• My favorite artists by genre

    Nov 3 2009, 23h40 por Jatup

    My favorite artists by genre. Just making this so later on I can see how my taste has changed. At least 2 artists per genre, no more than 10. Artists can appear more than once if they work with many genres.


    Ambient:

    1. Solar Fields
    2. Carbon Based Lifeforms
    3. Banco de Gaia
    4. Solar Quest
    5. Cell
    6. Aes Dana
    7. Yagya
    8. Hol Baumann
    9. Adham Shaikh
    10. Asura

    General Chillout:

    1. Adham Shaikh
    2. Kaya Project
    3. Moby
    3. Angel Tears
    4. Chicane
    5. Enigma
    6. SnakeStyle
    7. Gaudi

    Classical:

    1 .Ludwig van Beethoven
    2. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
    3. Antonio Vivaldi
    3. Johann Sebastian Bach
    4. Frédéric Chopin

    Dubstep:

    1. Burial
    2. Boxcutter

    Hip- Hop:

    1. Kaliber 44
    2. Paktofonika
    3. O.S.T.R.
    4. Cannibal Ox
    5. Coolio

    IDM:

    1. Kettel
    2. Secede
    3. Hibernation
    4. Nalepa

    Metal (all sub-genres included):

    1. Iron Maiden
    2. Falkenbach
    3. Summoning
    4. Arkona (Pol)
    5. Korpiklaani
    6. Blind Guardian
    7. Burzum
    8. Ensiferum

    Neofolk:

    1. Current 93
    2. Blood Axis
    3. Of the Wand and the Moon
    4. Nature and Organisation
    5. Kiss the Anus of a Black Cat
    6. Death in June

    Psychill and Psydub:

    1. Shpongle
    2. Ott
    3. Androcell / Distant System
    4. Slackbaba
    5. Phutureprimitive
    6. Puff Dragon
    7. Aural Planet
    8. Celtic Cross
    9. The Peaking Goddess Collective
    10. Tripswitch

    Punk:

    1. Misfits
    2. Dezerter
    3. Kazik
    4. The Analogs
    5. KSU

    Rock:

    1. Pink Floyd
    2. Led Zeppelin
    3. Dire Straits
    4. The Rolling Stones
    5. Guns N' Roses
    6. The Doors
    7. Kult / Kazik
    8. The Who
    9. Lynyrd Skynyrd
    10. Queen

    Singer-Songwriter kind of thing (I don't like this tag, but it works well here):

    1. Bob Dylan
    2. Lou Reed
    3. Cat Stevens
    4. Leonard Cohen
    5. Iggy Pop

    Sung Poetry:

    1. Stare Dobre Małżeństwo
    2. Raz Dwa, Trzy
    3. Wolna Grupa Bukowina
    4. Pod Budą
    5. Grzegorz Turnau

    Non-psychedelic Trance:

    1. Art of Trance
    2. Union Jack
    3. L.S.G.
    4. Cygnus X
    5. Underworld
    6. Orbital
    7. Cosmic Baby

    Psychedelic Trance (including goa, psytrance etc.):

    1. Hallucinogen
    2. Dimension 5
    3. Blue Planet Corporation
    4. Cosmosis
    5. X-Dream
    6. Filteria
    7. Transwave
    8. Jaïa
    9. Man With No Name
    10. Khetzal
  • Headphone Commute Reviews (July)

    Jul 19 2009, 14h21 por liftmuziek

    Looks like I've been falling behind even further. Something is happening, and I'm wondering if it's just me, or is the time really slipping away between the snow and the sprouted greens and the steaming asphalt and the fallen leaves. All I have between now and then are these words, and between the words is always the music. Meanwhile, I was able to squeeze out a free mix for your enjoyment, compiled of some of my favorite Intelligent Breakcore tracks. So point your clickers here for a free download. Besides that, I am also super excited to present you with not just one, but two label profiles covering some of my favorite music. There is the n5MD and the forever beautiful Merck. Click the banners below for a full label profile and interviews available only on reviews.headphonecommute.com. As usual, I would appreciate a comment or two, and recommend that you Subscribe to RSS Feed.





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    VA - 14 tracks re-wiring UK Garage (Boomkat)

    Boomkat is not exactly a record label. And it's not really known for its compilations. But it is a famous online music store for all of your underground musical flavors, from dubstep to hip-hop to IDM and modern classical. Towards the end of 2008, Boomkat launched a sister site : 14tracks.com. Every week, 14tracks presents you with an installment of "hand-picked selections united by theme or genre, bound by a particular style, or with some kind of common narrative in mind." Each compilation is available as a digital download (DRM free, 320 Kbps MP3s) priced at 99p per track or for £6.86 (approx. $11.25 in USD). I initially jumped on the site when Boomkat presented their Best of 2008 releases in three installments of 14 tracks. Ever since, I've been getting weekly newsletter updates, and checking out some off hand selections that may be outside of my usual interests. On more than one occasion, I would discover an artist that way, and end up grabbing full albums. It's been an excellent resource for opening up my horizons across the entire musical spectrum. Some noteworthy past selections that I want to point out include "14 tracks: experimenting with bowed strings", "14 tracks in the shadow of film noir", "14 tracks of early electronic music", "14 tracks of dark ambient", and "14 tracks that make you wish you played the piano". The latter collection, for example, features some of my favorite artists like Hauschka, Pan American, Harold Budd, Ólafur Arnalds, Erik Satie, Peter Broderick, Jacaszek, Goldmund, and many others. This week, I again fall prey to the outstanding marketing ploy of Boomkat and add into my digital cart a compilation titled "14 tracks re-wiring UK Garage". The selection of tracks includes some new material as well as rarities from Sully, Narcossist, Falty DL, Brackles, Groovechronicles, Millie & Andrea, TRG, Spatial and Peverelist. Representing labels from Planet Mu to Tectonic to Tempa and Infrasonics, this is an excellent collection of... well... UK's finest funky garage. Here's more from the description: With dubstep increasingly split between bombastic rave/wobble workouts and far more feminine (and, for our money, interesting) variants, the line is getting harder to define between one sub-classification and another. Further up the chain, UK Garage itself incorporates a number of different bass cultures, flowing in and out of Jungle, hip hop and R&B and generating mongrel sounds from Grime to Dubstep, Funky and beyond. All of this is to say that the bass scene always has and continues to evolve at a rate that's producing new sounds and splinters faster than anyone can even name them, despite the perceived malaise... So forgive me for covering an unconventional medium today, but as the 2-step beat rides along the wobbly bass in my speakers, I feel compelled to share this great find. If you're a fan of Burial's ghost-like vocals and light syncopated beats, then this is definitely a must for you. Also greatly recommended if you are not familiar with this genre. Point your browsers to 14tracks.com and enjoy.

    http://www.14tracks.com/selections/66-14_tracks_re_wiring_uk_garage

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    VA - 88 Tapes (Keshhhhhh)

    Keshhhhhh Recordings is based in Cambridge (England) and is run by Simon Scott (you should know him as the ex-drummer from the shoegaze band, Slowdive). I'm not exactly sure what Simon has in mind for the future of his label, but I must say, he's off to a pretty good start. First of all, he's got Taylor Deupree to master the entire compilation in his 12k studio. That alone should give you a pretty good idea about the intent here. And the roster of artists also tends to speak for itself. The eighteen track collection of ambient vignettes and sound explorations all revolve around a central theme. This theme less of a melodic structure, but rather a concept around a particular selection of recordings recorded by Simon Scott on an audio cassette back in 1988. On the liner notes of the release, Scott elaborates: "In 1988 on another rainy Saturday afternoon, whilst looking for sonic inspiration, I decided to take apart and re-assemble my stereo that had a quarter inch input socket as well as a turntable and tape player/recorder. The result was a fantastic malfunctioning, stuttering and glitching piece of equipment that suddenly realized my ideas of creating new sound. I promptly pressed the record button and let rip on my electric guitar and promised myself to write a song from the results one day. In 2008 the tape was rediscovered purely by chance in a house move and the rediscovery of this TDK inspired me to contact a group of artists and composers who I feel are talented and relevant today. There was just a simple single track sent off via email to inspire them to compose a piece of work for this compilation if they had the urge. They did and I am forever grateful to everyone involved in deconstructing the tape track and creating this album." And what a spectacular group of artists it is! The compilation opens up with an sound sparkling interpretation by Yasuhiko Fukuzono as Aus flowing right into a beautiful vocals of Sanae Yamasaki, [aka Moskitoo - see her excellent album, Drape (12k, 2007)]. We then move into noisy guitar feedback and lo-fi acoustic glitch by Mark Templeton (see his numerous releases and appearances on Anticipate Recordings). The 12k roster continues to propagate this selection with contributions by Keiichi Sugimoto as Fourcolor, Sawako, and one of my favorites, Lawrence English. Besides above mentioned aus, a few more artists from the Japanese label, flau, show up later, like Orla Wren and John McCaffrey as Part Timer. Chicago based Kranky Records enters the circle of Scott's friends with a beautiful heavily reverberated breathy piece by Christopher Bissonnette. Further on a release we see his labelmate, Thomas Meluch contribute a track as Benoît Pioulard. We also see an appearance by Akira Kosemura, who previously secured a spot on Airport Symphony - Virtual Terminal, a free deigital companion edition to the Airport Symphony, compiled by the above mentioned prolific Lawrence English and released on Room40 in 2007. A third through the release, Simon Scott finally appears with his own interpretation. A sound artist and a label owner of and/OAR, Dale Lloyd contributes a sonic carpet of luscious frequencies, followed by a ghost-like echoes of gated guitar and vocals by Matt Robson recording as Random Number. Additional appearances include tracks by Greg Davis, Adam Pacione, Ateleia, and Hannu. An excellent roster, don't you think? Meanwhile, Simon Scott prepares for his upcoming solo debut, titled Navigare on none other than Miasmah recordings.

    http://www.myspace.com/KESHHHHHH | http://www.keshhhhhh.com

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    Trentemøller / VA - Harbour Boat Trips : Copenhagen (HFN Music)

    Danish electronic producer, Anders Trentemøller, sets aside his studio equipment used to make some of the finest raw and tight minimal house grooves, to put together a compilation of some of his favorite downtempo tracks from Copenhagen. Harbour Boat Trips is a commissioned selection of folksy, ambient and electronic tracks, sprinkled with beautiful vocals, beats, and live instrumentation. This is the music you'd expect Trentemøller to listen to on early lazy Sunday mornings as he's waking up to a cup of coffee. In the liner notes, Trentemøller confirms: "Dear Listener, within this compliation I have basically chosen some of the many songs I use in my own most intimate hours, coming down after gigs, cleaning my apartment, waiting for friends to arrive or simply daydreaming with my twenty-first century walkman through the city of Copenhagen. [...] All the artists on this compliation which include names from nearly four decades have, to me, created different aspects of beauty." Opening up with Grouper and diving into Gravenhurst, you're immediately set for a selection of songs traversing moods and genres. There are many pleasant surprises along the way from previously unknown (to me) artists. For example, I've heard before music by Emiliana Torrini with releases on FatCat, but after hearing her lovely voice on a track "Lifesaver", I add her acoustic album, Fisherman's Woman (Rough Trade, 2004) to my collection. A track by The Hypothetical Prophets (Proroky) with Russian overdubbed lyrics take me out of their experimental neo-industrial chemical dub-house into the late 70s synth-pop track by Suicide titled Cheree. Moving through new wave beats by David Garcet. Following a haunting glitchy house track by Rennie Foster, in floats a Four Tet remix of Caribou's Melody Day, full of acoustic guitars and confident muffled four-four kick. With that we move into Trentemøller's edit of The Raveonettes cover of Joy Division's She's Lost Control. Before the compilation ends, Trentemøller finally appears with his own track, Vamp, followed by Two Lone Swordsmen and a fitting closure by Soft Cell's Tainted Love. This compilation is the very first release from Hamburg based hfn ['ha:f?n] music, which opens up on its site with the following statement: "Harbours are open doors to the world, and so is hfn, and to all spectrums of music." There is not much information that is available about the label on its site or elsewhere, but I expect we'd see a few more installments in this series in the future. In closing, I'd describe this release as a personal mixtape shared by Trentemøller especially for you. Enjoy!

    http://www.hfn-music.com | http://www.anderstrentemoller.com

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    Hecq - Steeltongued (Hymen)

    Hecq... Have you heard? If you haven't, it's time to jump on board. And by the way, you're missing out! After all, this is Hecq's sixth full length release (fifth on Hymen Records). Dare I say it the following way : with Steeltongued, Hecq surpasses the leaders in electronic experimentation, Autechre, leaving them in the dust to scratch their heads in awe of this twenty-seven year old Berlin based musician. Like a villain of traumatized sonic disintegration, Ben Lukas Boysen unwinds the tight coils of sound into distinct entities of material forms and packs them away into carefully allotted spacial frequency shelves. I did not bring up Autechre for mere name dropping. I clearly remember the very first time I heard the decomposition of sound in the Booth & Brown's track Vose In on LP5, (Warp, 1998). I will never forget. Not one release in the last decade has stopped my breath with the penetrating thought of "what the hell was that?". In the last years, steps have been taken to evolve the sound and build upon the solid foundation, with only Autechre occasionally in the lead, piercing the darkness of uncharted territory. They are always allowed. Because, frankly, they are Autechre, right? The one falling in their footsteps is always behind. Apprentice to a skilled magician. Then... BOOM! ... Hecq. I don't know how Lappersdorf (Germany) based Hymen Records had discovered Boysen [that surely deserves an interview question], but when they did, they have struck gold. Quickly demonstrating his abilities with Scatterheart (Hymen, 2004) and Bad Karma (Hymen, 2005), Boysen has landed a coveted spot on a limited Hymen boxset, Travel Sickness (Hymen, 2006), with a mini-EP along with the releases by Lusine Icl, Solar X, Lowfish, Venetian Snares, Psi Spy, Snog, The Manhattan Gimp Project and Mad EP. Mmmm. My copy still smells like cedar... Delicious. Boysen's fourth album, 0000 (Hymen, 2007) made my Best of 2007 list, and in 2008... well... I have lost the words with Night Falls (see my previous review). So what to expect with Steeltongued? Twisted rhythms swirling around your brain like an inhaled sip of wine and a gulped breath of smoke. Divine soundscapes crawling beneath the barbed wire of the restraining acoustic prison, begging to rather be shot in the back then remain draining their minimalism onto the cold surface of tears and blood. I will survive, bounces the reverse reverbed voice of Nongenetic, Late for my funeral, rather be buried alive... Then destruction and mayhem... Then silence... Frost... and the Hypnos trilogy of tracks. Well, that's just gorgeous... This double disk release features twelve remixes of Steeltongued from an eclectic group of friends and collaborators, including Spyweirdos, Si Begg, Black Film, and Team Doyobi among the many. Words are too limited and gentle to describe the range of emotions evoked by Steeltongued. The album is a trip and an unforgettable experience. That one memento that will stay with you for years to come. That one beautiful moment of "what the hell was that?"

