Albums

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

by Mike Davies

Evening Machines is Gregory Alan Isakov’s first album of new material in five years. Listening to the album has been described as being enfolded in a comfortable solitude; settle down and enjoy the glow and the hum.

by Mike Davies

Healy’s second album steps up a level from her 2014 debut. One of the finest Americana albums out of the UK this year, Healy doesn’t just keep the flame alight, she ensures it blazes.

by Thomas Blake

For listeners unacquainted with Quebecois folk music they have created an eloquent document of a musical form that is very much alive, but just as importantly they have put down a feisty, foot-stomping collection of unusual and highly rewarding tunes.

by David Kidman

Jaywalkers return with ‘Time to Save the World’. The musicianship is truly tasty: both deft and impeccable but never soulless while their togetherness and interplay is mesmerising and attention-grabbing…

by Ken Abrams

Strike the Match is an excellent new release from the Boston, MA-based band Billy Wylder. The band blends a fresh indie-folk sound with compelling lyrics to create a joyful listening experience.

by Mike Davies

Four years on from her Chasing Ghosts debut, the Alabama-born multi-instrumentalist singer-songwriter Sylvia Rose Novak returns with a self-produced album that welds the personal and the political.

by Paul Kerr

Orit Shimoni is an excellent teller of tales who should be more widely recognised as she roves around baring her heart. Her latest offering is a nod to her nomadic life.

by Donald MacNeill

Freumhan Falaichte is a breathtakingly accomplished album with an incredible line-up including Julie Fowlis, Rosa Cedron, Fraser Fifield, Ewan MacPherson, Natalie Haas and Donald Hay. It’s also an enormously significant album in the Scottish folk scene and for Gaelic music.

by Neil McFadyen

After becoming utterly entranced by the CD release of Northern Flyway, it was abundantly clear that the full live production the CD was based on was going to be something special…this multi-dimensional exploration of birdsong, ecology, and folklore casts an even stronger spell.

by Glenn Kimpton

Hummingbird is Smith’s most impressive album yet. A work of mature and subtle beauty, celebrating songs that are still being sang and ones that will carry on being sang; this album should be heard by everyone.

by Neil McFadyen

Always driven to broaden their horizons, each successive album from Breabach has brought something new and innovative to their music, and Frenzy of the Meeting is no exception. Listeners are sure to enjoy the results with an ever increasing sense of wonder.

by Richard Hollingum

There is a particular something about Cornish Celtic music that has drawn me in for many years. I am not sure if I can find the right words, but I know that Davey & Dyer have it and the music speaks volumes.

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