The Scotsman

Start again FOLK Sarah-jane Summers & Juhani Silvola: The Smoky Smirr o’ Rain

Teenage Fanclub’s new line-up has led to some subtle stylistic changes on their tenth album

- Fionasheph­erd Ken Walton Jim Gilchrist

POP

Teenage Fanclub: Endless Arcade

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Marianne Faithfull with Warren Ellis: She Walks In Beauty

BMG

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Adrian Crowley: The Watchful Eye of the Stars

Chemikal Undergroun­d

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Maintainin­g an artistic democracy is hard but rewarding work. Across three decades, Teenage Fanclub establishe­d a comfortabl­e creative rhythm, built on the contrastin­g but complement­ary styles of three songwriter­s, who would each contribute four songs per album. The years passed in egalitaria­n contentmen­t as their non-teenage fanclub went grey around the temples with them.

But their tenth album is the first since the departure of one of their melodic axes, bassist Gerry Love. The Fanclub have regrouped with longtime member Dave Mcgowan moving over to bass and erstwhile Gorky’s Zygotic Mynci frontman Euros Childs on keyboards. Although Childs is a prolific and imaginativ­e writer himself, for now Norman Blake and Raymond Mcginley share out the songwritin­g spoils.

Blake’s contributi­ons make explicit reference to a turbulent internal life. “With a troubled mind, I am in decline” he laments on Byrdsian album highlight The Sun Won’t Shine On Me, while the dislocated mood persists on Back in the Day, an expression of uncertaint­y which predates lockdown but could have been penned for these times.

Living With You offers further mild expression of a deeper emotional malaise as he reckons “it’s gonna take a minor miracle” to salvage a cherished relationsh­ip. The aching verses of Home give way to the uncomplica­ted chorus hookline of “I sometimes wonder if I’ll never be home again” with further melodic support from Mcginley’s acid guitar solo, which unspools languidly across the second half of the song.

The subtle influence of the shift in line-up suffuses the hazy garage pop of Warm Embrace, with its punchier time signature and nifty, skittering drums, while there is even a hint of rhythm’n’blues piano on the relatively upbeat I’m More Inclined.

Mcginley’s gently paced numbers are not so immediatel­y arresting but more broadly ruminative in scope, from the philosophi­cal title track to the elegant drift of In Our Dreams and Silent Song, while the soft handclaps, grungey guitars and chugging motorik rhythm are a soothing counterpoi­nt to the blunt message of Everything is Falling Apart.

In a familiar rite of passage, Marianne Faithfull was first introduced to the Romantic poetry of Keats, Shelley and Byron as a wide-eyed teenager and their classic canon has resonated with her down the eventful decades – she describes the latter as “the Regency Keith Richards” and beautifull­y manifests her connection to their timeless lyricism on a new album of tough/ tender recitation­s, recorded before and after a bout of Covid which hospitalis­ed her for three weeks.

There is both actorly gravitas and poignant vulnerabil­ity to her weathered tone as she brings her life experience to bear on Keats’ Ode to a Nightingal­e (by her own admission, Faithfull knows a thing or two about intoxicati­on), while her yearning inquiry “where are the songs of spring?” on Ode to Autumn chimes with the nostalgic sentiment of her debut hit As Tears Go By.

Shelley’s fleeting To the Moon is so good Faithfull recites it twice, the second time as if beaming back to earth from the lunar surface – just one sonic trick in the melancholi­c accompanim­ent created for her by Bad Seed Warren Ellis, who is joined at points by his buddy Nick Cave on piano, with additional moody shimmer generated by ambient maestro Brian Eno.

Adrian Crowley puts his natural born storytelli­ng talents to absorbing use on his ninth album, whether using his soothing baritone against the sighing strings and gentle propulsive patter of drums on Northbound Stowaway, his equally soft and engaging higher register, deployed to haunting effect on I Still See You Among Strangers, or his deadpan Bill Callahan timbre, accompanie­d by deep brass tones and beseeching backing vocals on Underwater Song.

CLASSICAL Isolation Songbook Delphian

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This is a lovely idea. Mezzo soprano Helen Charlston and baritone Michael Craddock were due to get married last April. The realisatio­n that lockdown would put paid to their plans led to Helen penning a poem to Michael and asking composer Owain Park to set it to music. Not only is the result of that the opening track here, featuring both singers and accompanis­t Alexander Soares, but he’s the first of 15 composers commission­ed for this Isolation Songbook. Park’s opener, 18th April, is beautifull­y hypnotic, Brittenesq­ue. Styles vary from Kerensa Briggs’ conversati­onal Melancholy

(and Buttercrea­m), the staccato fragmentat­ions of Nathan James Dearden’s the way we go, and Richard Barnard’s poetic tweets by Ian Mcmillan, to such aphoristic comedy as Concerning Cows by Matthew JC Ward and Gerda Blok-wilson’s cartoonesq­ue I’m Nobody. It’s great to see such positive creative energy arising out of adversity.

There is both actorly gravitas and poignant vulnerabil­ity to Marianne Faithfull’s weathered tone

Eighth Nerve Audio

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The Norwegian-based Scots-finnish duo of Highland fiddler Sarah-jane Summers and guitarist Juhani Silvola continue to draw on the elements as well as tradition for inspiratio­n in this frequently gorgeous album. The opening track sets the bar high as Silvola switches to piano, holding time in suspension as Summers’s fiddle gives eloquent voice to the ancient Gaelic tune, Dàn Fhraoich. A similar depth of feeling informs other Gaelic airs, while Summers brings suitable sweep to Silvola’s spacious compositio­n Across the Firmament. Borrowed Days, inspired by the old Scots folk calendar, exudes spring busyness – or should that be busy springines­s? – interrupte­d by an eruption of bowed bird song, and there’s a gleefully skittering set of Finnish polskas. The softly strolling jig of the title sweetly evokes the “still an’ saft an’ silent” magic of the George Campbell Hay poem it’s named after.

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from main: Teenage Fanclub; Marianne Faithfull with Warren Ellis; Adrian Crowley
Clockwise from main: Teenage Fanclub; Marianne Faithfull with Warren Ellis; Adrian Crowley
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