    Two and a Half Questions With Hecq

    http://www.myspace.com/hecq | http://www.hecq.de
    http://www.myspace.com/hymenrecords | http://www.hymen-records.com

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    Mokira – Persona (Type)

    The gentle swells of lo-fi loops and and breathing atmospherics set the tone for Mokira's eighth full-length album. After previous releases on a roster of labels, a Stockholm-based Swedish sound sculptor, Andreas Tilliander returns to Type Records with Persona. Tilliander introduced us to his Mokira moniker with his debut, Cliphop, on Raster-Noton. His glitchy hip-hop sound has landed him on Mille Plateaux, where Tilliander continued to contribute towards the 'clicks & cuts' genre. But for Type, Tilliander has been stripping away the beats [but not the rhythmic structure], and focusing more on ambient textures that let the music flow organically through analog and digitally processed layers. Starting from the first track, the disintegrating repetitions of drony re-sampled pads instantly remind me of works by William Basinski, tape hiss and all, while the gentle onslaught of incoming harmonic frequencies are reminiscent of works by Tim Hecker and Vladislav Delay. The dull, murky, and thick reverberations bridging acoustic and electronic elements will also satisfy the fans of Gas and Fennesz alike. But comparisons to others are futile, since Tilliander has already made a name for himself, ranging from his dub and tech-house releases under his real name on his own label, Repeatle, to abstract electronica and glitchy IDM on Komplott under a Komp alias, and even a minimal dub 12" on Echocord under his Lowfour moniker, among the many. Across a wide spectrum of tracks, I hear the same main theme, which is explored upon through various experimental approaches. Tilliander's proficiency in electronic music and control of its branches clearly shows throughout Mokira. This is especially evident when ambient progressions are interrupted by a growing 303-like-gliding-bass-line that is at once unexpected and yet feels very appropriate. Throughout the album, a noticeable amount of true analog equipment dominates the presence, as only accented by a track, appropriately named Oscillations And Tremolo. Towards the end of the album, a single loop is re-sampled and re-assembled. And once the tape hiss comes in, the path is obvious - it leads back to the beginning of the album where the music continues to decay and disintegrate. Persona is truly listening music. Preferrably with your eyes closed. And it is upon multiple listens that you will begin to discern and peel off its layers, to reveal the true genius behind this latest installment from Mokira. It's no wonder, that after numerous contributions towards the evolution of electronic music, Tilliander was awarded a Swedish Grammy music award in 2005. Thus, I am immediately propelled to dig up and revisit his earlier releases. During your parallel search, it's worth picking up an acid tech-house 12" under Tilliander's real name, titled, Stay Down (Repeatle, 2007) featuring a remix by The Field. Also recommended Tilliander's debut on Mille Plateaux, Ljud, and his very latest Show (Adrian, 2009).

    http://www.myspace.com/andreastilliander | http://www.repeatle.com
    http://www.myspace.com/typerecordings | http://www.typerecords.com

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    H.U.V.A. Network - Ephemeris (Ultimae)

    Humans Under Visual Atmospheres (H.U.V.A. Network) is back with a long awaited sophomore release on Lyon (France) based Ultimae Records. Before I cover the album, it's worth it to pause and deconstruct this group. H.U.V.A is a duo comprised of Magnus Birgersson and Vincent Villuis. Birgersson is none other than Solar Fields, a regular on Ultimae, with six full length albums. If that alias sounds familiar, it's probably because you were blown away by his recent music score for the Electronic Arts game Mirror's Edge. That's right, that's Birgersson. And Monsieur Villuis is none other than Aes Dana, an alumni member of Asura (as of 2001) and part owner of Ultimae with Sandrine Gryson (Mahiane). With such a solid and talented combination, you'd be right to get excited about this next installment in psybient evolution. The purveyors of "oneiric trip-hop", downtempo, and "ambient geometries" will be absolutely delighted with the psychedelic melodies, etherial sound design, and impeccably crisp production. Seekers of sonic voyages will be enveloped by limitless soundscapes, spreading over slow punctuated beats that eventually lift off into an outer journey. The mid portion of the album picks up in tempo, and evolves into a light morning trance, keeping with the rhythm of a four-to-the-floor kick drum. But at the end of Ephemeris, the beat slows down once again, to bring you back down to Earth, after your brief meditative trip. The album was composed between two studios, Villuis' Ultimae Studio in Lyon, France and Birgersson's Studio Jupiter in Göteborg, Sweden. The deluxe edition of the digipack release contains a sixteen page booklet with photographic works by Gingerine, BeneA, Concoon, Goulden, 1100, and Matzchen. Here is a quote from the album defining its title: An ephemeris (plural: ephemerides; from the Greek word ephemeros "daily") is a table of values that gives the positions of objects in the sky at a given time or times. The position is given in a spherical polar coordinate system of right ascension and declination or in logitude along the zodiacal ecliptic, and sometimes declination. The ephemeris paramaters relate to eclipses, apparent retrogradation/planetary stations, planetary ingresses, sidereal time, positions & the phases of the Moon, Cartesian coordinates, picnic on Mars, breakfast on Jupiter and disturbing jetlags. While filling your cart on Ultimae's web shop, be sure to add the duo's first collaboration, Distances (Ultimae, 2004), as well as Solar Field's recently released Movements (Ultimae, 2009) and Aes Dana's Season 5 (Ultimae, 2005). I am also a big fan of the Ultimae's Fahrehnheit Project compilation series, with its last installment being Part 6 as of 2006. Favorite track on the album: Orientations Part 1

    http://www.myspace.com/solarfields | http://www.myspace.com/aesdana
    http://www.myspace.com/panoramicmusic | http://www.ultimae.com

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    Bluetech - The Divine Invasion (Aleph Zero)

    Evan Bartholomew drops another album for our hungry ears. This time, his groovy downtempo sonic treatments are released under his renowned moniker, Bluetech. For The Divine Invasion, Bartholomew puts aside his ambient and modern classical work under his real name, and returns to his tight IDM , digital funk, and tech-dub beats with a touch of masterfully produced atmospheres and spacey psychedelia. Here's Bluetech with his staple sound of micro-programmed clicks and stereo bouncing bleeps. Here's the never-ending echo of the the minor dubbed-out chords. Here's everything we have grown to love from one of the pioneers of PsyDM sound. Listening music meets dance floor meets contemplative far away places where dreams recursively collide. Aleph Zero is an Israeli label putting out downtempo and psychill records, as spearheaded by its co-owner, Yaniv Shulman (one half of Shulman). Bartholomew has found a home on Aleph Zero for Bluetech releases since Elementary Particles in 2004. This is Bluetech's fourth full length release, including the quietly slipped in Phoenix Rising, released on his own, mostly minimal, modern classical, and ambient focused label, Somnia, just a few months prior. Did you catch that one? On The Divine Invasion we hear Steve Hillage (Mirror System) return for a contribution of his guitar sweeps, after a very successful collaboration last year with Bartholomew, under his dub techno slotted moniker, Evan Marc, on Dreamtime Submersible (Somnia, 2008). We are also treated to a track of collaborative work between Bluetech and Eitan Reiter, who has made numerous appearances in the past on Aleph Zero, Dooflex and Iboga. The Divine Invasion is at once more mature and playful. Following Bartholomew through his ambient and techno releases, I can hear the both sides converge on the Bluetech sound that steers clear of stylistic constraints and genre defining elements. This is not a futuristic science fiction space odyssey, where the newly technological advances can be disproved by today's early adopters. This is a mysterious world of dreams and psychedelic visions. And in such alternate realities, unfathomed by our limited senses, anything goes. This surreal music of no limits and boundaries is the perfect candy for your reality smothered mind. With numerous appearances on a roster of respectable labels, Interchill, Yellow Sunshine Explosion, Platipus, and his own Native State Records, this is one of Bluetech's finest contributions towards the evolution of psychedelic sound. For an ambient exploration in sound, pick up Bartholomew's releases on Somnia. Make sure you also check out Bluetech's Sines and Singularities (Aleph Zero, 2005). Recommended if you get down with Plaid, Jon Hopkins, Kilowatts and Ott.

    Two and a Half Questions with Bluetech

    http://www.myspace.com/iambluetech | http://www.bluetechonline.com
    http://www.myspace.com/alephzerorecords | http://www.aleph-zero.info

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    Telefon Tel Aviv - Immolate Yourself (Bpitch Control)

    [Editors Note: I tried writing about it. Multiple times. I tried avoiding it. I felt obliged. I tried not to listen. But listened anyway. At the end, I found these words by Sarah Badr.]

    What follows below is a review for an album whose title has been rendered regretfully apt. The sudden passing of Telefon Tel Aviv’s Charlie Cooper only two days after the group released their long-awaited third full-length studio record is a coincidence suggestive of a sacrifice: an untimely departure at the arrival of something so great, yet so final. The well-deserved reception of Immolate Yourself, made public on 20th January, has since seen TTA fans buzzing with excitement across music forums worldwide. Based in Chicago and originally from New Orleans, the duo comprised of Cooper and Joshua Eustis had opted to join Berlin’s BPitch Control community shortly after their successful release of Remixes Compiled (including Apparat’s ‘Komponent’) provided clear indication as to why such a marrying of talent would be ideal. Previously signed on with Hefty Records, their earlier albums Fahrenheit Fair Enough (2001) and Map of What Is Effortless (2004) had been emotive masterpieces in their own rites. Early introduction into the world of TTA meant listening to tracks such as the first’s title number, ‘Introductory Nomenclature’, and ‘Nothing Is Worth Losing That’, with an awe reserved to the contemporary electronic greats who so masterfully balance the timbre of their glitches, the time-delays on snare and the synthetic chorus in reverb that unfailingly elevates the entire listening experience. Telefon Tel Aviv have always presented something so beautifully understated with their music’s philosophical allusions as evidently inspired by science and literature (’What’s The Use Of Feet If We Haven’t Got Legs?’). But beneath that, their unique chameleon metamorphosis integrating sounds across genres (most notable R&B and ambient) into a quasi-minimal techno has never ceased to impress. And Immolate Yourself takes that even further, bringing in some New Wave inspiration (’Helen of Troy’, ‘M’) with all the heavy 80s synth necessary for nostalgia to boot. Yet, somehow it still manages to sound very much like TTA, culminating halfway through on the hauntingly poignant ‘Mostly Translucent’ so worthy of replay and reminiscent of that driving force behind the fifth on their second LP. But all of this is beside the point. Because it is in this nature of TTA’s sound that Charlie Cooper will be remembered. Joshua Eustis, in a eulogy on MySpace for both his groupmate and close friend since high school, wrote: ‘We have been so fortunate to tour the world together, while at the same time having a massive amount of laughs at one another’s expense… His musicianship was surpassed only by his greater gift to the world — his warmth, his generosity, his unquenchable humor, and his undying loyalty to those whom he loved. Aside from Charlie’s singular genius and musical gifts, I can tell you that he was a total sweetheart of a guy, and a loving friend and confidant to people everywhere.’ At the age of thirty-one and earlier having been set to tour North America with Matthew Dear, Cooper is survived by his parents, sister, nephew and ‘more adoring friends than the Universe has dark matter.’

