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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
Baal and Mortimer - Deixis

Bureau B You know that you are in for a mysterious journey when the artist’s name Baal and Mortimer turns out to be a pseudonym for one Alexandra Grubler. Her ability to fuse sparse electronics with disembodied but somehow compelling vocals is really rather impressive, and for each of the thirteen vignettes compiled here, the mood changes subtly, often hesitant, the sounds hiding in shadows, stretching and pulling […]

reviews

Baal and Mortimer – Deixis

  • Album review
  • Baal and Mortimer
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 04/08/2020
Teleplasmiste - To Kiss Earth Goodbye

House Of Mythology As their debut’s successor, Téléplasmiste‘s third album To Kiss Earth Goodbye tones down the spacey dronescaping, that Time Machines-like purr, of the previous LP in favour of a more transitional tingle where dancing structures free up the space, openly invite an otherness to come and play.

reviews

Téléplasmiste – To Kiss Earth Goodbye

  • Album review
  • Michael Rodham-Heaps
  • Téléplasmiste
Published 03/08/2020
Ewa Justka - Upside Down Smile

Editions Mego The panoply writ “disruption” was cursed paratactically; or better, pastiche’s ante-noumen should imperatively be considered hypotactically. That is, without hesitation or compunction — res ipsa loquitur — but also mured qua violence (a tendril disavowed ‘twixt Richard of St Victor / Libidinal Economy).

reviews

Ewa Justka – Upside Down Smile

  • Album review
  • Ewa Justka
  • Kev Nickells
Published 03/08/2020
The Doomed Bird Of Providence - Rumbling Clouds of War Hover Over Us

10 To 1 Australian expat Mark Kluzek‘s The Doomed Bird of Providence has been producing thoughtful, melancholy travelogues for the weary of heart for the best part of ten years. These often focus on colonial times in his native Oz, but on Rumbling Clouds of War Hover Over Us, the journey described is even more personal to Mark and much closer to home for us.

reviews

The Doomed Bird Of Providence – Rumbling Clouds of War …

  • Album review
  • Mr Olivetti
  • The Doomed Bird Of Providence
Published 03/08/2020
J Majik - Always Be

Infrared Metalheadz veteran J Majik follows up 2019’s well received Full Circle with a three-disc album, Always Be, which continues his melding of old school drum’n’bass with a certain experimental scattering of sounds across the banging beats, making it a little more than just a raucous dancefloor filler.

reviews

J Majik – Always Be

  • Album review
  • J Majik
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 03/08/2020
Conrad Schnitzler - Con

Bureau B The opener “Electric Garden” on Bureau B‘s re-release of Conrad Schnitzler‘s 1978 album Con sets up a wonky forest of purr-cussive sirens that mercurially glisten, shapes that gently ricochet the headphones in buttery artificiality, form-filled but formless, bending that Karlheinz Stockhausen concrete into something less stoic and more playful.

reviews

Conrad Schnitzler – Con

  • Album review
  • Conrad Schnitzler
  • Michael Rodham-Heaps
Published 28/07/2020
Drift - Symbiosis

Tapete Symbiosis is Nathalie Bruno‘s first solo album-length outing as Drift.. After membership of Leave The Planet and Phosphor, and her Black Devotion and Genderland EPs, Nathalie decided to lock herself away and search within to complete a collection of tracks that would hold together as an album. it is fair to say that on the strength of Symbiosis, she has succeeded in that plan.

reviews

Drift. – Symbiosis

  • Album review
  • Drift
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 28/07/2020
Gunther Wüsthoff - Total Digital

Bureau B A splinter from the original Faust family, Gunther Wüsthoff presents a selection of his solo work as Total Digital via Bureau B. The title is one which the first three tracks encompass superbly in a triptych of machined doodles, pre-fixed by “TransNeptun”, a series far removed from planet Faust as it is humanly possible.

reviews

Gunther Wüsthoff – Total Digital

  • Album review
  • Günther Wüsthoff
  • Michael Rodham-Heaps
Published 27/07/2020
The Spermaceti Organ - Cosmic Distance Ladder

Courier Sound The latest release from The Spermaceti Organ, on a lovely cassette from Courier Sound, is a crazy, lurid yellow in an orange outer case; a vibrant and vivid release that is somehow the opposite of the distant light-smeared visions evoked by the sounds.

reviews

The Spermaceti Organ – Cosmic Distance Ladder

  • Album review
  • Mr Olivetti
  • The Spermaceti Organ
Published 21/07/2020
André Stordeur

