Music Scene Wales’ Top 50 Albums of 2023

  1. Ren – Sick Boi

    “This is a mammoth album of the best futuristic hip hop you’ve ever heard, knocking everyone else out of the park.” – Louder Than War

2. The Heavy North – Delta Shakedown

“This is an album that will be talked about for years, it’s a true blues explosion of sound yet there is more to it, far more. The blues/rock vibe acts as a supporting foundation for other elements to be introduced, elements of funk, punk, classical, gospel and everything in between blend seamlessly with their trademark garage blues ethos.” – Upcoming Bands

3. The Shed Project – Our Fear Is Their Power

“The Shed Project show their talents and growth with their new album. Each track goes from strength to strength, hooking you all the way in. The quality in production and song writing is refined, Roy’s vocals are heartfelt and real and their sound has matured.” – Music Scene Wales

4. CVC – Get Real

“Channelling 60’s California, this Welsh six-piece charm with classy psych-pop made for long summer evenings” – The Guardian

5. Apollo Junction – Here We Are

“Apollo Junction are set to take their hallmark anthemic sound to inspiring new heights and a wider audience with their third album Here We Are”. – Louder Than War

6. Trampolene – Rules of Love & War

“Excellently crafted indie guitar pop or whatever you want to label it…a real earworm” – RPM Online

7. Laurie Wright – Get On The End Of It!

“A force of nature possessing a raw and genuine talent that many can only dream of” – Music Scene Wales

8. The Royston Club – Shaking Hips and Crashing Cars

“The whole piece is an awesome medley of sick strings, relatable life experiences and very singable lyrics. Here is your wake up call…get those hips shaking – try to avoid the car crashing though”. – No Extra Source

9. Skindred – Smile

“Ragga-metal mainstays Skindred crank the attitude and stack up a few more anthems on irrepressible eighth album Smile.” – Kerrang

10. Rogue Jones – Dos Bebés

“Strides confidently and boldly, full of great songs built and presented with excellent musicianship and production.” – Wales Arts Review

11. The Lottery Winners – Anxiety Replacement Therapy

12. Lewca – Boombap for Boomers

13. The Lathums – From Nothing To A Little Bit More

14. The Reytons – What’s Rock And Roll?

15. DMA’s – How Many Dreams?

16. Mr Phormula – A.W.D.L

17. boygenius – The Record

18. Himalayas – From Hell To Here

19. Declan Welsh and the Decadent West – 2

20. Godsticks – This Is What A Winner Looks Like

21. Mark Sharp & The Bicycle Thieves – Unmask The Circus

22. Senses – Little Pictures Without Sound

23. Stellar Echoes – Now Is All There Is

24. Nancy Ackroyd – Light the Lamps

25. Brownbear – Demons

26. The Utopiates – The Sun Also Rises

27. Mace The Great – SplottWorld

28. Andrew Cushin – Waiting For The Rain

29. Brooke Combe – Black Is The New Gold

30. Thrillhouse – Something About This Place

31. The Sherlocks – People Like Me & You

32. H. Hawkline – Milk For Flowers

33. The View – Exorcism of Youth

34. Death Of Guitar Pop – Be Lucky

35. Baxter Dury – I Thought I Was Better Than You

36. Spector – Here Come The Early Nights

37. BDRMM – I Don’t Know

38. King Krule – Space Heavy

39. Olivia Dean – Messy

40. Rebelski – Simplicity

41. The Goa Express – The Goa Express

42. Gallaher’s Green – Dare To Dream

43. Box Of Trash – Candlewood 230

44. Ivan Moult – Songs From The Severn Grove

45. Tapestri – Tell Me World

46. Those Damn Crows – Inhale/Exhale

47. Revolution Rabbit Deluxe – Control Freaks

48. Patio – Collection

49. Come At The King – Overgrown

50. Katie MF – False Starts, Open Endings





Emily Marsden – Editor
#MusicSceneWales
@MusicSceneWales
musicscenewalescymru@gmail.com

Lewca Releases New Single ‘Monday Morning’

