Albums

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

by Thomas Blake

We Are The Wildlife, the solo debut of Brona McVittie whose name has been cropping up more and more frequently in the more expansive and experimental subsets of the folk music world. This is one of the most distinctive debuts you are likely to hear all year.

by Martha Buckley

Run these Hills is an album of soaring instrumentation and insistent rhythms, conjuring thoughts of long summers and holding hands.  It’s nostalgic post-teen pop for a generation in need of a boost; a perfect dose of optimism for grey days.

by Glenn Kimpton

With A Hymn for Ancient Land, Jim Ghedi has taken big strides in his sound to create a small masterpiece, a homage of sorts to the subtleties of nature, place and space.

by Dave McNally

The Wishing Tree is, believe it or not, the first studio recording by the redoubtable trio of John Doyle, John McCusker and Mike McGoldrick. An exceptional album that has to be a front-runner for album of the year.

by Ken Abrams

Jane Doe are a charming four-piece Paris-based band and their new EP Midnight Spell is a very promising debut on which they showcase a fresh and deep-reaching sound – one to watch for.

by David Pratt

Whether you’re already a fan or not, this live album is an indispensable addition to Christy Moore’s canon of work. A quintessential release from a national legend.

by Paul Kerr

Dan Michaelson releases his second solo album, taking on that hypnagogic time of day when one is waking from slumber. First Light is a wallow in angst and misery given wings by the superb music and his tremendous vocals.

by Neil McFadyen

The most arresting and impressive aspects of Sanctuary are not the message and the direction the music is coming from – it’s the music itself. The writing and musicianship shine in what is easily Ross Ainslie’s most impressive album so far.

by Mike Davies

Following on from 2015’s ‘Analogue Tales’, Birmingham’s James Summerfield returns for his sixth full-length release. ‘Doubt’ is arguably his most confident and wholly satisfying to date.

by Peter Shaw

There are obscure albums, lost albums and ultra-rare albums, and then there is All on the First Day by Tony, Caro & John. An extreme-DIY effort that was first released in 1972 and limited to only 100 copies.

by Richard Hollingum

Assembly Lane’s dynamic arrangements of traditional and contemporary material on their self-released debut take us another step on the way forward for traditional music.

by David Pratt

Texas-based singer-songwriter Keegan McInroe returns with his fifth album on which he more often than not goes straight for the jugular with untempered, visceral lyrics – Political and entertaining, he is an artist with something to say.

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