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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

Malicious Damage After last year’s cosmic collaboration with David Gilmour, [post=orb-featuring-david-gilmour-metallic-spheres text=”Metallic Spheres”], The Orb come back down to earth with a bump for their new album C Batter C. It’s effectively a soundtrack for a film and an exhibition that was held in Brixton in London at the end of last year. But do the separate pieces stand up on their own, without the aid of a […]

reviews

The Orb – C Batter C

  • Album review
  • Gary Parsons
  • The Orb
Published 06/11/2011

The Vortex, London 20 October 2011 “Sorry we’re a little late in starting, we were meant to start at nine. I looked at my watch and it said ten to nine, then suddenly it said quarter past. That’s what happens when you stand at the bar talking shit.” Evan Parker takes to the stage at The Vortex with this typically low-key opening gambit, a self-effacing remark which serves […]

live reviews

Evan Parker (live at The Vortex)

  • David Solomons
  • Evan Parker
  • live reviews
  • The Vortex
Published 03/11/2011

Industrial …right, so I’ll get the actual review part out of the way, assuming someone’s reading this from either the perspective of not knowing Throbbing Gristle or is interested in what’s new in this re-release/re-master. This shouldn’t take too long, don’t worry. First – if you don’t know TG, and you’re in any way interested in early industrial music – that is, the variety that wasn’t a pale, […]

reviews

Throbbing Gristle – D.o.A: The Third and Final Report of …

1 Comment
  • Album review
  • Kev Nickells
  • Throbbing Gristle
Published 02/11/2011

La Rose Noire David Lynch is now 65. It’s amazing. Since the release of Eraserhead (once seen, never forgotten) in 1977, his career has seen so many ludicrously high peaks that is scarcely seems possible to précis them; Frank Booth dry humping Dorothy Valens to his climax, an oxygen mask pressed to his face whilst whining “Baby wants to fuck”, all under amniotic Edward Hopper-style lighting; Special Agent […]

reviews

Chrysta Bell – This Train

  • Album review
  • Chrysta Bell
  • David Lynch
  • David Solomons
Published 01/11/2011

Striate Cortex You might not know joinedbywire, but if you do, you’ll probably know them for their exquisite packaging. Their latest is no exception to that rule – it’s an entirely beautiful, apparently home-made, fabric-on-hardcase thing which makes me wonder quite why most CD packaging looks so hopelessly crap – especially limited run or self-released records. I’m not sure if a little .jpg will do it justice, but […]

reviews

Joinedbywire – _ 48 Space Platform

2 Comments
  • Album review
  • joinedbywire
  • Kev Nickells
Published 28/10/2011

O2 British Music Experience 25 October 2011 I had never been to the O2 before, but had heard lots of horror stories about it. Apparently it had poor sound, bad visuals, over priced drinks, and terrible for people with vertigo. Luckily enough I was not headed for the main arena – that joy was to be for Cliff Richard’s blue rinse brigade – I was going to the […]

live reviews

The Buggles (live)

  • Gary Parsons
  • live review
  • O2
  • O2 British Music Experience
  • The Buggles
Published 28/10/2011

Rockstore, Montpellier 19 October 2011 In the great parade of dark-suited, wild-whiskered and drink-crazed (allegedly) rock’n’roll frontmen with a penchant for country tunes and Southern gentlemanly manners, in whose songs God breathes hellfire as often as not

live reviews

Bonnie “Prince” Billy (live at Rockstore)

  • Bonnie "Prince" Billy
  • live reviews
  • Richard Fontenoy
  • Rockstore
Published 23/10/2011

Industrial OK, having not been born until 1971, I was a bit late to the Throbbing Gristle party. By the time I discovered them in the late 80s, they were long defunct, the mission having terminated several years before. So when they did reform, I was cock-a-hoop (do people still say “cock-a-hoop” anymore?), and by the same token I was greatly saddened by last year’s tragic death of […]

reviews

Throbbing Gristle – Heathen Earth

  • Album review
  • Deuteronemu 90210
  • Throbbing Gristle
Published 18/10/2011

Optimo This will play out. This will be roundly buggered, sliced and diced and shat out all over the lightflashes and discofloors of your local sleaze pit. It’s good music for dancing girls, car chases, hedge-trimming, car-jumping. Chris Carter has the Abba fixations, of course, but the Devil’s in the disco. The Neurotic Drum Band remix (reimagining) maybe slows the beat down a little to create something that […]

