UKofA Returns With an Album That Sounds Like a Lifetime of Listening
- Kenny Sandberg
- May 8
- 1 min read

Twenty five years is a long time to spend making music. For UKofA, that stretch has covered hardcore metal, experimental choral work, festival stages across Europe, and now something harder to categorise: a twelve track album built from found audio, YouTube rips, library music, and live drums, held together by a perspective that only comes with time.
Time Will Take This All Away From Us is the kind of record that takes its title seriously. There's a sense of accumulation here, years of genre crossing and sonic experimentation
coalescing into something that feels surprisingly focused. The process reflects UKofA's background as a video editor, someone long immersed in the strange, functional blur of library sound, and that sensibility is all over the record.
The album is a slow burning dialogue with memory, aspiration, and human fragility, one that somehow manages to feel cinematic and intimate at the same time.
What's notable is how little it chases. No obvious genre pivot, no trend chasing. Just an artist with a lot of ground behind them making the most honest record that ground allows.
It's out now.




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