With a focus on traditional instrumentals, Ben Robertson's 'Rosewood' shows signs that we're witnessing a virtuoso guitarist in the making.
Rachel Wilkinson reviews 'Nick Hart Sings Ten English Folk Songs' and finds a musical jack-of-all-trades, master of so much.
We, famously, love a Roud number, and any review that manages a full house - one for every single track on the album - is always welcome at Tradfolk Towers. Here, Alex Hurr tell us why the traditional songs on The Haar's 'Where Old Ghosts Meet' are a must-listen.
The unflinching protest and traditional folk singer releases the video to his crowdfunded single, 'A Right to Roam'.
Vermont folk singer, Fern Maddie, delivers a questing, unsettling, occasionally visionary collection of songs. An impressive debut, well worth your time.
Tamsin Elliott's debut album, FREY, is, in a word, sublime. Few albums this year have taken us on such a magical journey.
New contemporary folk label/collective Broadside Hacks tackle another traditional classic, hinting at things to come perhaps? Alex Hurr investigates.
The Brown Girl and Other Folk Songs by Angeline Morrison is an incredibly intimate performance that highlights the singer's considerable vocal chops.
Bryony Griffith and Alice Jones deliver A Year Too Late and a Month Too Soon, later than expected but the sooner the better, and it's a wonderful album to boot.
Anna Tam returns with Hatching Hares, a breathless, wide-ranging album that plays to her considerable vocal and multi-instrumental talents.
'Mousehold' is a thoughtful head-bop of an album that takes you on a journey through the flatlands of the East.
From the quiet sanctum of a church in bustling Brooklyn, the extraordinary Nora Brown delivers her intimate third album: 'Long Time to be Gone'.