Proudly not optimising for search engines since 2021.

Month: August 2025

No Digas Más: LA LOM Live in London

Wednesday 20th August 2025

Jazz Café, London, England

Regardless of all the wonderful things that are happening in the world, it stands to reason that, if it were possible to weigh such things in the balance, there would be one thing happening in any given moment which is above all the others. Of all the things happening simultaneously across this sphere of ours, there would be one place and one experience that is the best thing currently happening. And while that experience may change – in one moment it could be a couple welcoming their first child, the witness of a meteor shower or other great natural event, the triumph over a great task or an act of consummated love, or even just a moment alone or in fine company – there would always be one such moment. And, hyperbole aside but still feeling the heady after-effects of this music, it is hard for me to imagine that there is any better place on Earth to be on the night of Wednesday 20th August 2025 than among the crowd of a few hundred in the Jazz Café in Camden, listening to LA LOM.

This trio of American musicians leave you speechless. Certainly, they are hard to summarise in a piece of writing. There’s no need for anyone to sing – the band are exclusively instrumental – so it’s perhaps little wonder that my own words seem insufficient. Guitarist Zac Sokolow, dressed in the laid-back style of one of the capable men from Hemingway’s Cuban stories, strides across the stage. A few feet from where I stand in the front row, stage right, he picks up the white lead which has lain like a coiled python on the stage and plugs it into his striking black and copper 1960 Kay Style Leader guitar. On the other side of the stage, bassist Jake Faulkner is dressed all in black, an electric Fender Vintera slung across his body. A large upright bass looms behind him. Between these two guitar players, drummer Nick Baker – as handsome as a model in his waistcoat and slicked-back hair – is seated behind a remarkable array of percussion (on which more later).

I start with the look, not the sound, because, like many, that was what first drew me to the band. As an aficionado of the resurgence in alternative country and roots music in recent years, which has formed the bulk of my live music experiences, I came across LA LOM by chance in the Instagram feed of Sierra Ferrell, one of alternative country’s leading lights and a generational talent herself. A fan of the band, Sierra had reposted one of those vivid Technicolor videos the band has released of their songs. My phone was on mute, but the evocative retro images were enough to hold my attention. And when I unmuted and heard those sounds for the first time, that attention turned to afición.

The LA LOM sound is hard to describe, but instantly recognisable as Zac plugs in his guitar and the band begins ‘Figueroa’. Theirs is Latin instrumental music, but that doesn’t begin to cover the vast array of influences which the trio have managed to distil into their own sound. My own reference points were the rock instrumental music I knew – Duane Eddy, Santo and Johnny, perhaps Booker T and the MGs – but those more knowledgeable than I could rattle off more accurate descriptors: cumbia, Afro-Cuban, arabe, Mexican bolero, Peruvian chicha, all backed with classic Americana and the slight hints of country and rockabilly that provide the one link to the alt-country music of Sierra Ferrell that led me here.

It is an incredibly cultured and nuanced musical brew – and also an intoxicating one. Zac’s distinctive guitar tone – particularly from his red 1960s National Val-Pro guitar, which replaces the black-and-copper Kay after the first song in tonight’s set – speaks and sings as clearly as any frontman.

Nick’s drum setup is a masterpiece of innovation and improvisation, combining the traditional Ludwig drum kit – hi-hat, bass drum, etc. – with congas and a cowbell. Nick uses conventional drumsticks, his bare hands, and even maracas as drumsticks, the sum effect allowing one man to perform the beat of cumbia, which usually involves multiple percussionists. It also looks impossibly cool.

Meanwhile, Jake slaps and twirls his upright bass with flair and howls primal Latin aullidos at the most cathartic moments of the songs. He stalks about the stage with the Vintera slung around his neck and provides the band’s swagger as he gestures and cheerleads the crowd. This band has élan. It has cojones. It has the right stuff. They follow up ‘Figueroa’ with the self-titled ‘Danza de LA LOM’, fully announcing themselves to a crowd that is already whipped up by the sound. The bartenders at this jazz bar couldn’t make a more potent mix tonight even if they served their cocktails in quart jugs.

The band begin to roam, showing their dexterity by adapting the Turkish song ‘Dane Dane Benleri Var’ into signature riffs and then moving back into the more familiar territory of the Calixto Ochoa song ‘Los Sabanales’. Zac’s guitar sings, while Jake’s rhythmic swaying and Nick’s short drum solo draw cheers. The crowd is already in a party mood.

