Though he spent most of his formative years in the grim surroundings of 1980s Belfast, singer/songwriter Foy Vance's musical vision is the product of an entirely different sort of nervous tension -- the cross-racial friction, harmony, and disharmony that gave rise to jazz, blues, and soul in the American South, where Vance, the son of a traveling church minister, spent the pivotal first five years of his life. Emerging in the early 2000s, Vance took his cues from the likes of Otis Redding and Nina Simone, adjusting his own guttural singing style accordingly, with his distinctive Northern Irish lilt finding an obvious point of comparison in similarly styled compatriot Van Morrison.