• Most popular new releases on soundamus 22 Dec 2008 to 28 Dec 2008

    Dez 26 2008, 14h08 por soundamus

    Most popular new releases on soundamus 22 Dec 2008 to 28 Dec 2008
    Use soundamus to create a feed of new and upcoming music releases from the artists you listen to on last.fm.


    Artist: Architecture in Helsinki
    Album: That Beep
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008




    Artist: FRATELLIS
    Album: Heady Tale
    Release Date: 22 Dec 2008




    Artist: Kylie Minogue
    Album: Boombox the Remix Album 2000-2
    Release Date: 22 Dec 2008




    Artist: Sirenia
    Album: The 13th Floor
    Release Date: 26 Dec 2008




    Artist: Surkin
    Album: Next of Kin - Mark II - EP
    Release Date: 22 Dec 2008



    Artist: Jimi Tenor
    Album: 4th Dimension
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008




    Artist: Tarentel
    Album: Live Edits: Italy / Switzerland
    Release Date: 22 Dec 2008



    Artist: Rick Ross
    Album: Here I Am
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008




    Artist: Liam Finn
    Album: Live from the Wiltern
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008




    Artist: Chrome
    Album: Blood on the Moon
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008




    Artist: West Indian Girl
    Album: 4th On the Floor: West Indian Girl Remixes, Vol. 2 (Black Edition)
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008




    Artist: West Indian Girl
    Album: 4th On the Floor - West Indian Girl Remixes, Vol. 2
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008



    Artist: Ground Zero
    Album: Gate of Death (Japan Version)
    Release Date: 25 Dec 2008



    Artist: Kevin Blechdom + Eugene Chadbourne
    Album: Chaddom Blechbourne Experience
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008




    Artist: Sesto Sento
    Album: Key to the Universe
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008



    Artist: Joell Ortiz
    Album: Ups & Downs
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008



    Artist: Jan A.P. Kaczmarek
    Album: Najwieksze Przeboje
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008



    Artist: Jimi Tenor & Kabu Kabu
    Album: 4th Dimension
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008




    Artist: Syleena Johnson
    Album: Chapter 4: Labor Pains
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008




    Artist: Biagio Antonacci
    Album: Best of 1989 & 2000-2001 & 2007
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008




    Artist: Il Genio
    Album: Il Genio
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008




    Artist: Bush Chemists
    Album: Singles Eight
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008




    Artist: Rohff
    Album: Code De L'Horreur
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008



    Artist: NASA
    Album: Whachadoin?/Money
    Release Date: 22 Dec 2008



    Artist: Ich Troje
    Album: Osmy Obcy Pasazer
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008



    Artist: Evil Masquerade
    Album: Fede to Blood
    Release Date: 24 Dec 2008




    Artist: Pay TV
    Album: Fashion Report
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008




    Artist: Ce'cile
    Album: Waiting
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008




    Artist: Tom Carter
    Album: Glyph
    Release Date: 22 Dec 2008




    Artist: Uton
    Album: Mystery Revolution
    Release Date: 22 Dec 2008




    Artist: Yuko Goto
    Album: Goto Song 2
    Release Date: 25 Dec 2008




    Artist: Valery Gore
    Album: Avalanche to Wandering Bear
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008




    Artist: Hiram Bullock
    Album: Plays Music of Jimi Hendrix
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008




    Artist: Anna Tatangelo
    Album: Nel Mondo Delle Donne
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008



    Artist: Last Autumn's Dream
    Album: Dream Catcher
    Release Date: 24 Dec 2008




    Artist: Fagget Fairys
    Album: Feed the Horse - EP
    Release Date: 22 Dec 2008




    Artist: Eli Young Band
    Album: Eli Young Band
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008




    Artist: Cubismo
    Album: Autobus Calypso
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008




    Artist: Eddy Wata
    Album: The Light
    Release Date: 23 Dec 2008
  • The Silent Ballet shameless plugs, Volume Fourteen. Goldmund - The Malady of…

    Out 14 2008, 16h40 por ConnectedDots



    Website
    Listen

    Type Records
    Buy

    Score: 8/10

    The music industry has the reputation of a shark, ready to swallow any of the dauntless men and women braving its trenches whole at a single misstep. It is fast-paced, unforgiving, the money is often short, the politics always long. Yet every now and then, you stumble upon a group of people that seem to stroll through these difficulties without noticing they were even there - a party of artists that just oozes serenity and that makes music like there is nothing wretched with the world they live in. In this case, I'm talking about the fantastic minds behind type records; Helios, Peter Broderick, Sylvain Chauveau, Tarentel, Xela, Ryan Teague, The Alps, Sickoakes... so many names that will instantly make an innocent smile appear on the face of any passionate instrumental music aficionado.

    The man behind Helios, Keith Kenniff, is the perfect representation of what these guys consistently bring to the table. After a near-perfect young musician’s life that took him all the way to world renowned Berklee College of Music, he released the first Helios album Unomia and most importantly the critically acclaimed Eingya, putting him on the map as one of the new-generation musical prodigies. It would appear however that in Kenniff's mind, it was too short of an achievement to be behind only one of the most talked about up-and-coming instrumental acts of the 2000's; so in 2005 he released the beautiful Corduroy Road under the moniker Goldmund. Three years later, after last year's Two Point Discrimination and a few months short of the new Helios release, he's at it again with this very strong new longplayer The Malady Of Elegance.

    Even though there's a huge difference in means between Helios and Goldmund, the very particular spirit and songwriting style of Kenniff is undeniably the same. Where Helios makes soft electro-acoustic ambient music, with intricate percussion work and delicate guitar playing, Goldmund is all about the artist behind his piano. Like fellow reviewer Zach Mills outlined so well in his take on Goldmund's last opus, there is a notable dedication to bring the listener as close as possible to the musician's own experience in his music. You hear pedals being pushed, hammers slamming chords, you feel the instrument responding to Kenniff's actions as if you were sitting next to him in his recording studio throughout the record. Needless to say, with such attention to detail, the production on the album is irreproachable; a standard that the nice people from Type seem to demand of all their artists. It's almost bone-chilling in pieces such as "Gifts," or "now."

    It isn't the only reason why the emotional value of this record is in such high grounds. Goldmund's compositions are akin to those of acclaimed minimal pianists like Max Richter or Hauschka, yet even the slightest comparison feels to the reviewer's heart like the most short-minded and useless act of namedropping, as his music is impregnated with such personal nurturing that nothing really resembles it. The slow-paced flow of the record gives out a delicate, almost shy impression on the ears, as if the musician was holding each note until the very last moment, making sure it has as much attention from the listener as it needs. The opener, "Image-Autumn-Womb," throws you out of this world into a dream-like state you can't leave until the last note of "Evelyn," the album's last track. During this journey through The Malady of Elegance, the music, coupled with the track titles, doesn't force a cinematic context to your listening experience as much as it suggests one, letting you complete the picture with your own background. I am deeply convinced that each listener of this album will live through it differently, as it appeals to such a wide range of feelings and thoughts.

    "In a Notebook" brings out childhood memories with its nursery rhyme-like 3/4 time signature. "Threnody," like its title aptly hints, is the perfect soundtrack to the day after a sad occurrence with its melancholic and slow melody retaining a strong positive feel, almost saying "it's time to move on." The titles "The Winter of 1539-1540" and "Apalachee" seem to imply that somewhere in the record resides a common theme, as it is during that winter that Hernando De Soto's violent expedition for gold in Apalachee territory came to a brutal halt as the tribe fought them back in the town of Anhaica. I'm afraid there's not much more I know, apart from the fact that the former song sounds like a beautiful ode to a courageous struggle, while the latter expresses desolation, and a sense of emptiness. "The Gardener" sees Kenniff pick up his guitar again to accompany the piano line on a mysterious melody.

