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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
Rangda - False Flag

Drag City The foundations of rock music are built on strata that have long eroded for all but the most credulous. It was initially fun, sexual and swaggering; angry, rebellious and irreverent; energetic, spontaneous and irrepressible; extrovert, engaged and innovative. Decades of mishandling by musicians, record labels, critics and musicologists have caused these qualities to be all but stripped away. Energy and spontaneity have been neutralised by expectations […]

reviews

Rangda – False Flag

  • Album review
  • Rangda
  • Seth Cooke
Published 09/07/2010
Cluster – Qua

Klangbad Longevity in the fickle world of pop music has traditionally been an undervalued trait and Cluster, now well into their fourth decade as a musical unit, have long been an elusive presence as they’ve sailed through the decades since their inception in 1969 (with fellow electronic pioneer and Zodiak Arts Lab alumni Conrad Schnitzler as Kluster with a ‘K’). Cluster have seen through the ‘heroic years’ of […]

reviews

Cluster – Qua

  • Album review
  • Cluster
  • Jim Backhouse
Published 06/07/2010
The Necks at The Barbican Theatre

The Barbican Theatre, London 26 June 2010 The Necks have had a pretty good upswing in their fortunes with London performances over the last few years, with sold-out runs of nights at The Vortex in Dalston so successful they added in extra shows late into the night, followed up by a triumphantly immense performance in the ecclesiastically-charged setting of the Union Chapel in May 2009. Tonight’s set finds […]

live reviews reviews

The Necks (live at The Barbican)

  • Barbican Theatre
  • live reviews
  • Richard Fontenoy
  • The Barbican
  • The Necks
Published 04/07/2010
Disappears - Lux

Kranky I have to admit I’d never heard of Disappears before this record landed in my lap, so I looked them up online. (Research, see? Professionalism and that. That’s what seperates us real professional music writer types from the blogroll masses.) A noisy Chicago four-piece, refugees from the sad decline of Touch and Go records, Disappears have found an unlikely home for themselves at glitch-(and drone – Ed.)-merchants […]

reviews

Disappears – Lux

  • Album review
  • Anton Allen
  • Disappears
Published 03/07/2010
Lisa Dillan – Arousal

AIMsoundCity Lisa Dillan is a vocal improviser originating from the northern parts of Norway. She is a trained and educated jazz singer, but many years ago she moved further away from the jazz, and started exploring the possibilities that lies within improvising with the voice and creating various mouth sounds. When I first watched this tiny woman doing a live performance some years ago, it was a big(!) […]

reviews

Lisa Dillan – Arousal

  • Album review
  • Lisa Dillan
  • Ronny Wærnes
Published 30/06/2010
Skjølbrot - Maersk

DIY/unsigned Recording studios are time machines, capable of layering conflicting alternate pasts, warping space into new configurations and building dreamlike gestalts from contrasting times and places. But we could be forgiven for thinking otherwise. Engineers and producers have worked diligently for decades to maintain the illusion they’re releasing records made by pub rock bands performing live together in the same place at the same time (live performance being […]

reviews

Skjølbrot – Maersk

2 Comments
  • Album review
  • Seth Cooke
  • Skjølbrot
Published 23/06/2010
Jazkamer – We Want Epic Drama

Pica Disk The June edition of the Jazkamer monthly series, We Want Epic Drama, is the first album with the full metal line-up since the highly acclaimed Metal Music Machine was released. Two drummers, electronics and three guitars promises quite an onslaught. However, that is often the case with Jazkamer, two or more members almost always manages to present an impressive wall of sound, no matter what. As […]

reviews

Jazkamer – We Want Epic Drama

  • Album review
  • Jazkamer
  • Ronny Wærnes
Published 19/06/2010

The Underworld, London 17 June 2010 With their tattooed limbs and trucker caps, their wall-eyed glares and N’Awlins shirts that might never actually have seen better days, Weedeater strike about as Southern image as can be imagined, straight out of Wilmington, North Carolina via the casting for a Rob Zombie slasher flick soundtracked by the leavings of the stoner blues. Set down like they were at home on […]

live reviews

Weedeater (live at The Underworld)

  • live reviews
  • Richard Fontenoy
  • The Underworld
  • Weedeater
Published 18/06/2010

Minor Fall Records This is an EP that really wants you to like it from the moment you see the sleeve. It screams “Hey, I’m friendly, we could hang out and play Swingball!” First off you get a really endearing picture of a smiling jukebox as the sleeve art, and then the CD itself is pretending to be vinyl. It’s beautiful packing, it really is, and to an […]

reviews

The Cellophane Flowers – If I Was A Girl

  • Album review
  • Deuteronemu 90210
  • The Cellophane Flowers
Published 17/06/2010
Oneohtrix Point Never - Returnal

