Category: Magazine Sixty reviews

  • Magazine Sixty Music Review With Wave Arising

    Magazine Sixty Music Review With Wave Arising

    Greg Fenton reviews Wave Arising – (The) Rooted Sky – Ransom Note Records It would be fair to say that I only possess a passing knowledge of Spiral Tribe’s adventure including those of member Sebastian Vaughan’s part in it all, something I intend to rectify because it’s another part of the cultural jigsaw I find…

  • Magazine Sixty Music Review with Dino Lenny

    Magazine Sixty Music Review with Dino Lenny

    Greg Fenton reviews Dino Lenny – Lose Control – R&S Records Dino Lenny’s recent releases have sounded like a series of engaging conversations of late by communicating vibrant motion and meaning for you to react to. The title, Lose Control says all you need to know tearing up figurative notions and dancefloors in the process.…

  • Magazine Sixty Music Review with Moderna

    Magazine Sixty Music Review with Moderna

    Greg Fenton reviews Moderna – Blades feat. Theus Mago – Brave New Rave The air of mystery is always a tempting proposition, especially in the hands of Moderna creating smoldering atmospheres intertwined with the radical proposition of creative, contemporary purpose. Blades reveals an aspect of the forthcoming album with the apt title, The Future Is…

  • Magazine Sixty Music Review With Nutty Nys – Natural (Retake) (Charles Webster Remixes)

    Magazine Sixty Music Review With Nutty Nys – Natural (Retake) (Charles Webster Remixes)

    Greg Fenton reviews Nutty Nys – Natural (Retake) (Charles Webster Remixes) – Stay True Sounds Outstanding work from Charles Webster once again by fine-tuning this beautiful vocal delivery perfectly. It’s found in the wash of harmonies, simmering percussion, and imaginative arrangement of soulful sounds that all at once warm the heart, and ignite the mind.…

  • Magazine Sixty Music Review with Cellar

    Magazine Sixty Music Review with Cellar

    Greg Fenton reviews Cellar – Blue Tenderness – Cellaroot It’s the sense of freedom unleashed via an almost intuitive, interactive propulsion of rhythm, reduced harmony, and the forward-thinking yet almost contradictory pulse of analogue, modular machines that make this all feel so engaging. That and the fact in no way can you predict what will…

  • Magazine Sixty Music Review with Moving Away From The Pulsebeat

    Magazine Sixty Music Review with Moving Away From The Pulsebeat

    Greg Fenton reviews Moving Away From The Pulsebeat – Post-Punk Britain 1978-1981 – Cherry Red Records Shall we discuss Post-Punk again? Maybe not beyond sounding like it was dreamt up as one of those catch-all titles, though lacking the necessary breadth to fit the great divide between its wild diversity of styles. In reality, the…

  • Magazine Sixty Music Review with DJ Counselling

    Magazine Sixty Music Review with DJ Counselling

    Greg Fenton reviews DJ Counselling – Alt-Mobeat As an artist channeling all that you are into music must prove to be a fearsome trial at times, however, the consequent rewards of such honest, heartfelt expression mean we get to rejoice in its repercussions as light shines brightly at the end of the tunnel. DJ Counselling’s…

  • Magazine Sixty Music Review with M4LA

    Magazine Sixty Music Review with M4LA

    Greg Fenton reviews M4LA – Hoult EP – Beyonders Music It sounds like people are singing again. And not over the tired, old regurgitated disco of the past but in new, contemporary ways pointing music in the correct direction. Happy days. Nick Grimes (Gr1mes) seasoned voice spills tastefully across the delicate piano and over the…

  • Magazine Sixty Music Review with Transmission Towers

    Magazine Sixty Music Review with Transmission Towers

    Greg Fenton reviews Transmission Towers – Sparse – É Soul Cultura Let’s begin with the word, excellence. Not one I find use for as often these days but one which describes this beautifully crafted creation fittingly. Music to get lost and found might also feel apt. Wrapped in the envelope of soulful certainty Sparse is…