    As you can see, it is very hard to describe Golmund's music without being extremely subjective. There's something in there, something that makes it so special. Both intricate and accessible, The Malady of Elegance is yet more proof of the unlimited musical prowess of Keith Kenniff. Giving high expectations as to what Caesura, Helios' next musical venture will be, this album fills the void left by Max Richter's latest awkward attempts at recreating the magic of pieces like The Blue Notebooks, and joins the ranks of the likes of Jóhann Jóhannsson or Takahiro Kido as to what neo-classical music is supposed to sound like. The only reason why I'm not listening to The Malady of Elegance day in and day out is that it would keep me from doing anything else. Yet another winner for Type Records.

    Original Link: The Silent Ballet
  • The Half Stack: Playlist 9/16/08

    Set 16 2008, 18h12 por xaviae

  • A compilation reflecting my subconscious mind.

    Set 2 2008, 15h08 por JonnieBrasco

    In my life, I've made a lot of compilation tapes and cd's. Sometimes to amuse myself, but most of the times to share my favourite music with people who are close to me. I would like to share about my most beautiful and effective compilation so far:

    With much care and precision, I made a compilation that is a reflection of my soul, mind and active dreamlife.The character of the tracks should be caught with the following tags: , , (dreamy, but awake!), , , , ,

    The tracks:
    1. Slowdive - TocarRutti (Pygmalion).
    In autumn 2004, I never had heard of Slowdive. But in a dream at one of that autumn's nights, I was walking through a very wide, green and empty landscape. The sky was clear, so the sun was shining and my view contained a windmill or a small hill here and there. After a moment I saw a boy walking very far away, almost at the beautiful horizon. It was hard to come close to him, but finally I stood in front of him. He looked like me, but he wore a shirt with the text: "Slowdive". I asked him: "Who are you? What is Slowdive? Is it a band or something?". While I was bothering him, he replied things as: "Go away" and "Leave me alone". I couldn't make any proper contact with him.
    When I woke up, I started to look on the internet for Slowdive, and I found it was a band! Several months later I realized the boy in this dream was me. Slowdive was a personal aspect of this boy, and it already had become a personal aspect of my musical listening behaviour. Nowadays, I still think there's no better band than Slowdive to soundtrack the world of my dreams at night and personal subconscious awareness. This track "Rutti" is most significant, a very clear and relaxed track, not of this world.

    2. Bark Psychosis - TocarThe Loom (Hex).
    For me, listening to the album Hex by Bark Psychosis is like discovering the biodiversity of a deep sea with a colorful coral riffs and fishes. Common popular music on the radio does not go very deep, but the music of Bark Psychosis brings your subconsciousness deep like the inspiring bottom of the deepest ocean. Bytheway, the second part of this song brings a great organic and hypnotising rhythm.

    3. Yo La Tengo - Green Arrow (I Can Hear the Heart Beating as One).
    This ambient piece starts with crickets, and it ends with crickets. Accompanied by an electric guitar that is modestly howling, these are ingredients to bring my focus to my solar plexus. It feels good to dream away with this sad tune.

    4. Talk Talk - TocarI Believe In You (Spirit of Eden).
    As a kid I was fond of a "very best of" compilation of Talk Talk, and finally, without any doubt the tracks of their last two albums, are the best. "I Believe In You" is a magical song with a brilliant composition and a deep spiritual character, it fits on this compilation brilliantly.

    5. Bark Psychosis - TocarPendulum Man (Hex).
    Different rhythms are melting together and dull sounds are carried away by an invisible wind in this very hypnotising multi-dimensional song. But more events happen and the result of it is a very comfortable state of mind.

    6. Ozric Tentacles - TocarToltec Spring (Erpland).
    A short ambient 'jungle' track by The Ozrics. This band is bringing me magician music. This track contains some "Indian nature awereness", and I am using it as a kind of fresh intermezzo on my compilation.

    7. Tortoise - TocarEverglade (TNT).
    The aura of this track is: a little bit creepy, ominous, sinister. But these are aspects of our subconsciousness as well, just like the peaceful moods are. The echo's of this track Everglade are reflecting the marshes and depths of our souls.

    8. Tarentel - Popul Vuh (The Order of Things).
    The only track with synths. Tarental also is one of my 'subconscious' bands. In on of my dreams I was attending a gig of this band, and I seemed the only one in a small audience, that was really interested to listen to this music. Actually the first quarter of this song is neglectable, while the last quarter contains the beauty of the rainbows of your nicest dreamscapes.

    9. Pan American - Lights of Little Towns (Quiet City).
    A professional lullaby to end with.
  • Rotations (August 1st)

    Ago 1 2008, 17h02 por liftmuziek

    Wow... It's August. Again... How did that happen? And I was just busy compiling my Best of 2008 [so far...] list. Oh well. Here's a great installment of Rotations with Two and a Half Questions with iTAL tEK, Kettel, Jacaszek, Kangding Ray, Richard Chartier, Peter Broderick, Hecq and more!!! For up-to-date reviews, be sure to subscribe to reviews feed!

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    iTAL tEK - Cyclical (Planet Mu)

    OK, I was going to de-capitalize the artist and album name appropriately, but it screws up my nice formatting. I'm sure that Alan Myson won't mind. Hailing out of Brighton (UK), this is Myson's first full length release. There were a couple of 12" back in 2007 various labels, plus a few file releases here and there, but that's all. I first came across iTAL tEK on 10 Tons Heavy compilation, followed by 200, and now Mary Anne Hobbs drops his tune on her Evangeline - all released on Planet Mu. The above appearances should lovingly pigeonhole Myson's music into a dubstep genre. Through eleven tracks, Myson explores all facets of the uprising style, from dark to melodic, and from experimental to dance-floor. As an album, it is a very involved listening experience, begging to be returned to over and over to uncover its multi-layered production that will satisfy the break-,IDM-,and bass-heads alike. In the recent years, dubstep has been a hit or miss for me. I mostly end up tossing away records that exploit the genre's popularity by applying the tiring old formula - sample this here, apply the syncopated beat there, drop in the wobbling bass, and repeat. The volume of current underground output reminds me of the days when gabber swept Rotterdam in the mid-90s: anything was up for grabs as long as it employed the squirrely vocals and distorted 909 kicks spun above 150bpm. Only the gems outlast the hype to survive through history for another rotation. Myson stands among the few artists that integrate and employ the genre's characteristics with an intelligent design, bringing dubstep closer to the electronica for listeners, and gaining a permanent presence on my shelves of classic albums. That being said, Planet Mu is responsible for pushing the boundaries of electronic evolution, keeping up with the trends and exciting our neurons. It is with a full support of such an established label, among the many independent and progressive smaller counterparts, that the musicians and fans alike, will benefit for the years to come. Thanks, Mike [ed. Paradinas]! Keep it rolling. My good friend, Rob Booth, over at Electronic Explorations, is also a big fan. He recently hosted Ital Tek's Exclusive Mix with a couple of unreleased tracks - it's a must. Recommended for fans of Boxcutter, Pinch, Vex'd, The Gasman, and Distance.

    http://www.myspace.com/italtekmusic | http://www.planet-mu.com/artists/italtek
    http://www.myspace.com/childrenofmu | http://www.planet-mu.com

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    Two and a Half Questions with Ital Tek

    I placed you somewhere between dubstep and IDM - how would you describe your music?
    I'm really bad at this question usually! I think that's a fair description though. I've tried to create a middle ground in my records between bass heavy music that works really loud in a club but also so you can listen to it at home/in the car/walking about etc. I think albums are really important as whole pieces rather than just collections of tracks and so I wanted to make one that people would want to listen to all the way through. I love bass music/dubstep but sometimes I want to listen to something with a nice melody aswell. I try to tick both the boxes. Old electronica - Aphex, Muziq and then the sort of textures and soundscapes that bands like Nine Inch Nails and Radiohead make have had a big influence on the way I go about making music.

