
#42: Knowledge : Edwyn Collins
The way the music industry has changed so much in recent times can be exemplified by the way Nation Shall Speak Unto Nation, the tenth studio album to be released by Edwyn Collins, was promoted.
There was an advance single:-
mp3: Edwyn Collins – Knowledge
It never came out in any physical format but was posted to various digital and streaming platforms on 15 January 2025, while a beautiful and rather moving video was made available via Edwyn’s YouTube page. The video was also used by a number of on-line publications to highlight that a new album was forthcoming.
The album came out on AED Records on 14 March. Sales wise, both in terms of the number of physical copies sold on vinyl/CD or downloads via the usual places out there, it didn’t trouble too many charts, although it was listed at #7 in the UK Independent Albums Chart and #8 in the Scottish Albums Chart. The handful of reviews were unanimously in praise of the songs and music, with this, from Phil Mondegrien in The Guardian, being atypical.
Recorded at his home studio in Helmsdale in north Scotland with musicians including his son, William, there is a sense that Edwyn Collins’s 10th solo album – and his fifth since two life-changing strokes in 2005 – is about homecoming, coming full circle, marking the end of a journey. Quite apart from the explicit references to the village in which he lives on The Bridge Hotel, he sings elsewhere of “winding my way back home”.
There’s also a sense of reckoning. The title track alludes to the speech problems caused by his ill health: “Back when the words came easily/ I had the answer to everything”, something also touched upon on Knowledge. Indeed, his lyrics are equally thoughtful and thought-provoking throughout, the musicianship sensitive and never seizing the spotlight from his still distinctive baritone. Paper Planes and It Must Be Real are particularly beautifully realised; the rousing The Heart Is a Foolish Little Thing conceals rueful and tender sentiments. Collins has just announced a farewell tour for the autumn. One has to hope this compassionate, empathetic record is not his farewell album too.
I’ve a feeling that Edwyn is going to ease his way into retirement – he is after all just a month short of his 67th birthday. But then again, he’s always had a huge work ethic, and I’m quite sure he still retains a creative spark, so who can say?
There were two further videos made for songs on this album
And with that, this series comes to an end.
It’s one I’ve particularly enjoyed writing given that the songs featured harked back initially to my teenage years, before following me through my student days and then decades of gainful employment, and finally into an age when I now look forward to all-seated gigs above all else.
Thanks for all your comments and supportive words.






















