The Scotsman

Out Lines and Hamish Hawk

- FIONA SHEPHERD

St Luke’s, Glasgow

ON THE final night of this year’s Celtic Connection­s, Twilight Sad frontman James Graham and former Scottish Album of the Year Award winner Kathryn Joseph said a (hopefully temporary) farewell to their own Celtic connection as they prepare for their own individual releases later this year.

The pair have duetted previously at a couple of collaborat­ive events but a commission from Easterhous­e’s Platform arts centre to turn local stories into songs has resulted in a more formal pairing as Out Lines, alongside Joseph’s regular wingman and producer Marcus Mackay, showcasing their contrastin­g but eminently compatible voices against a backdrop of piano, harmonium and drums.

Joseph is the bolder, more distinctiv­e singer with a strident yet sensitive soprano. Graham boasts a rich baritone in the somewhat apologetic indie angst style, yet he exhibited a natural feel for a folk melody on a hearty pagan pastoral number and the trio barely baulked at vaulting straight from Easterhous­e lore to Abba’s Lay All Your Love On Me which they covered in grand melodramat­ic style, enhanced by wheezing harmonium.

There was also appealing support from Hamish Hawk, a polite, charming Edinburghb­ased one man band with a “highly Googleable name” who has already found favour with the likes of King Creosote and James Yorkston for an

engaging set of songs to lean in to. He unleashed some heroic acoustic strumming on Tooting Broadway but was generally a gentler soul with a direct eloquence to his music.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom