Filmed at The Lilliput Press in Dublin, Ye Vagabonds’ live performance of Mayfly finds Brían and Diarmuid Mac Gloinn joined by Alain McFadden on harmonium, synths and mandolin, Kate Ellis on cello, and Caimin Gilmore on double bass. Taken from their acclaimed album All Tied Together, it’s a warm, unhurried rendering of a song about loss, belonging, and the people who slip quietly away.
Tristan Allen has shared the video for Act III: Rite, the latest visual from Osni the Flare, out March 27th via RVNG Intl. The album — a creation myth spanning several acts — was built from toy instruments, ocarinas, and wordless vocals recorded in a Brooklyn apartment overlooking a cemetery. With each new video, Allen’s meticulous, puppet-threaded world of myth and fire comes further into view.
Camille Camille returns with In A Song, a dusty and atmospheric new single out now via Labelman. Built around insistent train-like percussion and ambitious fingerpicking, the track sees Belgian singer-songwriter Camille Willemart leaning into psychedelic folk territory — restless, searching, and quietly assured. The first taste of an upcoming album, it’s an ode to doubt and the pull of new beginnings.
Grief can do strange things to a songwriter. For Alela Diane, the death of Portland folk legend Michael Hurley last year didn’t close a door — it flung one wide open. Who’s Keeping Time?, her seventh album and debut on Loose Music, arrives May 22nd as a communal, attic-recorded reckoning with time, memory, and the enduring pull of song. Listen to lead single ‘California’.
Juni Habel has shared the video for Stand So Still, the latest single from her upcoming third album Evergreen In Your Mind (out April 10th via Basin Rock). Shot by Malin Longva at Verdens Ende, Norway, the visuals match the song’s quiet ambiguity — a folk gem that opens like something ancient before drifting, on Habel’s voice alone, somewhere entirely its own.
Hen Ogledd have shared the video for End of the Rhythm, the final single from their new album DISCOMBOBULATED (out February 20th). Directed by James Hankins and rooted in the gaudy euphoria of early 90s rave visuals, it’s a fitting companion to what KLOF’s Thomas Blake calls “their most consistent, relevant and boundary-pushing record yet.” The band also announce an 8-hour London sound-ritual this June.
Buck Meek’s The Mirror is the work of a true American outsider, one who understands that creativity is always a collaboration and a lineage. Whether channelling dusty Texan country or something stranger and more introverted, Meek — aided by Big Thief bandmate James Krivchenia’s light-touch production — stretches these songs into unusual shapes without ever losing sight of their warm, beating hearts.
Abigail Lapell shares “Hazel,” the first single from forthcoming album Shadow Child — a nine-song cycle written during pregnancy after years of IVF and loss. Featuring Jill Barber, the track is a spare lullaby addressed to a child whose existence remains uncertain, its plucked guitar drifting through childhood imagery — sandcastles, snow angels, a name carried off on the summer air.
Wendy Eisenberg has shared Old Myth Dying, the second single from their forthcoming self-titled album, out April 3rd via Joyful Noise Recordings. Written during a fever in early 2024, the track pairs an urgent vocal performance with polyrhythmic guitar work, and signals a compelling shift toward folk songcraft — drawing on John Prine, Gillian Welch, and Joanna Newsom — after a decade of genre-spanning work.
Visible Cloaks have announced Paradessence, their third album, and shared lead single Disque featuring Motion Graphics. The Portland duo’s follow-up to the acclaimed Reassemblage draws its title from Alex Shakar’s concept of paradoxical essence — the schismatic core that makes something desirable through contradiction. The accompanying video, directed by Grade Eterna and Spencer Doran, transforms a London greenhouse into an uncanny 3D point cloud.
A new weekly playlist featuring Kim Deal, Tōth, Hiss Golden Messenger, My Precious Bunny, Rolan Brival, Ora Cogan, Bonnie “Prince” Billy, Lemoncello, Barry Walker Jr., Matt Kivel, More Eaze, Tenderness and more.
The latest KLOF Mixtape is an eclectic offering, featuring Cinder Well, whom many are discovering for the first time thanks to “The Wise Man’s Song”, the theme to the BBC Drama Small Prophets. Plus we’ve also music from Jenny Lysander, Cynefin, Northern Flyway (ft. Jenny Sturgeon, Inge Thomson, Sarah Hayes, Jason Singh), Frankie Archer, Malmin, Sourdure, Elle Osborne, Matt Kivel, M G Boulter, Sam Moss, Damien Jurado and The Lords.
The latest Monday Morning Brew playlist is just under two hours long and features music from Catrin Finch, Mitski, Charlotte Cornfield, Iron & Wine, Jesca Hoop, Majke Voss, Gia Margaret, Rob Noyes, Benedicte Maureseth, Tucker Zimmerman, and lots more.
