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Album Review: Sam Lewis - Everything's Fine

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  On his seventh studio album, Sam Lewis almost presses the reset button and heads back to the raw domain of the stripped back song. Across nine original lyrical compositions, the light shines inwards exposing the skeletal status of country-folk songwriting. EVERYTHING’S FINE eventually gets up to full complement with an instrumental and a cover to propel an album with nothing to hide and everything to gain. From this vulnerable position, Lewis draws upon immense writing chops presenting a package hooking in a listener for a rewarding thirty-plus minutes.  Assigning John Prine as a comparison can be an exaggerated superlative but on two occasions you could be forgiven for sensing the presence of the maestro. Opening track ‘ Chase the Moon ’ possess a killer melody, is ripe with metaphors and meticulously strummed. Any similarity to the aforementioned legend is coincidental… or not. Later in the album, ‘ Making It Up ’ evokes a similar effect albeit with a little more pace....

Album Review: Katherine Priddy - These Frightening Machines

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  Vibes freely flow. Words intuitively swirl. Sounds sweetly melt. Katherine Priddy leans on all the assets at her disposal to conjure a record of serious magnitude. Tossing a poetic instinct into an esteemed pot of musicians brews a stunning concoction of songs steering through personal change and insightful musings. Across ten tracks folk sensibilities court contemporary trappings dealing a sound purring with creative delight. THESE FRIGHTENED MACHINES buries itself into your psyche, inviting you to wallow in warm lyrical waters and bask in the sensuous mesmeric sounds. A single play piques the interest; multiple plays smooth the way for a keeper to bed in. Momentum for Birmingham-based Priddy has been building over the last couple of years. Gentle evolution across subsequent albums accrued growth on numerous platforms with this latest effort accelerating the pace of progression. Released on Cooking Vinyl Records puts Priddy in fine company and affords opportunity to explore past...

Single Share: Roswell Road - Weirdo at the Party

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  Roswell Road have released the final single from the upcoming album REBEL JOY due on March 13th. Band member Jasmine Watkiss wrote the song from the personal experience of being uncomfortable in certain circumstances, and the theme can transcend its original inspiration to a multitude of other personal interactions. ' Weirdo at the Party' is an escalating track with alt-folk trappings. It leans in a different direction to the first two singles, perhaps requiring a couple more listens to grasp but suggesting the band aren't afraid to mix things up rather than just proceed down a pre-ordained path. All is set for a much anticipated debut full length record.  Weirdo at the Party by Roswell Road

Gig Review: Courtney Marie Andrews - Hare and Hounds, Kings Heath, Birmingham. Wednesday 25th February 2026

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  “You guys are so quiet.” Maybe it was something to do with a spell cast from the stage. A packed room of hypnotised devotees hanging on every lyric and note. The lure of Courtney Marie Andrews is strong, almost addictive. Her steely gaze captures attention and freezes the moment. Noise would breach the code and nobody in the Hare and Hounds was going to do that. “That’s Valentine folks.” A simple end to what was a minimalist exhibition of an album stirring emotive songwriting affection since surfacing in January. A segment designated as act 1. Unfiltered evidence of a songwriter and musician stretching every sinew of their creative nous came to the fore. Forty minutes when the songs spoke for themselves. You could argue the stage became a studio and the gig a session, however this form is the identity and one honed over the last decade as a prominent solo artist.  Courtney Marie Andrews is at ease with communicating through her music. Reenacting a record in its enshrined str...

Gig Review: Thorpe and Morrison + Darach- Centrala, Birmingham. Sunday 22nd February 2026

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  There is a creative stir at the heart of post-industrial Birmingham. In the dimly lit quarters of backstreet Digbeth, grimy relics are brought to life beneath the surface. Disguised bars, food joints, performing spaces and improvised studios align to regenerate. A single two level unit located in Minerva Works would likely once have been humming to one of the city’s thousand trades, tonight it purred to a brace of fiddles and guitars. Centrala was born from Central and Eastern European culture; on this Sunday evening the sounds were more Western Europe or to be more precise a curved spine from the west of Scotland through parts of England to the Iberian peninsula. Its performing space was commandeered by two duos, similar in set up, different in sound. Thorpe and Morrison were the hosts but Darach were far more than mere guests. Together they filled the air with mesmeric sounds, and hearts with the vibrant beat of grassroots music.  6:45 is a good time to begin a Sunday even...

Gig Review: Kim Richey - Kitchen Garden, Kings Heath, Birmingham. Thursday 19th February 2026

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  “Has anybody been to the Bluebird Cafe?” “Yes,” mumbled two voices from the first row. In a more appropriate environment, the response would have been extended to “yes we saw you” but for now the focus was enjoying another Kim Richey performance ten years on from that Nashville encounter. Midway through the show, the name Don Henry cropped up as the co-writer for ‘ Chapel Avenue’ , the opening track from the most recent album EVERY NEW BEGINNING. Cue another connection with the Bluebird Cafe as he was on the same writers’ round bill in 2016. That’s enough of cafes four thousand miles away, let’s concentrate on one in Kings Heath - a cafe by day; an intimate gig venue by night. By estimation (and personal attendance), this was Kim Richey’s fifth visit to the Kitchen Garden, beginning with a double bill with Ben Glover in 2018. Solo has been the de facto performing format up until this evening when joined by long term guitarist Jez Ashurst. With no new music to present since the la...

Single Share: Luke James Williams - Hollows and Branches

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"Rising English folk artist Luke James Williams announces his second album ‘ Limes Hotel ,’ due this April, alongside the release of his new single ‘ Hollows and Branches’  out February 6th.  Hollows and Branches is the third single from ‘Limes Hotel’ following ‘Seeds’ and ‘Ends.’ Earning widespread praise and airplay from BBC Radio 6 Music, BBC Introducing and Amazing Radio these new songs reveal an artist emerging as one of the UK’s most compelling new folk voices. " Williams equates grief with the natural world in a song getting to the heart of  what a relationship meant. His quintessential English-style folk vocals, almost spoken, give a real life sentiment to the lyrics, all delivered in a passive tone allowing space for the song to impact. 'Rich isn't happy, sad isn't poor' is a lyric to ponder.  Limes Hotel by Luke James Williams www.lukejameswilliams.co.uk