It’s vampires and dangerous love when we talk with Natasha Khan of Bat for Lashes. She talks about the vampyric and film imagery behind her new album, Lost Girls.
Phantoms and spirits alight on the next Echoes. We’ll hear the October CD of the Month, Azam Ali’s Phantoms, an album of electronic moods and songs that seek the spirit in troubled times.
FLOW plays live with pianist Fiona Joy, guitarist Lawrence Blatt, trumpeter Jeff Oster and guitarist and Windham Hill founder Will Ackerman. And we’ll hear an interview with Iceland’s Hugar.
John Diliberto paints sound in Autumnal colors with some of the classics like George Winston and new music from Fiona Joy Hawkins and Maya Beiser on an Echoes Autumnal Equinox.
On a Slow Flow Echoes, Thomas Newman from his score The Highwaymen, the movie about the two Texas Rangers who hunted Bonnie & Clyde. Then from the highway to the spaceways with Chuck Van Zyl.
On a Slow Flow Echoes, it’s new music by Shambhu. He’s a post-Windham Hill style guitarist with a new album called Lilac Skies. We’ll also head into deep analog space with D’Voxx.
King Crimson kick-started progressive rock with music like “21st Century Schizoid Man.” Echoes takes a Flashback 50 to their debut album, In the Court of the Crimson King.
Coming up on Echoes, the dreamy ruminations of Lowpines. Lowpines is guitarist Oli Deakins. He’s a member of Lyla Foy’s band, but he makes his own introspective and atmospheric songs.
We talk to Heather Woods Broderick. She’s backed up Sharon Van Etten, but on her own, she makes a personal and atmospheric music of peacefully contemplated turmoil.
We go into the chill of Iceland when we talk with Hugar. The ambient chamber music duo recently released their second album Varða. The duo talk about the landscapes of Iceland on Echoes.