    Charles Wesley Cooper III
    12 April, 1977 – 22 January, 2009

    Original review posted by Sarah Badr on pieces-at-random.com
    Republished with permission of the author.

    http://www.myspace.com/telefontelaviv | http://www.telefontelaviv.com
    http://www.myspace.com/bpitchcontrol | http://www.bpitchcontrol.com

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    Giuseppe Ielasi - Aix (12k)

    A few steps in an empty gym, an organ chord, some pouring water, and we're off... Aix is a slight departure from the Italian artist's, Giuseppe Ielasi, previous release on 12k, August. The latter is a work of restraint ambiance with electronically treated acoustic instrumentation, which was a perfect fit for Taylor Deupree's minimal label. While the former album, the one we're concerned with in this review, produced in Aix-En-Provence (a city in southern France), is a juxtaposition of found confetti of sound, glitched trite and stitched tight into rhythmical structures and repetitive patterns. Like a winter coat glued and sewn together from ripped pieces of fabric, the sporadic collection of sounds seems obscure, that is until you get closer, and you realize that it's warm and fuzzy, even if the colors don't match. The selection of tracks on this "grid" album are groovy, funky and jazzy, drawing an imagery of street performers playing on buckets, rubber bands, zippers, aerosol cans and an array of homemade percussion. In fact, this album strangely reminds me of a recent intarwebs video I saw, Music For One Apartment and Six Drummers. Yet this concotion of dusty sounds does not feel muddy or loose. In fact, it is light and bouncy, leaving plenty of room for each sound to evolve and breathe in its own sound spectrum. Ielasi becomes a master chef, walking into your abandoned kitchen and while opening a rusty refrigerator door, mumbling to himself, "Now what do we have here?" While folding the samples of micro textures and handfuls of semi-random rhythm into a boiling pot of bouncing echoes and stirred grooves, Ielasi delivers an exquisite course of contemporary musique concrète, best served warm, while the melody's still lingering... Overall, this is an interesting sidestep for Ielasi and 12k as well. Don't expect the warm Fennesz like layers and washes reminiscent of August. Enter with an open mind, and Aix will surely leave an imprint and beg you to return again. Besides releasing albums on 12k, Sedimental, and Häpna, Ielasi is also a founder of Fringes Recordings [now defunct] and a co-founder of Schoolmap Records. Be sure to pick up his one-track 30-minute masterpiece, Plans (Sedimental, 2003), as well as above mentioned August (12k, 2007).

    http://www.myspace.com/giuseppeielasi | http://www.ielasi.com
    http://www.myspace.com/12kline | http://www.12k.com

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    Arovane - Tides (City Centre Offices)

    With only five albums and a handful of EPs and even some 7-inchers, Berlin-based Uwe Zahn, signed off from producing music altogether, with the last track on Lilies (City Centre Offices, 2004), titled Good Bye Forever. But Arovane's music doesn't age. In fact, it is one of those rare occurrences where it gets better and better as time passes. Today, as part of my Nostalgic Flashbacks series, I wish to revisit Zahn's sophomore album on City Centre Offices, released in the summer of 2000, titled Tides. As the title of the album may suggest, in Tides, Zahn is exploring the incoming waves and their outflow, perhaps in relation to music, perhaps in relation to life. The ambient sounds are accompanied by intricately produced beats, re-sampled guitars, Arovane's staple-sound harpsichords, and organically layered developments. And those melodies... The melodies are simple, delicate and elegant. The sound is melancholic and contemplative. The downtempo slowed down hip-hop beats have lost their bouncy aggressiveness, and instead become loungy, laid back stretches of yawning morning rhythms. The arsenal of elements is limited, yet immediately effective. At only a little under forty minutes long, the album remains one of Arovane's timeless compositions. I remember being overwhelmed by the sound then, and returning to Tides now, I can confirm that Zahn was ahead of his game, and one of the dominant pioneers of sound in the genre. But his journey towards this position was not rapid. Beginning his music experiments since he was 15, Zahn worked with acoustic instruments (clarinet), microphones, synthesizers and turntables, and in the early 90s began producing d'n'b influenced tracks and breakbeat. During his work at a Berlin radio station, Zahn was discovered by Torsten Pröfrock and his label, DIN. Arovane released his first 12", I.O. on DIN in 1998. This EP was soon followed by Icol Diston (DIN, 1998) and a limited 7", Occer / Silicad on City Centre Offices in January of 1999. The year 2000 finally yielded not one, but two full-length albums from Arovane. DIN released Atol Scrap in January, and as noted earlier, Tides came on the scene only six months later from City Centre Offices. The stage was set for Zahn to shine, and so he did. Gaining quick recognition among notable international labels like Lux Nigra [under his Nedjev moniker], and Morr Music [remixes of Accelera Deck]; collaborating with Vertical Form, Phonem, Christian Kleine, Jake Mandell, and Markus Schwill [in a duo group Research Garden]; and touring across the world, Zahn established himself as a one of the top producers behind intellectually melodic, and rhythmic ambient sound. Zahn's short biography on City Centre Offices signs off with stating that "he is currently very much into motorbikes and might start recording a new album pretty soon." Please... Let's hope as much... The world needs more beautiful music. Until then, enjoy Tides and my all time favorite, Lilies.

    http://www.myspace.com/arovane | http://www.arovane.de
    http://www.myspace.com/citycentreoffices | http://www.city-centre-offices.de

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    Robert Logan - Inscape (Slowfoot)

    This morning I'm a little bit on edge. In part because of continuous wet and cold weather that makes my bones and muscles ache. In part because of Robert Logan and his new release on Slowfoot titled Inscape. As I commute to music on my way to work, disturbing images flicker behind my eyelids: abandoned places, dark hallways, churning factories of the unknown. The industrial percussion grinds away in a moldy basement of an old asylum, where dreams become reality and nightmares turn to life. Somewhere deep within this dark flashback, a kitten walks up the piano keys, all skin and bone. The instrumentation on Inscape is comprised of sharp metallic needles, poking at the delicate tissue of your brain, reversing, glitching, and dancing in a distorted fury of lust for artificial coupling. The material is raw and synthetic, coming to life with a jolt of electricity and toxic chemical reactions. And that's just the first few tracks... Logan's previous release, Grinder EP (Slowfoot, 2008), has already been previously hailed by yours truly with the following observation: "The sound of the four pieces [on Grinder] is a continuously developing crunchy groove with a touch of big beat, infusion of hip-hop, and a base of dark ambient texture swishing at the bottom of this poisonous cocktail." With Inscape, Logan stayed true to his formula and continued the embrace of digital darkness and sinister soundscapes. As I prepare the write up for this album, I discover that Logan's inspiration behind Inscape was indeed an abandoned factory in Hungary which was being swallowed back by the engulfing forest. Well, now... I guess he did his homework right. As a testament from my comments above, I've witnessed these images through his music with no prior knowledge on the background. There are other notable albums that revolve around the concept of nature taking over man-made structures, like The Refractor's All Colors Run EP (self released, 2008) and Jóhann Jóhannsson's Fordlandia (4AD, 2008), but Logan does it with a much threatening vigor. There is no sadness in Inscape. It is rather a ruthless take back of what was rightfully owned. I should also perhaps mention that Logan is only 21, and has already opened for Grace Jones at Massive Attack's Meltdown. But Logan's music is strong enough to standout on its own. Inscape is Logan's sophomore release, following his debut, Cognessence (Slowfoot, 2007). Recommended if you like Hymen artists such as Hecq, Architect, and Ginormous as well as music from Tympanik Audio by Totakeke, Stendeck, and Autoclav1.1.

    Two and a Half Questions with Robert Logan

    http://www.myspace.com/robertlogan
    http://www.myspace.com/slowfootrecords | http://www.slowfoot.co.uk

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    Ametsub - The Nothings Of The North (Progressive Form)

    On some level, I'm a little surprised that no one is talking about Ametsub as much as I am. And I'm not just hyping up this Tokyo-based Japanese artist. Even Ryuchi Sakamoto has allegedly proclaimed, "I love this album. I have become a fan". Meanwhile, I've been listening to Ametsub's music since his debut release three years ago, Linear Cryptics (Progressive Form, 2006). For me, the discovery of this artist was totally accidental, and to this day I don't know the original source that incited me to pick up the album. But here I am, raving about his second solo release on Progressive Form, titled The Nothings Of The North. And here's what I love about it. Ametsub's music masterfully incorporates precision glitch into modern classical and future jazz. An accompaniment of tight bass lines and micro programmed rhythm is dominated by Ametsub's beautiful piano playing. The gorgeous and melancholic melodies have been in turn re-sampled, re-looped, and re-triggered to create frantic digital errors that skip across my dazzled memory. The light grooves incorporate elements from trip-hop, dub and abstract idm. The predominant cuts and clips are also extended to vocals, eventually morphing them from words to instruments to choppy bits of percussion. This should keep your cranium busy. Ametsub has already performed alongside respected artists such as Vladislav Delay, Bichi, Numb, and Takemura Nobukaza. His second release to date was actually a collaboration with Jimanica titled, Surge (Mao, 2007). I recommend you pick that up as well, and seriously, get your hands on Linear Cryptics! I guess the single reason why Ametsub has not been completely recognized is the lack of distribution in North America and Europe. It is difficult to get your hands on a physical copy of the album unless you actually order it to be shipped from Japan [I got Linear Cryptics by contacting Ametsub on myspazz]. Digital copies of both albums could be found on iTunes and Beatport. This album is highly recommended for fans of Arovane, Plaid, Murcof and Lusine.

    http://www.myspace.com/ametsub3110 | http://www.drizzlecat.org
    http://www.myspace.com/progressiveform | http://www.dropcontrol.com/~p_form

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    Harmonic 313 - When Machines Exceed Human Intelligence (Warp)

    When Mark Pritchard first released EP1 (Warp, 2008) under his newly refreshed moniker, Harmonic 313, I got extremely excited about his comeback. After all, I'm a huge fan of his output under a number of aliases, the most favorite being Harmonic 33 and Global Communication. The EP stepped up in bass, and dropped down to 8-bit sound, falling somewhere between abstep (abstract dubstep), electro and Detroit-style experimental hip-hop (313 being its area code). And that was just a teaser. His return with When Machines Exceed Human Intelligence (Warp, 2009), picks up right where the EP left off, and slams it back into our faces. It takes a few listens to truly appreciate the genius behind this album. Mostly because your ears are not accustomed to such rubber morphing of the genres. Falling somewhere along the lines of experimental hip-hop by Prefuse 73, Flying Lotus , and J Dilla, the tracks on Machines Exceed Human Intelligence are strangely unique in its own domain. The bass on the tracks is raw, grinding, and wobbly, accompanied by broken syncopated beats, sci-fi chords, and arcade game laser melodies. This flight through a 2D acid flahsback is at the same time an evil and fun experience. Think Nintendo's Spy vs. Spy [hmm, that link was a total Google accident] clashing in the fight between black and white. It is, as if machines not only exceed our intelligence in the future, but actually came back to play with our own favorite toys. The interlude titled, Cyclotron C64 SID, is a testament to Pritchard's tribute to everything retro. After listening to the album half a dozen times, and getting the melodies stuck in my head, I must recognize Pritchard as a continuous pioneer of styles. From ambient, to trip-hop, to experimental hip-hop with elements of dubstep, Pritchard is able to keep up with the trends, adapt to the endless evolution of sound and even invent a few of his own genres along the way - I call it bleep-hop. Glad to see him back on Warp. If you already own the album and the EP, pick up Global Communication's Fabric 26 mix (Fabric, 2005), as well as my all time favorite, Extraordinary People (Alphabet Zoo, 2002) by Harmonic 33. Recommended if you like the above mentioned names, as well as Moderat, Headhunter, 2562, and Lukid.

    http://www.myspace.com/officialmarkpritchard | http://www.harmonic313.com
    http://www.myspace.com/warprecords | http://www.warprecords.com

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    Windy & Carl - Songs For The Broken Hearted (Kranky)

    Windy Weber & Carl Hultgren have been releasing minimal ambient and experimental post-rock music since the late 90's. The catalog of this Michigan based husband-and-wife duo spans an eclectic selection of notable labels such as Icon, Ochre, Darla, Brainwashed, and of course, Chicago-based Kranky Records. Songs For The Broken Hearted is Windy & Carl's fourth release on Kranky (being signed to the label for over a decade now), where it perfectly fits among the works by their fellow label-mates, Stars of the Lid, Pan•American, Tim Hecker, and Brian McBride. The tracks on Songs For The Broken Hearted continue to build on the duo's style of beatless shoegaze layers of Carl & Windy's guitar work, using EBow and a variety of time-based delays, with the occasional soft vocals by Windy. Both play equal amounts of guitar on the record, and Windy tells me that "each track (with the exception of Rhodes) was created spontaneously with us both playing guitar, and then carl added a few extra layers after and i added the vocals". The sound of this album is still drony, but a lot more harmonic, as if a heavy pillow was left on the Rhodes, pressing on all the right keys. The cover art of the album pictures a forest with breaking light. A parallel could be drawn between this image and the dense stratum of sonic frequencies evoked by the guitar, with an occasional breakthrough of clearly EQed voice, which almost whispers the songs that lullaby the sad, and indeed the brokenhearted. To understand the depth of feelings behind this work, it helps to bypass my interpretations, and instead quote Windy talking about the album on the band's web site: "this is an album about love. everyone has known love, and everyone has known loss. love is not just about warm fuzzy feelings, although that would be the part people say they like the best. and in any span of time, love changes and means different things to different people. [...] songs for the broken hearted is an album full of honesty, both musically and lyrically. it is for anyone who has felt love - you can hear it in the sounds and the words, both spoken and unspoken. the album i never thought would be is finished." For an extensive selection of Windy & Carl's tracks, check out their triple disk release, Introspection (Blue Flea, 2002). A few other great recommendations from the duo include Depths (Kranky, 1998), Consiousness (Kranky, 2001), and a compilation of two EPs, The Dreamhouse / Dedications to Flea (Kranky, 2005) - the latter being a sad elegy dedicated to their departed dog, Flea. Recommended for the above mentioned Kranky roster. Windy & Carl are currently preparing for their spring tour along with Benoît Pioulard with some special treats from Lambs Laughter (Windy and Thomas Meluch). For tour tour dates and details check their website or myspazz.

