Tuesday, July 31, 2007

GULLIVER'S TRAVELS-S/T, LP, 1969, UK




A mythical and rather ludicrous (in both the positive and negative senses of that word) album from the U.K. psychedelic underground, briefly tossed on the market by Instant Records before it was quickly withdrawn for it's boucoup copyright infringements. This stoned piss-take party was overseen by none other than Andrew Loog-Oldham and, if nothing else, really deserves to be recognized for being the first overtly plunderphonic recording extant, collaging chunks of appropriated source material from everyone from The Lovin Spoonful to Little Richard, wrangling it through periodic primitive processing, patching it together with contributions from Mike D'Abo of Manfred Mann's band, tapes being run backwards and fluffy orchestrations, all in a thoroughly haphazard fashion and all ostensibly inspired by a stage production of Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels, though how that ties into any of the malarky at hand is anyone's guess. Note: as there is absolutely no correspondence between the number of track titles listed and the actual number of cuts banded on the vinyl, I've just ripped each side as one cut, since accurate titling is impossible.

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Z.S.K.A.-DAS BESTE VON Z.S.K.A.-TAPE, 1981, GERMANY




Much like the archival material of theirs that was issued on 7" vinyl around five years back by Was Soll Das? Shallplatten, this is a beautifully relentless Neue Deutsche Welle doink hammer of pots 'n' pans percussion, primitive synth blurt and effected vocal slurry that should make anyone enamored by this warts-and-all side of the NDW equation idiotically happy.

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RICK POTTS-CAROUSEL OF PROGRESS, 3" CDR, 2005, USA




Released as part of P-Tapes ongoing 3" CDR series in an edition of a mere 100 copies, this 20 minute treasure from L.A. Free Music Society maestro Potts (Solid Eye, Gothic Hut, Human Hands, Steaming Coils, Dinosaurs With Horns, Le Forte Four etc.) wheels into existence on a whisp of wheedling musical saw, judders into a convulsive calliope hallucination and then spends most of the duration finding novel ways to melt the established sonic fabric into funhouse mirror inversions of it's prior structure before finally taffy stretching itself into a blasted tonal drift. Wonderful.

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OMOIDE HATOBA-DAIONGAKU, CD, 1989, JAPAN





Following my posts of several other titles by this beserk Boredoms offshoot, here's their long unavailable debut missive. Interestingly, this presages some of the more constructivist developments that Yamamoto would later apply as The Boredoms constrained the dementia into more digestible packets starting with Pop Tatari. This is not to suggest that there's any shortage of synapse frazzling spazz attacks at hand. Far from it. But in typical Omoide Hatoba fashion, the post punk shitfits are playing footsie with the psychedelically sprawling in ways that stymie pigeonholing as much as they do rational thought when in it's destabilizing presence.

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The Last-Look Again ,LP,1980,USA

Influenced by '60s surf, psychedelia, and folk-rock, brothers Joe (guitar), Mike (vocals), and David Nolte (bass) of Los Angeles formed the Last in 1976, along with associates Jack Reynolds (drums) and Vitus Matare (keyboards). The Last might be considered a seminal indie band, having released early singles on their own label, Backlash. Their first album, L.A. Explosion, released in 1979 on the Bomp! label, has been lauded as a powerful and nearly perfect first effort.
The Last recorded a second album, Look Again, in 1980 on Backlash and distributed it privately. In 1982, they returned to Bomp! for the EP Fade to Black, and then completed Painting Smiles on a Dead Man for Lolita Records before disbanding in 1985. David Nolte left to join Wednesday Week and eventually ended up in Lucky. The band reformed in 1988 with Luk Lohnes on guitar and vocals, Missy Buettner on bass, and Robbie Rist on drums joining Joe and Mike Nolte from the original lineup. That year they toured outside of California for the first time and released Confessions on the SST label. Two more releases on SST have followed -- Awakenings in 1989 and Gin & Innuendo in 1996. Dave Nazworthy replaced Rist on drums during the recording of Awakenings, and David Nolte has a cameo appearance on that album as well. Nazworthy also plays for the Chemical People.
Through the personnel changes, the Last have maintained a consistent style of potent power-pop, heavily influenced by the local music they grew up listening to in Southern California.
~ Nick Kemper, All Music Guide
for more infos visit Last's website
Only 60-100 test pressing copies known to exist.Excellent mod/psych farfisa driven sounds all through!A great companion to everyone's summer holidays!

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Brother JT and Vibrolux -Music For The Other Head ,LP,1996,USA

Squirrelly, off-kilter, and more than slightly disturbing psychedelia doesn't come much more off than this. If Syd Barrett actually did crack via his acoustic ditties, Brother JT gives the sense of cracking with a full band behind him on Other Head. Certainly JT's opening snippets of conversation on "Comet" mentioning insanity and asking after Vibrolux member Difuria actually sound fairly calm, but as his voice starts snorting and snarling once the singing begins, Kansas (or, more appropriately, Pennsylvania) has been left behind. States of mind aside, though, "Comet" is a great monster of a track, a 20-minute-long workout with some truly grand guitar madness, of the squalling open-ended variety as opposed to clean fret wankery. The main line, "The comet will come," is repeated throughout like a mantra while more yelps, squeals, and semi-random rants add to it all. The rhythm is simple but does the business, a dance on the edge of normality. "Music For" is about half that in length but no less gone. JT softly mutters then sings the title phrase (subtitle -- The one inside the one, as illustrated by the wonderfully grotesque album cover) as everyone softly tunes up and plays, much like "Comet" in general approach. The soloing is a bit calmer all around, but the overdubbed vocal squelching and noise continues on. The final two songs are more on the straightforward side, though hardly without their own slices of oddity. "Blur (Twas)" initially fires up with a little bit of wah-wah and singing, then stops entirely and turns into a full-on acid punk rocker, with some deliciously gurgled and sneered singing. Everything wraps up with "Mind (I Don't... If You... Or Rot)," a heavy slice of funk as revamped through JT and company's distinct sensibilities.
~ Ned Raggett, All Music Guide

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Carlos Maria Trindade & Nuno Canavarro-Mr. Wollogallu,LP,1991,Portugal

Great experimental /ambient with some ethnic touches release by ex-Corpo Diplomático - Heróis do Mar - Madredeus ,Carlos Maria Trindade and ex- Street Kids avant garde musician and film music composer Nuno Canavarro.

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End of Data-Sahrah,LP,1984,France

Great and rare French album .Minimal Synth,post punk and some art rockish hints. Would appeal to all fans of Autopilot,Kas Product,Dark Day,Sad Lovers and Giants,etc.

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Big City Orchestra-- Animal Religion,tape,1988,USA

One of the most idiosyncratic and original groups of the past two decades, BCO is not your standard Orchestra. Situated in the greater San Francisco Bay Area, the band has released an enormous catalog of recorded material over the past two decades. Formed in the late 1970's the ensemble continues to maintain a free-flowing roster of artists from around the world that collaborate on specific projects. Categorizing the Orchestra into any given genre can be a task, as releases continue to surprise even the most devout listener. There is never any way to precisely classify the next BCO release. An album of authentic sea-shanties? A wall of noise? A shimmering downpour of lullabies whispered to the wind? A humorous or thought-provoking album of Sound Collages? Vocal excursions set to make Rod McKuen blush? We press play, leaning forward with slight apprehension. We await the first wave of blissful deception. We are perpetually rewarded.
From Discogs
This one was released through Ralph label,contributors are Crawling With Tarts and it's all consisted by manipulated animal noises!

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VANAY, Laurence "Galaxies" LP 1974 (France)

Laurence Vanay is the pseudonym for Jacqueline Thibault, wife of music producer and musician Laurent Thibault (ex-MAGMA). Here is her debut album entitled "Galaxies", a very rare item indeed and a Holy Grail for most collectors of 70ies underground French progressive.

"Galaxies" opens in a progressive instrumental mood, a style elegantly dominating the entire record. The powerful swirling organ, with a sound that owes to early CATHARSIS, sets an atmosphere of acid hallucinatory mellowness which prevails throughout the whole recording. The sublime folk twists add an aura of quiet and restrained melancholy, soft and seductive yet in perfect emulation with the dreamy flute play. Refined sonorities are interwoven with troubled twists of anguish, to faint in an aetherial vaporous climate reminding delicate second CRESSIDA or early GRACIOUS. An album of inconspicuous, sincere beauty and a masterwork of the french progressive folk scene.

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Monday, July 30, 2007

Verdenskang - And it's there,tape,1985,Italy(Alien Brains/Organum related!)

Nigel Jacklin was the founding member of Alien Brainsa DIY noise/experimental band started by Nigel when hewas still at school in the late 1970’s. The school inquestion was Oundle a public school near Peterborough.Convincing the music teacher that their music “wasjust like John Cage” Nigel arranged for ThrobbingGristle to perform at the school on the 16th March1980. The concert was subsequently released on videoand apparently all but ended in a riot. (An extract ofthe performance can be seen on YouTube at:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zAX0ahuNcNo)

Moving to London Nigel released a number of AlienBrains tapes on such labels as Deleted Records,Fashionable Trousers and Snatch Tapes often featuringcollaborations with other like-minded experimentalistsincluding the Rupenus Brothers (New Blockaders), DavidJackman (Organum) and Philip Sanderson (SnatchTapes/Storm Bugs). A collaboration with the RupenusBrothers and Neil Purvis called Live at the Basementwas released recently in 2007on vinyl by Tub of Gutsin a limited edition of 200. A track by Alien Brainswas also featured on the 2006 Vinyl on Demand LPSnatch Paste.
Initially highly prolific gradually in the early 1980’s Nigel Jacklin’s output began to decreaseending with a final and arguably the best tape calledVerdenskang - And it's there. The tape credits saythat it was made in co-operation with: PhilipSanderson, Meat Means Bloody Murder, David Jackman andintroducing: Zena. The level of “co-operation” of thevarious parties is unclear as there is not track bytrack analysis but it seems likely from comments bysome of the parties that the tape includes extractsfrom both live appearances and recordings made onlocations at various sites including a South Londonschool, Ealing College, an abandoned swimming pool inNotting Hill and perhaps most exotically PuertoD'alcala, The Valley Of Assisi and Wisebach. Thoughreleased in 1985 Verdenskang is in effect a documentof collaborations from 1981-85. The tape isundoubtedly uneven but in places quite brilliant withsome exquisite drone and collage work that is up therewith the best of the New Blockaders. Organum and StormBugs work.
Thanks to Claire Thomas for this!
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Jeff Greinke-Cities In Fog,LP,1985,USA

