Rachel Sermanni

Tied To The Moon

(Middle Of Nowhere)

It won't quite cause the same ripples as Bob Dylan circa 1965, but Scottish folk balladeer Rachel Sermanni has plugged in and gone electric. Well, not all the way across this second studio album - more than half of the set remains in the realm of the acoustic - but there's a louder, rockier vibe to several of the songs here. And the change has done her good.

On opening track Run, then onto I've Got A Girl and Tractor, there's more of a chug to her guitar and a solid foundation to the all-star rhythm section of former Frightened Rabbit Gordon Skene (bass) and Admiral Fallow's Louis Abbott (drums). This and the natural noir colourings of her songwriting - Alice falling down a rabbit hole past row upon row of unexpected minor chords - makes the Carrbridge native an unexpected PJ Harvey of the Highlands.

However, her voice remains gorgeously breathy and wide-eyed whether the music is amplified or delicately plucked. Everywhere you look, there are things to love: the beguilingly poetic lyrics on Ferryman, Jennifer Austin's haunted carousel organ on I've Got A Girl; Colin Macleod's subtly sympathetic production on the beautiful Don't Fade; the jaw-dropping arrangement of pattering drums, tinkling piano and crisscrossing voices on This Love that make the hairs stand up on the back of my neck. It's a flawless follow-up to what was an excellent debut.

Alan Morrison