    Two and a Half Questions for Windy & Carl

    http://www.myspace.com/windyandcarl | http://www.brainwashed.com/wc
    http://www.myspace.com/krankyltd | http://www.kranky.net

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    VA - Intelligent Toys 5 (Sutemos)

    The Sutemos collective is a Lithuanian net label which has been releasing free EPs and compilations since January 2004. Intelligent Toys is one of their best series, in which the label collects works from a roster of eclectic electronic musicians across the globe. And this fifth installment is one of my absolute favorites. First of all, even before I go into listing all of the appearances, let me tell you that this selection of tracks spans three logical disks (well, if it was to be printed, it would fit on three physical disks). There are a total of 39 tracks spanning over three hours of music, a nice batch of digital artwork, and an amazing hand-drawn stop-animation video by no_joy covering the track by Sleepy Town Manufacture. Walkman, the founder of Sutemos, managed to outdo himself this time around with "the biggest number of highly acclaimed artists that aren't collaborating with any of the net labels and who thought that giving their music away for free is stupid. Until now." And now I must finally break down and list all of the appearances. After an opening track by AGF/Delay (Antye Greie-Fuchs and Vladislav Delay) we dive right into Praveen (Praveen Sharma with releases on Merck, Ai Records and Neo Ouija), Gultskra Artikler (Alexey Devyanin, with releases on Autoplate, Other Electricities and Miasmah), and Deer (yep, this is Martin Hirsch, currently running Neo Ouija records). And I'm only through the first four tracks... Skip ahead and we fall upon the lovely and delightful tracks by Swod (a.k.a. Dictaphone on City Centre Offices), Miwon (Hendrik Kröz on CCO) and a beautiful glitched out track by a newcomer by the name of NGC 1365 (who is this?). And here comes Yagya (Aðalsteinn Guðmundsson with releases on Force Inc. and Sending Orbs), Maps & Diagrams (Tim Martin on Smallfish and Cactus Island) and... what's this? Ulrich Schnauss is in the house. And if that's not enough, there's more! Few Nodler (Linas Strockis on Planet Mu), IJO (Audrius Vaitiekunas on Plain), and Jvox (Joel Tallent on n5MD and Ad Noiseam). The Funcken brothers contribute a track by Funckarma (their seven aliases and albums on Sublight, n5MD, Ad Noiseam, and Symbolic Interaction are just too many to cover), RJ Valeo (Type Records), Kero (Sohail Azad on Shitkatapult, Bpitch Control and Neo Ouija), and SubtractiveLAD (Stephen Hummel on n5MD). More! There is Sense (Adam M. Raisbeck with releases on Merck, Monotonik, Neo Ouija, Miasmah and Kahvi), MINT (Murray Fisher on Kahvi, Boltfish and U-Cover), Ruxpin (Jónas Thor Gudmundsson on Mikrolux), and Monoceros (Joan Malé on Expanding). Irealize that in some ways this writeup is nothing but a three-paragraph-exercise in detailed discography of a tightly coupled selection of talent. But how else am I supposed to convey this much music in one release? Look at the names... ponder at the labels... listen to the music... and you'll be back for more! Be sure to pick up the first four Intelligent Toys volumes from Sutemos, as well as any of their previous twenty-two releases. And yes... all of this is free, so how can you go wrong?

    http://www.myspace.com/sutemos | http://www.sutemos.net

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    Hildur Guðnadóttir - Without Sinking (Touch)

    It is dark, dense, and brooding. The sky is gray. Winter is refusing to leave. Wind becomes the rhythm; dissonance - the melody. In the delicate hands of the Berlin-based (but Icelandic by birth) Hildur Guðnadóttir, the cello whispers and moans. Perhaps it's grieving for an uncertain future, perhaps accepting a buried past. The voice of sorrow seeps through the trembling fingers and saturates everything around it with something invisible, but wet and salty. Then, a heavy, thick and warm knot builds up inside my chest. And when I sigh, it escapes in a condensed vapor, ascends past the naked tree tops and joins a dark cloud in a stubborn winter sky. Finally the rain falls. And I cringe at all the pain. Hildur Guðnadóttir is not a newcomer to the scene. As a classically trained cellist, she has previously performed with and contributed to works by her Icelandic contemporary artists such as múm, Valgeir Sigurðsson, and Ben Frost, as well as Hafler Trio, Nico Muhly, and even Pan Sonic. For Without Sinking she was able to round up a talented group of friends, like Skúli Sverrisson, the prolific Jóhann Jóhannsson, and her father, Guðni Franzson. Dropping all of the above names should give you a brief idea of the circle that Guðnadóttir revolves in. I guess it's not surprising, since she is an active member in the neu-Iceland collective, Kitchen Motors. This is _the_ Reykjavík music scene think tank, owned and operated by Jóhann Jóhannsson, Kira Kira, and Hilmar Jensson. Without any exaggerations, this is indeed an acoustic modern classical marvel. Absolutely a must for this year! Add Without Sinking and Guðnadóttir's previous works to your collection. The debut album Mount A (12 Tónar, 2006) was originally released under the moniker Lost in the Hildurness. Her recent one-track complimentary release to the album, Iridescence (Touch, 2009), is only available as a digital download, as part of a new series of digital singles launched by Touch on April 1st. On May 16th, 2009, Hildur Guðnadóttir is scheduled to perform for Short Circuit, A Festival of Electronica, during a Touch showcase along with BJ Nilsen, Philip Jeck and the Gavin Bryars Ensemble, and [back on the road!] Biosphere!!! If you're anywhere around The Roundhouse in London, please go... For me...

    Two and a Half Questions with Hildur Guðnadóttir

    http://www.myspace.com/hildurness | http://www.hildurness.com
    http://www.touchmusic.org.uk

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    last.fm artist and label cloud mentioned in the above post: Hildur Guðnadóttir, múm, Valgeir Sigurðsson, Ben Frost, Hafler Trio, Nico Muhly, Pan Sonic, Skúli Sverrisson, Jóhann Jóhannsson, Guðni Franzson, Jóhann Jóhannsson, Kira Kira, Hilmar Jensson, BJ Nilsen, Philip Jeck, Gavin Bryars Ensemble, Biosphere, Monoceros, Ruxpin, Mint, Sense, SubtractiveLAD, Kero, RJ Valeo, Funckarma, Jvox, FEW NOLDER, IJO, Ulrich Schnauss, Maps & Diagrams, Yagya, Miwon, Swod, Dictaphone, Deer, Gultskra Artikler, Praveen, AGF/Delay, Antye Greie-Fuchs, Vladislav Delay, Sleepy Town Manufacture, Benoît Pioulard, Lambs Laughter, Stars of the Lid, Pan•American, Tim Hecker, Brian McBride, Windy & Carl, Moderat, Headhunter, 2562, Lukid, Prefuse 73, Flying Lotus, J Dilla, Harmonic 33, Global Communication, Harmonic 313, Mark Pritchard, Arovane, Plaid, Murcof, Lusine, Vladislav Delay, bichi, Numb, Jimanica, Ametsub, Ryuchi Sakamoto, Totakeke, Stendeck, autoclav1.1, Hecq, Architect, Ginormous, Jóhann Jóhannsson, The Refractors, Robert Logan, Lux Nigra, Accelera Deck, Vertical Form, Phonem, Christian Kleine, Jake Mandell, Markus Schwill, Fennesz, Giuseppe Ielasi, Taylor Deupree, Apparat, Telefon Tel Aviv, Plaid, Jon Hopkins, KiloWatts, Ott, Bluetech, Shulman, Evan Marc, Evan Bartholomew, Aes Dana, Mahiane, Asura, Solar Fields, H.U.V.A. Network, The Field, Echocord, LOWFOUR, Tim Hecker, William Basinski, Gas, Mokira, Andreas Tilliander, Spyweirdos, Si Begg, Black Film, Team Doyobi, nongenetic, Lusine ICL, Solar X, Lowfish, Venetian Snares, Psi Spy, Snog, The Manhattan Gimp Project, Mad EP, Hecq, Autechre, Grouper, Two Lone Swordsmen, Gravenhurst, Anders Trentemøller, Trentemøller, Greg Davis, Adam Pacione, Ateleia, Hannu, Simon Scott, Christopher Bissonnette, Benoît Pioulard, Akira Kosemura, Part Timer, Orla Wren, Fourcolor, Sawako, Lawrence English, Aus, Mark Templeton, moskitoo, Slowdive, Burial, Sully, Narcossist, Falty DL, Brackles, Groovechronicles, Millie & Andrea, TRG, Spatial, Peverelist, Hauschka, Pan American, Harold Budd, Ólafur Arnalds, Erik Satie, Peter Broderick, Jacaszek, Goldmund, Touch, Sutemos, Planet Mu, n5MD, Ad Noiseam, Mikrolux, Neo Ouija, Miasmah, kahvi, Type, Bpitch Control, Shitkatapult, Sublight, symbolic interaction, Sending Orbs, City Centre Offices, Force Inc., Smallfish, Autoplate, Other Electricities, Ai Records, Kranky, Icon, Ochre, Darla, Brainwashed, Warp, PROGRESSIVE FOrM, Tympanik Audio, Hymen, Slowfoot Records, Morr Music, Din, 12K, Häpna, Schoolmap, Hefty Records, interchill, Yellow Sunshine Explosion, Platipus, Native State Records, Aleph Zero, IBOGA, Somnia, Ultimae Records, Repeatle, Mille Plateaux, raster-noton, FATCAT, Rough Trade, ROOM40, Anticipate Recordings, KESH, Planet Mu, Tempa, Infrasonics
  • Das's also n Blogeintrag...

    Jul 10 2009, 1h30 por daniel_the_b

    bei last.fm...
    Ziemlich betrunken (dank Rechtschreibkorrektur doch orth. korrekt ;-)) hört man seltsame Musik... z.B. mal wieder Pain... vorhin beim Programmieren wars doch eher gechillt, mit Asura.... wobei [drunk]Perfect CircleThe Outsider als Video auch nicht zu verachten ist [/drunk]
  • VA / «The Lakeshore» mixed by Hexfire (2009) [psychill mixset]

    Jul 4 2009, 1h26 por trancing



    Genre.....................: Electronic
    Style.....................: Chillout; Psychill; Psybient
    Compilation Date..........: 01-Jul-2009
    Playtime..................: 71:24
    Quality...................: CBR 320k (LAME 3.97) 44.1khz Joint Stereo


    Brief info:

    I'm a bit lazy to make another description/overview. :) To be short - that's the mean between Inner Resonance and Nocturnal Solstice (that are previous compilations, see my journal). The set turned out to be rather tough; not exactly the music for regular chillout, but perfect music for peak-hour times we are subjected to then and now. Plus, this is primarily a modest overview of what great has been going on in the past several months within ambient/psychill scene (the material is new by the most part). So, for those that aren't up-to-date with what's up around in the field, that's a spotlight.


    Tracklist:
    01. Will-O'-The-Wisp - Like a Leaf in the Wind
    02. Easily Embarrassed - Mental Anguish
    03. Will-O'-The-Wisp - Long Sleep Plain
    04. D. Batistatos - Just The Sea
    05. Chronos - Planetarium (Aquarius Edit)
    06. H.U.V.A. Network - Rain Geometries (Solar Fields Remix)
    07. AstroPilot - Voda
    08. Aes Dana - Haze (Celestial Mix)
    09. H.U.V.A. Network - Orientations Part 1 (Above Towns Edit)
    10. Asura - Afterain

    Download link: http://rghost.ru/329548

    __
    Hexfire
  • Psy is in my mind - Positive Vibes Makes You Feel High [2009]

    Jun 13 2009, 9h14 por romero

    Psy is in my mind - Positive Vibes Makes You Feel High



    Year: February, 2009
    Country: Russia
    Type: Mix
    Genre: Electronic
    Style: Ambient
    Total Time: 1:37:39


    Tracklist:

    1. Solar Fields - Discovering
    2. Zymosis - Solar Quest
    3. Koan feat. Krusseldorf - Rainfall
    4. Shulman - Small Grey Creatures
    5. Harax - Night
    6. Bluetech - What The Night Reveals
    7. Blue Lunar Monkey - Free Flowing
    8. Zero Cult - Nitrogen
    9. Harax & Zymosis - Zaren
    10. shakri - Melody Of Space
    11. Blue Lunar Monkey - 2012
    12. M-Sphere - The Source
    13. Asura - Afterain
    14. Solar Fields - The Road To Nothingness

    Download Link
  • Recommended Songs -- new tool discovery!

    Abr 17 2009, 4h54 por AdriaNnLA

    Ok, so a significant part of the draw to Last.fm has always been the recommendations.