    Do you feel that you have found your own unique voice in your compositions?
    I don't know about having created a unique voice, I'd say it's pretty hard to be creating anything unique. I just enjoy sitting for hours making something I want to listen to, and something that excites me.

    Anything fun on the horizon? Live shows? Collaborations?
    There are a couple of collaborations that I had been putting off whilst finishing my album so hopefully they will get sorted now. I'm sure there will be something new out later this year, there's lots of things I'm working on at the moment. Aside from writing I'm doing some more festivals for the rest of the summer and then more gigs around and about most weekends after that.

    What's the story about iTAL tEK capitalization?
    The capitalisation thing was just how someone wrote it a few years ago on a flyer and then it kind of stuck with some other people doing it, and it going on the records like that etc. I don't mind how people want to write it. I've told some people who've asked that it's because of a sponsership deal with iTUNES... I think they believed me.

    http://www.myspace.com/italtekmusic | http://www.planet-mu.com/artists/italtek

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    Kettel - Myam James Part 1 (Sending Orbs)

    Reimer Eising, producing under the name of Kettel, is no stranger to the IDM scene. Since 2001, Eising has vigorously released a dozen EPs and nine full length albums on a handful of respectable labels, such as Planet Mu, Neo Ouija, DUB, merck, Kracfive, and his home label (which he co-runs with his brother, Wouter Eising and Kristian Peters), Sending Orbs. His last album, Myam James Part 1 was originally scheduled to be an EP, but Eising's onslaught of his mind-to-music-stream has borne not one, but two albums in the Myam James series. Based out of Groningen, The Netherlands, Eising is a classically trained musician, growing up playing piano since he was five years old. His love for Bach is clearly evident through complex, mathematical, and harmonic progressions in the acid driven, micro programmed, and organically acoustic pieces. From the album page on Sending Orbs: "Kettel manages to squeeze uplifting, warm, cheerful and enjoyable music out of his kettle and pottery factory, which is sad, melancholic and sensitive at the same time." The tracks on Part 1 are as intelligent as Inteligent Dance Music can be, with excellent production, masterful effect control, and instantly memorable melodies. Towards the end of the album, the track My Dogan (from the album My Dogan, on Sending Orbs [2006]), gets a treatment by Phoenecia. We also get an excellent remix from Secede, of another track, Church. Highly recommended if you like Aphex Twin, The Flashbulb, Jega, Barry Lynn and Wisp.

    http://www.myspace.com/captainkettel | http://www.kettelmusic.com
    http://www.myspace.com/sendingorbs | http://www.sendingorbs.com

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    Two and a Half Questions with Kettel

    What do you imagine it would be like to hear Bach playing the organ for the first time in church?
    What I have read about Bachs improvisational skills on organ, is that it was even better than his composed work. I don't know who said it, I have no source, but it's a famous quote so it may bear some kind truth. I want to believe it does, at least. I can't even imagine improvising a fugue, because for me it seems you have to have 4 different brains to do so. It is known that Bach improvised perfect fugues. What can I say? I know I would love it, I know it would be an amazing and miraculous thing.. I also know I'm not good enough at English to express the right superlatives at the right time in this matter. I'm such a great Bach-lover, I would seriously consider giving up an organ (HA!) to hear him improvise on it!

    How much of your music is mathematical in nature?
    Hard one. I don't go around calculating anything when I write music, but I think when a melody is "good" it has some kind of mathematical symmetry or 'truth'. If one is able to do it -have the scientific basis and knowledge to do so- can 'prove a melody'. If not equipped with math skills (like me, by the way), there is this way in which you can 'feel' good melodies go round. It's all about consistency I think when it comes to good music. Things have to sound intentional and consistent. I certainly believe that music is math in some way. I'm not sure if I want to find out how so.

    How much do you participate in running of the label [Sending Orbs], and which tasks do you usually pick up?
    It has always been my brother Wouter and my friend Kristian's label. My involvement in it is on and off. I'm usually part of the process of contemplating decisions tho.. Basically just someone that is not officially affiliated, but in the loop. Tasks.. I have helped out working the shop, done setting up some labelnights.

    Do you recall the first electronic release that made you want to produce this kind of music?
    I think it was a mixtape ridiculously called "Pfffff" my brother made for me with various electronic tracks on it that initially got me interested. Then I picked up a lot of Mouse On Mars and mid-90's Plaid, Autechre and Aphex. It wasn't really 1 release that turned the wheel for me, but I remember listening to Plaid's Not For Threes and wishing I made it. (But I kind of still do that). If you put a knife to my throat for this question I'd say Mouse on Mars was the first electronic love i had. Iahora Tahiti is still one of my most dear albums in the world.

    I know that you're a 303-fiend, do you own a couple of teebees; and what other fun toys can we find in your studio?
    I work the most basic and simplistic setup thinkable by a badger. All my music is based upon me playing keyboard; whether it's a synth or a 303. That is really the basis of everything I do; I can't make music if I can't jam/play. I find hardware toys hard to get into most of the times, merely because I think i find my roots in pianoplay; give me a few keys and I'm happy. But of course hardware synths can sound amazing, and they are amazing, and I'm even really into sound toys, I just don't own them. Let's just say I've never really gotten into knobtwiddling and experimenting with sounds. So far I've always found enough satisfaction and challenge in trying to write beautiful melodies. Different approach, I guess.

    Who is Myam James and when are we going to hear Part 2?
    Myam James is a viking a once dreamt of, throwing little blue balls at me. Part 2 is coming up, I'm actually working on it right now. It's supposed to come out in fall, so it will. It's a different album than Part 1; it's gonna have some more chilled out, soundtrackstyle, classical moments among more Myam1 acid stuff. That's the way it was all planend out and I still feel comfortable sticking to it. Showing a few different musical sides of myself; that's why it was a series in the first place. An album is always like a summary of the past year.

    How different are your live shows from the album tracks?
    Quite. They have been at least. The last year I have been doing a few Myam James tracks live, actually most of the Myam James tracks started as live tracks. But also during the releases of ambient albums my livesets would always been a little more upbeat and party, I think I just enjoy that the most myself.

