Honest, in-depth album reviews by KLOF Mag – championing and curating intelligent, uncompromising voices in contemporary and experimental music since 2004.
Albums
Dark and yet cleansing, while the skies that Cinder well sings of may be overcast, there is a light that shines through this album that warms the chill in the soul.
Samantha Crain’s most personal album to date, crafted to reflect how her life changed over the past three years, focusing not on the past but a brighter future.
Expanding contributions and embracing The Jayhawks’ broader influences, XOXO’s wide-ranging musical moods reaches out to a wider audience while never disappointing the faithful.
Sofia Talvik revisits Paws of a Bear for a stripped-back rework featuring just voice and guitar, all one take re-recordings that bring an added intimacy to the pervasive melancholia.
In many ways this could be seen as a companion piece to 13 Rivers – it should find a home amongst any music collection belonging to lovers of rich, melodic, song composition.
Northumbria is truly authentic, it both connects and communicates with a brutal honesty and warrants investigation. I, for one, look forward to future music from ConChie.
An album that picks up steam and spirit moving on to better days, Suzanne Vallie’s Love Lives Where Rules Die lights the darkness that can live within our hearts.
Born in Tribes is an auspicious debut and Lisa Marini has the potential to be one of the most significant voices of the next decade and beyond.
While all of her previous releases have been outstanding, this is in another league entirely, unquestionably one of the finest albums of the year and her personal Sirius.
