
Craven Faults – Yard Loup
This is taken from the new Craven Faults album ‘Sidings’ which is out now on The Leaf Label, a dependably bold and present day progressive label who make a virtue of the idea that there is some fun going forward. This is an act shrouded in some mystery but they are building a track record laced with expansive analogue electronic music of the mind. The new record takes its inspiration from the rusty deserted landscapes of post-industrial Northern England where the ghosts of electricity smoulder out of disused buildings, wherein ancient monuments of sound and recording equipment are recharged into existence and Craven Faults are a conduit for the thrum of sounds that re-emerge back into the atmosphere. This is electronica without limits, a sound that messes with the balance of time and space where the light and shade, the flesh and the steel, the settled and the disturbed breathe and feel as one.
Lady Nade – One Of Us
It is delightful to learn of new music coming from Lady Nade, an artist whose work balances the integrity of a folk singer-songwriter with the emotional heft and melodic flare of a serious soul artist. There are not too many I can think of who walked that line so convincingly, maybe Joan Armatrading or Tracy Chapman but either way, the singer born Nadine Gingell has had all these facets from the get go. It is said that the artists earliest influences came from the record collection of Nadine’s grandfather, which exposed her to Americana and rock ‘n’ roll as well as the more detectable elements of the Lady Nade sound. And now, ten years on from debut ‘Hard To Forget’, recorded in her kitchen, there is every reason to predict that Lady Nade’s evolution into an artist of great depth and an unmistakable creative fire is playing out before our very eyes and ears.
Lucinda Williams – World’s Gone Wrong
And while I am talking about singer-songwriter artist who are making a welcome return, here is one of the greatest ever. This is Lucinda continuing on the path of rehabilitation from a stroke using her creative energy as a font for regeneration. There is a bit of fire and anger in there too, the singer in full react and respond mode to the unfurling political situation in her homeland and stating in plain speak the way she sees it. But anyone can spout an opinion or jump on a soapbox, the craft is turning these impulses into song and creating a new piece of art; it sounds like Lucinda Williams still has all those senses fully plugged in and functioning. No wonder she has, with good reason, been called the female Bob Dylan; just like Dylan these days, the human condition and all its physical pitfalls does not dim the desire or the need to feel, write, perform and express. This is the title track from her new album.
Foy Vance – I Think I Preferred The Question
This is one that came out towards the end of 2025 by the Northern Irish singer-songwriter Foy Vance. It is a new chapter for Foy as he moves to Rounder Records and mines an earthy, muddy realism in both his sound and his composing. The track was produced by Ethan Johns which instantly ensures the offering arrives with a trademark of quality, but still it would be nothing if Vance was not on the devastating form we find him in here. Lyrically it seems to be meditating on the wonder in mystery, in the importance of enjoying the journey towards something, because maybe the feeling of fulfilment, of reaching your destination, does not match up to the mysteries of the unexplained. The disappointment of reality maybe? Well if I try and come to a definitive conclusion I am rather proving the point made in the song; instead just enjoy the drama and tension as it builds in this superb track.
Katherine Priddy – Hurricane
Not a cover of the Bob Dylan classic but instead perhaps the folkiest of all the artists I have featured this week, Katherine Priddy, tapping into the gentle soulful groove I spoke about with Lady Nade previously. More so, there is a subtle hint of smooth jazz and bossa nova at play here. All of which sit in sharp contrast to the darkness that prevails in the shades of violence in the lyric, showing an artist who is evolving away from the pure folk routes of her earlier work into a musical force across the spectrum. ‘Hurricane’ is an immense song with some irresistibly lush changes as the verse builds to the chorus. This is the third single from her new album ‘These Frightening Machines’, which is coming out on March 6th 2026.
Greazy Alice – Circles
This is some tender, laid back, rear porch, rocking chair, country balladry of a high stripe to close proceedings this week. With the ‘As Time Goes By’ album due out at the end of the month, this is from an EP of the same name released on Loose by a band comprising Alex Pianovich on vocals, guitars and piano, Jo Morris on backing vocals, Lee Garcia on drums and Will Repholz on bass guitar. There is an element of grief and the sense of life dishing out some hard lines imbedded into this tune, but a light shines through the melancholia as well, ushering a motion from introspection to hope and beauty.