The 2017 date was part of a wider tour to promote the most recent full-length Blue Rose Code release THE WATER OF LEITH. That album is now in the archives with many other recordings, so it was of little surprise to hear plans afoot for the next record. Sparking off his excellent guitar-playing accomplice Lyle Watt, Wilson eased through a couple of riveting sets to thrill the pulses of a dedicated gathering of Blue Rose Code fans almost packing the Kitchen to its capacity.
To increase the soulful spin on the evening, the support
came from Birmingham based singer-songwriter Philippa Zawe. This talented young
performer used a forty-minute opening set to increasingly blossom as her
heartfelt folk songs took on an extra dimension when the depth of her vocal
acumen extended. This was an opening set a cut above the norm and witnessing
this artist for the first time marked her out as one to watch on the local
scene.
Material for the main act drew from an abundance of sources
as Wilson set about interweaving stories, anecdotes and amenable chat into a
batch of songs stretching across two sets. Recently recorded numbers like ‘Red Kites’ and ‘I Will Lay You Down’ mingled with older tunes such as ‘Edina’ and ‘Whitechapel’. Evocatively celebrating the musical diversity of his
homeland, a moment of pure audience connection sprang out of ‘Wild Mountain Thyme’ and a reworking of
modern day Edinburgh anthem ‘Sunshine on
Leith’ breathed new life into a blast of populism. Proudly representing the
Blue Rose Code familiar was ‘Pokesdown
Waltz’, while leading the less familiar was ‘Wild Atlantic Way’, the latter introduced as a track inspired by the
west coast of Ireland and unravelling as a piece of Celtic union.
Through these and several other songs in a fully equipped
performance, the engaging lure of Wilson’s expressive character, and a voice
adding finesse to an urban grit, gripped an audience formed of Blue Rose Code
devotees and some who occasionally dip into his world. Regardless of which camp
you reside in, fully immersing into the work of one man, in whichever guise,
possesses a unifying agent for all present.
One format that the Kitchen Garden will never see is Blue
Rose Code in its most lavish form complete with full orchestra and special
guests. We were informed that Blue Rose Code: This is Caledonia Soul is making
an appearance south of border later in the year (Union Chapel London in
September to firm things up) to export a show that went down a storm at Celtic
Connections and Edinburgh Fringe. As appetising as that may be, we in
Birmingham are content to some extent to get what is presented on an ever
increasing regular basis as stripped down, the music of Ross Wilson is still in an accesible form to savour. A successful Kitchen Garden return re-enforced this view.
www.bluerosecode.com