The Best Albums of 2023 on Echoes. Listen to our 30 Favorite albums of the year covering the range of the Echoes Soundscape, uninterrupted by announcements, in a continuous stream.
Kevin Keller’s Evensong leads the Echoes Top 25 for November, followed by Russell Walder, Brannan Lane, John Gregorius, & Sean O’Bryan Smith and 22 more great albums.
Russel Walder’s Speak to the Storm leads the Echoes Top 25 for September, followed by Kevin Keller, Opium Moon, Erik Wollo, Mark Dwane, and 20 more great albums.
Hear ambient guitar, live, when Jeff Pearce comes in to play music from across his 30-year career, including covers of music by two of his influences, Harold Budd and Vangelis.
We put Charlie Cunningham in the picture with his new album, Frame. This English singer song-writer has echoes of John Martyn and Nick Drake and atmospheres of Brian Eno and Harold Budd.
On a Slow Flow Echoes, new music by Mark Dwane. The synth-guitarist always has spacey psy-fi themes, and his new album is no exception. It’s called The Utopian Paradigm.
Get ready for some powerful darkness with new music by Myrkur. The Danish singer is categorized as Black Metal, but really it’s just darker dream pop. She has a new album called Spine.
Lay back on the couch and listen to singer-songwriter Benjamin Jayne. When he’s not making vaguely psychedelic folk music, he’s a psychiatrist. He has a deeply melancholy album called Broken.
The artist known as BT is a polymath who gets into the code of his music. He has a new album, The Secret Language of Trees, and although it’s forest inspired, it’s not a pastoral romp.
Music to soothe your soul by Lis Addison. Her latest album is Songs from the Mara, inspired by Kenya and her environmental work there. It’s part of the chilled environment of Echoes.