• Omega_Switch's Favorite Albums of the 2000s (the inevitable...)

    Dez 30 2009, 7h00 por Omega_Switch22B

    So this is my attempt at making a list of my 100 favorite albums of the past decade. You know the drill. Hopefully the albums here can make up for the predictability of the list...

    You can find the full list (with 50 more albums, an explanation of the list and will hopefully include mini-reviews soon): here


    1. Agalloch- The Mantle
    2. maudlin of the Well- Leaving Your Body Map
    3. Steve Roach- Mystic Chords & Sacred Spaces
    4. Boards of Canada- Geogaddi
    5. Drudkh- Autumn Aurora
    6. Stars of the Lid- The Tired Sounds Of
    7. Godspeed You! Black Emperor- Lift Yr. Skinny Fists Like Antennas to Heaven!
    8. Wolves in the Throne Room- Two Hunters
    9. Isis- Oceanic
    10. Aphex Twin- Drukqs

    11. Weakling- Dead as Dreams
    12. dälek- Absence
    13. Warning- Watching From a Distance
    14. Cannibal Ox- The Cold Vein
    15. Sigur Rós- ( )
    16. Stendeck- Faces
    17. Eluvium- Copia
    18. Have a Nice Life- Deathconsciousness
    19. Natural Snow Buildings- The Dance of the Moon and the Sun
    20. Agalloch- Ashes Against the Grain
    21. Steve Roach- New Life Dreaming
    22. Jóhann Jóhannsson- Fordlândia
    23. Enslaved- Below the Lights
    24. Jesu- Silver
    25. Isis- Panopticon

    26. Lykathea Aflame- Elvenefris
    27. Tool- Lateralus
    28. Boards of Canada- In a Beautiful Place Out in the Country
    29. Björk- Vespertine
    30. Opeth- Blackwater Park
    31. Negură Bunget- Om
    32. Radiohead- Kid A
    33. Gas- Pop
    34. Arcturus- The Sham Mirrors
    35. My Dying Bride- The Dreadful Hours
    36. Ulrich Schnauss- Far Away Trains Passing By
    37. Boris- Flood
    38. Autechre- Confield
    39. Dolorian- Voidwards
    40. Animal Collective- Merriweather Post Pavilion
    41. Sun Kil Moon- April
    42. Aesop Rock- Labor Days
    43. Lunar Aurora- Andacht
    44. Esoteric- Subconscious Dissolution Into the Continuum
    45. Drudkh- Blood in Our Wells
    46. Bohren & der Club of Gore- Sunset Mission
    47. Carbon Based Lifeforms- Hydroponic Garden
    48. Darkspace- Dark Space II
    49. Primordial- To the Nameless Dead
    50. Blonde Redhead- 23

    51. The Ruins of Beverast- Foulest Semen of a Sheltered Elite
    52. Genelec & Memphis Reigns- Scorpion Circles
    53. Gorguts- From Wisdom to Hate
    54. Opeth- Deliverance
    55. Boris- Pink
    56. Ocean- Here Where Nothing Grows
    57. CunninLynguists- A Piece of Strange
    58. Skepticism- Farmakon
    59. Pan Sonic- Kesto
    60. J-Live- All of the Above
    61. Deathspell Omega- Si Monumentum Requires, Circumspice
    62. The December Sound- The December Sound
    63. ColdWorld- Melancholie²
    64. Gridlock- Formless
    65. Belong- October Language
    66. Reverend Bizarre- III: So Long Suckers
    67. Emperor- Prometheus: The Discipline of Fire & Demise
    68. Walknut- Graveforests and Their Shadows
    69. Wintersun- Wintersun
    70. Discordance Axis- The Inalienable Dreamless
    71. Nadja- Radiance of Shadows
    72. Sweet Trip- Velocity : Design : Comfort
    73. Vindensång- Terminus: Rebirth in Eight Parts...
    74. 柏 大輔- Program Music I
    75. Blut aus Nord- MoRT
    76. Nile- In Their Darkened Shrines
    77. Devin Townsend- Terria
    78. The Flaming Lips- Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots
    79. Lurker of Chalice- Lurker of Chalice
    80. Squarepusher- Ultravisitor
    81. !T.O.O.H.!- Řád a Trest
    82. Enslaved- Isa
    83. Absu- Tara
    84. múm- Finally We Are No One
    85. Tenhi- Maaäet
    86. Velvet Cacoon- Genevieve
    87. Gojira- From Mars to Sirius
    88. Sigh- Imaginary Sonicscape
    89. Tim Hecker- Haunt Me, Haunt Me Do It Again
    90. A Silver Mt. Zion- He Has Left Us Alone but Shafts of Light Sometimes Grace the Corner of Our Rooms...
    91. Six Organs of Admittance- Dark Noontide
    92. Immolation- Close to a World Below
    93. Reflection Eternal- Train of Thought
    94. Alcest- Souvenirs d'un autre monde
    95. maudlin of the Well- Part the Second
    96. Ulver- Perdition City
    97. M83- Saturdays = Youth
    98. Shining- III - Angst - Självdestruktivitetens Emissarie
    99. Deerhunter- Microcastle / Weird Era Continued
    100. The Knife- Silent Shout

