Kyle Lemmon - 28.01.2010  James Graham’s Caledonian brogue and producer Andy McFarlane’s earth-shattering guitar lines are ever-present but Forget the Night Ahead i...
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Nick Fenn - 22.10.2009  too Scottish. It seemed that all you needed were some guitars, a depressing atmosphere, and some quietLOUDquiet dynamics, and, of course, to be Scott...
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David Peisner - 19.10.2009 The Twilight Sad's 2007 debut album, <i>Fourteen Autumns & Fifteen Winters</i>, firmly placed them in Scotland's tradition o...
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Reef Younis - 18.10.2009 Bleak, wailing walls of guitar melodies that harrow and sink and wallow, buried deep inside groundswells of resignation and despondence ? it?s not a h...
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Andrew Grillo - 09.10.2009  Critical success, respect from your peers - it may not make you happy y'know. Singer James Graham has described 'Forget The Night Ahead' as being writ...
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Jamie Smith - 08.10.2009  Some albums are easy to write about. Nuances leap out at you, hooks are obvious, lyrics are noteworthy, patterns emerge through the music. But none of...
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Jamie Milton - 05.10.2009  Magicians save their best trick for the end. The most valuable present is always opened last. Roast potatoes are spared for the final mouthful of a Su...
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Dom Gourlay - 05.10.2009  The weight of expectation can be a hefty burden. Three years ago, The Twilight Sad were something of an unknown quantity outside of Glasgow's vibrant ...
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Gideon Brody - 05.10.2009 Review coming soon; intro goes here.Review text goes here....
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Maddy Costa - 02.10.2009  A Glaswegian friend once told me that the Scots have 40 words for rain - and most of them are evoked over the course of this dreich second album from ...
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