Albums

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

by Mike Davies

After 52 years of making albums, Chip Taylor doesn’t appear to be slowing down. The Cradle Of All Living Things is a generous double album, one that offers comfort and ideally listened to in those quiet twilight moments.

by Mike Davies

TumbleWeedyWorld is a terrific album on which Lynn Miles continues to consolidate her reputation as one of Canada’s most formidable songwriters.

by Thomas Blake

Emma Tricca is one of our most valuable and interesting songwriters, capable of strange and beautiful sonic flights of fancy and unexpected lyrical turns. Aspirin Sun is her best yet.

by Hannah Webber

Paul Smith and Rachel Unthank gave a captivating performance of their album Nowhere and Everywhere, and for a couple of hours, the world ground to a halt as we were taken on a journey of stories and myths. I only hope they keep telling them.

by David Pratt

At the forefront of both tropical and early psychedelic, electronic/synthesised music, with Ecuatoriana, Analog Africa transports the listener to a parallel universe where Polibio Mayorga is confirmed as a legendary icon of Ecuadorian music.

by Mike Davies

John Ward’s ‘Congress’ album is a solidly crafted collection of songs and poetic narratives based around the real events of Buffalo Bill’s visit to the UK in 1903 and 1904.

by Glenn Kimpton

Steve Gunn and David Moore’s ‘Let the Moon be a Planet’ feels improvised and free in nature. Still, its natural idiosyncrasies and fine nuances invite and reward deep listening—a quietly rich, contemplative and satisfying experience.

by Thomas Blake

Cinder Well’s ‘Cadence’ is something of a journey. Meandering, non-linear, but full of care and wisdom, it is an astonishingly powerful piece of work that seems to have been conceived in uncertainty but realised with the supreme assurance of one of the most consummate songwriters around.

by David Pratt

Yalla Miku is an exhilarating debut that reaches beyond the norm with its vitality and passion. The Geneva-based group have produced an album that is truly ‘Musique Sans Frontières’.

by David Pratt

With ‘I Saw A Star…’, Bennet Wilson Poole have produced an album that is as exhilaratingly brilliant and accomplished as their debut. It is as prime an example of high-class, polished, rewarding and entertaining music that you are likely to hear.

by Mike Davies

In Stolen From God, Reg Meuross has unquestionably written his masterpiece in a song cycle that turns an unflinching eye on the toxic legacy of the transatlantic slave trade, especially in his home in the South West of England.

by Mike Davies

Tell Me World is the debut album from Tapestri, a duo featuring Lowri Evans and Sarah Zyborska and surely a contender for the Welsh answer to First Aid Kit.

This site uses cookies. By continuing to use the site you consent to their use. Close and Accept Use of Cookies on KLOF Mag