    Albums that I listened to after making this list that might have made the cut (since I'm too lazy to revise the list right now)... or I forgot about and probably should have included somewhere...:
    Baroness- Red Album
    Something by Converge
    The Flaming Lips- Embryotic
    The Flashbulb- Soundtrack to a Vacant Life
    Kylesa- Static Tensions
    Nasum- Shift

    Ohhh... and if you got some recommendations up your sleeve, I'd appreciate it if you could dish them out. We all know they're more helpful than snide elitist remarks (although not quite as amusing)! But if you so insist, let me fuel the fire by stating that, at one point in my life, I did not know what the word "snide" meant. Take that as you will.

    But seriously... some recommendations would be appreciated, and I'd be glad to return the favor!
  • 2009

    Nov 9 2009, 15h20 por Pandesowna

    This is a list of music that I happened to pay more than normal attention to this past year, for one reason or another - new and old.

    Standout artists:
    Belong
    Frankie Rose
    Grass Widow
    Naomi Punk
    Woods

    Repeat listening:
    Abe Vigoda's Skeleton
    Aidan Baker and Tim Hecker's Fantasma Parastasie
    Bowie's The Man Who Sold The World
    Circus Devils' Ataxia
    David Ruffin's David
    Goblin's Suspiria
    Pia Fraus' Nature Heart Software
    Washed Out's Life Of Leisure

    Best Connecticut locals:
    Abraham King
    Estrogen Highs
    Get Haunted
    M.T. Bearington

    Of interest:
    Dominant Legs

    Disappointments:
    Eric Cordier's Breizhiselad
    Jay Reatard's Watch Me Fall
  • Tops of the 2000s - First Draft

    Out 1 2009, 19h20 por blahquaker

    boringboring asked me about my top 25 albums of the decade so I took a stab at it. No 2009 albums are included, and it's limited to one per artist.

    Blonde Redhead - Melody of Certain Damaged Lemons
    Yo La Tengo - And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside-Out
    Radiohead - Kid A
    At the Drive-In - Relationship of Command
    The Appleseed Cast - Low Level Owl Vol 1&2
    LN - Novel
    The Microphones - The Glow, Pt 2
    ...And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead - Source Tags & Codes
    Deerhoof - Apple O'
    Death From Above 1979 - You're a Woman, I'm a Machine
    Sonic Youth - Sonic Nurse
    M83 - Before the Dawn Heals Us
    Sleater-Kinney - The Woods
    Wolf Parade - Apologies to the Queen Mary
    Belong - October Language
    The Black Angels - Passover
    Boris - Pink
    Les Savy Fav - Let's Stay Friends
    Liars - Liars
    No Age - Weirdo Rippers
    King Khan & The Shrines - What Is?!
    Amon Tobin - The Foley Room
    Evangelista - Hello, Voyager
    Portishead - Third
    Flying Lotus - Los Angeles
  • Shoegaze-Related Music Blog Post

    Mai 18 2009, 3h15 por manfred_macx

    Something I'll just save for future reference...

    Top 10 Shoegaze Revivalists (Who Do More Than Just Revive) by Miles Klee, Smells Like Music

    01. Apparat
    02. Asobi Seksu
    03. The Field
    04. Jesu
    05. Kiss Me Deadly
    06. M83
    07. A Sunny Day in Glasgow
    08. A Place to Bury Strangers
    09. videohippos
    10. Ulrich Schnauss
    Honorable mentions: Deerhunter, Times New Viking, and Belong (Lovesliescrushing mentioned in connection to Belong in being drum-less).
  • Top 5 Songs Ever (April 9, 2009 Edition)

    Abr 10 2009, 2h27 por onthetown

    Most of my listening for the past week has involved the record player in my bedroom.. I will remark on my favorite moments of each song.

    05. School of Seven Bells - TocarWired For Light
    I enjoy the Deheza sisters' ascending melody/countermelody in the opening vocal line.

    04. Belong - TocarBeeside
    The chord progression slips in around 1:30 and it's just golden.

    03. Bon Iver - Blindsided
    There are several points at which this track will give me chills. The greatest of these would have to be when he cuts in with "would you really rush out.." Justin Vernon really knows how to make it happen.

    02. M83 - TocarLower Your Eyelids To Die With The Sun
    The ability to maintain such a level of over-the-top bombast for the entire 10-minute length of a song is impressive in and of itself. My first inclination is to say the drums kicking in at the one-minute mark is the biggest of all the big moments.. but I think the entrance of those soaring vocal samples twenty seconds later is where it really starts to own your soul.

    01. Phosphorescent - TocarA Picture of Our Torn Up Praise
    Though he may not be anywhere near Justin Vernon's level of vocal prowess.. I appreciate the resignation in Matt Houck's voice more than anything in the world.. it's something tired and wise and sincere. Lyrically, this song is brilliant from start to finish.. but when he drops "I'll be in the yard still taking pictures in the dark of all our torn up praise" at the end of the second verse.. that's it.

    I'm sleeping to develop my dreaming skills.
  • 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
  • Top 100 Albums of 2008

    Fev 9 2009, 7h17 por Omega_Switch22B

    So... here's the inevitable top albums list for 2008. I chose to cut this list at 100, even though I was originally going to make this simply an "albums of 2008" list and include all the albums I've listened to from the year thus far. Since I made the cut at 100, every album here is one that I'd recommend at least to fans of the genre of any particular artist/album. Anything in the top 50 I'd definitely recommend regardless, and anything in the top 25 is pretty much essential from my viewpoint. Also, as shown below, I've indicated the albums that either surprised me or disappointed me (based on previous albums from the particular artist).

    I made this list about a month ago, and just decided to post here it here for the hell of it. I'll probably change it, or even delete it, sometime in the future. So here's for shits and giggles...

    *Good surprise
    **Disappointment

    1. ColdWorld- Melancholie²
    2. Deepspace- The Glittering Domain
    3. Jóhann Jóhannsson- Fordlândia*
    4. Darkspace- Dark Space III
    5. Agalloch- The White EP
    6. Have a Nice Life- Deathconsciousness
    7. Deathspell Omega- Veritas Diaboli Manet in Aeternum: Chaining the Katechon EP
    8. M83- Saturdays = Youth*
    9. Virgin Black- Requiem - Fortissimo
    10. Genghis Tron- Board Up the House

    11. Deepspace- Subantarctic Sessions EP
    12. Esoteric- The Maniacal Vale
    13. Aeveron- Existential Dead End
    14. Nadja- The Bungled & the Botched*
    15. Steve Roach- Landmass
    16. Ihsahn- angL*
    17. Skepticism- Alloy
    18. This Will Destroy You- This Will Destroy You
    19. Moonsorrow- Tulimyrsky EP
    20. Dereleech- Downstream
    21. Portishead- Third
    22. Lifelover- Konkurs*
    23. Enslaved- Vertebrae*
    24. A Forest of Stars- The Corpse of Rebirth
    25. Sun Kil Moon- April

    26. October Falls- The Womb of Primordial Nature
    27. Ólafur Arnalds- Variations of Static EP
    28. TV on the Radio- Dear Science
    29. Mörker- Höstmakter
    30. Atmosphere- When Life Gives You Lemons, You Paint That Shit Gold
    31. Cor Scorpii- Monument
    32. Leviathan- Massive Conspiracy Against All Life*
    33. Deerhunter- Microcastle / Weird Era Cont.
    34. I Shalt Become- Requiem
    35. The Black Dog- Radio Scarecrow
    36. Celestia- Frigidiis Apotheosia: Abstinencia Genesiis
    37. Darkestrah- The Great Silk Road
    38. Fennesz- Black Sea
    39. Decrepit Birth- Diminishing Between Worlds
    40. Opeth- Watershed**
    41. Meshuggah- obZen
    42. Rotten Sound- Cycles
    43. The Roots- Rising Down
    44. Neutral- Serpents in the Dawn
    45. M. Persson: Sound- Strange Skies
    46. Nachtmystium- Assassins: Black Meddle Pt. 1
    47. Why?- Alopecia
    48. Nine Inch Nails- Ghosts I-IV*
    49. Origin- Antithesis
    50. Steven Bernstein- Diaspora Suite

    51. Gojira- The Way of All Flesh
    52. Scar Symmetry- Holographic Universe
    53. 65daysofstatic- The Distant and Mechanized Glow of Eastern European Dance Parties EP
    54. Dismember- Dismember*
    55. Caustic Reverie- Stochastic Resonance
    56. S.V.E.S.T.- Veritas Diaboli Manet in Aeternum: Le Diable est ma raison EP
    57. Amon Amarth- Twilight of the Thunder God
    58. Manual- Confluence
    59. Felixdroid- The Longing
    60. Clark- Turning Dragon
    61. Austere / Isolation- Bleak...
    62. Earth- The Bees Made Honey in the Lion's Skull
    63. VI- De Praestigiis Daemonum EP
    64. Nortt- Galgenfrist
    65. The Black Angels- Directions to See a Ghost
    66. Abigail Williams- In the Shadow of a Thousand Suns*
    67.
    Equilibrium- Saga
    68. R.E.M.- Accelerate
    69. Lustmord- Other
    70. Robert Rich & Ian Boddy- React
    71. Cynic- Traced in Air**
    72. Autechre- Quaristice**
    73. Stormlord- Mare Nostrum*
    74. Deicide- Till Death Do Us Part*
    75. Beach House- Devotion
    76. Dark Fortress- Eidolon*
    77. Bloodbath- Unblessing the Purity EP
    78. The Verve- Forth*
    79. Nas- Untitled*
    80. Moonspell- Night Eternal

    81. Woodtemple- Sorrow of the Wind
    82. Ratatat- LP3
    83. Ereb Altor- By Honour
    84. MGMT- Oracular Spectacular
    85. Steve Roach- A Deeper Silence**
    86. Baptism- Grim Arts of Melancholy
    87. Bosques de mi Mente- Ruido blanco
    88. Satyricon- The Age of Nero
    89. Belong- Colorless Record EP
    90. Coldplay- Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends *
    91. of Montreal- Skeletal Lamping
    92. The Monolith Deathcult- Trivmvirate
    93. Destroyer- Trouble in Dreams
    94. Jesu / Battle Of Mice- Jesu / Battle of Mice
    95. Brocken Moon- Das Märchen vom Schnee
    96. Iskald- Revelations of Reckoning Day
    97. The Dø- A Mouthful
    98. Bloodbath- The Fathomless Mastery
    99. Nine Inch Nails- The Slip
    100. Jazzanova- Of All the Things
  • I know you all care what I listen to

    Fev 6 2009, 21h30 por Otherness

    I've been listening to Harold Budd much more than it's healthy as of late. Okay, I'm exaggerating, but I've been listening to his music quite a lot. Finally gave a well-deserved listen to "Perhaps" and was stunned by it. I loved the way Budd often played a note when the previous one was long gone -- there's a lot of silence in that album and it works very, very well. Which made me think a bit about what exactly the music I listen to comprises of.

    What I mean is... Oh hey, why don't we use an example. I don't listen to nearly as much as I used to only a couple of months ago. Now, I know it probably doesn't make a whole lot of sense, but it seems to be too "full" for me. Most of post-rock music is instrumental, so the lack of vocal melody forces the arrangement to be more melodic than in vocal music. Thing is -- it doesn't really force melodic arrnangements. And this fullness of melody seems to be what's driving me away from this kind of music. I'd love to hear something post-rocky, but non-melodic, a bit like Belong or The Hope Blister's "Spider and I" and "Is Jesus Your Pal?"; something like five Harold Budds on sedatives playing at once. I'd love to hear something with as little melody, substance and structure as possible -- just the sound. Budd with the occasional Belong, Hṛṣṭa (who have a lot of substance, but the dream factor neutralises that) or similar artists do the trick for now, but I'm going to have to find more music of that kind.

    I've been also listening to quite a bit of lately. It's an Eastern European genre with a pretty large underground following in Poland -- of the Western genres, I think is the most similar to it. As the name suggest, it's largely lyrics-based and the arrangements, though often wonderful, have a secondary role. Which I guess is in line with my latest obsession with -like, Budd-esque music: while sung poetry definitely does not like melody or substance, the stress is placed in different elements than in more standard kinds of music. Or maybe I just like spewing out pretentious tosh disguised as contemplations about what music really is, you decide!

    Oh, all this reminds me, I need to finally give a listen to the Delia Derbyshire album I got frmo theloveisgone, it should be pretty close to the kind of substancelessness I'm looking for.