LEWCA is an English singer/songwriter/musician now resident  in France, never having been one for convention, LEWCA started life being born in a squat in Brixton, and by the time he was aged nineteen, he was living in a squat in Paris… After studying fine art and dabbling in film, LEWCA started making music just before, in his own words, he was “too old to die young”. Influences for LEWCA range from decadence to debauchery and musically from the likes of  The Clash, The Streets, Ian Dury, ASAP Rockythe Sleaford Mods, LCD Soundsystem, Bob Dylan, Eminem, Tom Waits, & more… 

After being in a few bands that fell apart for various reasons, LEWCA decided to go it alone in 2018, his seriousness for a desire to succeed crept in, in around 2019, but then the pandemic hit in 2020 putting laid to his plans for a while. 

Not being deterred, however,  LEWCA’s first EP was released in Dec 2020, with two more being released in 2021, then followed by a remix EP, a charity EP, and the Album; ‘Friday Night Rockstar’. 

Previous releases have seen LEWCA being championed on the likes of BBC Radio 6 Music and featured in official Apple iTunes music charts. 

Although LEWCA collaborates with various different musicians on his projects (most often ex band members) his main partner in crime is S.O.A.P.(aka DJ Sonofapitch – Chinese man, Taiwan MC) who is a Parisian drum & bass DJ & Beatmaker whom LEWCA first met when they shared a billing at a gig together in 2013.  Their partnership has grown from a shared love of wonky beats, UK soundscapes & a healthy dose of humour!

Since 2018 the duo have released 3 EP’s, & have been working together on two albums : “Friday Night Rockstar” which was released at the very end of 2022, & “Boombap for Boomers” which is out now.

LEWCA composes and sings all of the lyrics and toplines on the tracks and is also a  sometimes kazoo player! While S.O.A.P is more on the instrumentals playing keys, saxophone and doing “wicked DJ stuff”!

LEWCA is now gearing up for the release of the ‘Boombap For Boomers’ album by releasing a couple of the featured tracks, one such track being the tongue in cheek, yet astonishingly accurate and perfectly timed track of ‘Monday Morning’

It will probably come as no surprise that ‘Monday Morning’ is a track that’s all about that Monday Morning panic we all have and at no time is this more prevalent than the back to school Monday Morning especially after the long, long 6 week summer holidays. This is a track that will resonate with parents everywhere! 

Musically the track is heavily influenced with reggae beats and trumpet notes throughout.. It’s a very happy go lucky soundtrack interspersed with very relatable story telling lyricism about the trials and tribulations of getting the kids off to school. 

‘Boombap For Boomers’ from which the single ‘Monday Morning’ is taken was recorded in S.O.A.P.’ s basement studio over the  period of a year and all tracks were all mixed by S.O.A.P. and have been Mastered by Blanka.

Emily Marsden – Editor
#MusicSceneWales
@MusicSceneWales
musicscenewalescymru@gmail.com

Lewca Releases New Album ‘Boombap for Boomers’

LEWCA is an English singer/songwriter/musician now resident  in France, never having been one for convention, LEWCA started life being born in a squat in Brixton, and by the time he was aged nineteen, he was living in a squat in Paris… After studying fine art and dabbling in film, LEWCA started making music just before, in his own words, he was “too old to die young”. Influences for LEWCA range from decadence to debauchery and musically from the likes of  The Clash, The Streets, Ian Dury, ASAP Rocky, the Sleaford Mods, LCD Soundsystem, Bob Dylan, Eminem, Tom Waits, & more… 

After being in a few bands that fell apart for various reasons, LEWCA decided to go it alone in 2018, his seriousness for a desire to succeed crept in, in around 2019, but then the pandemic hit in 2020 putting laid to his plans for a while. 

Not being deterred, however,  LEWCA’s first EP was released in Dec 2020, with two more being released in 2021, then followed by a remix EP, a charity EP, and the Album; ‘Friday Night Rockstar’. 

Previous releases have seen LEWCA being championed on the likes of BBC Radio 6 Music and featured in official Apple iTunes music charts. 

