The Scotsman

Rufus Wainwright

- DAVID POLLOCK

Usher Hall, Edinburgh ✪✪✪

In April 2020 Rufus Wainwright had intended to release Unfollow the Rules, his first album of new music in eight years, after experiment­s with opera and adapting Shakespear­e’s sonnets. “I was also going to win a Grammy,” he noted here, with dry humour. “Then two things happened, Covid and James Taylor.”

The album (which was Grammy-nominated, at least) was released last summer, and when touring wasn’t possible, Wainwright re-recorded it live alongside some of his classic songs at the Paramour Ballroom in Los Angeles, for last month’s Unfollow the Rules: The Paramour Sessions album.

The plan had been to tour the original album with “a big ten-piece band and full sets”, but what we got here was the Paramour version – a pianist, electric guitarist and double bassist backing Wainwright, with no more elaborate stagedress­ing than the distinctiv­e

suits all were wearing (by the New York-based Glaswegian singer and design consultant Angela Mccluskey).

There are some beauties on the new record which stood out here alongside favourites like Going to a Town, including the amusingly-delivered ode to relative fame You’re Not Big, the mournful reflection on redevelopm­ent and the environmen­t Romantical Man, and Only the People That Love, conceived during the last American administra­tion.

This was Rufus Redux, the stripped-back, low-key version, a taster of the promised big band spectacula­r. Yet few contempora­ry singers have voices less in need of window-dressing. Throughout, the audience were treated to covers of Neil Young’s Harvest, Leonard Cohen’s So Long, Marianne and Fairport Convention’s Who Knows Where the Time Goes, and while he may not have matched the originals, he’s one of the few artists whose vocal precision allows him to get away with trying.

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0 Rufus Wainwright

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