Spiro, Passing Clouds, Dalston | reviews, news & interviews
Spiro, Passing Clouds, Dalston
Spiro, Passing Clouds, Dalston
Bristol quartet mix folk with avant-garde, classical and punk
Wednesday, 09 December 2009
Jane HarbourDave Gouldie
A self-styled “string quartet comprising a guitar, fiddle, mandolin and accordion” - welcome to the topsy–turvy world of Spiro. A world where nothing is quite what it seems. A world where up is down, black is white, and folk is, well, kind of avant-garde.
A self-styled “string quartet comprising a guitar, fiddle, mandolin and accordion” - welcome to the topsy–turvy world of Spiro. A world where nothing is quite what it seems. A world where up is down, black is white, and folk is, well, kind of avant-garde.
more New music
Album: Pearl Jam - Dark Matter
Enduring grunge icons return full of energy, arguably their most empowered yet
Album: Paraorchestra with Brett Anderson and Charles Hazlewood - Death Songbook
An uneven voyage into darkness
theartsdesk on Vinyl 83: Deep Purple, Annie Anxiety, Ghetts, WHAM!, Kaiser Chiefs, Butthole Surfers and more
The most wide-ranging regular record reviews in this galaxy
Album: EMEL - MRA
Tunisian-American singer's latest is fired with feminism and global electro-pop maximalism
Music Reissues Weekly: Congo Funk! - Sound Madness from the Shores of the Mighty Congo River
Assiduous exploration of the interconnected musical ecosystems of Brazzaville and Kinshasa
Ellie Goulding, Royal Philharmonic Concert Orchestra, Royal Albert Hall review - a mellow evening of strings and song
Replacing dance beats with orchestral sounds gives the music a whole new feel
Album: A Certain Ratio - It All Comes Down to This
Veteran Mancunians undergo a further re-assessment and reinvention
Album: Maggie Rogers - Don't Forget Me
Rogers continues her knack for capturing natural moments, embracing a more live sound
theartsdesk at Tallinn Music Week - art-pop, accordions and a perfect techno hideaway
A revived sense of civilisation thanks to dazzlingly diverse programming
Album: Lizz Wright - Shadow
Brilliant album from superlative vocalist
Album: Shabaka - Perceive its Beauty, Acknowledge its Grace
A quiet and reflective breakthrough
Album: Nia Archives - Silence is Loud
Sweeping up generations' worth of influences into a giddy pop rush
Add comment