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Kathryn Williams & Withered Hand
Willson Williams
One Little Independent
Hope-filled, and braced against the craggy Scottish elements, this collaboration from two stalwarts of the folk scene might be dealing with the deep cuts of loss but they've injected their ballads with a celebratory vein, a shining silver line amidst broody, leaden clouds.
‘Willson Williams’ witnesses the meeting of two like-minded musicians who’ve built their independent careers on inventive folk instrumentation, reflective and sincere lyricism, and not a small amount of self-deprecation. Their modest confessionals, written poetically and over nostalgic and atmospheric melodies, are as relatable as ever, and together they find new ways to unpack their feelings. One overarching theme on the album is that of grief, when the writing process saw them both, tragically, in mourning for separate loved ones; Dan for his brother Karl and his friend Scott Hutchinson of Frightened Rabbit, and Kathryn for her friend, comedian and BBC Radio 4 presenter Jeremy Hardy. They explain that “the initial premise and starting point for us was discussions and open conversations on bereavement. We’d both recently lost friends who were also in the public eye, and we talked about the strange place between personal loss and the communal grieving of a public figure”. Contrastingly, the music on ‘Willson Williams’ is warm, heartfelt and even cheerful, an opposing nature that is completely in keeping with both their humour and candidness.