    Any memorable moments from your recent North American tour?
    A lot. One memorable moment is this. We (Flashbulb, me, and a ..guest) had just travelled a long distance from Montana to Washington, somewhere. Note that during my tour the European Soccer Championships were on, and me being a big (Holland) soccerfan, upon arrival in the motel I instantly downloaded the match (that was already played back home, time difference). While I was getting loaded with Rolling Rock waiting till the download to finish, the Flashbulb was practicing his set and played some awesome guitar. I watched the match, we beat France 4-1 and I caused a beep in Flasbulbs ear screaming and yelling. By the time it finished I was nothing more or less than a drunken dutchman, far away from home, celebrating a party that was originally already over. Anyway, that night we took off to the festival to check out what it was like. It was already dark and the festival was up on a high mountain. Somehow we took a few detours, and although we were told the roads were gonna be unpaved and steep, the roads we drove on that night were life-threatening. We even were caught up in stream of sliding rocks that made it's way into the ravine, our brave SUV and SUV-driver (Benn) fighting with it. Anyway, all I can say is I'm glad I was drunk when that happened.

    http://www.myspace.com/captainkettel | http://www.kettelmusic.com

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    Rudi Arapahoe - Echoes From One to Another (symbolic interaction)

    As Eve Basilides opens up with strumming of the harp, a distant lo-fi hiss transposes you into a surreal world of shadows and broken dreams. By the time Kaithlin Howard's voice breaks through the reverb and lightly touched piano chords I begin to wonder if the imagery is indeed from my long lost memory. Rudi Arapahoe's spellbinding soundscapes accompany my daydreams into a world of modern classical and magical realism. "A strange and beautiful tale, voiced across the windswept plains and forests of purgatory." Here I give into another temptation to repeat the Echoes From One To Another poem: "In a dream I am standing / At the entrance to a forest / Here there are constructed / Numberless arches that radiate light / When I step through them at night / My body floats gently in the air / At this precise moment / When I am on the cusp of sleep / My shadow vanishes / And with it my weight." Why bother attempting to even describe such beautiful and timeless experience? Rudi Arapahoe has captured it all. As if the music wasn't enough, the photographs included in the packaging perfectly echo the artist's message via the visual senses. Echoes From one To Another definitely reminds me of Max Richter, especially The Blue Notebooks. It's mostly because of the melancholic piano, cinematic strings, and of beautiful spoken word. And when being compared to Max Richter was a bad thing? I hope Arapahoe's future is bright with creating mystical soundtracks to a world that we carve out of this visible reality. For when I close my eyes, it rapidly vanishes. And only music remains.

    http://www.myspace.com/rudiarapahoe
    http://www.myspace.com/symbolicinteraction | http://www.symbolicinteraction.net

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    Venetian Snares - Detrimentalist (Planet Mu)

    We can always count on Aaron Funk to punish us at least once a year. If you're not familiar with Venetian Snares, it's time for you to open up that hole and crawl out. Seriously. Winnipeg (Canada) based Funk is a prolific champion of the edgiest of genres - from modern-classical orchestral arrangements violated with breakcore to noisy IDM sprinkled with clicks and cuts. Among the collection of labels, he has managed to span some of my favorites - Zod, Distort, Sublight, Hymen and of course, Planet Mu. Detrimentalist is Funk's twentieth (!!!) album, in which he steps away from classical themes sampled and revisited in My Downfall (Planet Mu, 2007), and brings back the early drum'n'bass loops only the way Venetian Snares can. Planet Mu describes the release as "Venetian Snares' 332nd official studio album of disgusting ejacutronic rave horn." After a couple of rotations the intelligent design behind complex time signatures stands out from the imitators' attempts at making [whatever]-core simply for the sake of it. The first two tracks, Gentleman and Koonut-Kaliffee set the tone for the entire album, and the grind never stops. The cover art is sprinkled with an array of neon green aliens, robots, skulls, wingdings, guns, cassettes, and other demented and detrimental paraphernalia. And ducks. My favorite track is Eurocore MVP with ragga vocal samples, Funk's staple bass rips, drilling Amen breaks and an obligatory snare rush. This is breakcore at its finest. Keep it coming, Funk... We're listening... For similar styles, check out Bong-Ra, Shitmat, end.user, and my new favorite, Igorrr.

    http://www.myspace.com/venetiansnares | http://www.venetiansnares.com
    http://www.myspace.com/childrenofmu | http://www.planet-mu.com

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    Jacaszek - Treny (Miasmah / Gusstaff )

    Gusstaff is a small independent label based in Poland, which has already released two previous albums by Michal Jacaszek. Jacaszek's third full length album, Treny, is also picked up by Erik Skodvin's Miasmah. The latter mentioned label is quickly gaining recognition among the ambient and modern classical connoisseurs with CD releases (Miasmah started out as a net label) from great artists like Encre, Rafael Anton Irisarri, Elegi and now Jacaszek. Looks like Miasmah has also picked up Jasper TX for his upcoming July release, Black Sleep, but more on that later... Treny is a modern classical marvel that immediately jumps to the top of my favorites for this year. And big thanks to all my readers who recommended it as Best of 2008 So Far in their submitted lists. Patiently paced melodies evolve in the hands of skillful violinist Stefan Wesolowski and cellist Ania Smiszek-Wesolowska [sounds like the two are a couple ;) ]. The reverb treated organic acoustics are complimented with piano phrases and atmospheric electronic treatments by Jacaszek. Through out the tracks, Maja Sieminska's voice glides within the hazy soundscapes like an echo of awakened ghost. My good friend Paul observes, "I listen and feel I have lost everything..." My immediate impression brings back that majestic moment of discovering an album that will stay with you through sweet and dark moments alike. Based out of Gdansk, Poland, Jacaszek is a profound manipulator of electro-acoustic sounds and fits right along my favorites like Dictaphone, Porn Sword Tobacco, Marsen Jules, Zbigniew Preisner and of course Deaf Center. Highly recommended.

    http://www.myspace.com/jacaszek | http://www.jacaszek.com
    http://www.myspace.com/miasmah | http://www.miasmah.com

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    Two and a Half Questions with Michal Jacaszek

    What inspired you to manipulate acoustic recordings into a composition of its own?
    Acoustic sounds themselves are very inspiring. In opposite to most of synthetic sources they have a potential to be extended, manipulated, and after all they still preserve their rich lively nature. For me as a producer working with digital media , this is very secure and comfortable situation.

    Tell us more about your own musical language?
    I hope I have one. I want my music to be soft but hardly touching, monotonic but keeping you awake, filled with emotions but controlled, ... not too narrative neither too cinematic - but still atmospheric... A bit like with a prayer - I like repetitions, trance mood. If I really have my own aesthetics, I want it to be in constant evolution...

    Is there a sad story behind your soundtrack?
    "Treny" means "laments" in ancient Polish vocabulary. This is also a title of collection of elegiac poems written by a Polish renaissance poet Jan Kochanowski. These pieces have really strong tension, they are deeply touching and they were written after the death of poet's little daughter. Her name was Orszula - and it is also a title of one of my tracks. Other tracks' names are "rhythm is immortality", "grief", "death calm" etc. So definitely you can find some sad motifs behind my album.I am fascinated with this part of human emotions, although I have a quite happy life. Passing , vanishing, ending, - these things inspire me strongly.

    http://www.myspace.com/jacaszek | http://www.jacaszek.com

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    Portishead - Third (Island / Mercury)