Although LEWCA collaborates with various different musicians on his projects (most often ex band members) his main partner in crime is S.O.A.P.(aka DJ Sonofapitch – Chinese man, Taiwan MC) who is a Parisian drum & bass DJ & Beatmaker whom LEWCA first met when they shared a billing at a gig together in 2013.  Their partnership has grown from a shared love of wonky beats, UK soundscapes & a healthy dose of humour!

Since 2018 the duo have released 3 EP’s, & have been working together on two albums : “Friday Night Rockstar” which was released at the very end of 2022, & “Boombap for Boomers” out now.

LEWCA composes and sings all of the lyrics and toplines on the tracks and is also a  sometimes kazoo player! While S.O.A.P is more on the instrumentals playing keys, saxophone and doing “wicked DJ stuff”!

‘Boombap For Boomers’ was recorded in S.O.A.P.’ s basement studio over the  period of a year and all tracks were all mixed by S.O.A.P. and have been Mastered by Blanka. The album is out now across all streaming platforms.

Emily Marsden – Editor
#MusicSceneWales
@MusicSceneWales
musicscenewalescymru@gmail.com

Lewca Releases New Single ‘Quite Like Me’

Following on from the fantastic Friday Night Rockstar album, solo artist Lewca has collaborated with dancehall legend DJ Elephant Man.

Lewca sings and raps over organic beats that borrow freely from the 80’s new wave, 90’s alternative and modern lo-fi, indie pop and hip hop.

‘Quite Like Me’ is awesome 90’s nostalgia, a great summer tune. It’s out now on all streaming platforms.

Emily Marsden – Editor
#MusicSceneWales
@MusicSceneWales
musicscenewalescymru@gmail.com

Lewca – Year One Album Review

An introspective, genre-bending journal of hedonistic depression.

This is a record that opens up as you progress through it. I’ll confess that I thought I had it pegged, but to Lewca’s credit, he ventures stylistically further on this one record than I would’ve expected.

That said, the overall vibe here is of a malevolent statement of personal darkness; if that’s your thing, then this maybe for you. If not, then this record could certainly grate on you, and maybe that’s it’s aim.

For example; ‘Year One’ by Lewca opens with some intent and what could be the tone for what’s to come; the rhubarb and custard sing-along ‘Young and Foolish’ with its profound wisdom: ‘I’d rather be young and foolish, than old and fucking stupid’.

Cool cool… Good luck with both of those seeming inevitabilities.

But then ‘Doing my Thing’ is at least… doing its own thing; it’s a song you’d avoid in the kebab shop at 3am, but then obnoxious is clearly the point. Not in a disruptive-protest, furious-punk kind of way, more an honest statement of self-dissatisfaction, which at this point, I actually believe.

‘Back from the Dead’ switches it up a bit, plodding along with a hangover, about a hangover and vocally resembling a sort of Ian Drury-esque account of a hangover. It’s well enough put together, depending on how you feel or want to hear about hangovers.

‘Fallen’ is sad. Suicide, death, it’s all there.

‘Born to Survive’ is where Lewca hits his stride. The hip-hop beats suit his vocal delivery and maybe that’s what makes sense – he’s a natural MC and lyricist. He’s a man speaking his own truth. And if what you focus on you become, perhaps tells you a lot.

Do you remember Agadoo by Black Lace? Well imagine if it was about divorce. That’s what the next hit ‘What went wrong’ feels like.

‘Beautiful Day’ (for MDMA?) is exactly what it sounds like as this creatively schizophrenic record swerves down the dance music lane. The genre-hopping being one of the record’s strengths; it’s not that predictable, even if it’s full of seemingly off-the-cuff thoughts polished into tracks. And, although there’s no sign of developing ideas further before committing to the mic, it is what it is and tracks like ‘Dodgems’ and ‘Champions’ are to be fair, bangers.

The Ska of ‘Nuffink’ picks up where The Specials left off and suits Lewca down to the ground. But then, this is a guy that’s like a playlist on shuffle. Not afraid to speak an ugly truth or two but as the record goes on it gets much more playful and creative as it spans a ton of sounds, like only a solo artist producing their own record can.

There’s some good energy on there too – take ‘Giggle’…a bouncing house party of a song you’d want to hear live. That’s not easy to pull off.

In all, this sounds like one man’s account of his world and like it or not, he probably sincerely doesn’t give a fuck.