Jeff Greinke is a musician, composer, performer, sound sculptor and visual artist known worldwide for his unique sound. Through a highly developed process of layering, Jeff composes and performs music rich in texture, depth, mood and subtle detail. Using various acoustic and electronic instruments, found sounds and extended studio techniques, Jeff sculpts sound worlds that conjure a strong sense of location, hovering somewhere between the familiar and the exotic. Key elements include mood, texture, space, motion and a perception of place, with no one element being primary. Jeff Greinke began composing and performing music in 1980 while studying meteorology at Penn State University. "As far back as I can remember I've been fascinated by the weather... I soon realized that much of my work runs parallel to this interest... It has always been more intuitive and experiential than scientific... I see the correlation between meteorology and my music more after the fact. It's never premeditated." Here, Greinke explains his approach to improvisation and composition, "I approach each new work as a blank slate. I begin by searching for interesting sounds from which to create a foundation, whether it be a drone, or little melodic phrase, or a compelling rhythm. Each piece evolves over time through a meticulous process of layering, combining sounds vertically and placing them spatially into a three dimensional environment. Each layer stimulates new ideas from which to continue until I reach a point where no new elements are needed."
After moving to Seattle in 1982, Jeff formed the production company and recording label, INTREPID, through which he produced his first LP, Cities in Fog. He has since released twenty other recordings on various U.S. and European labels. His most recent is entitled Weather From Another Planet, released in 2003 on First World, a label and distribution network he co-owns with four other musicians. Greinke's work can also be heard on numerous compilation recordings. He has composed music for film, video, dance, theatre, radio, and art installations. Jeff Greinke has toured extensively throughout the United States and Europe and has performed in China, Canada, and Mexico. His 8 May 1994 performance at The Gatherings Concert Series was a turning point for the innovative music scene in Philadelphia, "I approach live performance in a very different manner from that of the studio. I'm very much concerned with the 'live' aspect of the music, so I set up situations that require me to be fully involved with that process. I don't use any pre-recorded tapes, CD's, or pre-programmed sequencing. I am interested in performing music that is multi-layered, much like that of my studio work. So I tend to get a lot going on at once between my sampler, synth, other acoustic elements like trombone, voice, small percussion and several long delays. Things can get pretty precarious at times, and I like that. It keeps me active on stage - I'm dancing really - and there's a tension for me which I hope translates to the audience. Furthermore, the audience can visually see me expressing myself. I think this is important. Also, there's a greater amount of improvising going on, and when I'm on, in flow, that can be powerful for an audience." Greinke has also been a member of numerous ensembles and is founder of the group LAND, featuring Lesli Dalaba (trumpet), Dennis Rea (guitar), Bill Rieflin (drums) and Fred Chalenor (bass). LAND toured China in 1996 which included playing the prestigious Beijing International Jazz Festival. Greinke's current ongoing project is a collaboration with former Sky Cries Mary vocalist Anisa Romero called Hana. He is also working with the group Faith and Disease, "LAND and Hana have provided me with the opportunity to branch out into areas that also interest me - beyond that which I've explored as a solo artist. My work with Anisa has me experimenting with more conventional song-oriented forms of music while maintaining my textural moody sound." Contemplating the musicial evolution since the release of his first LP, Greinke relates that, "The changes have been very gradual. My work has become more refined yet also more broad, and somewhat more accessible. The earliest works were generally dark. My studio was very minimal and techniques fairly crude. My approach was experimental and adventurous. Slowly I began to infuse my work with rhythms. In 1989 I spent six months travelling around Southeast Asia. Upon returning I found that my aural experiences there were informing my music. The albums 'Changing Skies' and 'In Another Place' reflect that influence. Over time I developed my ability to create more complex and texturally interesting rhythms. I also began collaborating more with other musicians. I became intrigued by the possibilities presented through interacting with more adept players of instruments I wanted as part of my work. So I formed LAND in 1993. When I met Anisa, I was able to explore my interest in composing a more conventional style of music that none-the-less was imbued with the kinds of moods and textures that had been part of my music all along. At present both of my group projects have quieted down, so I am back focusing on my solo work, creating quieter compositions, similar in terms of mood and spaciousness as my earlier work, but pared down, simpler. I'm attempting to achieve some of the same qualities with less going on." Jeff Greinke's current musical offerings are Wide View (Hypnos) and Weather From Another Planet (FWD). On these releases Greinke leads the listener through a range of themes in tonality, coloristic range and contrast. The compositions seem basic: slow, open melodies over a shifting foundation of swelling harmonies. But these works are more than mere system driven modernism - ruled soley by a compositional method; it is introspective, personal and deliberately widely spaced. Here the mood ranges from noirish and nocturnal to idyllic and beautiful. Yet, these latest albums do not contradict the earlier isolationist atmospheric works, but are more interested in what can be discovered than in preserving what this artist is already known for. Perhaps now we have Greinke's most inviting works - his music for a newer century. Greinke's album Soundtracks debuted on the 08.15.04 broadcast of STAR'S END and was officially released at his concert in Philadelphia on 11 September.
Selected Press Quotes:
"Greinke continues to prove himself as one of our finest and most important composers and sound artists. His style has encompassed ambient industrial soundscapes, fourth-world exoticism and ambient washes, and he displays a magnificent ability to create compelling, sensual, tangible textures, sonorities, moods, and atmospheres."
- AUDION Magazine
"His music, which bridges synth, the avant-garde, ambient and industrial styles, can also be simultaneously accessible and challenging, a music in a no man's land for which no journalist has yet coined a cliche. If anything, Jeff's music is all about atmosphere, a power through subtlety." - AUDION Magazine
"Take the pace of everyday life and slow it down to the imperceptible movements of the planet. Take the sounds of a factory and spread them in a slow motion design. That's the concept of Jeff Greinke, a musician who has taken Brian Eno's ambient music concepts to extremes. He takes conventional instruments and slows them down, runs them backwards, sends them through extensive processing that changes their sound beyond recognition and places them in soundscapes like barges moving slowly through a fog."
- ECHOES Radio
From:http://www.starsend.org/jeffgreinke.html
Jeff Greinke's debut has just as much in common with industrial music as it does with ambient music. as the title suggests it's a collage of sounds you'd find in an urban environment - the hums of factories, machinery, engines, wind, far away crowds of people - and he blends them together in a murky fashion. although it is beatless and without words, there are clear, hypnotic rhythms emerged deeply in this quiet tension and the feeling one gets is that of utter isolation and a feeling of dread, a knot building in the stomach over the immense terror lurking somewhere in there, as if you're alone in a high rise flat looking out of the window at the grimy city below which is emerged in fog.

as requested!
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Czesław Niemen- Aerolit,LP,1974,Poland




Czesław Niemen (real name Czesław Juliusz Wydrzycki) (February 16, 1939 - January 17, 2004) was one of the most important and original Polish singer-songwriters and rock balladeers of the last quarter-century, singing mainly in the Polish language.
Niemen was born in Wasiliszki in Grodno county. He made his debut in the early 1960s, singing Polish rock and soul music. He possessed an unusually wide voice range and equally rich intonation. He was also an ardent composer and a keyboard player. Soon after his first successful concerts in France, he started to use the pseudonym Niemen instead of his real name, gaining wider notoriety in Poland and making it easier to pronounce by foreigners. His song of 1967, "Dziwny jest ten świat" (Strange Is This World) became the most important Polish protest song of that era. He was one of the first Polish performers to wear long hair and colourful clothes and introducing psychedelia style to communist Poland. The first three LP album's Niemen recorded with his band "Akwarele" (Watercolours). Subsequently, he recorded with his other new bands: "Enigmatic", "Grupa Niemen" and "Aerolit". In 1969 he changed musical style to progressive rock while recording the monumental album Enigmatic. The most notable song from it was "Bema pamięci żałobny rapsod" (A Mournful Rhapsody in Memory of Józef Bem), based on the 19th century poem by Cyprian Kamil Norwid. The rest of Enigmatic songs were a sung poetry as well. Niemen played Hammond organ, later mellotron and Moog synthesizer on his records.
In the early 1970s, Niemen recorded three English language albums under the CBS label. In 1974 he recorded Mourner's Rhapsody with Jan Hammer and Rick Laird from Mahavishnu Orchestra. In the seventies, Niemen turned to jazz-rock fusion and electronic music (Katharsis album). In 1972 he also contributed with a song performed by him in "Wesele" (The Wedding (1972 film)) by director Andrzej Wajda , laureate of an honorary Oscar. Later, Niemen also composed film soundtracks and theater music. In the 1990s he showed interest in art painting and computer graphics. He died of cancer in Warsaw.
FROM WIKIPEDIA
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Incontinents-The Call,LP,1981,France




Ineresting French band ,that released only this LP and a 7" through Scopa Invisible label. Influences of early Gang of 4,Maximum Joy,Medium Medium and the whole mutant funk Y records scene is more than obvious,all that mixed with the classic for the period post punk sounding.
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Beia Come Aba -st,LP,1979,Italy


An interesting combination of new age, prog, and fusion that leans toward sparse instrumentation and extended improvisation. In many ways it reminds me of early Vangelis (e.g. The Dragon or Hypothesis) but is more guitar driven. It's high points are courtesy of Antonio Lombardi (guitar) and Sergio De Francesco (keyboards). Released with 2 different covers.
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C.C.C.C.-Cosmic Coincidence Control Center,CD,1992,Japan

C.C.C.C. is a noise band from Japan, alongside such bands as Merzbow and Incapacitants.
The core line up of this band consisted of Hiroshi Hasegawa (also of the bands Astro & Mortal Vision) and former bondage-porn star Mayuko Hino. Hino would occasionally during live shows reprise this element of her past into her performances by engaging in such acts as onstage stripteases. Other members were occasionally and variably brought in for work on singular albums, but had no permanent membership in the band.
Aesthetically, the band, and Mayuko Hino in particular, advocated a very emotive and cathartic approach to noise music as opposed the conceptual and intellectual approaches advocated by many European noise musicians, most notably within the "power electronics" subgenre. Mayuko Hino believes that Noise, when done emotionally rather than intellectually, not only creates more interesting sounds, but reveals much about the personality of the noisemaker. Sonically, C.C.C.C.'s first release, "Cosmic Coincidence Control Center" was much quieter and much less distorted than most "Japanese noise" releases, bordering on being experimental ambient. Later releases, such as "Rocket Shrine" and "Love and Noise", however, took the psychedelic ambiance and oddball sounds of early C.C.C.C., but amplified the volume and distortion levels to easily be as loud, and harsh as other Japanese noise bands, if not more so. The band's later releases rank among the more sonically diverse of noise albums, exploring an incredible variety of sonic dissonances, while still maintaining a consistently ear-splitting loudness.
The band eventually broke up. Hiroshi Hasegawa has returned, by all appearances, to doing experimental ambiance, this time under the name Astro. In 1995, Mayuko Hino released an album called "Chaos of the Night", which also starred Monte Cazazza of "Industrial Records" fame.
As of early 2007, C.C.C.C. have announced a new CD release entitled "Chaos Is The Cosmos" which is forthcoming on Cold Spring Records.
FROM WIKIPEDIA

Harsh psychedelic noise at it's best!
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Sunday, July 29, 2007

SEPSIS-LITURGIA BEZUMIA, LP, 1991, RUSSIA




If you can begin to wrap your head around the idea of a fusion of Relayer-era Yes, The latter day Magic Band (especially Ice Cream For Crow) and Butthole Surfers circa Hairway To Steven, you'll begin to comprehend what this acidically brainburning Russian power trio have cooked up here on their sole release, the sickness of which is clearly suggested by the title, which translates to "A Liturgy Of Madness". Working it's way up to some of the most beautiful, baffling and unaccountably emotionally wrenching musical conflagrations I've yet encountered, the elastic yet precision tooled rhythm section (worthy of Guru Guru) masterfully undergirds maneuvers of distended guitar eloquence that flame, squeal, whinny and howl in a way that's very Glenn Phillips as well, come to think of it. Almost beyond imagining.

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LUCIEN BOITEAUX-EXISTENCE IS PROOF, LP, 198?, AUSTRALIA




Housed in a super-elaborate handmade collage sleeve, this album of magnificent one-man higher-key improv blowouts (presumably multi-tracked) is brought to you by Aussie X-factor Boiteaux (who there is not a single peep to be found about online) and realized via drums, piano, flute, voice and "body percussion". Boiteaux establishes the outwardly bound agenda here right out of the gate with accretions of piano densities and tripped flute whirlwinds loosely yoked to massed rhythmic flurries in a way distinctly suggestive of a will to transcendence, a sensibility that carries through the entirety of this lost gem.

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DE FABRIEK-LABISH INTERMEDIARIES, LP, NETHERLANDS, 1989




With a line-up featuring Conrad Schnitzler (partly recorded at his Con Studio) and minimal synth figurehead Mark Lane, this is a rather unusual and auspicious outing for this long lived Dutch post-industrial unit. Much more watery and synthy than most of their recorded canon, these languid sound-morphs ambiguously unfurl in drifts through which slither flits of Michael Otto's bassoon in an atmosphere only really comparable to the more kosmiche-directed output of De Fabriek's sister project Narwal. Perfect 5 AM drift off material, methinks.

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JOSEPH HAMMER-MARBLE LOBBIES, CDR, 2003, USA




71 unbroken minutes of queasy listening from a live radio broadcast by this L.A. Free Music Society legend, Solid Eye /Dinosaurs With Horns/ Points Of Friction/ Joe + Joe member and living master of monophonic reel-to-reel tape manipulated wooze. It's worth noting that Hammer cites his primary musical influence as being "an episode of Land Of The Giants in which the heroes used tape loops to fend off alien baddies". Herein, please find soupy slurries of floppy and slack rotors and belts wetly drag against each other and slowly swaddling you in viscous thickets of amorphous gloop. Pass the cough syrup and don't let the inertial drag pull you into the undertow! Note: in order to upload this 70+ minute solid block of audio, I had to drop the bit-rate for this title from my customary 256 to 192.

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KLANGKRIEG-DAS FIEBER DER MENSCHLICHEN STIMME, CD, 1998, GERMANY








Before Felix Kubin's reign as king of NDW-inspired electronica ensued, he was spending his time proffering considerably more abstruse sonic universes under the name Felix Knoth with the aid of co-conspirator Tim Burre in Klangkrieg. On "Das Fieber...", the remit was to use only the sounds of processed human voice and the results are brilliantly nerve-rattling and surreal, sheets of austerity giving way to shattered bursts of spitting phonetics and hissing ejaculations amid sparse beds of electronic rasp, sear, ping and singe from vocals DSP-ed into oblivion.

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Claudio Rocchi & Paolo Tofani-Un gusto superiore,LP,1980,Italy


2 legends of the progressive scene Claudio Rocchi(Stormy Six) and Paolo Tofani (Area,Electric Frankestein), collaborate in this 1980 LP.A rather mainstream prog rock LP, yet very beautiful and exceptional.
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Capricorni Pneumatici-st,tape,1987,Italy

Italian duo active from 1987 to 1991. Ambient, ritual and concrete music. Their name comes from Aleister Crowley's book "Liber A'ASH vel Capricorni Pneumatici SUB FIGURA CCCLXX". The two persons involved in the project were only known under the pseudonyms of Pazuzu and Soda Caustica.

"...Your music is very good, truthfully, I like it better than any that has been sent me by various groups.
Both tapes are excellent."
Z'ev - November 1988, writing about CP and Al-Azif

Spooky creepy ambientritualistic industrial soundscapes all through.Don't listen it with lights off!