reviews

Chris Carter – Moonlight

  • Chris Carter
  • Loki
  • single review
Published 18/10/2011

Hippos In Tanks History is a virus. A fifth horseman of the apocalypse. It’s brutal, beyond reason, full of rage and memory; brittle with the fear of being forgotten. It loves and hates it’s host. Nostalgia is a dish served cold and for a long time now people have been struggling against it, trying to reheat old spices (and Old Spices), attempting to blur their way out. But […]

reviews

James Ferraro – Far Side Virtual

  • Album review
  • James Ferraro
  • Loki
Published 18/10/2011

Magic and Dreams In China Mieville’s wondrous The City And The City, the city of Beszel exists in more or less the same space as the city of Ul Qoma. The cities interweave, crosshatch; citizens unsee their counterparts in the other city, buildings themselves merge but don’t merge. Neighbours live next to each other but dutifully don’t notice their proximity, in fact are forbidden from doing so by […]

reviews

Ekoclef – Tapeswap

1 Comment
  • Album review
  • Bass Clef
  • Ekoclef
  • Ekoplekz
  • Loki
Published 14/10/2011

Rotorelief From the moment Bryin Dall starts singing “I Feel So Lonesome I Could Cry,” it’s evident that this is no ordinary selection of Hank Williams covers. With everyone (and probably their dog) who ever played a guitar seemingly having tackled their own version of the Hank Williams œuvre, Dall’s particular take on the subject matter primarily emphasises the pain and anguish of the songs, wringing every last […]

reviews

Bryin Dall – Deconstructing Hank

  • Album review
  • Bryin Dall
  • Linus Tossio
Published 09/10/2011

ReR It’s a curiosity, this one. I don’t know if you’ve seen Paolo Angeli‘s prepared guitar (have a look on YouTube), but it’s legions more cumbersome than the old crocodile clips and ebows that pass for prepared guitar in some circles. Part of me thinks of tacky one-man-bands when I look at it but, luckily for Angeli, the absurd look of his creation is quickly mollified by the […]

reviews

Paolo Angeli & Takumi Fukushima – Itunomanika

  • Album review
  • Kev Nickells
  • Paolo Angeli
  • Takumi Fukushima
Published 03/10/2011

Raster-Noton Alva Noto and Ryuichi Sakamoto‘s partnership is nearing a decade now, and it’s odd to think that (from what I remember), the pairing of a laptop and an acoustic musician was quite odd at the time – especially given Sakamoto’s history as a ‘proper’ classical musician. It could be philistine-coloured glasses on my part, but my memory of the early ’00s was that digital musicians and non-digital […]

reviews

Alva Noto & Ryuichi Sakamoto – Summvs/ANBB – Mimikry

  • Album review
  • Alva Noto
  • Blixa Bargeld
  • Kev Nickells
  • Ryuichi Sakamoto
Published 03/10/2011

Southern Lord Oh, Balaclava…can you come into the study for a minute? How are you? Seems like we never talk any more these days! Look…ahem…well. Your mother and I are worried about you. No, look, hear me out. You’re not in trouble, I just wanted to chat, y’know…man to man. And, you really are growing into a man now. It seems long since you were running around the […]

reviews

Balaclava – Crimes Of Faith

  • Album review
  • Balaclava
  • James Barry
Published 30/09/2011

Neurot Do you know where’s an interesting place to listen to this record? A chain coffee shop, in London’s Square Mile, at 8:15 on a Wednesday morning. , off to do important and responsible things. I suspect none of them are listening to Neurosis as they dodge buses on their Boris Bikes – Neurosis don’t lend themselves to this sort of urban drudgery. Not that there isn’t an […]

reviews

Neurosis – Sovereign

  • Album review
  • James Barry
  • Neurosis
Published 30/09/2011

Black Axis I was never a fan of slow music. I have tried to get a kick out of Sunn O))), and my enthusiasm lasts for a while, but then I get bored. Same again if they have some interesting guests, but usually it never helps. But then I heard Kollwitz and their debut Like Iron I Rust. They really made me open my ears to doomlike music […]

reviews

Pombagira – Iconoclast Dream

  • Album review
  • Pombagira
  • Ronny Wærnes
Published 29/09/2011

Critical Heights Imagine that Animal Collective could be reformatted like a hard drive. Imagine some mad urfolk indie scientist, their senses dulled by slow cracks and too good weed, decided that the shimmering pop tarts of Merriweather Post Pavilion was just too much to bear, too damned hummable and so somehow found a way to just suck the Baltimore boys back to a time, circa Spirit They’re Gone, […]

reviews

Savaging Spires – Savaging Spires

  • Album review
  • Loki
  • Savaging Spires
Published 29/09/2011

Recently

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