    If you know of any music that might do the trick as well (and somehow managed to read through this messy stream of consciousness of mine and get here), please tell me, I'll be grateful!
  • Best Albums of '08

    Jan 1 2009, 2h39 por nebuchadnezzar3

    This is a massive collection of all the albums this year that I liked; they are done in Album Title - Artist format. The asterixes denote albums I haven't actually been able to download yet for whatever reason, but are by artists I am familiar with and have been recommended highly by other people.

    Hope you enjoy! If there are ones you think I've overlooked or left out, PLEASE INCLUDE in the comments so I can listen myself. There are some that I know some people liked but I didn't include if I didn't like 'em, but whatever, that's why it's my list. Still though, it's kind of a master-list for me cuz it's practically everything that came out that I enjoyed this year, was a lot.

    Also include in the comments similar/upcoming artists to those listed here, especially ones with promising releases in 2009.

    Alegranza - El Guincho
    It's Not Something But it is Like Whatever - Errors
    Sworn - Anders Ilar
    Magic Monday - Michna
    Keeper's - Deastro
    Something for All of Us - Broken Social Scene presents...Brendan Canning
    Out My Window - Koushik
    Asa Breed (Black Edition)/Pom Pom Single - Matthew Dear
    The Sun and the Neon Light - Booka Shade
    God Is An Astronaut - God Is an Astronaut
    III - The Alps
    Congotronics 3: In The Seventh Moon The Chief Turned Into a Swimming Fish and Ate the Head of His Enemy by Magic - Kasai Allstars
    Let The Blind Lead Those Who Can See But Cannot Feel - Atlas Sound
    Various EPs (Including Weekend EP, How I Escaped The Prison Of Fractals mini album, Things I'll Miss EP) - Atlas Sound
    Logos (official release 2009 GET PSYCHED!) - Atlas Sound
    Microcastle / Weird Era Cont. - Deerhunter
    Caesura - Helios
    Convivial - Luomo
    Home and/or Float - Peter Broderick
    d_rradio - d_rradio
    Just A Souvenir - Squarepusher
    Topics for Gossip - Goddamn Electric Bill
    NYC - Kieran Hebden and Steve Reid
    A Memory Stream - The American Dollar
    Black Sea - Fennesz
    Challenger - Burning Star Core
    Glider - The Sight Below
    Osborne - Osborne
    Alpinisms - School of Seven Bells
    Violets - Twine
    Adage of Unknown - Jdsy
    Something Like Nostalgia - The Abbasi Brothers
    Litany of Echoes - James Blackshaw
    A Footprint of Feelings - Moonlit Sailor
    Með suð í eyrum við spilum endalaust - Sigur Rós
    Yearbook 1 - Studio
    Syclops - Syclops
    High Places - High Places
    The Whole Story of Glory - Do Make Say Think
    Water Curses EP - Animal Collective
    Reveries - Pacific!
    Songs in A&E - Spiritualized
    No Way Down - Air France
    Kleerup - Kleerup
    Saturdays = Youth - M83
    Two EPs - Final Fantasy
    Priest Lake Circa '88 - Slow Dancing Society
    These Promises Are Being Videotaped - El Ten Eleven
    Car Alarm - The Sea and Cake
    Neighborhood Suicide - Radius
    We All Inherit The Moon - we all inherit the moon
    Bad Vibrations - My Education
    Embers - Up-C Down-C Left-C Right-C ABC + Start
    Birds - Collections of Colonies of Bees
    Sand - Philip Jeck
    Variations of Static - Ólafur Arnalds
    Humus - Emanuele Errante
    SOOL - Ellen Allien
    The Airing of Grievances - Titus Andronicus
    Mothertongue - Nico Muhly
    Maybe They Will Sing For Us Tomorrow - Hammock
    Memory Drawings - The Drift
    Pyramids - Pyramids
    Ringer - Four Tet
    Rest - Gregor Samsa
    Bersarin Quartett - Bersarin Quartett
    Little Wars - Unwed Sailor
    Colorloss Record - Belong
    Los Musicos Perdidos - The Boats
    Street Horrrsing - Fuck Buttons
    Faint At The Loudest Hour - Alexander Turnquist
    Turning Dragon - Clark
    Sombunall - Beneva vs. Clark Nova
    Quaristice - Autechre
    Volume Objects - Autistici
    People Like People Like You - Spokes
    Rivers Arms - Balmorhea
    The Bees Made Honey In The Lion's Skull - Earth
    A Maze and Amazement - The Enright House
    Black Paris 86 - Arms and Sleepers
    Goodbye Melody Mountain - The Samuel Jackson Five
    Keep Your Eyes Ahead - The Helio Sequence
    Pleamar - Resplandor
    Uproot - DJ /rupture
    London Zoo - The Bug
    Silence In Everywhere - Euphoria
    Tanks And Recognizers - Lights Out Asia
    Tea Parties, Guns and Valor - Truckasauras
    Receivers - Parts and Labor
    Diary of an Afro Warrior - Benga
    Underwater Dancehall - Pinch
    Margins Music - Dusk + Blackdown
    Repercussions - Distance
    Doomsdayers' Holiday - Grails
    Vinyl re-releases - New Order
    Hold On Now, Youngster - Los Campesinos
    Fordlandia - Johann Johannson
    VOI - mudy on the sakuban
    LP- Holy Fuck
    The Very Best Mixtape - The Very Best (Esau Mwamwaya and Radioclit)
    Metamathics - High Dependency Unit
    High Places - High Places
    Devotion - Beach House
    This Is It And I Am It And You Are It And So Is That And He Is It And She Is It And It Is It And That Is That - Marnie Stern
    The Mixtape About Nothing - Wale
    Feed The Animals - Girl Talk
    Los Angeles - Flying Lotus
    Saint Dymphna - Gang Gang Dance
    Made In The Dark - Hot Chip
    You & Me - The Walkmen
    Where You Go I Will Go Too - Lindstrøm
    Hercules and Love Affair - Hercules and Love Affair
    In Ghost Colors - Cut Copy
    Nouns - No Age
    Third - Portishead
    Fleet Foxes and Sun Giant EP - Fleet Foxes
    Dear Science - TV on the Radio
    In Ear Park - Department of Eagles
    Visiter - The Dodos
    The Malady of Elegance - Goldmund
    What a Great Place to Be - Sumner McKane
    The Culture of Background Noise - Because of Ghosts
    The Metamorphosis Project - The Seven Mile Journey
    Eternal Return - This Is Your Captain Speaking
    It's Not Me, It's You - pg.lost
    Lagrange Points - Mooncake
    Ruido Blanco - Bosques de mi Mente
    Hatchback - Hatchback
    Vivian Girls - Vivian Girls
    *L'oceano Delle onde che Restano onde per Sempre - Neil on Impression
    *Dolores - Bohren & der Club of Gore
    *Wolf - Troubles
    *Out of Season - Anoice
    *Parallax Error Beheads You - Max Tundra
  • Top 20 of 2008

