Album Reviews from the KLOF Mag team and recommendations from KLOF Mag’s Editor.
Albums
With their second recording Wild Go receiving airplay on UK shores Dark Dark Dark’s pitch and note perfect re-creation of their Balkan inspired tracks tapped out a heartfelt oscillation between liveliness and loneliness, with the precision of it all framing their Eastern-folk and pitch dark jazz hybrid.
It’s always a pleasant surprise when an artist from way back contacts you out of the blue. I Draw Slow were a regular on the station a few years.
The candle-lit environs of Dalston’s Cafe Oto felt a particularly apt setting for chamber-folk five-piece The Magic Lantern to host their single launch party. Amongst the flickering tea-lights atop wooden tables, decorated with remnants of Organic beer and homemade cakes, a crowd of friends, family and listeners new and old gathered.
Under various guises James Toth has a vast back catalogue, we’re talking number of hot dinners vast here. We review the latest album Death Seat…
The Woody Nightshade is Sharron Kraus’s fourth studion album. Her fad free approach to folk continues, all be it along a different path from her last album, The Fox’s Wedding.
Kerry Fowler’s solo EP, Dance of the Selkie, is a fine introduction to a promising singer songwriter who’s garnering some much deserved praise for her well-crafted and atmospheric ballads.
The Burns Unit is an 8 piece indie folk collaboration between some of the best names including King Creosote and Karine Polwart. Their much anticipated album, Side Show, was released in August.
