Albums

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

by Bob Fish

Taken as a whole, Sing Leaf’s ‘Not Earth’, described holds promise for other worlds. It’s up to us to find them.

by Mike Davies

While The Marriage are a musical rather than a connubial relationship featuring Kirsten Adamson and Dave Burn, this debut sounds like the dawning of a very bright future.

by David Morrison

Crescent, the second offering from Speaker Face, is an album of pure class, indisputable elegance, compositional invention and, above all, rich emotional rewards.

by Thomas Blake

Nan Shepherd’s writing has found a perfect musical equivalent in Sturgeon’s stunning new album…a work of rare beauty: to hear The Living Mountain is to hear the song of the Cairngorms.

by David Pratt

With ‘Sowing Acorns’, Emma Langford has delivered a mature, assured and eminently listenable album, frothing with melodic charm and lyrical intrigue.

by Chris Wheatley

Taken as a whole, La Locura De Machuca amounts to another astounding entry in the Analog Africa catalogue. The artistic statements rendered here are joyous, enticing and a boon for the soul.

by Glenn Kimpton

It’s a clever musician who can weave such a human image through sparse improvised playing, but Samuels is clearly one such player and this small, cohesive and unassuming album contains multitudes of such touches.

by Billy Rough

Ewan MacPherson’s ‘Norther’ is a curious and utterly beguiling beast. Released in 2008, it’s a self-assured and impressively produced debut that takes you back to the roots revival of the mid-2000s.

by David Pratt

Tired of the same old? Then Gap In The Fence from Scotland’s Tom Houston will bring refreshingly welcome rays of musical sunshine into your life.

by Billy Rough

Kris Drever’s ‘Where The World Is Thin’ is a charming album. Confident and mature in its content, and beautifully performed. A fine treat as the nights draw in.

by Thomas Blake

The Magpie Arc’s debut EP is a varied and brilliantly executed set of songs from a truly gifted group of musicians and bodes extremely well for what is to follow.

by Thomas Blake

Martin Green goes well beyond the boundaries of traditional music with The Portal, a multifaceted artwork that is as original as anything that has come out of this strange year.

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