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

The Story Song Scientists is a wonderfully intriguing release which showcases intelligent songwriting and delightful voices in equal measure.  I hope that we have have not seen or heard the last of their working together to produce music of the finest quality.

by Thomas Blake

On Stick In The Wheel’s second ‘From Here’ compilation well-known interpreters of traditional song rub shoulders with experimental folkies while Brit-folk royalty has a place at the table alongside impassioned protest-singers.

by Mike Davies

A consummate songwriter, Tivel’s attention to detail, both physical and emotional, draws you into the worlds her songs describe and inhabit, sometimes leaving you in tears, sometimes filled with radiance. Seek your answers within.

by Glenn Kimpton

I have believed for a long time that there is magic contained in forms of improvised music that cannot be found in others and this album by Cormac Byrne and Adam Summerhayes certainly backs that theory. Their Stone Soup project is the best thing I have heard so far this year.

by Rachel Lynne Wilkerson

Wherever you find yourself on the way “From A to B,” The Diamond Family Archive offers you a mind-bending soundtrack en route. The sonorous landscapes in the album are unmistakably British and peculiarly beautiful.

by Mike Davies

The Melted Morning is Danni Nicholls’ follow-up to her critically acclaimed 2017 sophomore release Mockingbird Lane. It ends on a track that warrants country classic status and a queue of artists looking to cover it. Her best yet.

by Ken Abrams

Sincere and effective songwriting doesn’t always come together. Jefferson Hamer does an outstanding job on Alameda, carving out his own niche in the current folk arena while paying tribute to the masters.

by Donald MacNeill

Innes Watson’s highly anticipated debut solo album ‘Guitar Colloquium’ speaks volumes and is full of emotion. It is the complete antithesis of self-indulgent.

by Mike Davies

Jonathan Seale was born in Texas and raised in the jungles of South America where he was dubbed Son of Cloud by the Yukpa, providing a springboard for a debut solo album that delves into the notion of family tribes, both inherited and created.

by Richard Hollingum

Restitute came out of necessity and a feeling of personal responsibility towards her friends. Here is a collection of diverse songs that clearly mean a lot to her …a singer at the height of her power.

by Peter Shaw

On their latest EP, English folk trio Faustus tackle the Lancashire Cotton Famine which brought great hardship, unemployment and hunger among working people. They bring the ghosts of the past to life in their own unique way.

by Mike Davies

Ida Wenøe tells her audience to look inside and realise that what you have may be worth more than what you’re chasing, to find the patience to be in and enjoy the moment instead of always seeking for the next one. Take a breath, soak it in and be touched by its magic.

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