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Back home
Where once there was music, now let there be noise
  • Search
  • About Freq
  • news
  • reviews
    • live reviews
    • books
    • DVD, bluray & video
    • Films
    • review features
    • Index
    • Archived reviews 1998-2008
  • features
    • Freq Presents: Overground – an N16 music radio show
  • interviews
  • Contact Freq
  • Copyright
  • Contributors
  • Dedication
High On Fire - Cometh The Storm

MNRK Heavy It’s been an incredible six years since High On Fire’s last album, Electric Messiah and its evil Santa cover. Since then, High On Fire has tasted Grammy success, Matt Pike posited as the logical successor to Lemmy Kilminster’s title of biggest badass in rock … and then the COVID-19 pandemic hit. With his long-term interest in Nibiru, David Icke and fringe theories in general, Pike fell […]

reviews

High On Fire – Cometh The Storm

  • album reviews
  • High On Fire
  • Jayaprakash Satyamurthy
Published 16/04/2024
Carla Diratz and the Archers of Sorrow - Blue Stitches

Discus It has been a couple of years since Carla Diratz‘s The Scale was released and you could be forgiven if the line-up for that album viewed it as a one-off; a unique meeting of post jazz rock minds. But when Carla contacted Martin Archer to suggest a more blues inflected album, suggestive of the current world malaise, both he and Nick Robinson jumped at the chance to […]

reviews

Carla Diratz and the Archers of Sorrow – Blue Stitches

  • Album review
  • Carla Diratz
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 16/04/2024
The Borderlands screen grab

Well-regarded but under-seen on initial release a decade ago, The Borderlands has become something of a beloved cult favourite, one that along with Ben Wheatley’s early work was key with reviving folk at the centre of horror culture. On its tenth anniversary, this Second Sight re-release gives an opportunity to re-examine the film, and to find it even stronger than the first time round, standing head and shoulders above many of the films that have followed in its footsteps, whilst remaining kind of inimitable, a totally singular concoction.

DVD, bluray & video Films reviews

The Borderlands

  • Bluray
  • Elliot Goldner
  • film review
  • Joe Creely
Published 15/04/2024
Distraxi live at Monochrome

Oh, a festival of ugly music - how could I refuse? Quite a varied line up too, the action split between two rooms -- the main stage and a cellar-like space further into the venue.

live reviews reviews

Monochrome: Festival of Ugly Music

  • Aluk Todolo
  • Cavalerie
  • Cuntroaches
  • Distraxi
  • Gnaw Their Tongues
  • Guttersnipe
  • Iffernet
  • live review
  • Michael Rodham-Heaps
  • Ona Snop
  • Ovo
  • Strange Brew
  • Vacuous
Published 11/04/2024
Fyear - Fyear

Fyear are a double drummer nine-piece with two spoken word performers which has chosen a suite of seven apocalyptic post-classical soundscapes to force across their message of human mistake, economic disarray and environmental disaster. The sound generated by the group and the thoughts expressed make them a perfect fit on Constellation, sharing recording venue Hotel 2 Tango with many of the label's other artists and a desire to raise consciousness in a new and unique way.

reviews

Fyear – Fyear

  • Album review
  • Fyear
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 08/04/2024
Maridalen - Gressholmen

For Maridalen's third album, although the line-up of Jonas Vemøy, Anders Hefre and Andreas Haga remains the same, the venue has changed and instead of the self-referencing village church, they have decamped even further from civilisation to the island of Gressholmen, a boat ride from Oslo, which according to the lovely photographs is an apparently partly abandoned area redolent of the past.

reviews

Maridalen – Gressholmen

  • Album review
  • Maridalen
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 08/04/2024
Einstürzende Neubauten - Rampen

Each subsequent album teetering between this rough'n'smooth threshold, the best a balancing act between and this latest sparsely packaged artefact, revisiting that Zickzack spidery black text and that ever-present dancing primitive swamped here by an acidic yellow, harbours some seriously lovely junkyard / alt-pop moments.

reviews

Einstürzende Neubauten – Rampen (apm: alien pop music)

  • Album review
  • Einstürzende Neubauten
  • Michael Rodham-Heaps
Published 05/04/2024
Rotem Geffen - The Night Is The Night

There is an intensity to the delivery especially when set against the stark tones of solo piano, the English words of the self-titled opener dancing into German as Katt Hernandez's lazy violin curls around the piano like smoke. These shards of violin that are spread throughout the album work as threads that draw the stories along, a serrated light into which the voice stares longingly.

reviews

Rotem Geffen – The Night Is The Night

  • Album review
  • Mr Olivetti
  • Rotem Geffen
Published 05/04/2024
Kjetil Mulelid - Agoja

For the first album under his own name, a more fluid group of musicians has gathered to flesh out musical expressions that have been approached in a way that highlights the melody and rhythm, but also allows plenty of room for extemporisation. The other lovely thing about the album is that, although it is born of Kjetil's ideas, he leaves acres of space for his guests often moving into the background to allow the likes of Arve Henriksen, Martin Myhre Olsen and Signe Emmeluth to step forward and lead the way.

reviews

Kjetil Mulelid – Agoja

  • Album review
  • Kjetil Mulelid
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 05/04/2024
The Conformists - Midwestless

Computer Students The Conformists have been toiling away in the St Louis hinterlands for nearly thirty years, crafting their awkward, distended “ugly rock music” and stretching it into new shapes, imbuing them with fresh perspectives and leading us away from leaden cruelty to a hypnotic, distorted romanticism that drags new blood and new earth from the cycle of days and seasons. Those arbiters of unusual time signatures Computer […]

reviews

The Conformists – Midwestless

  • Album review
  • Conformists
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 03/04/2024
SunnO))) live at The Marble Factory

