New Release Reviews

John Craigie – I Swam Here

There are certain artists for whom their USP is nothing more attention grabbing than they are excellent musicians, singers and writers simply getting on with the job of refining and honouring their craft. John Craigie is all three of the above and without hitting anyone over the head with gimmicks, he continues to amass a following thanks to just being very, very good at what he does. Today that means nine critically lauded studio albums, three live recordings and a series of covers collections, including 2025’s ‘Lonely Revolver,’ a full-show rendition of The Beatles’ ‘Revolver’ which he engagingly (sgt) peppers with history, and stories told between each beloved song. Craigie’s music resonates far beyond the studio, with sold-out solo and full-band tours across the North America, Europe, and Australia, show-stopping performances at annual gatherings like Newport Folk Festival, Pickathon, Edmonton Folk Festival, and High Sierra Music Festival. With this latest record of new material already available, the news is good for John remains indisputably on the same evolving role we have enjoyed over the last decade and if I tell you ‘I Swam Here’ is a more reflective offering than before, fear not; this is mindfulness that loses none of Craigie’s trademark panache. Recording sessions took in an initial batch of sessions in New Orleans where John played a nylon stringed acoustic guitar as his lead instrument for the first time on record. It appears that, with the tone established from the outset, the singer and his musician pals were able to follow through and realise the creation of a John Craigie album like no other.

The album enters with the gentle picking of ‘Mermaid Weather’ and you immediately feel like handing over the wheel to this audio captain. It may well be minimal and the verses breeze in like gentle waves, but there in those decorative little flourishes, the brush strokes of percussion that somehow coast with purpose and the bar-room piano fills which quietly rain down like pure water, are the flashes of transmutation that elevate Craigie’s music from mere anecdotal confession into the realms of majestic. ‘Fire Season’ has the hazy lilt once mastered by Beachwood Sparks and indeed the fire of the title is felt in that Laurel Canyon style warmth of the music. This was one of the earliest pieces written for the album and its themes of perseverance and dedication to craftsmanship were clearly followed up on from this launch pad. In fact, much like Bob Dylan’s ‘Blood On The Tracks,’ where much of the album was re-recorded in a second round of sessions because the singer did not feel the materials essence had been captured first time around, so too did John have to take another run at some songs on ‘I Swam Here.’

The man himself explains that “there were two separate recording sessions in two separate locations with different musicians. This is because after New Orleans, three of the ten songs did not meet my vision, and it was not realistic to get back to New Orleans to re-record based on everyone’s schedule. The intention in the mixing is to not have the listener able to tell which ones were recorded where; but it’s possible some attentive ears will be able to.” On ‘Whispers’ John, as a soft harmonium sound anchors his freefall at the close, cascades to the refrain “I’ll follow your whispers all the way down” before a cymbal wash snuffs out the light. ‘Edna Strange’ has the wild frontier echo of a spaghetti western and it is here, on a Marty Robbins inspired song, that John’s vintage guitar sound really feels like the optimum choice of expressive instrument. The words are mighty fine too, stand out lines in this particular story song including the pin-sharp, “she wore no wedding ring, but I wasn’t blind, I saw the mark where it’d been.”

I have been a fan of Craigie’s for a few years now and one aspect of his work in which he excelled was a rich, dry and witty, finely honed lyrical bent that had more than a hint of prime Dylan about it. On this record though the Bob comparisons are not served up quite so readily but, if you consider how Craigie has co-ordinated a wholesale style and tone shift for this record whilst remaining unmistakable himself, then maybe that is the biggest proof of a Zimmerman-like pedigree of all. ‘Dry Land’ points a finger of blame in the direction of terra firma as the breezy music looks to the sea under a sky alive with ringing pedal steels and melodic keys. The uniformity of sound continues on ‘Call Me A Bullet,’ this one growing irresistibly into its undeniable refrain. ‘Claws’ is a slight departure, the muddy guitar sound and general swampy vibe recalling some of Daniel Lanois’ production work from thirty odd years ago. ‘Mama I Should Call’ plays service to some classic country ballad tropes, including the satisfying counterbalance of a male-female joint vocal in the chorus parts, but that Mexican shuffle is pretty special too. Penultimate ‘I Remember Nothing’ is a glorious tumble into echoey climes crashlanding into ‘Don’t Let Me Run Away,’ where John sounds like he is singing from the bottom of a valley, mournful wind instrumentation evoking a nostalgic reverie and the shuffling brushes of the rhythm suggesting our man has wandered off into the sunset. Hope within this forlorn close can be found there in the title; John may have drifted out for a season of meditation, but his spirit remains, and he will return to carry this journey ever onwards; and long may he continue to do just that as I am very much on this deep, musically thrilling ride too.