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Delia Derbyshire & Barry Bermange-Within Dreams,radio broadcast,1964,UK


"This programme of sounds and voices is an attempt to re-create in five movements some sensations of dreaming - running away, falling, landscape, underwater and colour. All the voices were recorded from life (by Barry Bermange) and arranged in a setting of pure electronic sounds." (RT) -Produced by David Thomson.
--Note also BBC RADIO 3 19.10.93 Between the Ears: The Dreams by Barry Bermange An invention for radio: people talking about recurring elements in their dreams; ethereal electronic sounds. Introduced by Mark Russell in conversation with Barry Bermange." --Nigel Deacon
"Part of the four programme "Inventions for Radio" series, created in collaboration with Barry Bermange, Dreams is a collection of spliced/reassembled interviews with people describing their dreams. Delia's editing and repetition, together with her dissonant, often terrifying musique concrete soundbeds, make this distinctly uneasy bedtime listening. The entire piece is 45 minutes in length." -- d-d.org
"Her collaborations with the poet and dramatist Barry Bermange for the Third Programme showed her at her elegant best. He put together The Dreams (1964), a collage of people describing their dreams. It was set by Delia into a background of pure electronic sound." --Brian Hodgson
Broadcast 1964-1965 (according to the www.doollee.com article on Barry Bermange).
1. Running (08:08) 2. Falling (08:45) 3. Land (07:02)
4. Sea (09:38) Lyrics 5. Colour (09:22)
More electronic weirdness by the pioneering electronics "witch" Delia Derbyshire.
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Hototogisu-Cuckoo Cloudland,LP,2001,USA

This was the 2nd release by the Hototogisu, and was touted as being the work of a mysterious Japanese group with ties to the Taj Mahal Travellers, only later did we find out that it was really Matt Bower of Total / Skullflower / Sunroof! / Vibracathedral Orchestral fame. Bower is currently working as the Hototogisu with Marcia Basset of the Double Leopards. The record comes in a plain white jacket, with a textured silk-screened red rice-paper cover. Very nice indeed, probably De Stijl’s best work.
Just 99 copies were made.

As requested!
After kindly destijl request i have to remove this link ,as there is a plan to reissue "cuckoo cloudland" on CD.

Hermann Nitsch-Orgelkonzert 9 dec 1986 Linz,2xtape,1987,Germany

Hermann Nitsch (b. 1938) is an Austrian artist who works in experimental and multimedia modes. He is associated with the Vienna Actionists, and like them conceives of his art outside traditional categories of genre.
In the 1950s, Nitsch conceived of the Orgien Mysterien Theater (which roughly translates as Theatre of Orgies and Mysteries), staging nearly 100 performances between the years of 1962 and 1998. These ritualistic performance actions, often included staged crucifixions and animal slaughter, incorporating other ritualistic actions as well as music and dance.
Nitch juxtaposes slaughtered animal intestines with quasi-religious icons, satirizing and questioning the moral ethics of atavistic religion and sacrifice.
His abstract splatter paintings also establish a controlled violence theme, using bright reds, maroons, and pale greys that communicate organic mutilation.
By 1995, Nitsch had been sufficiently embraced by the establishment that the Vienna State Opera invited him to direct and design the sets and costumes for Jules Massenet's opera "Herodiade."
In 1998, Nitsch staged his 100th performance (named the 6-Day Play after its length) which took place at his castle in Austria, Schloss Prinzendorf. Nitsch considered this performance his pinnacle. In 2004, he held an abbreviated (2-day) version of the work. He continues to publish articles and release CDs.
From Wikipedia
Great spooky soundtrack to nightmares.Wish i could find a dvd of his performances.

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Friday, July 27, 2007

LUCAS TROUBLE-LE ROY DEFIGURE, LP, 1981, FRANCE




Brilliant and wide ranging French synthy post punk art damage released on the seminal Scopa Invisible imprint (responsible for releases by Ilitch, Philippe Doray, Hector Zazou, Incontinents, etc), which should perhaps give you an idea of the rarified territory of weird we're discussing here. Much like these aforementioned artists, there's a distinct sense here of radical outsider art prog energy re-directed by post punk imperatives and the sense befouling sonic cocktail that's resulted is one for the ages.

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WERKBUND-STAHLHOF, LP, 2000, GERMANY




Following a raft of postings of Werkbund material by both Jim and moi, here's one more essential piece of the puzzle, with Asmus Tietchens and Ulli Rehberg masterfully honing their cryptic sonic mirages of suspended, vaporous and hazily resonating atmospherics into ever more esoteric territories on this haunting essential work.

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FACELESS/OTTO KENTROL-FAKE/GHOST BOY-SPLIT LP, 1983, USA




Interestingly, though I've posted Otto Kentrol material in the past (which I'd deemed "excellent sax-skronking art damage"), their work here is not at all the reason for this split album being posted by me, their sensibility having taken a not terribly appealing (if nevertheless entirely distinctive) turn toward a fusion of slack mutant funk and supper club jazz in the intervening three years since the debut of theirs that I posted. No, it's entirely for Faceless' beautifully ungainly perambulations that this post is showing up here. Somewhat Beefheartian in approach (though not in a way particularly redolent of any of the other Beefheart-indebted units I've posted over time here), their M.O. filters these impulses through a mottled blanket of post no wave Downtown NY motion that's directly keyed into the same aesthetic territory being explored by the sundry bands included on the the Peripheral Vision compilation LP I posted a while back.

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ART ZOYD/J.A. DEANE/J. GREINKE-S/T, CD, 1990, FRANCE/USA




The ominous and riveting 23 minutes of otherwise unavailable (amazingly, seemingly to this day) material by French R.I.O. monsters Art Zoyd that comprises the first third of this three-way split CD dates from the post-Berlin era of their work (specifically the period between Nosferatu and Marathonnerre), with the synths and sampling that began significantly augmenting their chamber rock approach from this period onward affording their music a different sort of solemn gravity from their more acoustic based (if no less astringent) earlier work. Wish I could say I was more jazzed about the remainder of the discs contents, but both Jon Hassell and Butch Morris collaborator J.A. Deane and Jeff Greinke are ploughing similar furrows of ethno-synthiness that'd probably work effectively as Discovery Channel soundbeds, but are rather outside my personal musical remit. Any release containing 23 odd minutes of otherwise unavailable Art Zoyd pretty much sells itself though, methinks.

Get part one Here

Get part two Here

B-SHOPS FOR THE POOR-THE ICEBERG PRINCIPLE, CD, 1989, USA




Very much a product of it's time, the arch, angular horn-charty Downtown NY-meets R.I.O. sonics of this peculiarly moniked unit have a definite whiff of perky yet hectic Curlew style bippity boop about them, but they've been buffed to an oddly antiseptic shine by punchy 80's production values. In theory, this should come off as a chalk and cheese combo but in practice, it lands B-Shops in a fruitful and under-charted territory thats not far from the giddy sax-centric universe of Hajime Tachibana. These offbeat constructs are frequently offset by Sarra Tyrer's too-cool-for-you chanteuse stylizations, whose supple approach is like an unexpected silk caress in a pachinko parlor.

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S.T. Mikael-The Unknown,1991,LP,Sweden


Here's one more gem of the great S.T. Mikael,actually his 2nd release.
"Real disturbed garagy psych with his tormented vocals, guitars and a total homemade obscure vibe to it...tremendous acid bird cover painting. -Gregg Breth, USA.Fantastic Swedish Psych...one of the best of the last year!" - A Trip With Mushrooms, Netherlands
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Peter Scion-Through my ghost,CD,2002,Sweden

This one closes Peter Scion discography.As always wonderful!
BEHIND THE VEIL OF 'THROUGH MY GHOST''Through My Ghost' was recorded in the first week after the demise of Pangolin. I left the band during the sessions for our second, unfinished album in June 2000. The album was supposed to include a couple of newlywritten songs, and when I was free to take up my solo career again, I wanted to use them for 'Through My Ghost'. 'Under A Grey Sun', 'Funny' and The Devilish Mother' were all songs we had rehearsed with the band. I also had a couple of unreleased recordings that I thought fit into the context of the new album--'The Farthermost Shore'. 'Glad For You', and the song that eventually gave the album its title, 'Through My Ghost', were added along with a couple of songs that emerged during the solo sessions. I think that Pangolin is very much present in these recordings. My approach to the music was much more rock'n'roll than it had been previously, even in some of the mellower songs. In a way, this is the Pangolin album that never was. Kind of.The album was ready to be released soon after it was completed, but due to technical problems, lack of time and sheer bad luck, it took me almost two years to get it out. That's a long time for someone who is restless and constantly working on new songs. It's like having a mental constipation. I was very frustrated to have it stuck in a limbo. More than once, I almost scrapped the whole album, although people encouraged me not to give it up. Now I'm happy I didn't cancel the release. After all, I think it's a good album. During the delays, I also had the time to consider changes, and I eventually I dropped three songs from it in order to get a more cohesive record.I've been asked whether the song 'Funny' is a comment on the Pangolin split up, but the truth is that it isn't. At least, it wasn't when I wrote it. However, when I recorded it on my own, lots of the frustration and disappointment that the break up resulted in went into the song.I usually don't tell people what my favourite track is on a certain album, but I must admit that I have a special relation to 'Funny'. When I just had written it, I called it 'the WIll Oldham song' because it was so slow.I soon speeded it up a bit and in the end, it had switched from Will Oldham to Neil Young... It's a song that since I wrote has appeared my live sets from time to time. It's fun to play, and I like how it goes up and down in intensity and energy. It's a very organic song, and there's a lot of space for other musicians to shape it.'Warning!' is just for the fun of it. It's like a mix of Link Wray and Suicide. I love those early 60's guitar instrumentals. Someone once said that every guitar player has at least one song like that, and 'Warning!' is mine.'May She Fly High' was originally recorded during the 'Amethyst Dream' sessions, although this is a new recording done especially for the album. It's a song for all children everywhere, but most of all for my daughterEmma. A wishful song, a song of hope. When I think about it, it's probably a song for every person. It kind of says, don't let life bring you down, it's worth to go on. Save some of your sweetest dreams to paint a sad andgloomy day. Perhaps that is what 'Through My Ghost' is all about anyway. About not giving up, but to go on, always go on. Always. It's worth it.
From Tree music web page
PETER SCIONThrough My GhostLadies and gentleman (and especially fans of "Peter Scion, the folk artist") find your way to your most stable and comfortable chair. Not only because Through My Ghost is a magic piece of sonic goodness that demands your full attention, but also to avoid major injuries after falling from the shock waves of the freewheeling power chords of the wonderful Link Wray-esque surf-inspired opener, "Warning". This start unquestionably comes as a surprise, but it's a nice and inspired shock that'll find you intrigued to hear what this Swedish musician is up to this time. The rest of the music doesn't mean this is the departure from Peter's previous work that the opener suggests, but I'm still hesitating to label the music as folk as it's as much about singer/songwriter sensibilities and psych rock, which makes sense given that Peter doesn't really consider himself a folk artist in the first place. Through My Ghost was recorded right after the long-missed Pangolin combo called it quits, and perhaps that's why it's such a bleak and dark listen. But as much as breaking up from Pangolin seems to have been hard on Peter, it also seems to have been the starting point for hope, something that is especially evident in the beautiful closer "May She Fly High." It's a hymn for children in general and his daughter Emma in particular with crystal clear guitar work circling around the heavens without any desire of really going anywhere. The same can not be said about the organ-laced claustrophobia of "The Fathermost Shore" and the quietly crawling title-track, both of which are so melancholic they're difficult to listen to before the sun decides to call it a day. This is music made to listen to on the headphones when all the lights have gone out and all there is left is yourself and your own thoughts. But this is also something for all of you who discovered Peter's music though Pangolin, since it includes plenty of forays into soaring guitar psychedelia. "The Devil Is A Watcher" is particularly pleasing with its combination of heavy guitar explorations and sitar. "The Devilish Mother" is another favorite track with echoing guitar work folding in and out of the darkest realms with stunning ease. In our never-ending campaign for bringing heartfelt and honest music to the masses, I'm happy and honored to celebrate the arrival of Through My Ghost, Peter Scion's most consistently enthralling and powerful work to date.
review from Broken Face #14

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Matthew De Gennaro-Under The Sun,CD-R,2002+5,CD-R,2003,N.Zealand




Here are 2 excellent recordings of dark psych/folk by the genious Matthew De Gennaro.

