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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

(Sinnbus) I Might Be Wrong come from Berlin and are, apparently, “supported by the Initiative Musik Non-profit Project Company Ltd. with project funds from the Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and Media on the basis of a resolution passed by the German Bundestag.” Splendid! – how can we resist an album boasting such venerable patronage? Naming your band after a song by your fave combo however, is rarely […]

reviews

I Might Be Wrong – Circle the Yes

  • Alan Holmes
  • Album review
  • I Might Be Wrong
Published 30/11/2009

uZu Music UnicaZürn was, apparently, a surrealist artist known for automatic drawing. I never knew that. Well, not until I just looked it up, anyway. The wonders of the internet. These days, at the touch of a button, you can learn all manner of things. You could, for example, go onto Freq and learn, from me, about the other UnicaZürn, whose début album, The Temporal Bends, I am […]

reviews

UnicaZürn – Temporal Bends

1 Comment
  • Album review
  • Deuteronemu 90210
  • UnicaZürn
Published 23/11/2009

Cooking Vinyl / Recommended Records Pere Ubu evolved in a different universe to the rest of 70s rock. In mainstream history as we know and remember it, The Sex Pistols single-handedly swept aside years of proggishness, clearing a completely new path and establishing the new year-zero (OK, that’s a parodic exaggeration, but it isn’t far from what it felt like at the time). But in Ubu world, then […]

review features reviews

Pere Ubu – Datapanik in the Year Zero/London * Texas

  • Album review
  • Andy Wilson
  • Pere Ubu
Published 07/11/2009

FatCat In a music world where the past is ever present, remarketed and remastered for future generations, The Twilight Sad seem to have chanced upon the dusty old trunk marked “The Eighties” and gleefully plundered its contents wholesale, though highly discriminatingly. Luckily, these resourceful Scots have what it takes to transcend the sum of their influences, rearranging the jigsaw pieces in a reassuringly wrong order – imagine The […]

reviews

The Twilight Sad – Forget the Night Ahead

  • Alan Holmes
  • Album review
  • The Twilight Sad
Published 02/11/2009

Earache This takes me back. Sometimes innovations can be pinned down to very specific musical moments. In the same way that Eddie Van Halen‘s tapping on “Eruption” spawned a legion of followers, Mick Harris‘ death blasts on “Scum” set the pace and tone of metal drumming for decades to follow. Its hard to overstate the impact of “Scum” and late 80s UK hardcore. Suddenly everyone was listening to […]

reviews

Various Artists – Grind Madness at the BBC

  • alaric
  • Bolt Thrower
  • Carcass
  • Earache
  • Extreme Noise Terror
  • Godflesh
  • Heresy
  • Intense Degree
  • Napalm Death
  • Peel Sessions
  • Unseen Terror
  • various artists
Published 31/10/2009

 Earache This isn’t what I’d expect from Earache at all. Cauldron are a “traditional” metal outfit from Canada. Not a hint of Grind Madness here. Maybe Cauldron are a sound of things to come. Growling and evil has dominated metal for quite some time now. Yeah it can be great fun, but its a little one dimensional isn’t it? And hey making devil horns and growls is quite […]

reviews

Cauldron – Chained to the Nite

2 Comments
  • alaric
  • Album review
  • Cauldron
Published 31/10/2009

Constellation When Toronto’s Do Make Say Think emerged over a decade ago, they came over as an enjoyable but slightly generic example of the Canadian post rock scene of the time, seemingly doomed to live in the shadow of Montreal’s Godspeed You! Black Emperor, before fading away when the post rock bubble burst. In the event, things have turned out very differently and as G!YBE themselves seem to […]

reviews

Do Make Say Think – Other Truths

  • Alan Holmes
  • Album review
  • Do Make Say Think
Published 30/10/2009

Ipecac Unlike a lot of remix albums where an artist gets a song to work with, the artists on Chicken Switch were given whole Melvins albums to work with. So each track is a remix of a whole album. The Melvins chose experimental electronic artists for Chicken Switch, with such names as Matmos, Lee Ranaldo, Merzbow, Kawabata Makoto and Speedranch getting involved. The result is a pretty extreme […]

reviews

Melvins – Chicken Switch

  • alaric
  • Album review
  • Melvins
Published 28/10/2009

Easy Action While a 4CD set of murky cassette recordings of the same set from four different Stooges shows during Spring 1971 is clearly only of any real interest to hardcore Stooges fans, why would anybody not be a hardcore Stooges fan? The three holy relics that have sustained the Stooges’ reputation for the past thirty five years are in themselves perfectly realised works of unparalleled slobbering rock […]

reviews

The Stooges – You Want My Action

  • Alan Holmes
  • Album review
  • boxed set
  • The Stooges
Published 23/10/2009
Sister Iodine