Another Brew playlist, ft. Swelt, Ye Vagabonds, Damien Jurado, Joe Harvey-Whyte & Geir Sunstøl, Chris Brain, Little Mazarn, Quest Ensemble, Benedicte Maureseth & Ensemble neoN, Marta Del Grandi, Penny Arcade, Mike Tod, Barry Walker Jr., Balladeste, Ana Silvera & Saied Silbak, Maz O’Connor, Michael Cormier-O’Leary, and more
Very few come sprinkled with the kind of magic dust that coats the new album by Georgia Shackleton. A sense of history seeps into every corner of the recording. These songs are timeless and wise, bright and intricate, shot through with polar light and the glint of the sea. “From the Floorboards” is an album with a story behind it, and that story is worth telling.
L.Y.R. share the title track from their forthcoming album Dark Sky Reservation, out 3rd April via Real World Records. Named for those regions where light pollution is outlawed, the song turns that environmental concept inward — into doubt, hesitation, and the uneasy beauty of the unknown. Richard Walters’ ethereal vocals and Armitage’s dry spoken word make for a quietly devastating pairing.
Marisa Anderson’s The Anthology of UnAmerican Folk Music, Vol. 1 draws from the late Harry Smith’s vast private collection to present nine guitar arrangements sourced from regions the US has been in conflict with since 1970. First single Taqsim for Guitar offers a meticulous reworking of a 1955 Syrian field recording — Anderson’s fretted instrument reaching, carefully, toward music it was never designed to hold.
North Carolina duo Tacoma Park have shared “Untied,” the first reveal from their forthcoming album Baltimore, due April 24th via Centripetal Force. Mastered by Chuck Johnson, the album finds Ben Felton and John Harrison at their most intentional — editing sprawling improvisations into something focused and cinematic, with electronics and acoustic instrumentation suspended in generous, deliberate space. Vinyl preorders are open now.
Our latest Off the Shelf guest is Sam Amidon. In this series, we ask an artist to select ten items from their home, photograph and talk about them; a form of storytelling through objects. Sam, along with Finnish violinist Pekka Kuusisto and the Norwegian Chamber Orchestra, will launch their new album Willows at Kings Place on 24th February–an 80-minute concert of remembrance and renewal.
Shane Parish takes on the music of English electronic duo Autechre, re-imagining ten of the band’s 1990s songs solo on his Taylor acoustic — ultra-minimalist and organic. The intricacy of the numerous patterns becomes clearer with each listen, time signatures and tempos working together to create a tapestry of beautifully accomplished acoustic playing. Super clean, incredibly precise, and simply a pleasure to listen to — Autechre Guitar is a stunner.
Natalie Wildgoose has shared Nobody on the Path, the lead single from her forthcoming EP Rural Hours (15th April, state51). Wrapping her trembling vocals in guitar, piano, banjo and violin, the track draws on the physical rhythms of solitary moorland walking — music that moves the way the title suggests.
On ‘The Call,’ Montreal-based quartet Bellbird turn jazz presumptions upside down, with the rhythm section dictating form while horns take care of tempo and sonic character. Even as they run with carefree abandon, they never lose the listener. Every track features juicy melodies and audio patterns that are pleasing to the ears, launching themselves on a flight that sounds rather timeless.
Joshua Burnside’s “The Last Armchair” opens with a brutal intimacy: “Oh, The last armchair you ever sat on / Before you overdosed / Is the one I sit in every morning / To eat my egg and toast;” the Belfast songwriter revealing how grief strips away every carefully constructed illusion of adulthood, that beneath mortgages and responsibilities we’re all still waiting for reassurance.
Hen Ogledd’s third album, DISCOMBOBULATED, is fresh, weird, pranksterish, passionate and downright uncategorisable as we have come to expect. Their blend of freaky electronic folk-rock, politically charged psych-pop and modernist compositional techniques is elusive, bewildering and brilliant—music that seems to invent new colours. Admirably anti-bigotry, anti-corporate, anti-corruption. Their most consistent, relevant and boundary-pushing record yet.
Lemoncello reveal their new single “Meet Me Halfway”, their first new music since last year’s self-titled debut. Written in a clifftop cabin overlooking the Skellig Islands and later recorded with co-producer Ruth O’Mahony-Brady, the six-minute track explores modern disconnection through sparse guitar, voice, and distant strings—a quietly persuasive meditation on vulnerability and connection.
The Notwist have shared “Projectors,” a new single from one of 2026’s most anticipated albums, News from Planet Zombie (March 13th via Morr Music). The track offsets burbling electronics against country-tinged songwriting, featuring guests Enid Valu, Haruka Yoshizawa, Chris Xiao, and Mathias Götz. The band describes the lyrics as “written as if Rutger Hauer could sing them in Blade Runner.”
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