If you feel like not giving a fuck with him, give it a listen. If not, I doubt anyone cares.

For fans of:Ian Drury, The Specials, The Jam, Kid Kapichi

Scott Massey
#MusicSceneWales
@MusicSceneWales
musicscenewalescymru@gmail.com

Music Scene Wales’ Top 70 Albums of 2022

  1. Adwaith – Bato Mato

    ”an awe-inspiring record full of vivid freshness” – Wales Arts Review

    “Influenced by the Siberian and Mongolian wilderness, as open and vast as the limitless sky around them, ‘ETO’ perfectly captures the trio’s growing confidence with its open-hearted soaring melody’s and lyrical vulnerability.” – Music Scene Wales


2. The Heavy North – Electric Soul Machine

“Electric Soul Machine is solid proof of The Heavy North’s songwriting abilities and command of their instruments plus a good knowledge of their sound and genre with a unique touch. It has well-thought dynamics that’ll have your undivided attention right from the 1st note” – Rock Era Magazine

“This album is packed to the brim with the kind of upbeat refrains and harmonies that’ll have you dancing along (in your chair if you must) from start to finish.” – Music Scene Wales


3. Holy Coves – Druids and Bards

“Druids And Bards is a powerful album which deserves your time and attention. If there is any justice it will be up there in the next couple of months in the end-of-year ‘Best Of’ lists.”- Louder Than War

Druids and Bards is a superb, flawlessly-crafted album, as close to perfect as any I’ve heard this year. Every track is outstanding, making for a joyful listening experience from start to finish. Holy Coves are back, and then some! – Eclectic Music Lover


4. Fontaines D.C.

“The Irish band’s third album is a fierce, dirge-like thundercloud of ruination” – Independent

“A breathtaking collection that’s like nothing they’ve ever done before.” – NME


5. Spiritualized – Everything Was Beautiful

“Jason Pierce returns with a sonic feast. The man also known as J. Spaceman delivers a dense, orchestrated record that is as solid as it is sprawling, proving that he’s a master of sonics. – NME

“A sweet din of magnificent melodies.” – The Guardian


6. Sea Power

“One of their best works…these dynamic, grandiose anthems are worth getting to know.” – Standard

“A hopeful and defiant record that rails against ugly, insular points of view.” – NME


7. The Brian Jonestown Massacre

“Brian Jonestown Massacre is out of this world, quite literally. Highly prolific and ever-present in the alternative-indie scene.” – Clash Music

“Immersive. Beautiful. Everything you could want from a 180grm black vinyl LP.” – Music Scene Wales


8. The Black Angels – Wilderness of Mirrors

“It’s all part of an astonishing cinematic tapestry. This album will leave you so wobbly and weak-kneed, you might have to take a few days off work to recover. Headphone melter of the year so far, for sure.” – Louder Sound

“Heavy vibes. Floaty. Cinematic. Committed.” – Music Scene Wales


9. Goat – Oh Death

“Oh Death is an extremely well put together, cohesive and dynamic album. It offers trippy and wild afro-beats with jazz infused psych rock, louder and more aggressive than Goat has ever sounded.” – The Sleeping Shaman

“It’s as confusing as hell, but it’s also thrilling, occasionally daft, and deliriously, gloriously imaginative. Goat’s best album.” – Louder Sound


10. Voldo – Melting Pot

“Altogether, as an album, it works really well, with the group’s customary taste and precision balanced against a new looseness and a return to earlier, funky playing patterns. That’s more than enough to make it the best Booker T. album in some time, the Memphis Gas of the Year, and a Major Rock Event for everyone.” – Rolling Stone

“Everything here is what you want from an all time great album.” – Music Scene Wales


11. Bob Vylan – Presents The Price Of Life

“Fiercely relevant, furious punk anthems. The London duo’s alt-rock tracks about inequality will speak to a wider audience than their previous album did, but they also never soften their edges.”- NME


12. Lewca – Friday Night Rockstar

“Lewca smashes it with his release of the debut album, Friday Night Rockstar. The Brixton-born but French-living artist comes at us from Paris with love, humour, melancholy, and a bag full of drugs. This album is sexy and relentlessness.” – Up To Hear Music


