Bowlegs - 28.02.2011  Presenting traditional folk melodies alongside the raw gusto of the 70s rock movement sounds like an unsavoury recipe for disaster. But with third alb...
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Eli Lee - 28.02.2011  At last, a record that takes on the nebulous new genre of witch house. In No Witch, The Cave Singers declare they just can't take it anymore - it's to...
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Benjamin Ewing - 23.02.2011 The sound of No Witch is an emphatically bouncy amalgamation of folk, country, blues, and occasional sitar ? all in service of the sort of loose rakis...
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Jason Heller - 22.02.2011  It’s a testament to The Cave Singers’ good sense and taste that No Witch, the group’s third album, is a tightly controlled, competent set of folk song...
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Matthew Fiander - 22.02.2011  Right off the bat, the title of the new Cave Singers’ album surely marks a change. Following the inclusive, feel-good titles of Invitation Songs and W...
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Eric Grandy - 22.02.2011  Seattle, as much as any city, has benefited in the past few years from a renewed interest in all things folky and pastoral. Shaggy folk traditionalist...
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Don Yates - 11.02.2011 This Seattle folk-rock band’s 3rd album was produced by Randall Dunn (Black Mountain, Earth, Boris), and he provides them with a more muscular, rock-o...
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Chris Buckle - 03.02.2011  ‘Authenticity’ is fetishised in folk and rock alike. It’s a vague, unempirical concept, the application of which relies upon a paraphrasing of Potter ...
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