LA LOM roam through some more fine cumbia songs that I can’t place, but whatever they are, they’re good eatin’. I swear I hear ‘Moonlight Over Montebello’ at some point in there, but when it comes there’s no mistaking the distinctive twinkling riff of ‘Santee Alley’, which draws cheers from the crowd.

The band have been stacking powder kegs so far tonight, but now they light the match. ‘Alacrán’ is where the night becomes impossibly fierce, so dirty and so bright; in its wake the dancing becomes uncontained. The Arab-tinged guitar riffs of ‘Alacrán’ are, in the live setting of the Jazz Café, made heavier by Zac, reminiscent of Jimmy Page’s Led Zeppelin riffs. Nick matches him with some booming Bonham-style drums. Jake, not to be outdone, unslings his Fender bass midway through the song and, to spontaneous whoops and roars from the crowd, takes and then theatrically spins his upright bass. LA LOM certainly know how to put on a show.

A drum roll triggers the frenetic ‘Arriba Pichátaro’, one of the most glittering moments of music in a night full of them. Jake and Nick pause to track the bars of Zac’s ascending guitar notes, nodding with approval, before each taking a flourish of their own. As Nick performs a drum solo, Jake takes a black cloth from his pocket and waves it like a matador before Nick’s drum set. The drummer takes the bait and turns the intensity up a notch. Jake takes the rag and twirls it around his head, jumping maniacally and whipping the crowd into a frenzy, before throwing it over his shoulder and performing a slapping bass solo of his own.

From this moment on, the night is a Pandora’s box of exploded musicality: an expansive ‘Espejismo’ followed by the spectral riffs of ‘Ghosts of Gardena’; a grooving cover of ‘Tonta’ by Grupo Mojado; a brand new song, ‘Belvedere’, with a throwback Seventies soul-funk vibe. The band can slow it down with ‘Lorena’ and another brand new “love song”, the slow, hazy romance of ‘Sixth Street’. They can speed it up with the conga-driven ‘Me Robaron Mi Runa Mula’, or roam between the two extremes with a free-range cumbia medley, which also contains the only vocals of the night – Zac singing a verse in Spanish in ‘Cumbia Sampuesana’. And throughout it all there is the signature LA LOM sound; the propelling drums and grooving bass that give a platform for Zac’s riffs on ‘Cumbia Arabe’ and the complete soundscape of ‘Angels Point’, perhaps their quintessential song. One stunning young woman in the front row holds up a sign with a marriage proposal. This might be the coolest band in the world right now.

After ‘Angels Point’, the band invite Rihab Azar back to the stage. She had been tonight’s support act, delivering a rich, textured half-hour set of Middle Eastern folk music on the oud. Now she brings the lute-like instrument to complement LA LOM on ‘Al Wafa’. Sitting on a stool before the band, her oud dovetails well with Zac’s guitar and, taking a solo on the instrument, she smiles up at an admiring Zac. Her oud solo draws a roar from the crowd as loud as any tonight.

After Rihab leaves the stage to applause, blowing kisses to the band, LA LOM break into the final song of their set, a cover of ‘El Sonido de Los Mirlos’ by the titular Los Mirlos – “one of our favourite groups,” Zac says from the mike. Nick’s rapid conga solo is quickly followed by a dirty, crunching Latin guitar solo by a grinning Zac, which draws another howling aullido from Jake. There’s a massive smile on Nick’s face as another high-tempo drum solo reaches its peak and Zac’s guitar picks up the release. Amongst all the showmanship and colour and fun of the band, there is a powerful synergy of goodwill and musicianship.

After the band leave the stage, there is naturally a huge roar for an encore, a collective passionate wail around the jazz bar that almost drags the band back up on stage by itself. When they do return, Zac has taken off his shirt and is down to his vest in the August heat of the bar, while Jake twirls his black rag again to ensure the crowd remain at fever pitch. ‘El Cascabel’, their encore song, is one final blitz of that addictive LA LOM sound, after which, in one final display of flamboyance, Jake takes his upright bass and holds it high above his head. Are you not entertained? the gesture seems to ask the thronging, roaring crowd.

