• Home
  • Contact
Entertainment Now
  • Home
  • Music
  • Movies
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcasts
  • Food and Drink
  • Edinburgh Festivals
    • Cabaret
    • Dance, Physical Theatre & Circus
    • Family
    • Musicals
    • Spoken Word
    • Theatre
  • Comedy
  • Books
  • Theatre
  • TV
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Music
  • Movies
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcasts
  • Food and Drink
  • Edinburgh Festivals
    • Cabaret
    • Dance, Physical Theatre & Circus
    • Family
    • Musicals
    • Spoken Word
    • Theatre
  • Comedy
  • Books
  • Theatre
  • TV
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Entertainment Now
No Result
View All Result
Home Music

Album Review: The Zutons: The Big Decider

Fiona Shepherd by Fiona Shepherd
May 7, 2024
in Music
3 1
0
Album Review: The Zutons: The Big Decider

In 2008, The Zutons released their third album You Can Do Anything. At the time, with Amy Winehouse delivering her soulful spin on their glorious anthem Valerie, perhaps they did feel as invincible as that title. But frontman Dave McCabe’s drinking was to drive a wedge through the band and members split off to join The Coral and Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds, leaving McCabe, drummer Sean Payne and saxophonist Abi Harding – always their not-so-secret weapon – to pick up the pieces in Zutons Mk.2.

The Big Decider, their first album in sixteen years, is an impressive return to action and a reminder of this Liverpool band’s potency and imagination. Written in lockdown, recorded at Abbey Road Studios and produced by Nile Rodgers and their old associate, Lightning Seed Ian Broudie, it features a complementary blend of the sensitive and the celebratory.

Related articles

Kevin Farge Unveils Ambitious 27-Track Album Country Love Song

Katie Dauson Explores Growth and Resilience on Eighth Studio Album Change

Comeback single Creeping on the Dancefloor is a bruiser of a track with its rat-a-tat drums, George Harrison-like burnished guitar and McCabe’s robust vocals contributing to the Black Crowes-like rootsy rock vibe. The Seventies funk strut of Pauline joins Valerie in their pantheon of big characters before they lighten the mood with the cantering drums, sultry dreampop vocals and delicate jazzy piano of Water and its refreshing imagery: “let the water run, it brings life”.

The indie rhythm’n’blues of the title track is a bittersweet cut infused with old soul as McCabe reflects that “those yesterdays always creep up on me”. Rodgers makes a philosophical spoken word cameo on Disappear, while Harding adds a soulful solo to the twinkly, yearning ballad Company and channels the spirit of Bacharach & David for her classy, brassy opening to Rise, another pleasing slice of vulnerability.

They save the worst for last. Best of Me is an underwhelming finale, with the band playing it tender and tempered rather than triumphant, as if slightly cowed – but it’s the only moment of ambivalence on The Big Decider.

Tags: musicreviews
Fiona Shepherd

Fiona Shepherd

Fiona is an established music journalist, based in Glasgow, where she has been attending gigs for the past 35 years and writing about the local and wider music scene since 1990. She is the chief rock and pop critic of The Scotsman, and also writes for Scotland On Sunday, The List and Edinburgh Festivals magazine. She is co-founder and co-director of Glasgow Music City Tours and Edinburgh Music Tours, which offer guided music themed walking tours exploring the rich musical history of both cities.

Related Posts

Kevin Farge Unveils Ambitious 27-Track Album Country Love Song

Kevin Farge Unveils Ambitious 27-Track Album Country Love Song

by Siobhan Rowe
June 17, 2026
0

Kevin Farge returns with Country Love Song, an ambitious 27-track collection that draws together folk, jazz, alt-country and Latin influences into a richly textured and deeply...

Katie Dauson Explores Growth and Resilience on Eighth Studio Album Change

Katie Dauson Explores Growth and Resilience on Eighth Studio Album Change

by Siobhan Rowe
June 17, 2026
0

Canadian singer-songwriter Katie Dauson returns with her eighth studio album, Change, an eclectic collection of songs that explores personal transformation, self-reflection and the challenges of embracing...

MIIA Unveils Club-Driven New Era With “Necessary Evil”

MIIA Unveils Club-Driven New Era With “Necessary Evil”

by Siobhan Rowe
June 17, 2026
0

Norwegian alt-pop artist MIIA is entering a new phase of her career with the release of her latest single, “Necessary Evil,” a track that combines her...

Bassline Lions Release New England Football Anthem ‘The Time Is Right Now’

Bassline Lions Release New England Football Anthem ‘The Time Is Right Now’

by Siobhan Rowe
June 12, 2026
0

As England supporters gear up for a summer of football, Bassline Lions have released a new single they hope will become the soundtrack to the season....

Sylvain Zebo Blends French Pop and Reflection on New Single “Test”

Sylvain Zebo Blends French Pop and Reflection on New Single “Test”

by Siobhan Rowe
June 17, 2026
0

French singer-songwriter Sylvain Zebo has released his latest single, “Test,” a thoughtful and atmospheric track that combines elements of French pop and pop rock with reflective...

RECOMMENDED

Dr Kaboom and the Wheel of Science
Edinburgh Festivals

Edfringe Review: Doktor Kaboom: Under Pressure

July 31, 2025
The Bay
TV

Filming Begins for the Fifth Series of ITV’s The Bay

August 23, 2023
Entertainment Now

Your daily fix for what is trending in entertainment.

© 2026 Entertainment Now.

  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Music
  • Movies
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcasts
  • Food and Drink
  • Edinburgh Festivals
    • Cabaret
    • Dance, Physical Theatre & Circus
    • Family
    • Musicals
    • Spoken Word
    • Theatre
  • Comedy
  • Books
  • Theatre
  • TV

© 2026 Entertainment Now.