    It's been almost 11 years since Portishead released their last self-titled album (I'm not counting Roseland NYC Live). The three member group of Adrian Utley, Geoff Barrow and more prominent Beth Gibbons have been often credited with making the trip hop genre more mainstream. Originating out of Bristol, UK, Portishead introduced their hometown sound to the commercial radio waves in 1994 with Dummy. With downtempo hip-hop beats, a touch of turntablism, and Gibbons' staple vocals, Portishead instantly created their own style and with that came a vast following. It's no wonder then, that when appropriately titled Third album hit the shelves, it was snatched with a hunger. Prior to the album's street date it was released on last.fm and attracted over 327,000 listeners within 24 hours. On Third, Portishead experiments in a darker territory, a bit brooding and at times almost industrial in nature, while rewarding the listener with a familiar voice. There are many unforgettable moments on the album when you find yourself go "what" and "nice". Perhaps there is not much revolutionary on Third for some, and they may not feel justified for the waiting period. Nevertheless you can't just let it slip by. Portishead remains a favorite and after consecutive rotations, Third climbs to the my list of "Best of 2008 so far..." I still love and play the first two albums. [Gibbons also released a solo album titled Candy Says in 2003]. Favorite tracks: Plastic and Machine Gun.

    http://www.myspace.com/portisheadalbum3 | http://www.portishead.co.uk

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    Kangding Ray - Automne Fold (raster-noton)

    An amazing array of releases from Raster-Noton can drain any serious collector's wallet. My latest search includes the twelve super rare twenty-minute monthly releases titled 20' to 2000, and I highly doubt that I'll be able to score it for anything less than a thousand bucks. Oh well... So instead I'll give myself a present of Kangding Ray's sophomore release, Automne Fold. And the album more than satisfies my experimental, organic, and dark rhythmic cravings. Kangding Ray is an alias of Berlin based David Letellier who creates synthetic, glitchy, and yet very musical compositions of analog tones, micro-programmed beats, and digital errors. Letellier's musical experience includes being a guitarist and a drummer for a band with rock and jazz influences. Stacking against his electronic music design is his diploma in architecture - perhaps Letellier erects and demolishes soundscapes in the same way. The sound of Kangding Ray is not as minimal as the usual roster of Raster-Noton (e.g. CoH, Ø, and the label owner, Carsten Nicolai). It is still experimental, super intelligent, yet at the same time very listenable - I found Alva Noto's Xerrox Vol. 1 conceptually very fascinating, but for some reason the album did not remain in my rotations. Kangding Ray, on the other hand, seems to fit more along his contemporaries, like Hecq, Subheim, Kattoo and Murcof. There are even lyrics in some of the "songs". Perhaps Automne Fold will create a gateway into the label's catalogue for listeners with a less sensitive ear. Be sure to pick up Kangding Ray's 2006 release on Raster-Noton, titled Stabil. Highly recommended. Makes my Best of 2008 list so far...

    http://www.myspace.com/kangdingray | http://www.kangdingray.com
    http://www.raster-noton.net

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    Two and a Half Questions with Kangding Ray

    What is your alias "Kangding Ray" mean?
    Nothing really, kangding is a small town in the tibetan region of sichuan in china, where i went just before finishing my first album. Later i heard that it's also a famous traditional chinese song.

    What role does your education in architecture play when you construct soundscapes?
    A lot of people ask me this question, due to my background, but I still don't have a definitive answer to it. There are of course some links, in terms of construction or textures, or the idea of music "spacialisation", the fields explored by pioneers like Pierre Henry or Stockhausen. For me, one of the most interesting approach is probably the treatment of music composition and architecture through the same abstract patterns, mathematic rules, one of the finest example being the collaboration of Xenakis and LeCorbusier for the "poème électronique". But at the end, music stays music, it's about sound and emotions.

    What is your favorite piece of studio equipment?
    A portable digital recorder, that i use to record anything that i find interesting.

    http://www.myspace.com/kangdingray | http://www.kangdingray.com

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    The Herbaliser - Same As It Never Was (Studio !K7)

    So what exactly prompted The Herbaliser to release Same As It Never Was on the infamous Studio !K7? After all, their deep discography is tied almost exclusively to Ninja Tune [if anyone knows the answer, drop me a line]. Since 1995, Ollie Teeba and Jake Wherry have released five studio albums and two live mixes on Fabric (see my previous review of Fabric.26), not to mention a dozen singles, appearances and remixes. The group has also grown from an original duo into a full 5-piece band - you have to check out the amazing Session One album (Department H., 2000). Same As It Never Was indeed sounds a bit more funky, as the group is attempting to trace the hip-hop roots and bring back the elements of jazz, r&b, and soul. This time they are also joined by the London based "22-year soul diva" Jessica Darling - who lays her lovely voice so smoothly over the grooves - really brings back the fun of the 70s. The track Can't Help This Feeling will validate any doubts. NYC based Jean Grae (aka What? What?) returns with an excellent track, Street Karma (A Cautionary Tale) previously collaborating with The Herbaliser on Take London (Ninja Tune, 2005). Revitalizing the genre, The Herbaliser sparks a wave of nu-soul, if you will, across the continent. It would be a pleasure to watch them live. My typical artist cloud for The Herbaliser would include DJ Food, The Cinematic Orchestra, Funki Porcini, DJ Krush and Up, Bustle and Out.

    http://www.myspace.com/theherbz | http://www.herbaliser.com
    http://www.myspace.com/k7records | http://www.k7.com

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    Nostalgia 77 - Everything Under The Sun (Tru Thoughts / Ubiquity)

    Listening to Birghton (UK) based Benedic Lamdin's solo project under Nostalgia 77 alias I am reminded once again of his light, playful, and jazzy compositions. The last album I recall hearing was Songs For my Funeral, which I remember being more downtempo with a sprinkle of breaks bordering future jazz. One of those great tracks to compliment a chillout compilation (as a matter of fact, there was a double disk comp, Chilled Beats Sessions, where Nostalgia 77 appeared alongside Skalpel, The Cinematic Orchestra, Bonobo, Blockhead, Daedelus, Plaid, Boards of Canada, Prefuse 73 and many, many others [Sessions, 2005] ). Then there is, of course, The Nostalgia 77 Octet with a great Weapons Of Jazz Destruction release on Tru Thoughts last year. The latter deserves a separate review, but I'll briefly mention that the octet is formed from the Royal Academy of Jazz graduates and NYJO Alumni. For his sixth full length album (including the afore mentioned live project), Lamdin gathers his group of talented jazz musicians to walk up and down the modal scale with ease. Lizzy Parks returns with her lovely voice adding a perfect element to an already wonderful selection of songs. "I wanted to continue developing the ideas I've explored in the other records, to take the emotional moods that are there and to vocalize them. I wanted to write lyrics that reflected them," says Lamden. I personally applaud and enjoy following the artists that continue to not only reinvent themselves, but perfect their musical composition. It seems that many musicians, after consecutive successful releases want something more and end up turning to the roots of live, improvisational, or organic sound - I'm thinking here of The Herbaliser, The Landau Orchestra, and even Amon Tobin. The 2008 double-disk compilation of Nostalgia 77's One Offs, Remixes & B-Sides is a must for any serious catalog collector.

    http://www.myspace.com/nostalgia77 | http://www.nostalgia77.com
    http://www.myspace.com/truthoughtsrecords | http://www.tru-thoughts.co.uk

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    William Basinski And Richard Chartier - Untitled 1-3 (LINE)

