Dave Foster Band – Maybe They’ll Come Back For Us: Album Review
Dave Foster and Dinet Poortman get progressive pop off to a tee.
Dave Foster and Dinet Poortman get progressive pop off to a tee.
Airbag come up trumps with another progressive flavoured and atmospheric classic.
Debut full-length album from Brighton garage/punk trio Gaffa Tape Sandy sees the band back on track after a tumultuous couple of years.
Trio HLK release their second album Anthropometricks, and it is an impressive musical tour de force.
Black Country Communion return with a belter. Bonamassa, Hughes, Bonham & Sherinian make it well worth the wait!
Rousing songs and tunes from Oxford ensemble Magpie Lane. Further investigation is certainly advisable
Friday nights should always be like this; hell, even on a Monday. Twangtastic!
With no connection bar their lateness, trad.arr. through a Saskatoon shutter, folktronica of an an anglo-french origin and blues from (ish) Norway.
Anthony Phillips & Harry Williamson’s Gypsy Suite is released in a new remastered and expanded CD edition.
Debut album from brother and sister duo, Painted Sky: Eleven flawless interpretations and adaptations of traditional themes.
Warwickshire singer-songwriter Karen Killeen-Jones considers life from the female perspective in six delightful songs.
Southend’s folk/Americana troubadour, MG Boulter returns – and this time he’s looking a little deeper below the mundanities of suburban life.
The Irish renaissance rallies ever onward, with doomcore acapella quartet Landless adding sparse and spare instrumentation to their timeless darkness.
New release from Seasick Steve: pure heart, soul and groove.
Blimey! The Decemberists return for album number 9. As It Ever Was, So It Will Be Again is a truly amazing addition to their canon.