The Scotsman

ROSIE NIMMO

- JIM GILCHRIST

Edinburgh singer-songwriter Rosie Nimmo’s mellow number Music Is Sunshine was inspired by a remark an acquaintan­ce made while they were both exercising their dogs on Portobello beach. “He said, ‘To me, music is like sunshine’,” recalls Nimmo, “and I do think it is essential for a lot of people.”

In fact, Music Is Sunshine was going to be the title track of her latest album, released last month, but at the last minute she changed her mind and used the last line of the song to title it Where Time Suspends – which, she agrees, also rather sums up our situation over the past, Covid-stalled year.

Nimmo, who also sings blues and jazz covers with her Rosy Blue line-up and in duet with guitarist Stuart Allardyce, has been writing and performing her own songs for the past decade or so. Shefinishe­drecording­thepresent album, her fourth, in September but had been working on it for the previous four and a half years. On it, accompanis­ts include husband Tommy on bass, guitarist Graham

Smith, Mairi Campbell on viola and multi-instrument­alist and producer Marc Pilley.

The album has been enthusiast­ically received, featured in this paper’s sister publicatio­n, Scotland on Sunday, championed by Iain Anderson and others on radio and warmly endorsed by none other than music-loving crime-writer Ian Rankin.

As well as a singer, Nimmo is also an accomplish­ed visual artist although her painting and printmakin­g have been taking something of a back seat. Some of her artworks can be seen in the background of her Scotsman Sessions video.

She believes that Where Time Suspends “covers so many different aspects of being human and I hope the music speaks to people. All I’m trying to do is communicat­e and give people something that’s not just about me but integral to all of us.”

For more on Rosie Nimmo’s new album Where Time Suspends, visit www. rosienimmo.com

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