15th May 2022 7:30 pm - 11:30 pm Ramsgate Music Hall - CT11 8NJ

Edinburgh singer-songwriter Hamish Hawk creates chamber pop songs that have swallowed both a dictionary and a compendium of modern urban (and island) fairy tales…

Experience the characters, incidents, emotions, geographical and artistic references live at RMH on May 15th. An exceptional evening of music awaits us!

“Hamish Hawk oozes class as a live performer. His darting stares and hand theatrics draw you in while his music does all the talking”The Skinny


Vivian Comma paints the Madonna, visibly on the verge of fainting. Christopher Wren walks amongst us once more, forswearing designing cathedrals for singing them. One half of the 1973 Mauritian Badminton Doubles Champions has a perfect serve. The boy who inhabits Track Three of John Lennon’s Imagine repeat-dials, passive-aggressively, to Tiree. A funeral, swinging to the Gay Gordons. A latter-day Paul the Apostle is offended by the sight of Edinburgh Castle – and, infinitesimally worse, can’t finish a beer.

These are the people and places, scenes and scenarios of the songs of Hamish Hawk.

Rich of voice and even richer of imagination, the singer-songwriter from Edinburgh creates musical pen-portraits as vivid in lyric as they are in melody. In all the wholly best ways, these are chamber pop songs that have swallowed both a dictionary and a compendium of modern urban (and island) fairy tales. And, on Heavy Elevator, his first fully-formed album, this prolific artist presents a perfect ten tracks packed with characters, incident, emotion, geographical/artistic references and tunes to hang your coat on. Hawk does all this with considerable wit, inspired by artists like Leonard Cohen, Morrissey (the olden days version), Jarvis Cocker, Randy Newman, and Stephin Merritt of Magnetic Fields.


“It is the most exquisite combination of Leonard Cohen’s storytelling timbre and Howard Devoto’s Magazine era edgy post-punk vocals”At the Barrier

“Both equally beguiling and harrowing”Into Creative

“There’s no getting away from his rich baritone which lends a chamber pop feel… his croon evoking the likes of Scott Walker and the Divine Comedy’s Neil Hannon”The Scotsman