    You listen to a bunch of tracks that you like and through the magic of databases, algorithms, and other listeners with similar tastes; you're presented with artist recommendations courtesy of the machine.

    Their used to be a sweet feature subset of the recommendation engine that allowed groups and other users to send you recommendations to which you could also mix in to your musical discovery journey.

    Unfortunately with the most recent 'overhaul' of the site, group recommendations went away completely and personal recommendations went to pot. Instead of being displayed on a singular page and allowed to populate a radio stream of unbroken recommendations, they now appear in your inbox where you have to sample them one-at-a-time.

    Not nearly as fun nor conducive to the discovery listening process. :-(

    I'd previously found a tool (I'll stick a link in here later) that would scrape some of your top artists data and present you a cloud of recommended artists -- it worked as good or better than the machine recommendations mentioned above.

    As good as artists recommendations are however, I've always hoped for a track recommendation system... and now there is!

    My understanding is that your top tracks are compiled, the most similar tracks to these, which you have not previously scrobbled, are extrapolated and then weighted on how many times they appear as a similar track to one of your top tracks. You're then presented with a list and a Last.fm friendly bb code you can copy-paste. One day hopefully there will be the ability to quickly dump the list in to a playlist or mass tag the result set in order to effortlessly begin the listening discovery process.

    Until such time we'll just have to dump them somewhere here, such as a journal and either sample independantly, or use the resulting links to compile a tag set or playlist ourselves.

    They say that one day in the future, the machines will do all the work for us, instead of us doing all the work for the machines...

    IIRC, the first list is from feeding in my top 50 tracks, and the second list (which should be more accurate) is from feeding in my top 200. I decided to save both for sake of comparison. I expect a lot of duplicates, which should be strongly recommended, but am also interested in the uniques.

    The author of this tool, kurtrips also presents a 'Random Song Statistics' generator, that will reveal how many unique tracks represent the total of all your listened tracks, and present as well an SRI or 'Song Repetition Index' representing how many times you listen to a track, when averaged over all the tracks to which you have listened.

    In fact, you need to run the Random Song Statistics tool on that site before you can benefit from running the Song Recommendation Tool.

    More information can be found here: Random Song Statistics And Song Recommendation Tool

    Recommended Songs (sorted by most recommended songs)

    TocarLady Folly : Ilya (Score = 114.66)
    TocarInside My Mind (Blue Skies) : Groove Armada (Score = 93.58)
    TocarDieu Reconnaitra Les Siens : DJ Cam (Score = 86.25)
    Ramblin' Man : Lemon Jelly (Score = 85.65)
    TocarLa Luna : Robert Rich & Steve Roach (Score = 84.87)
    TocarThe Dream Is Always the Same : Tangerine Dream (Score = 83.91)
    TocarSOS : Asura (Score = 83.85)
    Tocar1/1 : Brian Eno (Score = 82.95)
    TocarYo-Yo (Abbey Road Version) : Amorphous Androgynous (Score = 82.46)
    TocarTristesse Globale : Röyksopp (Score = 82.3)
    TocarSoluble Ducks : Animals on Wheels (Score = 81.54)
    TocarLunar Orbit Four - Back Side Of The Moon : The Orb (Score = 81.39)
    TocarThe Rhythm Resonator : Kilvo (Score = 81.39)
    TocarSelf transforming experience : Solar Fields (Score = 81.24)
    TocarVelius : Helios (Score = 81.2)
    Novio : Moby (Score = 81.19)
    TocarUnderstars : Brian Eno (Score = 81.11)
    TocarThe Claddagh of Sera Kirby : Flim (Score = 81.07)
    TocarNoun : Pan•American (Score = 80.73)
    Out Of Nothing : O Yuki Conjugate (Score = 80.71)
    TocarHeliopolis : Banco de Gaia (Score = 79.86)
    TocarNummer 6 : Porn Sword Tobacco (Score = 79.83)
    TocarMOS 6581 (Album Version) : Carbon Based Lifeforms (Score = 79.68)
    TocarWaveform (Ambient Jungle mix) : The Irresistible Force (Score = 79.67)
    Black Lamb & Grey Falcon : Biosphere (Score = 79.53)
    Green Reflections : Biosphere (Score = 79.45)
    TocarNummer 14 : Porn Sword Tobacco (Score = 79.2)
    TocarMobility Cookie Redirection : SK123 (Score = 78.99)
    TocarBig Teeth Man : Metricks (Score = 78.95)
    TocarNight Bus : Burial (Score = 78.81)
    TocarEveryone in the World Is Doing Something Without Me : The Future Sound of London (Score = 78.77)
    TocarBlue Haze : Ishq (Score = 78.57)
    Butterfly : Piana (Score = 78.5)
    TocarBeat of Desire : Steve Roach (Score = 78.37)
    Isometric unit construction : Domotic (Score = 78.16)
    TocarSnowflake 8 : Yagya (Score = 78.15)
    TocarLucky Saddle : FFWD (Score = 77.97)
    Sensitive Data : Chris Korda (Score = 77.89)
    TocarMullholland : Stars of the Lid (Score = 77.88)
    TocarPoem - Aztec hotel : Harold Budd (Score = 77.86)
    TocarRemember My Name : Bliss (Score = 77.8)
    TocarThe Sea is in the Boat : The Boats (Score = 77.77)
    TocarYara 06 : Marsen Jules (Score = 77.75)
    TocarWinston : Naked 9 (Score = 77.58)
    TocarDark Eyed Sister : Harold Budd/Brian Eno (Score = 77.53)
    TocarChinook : Loscil (Score = 77.46)
    TocarReliant : Planet Bliss (Score = 77.44)
    TocarUltrasound : Transient (Score = 77.41)
    TocarChamber of Synthi Dreams : Pete Namlook (Score = 77.38)
    TocarSubharmonic Passage : Pete Namlook (Score = 77.38)
    TocarFractal Liason : System 7 (Score = 77.32)
    TocarNea 3 : Solar Fields (Score = 77.29)
    Ruido : Murcof (Score = 77.26)
    TocarLazy Sunday Funerals 01 : Marsen Jules (Score = 77.16)
    TocarA Swimming Pool Down the Railway Track : Colleen (Score = 77.12)
    A Year in a Minute : Fennesz (Score = 77.1)
    TocarSamsara : Helios (Score = 77.1)
    TocarPictures at an Exhibition : Tangerine Dream (Score = 77.02)
    Through You : Seefeel (Score = 77.02)
    TocarDisk 0 : Atom Heart (Score = 77)
    TocarTrack 01 : Atom Heart (Score = 77)
    TocarKincajou (Duck! Asteroid) : Banco de Gaia (Score = 76.98)
    015 + - 06 - 8.01 : Fennesz (Score = 76.91)
    Tocarsmell memory traktor remix : MUM (Score = 76.9)
    Cloud Cover : O Yuki Conjugate (Score = 76.89)
    TocarIn Moll 5 : Markus Guentner (Score = 76.86)
    TocarShark : Juno Reactor (Score = 76.84)
    TocarKojan : Omnimotion (Score = 76.81)
    TocarHow Vacantly You Stare at Me : Harold Budd (Score = 76.75)
    TocarSpeedleam (empathy mix) : The Higher Intelligence Agency (Score = 76.72)
    TocarHalcyon : Loscil (Score = 76.7)
    TocarYu : Ishq (Score = 76.7)
    TocarLong Life : Bliss (Score = 76.68)
    Tocard|p 4 : William Basinski (Score = 76.66)
    TocarWing : Pan•American (Score = 76.65)
    District : Patrick Pulsinger (Score = 76.55)
    Tocarder wuestenplanet : Markus Guentner (Score = 76.46)
    TocarDSP Terminal : Tetsu Inoue (Score = 76.44)
    TocarUntitled 9 : Sutekh (Score = 76.29)
    Tocarfrom star to seed : Rena Jones (Score = 76.23)
    TocarUndercurrent : Rena Jones (Score = 76.23)
    TocarThe Deep (original mix) : Global Communication (Score = 76.18)
    TocarBubbaluba : Renegade Soundwave (Score = 76.18)
    Starethrough : Seefeel (Score = 76.08)
    TocarFalling, Flying, Dreaming : Steve Roach (Score = 75.99)
    TocarHoly Dance : Tetsu Inoue (Score = 75.96)
    TocarThe Biosphere : Global Communication (Score = 75.95)
    TocarOne Night and It's Gone : Colleen (Score = 75.85)
    TocarMmin : Bad Loop (Score = 75.79)
    TocarReverendrum [Tunnel Mix by Nylon Union] : Abuse (Score = 75.74)
    TocarSelinite : The Higher Intelligence Agency (Score = 75.73)
    TocarTrack3a(2waynice) : Keith Fullerton Whitman (Score = 75.65)
    TocarHere : Manual (Score = 75.55)
    TocarAmongst the Ruins : Delerium (Score = 75.5)
    TocarSnowflake 10 : Yagya (Score = 75.47)
    TocarTransmit Liberation : Single Cell Orchestra (Score = 75.46)
    TocarKika : EZ3kiel (Score = 75.39)
    TocarFlight 2127 : Single Cell Orchestra (Score = 75.33)
    TocarLifeforms (Path 5) : The Future Sound of London (Score = 75.31)
    Sketch : Julien Neto (Score = 75.18)

    =====

    Recommended Songs (sorted by most recommended songs)

    TocarLady Folly : Ilya (Score = 178.04)
    TocarInside My Mind (Blue Skies) : Groove Armada (Score = 160.08)
    Tocarpure : Sal Boca (Score = 156.63)
    Ramblin' Man : Lemon Jelly (Score = 153.65)
    TocarAngel : Massive Attack (Score = 134.6)
    TocarMessage in a Bottle : Saint Etienne (Score = 132.53)
    TocarDeep Love (Nitin Sawhney remix) : Mandalay (Score = 130.92)
    TocarGoing Under : Rockers Hi-Fi (Score = 130.73)
    La condition pour aimer : Autour de Lucie (Score = 130.69)
    TocarEither Way : Etro Anime (Score = 130.53)
    TocarOverdue : Bitter:Sweet (Score = 129.65)
    TocarAssociates : Simpletun (Score = 127.78)
    TocarTripping on a Trip : Felix da Housecat (Score = 126.88)
    TocarVenus : Funki Porcini (Score = 126.54)
    TocarHeaven : Bitter:Sweet (Score = 125.09)
    TocarThe Big Sea : Funki Porcini (Score = 124.92)
    TocarUnderground Vibes : DJ Cam (Score = 124.9)
    TocarDiablo : Etro Anime (Score = 124.61)
    Let Me Sleep : Laika (Score = 124.58)
    TocarEnough : Alif Tree (Score = 124.58)
    TocarAbandoned : Cling (Score = 124.07)
    TocarBittersweet : Atomica (Score = 123.89)
    TocarLifeboat : Lovage (Score = 122.72)
    Shock Corridor : Saint Etienne (Score = 121.1)
    TocarKeep on Moving : Audio Bullys (Score = 121.1)
    No Feedback : Khoiba (Score = 120.76)
    TocarWorry : Atomica (Score = 119.86)
    TocarLaisse le temps : Olive (Score = 119.3)
    Bad Things : Tricky (Score = 119.09)
    TocarAlicia Blue / Flow : Material (Score = 118.99)
    TocarSeven Souls (Tim Simenon Mix) : Material (Score = 118.99)
    Ghetto Youth : Tricky (Score = 118.8)
    TocarIntro : DJ Krush (Score = 118.49)
    Sweet : Lamb (Score = 117.99)
    Spooky Rhodes : Laika (Score = 117.52)
    Glory Box : Portishead (Score = 117.23)
    Tocar07. Piano Playa Hata : Wagon Christ (Score = 116.02)
    TocarDownhill Racer (Kenny Dope Remix) : Everything but the Girl (Score = 115.82)
    TocarScratch Yer Head (Squarepusher mix) : DJ Food (Score = 115.36)
    Another Membrane : MUM (Score = 115.02)
    TocarBlue Movie : Sneaker Pimps (Score = 114.93)
    Candy Mckenzie : Death in Vegas (Score = 113.37)
    TocarBeautiful (7 Canny Mix) : Mandalay (Score = 113.22)
    La contradiction : Autour de Lucie (Score = 112.59)
    TocarLittle Hitler : Everything but the Girl (Score = 112.07)
    TocarShorty's Judgement : The Herbaliser (Score = 111.85)
    Beautiful World : Archive (Score = 110.26)
    TocarUNKLE (main title theme) : UNKLE (Score = 109.73)
    TocarSoftly : Lamb (Score = 109.49)
    TocarThis Love : Sarah Brightman (Score = 109.47)
    TocarWomen Lose Weight (feat. Slick Rick) : Morcheeba (Score = 109.3)
    TocarLove Dub : Waldeck (Score = 108.4)
    TocarSpirits Fall : Pressure Drop (Score = 108.32)
    TocarSheared Box : Portishead (Score = 106.91)
    A Well Deserved Break : Morcheeba (Score = 106.38)
    TocarDieu Reconnaitra Les Siens : DJ Cam (Score = 106.35)
    TocarSafe From Harm (Perfecto Mix) : Massive Attack (Score = 105.43)
    TocarAttica's Puma States Remix : Sneaker Pimps (Score = 104.62)
    Tocarwhat are you to me : UNKLE (Score = 103.82)
    TocarLunar Orbit Four - Back Side Of The Moon : The Orb (Score = 98.58)
    TocarPerfect : Supreme Beings of Leisure (Score = 96.97)
    TocarBattersea : Hooverphonic (Score = 96.82)
    Novio : Moby (Score = 96.07)
    TocarSister Curare : Kid Loco (Score = 94.81)
    TocarTristesse Globale : Röyksopp (Score = 94.01)
    TocarDouble Drums (DJ DSL mix) : Peace Orchestra (Score = 93.94)
    TocarEveryone in the World Is Doing Something Without Me : The Future Sound of London (Score = 93.77)
    TocarSoluble Ducks : Animals on Wheels (Score = 93.03)
    TocarRemember My Name : Bliss (Score = 92.81)
    TocarLa Luna : Robert Rich & Steve Roach (Score = 92.6)
    TocarSOS : Asura (Score = 91.61)
    Tocar1/1 : Brian Eno (Score = 90.9)
    TocarLifeforms (Path 5) : The Future Sound of London (Score = 90.8)
    TocarNot So Blue : Quantic (Score = 90.46)
    TocarAin't Got Nothin' : Supreme Beings of Leisure (Score = 89.62)
    TocarThe Rhythm Resonator : Kilvo (Score = 89.22)
    TocarReliant : Planet Bliss (Score = 89.17)
    Guimar : Aim (Score = 88.82)
    TocarUnderstars : Brian Eno (Score = 88.64)
    TocarMOS 6581 (Album Version) : Carbon Based Lifeforms (Score = 88.56)
    TocarYu : Ishq (Score = 88.35)
    TocarThe Dream Is Always the Same : Tangerine Dream (Score = 88.08)
    TocarHeliopolis : Banco de Gaia (Score = 87.49)
    TocarYo-Yo (Abbey Road Version) : Amorphous Androgynous (Score = 86.71)
    TocarNight Bus : Burial (Score = 86.48)
    TocarBlue Haze : Ishq (Score = 86.2)
    TocarThe Sea is in the Boat : The Boats (Score = 85.6)
    TocarLucky Saddle : FFWD (Score = 85.56)
    TocarDark Eyed Sister : Harold Budd/Brian Eno (Score = 85.27)
    TocarPure Synthetic : Planet Bliss (Score = 85.17)
    TocarThe Claddagh of Sera Kirby : Flim (Score = 85.16)
    TocarUltrasound : Transient (Score = 84.9)
    Ruido : Murcof (Score = 84.88)
    Tocarsmell memory traktor remix : MUM (Score = 84.53)
    TocarMoon : Sia (Score = 84.47)
    TocarHide and Seek : Kruder & Dorfmeister (Score = 84.44)
    Tocard|p 4 : William Basinski (Score = 84.38)
    Out Of Nothing : O Yuki Conjugate (Score = 84.24)
    TocarKojan : Omnimotion (Score = 84.18)
    Tocarder wuestenplanet : Markus Guentner (Score = 83.95)



