Albums

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

by Johnny Whalley

This year’s Cropredy Convention was, as always, a great festival with music from folk to rock, from Alice Cooper to Edward II and the Peatbog Faeries! Read our live review.

by Johnny Whalley

Johnny Whalley looks back at Wickham Festival 2013 and shares some of the highlights of this year’s festival as well as some backstage banter with the artists!

by Helen Gregory

Three Cheers For The Undertaker is a highly accomplished debut album which bodes well for The Lost Cavalry’s future.

by Simon Holland

With former band The Sixers on hold, Stephen Kellogg delivers an album of clever, literate song craft, packing a big emotional punch and in Thanksgiving possibly the song of the year.

by Helen Gregory

Gill Sandell’s second solo album is an object lesson in the art and craft of songwriting; a shimmering tapestry of sound with a mesmerising beauty, Light The Boats must surely rank amongst the year’s best records.

by Harry Wheeler

Josephine Foster’s Little Life is a very welcome re-release, good on Fire Records for bringing it back into the fray. If you’re a fan, you need to add this to your collection.

by Thomas Blake

At times sincere, at times slightly sinister, Lux Harmonium’s new recordings recall the golden age of British psych-folk without ever losing their modern focus and precision.

by Helen Gregory

Rising For The Moon gets the deluxe re-issue treatment…the only studio legacy of what remains an excellent, if overlooked, Fairport Convention lineup.

by Anne Malewski

Being left and leaving, Alela Diane goes house-haunting on her latest release ‘About Farewell’.

by KLOF

London / Newcastle-Upon-Tyne based band Crumbling Ghost’s latest album ‘II’ is original and unrestrained in its approach, an album of renewal not revivalism.

by KLOF

Galway based six-piece collective Cubs release a ten-track EP which is filled to the brim with psychedelic folk goodness. A delightful listen.

by Simon Holland

Choosing to write and sing in English because of the unique perspective using a foreign tongue brings, Croatian born, German Native Antun Opic has created a Gypsy folk delight.

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