Album: Mary Chapin Carpenter - Personal History

Distinctive, intimate, perfectly pitched

In those seemingly long-ago times of loneliness and lockdown, artists around the world invited us into their kitchens and living rooms as they sang into their webcams and iPhones, some more successfully than others, doing what they needed to do. The most successful, the one I truly looked forward to, was Mary Chapin Carpenter who, every week, welcomed us into her sun-dappled Virginia farmhouse for a chat and a song.

Lucy Farrell, Catherine MacLellan, The Green Note review - sublime frequencies

★★★★ LUCY FARRELL, CATHERINE MACLELLAN, THE GREEN NOTE Sublime frequencies

Two singer songwriters in their prime deliver a double header showcase in Camden

Lucy Farrell, one quarter of the brilliant, award-winning Anglo-Scots band Furrow Collective, and a solo artist whose stunning debut album, We Are Only Sound, was released in 2023, divides her time between the UK – she’s a native of Kent – and Prince Edward Island, a musically rich parcel of land off Canada’s eastern seaboard. The island is home to the other half of this sublime folk-acoustic double bill, Juno Award-winning songwriter Catherine MacLellan.

Album: Mark Morton - Without the Pain

★★★ MARK MORTON - WITHOUT THE PAIN Second solo album from Lamb of God guitarist lays down hefty southern boogie

Second solo album from Lamb of God guitarist lays down hefty southern boogie

Mark Morton is best known as a guitarist with US metallers Lamb of God. They’ve been going for three decades, established and successful, at the more extreme, thrashier end of the spectrum, but still achieving Top Five albums on the Billboard charts.

Midnight Cowboy, Southwark Playhouse - new musical cannot escape the movie's long shadow

★ MIDNIGHT COWBOY, SOUTHWARK PLAYHOUSE Ambitious project overwhelmed by challenges 

Two misfits misfire in misconceived show

It seems a bizarre idea. Take a pivotal film in American culture that reset the perception of The Great American Dream at this, obviously, pivotal moment in American culture in which The Great American Dream, for millions, is being literally swiped away at gunpoint, And… make it into a musical

Album: Perfume Genius - Glory

Album seven from an artist carving out his own space in the most modernist of ways

I can’t stop reading and re-reading the review copy I got of a new book, out next week. Liam Inscoe-Jones’s Songs in the Key of MP3: the New Icons of the Internet Age is one of those books where you’ll find yourself shocked that it didn’t exist before: it’s a mapping out of the modern musical and subcultural landscape on terms defined by the millennial artists who’ve come to define it.

Album: Alison Krauss & Union Station - Arcadia

★★★★ ALISON KRAUSS & UNION STATION - ARCADIA Their first album in 14 years looks hard at the past, and its role in the present

Their first album in 14 years looks hard at the past, and its role in the present

It’s been 14 years since Alison Krauss and Union Station released an album – 2011’s Paper Aeroplane. The world’s shed a few skins since then, and little resembles the way it was. The ten songs on their new album, Arcadia, recorded in studios across Nashville, are tied up in that cat’s cradle of time, of the past and how it is remembered.

Album: Toria Wooff - Toria Wooff

Assured but too measured debut album from Americana-inclined singer-songwriter

On the cover of her eponymous debut album, the Bolton-raised Toria Wooff reclines on a church pew located in Stanley Palace, a 16th-century mansion in her adopted city of Chester. In her hand, a Celtic Cross. Such imagery implies that what will be heard on the grooves within the sleeve might cleave to forms of gothic-inclined British folk. This, though, is not the case.

Album: Jason Isbell - Foxes in the Snow

Small stories, big talent from the Alabaman storyteller extraordinaire

America – the pro-wrestling-ass nation, the ultimate society of the spectacle – famously likes things big, and modern country and western music has gone along with that. Big hats, big trucks, big sentiment, big pop production, very big sales indeed, and not a lot in the way of subtlety. But country also has a parallel history, of course: as music of the little guy, the theatre of the domestic, a place for preservation of simple folk traditions in the face of the overwhelming scale of modernity.

Album: Reg Meuross, Fire & Dust: A Woody Guthrie Story

At once a celebration and an exploration of the timeless Dust Bowl Balladeer

I come to this album from a week or so spent among the denizens of the New York and Boston folk revivals, including a key figure from Tulsa and the Guthrie Center, and a concert (Judy Collins, marking 85 years of music and activism).