    I'm pleased to notice that the vast majority of these recommendations are streamable!

    Now off to build a tag set to have a proper listen. :-)
  • Headphone Commute Reviews (March)

    Fev 28 2009, 23h23 por liftmuziek

    It has become a common pattern with me. I turn around and wonder how time goes by so fast... I used to write up bi-weekly rotations. And now it's been almost two months since my last installment. Nevertheless, I haven't been idle. First of all, I finally posted the long awaited Headphone Commute's Best of 2008 list. And a few weeks prior, I prefaced it with my Top 50 of 2007 revisit. There was also a post of my Ten Favorite Mixes of 2008 in case you missed it. Not to mention, a complete new site revamp with a whole new feature covering Label Profiles - first up with Chicago based Tympanik Audio! With this much output and a vacation in between, I am finally back on track for 2009, pumping out reviews in the same spirit. Here I present you with an installment of 16 writeups covering dubstep, breakcore, minimal techno, ambient shoegaze, psybient chillout, modern classical, experimental, rhythmic noise, and of course a few flashbacks! As usual, I would appreciate a comment or two, and would love it if you could Subscribe to RSS Feed. Visit the new site at headphonecommute.com !!!

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    2562 - Aerial (Tectonic)

    Twenty-five sixty-two is not just a postcode in The Netherlands' Den Hague - it is also an alias of its resident who is a prolific producer of dubstep, techno, and broken beat atmospherics. Dave Huismans's first full length release on Tectonic under 2562 moniker is titled Aerial. Tectonic is the same label that previously brought you the 12-inchers from Pinch, Skream, and Cyrus. On Aerial, Huismans layers dubbed out minor chords on top of the blowing wind of white noise and deep sub-bass enriched syncopated beats. The rhythm bounces between a Detroit-meets-Berlin techno sound and reverb heavy dubstep, creating tunes geared more towards home listening then as the fillers on the dance floor [not that hearing these tracks booming on a loud sound system would be unappealing].With his own personal style, Aerial is more of an album then a compilation of singles. The tracks work well together, wrapped around the concept the same way Burial delivered the unmistakable sound of Untrue. One thing for sure - this isn't the sound of London. That is to say, that it seems to have more in common with minimal dub techno then the filthy bass ridden dubstep hooks. Both styles are excellent - just depends what you're in the mood for at the moment. And this very instant, I need to be chilled out and at the same time warmed up, keeping the evil grin away. At the end everything is just a matter of taste. And there's only one way for you to find out.For more music from Huismans, check out his two side projects: a few EPs on Subsolo Records as A Made Up Sound; and earlier released jazzy broken beat EPs on the Dutch Flyin' High Records under Dogdaze alias. Recommended if you want to hear dubstep with some Modern Love and Basic Channel feel.

    http://www.myspace.com/2562dub
    http://www.myspace.com/tectonicrecordings

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    BLÆRG - Dysphoric Sonorities (Bottle Imp Productions)

    Since the good ol' days of Squarepusher's jazzy idm breaks, laced with jungle flavored drill'n'bass, I've been nostalgic for that fading away sound. Even Venetian Snares modern-classical-meets-breakcore masterpiece, Rossz Csillag Alatt Született (Planet Mu, 2005), is now almost four years old. Has the genre put on an angrier mask and turned to gabber-heavy random-triggered mayhem? Where are those melodically driven themes complimented by intelligent macro programmed precision percussion? Or maybe I'm just not looking in the right places. Feel free to turn me in the right direction.Imagine my surprise when I landed on BLÆRG. This Ohio (US) based producer is everything mentioned above and more! [Yes, exclamation point is really necessary at this point]. Scott Wehman is not exactly a newcomer to the scene. Initially playing bass guitar for a few local metal bands, Wehman turned to producing electronica. With a few digital releases and a full length, Sesquipedalia (FromTheGut, 2007), Wehman joined Detroit stationed Bottle Imp Productions' roster, and opened up with a his sophomore album, Dysphoric Sonorities. Following this release he put out a very lovely limited EP [only 50 copies!], Auspices & Vagaries (Bottle Imp, 2008) and a collection of earlier tracks [presumably traded over the slsk network], Soulseek Days (Bottle Imp, 2008).On Dysphoric Sonorities, Wehman cleverly masters all of the beloved elements of intelligent breakcore - from jazzy keys, to bass slaps, to piano chords, to acoustic percussion drilled and glitched out to perfection. And there is enough evil in there to satisfy the angry rats scratching at the surface of the inside of my skull. Oh, and did I mentioned that production is top notch? Highly recommended along with the EP (if you are one of the lucky ones to get your dirty paws on it), if you like above mentioned names, plus Xanopticon, The Flashbulb, Enduser, Igorrr and Wisp.

    Read Two and a Half Questions with Blaerg

    http://www.myspace.com/blaerg | http://www.fromthegut.org/blaerg
    http://www.myspace.com/bottleimpproductions | http://www.bottle-imp.com

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    Ø - Oleva (Sähkö)

    OlevaYou would think that by being one of the prominent sound engineers and pioneers in experimental music since 1993, Mika Vainio would have run out of steam. You would think that numerous copy cats would push his sound design into obscure corner of just another knob tweaking artist. You would think. But Vainio treads on. Currently residing in Berlin, Vainio is a prominent member of the acclaimed Pan Sonic duo (with Ilpo Väisänen). And besides his more established minimalist alias, Ø (pronounced "ohm"), he has also released under Kentolevi, Tekonivel, and Philus monikers - check out the Kolmio EP on Sähkö for the latter. Speaking of the label. Helsinki based Sähkö (which stands for "electricity" in Finnish) has built up a respectable catalog of abstract, minimal, and experimental releases since its launch in 1993 [same year that Detroit's Basic Channel was launched]. These are mostly featuring the output of various projects by Vainio and Väisänen, with an occasional release by Jimi Tenor, and a 12" by Mike Ink (Wolfgang Voigt). It also manages a handful of sub-labels which include Jazzpuu, Keys Of Life, and Puu (means "wood"). But back to Oleva ("The Existing") which features the familiar signature of Vainio's style of digital wire hum, low rumbling saw-tooth distortions, dark industrial stabs, and pounding minimal beats. Although the album features a few purely ambient tracks, as well as a couple of abstract drony explorations, the proliferation of tight rhythmic components make this release a more headphone oriented experience [as opposed to an archive of an experimental audio installations]. Oleva is is an ongoing exploration into noise and silence alike. Yet another excellent addition for the avid minimalist collector. It's delightful to see that Sähkö keeps on printing just the quality stuff. Make sure you are well familiar with Ø's classic Metri (Sähkö, 1994). Recommended if you love Gas, Autechre, anything from Basic Channel, and of course Pan Sonic.

    http://www.myspace.com/electronicsquelches | http://www.phinnweb.org/vainio
    http://www.sahkorecordings.com | http://www.phinnweb.org/sahko

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    Christopher Bissonnette - In Between Words (Kranky)

    Here's another winner for Kranky, a Chicago based label that has been releasing outstanding material from Pan•American, Deerhunter, Stars Of The Lid, Loscil, Atlas Sound, Benoît Pioulard, and Valet, just to name a few. In Between Words is a sophomore release for Canadian based Christopher Bissonnette. And what a sonic treat it is! The warm layers of sound blanket the microscopic hair cells within my cochlea and gently sway them with precision controlled sound pressure. Half way through the first track an itch develops deep within my auditory canal, but I simply can not scratch that deep. Tiny white-noise artifacts crackle through the thick orchestral pads, like distant lightning in the muggy summer. But the thunder never breaks. Instead it stands still, simply just there, quietly revealing its presence, forcing you to accept. Accept this, and everything else that is currently around you. In Between Words is a collection of Bissonnette's works exploring special acoustics and integration of field recordings. Through six purely ambient and minimalist tracks, Bissonnette experiments with found sound and the empty space found in between. "Inspired by the continuous din, the constant low-level hum of urban background noise, interspersed with all manner of mechanically created sounds, Bissonnette finds in this a near-melodic soundtrack to his daily life." The organic swells are based mostly on symphonic instruments as well as macro synthesized frequency rich sound waves. As such, I find this beautiful composition much plausible to the soul, then the external background sounds of our urban environment. I almost wish that some public transportation authority would publicly broadcast this music during my morning commute. Until then, there are always headphones. If you enjoyed this album, be sure to seek out Bissonnette's debut album, Periphery (Kranky, 2005). Recommended if you follow works by Philip Jeck, Tim Hecker, Machinefabriek and Stephan Mathieu.

    Read Two and a Half Questions with Christopher Bissonnette

    http://www.myspace.com/christopherbissonnette | http://www.christopherbissonnette.ca
    http://www.myspace.com/krankyltd | http://www.kranky.net

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    The Sight Below - Glider (Ghostly)

    Following up the free digital teaser, No Place For Us EP (Ghostly, 2008), The Sight Below graces our ears with a full length, Glider. The album picks up right where the EP left off - majestic flowing ambient pads spreading over endless soundscapes complimented with an ongoing four/four beat. This is ambient techno at its finest. The lush acoustic guitars are drenched in layers of reverb and luscious background chords. All the instrumentation on the album [sans the 808 percussion] was done with a guitar, ebow, viola box, loop pedals, reverb units and a delay box. The lack of transition in the rhythm first may seem to sound almost amateurish (as if a simple kick was stretched out throughout the entire track), until you realize how important this explicitly desired minimalism is for creating a hypnotic atmosphere, resembling a pumping heart beat somewhere deep within your throat. The title of the album triggers a distant memory: I jump off a mountain in Rio de Janeiro, silently hand glide through thick humid air, and land on the beach. The music evokes all the experienced feelings. The calmness of the ocean. The simplicity of falling. The excitement of danger. The Glider is the perfect soundtrack for this flashback. It's a pleasure to see this album on Ghostly International which is currently celebrating its 10-year anniversary with a tour of The Sight Below, Lusine, Grouper, and others along the way (see the label's myspace for tour dates). This Seattle based artist prefers to keep out of the spotlight and stay anonymous (hopefully for the time being). And as long as The Sight Below keeps on making that great music, we don't care. You will absolutely fall in love with this album if you follow Yagya, Echospace, Gas, and Christopher Willits. And don't forget to pickup the free EP!