Matthew De Gennaro : Under The Sun
This is the second private release of 50 only by Matti, played on archtop guitar, tape, accordion, chimes, drum, percussion, amplifier, clavioline, mouth organ, automaton, violin, aeolian harp, viola da gamba, piano and voice.
It’s a quietly evolving release. The first track, “Arrow Bold” has a carpet of fingerpicking guitar with stitches of textures from overtone sounds, from lighter to somewhat more saturated airy colours. On “Organ” there are chimes and organ droning or filling up the surrounding space, satturating in colours. “Ravenwood” is a short edit inbetween live recording improvisation with viola de gamba and a bass string. “Bells” starts with a loop of a bell sound with its overtone droning, then spotlights the musician, improvising loosely with guitar and voice, depressed in a dark kitchen, with the windows open, with background noises. “Heartstrings” on acoustic guitar with guitar overtone drones fills up spacey areas again. “Back of Beyond" is a concluding track with fingerpicking acoustic guitar, and an experimental texturing picking nstrument, with accordion and organ, and a few other instruments on the back, guiding the essence. This whole CD works like a soundtrack, describing a detailed environment.
Matthew De Gennaro : "5"
This third release is in fact very different. It is much more focused on the acoustic guitar fingerpicking (with some 'fantazias') and has some folk flavour too. I hear some instruments (organ/pipe like) that contribute to this sphere. The acoustic guitar becomes like a description of wood and a tree in nature, while the other instruments work like grass, flowers or birds, the environment, that makes the vision on the tree more beautiful and full. Matts' voice humming is nothing but another instrument, amongst the others, while the fingerpicking itself describes the real picture. ..“Day after Tomorrow” uses some part of a loop, but especially the one before last track “Hennig Christiansen” is a bit different with a family-noises-like environment-like loop mixed with some organ.* In some way this still is equally descriptive and sweet.. Last track is a very good and structured conclusion with some fingerpicking, an organ part and some song words. Very nice.
from http://psychedelicfolk.homestead.com/acidfolkreview8.html
get them both here

Thursday, July 26, 2007

Maher Shalal Hash Baz-Souvenir de mauve,CD,1999,Japan

Maher Shalal Hash Baz is the artistic alter ego of Tori Kudo, a Japanese naivist composer and musician. The name is taken from Maher-shalal-hash-baz in the Book of Isaiah, and translates roughly as "Hurrying to the spoil, he has made haste to the plunder."
Tori Kudo has been cagey about details of his life before MSHB. He was once a member of a shadowy, revolutionary political party in Japan, although he has dissociated himself from politics since becoming one of Jehovah's Witnesses. He also works as a ceramicist.
He claims to have played classical and jazz piano, as well as playing organ in a Protestant church. His other musical influences included T. Rex and saxophonist Steve Lacy. He and his wife Reiko Kudo joined a band called Worst Noise when they moved to Tokyo; other members dropped out, leaving Tori and Reiko as a duo, known simply as Noise. Under this name they released an album called Emperor.
The impetus for Maher Shalal Hash Baz came when Tori met euphonium player Hiroo Nakazaki on a building site, and found that they shared an interest in the music of Mayo Thompson and Syd Barrett. Apart from the core trio (Tori on guitar and vocals, Reiko as vocalist, Hiroo with his trusty euphonium), the lineup has always been fluid.
After a couple of self-released cassette albums, the Japanese Org label released Maher Goes To Gothic Country (1991) and the 83-track box set Return Visit To Rock Mass (1996).
The group's profile outside Japan became much higher when Stephen McRobbie of The Pastels signed them to his Geographic label. They have released two albums on Geographic: the compilation From A Summer To Another Summer (An Egypt To Another Egypt) (2000) and the 41-track Blues Du Jour (2003); plus a number of EPs on various labels, including 'Souvenir De Mauve' (Majikick, 1999), 'Maher On Water' (Geographic, 2002), 'Faux Depart' (Yik Yak, 2003) and Live Aoiheya January 2003 (Chapter Music, 2005).
Tori Kudo has resisted defining the sound of his band, although in an interview with Tim Footman in Careless Talk Costs Lives magazine (August 2002) he declared "I am punk." There are also elements of folk, psychedelia and free jazz; the band's tendency to ask members of the audience to join in adds a sense of danger in live performance. Perhaps the best description comes from his own sleevenotes to From A Summer To Another Summer: "Error in performance dominates MSHB cassette which is like our imperfect life."
From Wikipedia
Strange folkish naive music with 2 long jazzy improvisations.

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Peter Scion-Sweet Sorrow Man,CD,1998,Sweden


Here's another Peter Scion gem from 1998.Dark folkish C&W (!) this time(note i hate C&W music ,but this one kicks ass).Here 's what Peter Scion himself tells about it:

ALONG THE TRACKS OF 'SWEET SORROW MAN'
NOTES BY PETER SCION
After three folk/psych oriented albums, I felt that I needed to change direction. I needed to take care of another great musical interest of mine--country music. Or at least, bring it out into light. I've always argued that there is country music hidden beneath the surfaces of the previous albums as well, although the influence wasn't as obvious as it is on 'Sweet Sorrow Man'. I find it very easy to imagine 'These Darkened Trees' with a swinging country groove, and it's still something of a dream to dress up 'In the Forest' in full bluegrass garb with banjos and fiddles and everything. Actually, the silly, tongue-in-cheek 'Last Song' that ended up as the hidden bonus track on 'Sweet Sorrow Man' was recorded during the 'Amethyst Dream' sessions!
'Sweet Sorrow Man' was originally supposed to come out as a cassette only EP. The working title was 'Songs of Dedication', and the songs planned for inclusion were 'Rain', 'Falling Through', 'Gentle Wandering Ways', 'Only Shadows of Her Presence', 'Like A Hurricane' and 'The Last Song'. But songs kept coming, and suddenly there were six new recordings. 'Gentle Wandering Ways' was dropped, the version of 'Rain' was substituted by a new and better version, and 'The Last Song' was, as said before, hidden away as a bonus track on 'Sweet Sorrow Man'. I wanted it there, because there was no way I could leave the listener stuck in the pitch-black sadness of 'Like A Hurricane'. It just wouldn't have been fair.
'Sweet Sorrow Man' was my personal favourite when it was released, and it's still very special to me. I'm really proud of 'Sweet Sorrow Man'. I decided to include the many cover versions, because I thought--and still think--they fit in nicely with the story I wanted to tell. I think 'Kathleen' is one of my best recordings to date. It was actually a friend of mine who suggested I should cover it, but at that time, I knew I couldn't. Then one day, it felt just right to do it. The song said everything I wanted to say. The vocals are a first take.
'Is It Raining in Seattle?' was written prior to 'Devachan', and it was in fact recorded for but dropped from the album. For 'Sweet Sorrow Man' the song was brought out again, but the original version wouldn't have worked within the context of this new context. However, I couldn't decide how to grab the song, and so slightly frustrated, I just turned up the recording volume and went for it. The levels were actually too high, so the entire song is a bit over-heated, but I love that devil-may-care attitude. Like with a lot of other songs on 'Sweet Sorrow Man', the basic track and most of the overdubs are first takes.
'Sweet Sorrow Man' is also the album I have pick songs from most often when performing live. 'Lover's Crime' and 'Is It Raining in Seattle?' both made their way into Pangolin's repertoire, and when the atmosphere is right, I still pull out 'Kathleen'. It's a timeless song of timeless emotions. Besides, if I can show Townes Van Zandt the tiniest bit of respect by playing his song, I will until the end of time.
Lars Holmquist at Domestica did the album cover. I brought him the pictures, and the next time I met him, the cover was finished. I loved it right away!
But to be honest, I'm not sure whether 'Sweet Sorrow Man' should be called 'country music'. Someone named the style 'Country & Northern'--I guess that's the best name for it. Because, you know, what does a Scandinavian know about country music anyway?


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Double Leopards-Soulless Dust, Speed and Strength,CDR,2002,USA

Following my previous post of Double Leopards 1st effort here comes their 3rd selfreleased CDr limited to 100 copies.

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Syrinx -Long Lost Relatives,LP,1971,Canada


The birth pangs of electronic music within pop were often tentative affairs, as bands such as the Fifty Foot Hose and the Silver Apples had to absorb such obtuse (from a rock perspective) luminaries as Karlheinz Stockhausen or Morton Subotnick and then attempt to incorporate their complex ideas into the rather simple guitar/bass/drum rock idiom. By the seventies the moog synthesizer, still somewhat a novelty sound but more portable and affordable, would become a vehicle for the then-predominant progist post-Hendrix obsession with virtuosity, replacing the guitar in extended, self-indulgent (read: wankfest) solos – think ELP, Edgar Winter or Head East. Still others, such as Walter Carlos, reworked classical themes, thus establishing a veneer of respectability for the instrument.
Often ignored are those Germans - Popol Vuh or Cluster come to mind - who, perhaps because they were unencumbered by the burgeoning rockist protocol of rhythm/chords/solo (rock being a still fairly foreign presence at the time in Europe), coaxed spacy meandering “head music” from their synths. The overlooked Syrinx falls somewhat into this camp.
Syrinx is essentially the brainchild of songwriter/multi-instrumentalist John Mills-Cockell, who had previously helped found the Mind Expansion Centre in Montreal, a sort of free-form art space existent at the end of the 1960s. A resultant LP soundtrack to an installation there, the privately pressed Free Psychedelic Poster Inside, was released under the name Intersystems (a precursor it would appear to Stereolab’s Music for the Amorphous Body Centre, the accompanying music for a Charles Long exhibit at the Tanya Bonakdar Gallery in New York in 1995.).
Michael Panontin
If you enjoy Popol Vuh, Yatha Sidhra, The Third Ear Band,Intersystems or Tuxedomoon,you will surely love this!
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Underground Failure-st,LP,1970,Sweden



Atrue psych monster rarity alternating between melodic mellow moments and crazed fuzzed out bursts of wicked VU styled guitar.Availability of this album has slipped into oblivion.Only 150 pressed,but seems to be 2 alternative cover versions as you can figure out above.
get this gem here

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

V/A:Voices, Notes & Noise,LP,1984,Germany

Great compilation by Recommended music from 1984 gathering some of the most important experimental acts of it's time.

Track Listing
Side 1
Battle Hymn - Martin Bisi/Viki Galvez Bisi
120 Défunts Pour Une Patrie - Un Department
Easter Parade - Veedtharm Morgan Fisher
Mixture/Kitchen/Theatre - Mixed Band Philanthropist
Dance Up A Storm... - Let's Have Healthy Children
Labertino - Victor Nubla
Boxer Versus Wrestlers - Officer!
Another Insanity - Human Flesh
Tantine - Zazou/Bongo
F.M. Creatures - Ptôse
Und Endlich Stirbt - Goebbels/Harth/Stötzner
Side 2
Gargamel Chex Les - Hellebore
The Flying Eyes Part IV - The Doo Dooettes
Elenka I - Lichtenstein Lingery
It Just Ain't So (Not A Cole Porter Song Unsung By Ella) - Nurse With Wound
Oil - Madi-Diddi
O.R. v/s Metronome - Debile Menthol
Schraubenzieher - Dissidents
Ein Walzer - Dressed Up Animals
999 (Nein Nein Nein) - The Lowest Note On The Organ
Vitesse - DDAA
120 Herzschläge - Christoph Wünsch
Like A Nightingale - Malcolm
Liebe Art Bears - Reinhold Brunner

Typed in blue lettering on the heavy plastic sleeve is the tracklisting and contact information for each artist as well as the "Visual Guide" crediting those responsible for the photo slides on the insert. This insert is a 12" sized clear plastic sheet of 72 photo slides (see primary image) featuring images by Pierre-Alain Hubert, Tom Recchion, Hummel/Homeyer, Christophe Desforges, Ruggero Maggi, Harry C. Poole, Albrecht D., Walter Schmidt, Jürgen O. Olbrich, Benedict Tisa, Jupiter Larsen, Ryszard Wasko, Paul Rutkovsky, Reinhold Brunner, Pete Horobin, Edgardo Antonio Vigo, Leland Fletcher, Bakhchanyan, Vittore Baroni, Ubaldo Giacomucci, Pawel Petasz, Giovanni Fontana, B. George, Stiletto, Mario Borillo, Gabor Toth, Paul Hurst, Peter Weiss, Ilse Garnier, Baina Masquelier, Andy J. Stenhouse, Marilyn R. Rosenberg, Meyer Enz. Lexikon, and Stephen S'Soreff.
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Fricara Pacchu-Waydom,tape,2005,Finland

A first solo recording(limited to 200 copies) from the lines of Maniacs Dream! Nasty and blasty Fricara is the coolest. Does this tell about Tao Tao's mutation with a carcass? No, this has nothing to do with problems. It goes over everything, it's the best, all the rest is wiped away. When Paavi heard this he said it was the best thing he had heard after hearing the Faust Tapes in 1995. The salesman was drunk and told the young pope to watch out for mushrooms starting to grow in his head.

