The Scotsman

Defiant outlaw’s breakneck blues rock odyssey

- FIONA SHEPHERD

Celtic Connection­s: Sturgill Simpson

Old Fruitmarke­t ✪✪✪✪

Field Music

Kelvingrov­e Art Gallery ✪✪✪✪

The final weekend of Celtic Connection­s afforded two contrastin­g opportunit­ies to take in the outer limits of this eclectic music festival at its most rocking.

Kentucky country singer Sturgill Simpson is scorching hot property right now with an appeal which extends far beyond the traditiona­l country music fraternity. Having built an audience for his excellent evocation of the outlaw country sound of the 1970s and 80s, Simpson has truly declared himself an outlaw with the release of his fourth album, Sound and Fury, a freewheeli­ng psychedeli­c blues rock odyssey which has more in common with ZZ Top than Willie Nelson and his grassroots ilk.

That Sound and Fury was launched at the San Diego Comic Con accompanie­d by a 40-minute anime film on Netflix is testament to how far Simpson was prepared to go to p*** off his record label.

This show – cramming twoand-a-half hours of material into a two-hour set in order not to break the curfew – was similarly fuelled by defiance, with Simpson and band launching straight into hardcore rock riffing embellishe­d with unapologet­ic new wave keyboards supplied by the only man at Celtic Connection­s wearing sunglasses indoors.

This was a loud affair so it wasn’t always possible to appreciate Simpson’s soulful tone but there were compensato­ry thrills as the band hurtled through Sound and Fury with no-nonsense momentum through some thoroughly satisfying boogie, onwards into an irresistib­le groove harking back to the acid blues of Canned Heat and moody psychedeli­a of Pink Floyd before whipping up some blues rock ecstasy to finish.

Breakthrou­gh album dis

pensed with, Simpson moved on to a selection of “country music you will probably hate”. More fool anyone who did reject his mighty soul music which encompasse­d epic southern rock with some proggy breakdowns, Wingsera Mccartney testifying soul, languorous acid rock, tight 70s funk and a proper southern soul treatment of You Don’t Miss Your Water before a turbo-charged climax.

There was country music of an altogether more ravishing class the following night, courtesy of Glasgow duo Tenement & Temple, who generated a tender lullaby sound in the grand space of the Kelvingrov­e Art Gallery. Monica Queen’s exquisitel­y pitched vocals showcased country soul power in vulnerabil­ity with rapturous accompanim­ent from her partner Johnny Smilliepro­ducingaman­dolinlike Tex-mex trill on guitar.

Headliners Field Music did not fare so well with the challengin­g acoustic of this “slightly reverby room” but pulled through with the absorbing concept of their current album and show. Making A New World took as a starting point developmen­ts in military technology during the First World War and created a suite of lean, angular indie rock songs on social reconstruc­tion after the Great War – the forming of new communitie­s, the founding of the League of Nations, the women’s suffrage movement, the birth of Dadaism and a funky tune on the developmen­t of sanitary towels.

This was followed by a looser selection of songs from their intriguing back catalogue, including a catchy number made up entirely of the ridiculous claims made by President Donald Trump.

 ??  ?? 0 Sturgill Simpson’s soulful tone was sometimes lost as his band hurtled through Sound and Fury
0 Sturgill Simpson’s soulful tone was sometimes lost as his band hurtled through Sound and Fury

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