    LINE is a label of another breed and dimension. Created by Richard Chartier in 2000 under the 12k umbrella, LINE publishes experimental and abstract installation compositions by sound artists exploring contemporary digital minimalism. LINE has a nice roster of signal processing and deconstructing composers, including Alva Noto, Taylor Deupree, Vend and Asmus Tietchens. For the latest limited 2008 release, LINE has re-issued a 2004 acclaimed work by Richard Chartier and William Basinski, Untitled 1-3, first appearing on Japanese label Spekk. The two original Untitled tracks are remastered by Taylor Deupree and complimented by two new works - Untitled 3 and its Reprise. The initial edition of 1300 remained on the market for only two months before completely selling out. Basinski has been working on experimental soundscapes for over twenty five years. His installations and collaborations with filmmaker, James Elaine, have received international exposure and acclaim. Chartier has been producing experimental and minimal work that "explores the inter-relationships between the spatial nature of sound, silence, focus, and the act of listening." His sound works reached international exhibits and digital art/music festivals. Both musicians have appeared on Olaf Bender and Carsten Nicolai's hailed German label, Raster-Noton. In this aural documentary of another planet's lifeform, Basinski incorporates tape loops and elements from an eight voice polyphonic analog synthesizer from 1982, Voyetra-8. Chartier adds thick slabs of frequencies with elements from various sound installations. The piece is dark, haunting, and brooding, with alien feathered beings chirping in the background. Although the ambiance of composition is everlasting, the feeling of uneasiness remains with you well after you've downloaded these instructions into your brain. Untitled 2, at 35 minutes alone, is your guide for examining the album's abstract expressionist artwork by Chartier himself. Bring this album with you while visiting your local contemporary museum, select a dark, minimal, and abstract piece, and dissolve for a half an hour into the essence of being. You will find it... there...

    http://www.myspace.com/richardchartier | http://www.3particles.com
    http://www.myspace.com/12kline | http://www.12k.com/line

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    Two and a Half Questions with Richard Chartier

    Untitled 1-3 is a dark album, would you agree? What are the images that the soundscapes paint for you when you close your eyes?
    i think the "untitled1" is a bit dark but not necessarily the rest of the works. william described the first piece as very evocative of dark sky with swirling birds. i think that piece at the same time has moments of brightness.

    What is the current state of digital minimalism as an art form?
    oh i am not sure i can make any statements about that. i can say i hear less and less that i enjoy. there is a lot of minimalism for minimalism's sake that feels lacking in depth. : )

    How has the exposure to sound installations (as opposed to producing albums) has influenced your creativity and composition?
    i see installation versus composition very different processes and end products. the works i do for installation often do not have a set ending and are made of shifting loops that change over time. composing is far different structurally.

    Read FULL Two and a Half Questions With Richard Chartier only on Headphone Commute.

    http://www.myspace.com/richardchartier | http://www.3particles.com

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    Peter Broderick - Float (Type)

    Perhaps it's possible to stop comparing some contemporary classical musicians to Max Richter, and instead begin comparing them to Peter Broderick. After a release of a 7" single on John Twells' (Xela) Type Records, Portland based Peter Broderick emerges with a full length album, Float. For this release, Broderick borrows his friends Amanda Lawrence for string and vocal work, and Skyler Norwood to aid in recording and effects from a collaboration on Loch Lomond's Paper The Walls (Hush Records, 2007). Float is immediately bold, familiar, and elegant. As any soundtrack written for a passing life, it transcends its message past the minor key. At first the album sounds too comfortable, like a soft blanket thrown over the frigid winter feet. I feel as if I've heard this sound before, perhaps in a forgotten film, or as a fragment of a beloved prelude. But as I let my mind break down the composition, the messages begin to emerge. I'll let you hear your own details - I'd hate to lock the music into words. Broderick's banjo playing adds an interesting element to the ensemble of the [usual] piano, strings and an occasional guitar. And I can't help but draw a parallel between the ages of Broderick and Ólafur Arnalds - both are only twenty one! With that said, may I claim that modern classical is at the beginnings of a new cycle, with young multi-instrumentalists incorporating both, organic and electronic, leading the way. Highly recommended! A cozy cinematic score. Check out above mention artists plus Harold Budd, Michael Nyman, Alberto Iglesias, Clint Mansell and of course Jóhann Jóhannsson.

    http://www.myspace.com/peterbroderick
    http://www.myspace.com/typerecordings | http://www.typerecords.com

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    Two and a Half Questions with Peter Broderick

    What is your musical background?
    I started classical violin training at age 7, and played in various youth orchestras, then in my early teenage years I lost interest in the violin and started playing electric guitar in rock bands. Around 15-16 I realized again how beautiful the violin actually is, and picked it up again. At this time I also became interested in all kinds of instruments, and started collected them and trying to teach them to myself. For a while there it seemed like I was somehow getting a new instrument every week! I would go to friend's houses and search through their attics and say "Can I have this?"

    Who are your favorite classical composers?
    Arvo Pärt, Philip Glass, Rachel Grimes, Max Richter, Jóhann Jóhannsson, Steve Reich...

    Any hints as pertaining to the title of the album?
    I think since it's just one simple word, there are many ways to look at it. Hopefully.

    I feel that the gap between modern classical, ambient and electronic is slowly closing as led by a new generation. What do you picture the future of contemporary classical music to be?
    I think I agree. I consider people like Max Richter to be wonderful classical composers, even though you'd probably more likely find his music in the electronica section, or even rock/pop at some stores...

    How is the weather in Portland?
    The Spring and Autumn are perfect -- crisp air and mild temperatures. Sometimes the winter gets just a little too cold, and sometimes the summer gets just a little too hot. Some people complain about the amount of rain there, but I like it.

    http://www.myspace.com/peterbroderick

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    Hecq - Night Falls (Hymen)

    As I turn my attention from ethereal to dark ambient, it is only appropriate that I cover the latest album from one of my all time favorite artists, Hecq. Last year, I already hailed Ben Lukas Boysen's double disk release, titled 0000, as one of the Best of 2007 albums. It perfectly aligned along my favorite elements of grandiose orchestral sound and punctuated IDM beats. Upon my first listen of Hecq's fifth album, I anxiously await the glitchy breaks that are so prominent in Hecq's previous albums. Alas they never come. And with this proclamation, Boysen creates a new sound in which he instantly excels. Appropriately titled, Night Falls, Boysen drops the rhythmic structure altogether, and produces one of the most inspiring, lush, atmospheric and hauntingly dark pieces I have heard to date. There is a continuous cinematic tension of something hiding right beneath the shadow of a thinly layered sonic veil. Night Falls is an album that stops you dead in your tracks to really listen. What is that brooding sound, and does it have a name? I will not hide the fact, that with each swell of dynamic wave, the emotion within me rises as well, and I fight back the tears at the tip of each crescendo. With outstanding production and masterful control of individual frequencies, Hecq propels his sound techniques from a mere post-industrial IDM producer to a contemporary neo-classical composer. Hymen should be proud. Reminiscent of Murcof, Lusine ICL, Kattoo, Nebulo and Subheim.

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

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    Two and a Half Questions with Hecq

    What inspired you to compose Night, such a grandiose instrumental piece?
    even if this might sound like a quote from a b-movie but actually the experience that's nothing's eternal. things just not made to last... which is a thought i had to get used to over several years actually :) putting that vulnerability into an album was something i needed to do last year. it was created in 2-3 weeks actually... it was kind of phase i was in and where all pieces came together by themselves more or less - that again was proof to me that you can't force ideas really - that's why i haven't released an album in 2006...

