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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
Yosef Levitt and Peter Broderick - River Of Eden

Once again there is an impromptu group consisting of Yonathan Avishai on piano, Itay Sher on guitar and Yoed Nir on cello to colour in the compositions, but it is the interplay between Peter and Yosef that makes the album such an intriguing listen. Peter has clearly done a lot of travelling (he is an American who lived in Denmark but is now based in Ireland), but easily merges into new environments which makes this album a surprisingly comfortable fit for him.

reviews

Yosef Gutman Levitt and Peter Broderick – River Of Eden

  • Album review
  • Mr Olivetti
  • Peter Broderick
  • Yosef Gutman Levitt
Published 11/01/2025
Bridget Hayden And The Apparitions – Cold Blows The Rain

I’ll admit that before this album crossed my desk I hadn’t heard of Bridget Hayden before, but I’m always willing to take a listen to anything new on the folk scene, particularly as that scene is currently experiencing something of a purple patch. Having said that, anyone who has heard of Bridget before will know that she is usually more associated with lo-fi noisy drones, reverb-heavy blues and feverish waves of doom-laden sound, so this album of traditional folk appears to be going off on something of a tangent.

reviews

Bridget Hayden And The Apparitions – Cold Blows The Rain

  • Album review
  • Bridget Hayden
  • Dave Pettit
  • The Apparitions
Published 06/01/2025
The Green Telescope - Andy Kershaw Session 23.01.86 / Blueboy - Deux / The Loft - “Dr. Clarke” b/w “Got A Job”

After branching further out of apparent comfort zones across 2024 in terms of content and format manoeuvres, Precious Recordings pivots once again, around the turn of the New Year, with three self-set-boundary-breaking releases.

reviews

The Green Telescope – Andy Kershaw Session 23.01.86 / Blueboy …

  • 10" EP
  • 7" vinyl
  • Adrian
  • Blueboy
  • EP review
  • The Green Telescope
  • The Loft
Published 05/01/2025
Elin Forkelid - Songs To Keep You Company On A Dark Night

For her latest adventure, the title pretty much says it all, dialling down the wilder proclivities for something more subdued; an album that allows the four players, Elin on saxes, Tobias Wiklund on cornet and trumpet, David Stackenäs on guitar and Mats Dimming on bass, plenty of low-key interaction that embraces the listener, warming the fireplace for a battened-down experience.

reviews

Elin Forkelid – Songs To Keep You Company On A …

  • Album review
  • Elin Forkelid
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 05/01/2025
Téléplasmiste - Of Nature And Electricity

Whirring the hinge between this world and elsewhere, Téléplasmiste's Of Nature And Electricity’s’ compass points are plentiful -- exploratory. Gently coaxing themselves into the uncharted, a softly rounded trip into the infinite.

reviews

Téléplasmiste – Of Nature And Electricity

  • Album review
  • Michael Rodham-Heaps
  • Téléplasmiste
Published 30/12/2024
Slomo - Zen and Zennor

Capturing the atmospheric flavour of an ancient Cornish burial site, Slomo’s fifth album is a mid-winter’s dream, ditching the well-trodden refuge of dark ambience in favour of something less menacing, more nuanced.

reviews

Slomo – Zen And Zennor

  • Album review
  • Michael Rodham-Heaps
  • Slomo
Published 30/12/2024
Memorials – Memorial Waterslides / Windy & Carl – Heavy Early And The Creation Of Venus / Dean and Britta and Sonic Boom – A Peace Of Us

For those feeling forswunk and seeking to switch-off over the mid-winter break, then musical products conceived by artists in hermetic bubbles seem suitably worthy of some eleventh-hour examination, at the end of a very hectic 2024. As the three below albums attest…

reviews

Memorials – Memorial Waterslides / Windy & Carl – Heavy …

  • Adrian
  • Album review
  • Britta Phillips
  • Dean Wareham
  • Memorials
  • Sonic Boom
  • Windy & Carl
Published 23/12/2024
The Blair Witch Project

What worked perfectly on a sketchy VHS at home suddenly seemed to fall flat on the big screen. It’s all about the suspension of disbelief -- being able to believe something you know intellectually is a fiction is real. Turns out it’s easier to do that when you’re not in a building whose very existence is predicated on showing people things that don’t exist, and when you’re not in the company of hundreds of people eating popcorn.

