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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
R.O.C (photo by )

Preceded by the “Chateau” single earlier this month, unconventional musical subversives R.O.C return with their first album in twelve years, Bile And Celestial Beauty, appearing on rocmusic on 29 March. Oleg Rooz has created seven short films to go with the album, and his video for the track “Divorce”, which is released this Friday (15 March) and receives its exclusive premiere below, accompanies an interview with Mr Olivetti.

features Films interviews

“Some of the most difficult stuff is the most entertaining” …

  • film
  • film premiere
  • interviews
  • Mr Olivetti
  • Oleg Rooz
  • R.O.C
Published 13/03/2019
Conny Plank: The Potential of Noise

Cleopatra / MVD Visual Conny Plank and his circle were, as record producer David M Allen says: “The hippies who fell in love with machines”. * Much has been said about how the youth of Germany needed to reinvent themselves – and their art – at the end of the Second World War. Distancing themselves as quickly as they could from their parents’ generation, some found inspiration in […]

reviews

Conny Plank: The Potential Of Noise

  • Conny Plank
  • DVD
  • film review
  • Leon Muraglia
Published 07/03/2019
George McFall - XIV:Surrounder

Tenement George McFall‘s first release under his own name, after stepping out from behind his Clean George IV pseudonym, has quite an intense edge with an arch and literate drive that stands it out from a lot of the synth-based music of the moment.

reviews

George McFall – XIV:Surrounder

  • Album review
  • George McFall
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 02/03/2019
Rocket Girl 20

Rocket Girl I have fond memories of corresponding with head Rocket Girl Vinita back in the 1990s, those heady days of hand-folded seven-inch singles and US imports being posted out from their East London lair for the equivalent cost of a second class stamp in today’s over-inflated mail costs. That the little notes nearly always came from her and would also include suggestions of bands to whom she […]

reviews

Various Artists – Rocket Girl 20

  • A Place To Bury Strangers
  • Album review
  • Andrew Weatherall
  • books
  • Coldharbourstores
  • Dan Treacy
  • Füxa
  • Jon de Rosa
  • July Skies
  • Kirk Lake
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  • Mr Olivetti
  • Piano Magic
  • Pieter Nooten
  • Robin Guthrie
  • Silver Apples
  • Transient Waves
  • various artists
  • White Ring
Published 01/03/2019
Test Dept - Disturbance

One Little Indian The beats might be more machine tooled than salvaged these days, but Test Dept still haven’t lost any of that rage or taste for addressing injustice. This return to form is snarling at the usual subjects, the dirty end of capitalism and its bankrupt ideologies.

reviews

Test Dept – Disturbance

  • Album review
  • Michael Rodham-Heaps
  • Test Dept
Published 28/02/2019
Coldharbourstores - Vesta

Enraptured Enraptured Records must be in their twenty-fifth or twenty-sixth year now, and although things seem to have gone a little quiet on their front over the last few years, Coldharbourstores are still flying the flag for them and are back after a mere three years with their follow-up to 2016’s Wilderness. With Graham Sutton back behind the desk again

reviews

Coldharbourstores – Vesta

  • Album review
  • Coldharbourstores
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 28/02/2019
A Swarm Of The Sun - The Woods

Version Studio Swedish duo A Swarm Of The Sun have been together for a good ten years or so, but this latest album is their first since 2015. Erik Nilsson, guitarist and pianist of the duo, is also chief of Version Studio Records, the group’s label; and vocalist Jakob Berglund arranged the beautifully monochromatic artwork, all snowy forestscapes and misty moods.

reviews

A Swarm Of The Sun – The Woods

  • A Swarm Of The Sun
  • Album review
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 28/02/2019
Rema-Rema - Fond Reflections

4AD Sadly, I wasn’t old enough to see Rema-Rema in the flesh — it was only as a result of being an avid 4AD label nut that I spied this curio in the mail-order catalogue back in the early 1990s, an EP that almost instantly became one of my treasured finds. A squealing black heart of a surprise that I can now some forty years later finally sample […]

reviews

Rema-Rema – Fond Reflections

  • Album review
  • Michael Rodham-Heaps
  • Rema Rema
Published 27/02/2019
Caspar Brötzmann Massaker - Black Axis

Southern Lord After listening to these first two re-issues in a planned series, I can see why Southern Lord would want to be responsible. Thirty years after their initial releases, their legacy lives on in the sound and sweep of various members of the Southern Lord roster both past and present.

reviews

Caspar Brötzmann Massaker – The Tribe / Black Axis

  • Album review
  • Caspar Brötzmann
  • Caspar Brötzmann Massaker
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 27/02/2019
Thighpaulsandra - Practical Electronics With...

