7/10
Tim Watt’s 'Scenes From The Jazz Age' is a living portrait of a world once defined by roaring hedonism and quiet reckoning. With a poetic lens and a voice steeped in ache and elegance, Watt reaches back across a hundred years of inspiration to draw poignant parallels between then and now, when the shine of excess often hides the weight of longing.
Instead of mimicking a bygone sound, Watt rebrands it for a modern ear. Distilling the emotional temperature of the 1920s into a momentary sparkle before it slips away. His songwriting bears the fingerprints of great lyricists including Leonard Cohen’s slow-burning intimacy, Bob Dylan’s layered storytelling, and the raw honesty of Neil Young, but it never feels derivative. Tracks like 'City Shadows' and 'Mind' weave delicate melodies with phrases that feel both timeless and entirely his own.
But what gives 'Scenes From The Jazz Age' its staying power is its quiet strength. There’s no effort to dazzle for the sake of it. The arrangements are tastefully restrained, allowing the production and his hushed vocals to take the spotlight.
'Scenes From The Jazz Age' is an album for late nights, cracked windows, and reflections that don’t quite resolve. It’s a companion for the dreamers who feel like they were born in the wrong era and the realists who know every glittering age has its shadows. In Tim Watt’s world, beauty is always just a little bit broken, and all the more moving because of it.