Danny Neill

Get a copy of the album today via this link: https://amzn.to/4cB2ctf

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Fresh Juice

Fresh Juice 30th March 2026

Konyikeh – Mercenary

Let’s commence this week with a voice that is being touted as the next UK based soul star to watch out for. ‘Mercenary was released via FAMM in late February 2026, the single following the momentum of Konyikeh’s October track ‘Vulnerability’ and arrives just after her second sold‑out headline show at London’s SJQ. It opens with urgent guitar lines and drums that feel expansive yet tightly controlled. She threads in influences that sit outside her more immediately recognisable palette, drawing on Arabic scales, Gqom, and Amapiano to build a world that feels both cinematic and soulful. Her vocal delivery stays precise and poised, while the harmonies swirl with an eerie, filmic tension. You can find a download here: https://amzn.to/3NIRUOj

Diyet & The Love Soldiers – Give Me A Reason (Acoustic)

This is the first single from Diyet & The Love Soldiers new acoustic EP being released to coincide with their latest tour. ‘The Seeds Of Dreaming’ is a companion release to last year’s full‑band album of the same name. Due out on 17th April 2026, the EP gathers five re‑worked tracks from that 2025 record, presenting them in raw, single‑take performances that highlight the emotional grain of Diyet’s voice and the trio’s close‑knit musicianship. Diyet was born and raised in the Kluane region of the Yukon, she carries Indigenous, Japanese and European heritage, writing and singing in both English and Southern Tutchone. The music she makes with her band touches the meeting point between ancestral knowledge and contemporary life, shaped by her return home after years in Vancouver’s publishing world. Find out more via this link: https://diyet.bandcamp.com/

John Craigie – Dry Land

One of my favourite songwriters of modern times, John Craigie is captured here in a live clip performing a new track from his latest album ‘I Swam Here.’ He is exploring gentler tones on this album (which will be getting the full length review treatment on these pages very soon) as the troubadour from Los Angeles, often described as in the lineage of Woody Guthrie and Ramblin’ Jack Elliott, boldly broadens his song palette. His blend of wry humour, road‑worn narrative writing, and acoustic intimacy has become his signature but to put it in straight talking terms, John Craigie is a very fine songwriter and performer. Find out more and get a copy of the album this way: https://johncraigie.com/

Green-House – Under The Oak

This haunting, ambient-adjacent piece by Green-House is from the ‘Hinterlands’ album on Ghostly International. The album treats ambient music like a living ecosystem; lush, breathing, and quietly radical. Their sound folds field recordings, soft-focus synths, and a deep ecological sensitivity into a world that feels both restorative and subtly adventurous. Watch these pages over the coming days for a full length feature on the album, ahead of that you can get a copy of ‘Hinterlands’ via this link: https://amzn.to/4lTy3IK

Wooden Overcoat – Home

Based in Portland’s hazy melting pot of musical wonders, psychedelic pop outfit Wooden Overcoat unveil ‘Home,’ a shimmering, reverb‑soaked single that drifts like a sanctuary built from haze and heart. Its trippy visual companion comes from Italian multi‑arts visionary Francesca Bonci, framing Brant Hajek’s reflection on beauty that can’t quite hold; two people paired as naturally as elements in the wild, slowly decomposing, self‑destructing, and still reaching for each other in the glow. Find out more about this incredible debut release here: https://wooden-overcoat.bandcamp.com/track/home

The Maharajas – Just Drink Wine

Ending things with a bang this week, we have The Maharajas kicking the door in with ‘Just Drink Wine,’ a blast of pure Stockholm swagger that reminds you why they’ve been Europe’s most dangerous garage‑rock lifeline for three decades. Their formula is still lethal: fuzz guitars that snarl, drums that hit like a bar‑fight heartbeat, and vocals that sneer with the kind of conviction you can’t fake. They’re not trading on nostalgia, they are living the 1960s spirit in real time, turning raw R&B, beat grit, and high‑octane attitude into something that still feels volatile, stylish, and gloriously unpolished. It’s the sound of a band who never stopped believing rock ’n’ roll should be loud, sweaty, and a little bit reckless. You can get it right now by following the link: https://amzn.to/4s2mYXl

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