How bright the sound has been tonight. So much of what is great in music, and in live music particularly, has been manifest in the performance of LA LOM. There has truly been no better place to be in the world for the last couple of hours than in the front row of the Jazz Café in Camden Town, as Zac Sokolow’s singing red guitar emits its perfect tone as naturally as breathing, Jake Faulkner spins his upright bass, and Nick Baker plays a conga with one hand and beats a drum with a maraca in the other.

In look and sound and energy, LA LOM represent something that we understandably thought lost to the world; that undiluted colour and vibrancy and guiltless, irrepressible fun that characterised the music of better times. It’s not something retro or reclaimed, but something reborn, made by a band that refuse to let a soul leave unmoved. It is irresistible, and it was in London tonight. If it is in your city it is essential that you go. It is not up for debate. I can say no more.

Setlist:

(all songs from the album The Los Angeles League of Musicians and written by Zac Sokolow, Jake Faulkner and Nick Baker, unless noted)

  1. Figueroa
  2. Danza de LA LOM
  3. Dane Dane Benleri Var (Neşet Ertaş) (unreleased)
  4. Los Sabanales (Calixto Ochoa) (unreleased)
  5. Eleno Kerko (unreleased)
  6. Astro Cumbia (unreleased)
  7. Moonlight Over Montebello
  8. Santee Alley (from LA LOM EP)
  9. Alacrán (single)
  10. Arriba Pichátaro (Daniel Plancarte Alejandre) (unreleased)
  11. Espejismo
  12. Ghosts of Gardena
  13. Tonta (Felipe Barrientos/Luis Elizondo) (unreleased)
  14. Belvedere (unreleased)
  15. Lorena
  16. Cumbia Arabe (Francisco Nicolás Bobadilla) (unreleased)
  17. La Danza Del Petrolero (Emerson Casanova Sanchez) (unreleased)
  18. Cumbia Medley (from Live at Thalia Hall)
    • El Paso Del Gigante (Albert Tlahuetl)
    • La Danza de Los Mirlos (Gilberto Reátegui)
    • Cumbia Sampuesana (José Joaquín Bettin Martínez)
  19. Me Robaron Mi Runa Mula (Noé Fachin) (unreleased)
  20. 6th St. (unreleased)
  21. Angels Point
  22. Al Wafa (with Rihab Azar) (unreleased)
  23. El Sonido de Los Mirlos (Gilberto Reátegui) (unreleased)
  24. Encore: El Cascabel (Lorenzo Barcelata) (unreleased)

My other concert reviews can be found here.

Gothic Revival: Toria Wooff Live at the Nordic Church

Saturday 26th July 2025

The Nordic Church, Liverpool, England

I’ve been blessed to experience many fine concerts, from stadia hosting legends such as Paul McCartney and Nick Cave to the likes of Kassi Valazza singing a Neil Young song in a bakery in York or her own remarkable songbook in churches of her own. But no concert has been so unique as this warm, bright Saturday evening in Liverpool, hearing Toria Wooff’s voice soar in the Nordic Church.

The Gustav Adolfs Kyrka is an impressive sight as you approach. It is a Swedish stave church, a rarity outside Scandinavia, though built out of familiar British redbrick. While its tall greyed spire is dwarfed by the more recent tower-block developments that encroach upon it along Liverpool’s waterfront, the church dominates the sky and steals the heart in a way those more soulless buildings never could.

By English standards the church is young; built in 1884 for itinerant Norse sailors and emigrants on their way to America, you enter under the black-and-gold sign that names this ‘Skandinaviska sjömanskyrkan’ (Scandinavian Seaman’s Church) and walk up two flights of narrow stairs to enter the nave. Unlike the conventional rectangular shape found in a typical English church, the nave of the Nordic Church is an eye-catching octagonal lantern shape. Bride-white walls host Gothic lancet windows through which the sun pours as I take my seat on an empty pew in the front row. I gaze up at the roof high above. More learned eyes than mine would be able to draw out the nuances of the kyrka‘s architecture, but I know enough to recognise the Gothic Revival elements both inside and outside the church.

