The Scotsman

Isobel Campbell Mackintosh Church, Glasgow ✪✪✪

- FIONA SHEPHERD

IT HAS been almost a decade since Isobel Campbell lived or played in her native Glasgow, but her mesmerisin­g musical MO hasn’t changed. With its mix of pretty fragility and eerie intent, set opener Willow’s Song from The Wicker Man still sounded like the quintessen­tial Campbell song even if she didn’t write it.

Campbell remains an awkward stage presence and at times this was a haphazard performanc­e, but fortunatel­y it had a brace of bewitching, bitterswee­t new songs from comeback album There Is No Other, delivered with trade

mark breathy vocals, gently undulating acoustic guitar, and delicate embellishm­ent from cello and viola.

Charming though this was, the psychedeli­c folk tones of The National Bird of India brought a welcome if subtle change of dynamic while a selection of cosmic country tracks originally recorded with her onetime duet partner Mark Lanegan were revisited with bassist Nina’s rich alto deputising for the gruff Lanegan before Campbell reached right back to her Glasgow indie roots to encore with the first song she wrote for her former band Belle & Sebastian. The burnished twang of electric guitar on Is It Wicked Not to Care ended the show with some welcome oomph.

There was complement­ary support from Mull musicians Hannah Fisher and Sorren Maclean, who tag-teamed on each other’s songs – Fisher’s fragrant indie folk and Maclean’s more countrytin­ged heartworn melodies, garlanded with the former’s featherlig­ht fiddle and the latter’s economical but expressive guitar – before rounding off with a gossamer rendition of Roddy Hart’s Tree of Darkness and a Caledonian bluegrass take on Townes Van Zandt’s altogether more spirited Loretta.

 ??  ?? 0 Isobel Campbell’s musical MO hasn’t changed over the years
0 Isobel Campbell’s musical MO hasn’t changed over the years

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