Reviews
"If there’s any contemporary label that could pull off the difficult task of promoting the cassette format it’s probably the amazing Finnish Lal Lal Lal imprint. To tell you the truth I couldn’t care less about the format of Fricara Pacchu’s Waydom though, as it’s such an impressive slab of primitive folk clatter, deranged psychedelia, motorik krautrock and feedback-riddled ceremonies. Waydom is like an uncontrollable volcano of instrumentation floating together to an impressive and majestic lava flow, initially interesting for its power more than the mind-puzzling polyrhythmic structures laying beneath, that doesn't strike me until much later. It’s like a pulsating tangle of the styles mentioned above and it’s all repeated till it invokes a sinister aural nightmare. Waydom has the shamanic and somewhat tribal feel of Avarus and Siamese Temple Ball but is still sounds modern in a Sunroof! meets Dead C kind of way. Essential." - Mats Gustafsson / Broken Face
"Another killer hit from the Pfinland psych pscene. A lot of the music coming from this camp sounds like a bunch of people shaking things and blowing other things like crazy, which is usually pretty cool, but I like it even better when they use an electric guitar or two, lock in on some circular riffs, fall into a heavy backbeat, and make the whole thing shine like glowing embers. That's exactly what's going on here with Fricara Pacchu's Waydom cassette. We're talking LOCKED in -- hell yeah, these are grooves. Like all the best Finland stuff, it sounds like droned-out Sun Ra-meets-Dead C ethnic music that you can worship pagan concepts to with no persecution complex whatsoever. Apparently Fricara Pacchu is just one person, from the band Maniacs Dream, but he or she sounds like a band to me -- one of the best in Finland!" - Larry "Fuzz-O" Dolman / Blastitude
Awesome tape....take some weird folk mix it with twisted krautrock and then put it on the blender with spoonfull of freaked out psychedelia ....
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Corsican Paintbrush-Lichens & Moss,CD-R,2005,USA

Corsican Paintbrush was officially formed in the late spring of 2004, driving down the highway on the way out of the city. this project consists of brad rose (the north sea, the golden oaks, etc) and eden hemming rose (wax ghost, the cone bearers, etc). corsican paintbrush became the replacement for the ill-conceived duo-project, winter in prague. the latter concept was never that great and we decided we needed something different; something less constrictive. the name comes from the combination of two things on our mind that day. one) corsican mint. eden had just planted some in our balcony-garden, and we found it enthralling. two) the official state wildflower of oklahoma was in full-bloom on that drive: indian paintbrush. between indian mint and corsican paintbrush, the latter won out and there was joy. recording got underway immediately, however stalled in the thick hot air of the oklahoma summer. portions of the initial release, "lichens & moss," were recorded that summer, but it wasn't until a semi-drunken new year's eve that the sessions were finished. the result was a sparse forest clattering through a mythic haze. as 2005 transpires, new projects are underway... interest has grown in the project and the first edition of the debut cd-r (an edition of 55 copies) is withering away to dust. we move forward and we walk amongst the trees, smiling with the sun...

Instruments used: guitar, glockenspiel, piano, melodica, bouzouki, oud, keyboard, bells, nutshell rattle, seed pods, cardboard boxes, pennywhistle, tapes, recorder, train whistle, maracas, and clay pot.
From Digital Industries website

Combining lush instrumentation with clattering percussion and ramshackle beats, Corsican Paintbrush creates a new world of sound out of old world technology.Corsican Paintbrush paints an engrossing picture of a folk music never before encountered, and it does so with broad and yet delicate swaths of color and texture. Just don't call this sound New Age or Ethnic Folk, it digs deeper and broader than that, sounding at times like a piece from the richly diverse Sublime Frequencies collection, and at other times like a death march across the desert, carried on the back of the Sunburned Hand of the Man. Swerving feverishly between what could easily be chopped up Native American rhythms, sampled Celtic melodies, andspace-age funk played on trash heaps, the music of Corsican Paintbrush is actually all of this and none of it.

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Sex Museum-Fuzzface,LP,1987,Spain


Here's something different.Great psych garage/surf/mod from these Spanish legends.Maybe the Spanish Fuzztones?Great version of See See Rider and Psycho.This is their very rare 1st LP.Especialy posted for Mr. Vertigo. Summer's here and this record can be perfect companion for all mutantheads over there ,to their excursions in (mutant) beaches!
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Joel Vandroogenbroeck-Meditations vol.2,LP,1980,Belgium

.Joel Vandroogenbroeck (aka: VDB Joel) was the main, only consistent member in Brainticket, and on this library album the emphasis is on his flute talents, paired with some great Moogy electronics and mellow pre-new age ambience. Think Klaus Schulze meets Herbie Mann (well, not really), but it's a good start... Awesome meditative sounds ....

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Vampires' Sound Inc.-Psychedelic Danceparty,LP,1969,Germany


Vampires' Sound Inc. were actualy 2 German composers: Manfred Hübler and Siegfried Schwab. Blaring Stax horn sections, wild psychedelic fuzz box guitar, jazzy organ runs, strutting funkadelic drum and bass, and an occasional glockenspiel or sitar for freakout effect. Manfred Hubler and Siegfred Schwab toss this melange of styles into a Cusinart blender and hit the "puree" button. Jess Franco obtained the music for his soundtracks from two obscure albumns by "Vampires Sound" (the two German composers) called "Psychedelic Dance Party" and "Sexadelic", soley because he like the female vampire design on the album covers. Both LP's were transfered completly back to back in original running order on a CD called "3 Films by Jess Franco" which was limited to 500 copies.Groovy ,baby!
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Monday, July 23, 2007

V/A-BOWLING BALLS FROM HELL, LP, 1980, USA




For those into the mythos, this Cleveland/Akron underground compilation pretty much defines the term "must-have". Let's start with the inclusion of one of the greatest Pere Ubu songs that never was, here brought to you by the duo of David Thomas and Tin Huey's Ralph Carney. Just pure lunatic bliss. Now factor in two further Carney gems of damaged Residential rock and fully six GODHEAD tracks of instrumental minimal synth in a style redolent of The Human League circa The Dignity Of Labour by one Dennis DeFrange (virtually half the album) and you've got the makings of a stone cold classic. Really, there's not a duff cut in sight. Hell, even The Waitresses manage to turn in something great (well, they did start out weird, for the few who've heard their debut single) with a much odder version of their new wave hit "I Know What Boys Like", here mysteriously re-titled "Wait Here, I'll Be Right Back...".

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FAMLENDE FORSOK-ARS TRANSMUTATORIA, LP, 1990, NORWAY




Resolutely obscurantist in approach, the nebulous soporific netherworld Famlende Forsok inhabit bears a bit of a resemblance to some of the murkier corners of Nurse With Wound's musical universe (think The Murry Fontana Orchestra Plays The Hafler Trio), albeit abetted by great mouthfuls of narrative Norse verbiage which might prove clarifying for the Norwegian speaking among you, but for the rest of us, it just adds another layer of pleasurable obtuseness to their addled atmospheric constructs. Blearly buried synths burble and burr, washy trumpets smear resonances amidst distant ritualistic rhythms and vague half-melodies occasionally drift into earshot as That Voice continually fades in and out of focus. Beautiful.

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MARBLE SHEEP & THE RUN DOWN SUN'S CHILDREN-S/T, LP, 1989, JAPAN




The first Marble Sheep missive to gain release is actually chronologically their third set of recordings, the prior two album's of theirs that I've posted (Old From New Heads and Whirl Live) both being archival collections culling live material from a few years prior to the work at hand. Taken from a 100 copy LP reissue of their debut CD (presumably bootleg), the sound here is poised precisely midway between the monolithic and coruscating jams of those earlier sessions and the more loose, open and Grateful Dead-sy approach they'd questionably gravitate towards after this. At this juncture though, the atmosphere is still sufficiently thick with psychoactive juices and acid rock thunder to render such dodgy propensities dismissible, even the languid bits here having a luxuriant acid lacquer to them thats not a million miles away from what Sun Dial were getting at on the less furious portions of their deadly debut LP "Other Way Out".

NOTE: DUE TO PROBLEMS WITH THE ORIGINAL LINK, I'VE RE-UPLOADED THE ALBUM AND REPLACED THE ORIGINAL LINK WITH NEW ONE.

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DET WIEHL-8782, CD, 1993 (RECORDED: 1982-1987), NETHERLANDS




This archival disc of manic mangled post punk experimentation was released by Frans De Waard (Kapotte Muzik, Beequeen, Goem) on his KiP imprint and sits at a decidedly odd right angle to the more austere sound art he's otherwise more known for issuing, Det Wiehl's barbed and somewhat forbidding approach positing a form of Metabolist-like art menace thats very heady indeed.

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CLAUS VAN BEBBER & RON SCHMIDT/PAUL HUBWEBER-RUBBED + BLOWN, CD, 1999, GERMANY




Over the first half of this jarring split CD, ex-Z.D.L. member turned avant turntablist Van Bebber together with one Ron Schmidt craft quixotic and destabilized provisional landscapes where text sound collage, loudly torn paper, free jazz signifiers and roomfuls of shakers and rattlers accompany Kluster-like electronics surges as strange things get uttered by stranger people. What's live and what's Memorex? Impossible to say, which seems precisely the point. As was the case with the Van Bebber/Hubweber collaborative CDR I posted a short while ago all the above mentioned amelodic variables are craftily arranged in ways that make this seem like much more than just another round of improv blat. All of the aforementioned appears to account for the "rubbed" in the title. As for the "blown", we have near on 30 minutes of multi-tracked and spittle-drenched free action courtesy of Herr Hubweber, though his definition of "free blowing" seemingly connotes balloons and party favors as much conventional horns, all disorientingly counterpointed by fluttering, stuttering and juddering sounds sourced from mistreated guitars, bass and percussion.

Get part one Here

Get part two Here

Sunday, July 22, 2007

YOG SOTHOTH "Yog Sothoth" LP 1984 (France)



From the land of MAGMA, VORTEX and ART ZOYD, comes YOG SOTHOTH, revisiting classic styled jazz and giving it a darkened treatment baptized in the new music stylisms. YOG SOTHOTH owes inspiration to the above mentioned bands, though giving a lighter, more playful approach to their grim, outwardly treatment of jazz or classical music.

The album opener "Nekrosis", sets the mood in a jazzy Rock In Opposition style that evolves into a playful be-bop to conclude in an early VORTEX gone electronic twist. "Maint Reve Vesperal" that closes the first side is a creepy UNIVERS ZERO turning free jazz hybrid that ends in a calming respite. All second side is taken by the crescendo of "Fou: L' Art Noir" shifting endlessly from MAGMAoid intensity, to jazzy outbursts of pure controlled chaos, then to introspective ART ZOYD influenced progressivisms and all with a unique French sense of humor. A fresh and vital potpourri of eclecticism.

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Peter Scion-The amethyst dream(1998)+Tree music(1998)+Sister songs(2002?),CDs,Sweden



Following yesterday's exploration through Peter Scion works here are 3 more.
The Amethyst Dream
THE EMERGENCE OF 'THE AMETHYST DREAM'
NOTES BY PETER SCION
'The Amethyst Dream' concludes the entirely unintentional trilogy of albums that begun with 'Devachan' and 'Tree Music'. Initially I wanted it to be an album that you could have playing in the background while doing other things--which is one reason why much of it relies on instrumental themes and passages--as well as to listen to it with greater attention. Not much of the original idea went into the finished album. When deciding what songs were going to be included, it turned into an album that somehow makes a point.
One aspect of 'The Amethyst Dream' is that it's a cyclical album. Song sequence is very important to how you perceive an album, but sequencing is always an intuitive thing to me. It's about listening to what the songs tell you. They 'know' how they want to be grouped, and they're right most of the time. 'The Amethyst Dream' is like ebb and flow, and the songs correspond to each other with a certain regularity. First song 'Spring Fair Tune' corresponds to the closing track 'The Garden'. 'Permanent Green Light' to 'Death Comes from the Sky'.
'Death Comes from the Sky' is important to the album, and represents another aspect of it. The idea for the song came to me one extremely hot early summer's day. I hate heat more than almost anything else, and I figured the most painful end to mankind would be if the sun killed us. Really, I was terrified by the thought! I had visions in my head of bodies lying on the ground with the skin burnt off and only a few survivors trying to get away from the end no-one could escape. If they survived the sun, the poison wind or water would kill them anyway. A not very original image of an environmental Armageddon, but it came alive very vivid in my mind and scared the shit out of me! I think of 'Death Comes to the Sky' as the question to which other parts of the album offers one plausible answer. The question is somehow political, while the answer is spiritual.
'The Amethyst Dream' is, by the way, an album I'm rather satisfied with.



