Albums

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

by Glenn Kimpton

Featuring Sarah-Jane Summers, Juhani Silvola, Leif Ottosson and Bridget Marsden, the Siskin Quartet’s ‘Flight Paths’ is an exceptional album. Broad-reaching yet balanced, daring and compelling; I can’t recommend it highly enough.

by Philip Thomas

French duo O’o, featuring Victoria Suter and Mathieu Daubigné, have created a challenging but rewarding album. Touche is quite unlike any other album you’ll hear this year.

by Danny Neill

Everything on this collection from Luke Daniels and The Cobhers is attacked with such life-affirming urgency… These are songs that have cut across the eras, the sub-cultures and age restrictions, and now, they are hoping to knock down genre fences as well.

by Thomas Blake

British-Israeli collective Staraya Derevnya’s “Boulder Blues” is an unnerving, brilliant album that revolves around the twenty-plus minute opus Bubbling Pelt, which sounds like Comus and Faust fighting over a rare cache of Japanese psychedelic rock.

by David Pratt

Jackie Oates’ “Gracious Wings” is an album underpinned by top-quality musicianship and another assured and enthralling collection from one of the undoubted talents of the contemporary folk music world.

by Thomas Blake

With LAS, Brìghde Chaimbeul, Ross Ainslie and Steven Byrnes have delivered a highly accomplished album that, probably more than any other you’ll hear this year, unifies innovation and tradition.

by Bob Fish

On ‘Old Bones, New Fire’, Miraculous Mule continue to burn brightly, performing with zeal, a music that has shaped and continues to shape new generations.

by Bob Fish

While Luke Sital-Singh may be Dressing Like a Stranger, he is the same man he’s always been. The clothes may have changed, but he remains a talented observer of the human condition.

by Glenn Kimpton

Bile Bear is the adopted moniker of Italian guitarist Denis Cassiere. His Bear Bile album is mesmerising and a rather lovely thing – a player who is certainly one to watch out for.

by Thomas Blake

Perspectives On Tradition functions as a chapter in a manifesto for how folk music should be made and how tradition should be thought about. Stick in the Wheel are fearless when it comes to following their own standards, the results are rarely short of astonishing.

by Alex Gallacher

This is Eli Winter’s A Love Supreme moment; like Coltrane’s masterpiece, this album’s most profound qualities lie in its sense of unity, transcendence and hope. It’s a landmark album and the perfect ten.

by David Pratt

The Mystery Gets Your Number & The Poetry Makes The Call is a mighty fine post-punk rock‘n’roll record. Somewhere down the line, Robb Johnson asks, “Does it work for you?” The answer from these quarters is an unequivocal yes.

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