DVD, bluray & video Films reviews

The Blair Witch Project

  • Bluray
  • Daniel Meyrick
  • Eduardo Sanchez
  • film review
  • Heather Donahue
  • Joshua Leonard
  • Justin Farrington
  • Michael C Williams
Published 23/12/2024

Such is the sheer abundance of output from the music world in recent times -- which feels particularly acute this year -- it can be quite hard not to miss key things, even from reliable sources. Yet, thankfully, two distinctly dissimilar albums from the trusty homestead of Gard Du Nord Records have been extracted from the review pile just in time for Freq coverage in 2024. Both remind us that the label’s quietly radical diversity remains a compelling force running in the background of the record-releasing business.

reviews

Misha Chylkova – Dancing The Same Dance / Keiron Phelan …

  • Adrian
  • Album review
  • Keiron Phelan
  • Misha Chylkova
  • Peace Signs
Published 20/12/2024
Barbican Estate – Barbican City Of Tokyo

Barbican Estate are a Japanese trio now based in London and this release for Feral Child compiles four previously available tracks that were either downloads or pressed on limited cassette runs. Because of this, there is pretty good variety in the selection and with a running time of a little under half an hour, there is plenty of opportunity for them to spread their magic.

reviews

Barbican Estate – Barbican City Of Tokyo

  • Barbican Estate
  • EP review
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 20/12/2024
The Nefilim - Zoon

When it dropped in 1996, Zoon received a very mixed reception. It landed at a weird time, when the goth / industrial rock alliance had been forged but was still a somewhat uneasy one. On first hearing, I and many others were disappointed that what we were getting wasn’t more Fields Of The Nephilim, but what initially sounded like a softer, more introspective Ministry -- and really, what’s the point of a softer, more introspective Ministry?

reviews

The Nefilim – Zoon

  • Album review
  • Justin Farrington
  • The Nefilim
Published 20/12/2024
Neon Lemon - Hypnagogic Visions

Considering each of the six members plays at least two instruments, this is a surprisingly light affair; the bass sways and the guitar licks are textural delights and the slow, steady drums allow everything to slowly unfold. Vocals are dreamy in a Spacemen 3 kind of way; but sort of buried, as if frazzled by the bright lights.

reviews

Neon Lemon – Hypnagogic Visions

  • Album review
  • Mr Olivetti
  • Neon Lemon
Published 20/12/2024
Celebrate Yourself! The Sonic Cathedral Story 2004–2024

On reaching its twentieth birthday, Nathaniel Cramp’s Sonic Cathedral label has arguably benefitted from a degree of nominative determinism. Whilst he has tirelessly championed the sacred tenets of shoegaze, it’s not been in a restrictive small chapel sect-like way, but in a very broad-church fashion.

reviews

Various – Celebrate Yourself! The Sonic Cathedral Story 2004–2024 / …

  • Adrian
  • Andy Bell
  • Cheval Sombre
  • Dean Wareham
  • Deary
  • Dot Allison
  • Dummy
  • Emma Anderson
  • Horsegirl
  • Lorelle meets the Obsolete
  • Maps
  • Mark Peters
  • Masal
  • Neil Halstead
  • Not Me But Us
  • Pye Corner Audio
  • Three Quarter Skies
  • Various
  • Whitelands
  • Yeti Lane
Published 20/12/2024
eat-girls - Area Silenzio