André Stordeur was a pioneer of modular synth music and the leading exponent of the form in his native Belgium; sadly, he passed away in April 2020 before being able to complete a session or be interviewed for Philippe Petit‘s Modulisme. A session was however constructed from historic recordings, and the interview (which has already appeared on Modulisme) reproduced below dates from 2018, conducted by Chris Ferreira.

features interviews

Modulisme: André Stordeur

  • André Stordeur
  • Chris Ferreira
  • interviews
  • Modulisme
Published 18/07/2020
Das Rad - Adios Al Futuro

Discus Martin Archer must be one of the busiest men in music. Not content with running Discus, every other release seems to have some involvement from him, covering so many different styles and moods it is remarkable. Here we find him teaming up once again as Das Rad with Nick Robinson and Steve Dinsdale for another improvised excursion into noir-ish soundscape territory. Adios Al Futuro is the follow […]

reviews

Das Rad – Adios Al Futuro

1 Comment
  • Album review
  • Das Rad
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 14/07/2020
Jobina Tinnemans - Five Thoughts On Everything

Bright Shiny Things It might be that “landscape”‘ is as much defined by borders as it is landmass. Jobina Tinnemans‘ music (arguably) has a dual relationship with landscape — when we say the landscape of electronic music, we might mean IDM, electronica, soundscapes, field recordings (etc), each with their own borders. Tinnemans is clearly not beholden to such impermeable notions of border.

reviews

Jobina Tinnemans – Five Thoughts On Everything

  • Album review
  • Jobina Tinnemans
  • Kev Nickells
Published 14/07/2020
Fabrik - Impermanence

Fabrik Birmingham’s Fabrik are releasing their second album of rolling, experiential grooves on the back of a previous track, “Black Lake”, being picked up for use as a podcast theme in the States. Via stateside crowdfunding, they have put together a physical release for this album that is packed full of slinky vibes and evocative soundscapes, twisting around the beguiling vocals of singer Hayley Trower.

reviews

Fabrik – Impermanence

  • Album review
  • Fabrik
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 09/07/2020
Anima-Sound - Im Lungau

Play Loud! Excellent! More Limpe Fuchs goodness leaks out of Berlin-based Play Loud!, this time stretching back to the late seventies when she was an integral part of a duo called Anima-Sound with her husband Paul. Collecting together a series of live recordings made during the 1977 festival at Castle Moosham in the Lungau region of Salzburg, Austria, Im Lungau is an artefact saved from the brink and […]

reviews

Anima-Sound – Im Lungau

  • Album review
  • Anima-Sound
  • Michael Rodham-Heaps
Published 27/06/2020
The Microdance - Our Love Noire

Somewherecold Judging by the sleeve notes, the latest release from Alex Keevill‘s The Microdance has clearly had a difficult gestation, but the end result seems to have been well worth the sweat and tears. Over the course of fourteen tracks and more than an hour, we are taken on an emotional journey that hints at a kind of alt-rock direction, though Our Love Noire does rather plough its […]

reviews

The Microdance – Our Love Noire

  • Album review
  • Mr Olivetti
  • The Microdance
Published 27/06/2020
The Fall - Reformation Post TLC

Cherry Red This has been out a couple of months by the time you’ll read this. Do we worry about release cycles any more? I’m not too worried. Though there’s a strong chance that the core Fall fan, especially the sort to salivate over studio slurry, probably does worry. Bless his male-pattern CAMRA farts heart. Speaking of salivating over slurry, here’s the latest iteration in “the new normal”. […]

reviews

The Fall – Reformation Post TLC

  • Album review
  • Kev Nickells
  • The Fall
Published 26/06/2020
SPEKT1

SPEKT1 released his latest Instinct EP on his own We Got This label on 8 June 2020. The bass-heavy EP draws on his DJ past and his love of genres from trap to techno, drum and bass to reggae, glitchhop to soul-funk also features guest spots and collaborations from the likes of 23 Odd Cats, Wink and Prime Perf.

news

SPEKT1 “Town Funk” premier

  • 12" EP
  • premier
  • SPEKT1
Published 10/06/2020
Irma Vep - Embarrassed Landscape

I first caught Edwin Stevens perform as Irma Vep sometime in the late noughties at London’s Mascara Bar venue. He took to the stage solo and struck me as an earthier Will Oldham-type character: radiating emotion and pathos with only a guitar and voice. The set was intense and beautiful; it also involved humour and belching. In the intervening years, Irma Vep has released a flurry of LPs, […]

features interviews

“I owe nothing to reality”: Irma Vep interviewed

  • Andrew Doig
  • interviews
  • Irma Vep
Published 08/06/2020

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