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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
http://www.bureau-b.com - s/t

Bureau B Both Etienne Jaumet and Fabrizio Rat are trained pianists, but they have done their level best to obfuscate that fact under layers of progressive experimentation that finds Etienne concentrating on modular synthscapes while Fabrizio treats the piano in a far more percussive manner than we might be used to, distending the strings as he hammers the keys.

reviews

Etienne Jaumet and Fabrizio Rat – Etienne Jaumet and Fabrizio …

  • Album review
  • Etienne Jaumet
  • Fabrizio Rat
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 06/04/2022
Sussan Deyhim & Richard Horowitz - Desert Equations : Azax Attra

Crammed Discs Crammed‘s reissue programme for their Made To Measure series continues unabated with the extraordinary collaboration between Iranian vocalist Sussan Deyhim and New York sound artist Richard Horowitz. Originally released in 1986, this album merged Sussan’s ululating vocal explorations with Richard’s fearless electronic textures and took the listener on a journey that somehow combined the chilled sand-blown wonder of the Sistan Desert with the gritty of New […]

reviews

Sussan Deyhim and Richard Horowitz – Made To Measure Volume …

  • Album review
  • Mr Olivetti
  • Richard Horowitz
  • Sussan Deyhim
Published 04/04/2022
Suicide - Surrender

Mute / BMG Suicide are an odd band. Considered legendary influencers today, at the time (at least, according to the excellent No Dogs In Space podcast series on them) both reviled and adored — people hated the music, but loved Alan Vega and Martin Rev, so kept giving them gigs. Some people got it, though, perhaps most notably Bruce Springsteen, whose album Nebraska bears all the bloodstains of […]

reviews

Suicide – Surrender

  • Album review
  • Justin Farrington
  • Suicide
Published 04/04/2022
Nick Robinson - Lost Garden

Discus Discus regular Nick Robinson has been experimenting with guitar looping for over twenty years and his experimental trio Das Rad finds opportunities to interweave them with Martin Archer and Steve Dinsdale. Here though on a rare solo outing, it is all about the guitar in all its incredibly varied manifestations.

reviews

Nick Robinson – Lost Garden

  • Album review
  • Mr Olivetti
  • Nick Robinson
Published 04/04/2022
Rodney Cromwell - Memory Box

Happy Robots Having been fortunate to catch Rodney Cromwell, the nom de plume of regular Happy Robots recording artiste Adam Cresswell, supporting Pram some years ago, I was looking forward to hearing his latest release and was not disappointed. This is his second album and continues his crusade, using ’80s synth sounds to reproduce his own soft, dreamlike world.

reviews

Rodney Cromwell – Memory Box

  • Album review
  • Mr Olivetti
  • Rodney Cromwell
Published 04/04/2022
Ashtray Navigations - Before You Play This

Blue Tapes Those prolific Ashtray Navigations have more lo-fi on your hi-fi – a ten-track odyssey that leaves your brain a fizzin’. The diode-soaked bag-piping of the first takes no prisoners, brings back that glittery glutton of “Bird’s Beak”, oozy with a plunge-pool of sticky sauce celebratories. Meditatives you tune into, adjust your antennas towards and the slippery eels of “The Tactic” make it far easier to disgust.

reviews

Ashtray Navigations – Before You Play This

  • Album review
  • Ashtray Navigations
  • Michael Rodham-Heaps
Published 28/03/2022
Kee Avil - Crease

Constellation The cover image of the debut album by Montréal producer Kee Avil is certainly a disconcerting one. She sits at a desk in a sterile room with a paper mask of her own face over her actual face. It gives the sense of a twist of reality which runs through the ten tracks on Crease, merging abstract experimentation with sinuous rhythm and her own insinuating vocals.

reviews

Kee Avil – Crease

  • Album review
  • Kee Avil
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 28/03/2022
Moshonsensu - A Strange Dystopian Tundra

Redenetic Daryl Robinson’s Mōshonsensu creation is all about the construction of elaborate soundworlds that whisk the listener away from the everyday and place them amid unknown machinery and mysterious animals, strange sounds emanating from abandoned structures, sand-borne decay and the solitude of the vast prairie.

reviews

Mōshonsensu – A Strange Dystopian Tundra

  • Album review
  • Moshonsensu
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 28/03/2022
Placebo - Never Let Me Go

Elevator Lady First of all, Brian Molko is still, twenty-some years after I ever first saw him, one of the most physically perfect humans I have ever seen. Does this matter in the scheme of things? Well, when you consider his strange voice, almost too nasal and sometimes too non-singeresque, the repetitive-on-purpose lyrics and the way he just eclipses everything else to do with his own profession, it […]

reviews

Placebo – Never Let Me Go

  • Album review
  • Maryna Fontenoy
  • Placebo
Published 21/03/2022
Shirley Smart and Robert Mitchell - Zeitgeist²

Discus This current project of the classically trained duo of pianist and poet Robert Mitchell and cellist Shirley Smart came about after conversations back in 2014. Their desire to merge the structure of classical with the freedom of improv led to this collaboration, in which Robert also wished to address his family’s history and their relationship to the Windrush scandal in a way that is accessible yet emotive.

