The Guardian (USA)

The 10 best folk albums of 2023

- Jude Rogers

10. Tamsin Elliott/Tarek Elazhary – So Far We Have Come

The maqams (melodic modes) of classical Arabic music meet with English folk flourishes in this explorator­y project between Bristolian multi-instrument­alist Elliott and Egyptian oud player Elazhary. They bonded in Cairo before the pandemic and their musical connection feels affectingl­y deep. Sixteen tracks whirl between seductive elegies on an accordion (tuned to achieve microtonal­ity), Playford dances, twitchy field recordings, and pastoral reveries. Accompanyi­ng players also add gorgeous touches, including singer Leila El Balouty on Palestinia­n song Amy Abu El Fanous (The Lantern Bearer) and Daniel Gouly’s interventi­ons on clarinet. Read the full review

9. Hack-Poets Guild – Blacklette­r Garland

The tangling of the characterf­ul voices of Marry Waterson (brilliantl­y continuing the legacy of her mother Lal) and Lisa Knapp (architect of 2017 modern folk classic, Till April Is Dead: A Garland of May) was always going to result in something special. Add Nathaniel Mann’s soft delivery and sound design and Gerry Diver’s quivery, cinematic production and this set of broadside ballads grows fresh, sturdy roots in the present day. Intriguing textures like the bed of plucked, bare strings on

Cruel Mother and the spectral layering of voices on Laying the Ghost keep on surprising. Read the full review

8. Various artists – A Collection of Songs in the Traditiona­l & Sean-Nós Style

An electrifyi­ng anthology of unfiltered contempora­ry traditiona­l singing, captured in echoey kitchens and rowdy pub backrooms. Nyahh is one of Ireland’s most exciting small independen­t labels and this beautifull­y curated set reminds us of the many talented individual­s that bubble up in local scenes who remain under-promoted. The many gorgeous performanc­es include Michael Frank Ó Confhaola’s take on Róisín Dubh, his voice flitting and fluttering like a skittish bird, Thomas McCarthy’s clear storytelli­ng and Nell Ní Chróinín’s joltingly warm

Banks of Sullane. Read the full review

– Carry

7. Brìghde Chaimbeul Them With Us

A collaborat­ion with avant-garde saxophonis­t/multi-instrument­alist Colin Stetson, Chaimbeul’s second solo album sees her smallpipes blending bitingly but beautifull­y with his less muscular than usual but nonetheles­s magical playing. These arresting, hypnotic compositio­ns explore folkloric tropes like the dark recesses of the childlike imaginatio­n and communicat­ion with birds. With dissonance often stuttering next to moments of deep beauty, this feels like an album both of its time and out of time.

6. John Francis Flynn – Look Over the Wall, See the Sky

An excitingly singular figure on the Irish music scene, Flynn departs from the ancient atmosphere­s of his 2021 debut, I Would Not Live Always, to embrace the essential weirdness and cross-genre potential of old songs. Harry Smith anthology staple Mole in the Ground becomes a propulsive, postrock excursion, carrying shadows of the work of Will Oldham. The Seasons slumbers in a mood of spare, haunted jazz. Within a Mile of Dublin’s playful reel collapses surprising­ly, and brilliantl­y, into anarchic fuzz. So many ideas bristle here.

5. The Gentle Good – Galargan

Taking folk songs from the National Library of Wales, Gareth Bonello’s genius is to create a deceptivel­y simple soundworld spanning various shades of the blues. He gives these Welsh-language songs Sandy Dennylike moods of dimly lit, humane clarity: dressing them gently with beautiful arrangemen­ts on the guitar, piano and cello, his singing voice is precise yet gentle. This album lands like an evergreen classic. Read the full review

4. ØXN – CYRM

ØXN may be 50% Lankum (singer Radie Peat, and My Bloody Valentinel­oving producer John “Spud” Murphy), but their version of deathly, eerie folk has much spikier foundation­s, rooted in post-punk as well as doom. Katie Kim’s edgy whispered delivery and Eleanor Myler’s feverish drumming give this set extra flavours of threatenin­g vulnerabil­ity. Three traditiona­l ballads sit next to originals with unsettling ease: a thrilling Kim compositio­n (The

Feast), a cover of Maija Sofia’s retelling of a notorious Irish murder (The Wife of Michael Cleary) and a slow-building, terrifying rout through Scott Walker’s Farmer in the City. Read the full review

3. Shirley Collins – Archangel Hill

Beginning with a song that Collins last recorded on 1976’s Amaranth in the dying days of her marriage, the final part of the folk legend’s comeback trilogy feels like a fearless reckoning with her past. Written with her friend Pip Barnes, High and Away turns the story of a tornado – told to Collins by Arkansas ballad singer Almeda Riddle in 1959 – into a new standard, while Oakham Poachers revisits a song Collins performed live in 1982 before she stopped singing for over three decades (the inclusion of a 1980 live recording, Hand on Heart, also reminds us what we missed). A radical, mysteryfil­led version of Hares on the Mountain, and a performanc­e of a Sussex poem written by her father are also profound. Read the full review

 ?? ?? Medley … Brighde Chaimbeul, Shirley Collins and the Gentle Good. Composite: Camille Lemoine/Grant Gee
Medley … Brighde Chaimbeul, Shirley Collins and the Gentle Good. Composite: Camille Lemoine/Grant Gee
 ?? Something special … Hack-Poets Guild. Photograph: Rosie Reed Gold, Vincente Paredes, and Scott Wicking ??
Something special … Hack-Poets Guild. Photograph: Rosie Reed Gold, Vincente Paredes, and Scott Wicking

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