Honest, in-depth album reviews by KLOF Mag – championing and curating intelligent, uncompromising voices in contemporary and experimental music since 2004.
Albums
Featuring guests such as Kris Delmhorst, Pieta Brown, Tift Merritt and Kenneth Pattengale, Blood Brothers finds Foucault returning to his earlier folksier realms.
This is Brian Fallon’s third solo album since The Gaslight Anthem went on an indefinite hiatus. While the songs here are slow and reflective, Local Honey hits the sweet spot.
With its electro textures, Basia Bulat’s latest offering is probably her poppiest release to date. Are you in love? She asks. You will be – with this album.
On Waterbound, those all-important qualities of spontaneity and togetherness come across brilliantly, and in spades. Also, Alden Patterson & Dashwood have lavished just as much love and care on the package for this live album as they did on its predecessors.
This is an album that owes everything to the interconnectedness of things and is well aware of that fact… It is elemental and challenging music, but such is the skill of Apneseth and his band it feels beautifully simple.
Huam has something of the magic of an untrodden path about it. It rewards deep listening…light and quick, profound and full of care, it is an album of serenely balanced opposites. Also watch their new video for Mountain Of Gold.
To mark his 30th anniversary, Brooks Williams revisits his back catalogue to re-record some of his favourite songs along with an impressive array of guests including John McCusker, Christine Collister, Aaron Catlow and Jim Henry.
This brand new offering from the intensely versatile Swan-Dyer partnership is the product of their latest obsession – contra dance music. Don’t be sidetracked by its primarily dance-based rationale, but treat it as a pure – and purely enjoyable – listening experience.
Amalie Bruun successfully bridges the gap between Death Metal and acoustic folk making Folkesange an album you owe it to yourself to hear again and again.
Pavey Ark’s debut album tugs at the emotions with joy and sorrow in equal measure. Close Your Eyes And Think Of Nothing is, in a sense, a call to arms from a band that demands to be heard. It is a perfect antidote for these uncertain days.
Rattle on the Stovepipe’s “Through The Woods” is possibly even finer than their previous albums while Dave Arthur’s new release is a compilation of sorts, spanning the 15+ years of Dave’s tenure with the band he himself founded back in the early-noughties.
