By  the time the simple, rolling acoustic guitar of the title cartroad of this, the fourth album by Yorkston,  kicks in, you're feeling far away from home. Instruments  gently creaking in the manner of rotting ships moored perpetually in entertain. Deep  in the galley lies Yorkston,  singing of, ''salty tongues like lounge singers''.
Accordions,  flutes and the somber warmness of the steam from a mug of camellia sinensis, while sat in a deserted caf� in a Scottish  port town seems to be Yorkston's  comfort zone, and When  The  Haar  Rolls  In  is a folkish testament to towns, people and houses where time not so much stands still, merely merely seeps away unnoticed.
The  groggy, hungover feel of this platter is concomitant with Yorkston's  voice: a resonant aaron Burr that will bear inevitable comparisons with Nick  Drake,  but actually has far more of a experient baritone experience that speaks of one too many late nox cigarettes on the night bus.
Occasionally  the spume from the harbor gets in your eyes such as in the more incendiary harmonies of Midnight  Feast,  a data track written by the late British  folk singer, Lal  Waterson.  Here  a monotone, hypnotic pulse builds up to a climax hinting at something entirely more rambunctious: advent across like an anarchical sea-shanty as Yorkston  asks us to, ''come 1 step closer or stay away''.
While  inactive best-known as a member of the 'Fence  Collective'  - too a stable for KT  Tunstall  and The  Beta  Band  - When  the Haar  Rolls  In,  patch cloaked in clarinets and violas, is going to be best remembered for Yorkston's  hit voice. It's  one of the almost memorable in British  ethnic music music correct now.
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