    Is there a story behind this [imaginary] soundtrack?
    yeah...actually the story behind it are the reasons in the first answer but to be more precise: the loss of things and persons you wanted to keep, gaining clarity and how these things make you grow. i don't want this to sounds acroamatic really - i guess everyone knows that these experiences happen to us on almost a daily basis but we tend to mask them out (at least i do) so i have to channel these things into something else which helps me to reflect better and focused... It's not always like that though... sometimes i just love to get mental on plug ins :D3.

    This is quiet a departure from the "usual" Hecq. How do you personally feel about it, and do you think you'll produce more?
    yes it is - i feel that it was a need excursion from the previous work but it wont be the general style from now on. quite the opposite even - the 6th album (which i'm producing these days) will be pretty different from night falls...or better: night falls was the different album - as i'm inspired and motivated by many other things as well, nr.6 will be showing more and different approaches to music.

    Do you have a desire for scoring films?
    yes i have indeed! the sound design works are being a good outlet for this desire but i haven't had the chance to score an entire film yet - but i promise that this will happen very soon... its in the air :D

    http://www.myspace.com/hecq | http://www.hecq.de

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    The Drift - Memory Drawings (Temporary Residence Ltd)

    It's almost half way through the year, and suddenly I realize that I haven't listened to any post-rock released in 2008. So, I hit up one of my favorite labels, Temporary Residence Limited, a Brooklyn based source of great artists like Eluvium, Explosions in the Sky, Tarentel, Grails, and of course, Mono... and what's this? A new album from The Drift, that somehow slipped past me. The Drift is a four-piece instrumental band from San Francisco, originally created as a Lazarus and Tarentel side project, which by now evolved into a strong group of its own. Memory Drawings is The Drift's second full length release, following on the heels of an album compiling their previous three EPs, Ceiling Sky, released in November of 2007. Danny Grody from Tarentel literally synergies with the amazing trumpet work by Jeff Jacobs [the first time I heard trumpet blending perfectly with post-rock was on The Pirate Ship Quintet's self titled EP]. The drums and the upright bass more than compliment the intricate phrases and melodies which were recorded directly onto analog tape. The jazz influences are lurking just behind the curtains of the post-rock driven motif, and the tracks on Memory Drawings do not tire out the listener with any previously used and abused formula. Each piece on an album tells its very own story - changing rhythms, tempo, dynamics, and the tone as it evolves into a little cinematic fragment of memory, never forgotten since never was drawn. Yet another step forward for post-rock. Recommended if you enjoy Tortoise, Do Make Say Think and early Tarentel.

    http://www.myspace.com/trldrift | http://www.thedriftmusic.com
    http://www.temporaryresidence.com

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    Two and a Half Questions with The Drift

    I have to ask - who are your current favorite artists and influences?
    well the list is long and varied when it comes to influences, but if if we had to distill it down it would have to be something like: the necks, fela kuti, miles davis, fugazi, konono no. 1, ryhs chatham, cymande, dub of all kinds, SF, traveling, food, and most of all our friends and loved ones making art and music.

    Any good stories from your tour across Europe?
    well the tour was a good story in it of itself, but some stand out's would be playing the all tomorrow's parties festival that our friends explosions in the sky curated, being amongst many friends there - mono, eluvium, lazarus. it was a family event. our shows in poland we're outstanding (!)... the warmth from the people and generosity from our hosts was just incredible all-around. playing in a veranda in Esslingen Germany was surreal. having our friend cj boyd as a travel companion was also a real treat for us.

    What's next in store for the band?
    we've got a few exciting festival's in the works... LOLA Festival in London Ontario this September, the SF based annual Mission Creek Music Festival in July, and the Tanned Tin festival in Castellion Spain in November. we'll also be working on a string of us dates in the fall so keep your eyes peeled!

    http://www.myspace.com/trldrift | http://www.thedriftmusic.com

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    Dj Walkman - Milk Und Herring (Sutemos)

    Sutemos is a Lithuanian net label releasing free music from an eclectic collective of artists since 2004. The most notable of the releases is a series titled Intelligent Toys which spearheads the electronic music scene with underground highlights from Vladislav Delay, Near The Parenthesis, Esem, Sleepy Town Manufacture, Machine Drum, Praveen, Funckarma, Quench and Sense just to run through of a few names from the last, fourth volume. This time around, the founder of the Sutemos label, who goes by the name of DJ Walkman, has released a mix, titled Milk Und Herring. When I pick up a DJ mix, I look not only for the flow of tracks, but also the selection - the most important aspect. I could care less how perfect your beat-matching and transitions are, if the tracks were clearly chosen only to compliment the mix. DJ Walkman demonstrates that it is possible to skillfully accomplish both. The tracks on this excellent compilation range in genres and span over a decade of releases, collecting some of my favorite releases of all times. The first three tracks are from Burial, Coldcut, and Thom Yorke. And that's just a start. DJ Walkman effortlessly queues up Photek, followed by Radiohead, Squarepusher and Underworld, creating extra long mixes [exactly how I like it]. Then we move into Plaid, Speedy J, and Nautilis. By the time Plastikman, poligon window and the Surgeon come on, you begin to understand what the meaning behind the title is, and how this stylistic variety can be consumed in one sitting, of mixing such diverse ingredients like milk and herring. You know you want to hear it! Especially because it's FREE! Download directly from the Sutemos site.

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

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    I Monster - Neveroddoreven (Karma/Dharma)

    Thanks to my DVR, I never watch commercials these days. But there was this one ad, from AT&T, which got me to hit pause. It displayed flowers opening up, containing the cell phones inside. But it was also the music that stopped me. After the second time I saw the ad, I jumped on Google and sure enough, the first hit was people asking "what's that song on that commercial..." [I used the lyrics as keywords]. I've never heard of I Monster before, and after previewing a couple of tracks I just threw the whole album into the shopping cart. I was truly surprised to enjoy the entire album. It is now on its sixth rotation, and thus, deserves a write up. I Monster is a British group creating fresh, fun and bouncy trip-hop with very catchy samples and melodies. The two members are Sheffield based Jarrod Gosling and Dean Honer. Honer is also a member of All Seeing I and worked on some Add N to (X) albums. Together with Barry Smith (aka Barry 7), Honer founded a label, Cercle Records, on which the original 7" vinyl single of Daydream In Blue was released. In 1998 the duo has released their debut album, These Are Our Children. The track that got me all hyped up after hearing it only twice, Daydream In Blue, climbed the charts as a single, and soon after, the second album, Neveroddoreven, was released by Instant Karma and its sublabel, Dharma Records. [In 2004, Neveroddoreven, was also released on Atlantic]. I caught up with I Monster to get the spiel on their upcoming album. Here is the 411 - it is finished, no title or release date yet, a 7" vinyl single of a track titled A Sucker For Your Sound is coming up. Meanwhile you can preview the song on their myspazz. I seriously can't stop listening to this. Recommended if you like Moloko, Lovage, Portishead, Lemon Jelly, and Télépopmusik.

    http://www.myspace.com/imonsteruk | http://www.imonstermusic.com

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    Renfro - mathematics (MELTWATER)