    Read Two and a Half Questions with The Sight Below

    http://www.myspace.com/thesightbelow | http://www.ghostly.com/artists/the-sight-below
    http://www.myspace.com/ghostlyinternational | http://www.ghostlyinternational.com

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    Cardopusher - Mutant Dubstep Vol. 2 (Spectraliquid)

    With half a dozen of twelve-inchers under his belt, and a full-length breakcore album Hippie Killers Don't Mind Jah Conversations (Peace Off, 2006), Luis Garbàn, aka Cardopusher, lands a tasteful EP on Spectraliquid, continuing the Athens based label's Mutant Dubstep series with Volume 2. Garbàn's previous output ranged from above mentioned breakcore, to gabber and ragga. Now he's trying his hand at dubstep, and very successfully, may I add. On this three track EP with an additional two remixes by Innasekt (Sneer and Sully) and Pacheko (Francisco Mejia Szilard), you can expect to hear clear influences of Garbàn's edgier side, grinding with those nasty sawtooth riffs through concrete onslaught of deeply resonating dark and dirty bass wobbles. The memory breaching melodies and hooks are screaming to be released onto the dance floor. With a saturation of dubstep tracks on the market, it's very difficult to pick out the standout tracks in the crowd. But you can be sure that Cardopusher's addition to the collection will be permanent. It's no wonder that Thom Yorke (yes, the one of Radiohead) included a remix of Cardopusher's track on his weekly music chart. While grabbing this colorful digipack from Spectraliquid, make sure to pick up the first volume in the series, kicked off by none other than Ebola (Ben Hudson). This is turning out to be a rather nice selection of releases from the predominantly breakcore influenced artists, and I'm looking forward to the volumes to follow. Meanwhile, be sure to pick up Cardopusher's second LP, Unity Means Power, released on brand spanking new Murder Channel Records.

    http://www.myspace.com/cardopusher | http://www.cardopusher.com
    http://www.myspace.com/spectraliquid | http://www.spectraliquid.com

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    Kaya Project - And So It Goes (Interchill)

    The latest release from Kaya Project titled, ...And So It Goes, is full of spiritual and ethnic elements, multi-lingual vocals, and world infused beats. This is a third full length album from a collaborative duo of Sebastian James Taylor and Natasha Chamberlain. Incorporating digital production design with organic instruments, Taylor and Chamberlain create a beautiful downtempo album with elements of tribal rhythms and dusty dub grooves. This album is full of contributions from many artists, like Deepak Pandit on Indian violin, Susi Evans on clarinet, and excellent vocals by Irina Mikhailova. Some of the above artists have previously worked with Taylor under his other moniker, Hibernation, with the very latest release, Some Things Never Change (Aleph Zero, 2008). Taylor has always been a pretty busy guy. On the side, he manages to put out 12" breakbeat EPs on Sinister Recordings under his Digitalis alias. Meanwhile, some may recall his early psytrance work under Shakta moniker, with the last album being Feed The Flame (Dragonfly, 2004). In this latest work, Taylor and Chamberlain join forces once more, to display their wide artistic range through music that is at once relaxing, groovy, and earthbound. One can picture carefree belly-dancers performing around the fire, circled by musicians connected to their instruments with heart and soul. It is at once a feeling of happiness and unity with the one. Recommended for the likes of Asura, Tripswitch, Solar Fields and Entheogenic.

    http://www.myspace.com/sebastiantaylor | http://www.interchill.com

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    Aidan Baker And Tim Hecker - Fantasma Parastasie (Alien8)

    Toronto based Aidan Baker and Montreal based Tim Hecker pair up to deliver an abstract and experimental ambient piece on a Canadian Alien8 Recordings. Hecker is not a stranger to a noise-prominent label, having previously released Mirages (Alien8, 2004), and a re-issue of Radio Amor (Mille Plateaux, 2003). In addition, his ambient recordings have already graced quality labels like Force Inc, Staalplaat, Fat Cat and Kranky. This is, however, his very first collaboration. Baker, on the other hand, is known for his work with Leah Buckareff, together cooking up ambient drone metal under the Nadja moniker. Baker's discography is immense, and mostly consists of live improvised long pieces. His ability to churn out guitar heavy drone soundscapes can be overwhelming, but together, with Hecker's luscious synth work, they pull out a whole different beast. The overdriven guitars combined with hiss, crackle and static, vibrate feverishly across the frequency spectrum, occasionally revealing a hidden pattern, a loose structure, and a graceful melody. The paced slow-core riffs, rolling at a speed of a sleeping giant, are fed back into themselves and split through a harmonic meat grinder. All this is again mashed up, tweaked out, and faded in through a torrent of bit-crushed digitally violated audio waves that give your speakers (and ears) a massive workout. Fantasma Parastasie is a relaxing fatigue - it cradles you gently by screaming its head off. Thus, together, Backer and Hecker, define an oxymoron of ambient noise or shoegazer metal. This should be a special treat for those with a taste for Belong, Ben Frost, Fennesz, Jasper TX, and Lawrence English. Where as Baker has a bucket of upcoming albums, too many to fit in a paragraph (see my Two and a Half Questions with Aidan Baker for a full list), Hecker is scheduled to release his seventh studio album, An Imaginary Country, in March 2009 on Kranky.

    Read Two and a Half Questions with Aidan Baker

    http://www.myspace.com/aidanbakermusic | http://www.aidanbaker.org
    http://www.myspace.com/rainbowbloodx | http://www.alien8recordings.com

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    Jóhann Jóhannsson - Fordlandia (4AD)

    A few years ago, when I was regularly creating mixes for a podcast, an idea came across to compile music for my funeral. One thing I am sure about - I will die. And when I pass on, music will be filling in the void that was once my presence. How touching. Why shouldn't I be the one to select the pieces that would make others weep? Yes, I'll admit, I can be self centered like that. For my opening track, I turned to Jóhann Jóhannsson, and his Odi Et Amo from Englabörn (4AD, 2007). Now, with the release of Fordlandia, I may need to compile a second volume. On second thought, just play the whole album! But don't get me wrong. I don't want to come across saying that Jóhannsson's compositions are full of funeral sound [perhaps that should be a genre in itself?]. Yet, this Icelandic-born modern classical musician composes some of the most beautiful and soul drenching works that I have ever heard. The saturation of emotion approaches even my limits, and my eyes swell up with tears, as the concrete humanity gets cleansed in the rain, out in the windows of my crawling train. This is Jóhannsson's sixth full length album. Besides these contemporary classical conceptual pieces, Jóhannsson produced about a dozen of soundtracks for [mostly] Icelandic films, shorts and documentaries. There are also his theatrical works, arrangements for many artists, and music for installations. It would be an understatement to say that Jóhann Jóhannsson is a prominent figure in Icelandic contemporary artistic community. After all, he's one of the co-founders (along with Kira Kira and Hilmar Jensson) behind Kitchen Motors, "a think tank, a record label, and an art collective specializing in instigating collaborations and putting on concerts, exhibitions, performances, chamber operas, producing films, books and radio shows based on the ideals of experimentation, collaboration, the search for new art forms and the breaking down of barriers between forms, genres and disciplines." Thematically, Fordlandia continues the exploration of technology where Jóhannsson's last conceptual album, IBM 1401, a User's Manual (4AD, 2006) left off. Jóhannsson elaborates: "one of the two main threads running through [Fordlandia] is this idea of failed utopia, as represented by the [its] title - the story of the rubber plantation Henry Ford established in the Amazon in the 1920's, and his dreams of creating an idealized American town in the middle of the jungle complete with white picket fences, hamburgers and alcohol prohibition." For a detailed insight into creation of the album, including a commentary on each individual track (!!!), you absolutely must visit Jóhannsson's web site. Fordlandia thus becomes a second installment in a series of works documenting human hunger for ideals, technological progress, doomed failures, and the beauty of nature reclaiming itself. Such it is still, music for the born and the departed. Highly recommended! Undoubtedly one of the best albums of 2008.

    http://www.myspace.com/johannjohannsson | http://www.johannjohannsson.com
    http://www.myspace.com/4admusic | http://www.4ad.com

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    Plastikman - Closer (M_nus / NovaMute)

    This flashback is supposed to be another installmanet of my Random Vinyl of the Week series. But I'm already cheating... A little bit... I did indeed pull out this triple twelve-incher from my vast record library (the correct term is discothèque, right?). But it is still shrink wrapped! You can't expect me to break the seal on this collector's item, can you? And, of course, I have a CD version of this 2003 album right here. Plus the disk release contains four extra tracks! So back it goes, whence it came from, to age and marinate some more. Meanwhile, Richie Hawtin is already thumping, laying out some mean bass over reverberated strings. I turn up the volume. I always turn up the volume for Plastikman. Hawtin's control over dynamic range of cranium vibrating bass, and tiny little white noises in the background always creates a hypnotic experience. The pitched down, evil, and creepy Hawtin's voice is reciting some dark lyrics: "I don't know what's left to gain / All the guilt and now the blame / I don't want to stop this game / I'm starting to enjoy the pain." The rolling lower frequencies are penetrating every nook of my studio. The light bulbs are shaking in their sockets. Something just fell in the deep cavern of my closet. Closer is an intense experience, with little release, like an involuntary muscle spasm induced by an alternating current. The themes of paranoia, schizophrenia, and claustrophobia saturate the music. Is this what we get when we get closer to Hawtin? The album tends to continue the discomforting ground work laid out in Plastikman's previous minimal release, Consumed (M_nus, 1998). Moving further away from staple sound of 909 repetitive techno beats, 303 acid sweeps, never ending delays and mind warping arpeggios, Ontario based Hawtin continues his exploration into the deep, the dark and the minimal. A lot of people have dismissed Plastikman as just another speck in the Detroit techno scene of the early 90s, being in the right place at the right time. And at times I wonder if his sound is only exciting because I've been listening to his earlier albums, Sheet One (1993), Musik (1994), and Recycled Plastik (1994) nonstop back in the 90s. But as I mature, revisit, and analyze the sound [which continues to be imitated by many up and comers], I think Richie is here to stay. Even if we haven't heard from him in over five years! Hawtin's owned Canadian labels, Plus 8 and M_nus continue to thrive and output some solid material. For a quick taste of 2008 releases check out Heartthrob's Dear Painter, Paint Me and Gaiser's Blank Fade.

    http://www.myspace.com/plastikman | http://www.plastikman.com
    http://www.myspace.com/min2max | http://www.m-nus.com

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    Stephan Mathieu - Radioland (Die Schachtel)

    I was sitting in the waiting room. Waiting. The only external factors affecting my senses were the parallel lines of the desks and the chairs, the subdued colors of the withered walls, and the music of Stephan Mathieu in my headphones. I looked over to the clock, and the hand stood still. I turned my head sideways, squinted, and waited. Finally the hand moved. One second has passed. Then the parallel lines began to move, the chairs rippled against the desks, and the colors of the walls bled onto the carpet. My presence smiled, exited the waiting room, and slammed shut the door. I snapped out of my trip, as the clock has jumped ahead one meager second. The music on Radioland has a tendency to spread through reality its invisible tentacles of sound and invade every frequency with its incredibly thick palette, turning inaudible noise into sound, into music, into white noise again. Radioland is Mathieu's fifth full length release. And here's the kicker - it has been 'exclusively based on real-time processed shortwave radio signals', down-casting the higher frequency wavelengths to an audible spectrum of the human ear. Radioland is a limited release on a Milan (Italy) based Die Schachtel label. It is shipped on a transparent disk, Plexiglas body, with a clear acetate multi-fold cover, and appears to be already sold out on Boomkat. German born Stephan Mathieu, has been working with digital and analog processing techniques for more than a decade. His work is well known with an extensive discography concentrating on experimentation with sound, audio installations, and unique live performances. Mathieu's previous full length studio release was The Sad Mac (Vectors, 2004), followed by a collaboration with Janek Schaefer on Hidden Name (Crónica, 2006), and a single half-hour long recording of Radioland which was released by TouchRadio mp3 podcast series (Touch, 2006). The album is a highly recommended headphone experience, available as a digital FLAC download, if you can not get your hands on a limited hard copy. One thing for sure - this isn't drone music. It's macroscopic sounds fusing together into a grandiose orchestra. Another favorite of 2008.

    http://www.myspace.com/stephanmathieu | http://www.bitsteam.de
    http://www.die-schachtel.com

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    Boards of Canada - Geogaddi (Warp / Music70)

