Neil Spencer 

Ward Knútur Townes: Unanswered review – a captivating English-Canadian-Icelandic union

Born out of lockdown, the affinity between singer-songwriters Lucy Ward, Adyn Townes and Svavar Knútur bears fruit on an album of alluring melancholy
  
  

Lucy Ward, Svavar Knútur and Adyn Townes.
From left: Lucy Ward, Svavar Knútur and Adyn Townes. Photograph: Wilde Bloom

Defying the isolation imposed by the pandemic, Global Music Match is a project that connects musicians from different countries via the internet. Hence this happy confluence of folkies, who wrote together via Zoom for two years before recording Unanswered at a remote Icelandic “art farm”. Derby’s Lucy Ward, Montreal’s Adyn Townes and northern Iceland’s Svavar Knútur are all feted singer-songwriters in their homelands, but their collective rapport is still a surprise, whether it’s on close vocal harmonies or subject matter. Gentle romantic melancholia is the keynote, though it takes unexpected shapes. Ward’s Astronaut is a conversation between two former lovers, one earthbound, the other “drifting in the darkest of dark”. Townes’s Seasons is an imaginary love song by Johnny Cash to his recently deceased wife, June Carter (“we were magic”), while Knútur’s Isn’t It Funny melds sorrow with Nordic elves.

Steve MacLachlan’s production also helps rescue the record from despondency, adding drums, bass and violins to some tracks and bringing the spectral atmospheres of the deep north to Aurora and the title track, the tale of a disconnected telephone that sometimes rings (“they’re calling again from 1945”), while Orgar Brim revives an antique poem by a fabled fisherwoman. An unusual, captivating creation.

Watch Ward Knútur Townes perform Unanswered.
 

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