13. Hippies vs Ghosts – Giamocs

“Giamocs oozes class from beginning to end.” – Music Scene Wales

14. Josienne Clarke – Now & Then

“There is heartfelt emotion laid bare on this most personal of song cycles.” – Folk Radio


15. Suede – Autofiction

“A renewed sense of urgency – and enjoyment – pulses through this punchy, passionate comeback” – The Guardian


16. Wet Leg – Wet Leg

 “An instant classic debut that justifies the hype” – NME


17. The Shed Project – The Curious Mind Of A Common Man

 “They’re here for a good time, they wear their influences on their sleeves and couldn’t give a fuck what anyone else thinks” – Louder Than War


18. The Shop Window – A 4 Letter Word

“A 4 Letter Word is the much anticipated follow up to their 2021 debut The State Of Being Human.” – Louder Than War


19. The Telephones – Prosaic Turbulence

“The Telephones mix and unfold in a very beautiful and successful way their influences which come from bands of the 60s such as The Byrds, Love, Pink Floyd, The Beatles, and The Doors etc.” – Gew Gaw


20. The Smile – A Light For Attracting Attention

Attention is the brighter star in the Radiohead extended universe — maybe even the brightest — because the music balances beloved old sounds and new ideas while the lyrics speak pointedly to modern horrors.” – Vulture


21.The Battery Farm – FLIES

“FLIES is a valiant effort from The Battery Farm whose ferocious and distorted sound really feels the anguish and anger of modern-day society. The instrumentation is hard-hitting and experimental, the vocal variety matches the moods and themes of the album and shows how far the group is developing their sound from their previous EP.” – RGM


22. Florence &The Machine – Dance Fever

“Wonderful wildness from the most thrilling pop star of her generation In its commitment to euphoria, ‘Dance Fever’ is an album that looks forward to the release of all the pandemic’s pent-up energy at this summer’s festivals” – Independent


23. The Snuts – Burn The Empire

“Urgent excitement holds together the many twists.” – NME

24. Adam Walton – Afal

“Afal is an album that gets under the skin, that lingers and whispers at you in the darkest corners of your day.” – Wales Arts Review


25. Bjork – Fossora

“One of her hardest-hitting albums.” – The Guardian

26. Nova Twins – Supernova

“If you like music with attitude, passion and ferocity then this album and Nova Twins are most definitely for you. ‘Supernova’ really is a half hour of power and it will do nothing but continue to push this incredible band on their upwards trajectory!” – Full Pelt Music


27. Gwenno – Tresor

“Keeping “the Cornish language alive and singing Written in Cornwall and sung almost entirely in the local tongue, this album is as beautiful and strange as the county itself.” – Standard


28. Warpaint – Radiant Like This

“This comeback is a tribute to what you can accomplish when creating with people you love, proving the band can’t be tied to a specific scene.” – NME


29. Bastions – Majestic Desolation

“Majestic Desolation is a brief flash of ferocity. But in spite of its shortness, it leaves a lasting impact long after the final chords have rung out.” – Kerrang


30. Buzzard Buzzard Buzzard – Backhand Deals

“An invigorating blast of 70s power-pop that just about avoids the realms of pastiche thanks to some smart observational writing and irresistible guitar hooks.” – Guitar


31. The Skinner Brothers – Soul Boy II

“The Skinners Brothers sound is expertly varied and crafted, and you cant help but get slapped with little busts of familiarity. Senses are awaken by new tunes that you will feel like you’ve moshed to before. Think of it like this, if the restaurant menu was filled with all the big indie rock acts well The Skinners Brothers latest offering would be the mixed grill. Yummy.” – All Music Magazine


32. Skylights – What You Are

“Their emotive and raucous tunes fit the live indie-rock atmosphere without a doubt.” – RGM


33. Arctic Monkeys – The Car

“The band’s musical purpose comes through crystal clear in the elegant strings and subtle riffs cleverly woven throughout album, resulting in the most mature work the band has ever released.” Rolling Stone


