Album: Mark Pritchard & Thom Yorke - Tall Tales

A toning-down leads to an opening up of new possibilities in a fertile collaboration

I’ve got an admission: I never really got Radiohead, in no small part because of Thom Yorke’s singing. I appreciate his technical abilities and songwriting, and that a lot of people find his anguish cathartic, but the more he goes for it the more I switch off.

First Person: rising folk star Amelia Coburn on her French inspiration

AMELIA COBURN The rising folk star on her French inspiration

The Middlesbrough singer-songwriter on the background story to her latest single

“Sandra” is one of my favourite tracks from my album Between The Moon and the Milkman which was released last year.  While living in Paris a few years ago I shared a flat with an older French lady. We loved to chat every night when I came home from work, but one time she told me a story that stayed with me about her late husband, who was an abusive alcoholic. When he died, his only final wishes were to be buried. So of course, she had him cremated.

Album: Dr Robert & Matt Deighton - The Instant Garden

A couple of old mods waft into delightfully Seventies hippy territory

There’s this mod milieu, harking back to the Eighties. Weller at the forefront; Dr Robert and his Blow Monkeys; all righteously hate Thatcher; then the electronically groovy 1990s arrive; Acid Jazz Records; boss mod Eddie Piller; his collection of snappily dressed muso's who magazines wrote about and who nearly had hits. These sorts are still about, endlessly churning out music. It’s impressive. Sometimes the music is too. As with this album.

Album: Gigspanner Big Band - Turnstone

★★★★ GIGSPANNER BIG BAND - TURNSTONE Third album from British folk’s biggest big band

Third album from British folk’s biggest big band

For lovers of British folk from the 1970s on, Peter Knight is a potent force – renowned for his years with Steeleye Span, in their 1970s heyday and from 1980 through to 2013’s classic set written with Terry Pratchett, Wintersmith.

Album: Black Country, New Road - Forever Howlong

A left turn that trades chaos for charm, with mixed results

Black Country, New Road’s Forever Howlong is an ambitious reinvention that both captivates and, at times, frustrates. Following Isaac Wood’s departure, the band leans into a more collaborative and folk-inspired direction, trading their post-punk chaos for something more delicate and introspective. It’s a bold move, and one that yields some truly beautiful moments, even if the overall experience doesn’t fully resonate.

Album: The Waterboys - Life, Death and Dennis Hopper

An alternately involving then naff tribute to a countercultural film figurehead

Mike Scott is The Waterboys. Launched by wide-eyed 1980s folk-rock, and “The Whole of the Moon”, he’s long since roamed into whatever stylistic gumbo he fancies. The latest album – the band’s 16th – is a concept piece, a 25-track sonic biography of the late Hollywood maverick Dennis Hopper.

Album: Erlend Apneseth - Song Over Støv

Norwegian musical impressionist’s journey into the centre of a vortex

A pizzicato violin opens Song Over Støv. Gradually, other instruments arrive: bowed violin, a fluttering flute, pattering percussion, an ominous double bass. They merge. The climax is furious, intensely rhythmic. Suddenly, it is over.

Album: Jason Isbell - Foxes in the Snow

Small stories, big talent from the Alabaman storyteller extraordinaire

America – the pro-wrestling-ass nation, the ultimate society of the spectacle – famously likes things big, and modern country and western music has gone along with that. Big hats, big trucks, big sentiment, big pop production, very big sales indeed, and not a lot in the way of subtlety. But country also has a parallel history, of course: as music of the little guy, the theatre of the domestic, a place for preservation of simple folk traditions in the face of the overwhelming scale of modernity.