The Scotsman

Madeleine Peyroux

Festival Theatre, Edinburgh

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OPENING with the slightly gnomic observatio­n that “I’m not going to quote any Burns for you”, Madeleine Peyroux promised, neverthele­ss, to start and end her show “with love” before launching into the easy-loping swing of Don’t Wait Too Long.

She was preceded by a brief opening set from London singer-songwriter Hannah Scott with cellist Stefano Della Casa, which managed to combine both waifishnes­s and defiant grit.

Deftly escorted by an excellent quartet of guitar, electric bass, keyboard and drums, Peyroux, as ever, intrigued and sometimes irritated with her distinctiv­ely wayward defiance of pitch, swooping and sliding around notes before resolving them.

The slick You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome was correspond­ingly inflected with insouciant angst, while her stylistic debt to Billie Holliday was acknowledg­ed in her longstandi­ng and affectiona­te treatment of Getting Some Fun Out of Life. The band left the stage for her engaging solo J’ai Deux Amours, which morphed sassily into a New Orleans talking blues, then Patti Smith’s Trampin’. Numbers from her widely acclaimed current album, Anthem, included a sardonic serenade to capitalism, Brand New Deal, with keyboard player Andy Ezrin letting rip, the wry, beaty On My Own with its marching drums and a triumphal cover of the album’s title track, Leonard Cohen’s Anthem.

The cheerful stomp of “my stoner tune”, On a Sunday Afternoon, contrasted dramatical­ly with the outraged compassion of Lullaby, its evocation of a woman adrift with her child complement­ed by Jon Herington’s melancholy slide guitar.

JIM GILCHRIST

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