This, perhaps, is why Toria Wooff has chosen the venue to host her night of music. Wearing a long black dress and black boots to match her jet-black hair, this self-professed Goth is undergoing a Gothic Revival of her own. In March she released her self-titled debut album, a powerful, nuanced collection of self-penned folk songs with tasteful touches of country and Americana. In May I saw her live in a packed basement in Manchester as part of her successful album tour and, after tonight, I will surely see her again in the autumn, for she reveals to the audience in the Nordic Church that she will be touring again in October. In the meantime, she is busy recording and tracking her next album with James Wyatt, her partner and producer, and we’re treated to five unreleased songs in the setlist tonight.

There’s no opening act; instead, Toria performs two sets with an intermission, during which she mingles with the audience. She does not perform alone: as on her earlier album tour, Toria’s voice and acoustic guitar are supported by Polly Virr, who seats the endpin of her cello into a strap extending from the leg of her chair. Unlike in Manchester, where my view of Polly was obscured, tonight I’m able to not only hear but see her cello’s vibrato and tasteful glissandos complement Toria’s songs. The luxurious sound of the cello has never felt so essential.

Appropriately enough, the opening song in this singular church is ‘The Bargain’, an unreleased song that seems to be about a deal made with the devil (“he appeared in trusted clothes, cuffed and collared around his throat”) that also doubles brilliantly as a song about an independent woman who risks being ensnared by a controlling man (“the only thing I ask you to be: a doting mother, a wife to me”). It’s a fine introduction to Toria’s sound: a powerfully-sung, intelligent song with a timeless folk melody.

‘The Bargain’ is one that Toria has picked alone on her guitar, but Polly now joins for a flurry of songs from the album; ‘Lefty’s Motel Room’, ‘Song for A’ and ‘Sweet William’, her cello sounding particularly fine on the latter song. Toria then goes solo again for ‘Mountains’. This was one of the first songs of hers that really grabbed my attention, and while, like ‘Lefty’ before it, the subtle country touches of the recorded version are missing from the live duo of guitar and cello, it still resonates from the eight walls of the Nordic chamber.

Many artists are diminished by having their songs stripped back. Toria Wooff’s songs, by contrast, feel like they could bloom in arid desert. There’s a strength to her songwriting that allows for flexibility, and the songs work just as well on stage with Polly’s cello as they do with the more textured soundscape James Wyatt helps provide on vinyl. Quite by chance, and without fanfare, I have in the North of England stumbled across one of the more impressive young songwriters I’ve had the privilege to hear live. Toria proves it further with a series of unreleased songs to end her first set: ‘House on the Hill’, inspired by Susan Hill’s Gothic novel The Woman in Black, is a future fan-favourite, while ‘Good Mother’ showcases her gift for melody. The closer, ‘Battering Ram’, is one Toria says she has never played live before. Picked softly and sung gently as a folk song, it fits my above thesis about the songs’ flexibility to a tee: I could easily imagine it being recorded as heavy metal.

‘Battering Ram’ is met with applause – as, deservedly, has every song before it. In contrast to the gig I witnessed in the basement in Manchester a couple of months ago, where Toria told jokes and anecdotes to a heaving crowd, each round of applause tonight has been met with an almost shy thank-you from the lady at the mike.

It’s almost certainly due to the nature of the venue: a sacrosanct church with an audience lined in pews implicitly demands a more consciously demure approach than the rowdy crowd who backed into that dark Manchester basement. Certainly, during the intermission Toria is as bright and outgoing as ever.

She greets me with a hug and is pleased I came; she had placed me on the guest list tonight as a token of gratitude for purchasing one of her canvases recently. (She’s a talented painter as well as a singer-songwriter. As for me, it feels good to be an art patron, like I’m a 16th-century Italian count.) Toria signs a concert poster for me, as does James. (“Some people care about the producer,” he teases her.) She glides around the room and smiles and chats, offering her attention to anyone who wishes for it. As I return to the front row, a corgi pokes its nose out from under the pew, roaming around in search of pats and rubs. It’s a good night.

I know you just want to see the doggo.

As Toria and Polly return to the stage for their second set, the stagelights brighten due to the slowly failing light outside. Perhaps inspired by the intermission’s canine concierge, Toria opens with ‘Black Shuck’, which she says is about “the demon dog of East Anglia… and what the dog did in a church in the 1500s”. I check under my pew to make sure the corgi hasn’t also been doing things in a church. Jokes aside, ‘Black Shuck’ is a fine song, as yet unreleased, with another bona fide English folk melody from Toria.

