Dutch review here - the review looks positive despite the dodgy translation by Google!
"Richard Hawley may well be the nickname The Sheffield Sinatra invented by the Anglo-Saxon press his music, with his dark-romantic songs is the former guitarist of Pulp earlier indebted to artists like Scott Walker or Lee Hazlewood. No sensible person who doubts the superior quality of the man's work, but it was seen how good would come. His intimate songs in the big tent at their best Very good, as it turned while with "Let the ceremony begin 'scuffed Standing at the sky's end, which resulted in a fine jam.
In the first issue Hawley already illustrated that unadulterated romance and passionate guitar rock in a song can coalesce. Do not stare at the sun was the moving story of a perfect summer getaway with his son. A dreamy, lovely rocking song, but who listened carefully to the text spotted the dark side of the idyll. Tonight the streets are ours was so shamelessly romantic that only a musician of the size of Hawley get away with it. Leave you with body behind Hawley and his excellent band first went on the psychedelic tour, a harbinger of the mighty chunk acid rock we got presented in the lock. After first-rate versions of Before and open up your door (we spotted a couple of blissful slowend a few feet from us) Richard Hawley pulled out all the stops in There's a storm a comin ', a song as an approaching storm gained momentum railed. Close as he did with the long drawn out as energetic Down in the woods, which he proposed to the delight of everyone as "Susan" and a piece of children's song If you go down to the woods today processed. A powerful culmination of a perfect performance that comfortable for an hour or two had been allowed to take ..."
I thoroughly enjoyed the gig although I wish I'd have known about it earlier so I didn't miss the first 17 minutes