Albums

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

by Neil McFadyen

★★★★★ File Under Fiction is the latest release from Findlay Napier and the Bar Room Mountaineers. Findlay and writing partner Nick Turner have delivered a collection of songs full of earthy humour, hopeless love and biting satire.

by Melanie McGovern

★★★★★ Orienteers’ eponymous second release is a hazy, fragile, almost celestial sounding appreciation of travel (hence the name), and it follows up 2008′s Staying Places; released by the same folk under their original guise That’s the Spirit.

by Melanie McGovern

★★★★★ Honest Words may clock in at just over 10 minutes; this time whisking us away from the Fife landscape, yet it plays out as a suitable follow up to King Creosote & Jon Hopkins‘ Mercury nominated Diamond Mine.

by KLOF

★★★★★ The stirring vocals of St. Vincent return with the release of her third album, Strange Mercy. Reunited with producer John Congleton (Actor 2009) Annie Clark makes a departure from previous releases with her eletric guitar holding court on centre stage.

by Neil McFadyen

★★★★★ June Tabor and Oysterband have provided far more than a heady mix of traditional ballads and contemporary songwriting. The album raises the spirit and tears at the soul in turn. It takes all the artists involved in new directions, each and every one of them revelling in the exploration of uncharted territory.

by KLOF

★★★★★ Arctic is the first album by Swedish indie/folk-artist Thomas Denver Jonsson to carry the new moniker of ‘I’m Kingfisher’. The gentle nature of the music, experimentation and subtle electronica draw out his incredible voice and lyrics, this is just the beginning.

by Melanie McGovern

End of the Road festival yet again evaded the wet weather bookending it, and returned to the Larmer Tree gardens in Salisbury with a new layout, new ‘The Woods’ stage and perhaps its most varied line up yet.

by Melanie McGovern

Last week’s Tasseomancy album release show at London venue CAMP exposed a short yet evocative set illuminating their talents as songwriters and songmakers, but more so as mood makers.

by KLOF

★★★★★ Sallie Ford & the Sound Outside mix vintage jazz, blues, roots, rockabilly and punk, not forgetting Sallie Ford’s incredible powerhouse of a voice that sounds like she walked out of an Alan Lomax recording to raise the goddamn roof like a southern preacher!

by Neil McFadyen

★★★★★ On Juju’s latest release, In Trance, they don’t just dissolve the fragile boundaries between African tradition and rock – they demolish them with relish, they turn the walls upside down, they crash the gates open and set the inmates free. And the freedom is exhilarating!

by KLOF

★★★★★ I’m Gonna Live Anyhow Until I Die is the fifth installment from Global Jukebox, an independent label from the Alan Lomax Archive. No music collection should be without it!

by KLOF

★★★★★ Nils Frahm’s latest release, Felt, is an incredibly moving work of musical art that balances modern classical alongside the rich natural sounds that play at the edges of our consciousness, it is nothing short of a masterpiece.

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