Honest, in-depth album reviews by KLOF Mag – championing and curating intelligent, uncompromising voices in contemporary and experimental music since 2004.
Albums
Every line feels crafted, the lyrics exude a mix of storytelling, spirituality, wit, passion and poetry. It would be criminal if this weren’t nominated for the next Mercury prize.
Afrik Toun Mé is passionate yet complex in its sonic palette, the vocal structures, dynamism of the textures and utterly compelling rhythms produce an alchemy all of their own.
Lightning, Show Us Your Stuff, finds veteran singer-songwriter Grant-Lee Phillips addressing the strange fragility of life.
With ‘Into The Depths of Hell’, Belfast-based Joshua Burnside delivers yet another challenging but electrifying album. Potent and thought-provoking, it’s one to cherish.
Memories are strange things and Annie Dressner’s memories from Coffee at the Corner Bar enable listeners to enter a world they may never have visited, but probably understand better than they think.
McVittie never loses the wide-eyed sense of wonder at the poetry of the natural world. If she set out to reflect that beauty and wonder in music, she has succeeded admirably.
Joshua Burnell grabs our attention and imagination with this brilliantly accessible album, bursting at the seams with ideas, imagery and an assured ability with melody and song structure. Outstanding.
As well as demonstrating great taste, Dana Gavanski’s ‘Wind Songs’ doesn’t simply recreate old arrangements, it celebrates classic material making it live for new generations.
Wells describes The United State as being about what it means to be human, of the journey from cradle to grave and what connects us along the way
