Honest, in-depth album reviews by KLOF Mag – championing and curating intelligent, uncompromising voices in contemporary and experimental music since 2004.
Albums
On their latest offering Trevor Moss and Hannah-Lou join forces with producer Ethan Johns for an often down to the bone sound on which they spread their musical roots a little wider.
Sounding both retro and fresh, the latest offering from The Psycho Sisters, is an album that certainly warrants discovery and of which both can feel justifiably, if rather belatedly, proud.
Whilst hailing from Boston, Jenna Moynihan’s debut album ‘Woven’ proves that her heart lies with the Scottish fiddle tradition. At twenty-four years old, she is already playing beyond her years and leaving listeners around the world with baited breath for her next move.
Corb Lund returns with his highly-anticipated album, Things That Can’t Be Undone, his first new studio album in three years which finds him pushing out into new musical territory.
We rejoin Jonathan Day on the road for a series of guest posts written during his Atlantic Drifter launch tour. He heads over the sea in a force 6 to Rhum for the perhaps the most essential launch gig of the tour.
I’m Walkin’ Here is the latest gem from Rab Noakes, featuring new songs, lovingly described as 21st Century skiffle, as well as songs he’s collected for interpretation. Rab is joined by a a great lineup including a stellar array of singers with Roddy Hart, Emma Pollock, Jimmie Macgregor, Barbara Dickson and more.
Michael Chapman’s latest release ‘Fish’ is a beautifully constructed album. It’s a delightfully un-sanitised recording of a master guitarist completely at ease with his playing.
Vancouver-based band The Sumner Brothers return with their fifth album, The Hell In Your Mind. A musically and lyrically dark and dense affair that, if not quite in the 16 Horsepower league of intensity, is still a raw and exposed nerve.