This debut from French trio eat-girls is a bountiful beast as the dark-noted dirge-tastic drag of the opener ("On a Crooked Swing") testifies. The male / female coin-flip of vocals slinking over the tightly hooked half-lit gloom. The mournful and whispery Malaria-like creep of "Unison" snaking all seductive in the ear, that nocturnal prowl of guitar lobe mauling as lyrics overspill, tip noisily to retract beautifully back on this lush lullabied afterglow.

reviews

eat-girls – Area Silenzio

  • Album review
  • eat-girls
  • Michael Rodham-Heaps
Published 09/12/2024
Sassyhiya – Take You Somewhere

Skep Wax Carrying on from a richly productive 2023, Amelia Fletcher and Rob Pursey’s stealthily effective Skep Wax label set-up has this year continued to alternate between curating latter-day ventures from indie-pop veterans and nurturing newer talents. Whilst this has manifested in a slightly lower output in terms of records released, in favour of more live events, the tail end of 2024 and the start of 2025 seems […]

reviews

Sassyhiya – Take You Somewhere

  • Adrian
  • Album review
  • Sassyhiya
Published 09/12/2024
Wanu - Magma

Wanu is the solo nom de plume of Swiss bassist and composer Sébastien Pittet, but for this Magma project, he is assisted by Sébastien Guenot, who provides live drawings, and Mathias Durand who deals with multicasting and sound processing. Seb Pittet's background is in jazz, but this latest project moves far away from any kind of structure and into the realms of shadowy soundscape

reviews

Wanu – Magma

  • Album review
  • Mr Olivetti
  • Wanu
Published 07/12/2024
Mat Watson Photo: Elizabeth Watt

Australian experimental, improvisational and traditional multi-instrumentalist Mat Watson is known for being part of large and uusual orchestras and collaborations. He has played with Boredoms, conducted an orchestra for 40 synthesisers at the Sidney Myer Music Bowl, has multiple solo and collaborative projects on the go at any one time.

features interviews

Modulisme: Mat Watson

  • features
  • interviews
  • Mat Watson
  • Modulisme
Published 07/12/2024
Stomatopod – DrizzleFizzle

Whilst many bands at certain operational levels come alive for evenings and weekends, it seems as if the members of Chicago power-trio Stomatopod need them more than most outside of their day jobs, to discharge emotionally and recharge electrically. With this second full-length album from the ensemble – following on from 2022’s sturdy six-song Steve Albini-cut Competing With Hindsight mini-LP – it feels like the post-nine-to-five uncorking is positively explosive.

reviews

Stomatopod – DrizzleFizzle

  • Adrian
  • Album review
  • Stomatopod
Published 07/12/2024

Recently

  • Hallow Road
  • UFO67 – Hypogeum 68!
  • Hurry Up Tomorrow
  • World Sanguine Report – Songs From The Harbour
  • I’m Being Good – Shapeshitter
  • AVAWAVES – Heartbeat
  • Mark Fry – Not On The Radar
  • Angle Shades – Twirler
  • Final Destination Bloodlines
  • Laibach – Alamut
  • The All Golden – Chambers
  • Manuel Pasquinelli – Heartbeat Drumming: Bellmund Session
  • The Surfer
  • Ubiquitous Meh! – Oddville
  • Peg O’ My Heart
  • Yonglee and The Doltang – Invisible Worker
  • Brian Bilston and The Catenary Wires – Sounds Made By Humans
  • Druugg – Lost
  • Eurovision 2025
  • Eurovision qualifiers 2025
  • Golem
  • Black Cab
  • Xmal Deutschland – Gift: The 4AD Years
  • Thunderbolts*
  • Erlend Apneseth – Song Over Støv
  • Sinners
  • Andreas Tilliander and Goran Kajfeš – In Cmin
  • Firestations – Many White Horses / Songs Of Green Pheasant – Sings The Passing / Field Lines Cartographer – Solar Maximum / Perrache – Mt. Rubble
  • Drop
  • Bugge Wesseltoft – Am Are

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