    The recipe for Renfro requires a variety of carefully scavenged ingredients. Locate field recordings of wild animals and sonic atmospheres. Add fragments of material ranging from NASA feeds of deep space to burning credit cards. Mix in some static, glitch, and a pinch of distortion. Now slowly fold in a melancholic melody and Tim Branney's hushed falsetto voice as he sings intricate lyrics over Atom-James Draper's electro-acoustic manipulations. That's Renfro, "meld[ing] experimental electronic musical techniques with dream-pop songwriting", and doing a damn good job at it too. I'm not big on vocals (haven't I said that before?), (I think it's something to do with constrained concepts), (or perhaps the forced structure of a 'song'), but Renfro breaks out of boxed rules and layers voice as another instrument over ambient soundscapes and light percussion fused from cliky flippity-flop bleep lo-fi pops. The duo formed in late 2005, and is based in East London and North Devon, where they have been playing with microphones and "poetics of isolation, difference and collapse". Along with the release of Mathematics, Meltwater Records will also promote with two remix EPs with contributions from Marsen Jules, Porn Sword Tobacco, AGF/Loeb and Christian Fennesz [that alone should excite your appetite!]. The instrumental sound is reminding me of Xela, Skyphone, Julien Neto, and Swod. Like Thom Yorke singing over William Basinski with dying circuits driving the beat. Favorite track: Half-Life Of Happiness.

    http://www.myspace.com/renfromusicspace
    http://www.myspace.com/meltwaterrecords | http://www.meltwater-records.com

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  • Favorite post-rock bands

    Mai 11 2008, 18h32 por dbrain0

  • Orphax DJ setlist for Gruizig en Prettig at Eat This Eetcafe

    Abr 7 2008, 21h04 por masterrossi

    Had good fun at dj'ing at the Eat This Media Eetcafe in Utrecht on sunday 6th. I played 3 1/2 hours of music that could fit in with the idea behind "gruizig and prettig" (see also: http://www.last.fm/group/gruizig+en+prettig). After me Wouter van Veldhoven and Ellen Evers (The Puddle Parade) played their records.

    Sadly enough it didn't get recorded, but here is the complete set of albums I played. It's not in order of playing and I didn't add the song titles, but just to give an idea what I see as

    LP's

    [aritst]Six Organs of Admittance (Shelter from the Ash)
    Ricardo Avocado
    Marsen Jules (Herbstlaub)
    Kawabata Makoto[artist] (Hosanna Mantra)
    Es (Sateenkaarisuudelma)
    Cat Power (Moon Pix)
    Panda Bear (Person Pitch)
    Bibio (Fi)
    Fonica (Ripple)
    Susumu Yokota (The Boy and the tree)
    Junior Boys (Birthday)
    Nobukazu Takemura (Scope)
    Deaf Center (Neon City EP)
    Yasume (vWhere we’re from the birds sing pretty songs)
    Helios (Ayres)
    Vashti Bunyan (Just Another Diamond Day)
    Richard Youngs (Sapphie)
    Talk Talk (Spirit of Eden)
    Tarentel (Ghetto beats from the surface of the sun vol.1)
    Model Fighter (The Good Fighthing EP)
    Paradroid (Borelian Empire EP)
    SND & Luomo (Clicks & Cuts 3)
    Windy & Carl (Depths)
    Lichens (The Psychic Nature of Being)
    Vladislav Delay (Anima)
    Casino Versus Japan (Whole Numbers Play The Basics)


    10”s

    Tim Hecker (Atlas)
    Pan American (Quarry)


    7"s

    The Marcia Blaine School for Girls (Pink Sticks)
    d_rradio (Split met Marcia blaine school for girls)
    Goodiapal (Statoil)
    Fennesz (Transition)
    Xela (Suspiria)
    Benoît Pioulard (Fir)
    Mokira (The Bum That Will Bring Us Together)
    Khonnor (Burning Palace)


    Have fun tracking those albums down.
    Didn't search up track titles, too much work.
  • brise-glace - "when in vanitas" lp

    Mar 16 2008, 21h05 por ookunoki

    i recently resurrected Brise-Glace's only album When in Vanitas from the depths of my record collection and i cannot believe how fresh and interesting it still sounds, 14 years after it was recorded. it's like the newer, more percussive Tarentel records, but more stark; like Ben Frost's Theory Of Machines, equal parts ugliness and beauty but more old-fashioned (tapes instead of laptops); like Gastr Del Sol's Upgrade and Afterlife if Jim O'Rourke had locked David Grubbs in the bathroom and produced it all himself. but the closest point of reference has to be This Heat's Deceit, both in terms of its specific sound and its general aesthetic.

    who was involved:
    - Jim O'Rourke
    - darin gray (of Dazzling Killmen)
    - thymme jones and dylan posa (of Cheer-Accident)
    - Christoph Heemann
    - Henry Kaiser
    - David Grubbs
    - steve albini (engineer)

    judging by the stats on their last.fm page, people have either forgotten about brise-glace, like i had, or never heard them before. if you already have When in Vanitas, break it out - it's ripe for rediscovery. if you've never heard it, but you're interested, let me know and i'll see what i can do.
  • after the rocking

    Mar 11 2008, 1h22 por UCHalcyon

    Just for fun, let's compile a list of my favorite music in every genre I have an opinion on.
    Actually, I went ahead and made most of the list, and then I realized that I really only wanted to do this because I wanted to put Seascapes of the Interior on such a list, as one of the best 'post-rock' groups that ever was. (I guess I just wanted to make a list so that I could put up enough other stuff to make this seem like it's not an entry about post-rock, which it is, though the term makes me feel uneasy, just because so much of that Explosions in the Sky/Mono/check-out-our-myspace stuff is... well....) It's really a shame Seascapes aren't better known. Anyway, here is my homage to a brief but meaningful period in my musical listening history, and the best that post-rock has to offer, if you ask me. I'll even add favorite albums; why not?

    ---------
    Post-rock
    ---------
    Godspeed You! Black Emperor - Lift Yr Skinny Fists Like Antennas to Heaven!
    Rachel's - Selenography
    Seascapes of the Interior - All Safe, All Well (message me and I'll send it to you)
    Below the Sea - Les Arbres Dépayseront Davantage
    Tarentel - From Bone to Satellite
    Mogwai - Rock Action
    Sigur Rós - ( )
    Clogs - Thom's Night Out
    Gastr Del Sol - Camofleur
    Stars of the Lid
    Red Stars Theory
    Slint

    *************
    New Favorites - not post-rock, really
    *************
    Talk Talk [Laughingstock and Spirit of Eden]
    Morton Feldman [Coptic Light, especially]
  • Music accompany to iLiKETRAiNS concert

    Fev 1 2008, 12h22 por aRj4n

    Sun 25 Nov – iLiKETRAiNS, boy ler

    Heh, it’s been a while, but hey, I was bored just now and saw this list.
    I provided the music around the iLiKETRAiNS concert night. The following is what was played:

    1. White BirchYour Spain
    2. PelicanSirius
    3. Isis + AereogrammeTocarLow Tide
    4. Meanwhile Back In Communist RussiaHeliotrop
    5. These MonstersTocarNice Day to Start a War
    6. SpokaneThe Making of Americans
    7. TarentelTocarHello! We Move Through Weather!
    8. From Monument to MassesDeafening
    9. BevelSiberian Sunrise
    10. Shipping NewsThe March Song
    11. MogwaiFolk Death 95
    12. Mice ParadeTocarThe Nights After Fiction
    13. EfterklangMirador - Efterklang coming live @ Ekko 13 april 2008!!!

    *** iLiKETRAiNS concert ***

    14. evpatoria reportTocarTaijin Kyofusho
    15. Explosions in the SkyTocarThe Birth And Death Of The Day
    16. Redneck ManifestoTake On Us
    16. Nick Cave & The Bad SeedsO Children
    17. DressTocarRecognize
    18. KarateFirst Release
    19. The Berg Sans NippleGhost