Ruth Angell – Hlywing: Album Review
A solo debut from Ruth Angell which redefines sublime.
A solo debut from Ruth Angell which redefines sublime.
Once Again from 1971. The latest in the freshly polished Barclay James Harvest series.
Could this be the ONE? The latest offering from Sunny War may just be the big breakthrough…
We make a few musical connections and find ourselves tracking back to Tat Tvam Asi from Bludeepa.
Renaissance’s Azure d’Or is reissued in a very fine box set, that does full justice to an excellent album.
In These Dark Places sees The Filthy Tongues complete the Edinburgh trilogy in typically sharp style.
Uriah Heep release Chaos & Colour revealing there’s life and plenty of it, in the ‘not so old’ dog yet. We’ll have some of what they’ve had!
Otherish – “inspired by everything” – don’t dally on second album, Gone Wrong Rainbow Blues.
Promising delayed debut from East Anglian singer, a chameleonic marriage of styles and influences, held together by her pure vocal integrity.
Elegant jazz-trad hues permeate this classy release from the Assynt fiddle man, taking his reputation a further notch upward.
A feast of live recordings from The Tangent. Andy Tillison and his progtastic pals go full on.
Reconstructed fables of remembrance; slow and charming, ethereal and angelic from Meg Baird on her Furling album.
Gritty, hardcore messaging on the debut album from Bristol post-garage punks, the Holy Popes.
Requests for Valentine’s Day: Gooey musings from lo-fi ‘slacker’ JW Francis on Dream House.
Two albums and two sides of Hayley Griffiths, swinging from sweeping arrangements of familiar traditional songs to powerful and symphonic rock.