2019 Highlight: Amanda St John

Launching Muscle Shoals at the Green Note in London’s Camden Town, Amanda St John was with Paul Tierney on guitar – her co-writer of among other material, ‘Walk Away.’ Stevie Watts on keyboards completed the “acoustic” line-up on this occasion St …

Published: 16 Nov 2019. Updated: 3 years.

Launching Muscle Shoals at the Green Note in London’s Camden Town, Amanda St John was with Paul Tierney on guitar – her co-writer of among other material, ‘Walk Away.’ Stevie Watts on keyboards completed the “acoustic” line-up on this occasion St John explaining that the rest of the band had not been able to make it over from Ireland so “Stevie was drafted in.”

Completely at ease on stage, a warm presence, her voice is nothing less than a soul experience. In addition to her new songs ‘Grow’ from her back catalogue was a feelgood stand-out and got the healthy sized turn-out singing along with her as she walked into the middle of the room.

St John also delivered stirring versions of ‘I’d Rather Go Blind’ synonymous with Etta James but much earlier it was her accomplished take on Mary Gauthier’s ‘Mercy Now’ covered in recent years by Liane Carroll that indicated her power and passion and the songs tumbled along one after the other – the dice landing in what turned out a winning streak as the set wore on.

St John, from the north coast of Country Antrim, recorded the album at FAME in Alabama with Tierney and some of “the Swampers” among the personnel at the studio where Aretha Franklin made history. St John told us how you could smell the sound and how the place had hardly changed in years – “manky carpets” and all.

Blessed with a simply superb voice, she has brilliant stage presence and delivers her audience chats with grace and no little humour. She took off her shoes after a while joking that her stiletto could have fallen through a hole on the stage. The songs have a validity and authenticity to them borne out of a huge amount of turbulence in the singer’s life.

It is only once in a blue moon that a singer as credible in this soul seeking style as St John comes along. To conclude she owned the room: everyone should hear her. Grasp any opportunity to do just that. SG

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Paula Rae Gibson / Kit Downes, Emotion Machine, Slowfoot

From 2018. Dark nocturnes Emotion Machine is a sensual first duo collaborative album from acclaimed fine-art photographer and singer Paula Rae Gibson and pianist composer Kit Downes. Highlights include a subtle version of Rae Gibson classic, ‘Black …

Published: 16 Nov 2019. Updated: 4 years.

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From 2018. Dark nocturnes Emotion Machine is a sensual first duo collaborative album from acclaimed fine-art photographer and singer Paula Rae Gibson and pianist composer Kit Downes.

Highlights include a subtle version of Rae Gibson classic, ‘Black Hole’. The softer textures and sombre elegies that pervade the record enhance the many ideas in terms of mood and spell that Rae Gibson has been working on through the years.

A sense of hush, a stark reality emerges. Think the imagery of Nic Roeg, Sylvia Plath, Kate Bush, the cold shock of the afternotes of an unguessable Keith Jarrett chord that never needs to resolve.