Phantom Limb These Charms May Be Sung Over A Wound is the first album that Richard Skelton has released that is not through his own label, and is a continuation of his journey towards the perfection of a certain sort of elemental soundscape. Although the titles of the pieces contained […]
Monthly archives: September 2020
Big Potato (Europe) / Graveface (North America) There is a sense of joy to the cheesy fairground keyboards that open up Moon Attendant‘s debut album One Last Summer. The gentle drums and sleepy vocal delivery full of secrets give this first track a sense of a bedsit Squeeze, with a […]
99Chants Another day, another re-issue of an overlooked female composer. That might seem glib, but there’s a lot of it doing the rounds at the moment. And let’s be fair, composition is still too frequently male-heavy. Bunita Marcus is (unfortunately) known as one of those adjacent figures — a New […]
Kranky There is something about MJ Guider‘s sound that puts her perfectly at home on Kranky. There is a sense of drifting, of distant sounds clouded in fogs of reverb that make everything feel limitless. But there is also an intensity to the metallic rhythms that put you on guard. […]
Fire Tobin Sprout is probably best known as part of Guided By Voices, the oh-so prolific Dayton, Ohio band. The fact that he ever found time for a solo career is testament to his desire to release something that stood apart from GBV. Although no longer a part of that […]
Upset The Rhythm Well this came as a total surprise; after a steady flow of Normil Hawaiians re-issues from Upset The Rhythm over the last few years, the band now present two newly recorded tantalising glimpses into their sonic future.
Temporary Residence On first hearing Sparkle Division‘s debut album To Feel Embraced, which is a dusty fusion of lounge jazz and sleepy beats, one wouldn’t immediately figure it for a William Basinski project, but he is the man at the helm — although it is as much studio assistant Preston […]
Play Loud! So here we are in London’s salubrious East End, in a period between the wars and reflecting a very different area to the one we know now. Except kind of not — London’s always been a mix of people, so no great surprise that ’20s London had Eastern […]
Staraya Derevnya (CD) / Raash (cassette) / Steep Gloss Russian – Israeli – UK collective Staraya Derevnya dish up a refreshingly eclectic aesthetic where anything and everything has musical potential. A free-form exploration that’s open ended and primal which reaches into the unpredictable to pluck out some smouldering gold.
Kranky This is the second album for Julie Carpenter‘s Less Bells pseudonym and furthers her explorations pairing drifting electronics with choral vocals and the application of tension. There is a whimsical feel to the electronic wash that opens the album and cymbals glow with a kind of spectral sheen, but […]
Deutsche Grammophon The brothers Eno‘s Mixing Colours album was released at the start of the global pandemic of Covid-19, when most countries were in a state of lockdown. From reactions I read online, its soothing tones certainly helped many people through that difficult time, as it transported them to somewhere […]
Fire It is hard to believe that Kristin Hersh and David Narcizo have been playing together now for over thirty-five years. 1985 was the year of that extraordinary debut that reset the expectations of female rock bands, and it has been thirty-five years of that visceral rollercoaster that is Kristin’s psyche: […]
Berlin sound explorer and futurologist André Uhl‘s second album is due out next month, and the hypnotic video for its third single release “Amnesia” premiers below. Relax And Implode is described elliptically
Beats In Space / RVNG Intl It has taken seven years for the Dukes Of Chutney to follow up 2013’s Domino with a full-length album. In that time on their long, strange trip, they seem to have infused sounds from numerous countries into a personal patchwork that plays like a series […]
In advance of the album of the same name due out in physical formats on 16 October 2020, Art Terry releases his new video today, the first of a series of tracks to be published every Friday for the remainder of 2020.
Disciples I’d like to imagine there’s some Freudian primary school where aspersions are cast heartily on people’s unconsciousness, though one wonders the effects of Oedipalising on ‘your mum’ jokes. Phew describes this album as “an unconscious sound sketch” and, for all the half-finished-ness that might imply, she’s got a thoroughly […]
Group Mind The idea of music based on the elements immediately makes one think of mimetic, programmatic music. Air, water and fire have real-life sounds we can expect to hear reflected, but should the music try to imitate them? And what does earth sound like?
Give Me Monaco There is a cool elegance to the beats on the debut Give Me Monaco album that belies the dancefloor capabilities and rhythmic intricacies of the tracks collected here. Their producer, Leigh Redding, has been striving to translate thoughts and feelings of singularity and twisting them together to […]