Editions Mego The problem with the notion of Hypnagogic Pop was never the music, and Oneohtrix Point Never‘s superb Returnal demonstrates that fact perfectly. Brooklyn’s Daniel Lopatin makes tried and tested emotive music with plenty of precedent. Tangerine Dream is the most frequently cited, but you could equally choose any number of works by Vangelis or Jean Michel Jarre or Aphex Twin‘s Select Ambient Works

reviews

Oneohtrix Point Never – Returnal

  • Album review
  • Oneohtrix Point Never
  • Seth Cooke
Published 15/06/2010
Little Annie & Paul Wallfisch - Genderful

Southern From early avant-garde releases on the legendary Crass records as Annie Anxiety, to guest slots with artists as varied (and awesome) as Coil, Nurse With Wound, On-U-Sound and Collapsed Lung, to her current incarnation as Little Annie, Annie Bandez has been nothing if not prolific, apart from eclectic. Now she and long-term collaborator Paul Wallfisch (Botanics, as well as the criminally-underrated unofficial contender for Best Band In […]

reviews

Little Annie and Paul Wallfisch – Genderful

  • Album review
  • Deuteronemu 90210
  • Little Annie
  • Paul Wallfisch
Published 10/06/2010
Omar Souleyman - Jazeera Nights

Sublime Frequencies The third compilation of Omar Souleyman’s Syrian party music to be released by Sublime Frequencies doesn’t require much in the way of context for new listeners.  It’s a dance-pop album.  All that really matters is whether it’s catchy and whether it makes you want to flail around making an utter goon out of yourself.  Happily both criteria are met with a resounding YES. Despite being culled […]

reviews

Omar Souleyman – Jazeera Nights

  • Album review
  • Omar Souleyman
  • Seth Cooke
Published 10/06/2010
Hawkwind - Alien 4

Atomhenge Ah, the mighty ‘Wind. Where to start? Let’s assume that readers have at the very least a passing knowledge of Hawkwind‘s classic 1970s material and mythos. That decade’s long strange trip went roughly thus for the Hawks: early ‘electronic barbarian’ days in the Ladbroke Grove freak scene, then the never-bettered industrial strength trance-riffage of the Space Ritual era, before moving on to leaner, tighter, sci-fi dystopianism in […]

reviews

Hawkwind – Alien 4

  • Album review
  • Hawkwind
  • Manfred Scholido
Published 09/06/2010
Celeste – Morte(s) Nee(s) sleeve

Denovali French black metal hardcore act Celeste has realesed an album that is a proper dirty heavy black screaming noisy rotten piece of work that really takes me to some of my darkest places. Not only being dark, they are occasionally so heavy it makes my head want to go down and the rest of my body move underground. Don’t get me wrong; they are still a hardcore […]

reviews

Celeste – Morte(s) Nee(s)

  • Album review
  • Celeste
  • Ronny Wærnes
Published 03/06/2010

Invada David Wrench received an epiphany while trapped in the worthy nu-folk purgatory of the Green Man Festival last year. Surrounded by polite and twee young indie kids who had discovered acoustic instruments and woolly jumpers, he despaired at how a once radical and iconoclastic social force had been reduced to yet another lifestyle and fashion choice. As synchronicity would have it, at that very moment he received […]

reviews

David Wrench / Black Sheep – Spades & Hoes & …

  • Alan Holmes
  • Album review
  • Black Sheep
  • David Wrench
Published 02/06/2010

Groenland New NEU! Releases are by their very nature important events, their three classic albums having grown in stature year on year since their original release back in the early 70s. Most serious fans of the group will have bought NEU!4 when Ken Matsutani’s excellent Captain Trip Records released it briefly back in 1995. The masters used, recorded in 1986 but subsequently aborted, were supplied by drummer Klaus […]

reviews

NEU! – NEU!’86/NEU!’72 Non-Public Test

  • Alan Holmes
  • Album review
  • NEU!
Published 02/06/2010

Esoteric Forever doomed to be remembered as the one hit wonder god of hellfire, Arthur Brown is surely a true British eccentric maverick in the tradition of Syd Barrett, Peter Hammill and Genesis P. Orridge. After The Crazy World split, Arthur Brown put together the similarly theatrical group Kingdom Come in 1970. The group’s 1971 debut album Galactic Zoo Dossier was recently reissued by the people at Esoteric, […]

reviews

Arthur Brown – Kingdom Come/Kingdom Come – Journey

1 Comment
  • Alan Holmes
  • Album review
  • Arthur Brown
  • Kingdom Come
Published 01/06/2010

Gwymon The “quiet one” from Gorky’s Zygotic Mynci has been somewhat, well… quiet of late. In the five years since his former group officially called it a day we have been treated to no fewer than five releases from his ex-bandmate Euros Childs and yet We Went Riding is only Richard’s second solo offering, following on from 2006’s superb Seven Sleepers Den. As with his Beatles counterpart George, […]

reviews

Richard James – We Went Riding

  • Alan Holmes
  • Album review
  • Richard James
Published 01/06/2010

Recently

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