Patrick Watson – Uh-Oh: Album Review
Uh-Oh, his eighth album, journeys Patrick Watson through a career-defining recovery after losing his voice and coming to terms with the fact he may never sing again.
Uh-Oh, his eighth album, journeys Patrick Watson through a career-defining recovery after losing his voice and coming to terms with the fact he may never sing again.
Goodness gracious me, we’re saved, as Plant goes from a scream to a whisper!
Scenic Sessions from The Delines – Peak pleasure from the past, darker and sparklier than ever.
3rd album from British-born, Paris-based Ala.Ni mixes the warm, relaxed vibe of the Caribbean into a heady blend of calypso, jazz and bossa nova.
Bluegrass hued acoustica from the Moselle delta, in North London, the Tommys give the genre a good thump.
Scustin venerate Ireland’s pub culture in funk, disco, rock and spoken word. It’s hard-hitting, hilarious and hits out at targets way beyond the sanctity of the pub.
Warsaw 480km is the debut LP from Irish quintet pôt-pot, who infuse the propulsive grooves of krautrock with a phosphorescent psych-rock radiance, all underscored by harmonium drones, hypnotic male-female vocal harmonies, and deep layers of rough-hewn texture.
The Bar-Steward Sons Of Val Doonican return…with a new line up and a wonderful mix of brand new songs for your aural pleasure.
Simply stunning, Kim Carnie’s gauntlet may be unassailable.
Conceived and recorded on a narrowboat on the River Thames in Rural Oxfordshire, Cast Through The Mistletoe Tree transports the listener far away from the tribulations of the modern world.
Grift pays off, as Grimm shows off that the art of politicised singer-songwriting is anything other than redundant.
Emma Swift returns with The Resurrection Game; her first collection of original songs after her selection of brilliant Dylan covers.
Popol Vuh, a band that continue to influence, have two of their classic albums remastered and reissued via Cherry Red Records.
The hors d’oeuvres keep on coming. Appaloosa is the third taster for the forthcoming album from Nashville duo Haunted Like Human.
Hawkwind in exclesis. Mister Tayler does another sterling job in enhancing an iconic album from ’74.