The Living Tradition
PO Box 1026
KILMARNOCK
KA2 0LG


Tel 01563 571220

Our Reviewers
Top Selections

_________________

SOURCE

Scottish
Irish
English
Welsh
Gaelic
Cape-Breton
Australian
America
Canada
Galician

CONTENT

Song - Solo

Song - Group
Instrumental
Instr'l Groups
Music & Song
Dance
Pipe Bands
Archive
New Writing
Compilations

INSTRUMENTS

Pipes
Fiddle
Accordion
Flute
Whistle
Guitar
Mandolin
Banjo
Harp
_________________

Newletter
Feedback
About Us
Advertise
Writer's Guidelines
Links
Site Map

Email Us

This site is Copyright (C) The Living Tradition Ltd. No part of this site may be used without the permission of The Living Tradition.

The Living Tradition - Homepage

 

 


 

 


 
CHRIS STOUT QUINTET - Devil's Advocate

CHRIS STOUT QUINTET - Devil's Advocate
Greentrax CDTRAX305

Chris Stout's debut album was always going to be a hard act to follow.  Devil's Advocate does a pretty good job, but despite the extra four musicians it doesn't quite have the wow factor of First o' the Darkening. This is still a very fine recording: the title track and the set of Shetland reels pack a fair punch, and the kick-start to Aith Rant is superb. Mr Stout can also spot a good tune from other traditions: Lorient est Grand and Talaimh an Éisc both provide the finishing flourish for Chris' own compositions. The final track, Dynröst, is a beauty too, with Catriona McKay's harp and Fraser Fifield's sax contributing to the full atmospheric sound. There's first class accompaniment throughout from Malcolm Stitt and Neil Harland on guitar and double bass.

So what didn't I like? Not too much, really. The overlong introduction to Bambodansarna which in itself is a splendid melody. The similarly lengthy lead-in to Nanny and Andrew. The fact that Auld Swarra is polished off in under three minutes, a brusque dismissal of this grand old Shetland air. Slightly too much sax, and not quite enough of Chris Stout's fiddle. These minor criticisms, and a couple of tracks which didn't grab me, make the difference between Devil's Advocate being a "nice-to-have" and a "must-have" CD. Still well worth a listen, though.

Alex Monaghan

Secure On-line mailorder service
Buy this CD online from The Listening Post
The Listening Post is the CD mailorder service of The Living Tradition magazine.
This album was reviewed in Issue 75 of The Living Tradition magazine.