Tyler Bryant & The Shakedown – Electrified: Album Review
Heed the warning – “listen at your own risk – beware of electrical shock” from Tyler Bryant & The Shakedown’s Electrified.
Heed the warning – “listen at your own risk – beware of electrical shock” from Tyler Bryant & The Shakedown’s Electrified.
All surviving BBC sessions recorded by ‘Proto-Punk’ agit rockers, The Edgar Broughton Band, collected and packaged in one convenient box.
Moreland offers more than ever, an unexpected statement of such quiet power as to assure his due place at the top table.
Shock horror in that the Lindisfarne “missing years” contain some gold in them thar hills!
Toronto singer-songwriter Abigail Lapell returns, with a collection of songs that reference a few personal milestones and explore the ideal of growing old together.
Sir Richard of Hawley – welcome back with your jukebox of many delights. Guaranteed to melt the hardest of hearts.
The welcome – and long overdue – return of the Master. Richard Thompson is back with his first album in 6 years, and it’s a peach!
‘The wilderness years’ maybe but Holly & David – The Lovely Eggs – are in fine fettle.
Kent indie/alt rockers Indoor Pets return with a second album – and they’re in a darker, heavier, but no less humorous, mood than ever.
Expansive commemorative reissue of 70s guitar legend’s masterwork. Robin Trower take a bow.
Shine On Brightly, Procol Harum’s classic second album, is released in a new remastered vinyl edition.
Watford’s Dicemen flex their folk, post-punk and indie roots with twelve songs that cover the state of the nation, the state of the world and the elusiveness of fame.
Straight to the point and often deeply personal – Zoe Boekbinder holds nothing back on her new album, Wildflower.
A post bank holiday bottle-neck that needs unblocking, featuring two Welsh rarebits and some warm-reekin rich from Scotland.
Japanese Math Rock pioneers LITE rework their recent seventh album for a live audience.