Albums

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

by David Pratt

Falling More Slowly is a masterclass in song-writing and performance from one of our most-under-rated singer/songwriters.  Here’s hoping that we don’t have to wait another 50 years for his next solo release.

by Thomas Blake

Catherine Rudie’s ability to create vivid moods from often sparse ingredients is a rare gift – she can make you feel as if you inhabit the dream-spaces of these songs, and then return you to the real world with a bump.

by Mike Davies

Just four months after releasing the studio version of Western Stars, now comes the soundtrack to the cinematic film version recorded live in Bruces own nearly 100-year-old barn.

by Seán Purser

Seán Purser shares his highlights and photographs from Cape Breton’s Celtic Colours International Festival, an unforgettable 9-day celebration that is Staged in more than 300 venues around the island.

by David Auckland

‘Flux’ takes tide and time as its theme, but uses it ferociously to highlight the inequality and selfishness that we have introduced into our world. This is surely Rachael Dadd’s most potent work to date.

by Glenn Kimpton

Dusk could soon be considered one of the more important contemporary instrumental acoustic guitar recordings, and J. R. Bohannon a key player in the genre.

by David Weir

Of all the artists working within the rather loose confines of alternative folk The Livelong Day surely puts Lankum at the forefront. Writhing with the terror of our times one moment, then rising with indescribable heart and hunger the next; this is traditional song stretched and submerged.

by Mike Davies

Hannah Rose Platt follows up her well-received debut, Portraits, with a second set of variously musically lively and more reflective Americana-veined songs, featuring vocals from Sid Griffin and Danny George Wilson.

by Mike Davies

Eight albums in and it’s clear that Annie & Rodd Capps, while not looking to shake up the formula or push any envelopes, are holding their own on ‘When They Fall’.

by Bob Fish

The Peanut Butter Falcon is a story about what it means to be alive, living out your dreams and following where those dreams call you. Musically, the soundtrack follows a similar path merging styles and genres to detail a pathway between dreams and reality.

by Thomas Blake

They can be cosmopolitan in one breath, ethereal in the next. Their songs can be sad and yearning or darkly humorous. Their arrangements can sound, almost at once, ancient and startlingly contemporary. The rapid evolution of Bird In The Belly into one of our finest folk acts is a joy to behold.

by Matt McGinn

I could say that Terms of Surrender is infectious, intelligent and bewitching, but more than that, its just SO SO GOOD!!…the backbeat, the rhythm guitars, the hooks, but most of all the infectious and laid back tone and phrasing of lead man, M.C. Taylor

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