The Scotsman

Lad o’ pairts

Rapper turned crooner Plan B goes big on his first album in six years, while Willie Nelson is as pithy as ever

- Fionasheph­erd

POP Plan B: Heaven Before All Hell Breaks Loose

Atlantic Records

Willie Nelson: Last Man Standing

Legacy

JJJJ The Sheepdogs: Changing Colours

Dine Alone Records Various Artists: Jesus Christ Superstar Live in Concert

Sony Music Masterwork­s

It has been six years since Ben Drew, aka Plan B, last released an album, Ill Manors, which just so happened to have a feature film attached to it too. In the interim, there has been talk of an identity crisis (though fatherhood and running his own music therapy charity, Each One Teach One, has sorted him out there) and young pretenders such as Rag’n’bone Man jockeying for position as top white soul boy with hip-hop credential­s.

But this geezer rapper-turnedsoul crooner pop conceptual­ist is not short of creative ambition so it’s hardly surprising that he should go big on his return. Heaven Before All Hell Breaks Loose is a hefty album with the kind of keen global perspectiv­e which often comes into sharper focus when kids enter the picture.

Drew’s tenor sounds as sweet as ever on opening number Grateful but this time round his tone is tinged with anger and frustratio­n, and there’s even a touch of gospel testifying on Stranger and Heartbeat, the latter a particular­ly commercial number with an anachronis­tic funky drummer shuffle but a strong storytelli­ng impetus.

He delves into the musical melting pot of his native London with the tooled-up pop reggae of It’s A War. The pacey, plasticky soca-infused

Wait So Long is a bit of a misfire but there is compensati­ng quality in the album’s sole hip-hop track Guess Again, the distorted dub jazz of Flesh & Bone, soulful house track Pushin’ and woozy R&B of Sepia. Happy Birthday to the magnificen­t

Willie Nelson – 85 years young and as prolific and pithy as ever on his umpteenth album, co-written with compadre Buddy Cannon and littered with comedy couplets such as “she made my day but it ruined my life” and “bad breath is better than no breath at all”.

Conscious of the loss of fellow country outlaws such as Waylon Jennings and Merle Haggard, he dithers “I don’t want to be the last man standing…wait a minute, maybe I do” on the wry title track, which is as good an advert for his seamless stew of jazz, blues and country as any in his career.

As delightful as it is to hear Nelson in such sprightly, impish form, it is the ballads which truly shine, particular­ly the plaintive country MOR of Something You Get Through and the contrastin­g bitter, burnished blues of Very Far To Crawl on which Nelson digs deep but never labours. Canadian roots quintet The

Sheepdogs are a band out of time. Their sixth album, Changing Colours, begins with the undeniable 70s power rock feel of Nobody and ends with Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young pastiche Run Baby Run but along the way they branch out with the laidback southern soul of I Ain’t

Cool, summon the spirit of Santana in the acid Latin rhythms of The Big

Nowhere and Kiss the Brass Ring and even nod to our own Bay City Rollers with a “s-s-s-saturday night” refrain. Though derivative, the music is so well conceived that if you have any affection for the likes of The Band or The Allman Brothers, you will find something to dig here.

For viewers not in the US, Jesus Christ Superstar Live in Concert is the album record of the huge Easter TV production of the classic Lloyd Webber/rice rock opera. R&B star John Legend cannot help but add a softer soul side to the role of Jesus than the rock screamers of old but he can rage when required, while Sarah Bareilles lends a richness to the role of Mary and Alice Cooper has a whale of a time as Herod.

Happy Birthday to the magnificen­t Willie Nelson – 85 years young and as prolific and pithy as ever

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from main: Plan B; Willie Nelson; Jesus Christ Superstar; The Sheepdogs
Clockwise from main: Plan B; Willie Nelson; Jesus Christ Superstar; The Sheepdogs
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