Of all the times we’ve seen SunnO))) in action, this is definitely the best. The doom theatrics seem to be taken to a new level, visually grasping the apocalyptic with fresh conviction, the red disc lights behind glowing like dying suns cloaked in smokey blooms. Beacons shivering out in radiating spokes of arrowing light as the sound luxuriates in the smouldering pyroclastic cliff fall.

live reviews reviews

SunnO))) / Jesse Sykes with Phil Wandscher and Bill Herzog …

  • Bill Herzog
  • Jesse Sykes
  • live review
  • Michael Rodham-Heaps
  • Mr Olivetti
  • Phil Wandscher
  • SunnO)))
  • The Marble Factory
Published 03/04/2024
Twenty-five years and more of Freq (currently 26)

Freq has been online in various forms since 1 April 1998; this iteration has been around as of 2010, with an archive of older material available.

news

A quarter-century of Freq and counting… 27 years so far

2 Comments
  • About Freq
  • news
Published 01/04/2024
Erika Angell - The Obsession With Her Voice

Considering their current roster, Constellation is the perfect fit for this series of tracks that explore the interaction between electronics and voice in a completely unhindered and boundaryless fashion. Having spent time in groups and working on the edges of experimentation, this album focuses primarily on what Erika can achieve and how far she can push her voice within the song format.

reviews

Erika Angell – The Obsession With Her Voice

  • Album review
  • Erika Angell
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 29/03/2024
Nico - The Marble Index

I think of all the Velvet Underground effluvia this is the record I come back to most. I still massively rate Lou Reed as a songwriter but Nico is sheer vibes, like a cliff-face. From one angle she's massively unaffected -- the thin voice, that querulous vibrato. The proper folk singer approach of singing the notes largely undecorated. Nothing clever in her singing.

reviews

Nico – The Marble Index

  • Album review
  • Kev Nickells
  • Nico
Published 29/03/2024
Nico - Desertshore

Desertshore is not an easy listen. Across eight songs, which together are scarcely more than half an hour in length, Nico leads us on a melancholy musical journey through a portrait gallery of those who were, or had been, close to her: Garrel, Andy Warhol, her mother, Brian Jones, Ari. For a woman barely over thirty, there is already an abundance of loss, pain and sadness here, as Nico plays the role of medium to the voices of those troubled and damaged souls towards whom she had gravitated during her passage through the effervescent 1960s.

reviews

Nico – Desertshore

  • Album review
  • David Solomons
  • Nico
Published 27/03/2024
Fear City

A re-release of Abel Ferrara’s Fear City finds the cult classic as interesting in its flaws as ever. It’s the mid-'80s, New York is pre-clean up, still a landscape of neon, sex and hovering violence. Former Boxer Matt Rossi (Tom Berenger) and his business partner Nicky (Jack Scalia) run a management company for Manhattan’s best strip club dancers.

reviews

Fear City

  • Abel Ferrara
  • Bluray
  • film review
  • Joe Creely
Published 25/03/2024
Shiver meets Matthew Bourne – Volume 2

Recorded over two post-lockdown days, these recordings are consumed by a desire to play together in a room again after such a lay-off and that air of desire is palpable. This recording, encompassing the second day of the session, is alive with the possibility and their interaction and generosity is plain to hear.

reviews

Shiver meets Matthew Bourne Volume 2

  • Album review
  • Matthew Bourne
  • Mr Olivetti
  • Shiver
Published 25/03/2024
Martin Rev - Martin Rev

As a fan of Suicide’s tainted pop aesthetic, it’s not surprising that I’m loving the compelling sizzle here. That sleazy love muscle dissonantly dancing in all that analogue compression on Martin Rev's first solo release from the 1980s, now beautifully resurrected by those bastions of contemporary culture, Bureau B.

reviews

Martin Rev – Martin Rev

  • Album review
  • Martin Rev
  • Michael Rodham-Heaps
Published 23/03/2024

Recently

  • Laibach – Alamut
  • The All Golden – Chambers
  • Manuel Pasquinelli – Heartbeat Drumming: Bellmund Session
  • The Surfer
  • Ubiquitous Meh! – Oddville
  • Peg O’ My Heart
  • Yonglee and The Doltang – Invisible Worker
  • Brian Bilston and The Catenary Wires – Sounds Made By Humans
  • Druugg – Lost
  • Eurovision 2025
  • Eurovision qualifiers 2025
  • Golem
  • Black Cab
  • Xmal Deutschland – Gift: The 4AD Years
  • Thunderbolts*
  • Erlend Apneseth – Song Over Støv
  • Sinners
  • Andreas Tilliander and Goran Kajfeš – In Cmin
  • Firestations – Many White Horses / Songs Of Green Pheasant – Sings The Passing / Field Lines Cartographer – Solar Maximum / Perrache – Mt. Rubble
  • Drop
  • Bugge Wesseltoft – Am Are
  • Mekons – Horror
  • Maria Manousaki – Behind Closed Doors
  • Malmin – Med Åshild Vetrhus
  • Scanners / The Brood
  • Building Instrument – Månen, Armadillo
  • Billy Marrows and Grande Família – The Penelope Album Live
  • The Vultures – Liz Kershaw Session 16.06.88 / Shrag – Huw Stephens Session 09.12.10 / Marc Riley Session 21.03.12
  • Adam Fairhall and Johnny Hunter Play Mary Lou Williams
  • Ian Cleaver – Yarn!

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