Live Reviews

Spencer Cullum – The Church, Ipswich 4th May 2026

Spencer Cullum has always sounded like a man slightly out of step with the era he has been handed, and today that dislocation feels almost poetic. The British‑born, Nashville‑based songwriter and pedal‑steel conjurer made his latest record, ‘Coin Collection 3,’in the quiet refuge of a garden‑shed studio; an improvised sanctuary from the static and spite that pass for public discourse these days. Out of that retreat came a set of songs steeped in haze and clarity all at once, music that drifts through his mind like weather yet still to contend with the hard edges of the world outside. But on this bank‑holiday Monday in Ipswich, those edges soften. The venue is a modest, yet ornate church tucked into the town‑centre patchwork, glowing as sunlight pours through its aged windows. The audience settles onto wooden benches with a kind of reverent curiosity. And in this pocket of calm, it suddenly feels like Cullum’s meditative, luminous sound has found its ideal habitat. An ancient place, shielded from the modern horrors but with the welcome additions of a bar, vinyl record stall and toilets, and ultimately a perfect space to listen, feel and breathe.

The trilogy of ‘Coin Collection’ albums that have established Spencer’s reputation as a purveyor of delightfully pastoral shades, is said to be concluding with this latest release. They have all featured music that shimmers with the radiance of dawn to dusk electric folk, originally patented around fifty to sixty years back, whilst magically shining with the gloss of a sound that is freshly minted. Their occasionally subdued tones and quiet-storm lightness of touch can underplay a little just how accomplished a musician Spencer is. Anyone who has heard the closing track on an album called ‘Echolalia,’ released last year where Spencer played as part of a loosely formed group, will need no convincing that he has a range way beyond the templates of these three albums. But much like another favourite musician of mine, Richard Thompson, witnessing him in action before your eyes indisputably demonstrates how little he showboats in the recording studio, focusing on the requirements of the music ahead of any self-aggrandisement. He switches between acoustic guitar and pedal steel throughout, also accompanying fellow traveller and Coin Collective cohort, Rich Ruth, in an opening set that casts a real Floydian ambience over the room with its velvety electronic repetitions.

They are playing as a trio on this tour, the line up completed by Annie Williams on divine backing vocals and guitar; later when introducing them Spencer says they are people “I admire and think the world of” but listening to the way they embrace his music, it sounds like a feeling that runs both ways. During a cooly collected version of ‘Imminent Shadow,’ from the first album released in 2021, the floating sonic climate is brilliantly lacerated by brief flashes of electronic key noise from the hands of Rich. He really grabs hold of these songs and locks into the moments when a detonation from his box of audio wizardry can smash them open like a piñata. Annie too is utilised a lot more than merely for backing. Halfway through the set Spencer steps back, inviting Williams to take some lead vocals, firstly on a beautiful cover of a song called ‘The Mermaid.’ Annie tells us that Spencer had sent it to her before the tour and she sang it so much every day even her five-year-old would be humming it. That is no surprise for it is a hauntingly wonderous hymn, originally found on an ultra-obscure private pressing folk album from 1980 by Brenda Wootton on a label called Burlington. If this is in any way indicative of how deeply Spencer explores the folk backroads of Britain, I am mightily impressed. ‘The Mermaid’ is a highlight of the set and a fantastic discovery too.

Make no mistake though, Spencer Cullum’s music is the star of the show. I have greatly enjoyed his albums but have to say, immersing myself around these pieces in a live setting has taken them to the next level; I suspect this is where his work truly gets to thrive and grow. He has a charming Essex boy way about him too, joking that a track on the new album called ‘Easy Street’ sounds like the theme to the comedy ‘Only Fools And Horses.’ It is hardly anything like it but all the same, after planting the thought in my head it was hard to unhear the comparison. Later there is similarly good-natured badinage with the audience involving “super double thumbs up” approving acknowledgments and before a mesmeric take on ‘Gavon’s Eve,’ Spencer explains his reading the lyrics being down to forgetting them the day before, hampering Annie’s attempts to sing accompaniment while he “Bob Dylan’d it.” A spellbinding ‘Betwixt And Between,’ Ruth’s guitar blooming like acid‑tinged light, Annie’s vocals brushing the air with Pentangle’s ghost, ushers Cullum into the final stretch. By the end he looks replenished, almost reborn, and we are no less transformed. It is hard to believe another bank‑holiday weekend will ever close with such a sense of awakening, unless these same musicians return to this sanctuary once more.

