The Scotsman

The wigs fit for landmark Dylan gig

- FIONA SHEPHERD

Dylan John Thomas Barrowland, Glasgow JJJ

Headlining your first Barrowland show is a musical rite of passage which comparativ­ely few musicians reach.

However, 24-year-old Dylan John Thomas has hit this landmark so early in his career that his stagecraft consisted of a winningly DIY banner of his name, his setlist lasted barely an hour, including embellishi­ng covers, and his merchandis­e consisted of marketing his distinctiv­e footballer’s perm as a wig – available for £7 on the merchandis­e stand and clearly selling like hot…wigs.

With a former busker’s skill at reading the room, Thomas knows his audience and they certainly know his songs so well that he barely needed to engage, as the home crowd ran away with song after song.

In a reversal of street musician fortune, Thomas’s own tunes – predominan­tly gallus Glaswegian skiffle pop with heartworn lyrics – connected more strongly than most of his cover versions, including Someday by The Strokes and an ambitious solo acoustic blues run at Sam Cooke’s Bring It On Home to Me.

For the rest of the set, Thomas has mustered a band who bounced and tubthumped amiably while he showcased considerab­le dexterity on acoustic guitar, adding flamenco inflection­s to one baying ballad and trilling fills and frills to Feel the Fire.

He still includes the first song he ever learned to play in his set – a rowdy Caledonian take on Johnny Cash’s Ring of Fire.

But the fans were every bit as partial to the jaunty indie pop spirit of Fever and Nobody Else’s celebratio­n of succour.

It was almost too easy a win for Thomas but it comes following several years under the wing of another grassroots troubadour, Gerry Cinnamon, who will shortly headline Hampden Park – twice – with an acoustic guitar for company.

With every thing being considered, there was nothing too fancy to see here.

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2 Picture: Anthony Mooney ??
2 Dylan John Thomas 2 Picture: Anthony Mooney

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