The Scotsman

Trump that

Shirley Manson has taken a long hard look at the world, and doesn’t like what she sees

- Fionasheph­erd Ken Walton

POP

Garbage: No Gods No Masters

Stunvolume/infectious Music ✪✪✪

Crowded House: Dreamers Are Waiting

EMI Records

✪✪✪

Various: Dear John – Concert For War Child UK

Open Eyes Records

✪✪✪

Jeshua: Unreliable Narrator Lilybank Records

✪✪✪✪

Outspoken, articulate and engaged, Shirley Manson doesn’t pull punches in her public discourse. But she has generally looked inwards, or at least close to home, for personal lyrical inspiratio­n. Four years of Trump administra­tion in her adopted homeland, with Manson “on high alert” and no shortage of sociopolit­ical subject matter, has changed that dynamic. No Gods No Masters, the seventh album by her band Garbage, takes a look at the world and doesn’t like what it sees.

Kicking off with the ker-ching and arpeggiate­d bleeps of a gaming machine, The Men Who Rule the World sticks it to the greed-fuelled patriarchy through the medium of Inxs/prince-style slick pop funk, turbo-charged with rock guitar. Given that recording was done and dusted just before lockdown, the song’s plea to tear down and build up was prescient.

The stealthy ballad Waiting for God is Manson’s empathetic response to the Black Lives Matter movement, a goth prayer delivered through the prism of her own privilege – “we’re keeping our fingers crossed, smiling at fireworks that light all the skies up while black boys get shot in the back” – while the hard-driving title track favours rebuilding society over taking down statues.

Like her soon-to-be-tourmate Debbie Harry, Manson is a singer of many voices. She showcases all her textures here, using semispoken attitude on the verses and spitting out the chorus on fidgety industrial punk number The Creeps to capture a low career and personal ebb, before adopting a sultrier style to contrast tone and topic on Uncomforta­bly Me.

There is humour too. Wolves is a mischievou­s pop song in lupine clothing, while Godhead has fun at the expense of the male ego. And the filmic instinct Garbage brought to their Bond theme, The World

Is Not Enough, infuses A Woman Destroyed, a revenge tale in two scenes (intention and execution), as well as the spacious, sculptural closing track This City Will Kill You, a flowing dream state which evokes neon nighttime Los Angeles.

Fleetwood Mac’s touring guitarist Neil Finn comes home to his Crowded House – now populated with his sons Liam and Elroy – for the beloved antipodean band’s first album in 11 years. Dreamers are Waiting is a soothing summer cocktail of honeyed harmonies and sleepy soul, all taken at an unruffled pace, from the sunshine pop funk of Sweettooth to the heat haze wistfulnes­s of Show Me The Way. Elegantly crafted throughout, there is a sophistica­ted Bacharachi­an scope to Playing with Fire and some delicious burnished guitar on To the Island.

While Crowded House were able to tour the Finns’ native New Zealand earlier this year, the latest War Child fundraiser album is a product of lockdown. Dear John captures a 2020 online concert celebratin­g what would have been John Lennon’s 80s birthday, with Iranian musician Sepp Osley and his band Blurred Vision hosting a mixed bag of participan­ts for a selection of Lennon covers.

KT Tunstall makes her usual effortless connection to the material with her acoustic rendition of Gimme Some Truth, 10CC’S Graham Gouldman brings a plaintive vulnerabil­ity to Across the Universe and Faithless frontman Maxi Jazz a gruff sagacity to Power to the People, while Lawrence Gowan of prog rockers Styx delivers the hoary psychedeli­a of Tomorrow Never Knows.

Dundee-born, Glasgow-based Joshua Gray, aka Jeshua ,has produced a winsome lo-fi gem of a debut album in the daydreamin­g spirit of C Duncan. Unreliable Narrator was written over the last decade while Gray worked night shifts and wrestled with a sleep disorder so there is an agreeably trippy, off-kilter quality to his sonic blend of guitar reverb, soft, skittering drums and languid vocals which is wholly disarming.

CLASSICAL

The Eblana String Trio: King’s Achemist – British String Trios Willowhayn­e Records

✪✪✪

String trios have never been as fashionabl­e with composers as, say the string quartet or piano trio. But there is a singular delicacy in the balance that, when addressed, has resulted in fine music. This recording by the Eblana String Trio focuses on British examples. Of the two earlier examples, the impulsive fluidity of Moeran’s G major Trio is altogether more satisfying than Finzi’s Prelude and Fugue. The Eblana Trio’s selfconsci­ous performanc­e of the latter doesn’t help. More interestin­g, though, are Hugh Wood’s brilliantl­y animated Ithaka, inspired by Cafavy’s poem depicting Ulysses’ eventful homeward journey, and Sally Beamish’s The King’s Alchemist, based on the alchemist John Damian, of the Scottish court of James IV, who reckoned he could fly from Stirling Castle battlement­s. Beamish captures his mystery and eccentrici­ty in her kaleidosco­pic writing, as does this sensitivel­y astute performanc­e.

Neil Finn comes home to his Crowded House for the beloved antipodean band’s first album in 11 years

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Clockwise from main: Garbage; Jeshua; Crowded House
Clockwise from main: Garbage; Jeshua; Crowded House
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom