The Scotsman

Music

Siobhan Wilson shows off her quiet power, while Beyoncé’s live album can’t recapture the magic of her stadium gigs

- Fionasheph­erd

Album reviews, plus Ken Walton on the story behind opera Dead Man Walking

POP

Siobhan Wilson: The Departure

Suffering Fools Records

★★★★

Beyoncé: Homecoming : The Live Album

Columbia

★★★

The Pearlfishe­rs:

Love & Other Hopeless Things

Marina Records

★★★★

Jo Mango & Friends: System Hold EP

Olive Grove Records

★★★

Some performers have a natural ability to entrance, to make the listener lean in, to arrest with tenderness. Siobhan Wilson has that quiet power in spades. The Elgin- born, Glasgow- based singer turned heads with her SAY Awardnomin­ated debut album, There Are No Saints, and continues the charm offensive with this seamless followup, which foreground­s her pure tones and judicious vocal choices over uncluttere­d backing tracks using a handful of feature instrument­s.

The bare bones title track is as good an introducti­on as any, with Wilson’s longing delivery complement­ed by piano and synthesize­r. But then recent single Marry You introduces a new coquettish indie pop direction, with Wilson swapping keyboards and cello for a fuzz- toned Gretsch guitar as she chides an ambivalent partner.

The brooding guitar features again on Unconquera­ble, a slow- burn duet with her pop peer Stina Tweedale of Honeyblood, the captivatin­g, controlled Little Hawk, which builds to a stormy conclusion as Wilson shifts to rougher, tougher tones, and All Dressed Up Tonight, a beguiling gem which has been in her live set

for some time. The latter recalls PJ Harvey’s Dress, retooled for the selfobject­ifying social media generation.

Elsewhere, she operates with delicate purpose. April is a gentle declaratio­n of freedom of choice over melancholi­c cello, Stars Are Nonzero is a swooning, sonorous chanson, delivered with exquisite understate­ment, and Northern Clouds a fragile folk lament with fragrant overdubbed harmonies.

As before, she also puts her French language skills to use with a yearning version of 60s French pop standard, Dis, Quand Reviendras- Tu? and a demure, uncluttere­d cover of Serge Gainsbourg’s Ne Dis Rien. Wilson may exude the ingénue insoucianc­e of a classic Gainsbourg vocalist but as her warning shot lyrics attest, she wouldn’t settle for his male gaze.

The concert film of Beyoncé’s two breathless­ly received Homecoming headline sets at the 2018 Coachella festival is currently streaming on Netflix and is a riot of colour, commitment and choreograp­hy with a head- swimmingly huge cast of dancers and musicians corralled in proud celebratio­n of the traditions of America’s historical­ly black colleges and universiti­es ( HBCU).

Shorn of the visual impact, Homecoming: The Live Album is best approached as a companion souvenir, capturing the beefy brass blast of the marching band on Crazy In Love and the righteous reunion with Beyonce’s Destiny’s Child sisters Michelle Williams and Kelly Rowland. But it’s a protracted extravagan­za – long on artfully produced mash- ups of hip- hop, funk, reggae and jazz and relatively short on songs and soul.

If the sun is out, it must be time for a new album from The Pearlfishe­rs.

Love & Other Hopeless Things is their eighth release on Frankfurt’s Marina Records, but that’s not the only mark of continuity. David Scott’s effortless­ly wrought chamber pop songs, taking their lead from classic 60s and 70s songwriter­s, are as constant as the weather in his native Glasgow is changeable.

Scott pays tribute to that dichotomy with the urban romanticis­m of Sometimes It Rains In Glasgow, co- written and sung with Becci Wallace. But every day is summer in earshot of the freewheeli­ng pop of Could Be A Street Could Be A Saint or the easy listening country ballad You’ll Miss Her When She’s Gone.

Scott’s fellow songwritin­g tutor and sometime collaborat­or Jo Mango also releases new material this week. The System Hold EP comprises four tracks of featherlig­ht piano balladry with subtle electronic beats from ambient electronic­a artist Adem, which have been conceived to accompany Pervasive Punishment, the new book by criminolog­ist Professor Fergus Mcneill, and provide a chill- out meditation on themes of incarcerat­ion, monitoring and suspension of liberty.

Marry You introduces a coquettish indie pop direction, with Wilson swapping keyboards and cello for a Gretsch guitar

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from main: Siobhan Wilson; Beyoncé; Jo Mango; David Scott of The Pearlfishe­rs
Clockwise from main: Siobhan Wilson; Beyoncé; Jo Mango; David Scott of The Pearlfishe­rs
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