TREE MUSIC
THE BIRTH OF 'TREE MUSIC'
NOTES BY PETER SCION
After my first album 'Devachan' was finished, there was no turning back. Music kept flowing through me and into my 4 track tape recorder, and I couldn't have stopped it even if I had wanted to. In the spring of 1997, I was working on two albums more or less simultaneously. The working title for the first one was 'The Secret Garden', and the other one was named 'The Amethyst Dream'.
The 'Secret Garden' sessions provided the bulk for what became my second CD, 'Tree Music'. It's the old trial-and-error principles at work, without omitting the errors! I wanted everything to be there, I wanted the music to be free, keeping whatever entered the music. And I'm happy that the people who played with me on this album went along with this--thank you all!
I think 'Tree Music' is a happy album, albeit with strains of what we have learnt to define as darkness. The title track celebrates life, and 'The Flower of My Secret Garden' is a joyful love song. The second version of 'These Darkened Trees' changes the last line from 'I find myself alone' to 'I find myself'. The title 'Tree Music' wasn't chosen at random. It's an album dedicated to nature, green leaves are bursting with life, gardens are in full bloom, flowers reach for the sky with petals bathing in sunlight. Oh yes, there are what we might call darkness, but this too is part of nature. Besides, the powers of nature are neutral, and whether they are 'light' or 'dark' depends on what we make of them, whereto we direct them.
'The Flower of My Secret Garden' is an assemblage of several ideas that never got as far as becoming individual songs. It was fun to record, but a nightmare to mix! It's long and every channel is crammed with sounds and little details, and I really could have used six arms to get everything right! 'Cloak of Shame' was recorded live at home in early 1996, using a DAT. The sound effects was added later. For 'Willow Moon' I wanted to use a thunder storm as a backing track. However, the thunder and the rain wouldn't come, until early one morning when glorious thunder and lightning woke me up. I rushed out of the bed to capture the sound on tape. 'Dance to the Witch's Visit' is a jam with me and my friend Carita Forslund recorded in rehearsal for a gig in early May 1997.
From a technical and 'professional' point of view, 'Tree Music' is a perfect example of how to not make an album. You're not 'supposed' to leave everything there. Errors 'should' be corrected. Flaws 'should' be smoothed out. So called ugliness should be trimmed into controlled beauty. But I wanted an old overgrown, abandoned garden with an old witch house. I've loved those since I was a child, and the scary beauty of something taking on a life of its own. Don't know if I succeeded, and besides, that's only my idea of 'Tree Music' anyway.


Sister Songs
A MEANS TO AN END – THE "SISTER SONGS" SESSIONS

It surprised a few people when I announced that I'll stop making music, and that "Sister Songs" would be my last album. But from my perspective, it's a highly logical move to stop doing things with the same conviction I once used to do them. As a matter of fact, hadn't I decided to quit, it's doubtful I would ever have finished "Sister Songs". The sessions stretched out for several months which is an unusually drawn out period for me making an album. Although I was pleased with how the first songs I recorded turned out and knew what I wanted the record to be like, what story I wanted it to tell, I just couldn't make myself write the remaining material.

It was during one of my e-mail conversations with Craig Williamson I actually made my decision. He encouraged me to give it up when I complained to him that music wasn't fun anymore, and that finishing the album was becoming more like a ball and chain than the creative joy it had started as. As soon as I had adjusted to the idea that it would be my final album (mind you, it wasn't an easy step to take!), I wrote the last songs I needed to complete the record and recorded them in short time. After all, it would have been unfair not to finish it. Unfair to the songs I actually had at that point because I liked them and in many ways were my most ambitious and worked-through material, and unfair to the person to whom they were aimed.

At a first glance, "Sister Songs" may look like an album of love songs. To some degree it is, but it doesn't deal with the kind of love you hopefully find in a traditional relationship. The songs are more like friendship songs, a friendship that goes deeper than what a relationship seems to allow, paradoxically as it may seem. It deals with a situation that truly changed my life, something that – to quote one of the titles on the album – offered me a sense of belonging. I know it sounds just as sad as pretentious, but that sense is something I've rarely felt and when I finally got it, I had to celebrate it in some way. So if you want an autobiographical album, there you go!

All note taken from Tree Music Webpage
Get all three cds by Peter Scion!Great dark mystical acid folk full of melancholy and spreading emotions eveywhere as if they were flowers.FANTASTIC!HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!!!
get Amethyst dream here
get Tree Music and Sister Songs here

Vibracathedral Orchestra-Corpse,CDR,1998,UK

Following yesterday's post of VCO 1st recording here comes their 2nd one.Nothing to be added here.Simply great!

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Double Leopards-The Axe Helve,LP,1999,USA

This prolific noise drone group features Chris Grey (endless boogie, white rock), Marcia Basette (un, hototogisu, etc) as well as other un member/fursaxa member, grant acker, on one track.Working with almost static forms in a similar way to Japanese Fluxus operatives Taj Mahal Travelers, Double Leopards drop in elliptical melodies and rainbow electronics that flare just beyond the horizon, briefly illuminated by auroral bursts of tone that strafe the sky. Like Coil, Throbbing Gristle or Mirror, there is so much detail to the group's conceptions that they feel inhabited, so much eerie, subliminal action that their instrumentals seem to be undeniably about something, a hunch given further credence by darkly evocative titles.This is their 1st extremely rare LP.

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Abunai!-Universal Mind Decoder,CD,1997,USA

The title of Boston-based band Abunai's debut album is nicked from the Byrds, and this Universal Mind Decoder shares with that band an evocative mysticism that is delicate yet loses nothing in musical potency. Abunai (a warning cry meaning "Look out" commonly used in Japanese anime) directs its music less toward the pop end of the spectrum, however, and more toward a spacious, sweeping, and sound-intensive strain of psychedelia full of phased vocals, spacey sound effects, guitar distortion, and tribal drumming. The music, amazingly enough, meshes melodic, drone-based space-rock, P-Funk (particularly in the low end), pensive folk-rock, and shoegazer pop together so that Universal Mind Decoder could be seen as a sort of Cliff's notes to psychedelia from the past 30 years. But Abunai doesn't rest on the laurels of a psychedelic past and brings to its music something too often missing in psychedelia: a gentleness -- even subtlety -- that loses nothing in grandiose power. It is music capable of whisking you away and, in the same instant, disorienting you with its sense of foreboding. Everything that Abunai plays, from Celtic folk to trippy hymns, takes on a slow-cooking, heated ambience complete with modal scales, expressive riffs, well-manicured gales of distortion, and heavy drumming that amounts to music that both takes you away in its gradually building momentum and weighs on your consciousness like something that you can't quite grasp but know is important. The album has its fair share of densely textured gems: "77 Gaza Strip" is a cosmic bit of slow-motion surf music that dispenses any sunny business and replaces it with oceanic depths of guitar, making it closer to an Eastern-influenced take on Jimi Hendrix's "Third Stone from the Sun" than Dick Dale, but more mystically driven. "Cosmo Gun" sounds like some wind-swept psychedelic expanse with rich, palpitating bass and vocals echoing out from a deep hole, and in songs such as "Inspiration," the loping, beautifully melancholy cover of Richard Thompson's "Cavalry Cross," and "Quiet Storm," with their hymn-like overtones, Abunai make their sacred aspirations manifest in the most moving of ways. In general, Universal Mind Decoder seems like a cautious extension toward something spiritual, but something that is not -- perhaps cannot -- be identified or reached on a tangible level. As such, the music reaches a bit farther and lasts a bit longer than is necessary. Then again, that's the point of anything spiritual: making a human effort that never quite reaches transcendence but attempts it nonetheless.
- Stanton Swihart, All Music Guide

Space psychedelic excursions to melt your mind with!
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JOSHUA "Gold Cosmos" LP 2001 (US)



Joshua Burkett was a member of the TOWER RECORDINGS collective. Here is his second album, an all-underground star collaboration featuring among others Chris Corsano, Dredd Foole, Ben Chasney, PG Six, Cynthia Meadows and Matt Valentine.

"Gold Cosmos" is a stunning work, away from conventional folk structures with an archaic twist that sounds unmistakably cosmic. Built primarily of layers of acoustic guitar teased with other instrumentation, it starts from a clear Bernt Jansch influence to gradually mutate towards this religious feel of ecstatic delieverance found in mid 70ies POPOL VUH albums. Joshua uses his voice infrequently and rather as a backing instrument than a focal point. There is also a heavy TOWER RECORDINGS influence on the irregular repetitive patterns that are often punctuated by odd vocal samples, bells, harp, or quietly laid percussion.
A masterpiece of mantric quality!

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THE MESMERIZING EYE-PSYCHEDELIA-A MUSICAL LIGHT SHOW, LP, 1967, USA




Strangely absent from most accounts of of America's contribution to avant psychedelia (50 Foot Hose, United States Of America, Silver Apples, Friendsound, et.al.), the work of The Mesmerizing Eye might just trump them all, insofar as all of the aforementioned will periodically come up for air and give the listener a chance to regain their orientation and equilibrium. The Mesmerizing Eye will have none of that sorta pussyfooting about. From the word go, this is a brainfrying mindfuck that sounds like the most twisted bits of Friendsound ("everyone must eat rhubarb pie...") nerve-rattlingly dragged out for the album's duration. Searing acid guitar, air raid sirens, crying babies, thunderstorms, detuned marching bands staggering past...and all of that in just the first few minutes. All you psychonauts have been duly warned. Note: All tracks on this album segue into one another, so I've indexed sides A & B as one track each. Also...despite the fact that it's considered to be an LP, this album runs a scant 23+ minutes.

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V.A.-THE UP ANOTHER OCTAVE TRANSMISSION, LP, 1981, USA




This legendary minimal synth/new wave compilation's auspicious reputation turns out to largely be well deserved. Created to showcase a cross-section of Orange County, California new wave talent, there's plenty here for discerning ears to get legitimately hot and bothered about, not least the streak of brilliance that runs for most of the first side (dubbed the "tekno rok" side, so you can guess...) that takes in Farenheit's killer 6+ minute instrumental album opener that's a pure act of La Dusseldorf worship, Craig Sibley's tense textbook minimal synth, an insanely infectious slice of heliated chick vocal-driven new wave from a pre-Terri Nunn Berlin and an alternate version of Null and Void's "I Can See What's Happening" from their monster EP that I posted some time ago. Elsewhere, Berlin's John Crawford and Craig Sibley team up as Videos for some generically Devo-ish herky jerk and The Beat-E-O's stick out like a sexy sore thumb amidst the passel of also rans that occupy the more traditionally rockist "nu rok" B side (well...I never said this comp was 100% solid) with their off kilter early Tin Huey-style post punk anxiety attack.

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GOTHIC HUT-SHOW ME YER BELLY, LP, 1988, USA




Following my post of this L.A. Free Music Society-related art pop band's third album "Big Holes!" a little while back, here's their second missive from a year earlier. I'd previously bemoaned the fact that, unlike some of the other L.A.F.M.S. related bands of a rock disposition (Human Hands and Bpeople to name a couple), Gothic Hut have never really gotten their due. That this particular album featured a title more apropos for a group like Nashville Pussy might have had a bit to do with that, which is a pity, as this is another gem of subtly skewed low key pop smarts of a strangely narcotized demeanor, with Rick Potts' (Human Hands, Steaming Coils, Le Forte Four, Solid Eye etc.) impish sensibility lending the proceedings a subtly cockeyed air that'd be easy to overlook if you weren't paying close attention, their unprepossesing demeanor managing to creatively couch idiosyncracy inside that which superficially seems straightforward.

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THE LOOP ORCHESTRA-THE ANALOGUE YEARS, CD, 1999, AUSTRALIA






Following my post many months back of this wonderfully disorienting Australian experimental troupe's debut LP, here's their equally lovely second outing of old school reel-to-reel tape loop manipulation, much of it recorded live. This still extant unit features a pretty auspicious roster of Aussie avant heavyweights in it's ranks, among them Richard Fielding of early Severed Heads and Patrick Gibson of The Systematics and the supernaturally present and charged atmosphere they and the rest of this ensemble evoke here (by turns hovering, miasmic and cocooning) leaves little question that they're all still in the thick of their creative prime.

Get part one Here

Get part two Here

HEIMCOMPUTER 80-SYSTEMFEHLER, CDR, 2001, GERMANY




Part of a handful of Neue Deutsche Welle and minimal synth-inspired German units of a particularly nasty, cheap and video-game-y sort that emerged around the turn of the century (Brandstifter and Yppasswwd Daemons being a couple of others) all waving the flag for 8 bit sound and old school doink. Sounds like a plan to me and Heimcomputer 80 (particularly on this debut CD EP) get a lot of pleasurable traction out of their simultaneously stripped and overloaded Pong blurt formula.