    In 2002, the Scottish electronic music duo, Boards of Canada released their second commercial full length album on Warp Records, titled Geogaddi. I say, "commercial", because prior to being signed to Warp, brothers [yes, they _are_ brothers] Michael Sandison and Marcus Eoin Sandison have released several obscure EPs and albums on their own, Music70 imprint. These were mostly self-made cassette tapes, recorded for their friends and family, and are very rare and pretty much unavailable, with the exception of a few, which were later re-released. In 1995, Twoism attracted the attention of Sean Booth (Autechre) through a demo released on [that famous] IDM mailing list, and soon thereafter Hi Scores EP was released on Skam Records. In 1998, Warp picked the duo up with Music Has The Right To Children, and the rest, as we say, is history. On Geogaddi, BoC continues to play around with warped effects of stretched magnetic tape, light sprinkled beats, ghostly melodies and echoes of distant voices. The mood of Geogaddi is dark, melancholic, and at times nostalgic for the childhood, perhaps as a continuation of BoC's previous themes on Music Has the Right to Children. The sound of this electronic recording is very organic and warm, no doubt benefiting from BoC's use of analog equipment, acoustic instruments, and samples sourced from nature documentary films produced by the Canadian government agency, NFB - National Film Board of Canada. Sandison was quoted to say that Gogaddi is "a record for some sort of trial-by-fire, a claustrophobic, twisting journey that takes you into some pretty dark experiences before you reach the open air again." The 22 tracks on the album are a result of 400 different song fragments and 64 complete other songs, which were all trimmed, re-sampled and selected to be featured on a beautiful triple 12". The last record's side F (considered to be the 23rd track of pure silence), contains an etching in the vinyl of an image of a man, woman and two children. The artwork on the album consists of kaleidoscopic images of photographs of children created by the brothers themselves. We last heard from Board of Canada through their 6 track Trans Canada Highway EP, released on Warp in 2006. Today, the brothers continue to stay out of the spotlight, working away on more tunes featuring their original staple sound. Or at least we can hope that they are ;)

    http://www.myspace.com/abeautifulplace | http://www.boardsofcanada.com
    http://www.music70.com | http://www.bleep.com
    http://www.myspace.com/warprecords | http://www.warprecords.com

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    Fennesz - Black Sea (Touch)

    Here comes Fennesz, with his highly anticipated fourth studio album on Touch. Christian Fennesz is a prolific Vienna based composer who has been crafting electronic multi-layered laptop compositions with an aid of his guitar since the late 90s. Or is it the other way around? His guitar driven pieces with a heavy dose of DSP? Either way, Fennesz has developed that instantly recognizable and many times imitated sound. His vast discography extends through numerous EPs, remixes, soundtracks and collaborations, most notable of which is his work with Ryuichi Sakamoto on Cendre (Touch, 2007); as well as Cloud (Erstwhile, 2005) on which he worked with Keith Rowe, Toshimaru Nakamura and Oren Ambarchi. With a collection of works approaching the count of 30, Fennesz's last solo studio release was four years ago, Venice (Touch, 2004). So it should be no surprise that the fans jumped in anticipation to grab this 2008 release, Black Sea. And I hope the fans are not disappointed. Fennesz picks up where he left off with Venice, building on his trademark of processed and filtered guitar sound. Faint melodies cut with their pale beauty through a sharp fuzzy white haze. Sure, it may sound like over-driven, bit-crushing, pixel-offsetting, standing noise you have heard before on another album. But let me remind you once more, that Fennesz has been pioneering this sound well before the advancement of software and saturation of costly plugins on the market. On a nine-and-a-half minute track called Glide, for example, Fennesz is joined by Rosy Parlane [check out his albums Iris (Touch, 2004) and Jessamine (Touch, 2006)], to build up an incredible swell of sound, that buzzes to an orchestral crescendo, until it breaks into a tidal wave of near silence, which washes off the coast of a Black Sea. Experience Fennesz if artists like Alva Noto, Philip Jeck, Jan Jelinek, and Oren Ambarchi are on your radar.

    Also... Check out my previous review of Cendre and Two and a Half Questions with Christian Fennesz

    http://www.myspace.com/fennesz | http://www.fennesz.com
    http://www.touchshop.org | http://www.touchmusic.org.uk

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    Von Magnet - Ni Prédateur Ni Proie (Ant-Zen / Jarring Effects)

    Ni Prédateur Ni Proie is a complete theatrical performance packaged into twelve sketches on a disk. Strings tune up. A gong rings. A voice pleads with a shadow. Tension builds up. Industrial percussion kicks in. What follows is a combination of experimental neo-classical and avant-garde rhythmic technoid, curated with ethnic organic beats and acoustic orchestral instrumentation. Along the dark curtain of apocalyptic soundscapes, people confide in their woes. What is this place? With scalpel sharp precise execution, the French collective Von Magnet, tells a story of a human conflict. Regardless of the geographical location, we, the people, tend to find reasons to create interpersonal struggles that reflect externally through rage, tears, and war. The field recordings and the produced performances in different tongues speak for the voice of the human condition and the reality of today's brutal world. The cover art depicts two hands, of different skin color, smothered in oil, attempting to hold on to each other, but slipping away. The music conveys a similar theme. Von Magnet has been around since the late 80s, saturating the airwaves with post-industrial sound through more than a dozen albums. Their live shows are usually accompanied by performance art which transform the stage into a fascinating experimental musical. A quote from their bio: "Based successively in Barcelona, Rennes, Amsterdam, Lille, Berlin & Paris, for each project gathering different creative teams and mixed peculiar tribes of performers, visual artists, dancers, musicians, designers or sculptors, Von Magnet is indeed one of the cybergypsy pioneers of euroculture." It would be an absolute treat to see them live. Meanwhile, this excellent addition to an already powerful catalog of Ant-Zen will have to satisfy your cravings. The album is released in parallel on a French Jarring Effects label. Refusing to be divided, refusing to be boxed in, and refusing to accept the two extreme choices, with their music Von Magnet proclaims that it will be... neither predator, nor prey.

    http://www.myspace.com/vonmagnet | http://www.vonmag.net
    http://www.myspace.com/antzen | http://www.ant-zen.com

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    Sylvain Chauveau - The Black Book Of Capitalism (Type)

    This dusty selection of modern classical compositions originally released by Sylvain Chauveau in 2000 [and re-issued in 2002] is once again available on Type Records! This was Chauveau's debut album, originally titled in French as Le Livre Noir Du Capitalisme, and released on a Dijon (France) based experimental and ambient label, Noise Museum [which is now defunct]. This album has been long out of print, and I'll admit - since it never reached US, it totally fell off my radar. But thanks to Type, this remastered version [although still limited to only 400 copies] can be heard again! Throughout the years, Chauveau has experimented with sound applying self-imposed principles that amount to just these three: "to stay as close as possible to the abstract beauty of 'silence'; to make sure that each sound committed is absolutely necessary; to find [my] own roots within [my] cultural and personal history." Chauveau's collection of albums range from solo piano pieces to minimal experimental drones. For an interesting minimal exploration of fragmented sound check out the last five-track album, simply titled S. [Type, 2007]. Chauveau also has composed soundtracks for films by Sébastien Betbeder. The latest release, Nuage [Type, 2007] compiles music for two films, Les Mains D'Andréa, and of course, Nuage. But back to The Black Book Of Capitalism, which, incidentally, shares its title with a French book published in 1998, which is a collection of essays covering everything from African slave trade to the era of financial globalization. This original album is very much different from Chauveau's current experimental pieces. It is quiet the opposite, and one might say "full of sound". And immediately, one track after another, start to receive five star rating on my player, falling along the roster of my favorite works by Peter Broderick, Goldmund and Max Richter. Through the crackling grooves of a record the images of early European films flood the airwaves with ghost-like beautiful melodies that have only matured since their original birth. Music like his doesn't age. It is classic. Highly recommended!

    http://www.myspace.com/atkinsonchauveau | http://www.sylvainchauveau.net
    http://www.myspace.com/typerecordings | http://www.typerecords.com

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    Biosphere - Shenzhou (Touch)

    Prior to doing a proper writeup on Geir Jenssen, I listened to all of his grandiose works. Twice. OK, maybe not all. Jenssen's discography does not only span albums under his most famous moniker, Biosphere. There is his debut album, The North Pole By Submarine (SSR, 1989) as Bleep; two volumes of The Fires of Ork in collaboration with Pete Namlook (Fax, 1993 & 2000); two releases with The Higher Intelligence Agency, Polar Sequences (Beyond, 1996) and Birmingham Frequencies (Headphone 2000); an album, Nordheim Transformed (Rune Grammofon, 1998), with Deathprod; and finally a collection of field recordings from Tibet, Cho Oyu (Ash International, 2006), under his real name. And that's just scratching the surface. However, after spending an entire week (!) revisiting Jenssen's contributions towards the evolution of ambient sound as we know it today, I settled picking Shenzhou for this writeup. That one, my friends, is a masterpiece. Shenzhou explores more than just dark atmospheres and loop based hypnotic soundscapes. Here Jenssen does something many musicians have tried to accomplish - use classical music as the main ingredient, but without being too overbearing, obvious, or just for its mere sake. In Shenzhou, Jenssen constructs haunting environmental passages based on orchestral works by Claude Debussy, La Mer (The Sea) and Jeux. During the beatless layers of lush pads, deep sonic bass, and dusty vinyl samples of strings and woodwinds, Jenssen builds on meditative templates inflicting a trance-like state for the mind relying on its pattern recognition capabilities. The subliminal waves of euphoria wash over the timeless expansion of sound throughout the universe of the void. The subtle contributions of Jenssen's own sound design only enhance Debussy's already melancholic impressionist approach. Purely genius. This work solidifies Biosphere's impact on ambient movement. Previously, Jennsen has been known to pioneer his own personal style - arctic ambient. The latter is thematically named for Jenssen's geographical and minimalist attributes. Born in Tromsø, a city in the Arctic Circle of Norway, Jenssen evoked the sense of isolation and arctic calm, more prominent in his earlier albums like Substrata (All Saints Records, 1997) and above mentioned Polar Sequences. But in Shenzhou the ice melts away into the ocean of sound. And with it we drift... and we drift... For a sensory deprived in-vacuum experience, pick up Biosphere's Autour de la Lune (Touch, 2004) [headphones with deep bass response recommended], as well as his latest, Dropsonde (Touch 2006). In 2007, Norwegian Beatservice Records, re-released the first three of Biosphere's albums - Microgravity, Patashnik, and Insomnia. Highly recommended for the likes of Gas, PanAmerican, Steve Roach, Robert Henke, Deaf Center and Murcof.

    http://www.myspace.com/biosphereofficial | http://www.biosphere.no
    http://www.touchmusic.org.uk

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    last.fm artist and label cloud mentioned in the above post: 2562, Pinch, Skream, Cyrus, Burial, A Made Up Sound, Dogdaze, Venetian Snares, Squarepusher, BLÆRG, BLAERG, Xanopticon, The Flashbulb, Enduser, Igorrr, Wisp, Mika Vainio, Ø, Ilpo Väisänen, Pan Sonic, Kentolevi, tekonivel, Philus, Jimi Tenor, Mike Ink, Gas, Autechre, Pan•American, Deerhunter, Stars of the Lid, Loscil, Atlas Sound, Benoît Pioulard, Valet, Christopher Bissonnette, Philip Jeck, Tim Hecker, Machinefabriek, Stephan Mathieu, The Sight Below, Lusine, Grouper, Yagya, Echospace, Christopher Willits, Cardopusher, innasekt, Pacheko, Ebola, Kaya Project, Deepak Pandit, Natasha Chamberlain, Sebastian James Taylor, Shakta, Asura, Tripswitch, Solar Fields, Entheogenic, Bluetech, Aidan Baker, Nadja, Leah Buckareff, Belong, Ben Frost, Fennesz, Jasper TX, Lawrence English, Jóhann Jóhannsson, Richie Hawtin, Plastikman, Heartthrob, Gaiser, Janek Schaefer, Boards of Canada, Autechre, Fennesz, Ryuichi Sakamoto, Keith Rowe, Toshimaru Nakamura, Oren Ambarchi, Alva Noto, Philip Jeck, Jan Jelinek, Von Magnet, Sylvain Chauveau, Peter Broderick, Goldmund, Max Richter, Geir Jenssen, Biosphere, Panamerican, Steve Roach, Robert Henke, Deaf Center, Murcof
  • Ambient & Psy 2009 In Progress

    Fev 25 2009, 2h13 por gtutor












    [December 4, 2009]



    Please help me keep this up to date by posting news of new and future releases here.
  • Ambient & Psy 2008 In Review

    Fev 24 2009, 17h25 por gtutor

    2008 was a great year for psychill, I tried to keep a list of everything that came out. Keep in mind this list mainly focuses on psychill, I know there were a lot more releases in ambient, downtempo, idm, psytrance, etc.

    (My 10 favorite albums of 2008 are in bold)












  • VA / «Inner Resonance» mixed by Hexfire (2009) [psychill mixset]

    Fev 11 2009, 21h33 por trancing



    Genre......................: Electronic
    Style.........................: Psychill; Deep Ambient
    Compilation Date.: 11-Feb-2009
    Playtime..................: 73:31
    Quality.....................: CBR 320k (LAME 3.97) 44.1khz Joint Stereo


    Brief info:

    Silence here. This set is dedicated to a Friend of mine, that passed away 26th january. It's all about inner resonance, when at once sudden powers met and collapsed at the very same moment. You will hear sounds of grief and depth. May such sounds appear less frequently in our lives.

    Rest In Peace, Dear RIM.


    Tracklist:
    01. Harax & Sol - Leaves
    02. Easily Embarrassed - Illusions Within Ourselves
    03. Sundial Aeon - Mysanthia (Chaser Remix)
    04. Will-O'-The-Wisp - Divided & Conquered
    05. Side Liner - My Guardian Angel
    06. Liquid Soul - The Ritual
    07. Filteria - Cloud Kingdom (Solar Fields Remix)
    08. Asura - The Prophecy
    09. Aes Dana - Haze
    10. Between Interval - Field and Void

    Download link: http://rghost.ru/572194

    __
    Hexfire