(Éditions Mego) I first became aware of Sister Iodine when my group Fflaps played alongside them in Lille way back in November 1992. I enjoyed them a lot – they played a thrilling high energy no wave inflected punk rock, full of dissonant guitar savagery, filtered through an inscrutable Gallic nonchalance. Maybe their sound at the time owed a little too much to Sonic Youth, whose Lee Ranaldo […]

reviews

Sister Iodine – Flame Désastre

  • Alan Holmes
  • Album review
  • Sister Iodine
Published 23/10/2009
Faust (live at Pop Montréal)

Pop Montréal, Ukrainian Federation, Montréal 3 October 2009 The gathering krautrock-keen fans filled both levels of the seated, community-centre vibe auditorium known as the Ukrainian Federation which has hosted the likes of Patti Smith, Joanna Newsom, Loudon Wainwright III, and A Silver Mt. Zion. For Faust’s first ever show in Canada, heralding their entrance, Jean-Hervé Peron started by squawking and squealing on a trombone from the back of the […]

live reviews

Faust (live at Pop Montréal)

  • Faust
  • live reviews
  • Nancy Zerbny
  • Pop Montréal
Published 15/10/2009

(Southern Lord) What We All Come to Need is Pelican‘s first full length release on Southern Lord and and continues their elusive path of powerful instrumental rock. Southern Lord have also announced a tour with stable mates Wolves in the Throne Room, which has the makings of some must see gigs. Two fantastic but very different bands. What We All Come to Need is a superb album. At […]

reviews

Pelican – What We All Come to Need

  • Album review
  • AP
  • Pelican
Published 02/10/2009

(Geo) Alarm bells ring when the press release quotes from Mixmag‘s review of Roshi‘s previous release And Stars: “Stunningly beautiful Welsh-Iranian electronica torch songs” conjures up visions of dinner party audio floss – an unsuspecting musical victim snatched from a ‘novelty’ country, tacked on to a politely unobtrusive trip-hop beat and polished to a mirrored sheen with Real World™ grade 1000 aural sandpaper. Happily, The Sky and the […]

reviews

Roshi featuring Pars Radio – The Sky and the Caspian …

  • Alan Holmes
  • Album review
  • Roshi featuring Pars Radio
Published 30/09/2009

(Babel) The sleeve notes to By Proxy quote Aldous Huxley: “After silence, that which comes nearest to expressing the inexpressible is music.” But what Partisans express is not the arcane or ineffable but rather a straightforward affection for a rather uncontroversial jazz, probably circa whenever it was that Eric Dolphy was playing with Coltrane. The Partisans know what they are doing too, with guitarist Phil Robson and sax […]

reviews

Partisans – By Proxy

  • Album review
  • Andy Wilson
  • Partisans
Published 25/09/2009

(Gravid Hands) Leverton Fox have somehow largely cut themselves loose from contemporary cliches. Coming in a gorgeous Crayola-spattered cover, Country Dances is made of equal parts jazzy articulation and jagged electronic invention. Not that there’s anything obviously ‘jazz’ here, just heavily treated percussion and brass being moulded and distressed along with location recordings and plenty of abstract electronic tics and tears. Maybe the spirit of Han Bennink is […]

reviews

Leverton Fox – Country Dances

  • Album review
  • Andy Wilson
  • Leverton Fox
Published 25/09/2009

(Percepts) Apparently, Teleseen is the ‘primary alias’ of producer Gabriel Cyr, who claims to be “on the vanguard of combining dub and reggae with experimental electronic music” – a claim that’s true only in the sense that Daz really is a ‘revolutionary new product’, ie., not true at all. Such resort to unmediated hype is to be expected from someone who makes such a clunky show of his […]

reviews

Teleseen – Fear of the Forest

  • Andy Wilson
  • Teleseen
Published 25/09/2009

Casa Del Popolo, Montréal 16 September 2009 Another Alien8 extravaganza at Casa Del Popolo in Montréal: guaranteed visceral jiggling with nice folks who make confrontational music. A panda bear stands behind a flower-strewn hill, arms aloft, beseeching a soldier. Rainbow beams explode from the bear’s mouth through the soldier’s torso. The contradictory poster for this Alien8 happening may have the candy-coloured hue of yesteryear’s psychedelia, but don’t expect […]

live reviews reviews

ThisQuietArmy/Aun/Nadja (live)

  • Aun
  • Casa Del Popolo
  • live review
  • Nadja
  • Nancy Zerbny
  • ThisQuietArmy
Published 17/09/2009

Dirter Hmm. Nurse With Wound. Nurse With Wound, Nurse With Wound, Nurse With Wound. What to say? Writing about Nurse With Wound is like trying to nail a jellyfish to the fourth wall. After what seems like over nine thousand albums of surrealist sound sculptures, Stephen Stapleton (and partners in crime Andrew Liles, David Tibet, and a whole bunch of other skewed prophets) hasn’t yet lost the ability […]

reviews

Nurse With Wound – The Surveillance Lounge

  • Album review
  • Deuteronemu 90210
  • Nurse With Wound
Published 02/09/2009

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