34. Pixy Jones – Bits n Bobs

“It’s an eclectic mix ranging from experimental and psychedelic, synth-infused pop numbers, to the known and loved 60’s Beetle’s-esk rock harmonies – as well as the odd country blues nugget thrown in which is paired with the occasional Pixy Jones twist. Talk about an album living up to its name. Consisting of 13 tracks in total, ‘Bits n Bobs’ is truly a solid launch to any solo career.” – Hive Magazine


35. Deja Vega – Personal Hell

“With a sonic bang of pure power that screams along at breakneck speed throughout, which burns but never crashes. It’s already a contender for one of the albums of the year and I swear you will play this over and over again.” – Louder Than War


36. Michael Head & The Red Elastic Band – Dear Scott

“Can music really save your mortal soul? Maybe…Maybe not… But after listening to the new Michael Head and the Red Elastic band album Dear Scott you will surely think it can.” – Louder Than War


37. Alvvays – Blue Rev

“A subtle but satisfying expansion – The Canadians’ third album is still identifiably Alvvays, but the hooks here are sweeter, the instrumentation brighter, the energy more palpable.” – NME


38. James Domestic – Carrion Repeating

“He’s put words and music to vinyl and the results make compelling listening. Carrion Repeating is an album of eleven genre-less observational tracks, documenting our pitiful existence.” – Louder Than War


39. Horace Andy – Midnight Rocker

“Over the past five decades, the legacy of Andy’s voice has reflected his music’s history. Just as the acetate of a dubplate wears with each play, giving the genre its uniquely decaying instrumental quality, so his voice has matured from the clean, high-register clarion call on breakout single Skylarking into a richer, more vulnerable tenor. His first collaboration with British dub pioneer Adrian Sherwood, Midnight Rocker is the perfect showcase for this late-career sound, revisiting a selection of Andy’s earlier material in addition to six new tracks.” – The Guardian


40. Peaness – World Full Of Worry

“Peaness have delivered the aural equivalent of a sugar rush that leaves you exhilarated but with a bit of a come down. It won’t be long before you’re listening again though, and want to take again and again. A brilliant debut from a trio I’m looking forward to catching live soon.” – Louder Than War


41. Joe Adhemar – About The Soul

“Joe Adhemar is a genuinely individual voice with a genuinely individual view of the world. Which is giving listeners the chance to appreciate someone who stands apart from the crowd.” – Subba Cultcha


42. Just Mustard – Heart Under

“Just Mustard are a band completely at one with their sound, and with Heart Under they have well and truly mastered the art of atmospheric rock.” – Loud And Quiet


43. King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard – Omnium Gatherum

“The album is a smorgasbord of delights for any and all fans. Omnium Gatherum is proof that the band are enjoying a newfound freedom of being unshackled from their own self-imposed limitations to work albums through individual styles. Everything is on the table to be devoured, a pure feast of aural pleasure.” – Louder Than War


44. Weyes Blood – And In The Darkness, Hearts Aglow

“And in the Darkness, Hearts Aglow gently bombards you with one fantastic tune after another.” – The Guardian


45. First Aid Kit – Palomino

“Palomino’ flits between the certainties and uncertainties of love with ease, strengthened by deeper musical experimentation that won’t alienate longtime fans. Another gem in First Aid Kit’s consistently good arsenal of timeless, harmony-rich roots music.” – NME


46. Jessie Buckley & Bernard Butler – For All Our Days That Tear The Heart

“The actor and the former Suede guitarist deliver a beautifully produced folk-inflected set that showcases Buckley’s magical voice.” – The Guardian


47. Foals- Life Is Yours

“Foals headed into this process as a lean, mean, party-starting machine. The opening title track showcases that taut approach, warm optimism and fixed focus as Afrobeat rhythms greet Yannis comes blinking out of lockdown, rave-ready, can in hand.” – NME


48. The Myterines – Reeling

“Reeling’ is gripping throughout, and the band always seem ready to ascend to another level.” – NME


49. Columbia – Embrace The Chaos

“A life-affirming set of songs that will smash whatever stands in its way. For once, we alternative types beg the gatekeepers to put up barriers. It’ll only be that much sweeter when Columbia destroys them!” – Travellers Tunes


