Albums

Honest, in-depth album reviews by KLOF Mag – championing and curating intelligent, uncompromising voices in contemporary and experimental music since 2004.

by Billy Rough

With ‘Cross The Rolling Water’, Hannah Read & Michael Starkey have delivered a gem of a recording, an infectious, dynamic, richly layered album that’s a timeless, irresistible and thoroughly entertaining treat.

by Glenn Kimpton

Featuring a number of special guests including Sierra Hull and Kate Rusby, Damien O’Kane and Ron Block reunite once more on Banjophonics, a rich and rewarding album filled with energy, emotion and a huge heart.

by Mike Davies

The Often Herd, an Anglo-American UK-based four-piece, deliver an assured debut with ‘Where The Big Lamp Shines’, a melting pot of psychedelia, folk-rock, bluegrass and jazz.

by Thomas Blake

These songs are funny, sad, hopeful and mordant, and they are always melodically satisfying and musically accomplished. More than twenty albums into their career The Wave Pictures are producing their best and most stylistically varied work.

by Mike Davies

On his latest release, Steve Earle doffs the cap to the cowboy troubadour Jerry Jeff Walker who passed away in 2020 and shines a light on his great songs.

by Mike Davies

Understudy, Boo Hewerdine’s tenth solo album, finds him in a reflective mood. Despite the title, he consistently proves, as he does here, that he’s second to no one.

by Mike Davies

Oklahoma indie-folk twin sisters Jo and Sophia Babb mark their Companion debut with ‘Second Day Of Spring’, a sincere, weighted and original offering.

by Peter Shaw

Celebrating three decades of incredible music that has touched the hearts of so many, ’30: Happy Returns’ can’t be faulted. Take a bow, Kate Rusby, and keep shining your light.

by David Pratt

The Slocan Ramblers’ ‘Up the Hill and Through the Fog’ is a finely crafted release featuring tremendous instrumentals and painstakingly constructed songs that address difficult subjects whilst maintaining a keen sense of optimism and making high energy tracks sound effortless. It’s their best yet.

by David Pratt

Beja Power! succeeds eminently in being a powerful act of defiance, an acclamation and testament of devotion for Beja culture and a thoroughly enjoyable musical experience.

by Bob Fish

Ian Siegal has created an album fitting for a man who builds his music “Stone By Stone,” Illustrating just how much effort he infuses in every note. This is a classic from a true craftsman.

by Mike Davies

The soft and gentle musical arrangements of Grant-Lee Phillips’ ‘All That You Can Dream’ may catch you off guard as these are arguably some of the most potent songs he’s written. Lyrically this is very much the iron fist in the velvet glove.

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