With 2025 already feeling somewhat weighed down with algorithmically-enhanced gloom, we’re undoubtedly going to need some sheer aural abandonment to get through the remaining pre-spring period… and indeed beyond. Enter then two new releases following divergent trajectories, aligned towards taking us away from it all.
Up first is Cosmic Seeds, the fifth album from Brown Spirits. Making up the third non-archival act on the Soul Jazz roster, the Melbourne-based Tim Wold (guitars, keys, synths), Agostino Soldati (drums, percussion) and Ash Buscombe (bass) are markedly not averse at exhibiting fierce and flexible democratic musicality, as illustrated by this new full-length set, which follows on from still-fresh Freq–reviewed outings from their less-gregarious labelmates, Hawksmoor and Trees Speak.
Thereafter, proceedings weave between Can’s most funkified motorik modes (“Mind Rocker” and “Out Out Out”); Maggot Brain-meets-Bitches Brew odysseys (“Magnetic Fields” and “Beat On Repeat”); astral-prog-jazz (“Magenta Haze” and the title track); and some languid yet squelchy psychedelic noodling (“Winter Solstice”).
Although it’s quite apparent that the three members of Brown Spirits are heavily under the influence of their combined record collections, Cosmic Seeds is richly distilled to the point where its intoxicating qualities ultimately transcend any magpie-minded ingredients gathering.With the launch of this fifth LP from Rose City Band, it’s somewhat hard to believe that group leader Ripley Johnson has also been frontman for Wooden Shjips and Moon Duo, given how far his current main venture is removed from more sonic edge-pushing nature of those two still hiatus-residing operations.
Contently immersed in Ripley Johnson’s latter-day laidback bubble, Sol Y Sombra ultimately lacks an edge to really get a grip upon, but if you are needing some unpretentious and sun kissed escapism at the murky end of winter, it fits the bill assuredly enough.
-Adrian-