Brighton’s favourite unsung star put on a charming, intimate and enchanting show.

Chris T-T has long been receiving critical acclaim for his folk/punk music – what he describes as “my usual sweary political stuff” – but has remained largely under the mainstream radar. And it’s for the best if he keeps taking tangents like the one he did here.

This show, called “Disobedience”, was made up almost entirely of original music he has composed to go with AA Milne’s poetry from the 1920s – and it worked to brilliant effect.

In the intimate venue he switched between guitar and piano and performed songs like Halfway Up The Stairs, Squares And Lines and Binker, which were all silly enough for the children at this family-friendly lunchtime event but dark enough for the adult contingent too.

It fed perfectly into some of T-T’s own “songs with less swearing and politics” – the amusing Giraffes and poignant Seven Hearts.

Musically this was an excellent show, thanks in no small part to T-Ts compelling voice, and the whole gig was delivered with a warmth which gave the crowd little choice but to leave in appropriately festive good spirits.