Albums

Album Reviews from the KLOF Mag team and recommendations from KLOF Mag’s Editor.

by Simon Holland

Carrie Tree’s Home To The Invisible shimmers with little details and layers that create a sublimely beautiful, holistic sound that grabs your attention with a whisper and a caress.

by KLOF

Bill Callahan enters the temple of Dub on his latest offering ‘Have Fun with God’…re-imagined dub versions last years ‘Dream River’…not the huge transition you maybe think but we like it.

by Thomas Blake

A Dream Life of Hackney Marshes is the latest release from Walthamstow-based eclectic contemporary ensemble ‘Jetsam’. A companion piece an to Gareth E Rees’ illustrated book ‘Marshland’.

by Marco Canepari

Brothers and Sisters of the Eternal Son is a step forward along the pathway begun, in 2010, with Saint Bartlett…a route undertaken with a loyal and skilled companion: Richard Swift from the Shins.

by Simon Holland

The Elephant in the room is getting a lot of love from the Lexington crowd as Elephant Revival’s first London show proves a triumph, in advance of the release of These Changing Skies.

by Johnny Whalley

Scottish / Scandanavian duo Marit Fält and Rona Wilkie release an entertaining, fascinating and inspirational debut in the form of Turas…produced by Mary Ann Kennedy & husband, Nick Turner.

by Anne Malewski

For their second album The Harbour, My Home, Pär Hagström and Jenny Roos turn towards stranger sounds and darker skies.

by Simon Holland

The Hum sees O’Hooley & Tidow continue to build on their promise, bringing in Gerry Driver as sonic architect to match a set of songs brimming with big ideas and the sound of life itself.

by Simon Holland

Watch the new video from Monster Ceilidh Band. Vralkada is taken from their latest release ‘Charge’ which is one of our featured Albums of the Month.

by Simon Holland

Following a couple of stunning solo acoustic shows Nathaniel Rateliff is back in the UK, this time with a band. The result? More of the same as his Dingwalls’ show is another triumph.

by Simon Holland

A second sold-out performance at the Union Chapel and The Gloaming provide yet another spectacular celebration of traditional Irish music and culture with a decidedly modern twist.

by Thomas Blake

Rachel Newton, Lucy Farrell, Emily Portman and Alasdair Roberts combine to make ‘At Our Next Meeting’ one of the finest collaborative albums of the past few years.

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