Magazine Sixty
Music reviews and artist interviews
Magazine Sixty brings you reviews and interviews with some of the worlds leading independent artists. Discover excitng new electronic music, revisit seminal classics and hear from the people behind the sounds.
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Listening back to this album from the dawn of summer 2022 feels like the antidote to the murky grey gathering outside as autumn asserts its cold presence. Full of life affirming sounds and songs singing praises most notably on the piano coloured melodies of Black Apple Pink Apple and in particular the cool illumination of
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A boycalledcrow returns. Not to green, pastoral pastures of traditional folklore but to nervous, uneasy terrain that never quite settles. Like a story broken apart to reveal fragments or suggestions of composition you enter a strange world, though none the less a wonderfully exhilarating one in which you discover new process. It’s almost hard to
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If music is a cultural provocateur, an agent for change, then Filippo Vicario’s brilliant new release for Release LDN is as electrifying as it is radical. Poke, begins via a series of sensory charges igniting the senses as raw, pounding drums gather pace alongside a compelling and edgy array of fierce keyboard sounds, accompanied by
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In a sense you almost expect music like this like, that is to say of such beautiful life-affirming elegance, to accompany sunshine rays beamed down rapidly from heaven up there. Consquently acting as a foil to the Autumn grey outside while bringing the gift of light to the day Posta De Sol provides a most
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On a day like today, as clouds drift seamlessly by revealing sky blue heights charged with a blast of warm, autumnal sun, it’s easy to let this music flow through your veins exciting a thirst for life and an appreciation of nature as it surrounds you in such glory. Jazz as I’ve said endlessly is
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Located at the north-eastern edge of Scotland, around the Orkney Islands, the body of water called Scapa Flow is full of history, playing host to shipwrecks, Vikings and an oil terminal. So you can see why Andrew Heath’s imagination was sparked by the place and how that turbulent past has been translated into the ebb