50. Kula Shaker – The Once and Future King

“It’s a cracking slice of psychedelic rock at it’s best and a great return from the quartet who brought us the brilliant K back in the mid nineties.” – Louder Than War


51. Wrest – End All The Days

“The act’s new collection of songs End All The Days paints pictures and creates unparalleled snapshots of days gone by, of memories not so pretty. Lyrically, the songs are poised expertly, and are poetically balanced.” – I am Tuned Up


52. Hot Chip – Freakout/Release

“One of the most consistently entertaining electro-pop outfits of their generation have released their most introspective album yet.” – NME


53. Yard Act – The Overload

“A wonderfully wacky debut…The Leeds band’s debut is a wild ride through their Yorkshire upbringing, and the curly characters they picked up along the way.” – NME


54. TVAM – High Art Lite

“Listening to TVAM’s fierce and fiery new long-player, ‘High Art Lite’, feels like a dress rehearsal for this unavoidable solar apocalypse. The album is surf garage in a furnace. A synth orgy in a barbecue pit. A blistering barrage of fervent guitars and guttural synths, washed in plastic luminosity like a nuclear spill at Wigan Pier.” – Electronic Sound


55. Mother sun – Train Of Thought

“The album includes many of Petrucci’s finest solos, but the overall impression conveyed by the record is of unstoppable, if murky, power.” – Louder Sound


56. Orange G – The Void Bereft

“Beautifuly crafted songs with outstanding vocals.” – Music Scene Wales


57. Ben Pagano – Exploring Dreams

“Ben Pagano enthralls on the rousing “Feeling Down,” navigating both spacious synth-laden soundscapes and impassioned rock with cohesive success.” – Obscure Sound

58. Mike Legere – Memory Forming Clouds

“Awonderful slice of raw emotion.” – Up To Hear


59. Shadow Bones – In Another Life

“This beautifully written album is one that tells of Lukes demons and vulnerabilities through his sweet lyrics full of emotion.” – Music Scene Wales


60. Big Thief – Dragon New Warm Mountian I Believe In You

“They are a band you absolutely want to love – female-fronted, searching and sensitive, organically grown, tackling themes like the infinite as well as confessionals about love and loss.” – The Guardian


61. Moor Mother – Jazz Codes

“A stunning continuum of Black music.” – The Guardian


62. Gabriels – Angels & Queens – Part 1

“Brooding gospel soul with a shimmy and a stomp.” – The Guardian


63. Ezra Furman – All Of Us Flames

“Returning to familiar sounds of vintage girl groups and rock’n’roll, Ezra Furman writes trans pride and existential fear into an album that reveals the full strength of her vulnerabilities.” – Pitchfork


64. The Reverse Cowgirls – Fortis et Fidus

“While never losing the cow-punk fervour of its predecessors, Fortis et Fidus is a markedly different beast, lyrically poignant and musically inventive with key tracks.” – Louder Than War


65. Yeah Yeah Yeahs – Cool It Down

“A triumphant, rewarding return.” – NME


66. Red Hot Chili Peppers – Return of the Dream Canteen

“An Overwhelming Feast.” – NME


67. Wunderhorse – Cub

“Teenage punk evolves into a rock’n’roll troubador.” – NME


68. The Lightning Seeds – See You in the Stars

“See You In The Stars` is a welcome return to Lightening Seeds and it has it`s kind of yin and yang moments throughout with some really upbeat tunes and some more reflective and thoughtful life musings.” – Maximum Volume Music


69. Pale Blue Eyes – Souvenirs

“Heartwarming optimism is what characterises their debut from the get-go. Souvenir begins with frenetic electropop opener ‘Globe’, its underpinning rich vocal and twinkly synth doubling calling to mind OMD and New Order, and the chanted “you got this” call and response oozing hope and self belief.” – Clash Magazine

70. Woodoo Man – Y Nos

“The album draws on the artist’s love of solitude. It is a celebration of the beauty of the night and its mystery as he urges us to free our minds and open our hearts to the unknown.” – Music Scene Wales

Emily Marsden – Editor
#MusicSceneWales
@MusicSceneWales
musicscenewalescymru@gmail.com