Albums

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

by Helen Gregory

Gill Sandell and Chris T-T produce an idiosyncratic and iconoclastic celebration of some overlooked musical treasures from the last fifty years with covers of Willie Nelson, Kaiser Chiefs, Neil Young, Joni Mitchell and more.

by Simon Holland

With ‘Love And Logic’ suggesting a band really hitting its stride we catch up with Charlottesville band Sons Of Bill in a Bermondsey pub as they prepare for their UK tour leg.

by Mike Davies

JD McPherson’s follow up to his Rounder debut is equally rooted in early rock n roll, plenty of driving basslines, punchy limb-shaking rhythms, twangy reverb and the occasional splash of fat sax. It’s a gem.

by Simon Holland

It’s taken two years of patient work but Streets Of Laredo finally have the debut album that they always intended in the twisty, psychedelic, country-folk rumble of Volume I & II.

by James MacKinnon

Way Back Home is a very personal introduction to Sorren Maclean’s solo work and with fully-formed songs like these, it shows great promise for the forthcoming LP.

by Helen Gregory

The Glue Ensemble who hail from London / Paris offer an album which is simultaneously bleak yet optimistic, intricate but accessible and altogether a hugely enjoyable listen.

by Paul Woodgate

Jeffrey Foucault leaves the audience at the Green Note wishing they didn’t have a place to catch. Another great performance with top support from British duo and FRUK favourites Sugar Magnolia.

by Paul Woodgate

With top support from Nashville’s fastest rising star Andrew Combs, Justin Townes Earle takes to the Union Chapel Stage energised, relaxed and firing on all cylinders.

by David Weir

Alex Highton expands upon his previous recordings by confidently intermixing his eclectic range of influences with welcome appearances from Laura J Martin and Nancy Wallace.

by Helen Gregory

Hailing from Bristol, The Honeyfire have produced a deceptively low-key yet passionate album whose hidden depths repay careful listening.

by Johnny Whalley

Canadian singer-songwriter Dennis Ellsworth played a top gig at The Square Tower, Portsmouth and not his first there either. Support came from the talented Marion Fleetwood.

by Roy Spencer

Southern Tenant Folk Union release their most ambitious album so far. The Chuck Norris Project exposes the astonishing array of ills and injustices of a country claiming to be the world’s greatest democracy.

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