reviews

Shirley Smart and Robert Mitchell – Zeitgeist²

  • Album review
  • Mr Olivetti
  • Robert Mitchell
  • Shirley Smart
Published 14/03/2022
My Lord Music I Most Humbly Beg Your Indulgence In The Hope That You Will Do Me The Honour Of Permitting This Seed Called Keiji Haino To Be Planted Within You

Purple Trap Keiji Haino has rarely been one to avoid portentous titles and boy howdy has he stayed on-brand with My Lord Music I Most Humbly Beg Your Indulgence In The Hope That You Will Do Me The Honour Of Permitting This Seed Called Keiji Haino To Be Planted Within You. Away from Fushitsusha, Haino has a reputation for playing an extensive range of instruments — Shruti boxes, […]

reviews

Keiji Haino – My Lord Music…

  • Album review
  • Keiji Haino
  • Kev Nickells
Published 14/03/2022
Michael Bardon - The Gift Of Silence

Discus Martin Archer from Discus mentions that there are very few solo bass albums being released these days; but thankfully Michael Bardon, erstwhile member of Shatner’s Bassoon, has chosen to correct that. Over ten wildly varied pieces on The Gift Of Silence, he pushes both the bass and cello and our understanding of what sounds can be wrenched from them to their limits.

reviews

Michael Bardon – The Gift Of Silence

  • Album review
  • Michael Bardon
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 14/03/2022
Keeley Forsyth live March 2022

Bristol 10 March 2022 The acoustic charms of Stroud-based Maja Lena are first up, a songbird sweetness of voice attached to a fingerpicking deftness, that ’60s Yamaha neck dwarfing her fingers, her vocals skipping like wind-blown grass to gentle tonal shifts, then leaping unexpectedly in joyous abandon. The slumbering reflections of her Christmas-themed song reverbing to those silent quilted fields, the matted mulch of morning leaves.

live reviews reviews

Keeley Forsyth / Maja Lena (live at Strange Brew)

  • Keeley Forsyth
  • live review
  • Maja Lena
  • Michael Rodham-Heaps
  • Strange Brew
Published 14/03/2022
Bugge Wesseltoft - Be Am

Jazzland Since starting Jazzland twenty-five years ago, Bugge Wesseltoft has dipped in and out of collaborations and various artist projects with regularity, finding different modes of expression depending on the players involved. Here, shorn of any outside involvement apart from assistance from Håkon Kornstad on a couple of pieces, we find Bugge at the piano allowing his mind to wander, seeing where this freedom and time to ponder […]

reviews

Bugge Wesseltoft – Be Am

  • Album review
  • Bugge Wesseltoft
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 14/03/2022
Duncan Marquiss - Wires Turned Sideways In Time

Basin Rock The first solo album from erstwhile Phantom Band guitarist Duncan Marquiss treads a lovely line between the craggy, lonesome vistas of the highlands and the sweeping, metronomic pulse of middle Europe. Spread over seven long tracks, Wires Turned Sideways In Time moves between spare fingerpicked acoustic melancholy and heartbeat-riven synthscapes, managing to tie the two together in a warm bed of panoramic mystery.

reviews

Duncan Marquiss – Wires Turned Sideways In Time

  • Album review
  • Duncan Marquiss
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 07/03/2022
Loop - Sonancy

Cooking Vinyl Back in the distant ’80s, Loop’s heavy sound was a breath of fresh air. A hazy comfort blanket surfing a scissored sustain that a few years later and three albums in simply imploded, its nucleus split straight down the middle and slung-shot out into various new distractions. As if success had become a catalyst for change, Robert Hampson ditched his guitar for the seriously cerebral electronics […]

reviews

Loop – Sonancy

  • Album review
  • Loop
  • Michael Rodham-Heaps
Published 04/03/2022
Orfeo 5 - The Long View

Discus The latest release from pastoral improv troupe Orfeo 5 is tinged with a certain melancholy due to the passing of vocalist Ali Rigg. Main man Keith Jafrate, having chosen to review some pieces with which Ali had been involved back in 2007/2008, contacted Shaun Blezard and the sad circumstances came to light. These five older pieces were to be part of the collection of current work and […]

reviews

Orfeo 5 – The Long View

  • Album review
  • Mr Olivetti
  • Orfeo 5
Published 04/03/2022
FMS-80 - Lifestyle 02

Rednetic This latest release by FMS-80 on the ever-intriguing Rednetic label spins through series of dizzying, pastoral soundscapes bobbing on a sea of loops that scatter like sunlight on turbulent waves. A riot of bells on opener “Beidaihe Loop” holds incredible vibrancy, the mantra-like simplicity of the rippling loops moving through “Esplanade View” like a static vista of a fresh day, that panorama across a sunlit harbour in […]

reviews

FMS-80 – Lifestyle 02

  • Album review
  • FMS-80
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 28/02/2022

Recently

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