    Dez 26 2008, 17h29 por Derail6782

    I decided to do things a little different than last years "best of" journal. Due to lack of time and (in my opinion) lack of good releases, I just compiled a short list of what I think to be some of the better albums that came out in 2008. I can't help but think this year has been somewhat of a letdown regarding albums that really had a strong impact on me. (Mogwai instantly comes to mind) Unfulfilled promises of new albums from some and lackluster releases from others has left an empty space in my 2008 collection. With that being said, there was some very nice surprises this year. Lights Out Asia and Portishead came through with very strong releases and were probably 2 albums I've listened to most this year. 2009 already looks very promising so I'm keeping an open mind and my fingers crossed. Thanks for reading.

    Araya - The Bridge Of Hesitation (Benbecula)
    Autechre - Quaristice (Warp Records)
    Belong - Colorloss Record (St. Ives Records)
    Bitcrush - Epilogue In Waves (n5MD)
    Dedo - Solar Day (9.12 Records)
    Freeze Etch - Vessels (Force Of Nature Productions)
    Helios - Caesura (Type Records)
    Jack Marchment - Corydon & Manjrekar (Benbecula)
    Jesu - Envy/Jesu Split (Conspiracy Records)
    Kangding Ray - Automne Fold (Raster-Noton)
    Kettel - Myam James Part 1 (Sending Orbs)
    Lights Out Asia - Eyes Like Brontide (n5MD)
    M83 - Saturdays = Youth (Virgin Music)
    Near The Parenthesis - L'Eixample (n5MD)
    pg.lost - It's Not Me, It's You! (Black Star Foundation)
    Phylum Sinter - Exclusive Remasters (Not On Label)
    Portishead - Third (Universal Island Records)
    Sleepy Town Manufacture & Unit 21 - Kite (38.8)
    Subheim - Approach (Tympanik Audio)
    SubtractiveLAD - Apparatus (n5MD)