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Saturday, July 21, 2007

Pangolin-Beneath These Darkened Trees,CD,1998,Sweden


Here's another Peter Scion project,and one of my favorite CDs of this psych mastermind.Pure psychedelic rock full of lysergic vibes.Great organ work,wonderful P.Scion 's vocals,acid guitars,some eastern influences.Let your mind melt with these great recordings!Reminds me a mixture of early Paul Roland recordings with early Pink Floyd and HP Lovecraft(the band).A masterpiece.
Here's what Peter Scion says:
The Pangolin album just happened. It was basically recorded just to get an aural document of what the band sounded like. But the recordings turned out so well, that we started thinking of releasing them. At one point early on, it was suggested to make a sort of mini album using only the songs that hadn't been on my solo albums, along with the songs that was most obviously different from the solo recordings, such as 'Cloak of Shame' and 'Is It Raining in Seattle?', but that idea was soon abandoned in favour of full length album including everything we had recorded. There were no outtakes, unless you count a never finished, and rather bad, version of 'In the Forest'.
All of it was recorded digitally in our rehearsal space, with guitarist Mikael Ljung as engineer. (He's a wizard. I just know it. Things could break down and as soon he entered the room, they would work. He's my opposite.) All basic tracks (drums, bass and most of the rhythm guitars) were recorded live. Solos. vocals and Anna Glans' organ were added later. The basic tracks were recorded in one day. I can't remember many second or third takes.
We called in additional musicians for a couple of tracks. Rasmus Hägg was the guitar player in Evil Knievel, a band that also featured Anna Glans and Pangolin's bass player Jonas Elgemark. He provided some fantastic noises for 'Permanent Green Light'. He's the one that makes, for instance, those odd, fiery West Coastish Cipollina freak outs and the strange sounds at the end. Carita Forslund added flute to a few tracks, as well as background vocals on the title track. The guitar player of Gothenburg's excellent progressive outfit Grovjobb, Jerry Johansson, showed up with his sitar and helped us out on the instrumental 'Caravan Thing' as well as 'Cloak of Shame'. Another friend and fan of the band, Gustaf Bengtsson, was staying in town for a few days during the recordings, and blew harmonica on 'Tombstone Eyes'. I loved having all these people coming in and doing a great job. It was like one big family.
The arrangement for 'Is It Raining in Seattle?' was the idea of Sara Pang, our drummer at the time. We had originally played it similar to the 'Sweet Sorrow Man' version, but Sara never really liked that country beat, so instead she came up with that driving, rolling rockabilly groove--which of course was a strike of genius since the song improved a lot.
The vocals demanded a few takes for a couple of the songs. It was hard to find the right growl for 'Lover's Crime', and I constantly lost breath during 'Tombstone Eyes.' We had never played it so fast before, and it has a lot of words! The first vocals for 'Cloak of Shame' were lousy, so they had to be done again. Unfortunately I was quite hungover that day I was to do it, and every time the melody reached for the higher parts, my head felt like it was going to crack… I've learned my lesson now. Never another hangover day when recording!
During the the solo section at the end of 'Cloak of Shame' you can hear three solo guitars. It starts with only one, then another one comes along, then a third one. At the end, one by one they drop out of the mix. One of them was reversed. You don't hear that typical otherwordly whine of a backwards guitar because of all the fuzz I used, but it created different harmonies and adds a lot to the overall multilayered feel. 'Is It Raining in Seattle?' also uses several guitars at the end. We had more than one solo to choose from, and we couldn't decide which one was the best, so we put them all into the final mix!
The album was recorded in long sessions spread over a couple of weekends. We more or less lived in the rehearsal room. It was a real low budget job. Mics were taped to whatever available--there weren't enough real mic stands! It involved a lot of hard work recording 'Beneath These Darkened Trees,' but it was a wonderful time. At that time, Pangolin was the band I had dreamt of being a member of. It was wonderful. Really fun.
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The Continental Soul Searchers-In The Forest,CD,1998,Sweden


Here 's a wonderful acid mystic folk CD where 2 acid minds meet :St. Mikael and Peter Scion.Mystic stoned acid folk!Here 's what the 2 creators say about this:
SOUL SEARCHING--NOTES BY PETER SCION
It was an odd time, being young and slightly confused in the small town. Hadn't it been for Mikael I would have been pretty lost I guess. Musically lost for sure. Mikael was colourful in a city of grey.
Forming the duo Continental Soul Searchers with him was a beginning for me. It was like finding a map to untrodden land. Suddenly I had someone to bounce off ideas to. I could explore my limited abilities as a musician. I was surprised and delighted that someone with his skills wanted to play with me. I realize now, many years later, that Mikael gave me space to grow, musically and, perhaps even more important, personally. And that is one of the most beautiful things one person can give to another.
When I listen back to the recordings we did, so many great memories come back vivid in my mind. Lots of laughter, oh yes. Imagination. Good things. For years, I wanted to see the best of those recordings released as an album; I wanted to document what was a beginning for us both.
Listening to the Forest studio recordings evokes the atmosphere that surrounded those sessions. Late night, the pale moon through the trees, sitting outside the small house where the recordings took place, listening to the sound of Mikael overdubbing vocals or whatever finding its way into the silent forest night. And I remember how we got the beautiful atmospheric recording we wanted for 'Season Song'--Lach'n opened the window in the morning and put a microphone outside and captured the sweet sound of the birds singing in the trees. And how he kindly agreed to add violin for 'In the Forest' and we ended up with a great solo to contrast Mikael's wonderful guitar wizardry at the end of the song. I think that's one of Mikael's best guitar solos on any record. I've wanted to learn to play like that ever since. And I remember how I couldn't back out of recording 'Little Girl Magician'--I told Mikael before we got to the studio that I didn't want to do it unless we could have a cello on it. Coming to the studio, I soon noticed that Lach'n not only had a cello there, but also that he certainly knew how to play it… and the song turned out to be a sweet little tune that was well worthy of inclusion on the album.
'Råd för en friskare rygg' is a spoof. It was recorded at Mikael's home on his old portable tape recorder that made anything sound psychedelic. The lyrics might sound exotic to anyone who doesn't know Swedish, but I assure you, they aren't. Or, to be more correct, that's what they truly are!
The last five songs on the album were recorded in 1993, when Mikael and I lived many miles apart. I did some 4 track recordings of songs I had written and asked Mikael to sing them. I was fortunate enough to have a positive answer from him, so I brought the master tape to Stockholm and he overdubbed not only vocals, but also tablas for 'Ring Of Gold'. Distance can't stop a friendship in music!
All tracks taken together show our little duo as a rather versatile one. I neither can or will deny that, even though it may sound like boast. You just have to listen to the album to know that we had some nice music coming from many origins. I hear imagination and, important as it is to me, I hear the sound of a friendship that opened so many doors for me. I hear the beginning of something that will never ever end.
PETER AND I
by S.T. Mikael

We first met during a small local rock festival in our hometown summer of ´86.
Tall, dark-dressed, talkative and quite a funny character who seemed to have a lot of energy but not quite sure what to do with it. Apart from being involved in my own lonely musical world and recordings, I was a member of the dirty punky and funny rock group Dickie Dickhead & the Outcasts, but I was open to new contacts as I considered myself a lead singer and not only a rock guitarist. This guy, Peter, was a sort of singer/songwriter who, like me, had a lot of ideas and wanted to try new stuff. I was one of the few who had enough patience to cope with this odd guy so we talked a lot about music and how to make it more subtle. Both of us was rockin´ wild in bands but had a more introspective side which just had to be expressed.
I don´t remember details but somehow we joined together. He had a lot of lyrics, inspired by celtic folk songs and Nick Drake. I was more oriented in folk music from the southern areas of Europe and the Middle East and India along with psychedelia and crooner songs. What I remember is that we had a lot of fun, laughing a lot, recording spontaneously with lyric sheets all over the place, improvising. Sometimes I played guitar, tablas or bongos, but mostly I was only singing which was so exciting to me because I´ve always felt that I could be more concentrated and "be free in voice". We both did write songs but by this time (1987) I had my own group, the Twilight Souls, so I let Peter do most of the material. When we shaped our songs which, I think, were both original and different with an odd blend of our own characters, we dared enter the local Rock Contest and continued doing some gigs. It was a very happy period and the very first time I had the opportunity to co-operate and compose with someone else on musical terms.
By 1988 my band broke up so some energy was left over to Continental Soul Searchers which I didn´t think interfered with my own musical world. We recorded a lot of improvisations and proper songs, and we even tried a guy's studio (placed in a ruin, I think!), the first time for me, which was a weird experience. But maybe the most important thing with us was, that we talked a lot, and about everything in fact. We walked around like melancholic nature worshipping hoboes in a weird world that we never understood. We sure had some nice summers together!
In 1989 I left our town for Stockholm but we met and had sessions anyway. The peak of it all was during that early summer of `89 when Peter told me he had a friend, Lach'n Jonsson, who had a studio in the middle of a forest in the country, called "The Forest". We took a trip out there and recorded some finished songs. We did good, much thanks to Lach'n Jonsson who helped us technically but also did some drums, cello and violin. Great stuff he did!
And so did Peter, coming up with some beautiful songs and lyrics in the folklore vein that was an honour for me to sing. It was a dream and I can still sense the joy when listening to the material. That was my first genuine contact with a proper studio and something REAL came alive in me. Not only did we those funny, sweet, melancholic or moody recordings together but I also realized I was capable working in a studio adding different instruments like tablas, bass guitar, moog and Hohner Clavinet on to these songs which to a great deal, if I may say so, was the beginning of my own personal development and career as a solo artist.
After this we went separate ways and new things, great and small, happened to us both, along the way. But we still can share the memories of this period and sometimes, now and then, we see each other and do what we always have done… playing a homage to Mother Earth and her angels and demons...
From Tree Music website

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St. Mikael-Soul Flower,1996,2LP,Sweden




Following my previous post of ST. Mikael's lps here's another release from 1994 this time.

This double LP is the best album he ever released, but it’s his most unconventional as well. The four sides of "Soul Flower" all bear a different character: Side A is more or less the S.T: Mikael we know from previous LPs: the melancholic psychedelic singer/songwriter who records all his twisted songs on his home equipment with a skill and a passion seldom demonstrated elsewhere. Highlights here are the pounding "Godly" and the moody "Beyond the Haze". Side B is the strangest but also one of the best. ST Mikael experimented with Turkish ethnical instruments and musical style elements, resulting in the magnificent title track, the intriguing "The Titans" and the exotic, fuzzy "The Turkish Flower". Side C brings songs from one session and it shows ST Mikael in a very emotional, spiritual mood; he sings and plays his songs with the intensity of a young Tim Buckley. Highlights here are the long, semi-instrumental "Moving...Together" and the elegant "She Came With The Spring". Side D only features two tracks; the dreamy, soft "The Night Stars" and "Summer In My Life", a long jam (filling almost the entire side) recorded in the In Deep-studio with backing by Adam Axelzon and other friends. All of this resulted in an utterly stoned, mind lifting instrumentation with layers of exotic percussion, sitars going overdrive, spacy keyboards and burning guitar lines, an absolute best on an album full of high-quality psychedelics. ST Mikael proved once again to be a gifted songwriter and an unconventional performer with a very personal ear for acoustics and an emotional honesty seldom seen these days.
More to come pretty soon.
As requested
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Vibracathedral Orchestra-Mothing,CDR,1998,UK

Vibracathedral Orchestra (a/k/a VCO)is a UK-based drone ensemble that has been active since the late 1990s. The original group came together when Mick Flower began recording with Neil Campbell and Julian Bradley, who had released a number of homemade cassettes and an LP of their duo work. They self-released 2 CDR albums before Campbell suggested merging the nascent group with the trio Flower was working with alongside Bridget Hayden and Adam Davenport. This sealed the best known 5 piece VCO line-up. The group quickly became known for their prolific output on a vast array of independent labels and their incendiary live performances. They attracted the attention of Julian Cope, whose essay on the group can still be read at his Head Heritage website. Vibracathedral Orchestra has many self-released albums but has made music available through many key underground labels, including VHF Records, Giardia, Eclipse, U-Sound, Qbico, Textile and Freedom From. They have twice been featured in session on Resonance FM, given an hour long slot each time.
Although very much a fixed unit, the line-up has been occasionally augmented by the likes of Matthew Bower, John Godbert, Richard Youngs, John Clyde Evans (latterly known as Tirath Singh Nirmala) and Tom Greenwood (of Jackie-O Motherfucker). Julian Bradley left the group in 2004 with both Neil Campbell and Bridget Hayden following him in 2006. A new album, Wisdom Thunderbolt, featuring Chris Corsano and Matthew Bower as guests, has just been released on VHF.
From Wikipedia

This very early recording goes to prove that the group knew what they were doing right from the start. Probably inspired by Matthew Bower's work as Total or Skullflower, Mothing finds the group blasting forth layers of improvised yet atmospheric drones. The eighteen minute long The Beauty Of Refined Rusticity is a fine example as violins, cymbals and bass rumbles join a steady keyboard (or feedback?) drone. The music never climaxes, it just shifts gears, changing ever so slightly until it finally disappears, breaking the spell it conjured up through it's own length. The sound quality is quite low throughout (this is a CD-R after all!), but this only gives these alien sounds an even more exotic feel (this is especially true on the closing Falling Free You & Me, a twenty-three minute long buzzing drone which will drive your house pets mad!). Comes in a cheaply made slimcase and lame-ass artwork.
From:http://www.myrecordcollection.org/artists/vibracathedral/mothing.html

As requested!
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Fit and Limo-Internazionale,1982+Im Blickpunkt,198?(split with Stratis),tapes,Germany




