by For Folk's Sake • • Comments Off on Live | Bob Dylan @ London Palladium
For someone who has been on the same tour since 1988, it seems strange that the London Palladium is a venue that Bob Dylan had never played before these three shows. Even in his Nobel Prize acceptance speech, Dylan said…
by Joe Sweeting • • Comments Off on Album | Ciaran Lavery – A King at Night EP
Ciaran Lavery is not a musician to sit on his laurels. Just a mere few months after the release of Live at the Mac, a record preserving his concert at the venue in December 2015, Lavery has returned with a…
by Jonathan Frahm • • Comments Off on Album | Bob Dylan – Triplicate
Outside of seldom few this side of Lennon, McCartney, and Cohen, Bob Dylan is, among other things, often considered to be the greatest songwriter of modern times. Though his gritty, offbeat vocals may be seen as less than preferential by…
by Jonathan Frahm • • Comments Off on Album | Jay Regan – Wash Me
In the ever-expanding world of indie records that are far better than their cover art may imply comes Jay Regan’s Wash Me. Developed with an admittedly rather captivating swirly, 70s-inspired psychedelic center, Regan’s pasted-on logo and Arial font title prove…
by Jonathan Frahm • • Comments Off on Album | Shawna Virago – Heaven Sent Delinquent
Don’t let the authoritarian hype fool you: we live in an era of inclusiveness, one where transgender artists like Shawna Virago are finally able to receive the attention that they’ve arguably always deserved. Shamefully, from the time that Virago first…
by Joe Sweeting • • Comments Off on Album | Fionn Regan – The Meetings of the Waters
It is difficult to believe that we are already through a quarter of 2017. Already, in the opening four months of the year, there has been a gluttony of outstanding musical releases, and it seems likely that we can add…
by Joe Sweeting • • Comments Off on Album | San Fermin – Belong
It is a rare moment where a band presents themselves as being an ensemble performing expansive chamber-pop, yet, back with their third LP of such music, San Fermin return with Belong. Primarily a construct by Ellis Ludwig-Leone, who has previously…
by Jonathan Frahm • • Comments Off on Album | Karen Elson – Double Roses
Seven years have passed since Karen Elson’s debut record first wowed audiences with its blues-tinged ballads of murder and desolation. Unfortunately, this was a time where Elson met celebrity not for her music, but rather for the one she was…
by Jonathan Frahm • • Comments Off on Album | Joan Baez – The Complete Gold Castle Masters
Joan Baez is an artist who needs no introduction. Often lauded as the greatest folk artist to ever grace our planet Earth—and often sparking debate with Cohen and Seeger diehards who would argue otherwise—Baez has made a name for herself…
by Jonathan Frahm • • Comments Off on Album | January Zero – The Long Radio Silence
A growing trend of the modern folk music era has been albums wildly introspective in their craft to the point that their aural cosmetics are best described as something that has strayed far into the realm of melodic experimentation. We…