The Scotsman

Lucy Rose

St Luke’s, Glasgow

- MALCOLM JACK

“Suddenly it came for me, like a shock to the core,” sang Lucy Rose somberly in the opening line of her first song, sighing piano ode to sadness Solo(w), priming an evening of stark introspect­ion.

The Brighton-based English singer-songwriter’s fourth album no words left addresses her faltering mental health in recent years, as she has pivoted from major label-signed hot tip saddled with unreasonab­le commercial expectatio­n to an independen­t artist in search of her own voice. A voice she has promptly found with a suite of sparse, soft and sophistica­tedly arranged material that pulls no punches lyrically. Fans of Laura Marling and Feist may find much to love.

Performing her new album practicall­y in full left the set wanting for variation of tempo, volume and intensity, but certainly drove the point home as to Rose’s maturation as a songwriter. Fleshed out delicately by a five-piece band that included a congasbrus­hing percussion­ist, guitarist, bassist and a strings trio, the likes of Just A Moment and Treat Me Like A Woman sounded gorgeous. What Does It Take delved frankly into Rose’s relationsh­ip with her husband, who also happened to be the man scurrying around her feet between songs, her tour manager and tech William. “He does everything for me,” she joked, “and I reward him with tragic songs about us.”

Rose encored with a handsome solo cover of John Martyn’s Love You More, before finishing pointedly with Pt. 2, the penultimat­e track on No Words Left. “This time I’m looking out for me,” went one repeated phrase, a parting note of cautious optimism that felt encouragin­g to hear.

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