A year on from the success of the Iron Horse album written about cycling, Mary Erskine has kept the Me For Queen name but gone solo for her new EP, Who I Am and What I Am For, due out…
Ballads of the Broken Few, Seth Lakeman’s eight solo album, sees the folk troubadour align himself with the Wildwood Kin, based in Devon, and whose voices add harmonies and warmth to the record. ‘Silence Reigns’ is a great example of…
Although June’s show in Hiroshima perhaps pipped it, filmmaker Mark Cousins and Mogwai couldn’t have chosen a better setting for the screening of Atomic, Living In Dread And Promise than Coventry Cathedral, which was decimated by Nazi airstrikes in 1940…
Wilco, despite being 10 albums into their career, are still a band to hang your hopes on. They’re not your typical band, most don’t make it this far, and the band’s past clearly reflects why these 6 guys still exist…
Munro Fox are a collaboration between experimentalist Adam Stark, ex-Goldheart Assembly man John Herbert and academic Tom Barton. Last month they put out their debut album Last Chance Radio, a tender, delicate record to warm the heart as the nights…
Dave Tattersall has weird dreams. We know this because the Wave Pictures have a new album on the way, and apparently Bamboo Diner In The Rain is set “in the Bamboo Diner of my dreams, with rain beating on the…