|
Karine
Polwart launched her new album 'This Earthly Spell' in the
somewhat cosy setting of Edinburgh's Coda Music, the city's
only dedicated Folk Music retailer on Friday the 7th of
March. The album is the second to be released since the
birth of her first son, and follows just 3 months in the
footsteps of 'The Fairest Floo'er', released just before
Christmas.
The chiming opening track
of Karine Polwart's This Earthly Spell, a gorgeous vocal
setting of a lyric by eminent Scots poet Edwin Morgan, gives
way to the steely, swampy "Sorry", whilst the
delightful jazz inflected whimsy of "The News"
contrasts the anti-nuclear political bite of "Better
Things" and the incisive "Painted It White".
Unsurprisingly, for a new mum, three songs deal with motherhood.
The poignant understatement of "Firethief", which
Polwart wrote originally for HIV/AIDS documentary "The
Enemy That Lives Within", unravels a mother’s
loss; whilst she wrote the tender and delicate "Rivers
Run" for her own son. But it’s the eerie and
atmospheric parable "Tongue That Cannot Lie" that,
most of all, betrays Polwart’s background as a former
philosophy teacher, and her ongoing fascination with moral
ambivalence. Inspired by the supernatural legend surrounding
thirteenth century Scottish Borders poet and prophet Thomas
The Rhymer, it also distinguishes her as an ambitious and
captivating storyteller.
read
the Garden Sessions Review
see: karinepolwart.com
|