Now comes ‘The Flood’, a highlight of the night as it looks like both Toria and Polly particularly enjoy playing this one. The picking required on Toria’s guitar seems to energise her, as do the opportunities the song gives her voice to wail and soar. Polly is given her head too, weaving some cool vibrato flourishes into the performance. After the song ends, Toria is full of praise for Polly Virr from the mike. “She’s so good that in the set before, I actually played a song in the wrong key and didn’t know, and she just ran with it. So that’s why I keep her around.”

To reciprocate, Polly is moved to provide some of the most gorgeous cello sounds of the night, joining Toria’s voice in flight as the two soar on ‘Author Song’ and giving a cinematic through-line to ‘The Waltz of Winter Hey’. The latter is a real testament to Toria’s verisimilitude; she loves ghost stories, she says, and there’s not enough of them in Lancashire, so she decided to make her own. In her poet’s hands, this non-descript street of shopfronts in her hometown of Horwich (there’s an Aldi at one end of Winter Hey Lane, a nail parlour at the other) becomes a potent and foreboding place plagued by jealousy and the returning dead.

After another song, the sweet and simple palate-cleanser ‘That’s What Falling in Love Will Do’, Toria thanks the venue promoters, Mike Phoenix and Jon Edwards, for making the night happen (“they have such a good ethos with musicians”). At the end of the show, they will hold a raffle and hand out chocolates and wine to the winners, but in truth we’re all winners tonight. The venue, the seating, the audience and, of course, the music, have all been top drawer. My own ethos is never to seek out an artist before or after the show unless it happens naturally, and tonight it happens naturally. At the end of the night, I get another hug from Toria after she signs my setlist – another welcome surprise, for usually these sheets are swiped by fans before the artists’ footsteps have even finished echoing from the stage. But I stand around at the front to see if anyone else wants to take it before I do. No one does, and a beaming Toria is only too happy to sign it for me.

But before that time comes, Toria and Polly are still on stage, and they are yet to provide their finest moment. ‘See Things Through’ starts with Toria alone on her guitar. About a minute in, Polly comes in with that rich and resonant cello sound we’ve been so blessed with tonight. It’s an excellent song, one of those that indisputably deserves a wider audience. It’s sung with both vulnerability and remarkable power by an almost transcendent Toria Wooff; that chiaroscuro effect this lady in black in a white church is able to capture so impressively.

The song builds to its epic finale, Toria’s voice and Polly’s strings soaring in unison and falling in release. The applause which has greeted every song’s end tonight bursts spontaneously into roars for an encore. The duo oblige, with a gentle and calming rendition of ‘Estuaries’ to end the night. They are presented with garlands of flowers by Mike and Jon, and I grin as a sheepish James Wyatt is also called to the stage to take a deserved round of applause for his role in this music.

“You leave without saying goodbye,” Toria sang in that final song, and as an invited guest I determine not to slip out quietly into the night as I normally do at concerts. Toria signs the setlist for me, as I mentioned, but I’m also moved to thank her for the invitation and promising that I’ll certainly be coming to many more nights like this to witness her talent. I’m able to thank Polly too, and we talk about the night in Manchester. James is in a back-room somewhere, so as Toria walks past I touch her gently on the arm and ask her to say goodbye to him for me. It feels silly as I do so, and yet also natural; the warm welcome they have extended to me makes this moment feel like one of those gatherings of friends where you part and know you will come again. I descend the stairs to the exit, where Mike and Jon shake the hands of those who leave. I walk down the road on a summer evening that, despite the efforts of tonight’s Gothic revival, refuses to truly darken.

Setlist:

(no opening act; two full sets with intermission after ‘Battering Ram’)

(all songs from the album Toria Wooff and written by Toria Wooff, unless noted)

  1. The Bargain (unreleased)
  2. Lefty’s Motel Room
  3. Song for A
  4. Sweet William
  5. Mountains
  6. House on the Hill (unreleased)
  7. Good Mother (unreleased)
  8. Battering Ram (unreleased) [End of Set #1]
  9. Black Shuck (unreleased)
  10. The Flood
  11. Author Song
  12. The Waltz of Winter Hey
  13. That’s What Falling in Love Will Do
  14. See Things Through
  15. Encore: Estuaries

My other concert reviews can be found here.

My fiction writing can be found here.

© 2025 Mike Futcher

Theme by Anders NorénUp ↑