Albums

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

by Dave McNally

Bryony Griffith & Alice Jones’ “A year too late and a month too soon’ is traditional folk music at its most beguiling. An immersive album on which the songs are centre stage, performed by two of Yorkshire’s finest, delivered with absolute conviction and palpable charm.

by Philip Soanes

After a two year hiatus, Karl Culley makes a welcome return with his cathartic Redshift. The EP precedes a full-length album planned for release later this year.

by Mike Davies

Rupert Wates returns to his roots in English folk music for his latest album which he says is “a love song to humanity”, the music “of the people, by the people, for the people”. Power to the people, indeed.

by Mike Davies

Broken Hearts & Dirty Windows, the second volume homage to the late great John Prine does ample justice to his talent and legacy, this is a terrific collection.

by Alex Gallacher

Featuring a number of special guests including Laura-Beth Salter and Rachel Hair, Paul Tasker returns with a beautifully vibrant instrumental album Tierra Quemada.

by Mike Davies

Joined once again by The Orphan Brigade and a number of guest musicians, Amy Speace’s Tuscon is a stunning and deeply affecting work, a catharsis for her and an epiphany for all who hear it.

by Bob Fish

Dena Miller has one of those voices so incredibly high and pure that, at times, it’s almost shocking the things she sings about as Deer Scout on her debut album, Woodpecker.

by Mike Davies

Featuring an all-star ensemble of Nashville musicians, Molly Tuttle delivers her first all-bluegrass album and Nonesuch debut with Crooked Tree – In a forest of Americana saplings, Tuttle is a sturdy evergreen whose roots cling deep.

by Bob Fish

The music of Calexico’s El Mirador creates an ever-changing multicultural kaleidoscope of the American southwest. Along the way, you discover that while the sounds may seem foreign, they are also intoxicating.

by Glenn Kimpton

Controlled Burning is a mind-bender of an album featuring duets from guitarist Eli Winter and keyboard and synthesizer artist Jordan Reyes – unashamedly bonkers in places and calm and sedate in others.

by Mike Davies

VanWyck’s ‘The Epic Tale Of the Stranded Man’ is a major work that clearly, like the ancient epics on which it draws, serves as a cautionary mirror to society, it’s a stunning creation and surely, at some point, demands a dramatic multi-media staging.

by Richard Hollingum

Shifting away from his previous unique stripped-back style, Nick Hart Sings Ten English Folk Songs features a surprisingly wide variety of instruments and some impressively alluring multi-layered arrangements. He carries these folk songs on into the current time, giving them new life and extending their long history.

This site uses cookies. By continuing to use the site you consent to their use. Close and Accept Use of Cookies on KLOF Mag