Honest, in-depth album reviews by KLOF Mag – championing and curating intelligent, uncompromising voices in contemporary and experimental music since 2004.
Albums
While EP2 owes more to American Roots than EP1, when the musicians are as good as this, the influences matter less than the intimacy of the playing. This is a group of musicians playing the music that they love, and doing it better than just about anyone else.
Calexico’s Seasonal Shift offers us a hefty helping of cheer from locales all around the world, at a time when we need it most. Plus, watch their new video featuring Bombino.
If you want to get to the heart and soul of Reveal Records, then bring this compilation into your home and let some inspired music light up your life…one of our finest modern-day record label collectives.
The songs on Tobias Ben Jacob’s ‘Refuge’ are important and significant and deserve to be heard. One of the best, certainly the most emotionally powerful, albums I’ve heard for many years.
With his slightly unorthodox approach to traditional music, Rowan Leslie has created a set of music that attempts the feat of Escaping the Dawn. While that may seem like something of a fool’s mission, this album clearly is not.
Songs of Govan Old is not only an album bursting with pride and passion to stir the heart and blood of any Scot, but a damn fine listen even if you don’t have a tartan stitch to your DNA.
Henry Martin, the latest offering from Edgelarks (Hannah Martin and Phillip Henry) is an album filled with positivity – resolutely optimistic, brilliantly played and a joy from start to finish.
Variations Live is simultaneously harmonious, vital, timeless, and invigoratingly fresh, featuring three masters at work and clearly relishing the joy and companionship of playing together. For players and listeners, it genuinely doesn’t get much better than this.
Jennifer Castle’s “Monarch Season” heralds a passage of time, a change of seasons, yet inside the human heart, questions still remain. There is beauty in continuing to look for answers.
Working river: Songs and music of the Thames is a fine collection of some of the songs and tunes that captures the history of one of the most vibrant and historic rivers in the world.
Says The Never Beyond is an impressive achievement by any standards, for it delivers a startlingly innovative approach to the performance of the deep seasonal repertoire. A thrilling and utterly hypnotic ride through the wintersong repertoire.