Editions Mego Thighpaulsandra‘s voice is all over this one, words full of shady vampirics and sliding context, your imagination stitching the suggestion as they suck in the scenery around them. He’s a great story-teller too (I reckon he has a lucrative future in audiobooks for sure), fleshy and descriptive, the narratives noir-flowering a certain flamboyance

reviews

Thighpaulsandra – Practical Electronics With…

  • Album review
  • Michael Rodham-Heaps
  • Thighpaulsandra
Published 26/02/2019
Elena Setién - Another Kind Of Revolution

Thrill Jockey Elena Setién doesn’t rush into releasing albums. This is her third in six years and her first for Thrill Jockey, who really seem to be expanding their palette at the moment, and so Basque-born but Danish resident Elena brings a kind of remote, subtle beauty to the fold. The songs contained within Another Kind Of Revolution‘ describe her love for everyday life and what nature has […]

reviews

Elena Setién – Another Kind Of Revolution

  • Album review
  • Elena Setién
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 26/02/2019
Mammoth Weed Wizard Bastard - Yn Ol I Annwn

New Heavy Sounds Hey kids, let’s talk about nominative determinism! You know, that thing where someone’s name informs what they do, like having a dentist called Dr Tooth or a Tory councillor called Mr Gaping-Anus. It’s fun! Thing is, it tends to work the other way round with bands, because traditionally they actually CHOOSE their names rather than being christened at birth.

reviews

Mammoth Weed Wizard Bastard – Yn Ol I Annwn

  • Album review
  • Justin Farrington
  • Mammoth Weed Wizard Bastard
Published 25/02/2019
Atomic - Pet Variations

Odin Scandinavian jazz quintet Atomic have been pushing the jazz boundaries since 2001, but on this latest album, their second since moving from Jazzland to Odin, they have chosen to reinterpret some unusual tracks from other writers and from other eras, dipping from the outer reaches of jazz to pop to pieces by Edgar Varese and Olivier Messiaen. It is a varied palette that gives the quintet ample opportunity

reviews

Atomic – Pet Variations

  • Album review
  • Atomic
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 25/02/2019
Innerwoud and Astrid Stockman - Haven

Consouling Sounds This recent collaboration between Belgian double bassist and drone composer Innerwoud with soprano Astrid Stockman comes drifting out of the speakers like mist floating across a long forgotten battlefield. There is a humanity here, fused with a kind of melancholy that envelops the listener in a web of distant memories.

reviews

Innerwoud and Astrid Stockman – Haven

  • Album review
  • Astrid Stockman
  • Innerwoud
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 16/02/2019
Saba Alizadeh - Scattered Memories

Karlrecords Well, this one wrong-footed me, to be sure. The début album of Iranian composer and musician Saba Alizadeh, I had anticipated something of a showcase for Monsieur Alizadeh’s virtuoso stylings on his chosen instrument, the kamancheh, which he has been playing since the age of ten. Related to the redoubtable rebab, the compelling kamancheh is a form of long-necked four-string fiddle, played with a variable tension bow.

reviews

Saba Alizadeh – Scattered Memories

  • Album review
  • David Solomons
  • Saba Alizadeh
Published 14/02/2019
Endon - Boy Meets Girl

Thrill Jockey I have to say, this might be the most psychotic thing that Thrill Jockey have ever released in a twenty-five-year, nigh on 500 release career. In a nutshell, Japan’s Endon sound like an electronic-infested sludgy rock band standing around a pit while their vocalist is burnt alive, and recording the results. It is chaotic and more than a little harrowing, as vocalist Taichi Nagura visits the […]

reviews

Endon – Boy Meets Girl

  • Album review
  • Endon
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 14/02/2019
Cleaning Women - Intersubjectivity

Svart The band name is (possibly) a play on their instruments rather than their trade — it’s a trio of Finnish men playing on a bunch of junk instruments — a repurposed laundry rack, a wash tub bass, that sort of thing. It’s mixed by Einstürzende Neubauten‘s Alexander Hacke who, as you’re probably aware, knows a thing or two about ekeing elegance from repurposed industrial shrapnel.

reviews

Cleaning Women – Intersubjectivity

  • Album review
  • Cleaning Women
  • Kev Nickells
Published 13/02/2019
Frame - The Journey

Glacial Movements Eugenio Vatta is a Rome-based electronic musician who has been releasing stuff sporadically for quite some time. He has chosen his pseudonym of Frame to release his semi-ambient minimalist treatise on travel. Taken as a series of ten pieces, each named after a planet in our solar system with the ultimate being the arrival at an unknown point

reviews

Frame – The Journey

  • Album review
  • Frame
  • Mr Olivetti
Published 09/02/2019

Recently

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