Review
by Jon Falcone
The Man Born From Inside A Horse is the sound of the underdog, intense, inspired and casual in its graceful artistry.»
Review
by Jon Falcone
The Family Sign is a strong continuation and addition to a powerful series of modern rap albums.»
Review
by Jon Falcone
When the sarcasm is rightly planted, Woe opens up as a collection of near-perfect songs.»
Review
by Jon Falcone
Holy Ghost! provides some brilliant floor fillers and a snatch of great singles, but the duo seem too intimidated by their own influences, and pay them too much respect, to really meet their potential. »
Review
by Jon Falcone
Threading noise into silence, death into punk and the demonic into the beautiful.»
Review
by Jon Falcone
These songs are far more than mere novelties and the faux Dave Brubeck/jazz sleeve pastiche is brilliant. »
Review
by Jon Falcone
Through all this beauty, rhythmic intricacy and European cinema influenced strangeness, there is nothing here that screams out differently from Stereolab's output of the last decade. »
Review
by Jon Falcone
A beautiful, unique and sincere album of instrumental pop. Don’t let it get away. »
Review
by Jon Falcone
With more depth and crafting this could send shivers and be beautiful. Right now, however, it merely ticks a box.»
In Depth by Jon Falcone
When you’re celebrating the life of anything, a website such as Drowned in Sound, a loved one, a band, the first thing that always resonates after the initial huff at the candles is the realisation that ultimately, nothing’s changed… it’s ups as well as downs. That’s natural. There’s (hopefully) always something to look forward and that’s what keeps you going.»
Review
by Jon Falcone
If you’re after an album that plays with the history of American music, throws its influences over the table and re-appropriates them together in a psychedelic tapestry of pop, this and NLF3’s Beautiful is the Way to the World Beyond will be all you’ll need.»
In Depth by Jon Falcone
Max Richter’s live performances are all too seldom. As a composer who forges the work of piano and string quintet into a universe of electronic rumbles and soft white noise, tonight his compositions are perfectly matched by the art deco splendour of Cadog»
Review
by Jon Falcone
On How To Live Seeland continue to refine their identity. They’re not an act that (yet) feels a need for reinvention.»