Emily Barker signs to Thirty Tigers and releases new single. The climate crisis that dominated last year’s news brought burning questions back to the fore for her, and ‘Return Me’ marks her response.
Taken from his forthcoming EP, watch Jeb Loy Nichols’ video for the title track The Season Of Decline – It’s the bittersweet knowledge that everything passes, an acceptance of the ephemeral nature of beauty.
Swallow is the second single out from Sun Collective’s forthcoming EP, ‘MOVE ||REMOVE’. Watch the accompanying film and visuals by Myles O’Reilly and Donal Dineen (This Ain’t no Disco).
Watch Daoirí Farrell performing The Parting Glass. Recorded in honour of all of those who have lost their lives to Covid-19, it will feature on his new single The Lockdown.
Rufus Wainwright has shared a video for “You Ain’t Big” a song off his highly anticipated upcoming album Unfollow The Rules, out July 10th through BMG.
Galway artist Niamh Regan gives the first taste of her new record ‘Hemet’, an album full of musical accomplishment, emotional maturity, and subtle craft.
Watch the spectacular new video from Wardruna for their new single “Lyfjaberg” (Healing Mountain) which was mainly filmed in the mountains at Tustna in Norway. They all had to climb a few of their inner mountains to get it done.
On her new single, Emma Tricca covers Bert Jansch’s ‘It Don’t Bother Me’. From an initial, deliberate simplicity of guitar and voice, the track grows; organ, horns, and the band reveal themselves in a full flowering replete with hues of baroque and psych.
Following the release of his number one self-titled album exactly one year ago, Mick Flannery has announced the impending arrival of his seventh album: ‘Alive – Cork Opera House,’ coming July 24th 2020.
Bristol-based musician Andy Skellam returns with “Rosie is a Goldmine”. Watch Sally Imbert’s mesmerising animation which offers the perfect accompaniment to Andy’s beautiful new single which is also our Song of the Day.
For ninety years, English folk music and dance have had an official home in a quiet corner of central London. Just off a (usually) very busy high street, hidden from view in a pretty walled garden is Cecil Sharp House.