As the sky threatens to rain, we head into the safety of the Uncut tent to see Alela Diane.

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The American singer-songwriter, joined by a four-piece band, including a subtle backing singer, performs her woozy country-tinged songs to a good-sized crowd.

Her voice is a very fluid instrument, picking up the slack where the songwriting may not be memorable enough โ€“ her pronunciation of โ€˜canyonโ€™ alone on one song is enough to sustain attention for the whole track.

โ€˜White As Diamondsโ€™ gets a big cheer from the crowd, but itโ€™s the tribal, meditative closer โ€˜The Oceanโ€™ that really hints at the more interesting avenues Diane could pursue in the future.

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The rainโ€™s coming down thick and fast, so the tent fills up to bursting point โ€“ a good bit of fortune for Aboriginal singer Gurrumul, up next.

Backed by a string quartet, double bassist and classical guitarist, the blind singerโ€™s tracks are a little bit too โ€˜Pan Pipe Moodsโ€™ โ€“ if it wasnโ€™t for his voice, that is.

Soaring over the (far too) tasteful strings and folk-derived guitar picking, Gurrumulโ€™s voice is a tremulous wonder, stretching from guttural rumbles to almost unnerving animal-like cries.

Itโ€™s a moving performance. Perhaps Gurrumulโ€™s putting in all his reserves today because (as his double bassist says) the monsoon-like conditions remind him of home.

An act who donโ€™t quite get the same comfort from the rain are The Rumble Strips. Out on the main Obelisk Arena stage, they start their set with only a small crowd due to the harsh weather.

The sun begins to peek out, though, as they continue and the audience swells. Their earlier material features their best songs, for example, โ€˜Girls And Boys In Loveโ€™, but itโ€™s their newer, Mark Ronson-produced work that impresses most live, due to the fuller instrumentation and more reliance on keyboards and strings than horns.

As much as they deny it, thereโ€™s a real Dexys feel to their music โ€“ in the sprightly rhythms and Charlie Wallerโ€™s sonorous, soulful voice โ€“ and itโ€™s both their strength and their weakness.

As the sun comes out during โ€˜Motorcycleโ€™, though, Latitudeโ€™s loving it.

TOM PINNOCK