Words: Danny Neill Photos: Sophie Reichert

The latest ‘Spencer Cullum’s Coin Collection 3’ album is available here: https://amzn.to/42gpe2R

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Fresh Juice

Fresh Juice 16th February 2026

Cat Clyde – Man’s World

I have featured Cat Clyde in Fresh Juice in previous years but some artists are worth returning to again and again. It was the ‘Down Rounder’ record from 2023 and a blistering set at the End Of The Road festival that originally caught my ear, although that was actually her third long playing release having put a well received debut out in 2017. Over the years many have praised her ability to put a fresh spin on an old sound but I do not see things through such a retro lens. For me, the rocking country music that Cat delivers is raw and alive, very much a legitimate part of the 2026 landscape and I am excited to hear more of her vintage modernistic flavours when the new ‘Mud Blood Bone’ album is released on 13th March; you can pre-order that right away here: https://i.concordrecords.com/catclyde

GENA – Lead It Up

This is the latest single from the duo of Liv.e and Karriem Riggins who are about to release, on 27th February via Lex Records, a new album called ‘The Pleasure Is Yours.’ It is one of the most hotly anticipated records scheduled for the opening weeks of 2026 and this promo film tells you exactly why. These are subtle soulful sounds with a jazz flare and a cutting edge that could leave you bloodied and bruised. Just listen to those savage waves of distortion that tear it up as the song enters its finale. This is only one side of the sound GENA produce, flip things over and there are strong R&B and hip-hop elements as part of the cocktail too. This video film was directed by Cam Hicks and stars Liv.e, Karriem, Errol Chatman and Aijani Payne. Get your hands on this by visiting https://lexrecords.com/

Spencer Cullum – Rowan Tree

There are many acts around today who pull inspiration from the warm analogue sounds produced by British folk bands during the late sixties and early seventies. Sprinkled with a little acid guitar magic, buzzing with the throb of electricity against a deep traditional song structure and propelled by an organic rhythm section, it remains a sound that, the more it is repurposed for the present moment, moves way beyond the evocation of an era into an increasing timeless realm. Spencer and his various collaborators across different projects has proved himself to be one of the best, so it is fantastic to welcome ‘Spencer Cullum’s Coin Collection 3,’ the concluding album of the ‘Coin Collection’ trilogy out on 27th March via Full Time Hobby. You can pre-order and reserve your copy via this link: https://spencercullum.ffm.to/cc3

Courtney Barnett ft. Waxahatchee – Site Unseen

This is a pairing that makes perfect sense on paper and is proving to be extremely fruitful in practice too. Courtney has been keeping that slacker, grunge energy, shot through with a little Lou Reed streetwise cool and wit, alive for more than ten years now whilst Waxahatchee has been responsible for some of the truly essential modern country sounds to come out of the US in the 21st century. She (real name Katie Crutchfield) appears with Courtney singing a high harmony part on this, a taster single from Barnett’s forthcoming ‘Creature Of Habit’ album which is due for release on 27th March. Get yourself a pre-order of the vinyl by following the link: https://cbmusic.lnk.to/CreatureOfHabit

John Andrews & The Yawns – Something To Be Said

Time for a bit of chilled reflection with this suitably laid back number, it comes from a modestly titled album arriving on 3rd April called ‘Streetsweeper.’ Like our previous artist, John Andrews has been on the scene for a good ten years or more now and, through his various connections in the indie rock world, has a growing reputation as a fine purveyor of vintage sounds and a classicists hand at song composition. The Yawns were initially an imaginary band as John played most of the instruments on his recordings himself but, gradually, he has evolved to the point we find him at today, capturing the authentic live sound of musicians cooking together in a room (albeit in a very relaxed manner). You can pre-order the album today via the link: https://earthlibraries.com/

The Claypool Lennon Delirium – WAP (What A Predicament)

I am sure they will not thank me for saying it but there is some real Beatle Juice bleeding into the kaleidoscopic audio of this new track. Of all the Beatles next generation, it is frequently Sean Ono Lennon that seems to be the most plugged in creatively and who so often delivers the goods. This is the band he formed with the Primus bassist and vocalist Les Claypool who have more recently expanded to include Joao Nogueria on keyboards and Paulo Baldi on drums. Once more for this weeks Fresh Juice, they are an act that have been around for about ten years and continue to evolve and stay relevant, this new music refining the ‘progadelic’ notion coined by Lennon in an effort to describe the bands music. Keep up with their new recordings and live dates here: https://theclaypoollennondelirium.com

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