Fit & Limo are more or less the germ cell of the whole Limo-musicworld. In the late 70ies the couple play a kind of woods and fields folk and then taking the means of production in their own hands inspired by the Punk, New Wave and the so-called ingenious amateurism. They found a cassette-label (Servil) and invent new bands every new day! (Pure Luege, Kannibalen & Missionare, Hans Kahl Combo….). In spring 1982 Fit & Limo release their 1st tape on Servil: “Haende Hoch”. Their casio-pop and folk-punk is well-received by the mags of those days (Spex: “little stories, playful naοve children tunes, refreshing results, pleasant”). Further tapes follow: “Kleine Schiffchen” (1982), “Rote Blumen” (1983), “Golden Trash” (1984) and then “Put On The Flipside” (1985) which is the origin of the early repertoire of the Shiny Gnomes with its mixture of Garage punk. The label Pastell listens to “Put On The Flipside” and wants to produce Fit & Limo. But the Shiny Gnomes go in to the studio instead and record the classic “Wild Spells”. From 1986 til 1988 Fit & Limo retire to return with their first longplayer “Retrospective 1983-1988”. With the help of the drummers Ufo and Haffi it has a more Rock-direction which continues with the albums “Revisited” and “That Totally Tore My Head Off”. In 1993 they release their groundbreaking “Angel Gopher” album which is pure folk with heavy psychedelic touches. The drums are out and the bongos in. Their tribute to the Incredible String Band “This Moment. Fit & Limo Play Incredible String Band” fulfills this new direction. “Autre Monde” (on their double cd-set “Folly Is An Endless Maze”, 1995), “The Serpent Unrolled” (1998), “As Above So Below” (2000) and finally “Ginnistan” with more and more cosmic folk touches bring Fit & Limo best reputation in the international indie-folk scene. Their forthcoming album “Terra Incognita” will be out in late 2004 and has new surprises. With their supporting guests (Bernhard Witthüser of the Krautfolk-legend Witthüser & Westrupp, Jeffrey Alexander and Miriam Goldberg also known as Black Forest Black Sea, Timothy Renner who collaborated with Fit & Limo on a split-single and Steffi & Peter Wolf (pals of Fit & Limo) and their cosmic art-folk influences marks a new step in the Fit & Limo catalog.
Fit and Limo are somekind of a prehistory of the very famous psych heads Shiny Gnomes.These are 2 very obscure early F&L releases that not even their official discography from the Shiny Gnomes ,mentions.The first one must be their 2nd tape ,after Haende Hoch,on their own Servil tape label.The other one is a split tape with STRATIS (NOTE:i could manage to get only the F&L side,if anyone could provide STRATIS site it would be much appreciated),released through IRRE tapes label.This must be the 2nd IRRE tapes release (IT002)-and talking about IRRE tapes i think it's time to rip the first Poison Dwarves tape on this label.Well, F&L here sound more primitive than their known later acid folk releases. Think of stoned Amos & Sara jamming with Der Plan using tons of casio keyboards and tapes and some "broken" guitars and self made pecussion. Very homemade sound, yet wonderful but not iving any hints of what will follow in the mid/late 80s till now(except of course the cover of VU's "I'll be your mirror")
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Friday, July 20, 2007

NED ROTHENBERG/ELLIOTT SHARP/SAMM BENNETT-SEMANTICS, LP, 1985, USA





Hands down my favorite album that I've encountered from Elliott Sharp's vast discography, this music took the top of my head off when I first heard it as a teen on the radio in L.A. and twenty some years on, it still seems like a high water mark not only for Sharp but for the whole sprawling Downtown NY music culture of the mid-80's. Samm Bennett's octopoidal percussion work here is pure jawdropping polyrhythmic genius and, when set against Rothenberg's endless circular-breathing curlicues of vaguely joujouka-ish spiral motion and the alternately coruscating and Magic Band-plangent fretwork of Sharp (on a custom double-necked guitar/bass) frequently escalates the proceedings into zones of ecstatic group-mind genius that are unsurpassable. This is never more true than on the overwhelming ever-building North African by way of no wave cacophany of "Terra Firma" and the pin-you-to-your-seat drama of "Vliet's Van", a track that I can only describe as sounding like The Magic Band interpreting Lalo Schifrin' theme music to Enter The Dragon; easily one of my favorite pieces of music of all time. Please note that, as the insert shown attests, the track titles as listed on the back cover are actually reversed, with Side B 's contents actually Side A's. Their "Bone Of Contention" LP (with their named changed to Semantics) will follow shortly.

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SONORHC-OUTRELANDE, LP, 1982, FRANCE




As promised, here's the second Sonorhc album, this one seamlessly fusing archival material from 1973 with 1982 recordings, the whole sounding about as exotically overripe as the cover imagery looks. Sundry ethnic tendencies have found their way into Sonorhc's acidic musical grammer since their debut and it makes for a rather more languid (if no less rich) listening experience, their aesthetic probably coming closer to the krautrock template than any other French music of the era and that's never more true than on Outrelande; Deuter, Between and Dzyan circa "Time Machine" at one time or another all coming to mind as I steep myself in their luxuriant somatic soundword.

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MIZUTAMA SHOBODAN-MAID'S PRAYER SOUNDS LIKE DA-DA-DA!, LP, 1981, JAPAN







Following my post of their second album from 1985, here's the debut outing from this high strung all-female post punk crew fronted by a very intense young Tenko taxing her tonsils with perfervid passion. While this unit (otherwise known by the American translation of their name, The Polka Dot Fire Brigade), don't quite hit some of histrionic peaks of wrenching emotional gravity they'd reach circa '85, this is still a pretty bracing shot of art punk action by any measure.

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PC malfunction

Dear Mutant friends ,due to an unexpected PC malfunction i've lost all my massmirror links for today's posts.So i have to re-upload them and as a conclusion there be no posts today.I'm very sorry for this 2 day absence....but new posts will be here by me tomorrow.
Jim Mutantsounds

SACK UND BLUMM-ZACK BUMM, CD, 2001, GERMANY





Following my post of their sensational self titled debut CD, here's another can't miss missive from one of Germany's finest contemporary bands, the collaboration between underground naif polymath Harald "Sack" Ziegler and Frank "Schultge" Blumm. This compilation culls together their first two singles, a compilation appearance and 28+ minutes of material available no where else. The fact that Sack & Blumm have had their work issued through channels more readily associated with the electronica axis has managed to obscure just how much the doings of this idiosyncratic duo resemble, as mentioned before, the addled toy instrument delicacy of Pascal Comelade and Woo. Teasing tendrils of peculiarity out of delicacy and breeziness is a highly underrated art and these two odd ducks do it so effortlessly and with such evident creative force, I for one am frequently left awestruck.

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NO AID-S/T, TAPE, 198?, GERMANY



There's lots of no's to account for here. First off, no information, save that this gang were included on the seminal "Shau Hor Main Herz Ist Rhein" compilation LP (forthcoming). No song titles, no insert, no date (well...at least on my copy), nothing to be found online about 'em and...no humor. Nope...No Aid were one seriously down-in-the-mouth band and often very close in spirit to Christoph Anders' Toto Lotto (posted by me long ago), in the way they fuse their monolithically lumbering caterwauling scree and convulsive belching and bellowing to no-waveish effect. Provided you're in the mood for a good avant-ish battering, this frequently makes for much amusement. Or maybe I'm just in the mood to get barked at today.

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Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Yen Pox-st.tape,1993,USA

Dark ambient droners Yen Pox present here a soundtrack for the wake of the dead.Drilling scary dark landscapes creating a nightmarish atmosphere.Band with connections to Veil Of Secrecy and Bloodbox relesed this tape in just 100 copies through their own label.

"Music for nibbling at the dead"
~ Daniel Plunkett - ND Magazine

"Absolutely amazing extended subterranean darkness...."
~ Eric Lanzillotta - Anomalous Records

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Pelt-For Michael Hannahs ,CDr,1997,USA

Pelt is an extended experimental “raga” rock project by the blues guitarist Jack Rose
Jack Rose is a talented American blues rock guitarist which in parallel of his solo albums has released several items for an experimental, minimalist eastern tinged raga inspired project named Pelt. In this production, the acoustic, folk side of his musical background is orientated to unconventional, highly mystical experiences released with the help of traditional instruments as acoustic modal guitar, bowed strings, cello, bowed metal and addition of amplified sounds. In this adventure, Jack Rose is accompanied by three others musicians whose Mike Gangloss, Pat Best and Skipp James Connell. The quartet explores the universe of suspended "drones", the meditative density of eastern classical music and post rock. They provide a rather luminous, static and cinematic extended exploration throw infinite time. Pelt has published their first "classic" double album in 1996, called "Brown Cyclopedia". After that they have recorded the free form Burning/Filament/Rockets in 1996, then "Max Meadows", recognised for its great sense of diversity (a mix of Eastern raga, psychedelic rock and "world")… "Empty Bell Ringing In The Sky" marks their most psychedelic effort with freak out epic tunes. "Ayahuasca" ( 2001) is dedicated to the acoustic guitarist John Fahey. It features fingerstyle over ecstatic raga accompaniments. Published in 2003, "Pearls from the River" is an other exploration throw acoustic folk, monochord & calming raga sonorities.A completely hypnotic musical trip and a must have for fans of Faust, Ravi Shankar, John Fahey, Third Ear Band.
From ProgArchives
This was a very limited release made up for the completed Pelt 1997 US tour.Nice droning music with acoustic instruments mostly,very meditative and eastern influenced.

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Nagamatzu - Sacred Islands Of The Mad,tape +compilation tracks,1986,UK

Here's the first tape of Andrew Lagowski(SETI) project ,Nagamatzu.Dark electronics reminding Clock DVA's Thirst era recordings,Cabaret Voltaire early 80's sound,even the very first New Order's attempts(when Ian Curtis/Joy Division's shadow was still falling heavilly upon them).The compilation tracks are from 3 Minutes Symphony and Life At The Top comp. LPs.
IMHO this is a band that either you like it or not. But then isn't this the status of a so called "cult" band(or better say mutant?)?

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SONORHC-PURF, LP, 1972, FRANCE




This transcendent acid-induced genre-blurring masterwork is one of the greatest undiscovered treasures from the French underground, with plangent ethno-tinged Agitation Free cum Alain Markusfeld acid rock, watery improvisations, dreamy bits of Bo Hansson-like sympho prog wistfulness and freeform acid freakouts somewhat like passages of Love Live Life + 1 all not only sharing space but seeming like the most natural of bedfellows in Sonorhc's uncanny universe. A total mindbomb. Their second LP "Outrelande" will follow shortly.

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WALL OF VOODOO-S/T, 12" EP, 1980, USA






It's sorta amazing that no one's thought to post this out of print monster somewhere in the music blogosphere before, but then Wall Of Voodoo have always been a pathetically misunderstood and underrated band, whose early MTV-generated fame gave the impression of a new wave novelty act, which completely belies their origins, their intent and their absolute musical singularity (Ennio Morricone meets Kraftwerk after a trawl through the bowels of L.A.'s synth punk underground). Few realize that before MTV, Ridgeway and co. were a fixture of L.A. art punk fringe, frequently gigging and jamming together with synth punk titans Nervous Gender, and that their monster ace-in-the-hole percussionist Joe Nanini had previously been a member of Black Randy's Metrosquad. This debut EP captures them at a screaming peak of originality, never more so than on their bleak, severe and searing cover of Johnny Cash's Ring Of Fire.

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DANTALIAN'S CHARIOT-CHARIOT RISING, LP, 1995 (RECORDED: 1967), UK




Stewart Copeland wasn't the only Police member with a hippy past (see his Frolkhaven album that I posted a few months back). Way before Stewie got the idea to make a drug freak out album, old Andy Summers (here listed as Andy Somers) was already an estasblished figure on the British psych scene, once even maintaining a brief membership in Soft Machine, before Kevin Ayers became intimidated by his playing. Circa Britain's summer of love though, Andy's primary psych vehicle was opposite former R & B star Zoot Money in the frequently amazing Dantalian's Chariot. Having only managed to get one single released during their lifetime, this archival release culls together a wealth of previously unheard material. About half of the contents here are complete revelations, the best bits alternating Candy and A Current Bun Carnaby Street pop psych dementia (sometimes a bit like Pussy) with, on the mindblowingly beautiful instrumentals Soma pts. 1 & 2, an almost Chocolate Watchband-like orchestrated approach thats poignant in the extreme.

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HAUSHALTSWAREN/ANLIEGER FREI-S/T SPLIT, LP/CDR, 1981/2001, GERMANY




Following my post of D. Flemmer's excellent tape on Datenverarbeitung and preceding a host of further Datenverarbeitung tapes yet to come, here's a truly whacked out album from this label's arsenal, originally issued as a split LP, with both outfits featuring co-label owner Stiev, who's the source for said forthcoming Datenverarbeitung titles as well. Both of these related Neue Deutsche Welle units trafficed in penetratingly bent and hermetic post-Ralph Records outlandishness; Anlieger Frei's sometimes akin to Der Plan at their most squashed and insular (think: Zuruck In Die Atmossphare), Haushaltswaren's slightly more tightly honed approach nudging the proceedings closer to Wirtschaftswunder territory. Stiev has graciously translated the text included in the CDR reissue into English for the benefit of Mutant Sounds fans, which follows here:

Greetings from a survivor..
Rereleasing a not so very important record after 20 years? Why? Well, there are some reasons. 20 years ago (oh my god is it that long?) me and my friends had a lot of fun when recording this album. That's what it was all about, having fun and being more or less creative at the same time. As Stefan Werner form 5te Gangart-label contacted me, I was aware, that Anlieger Frei
(translated: Residents only), my band (would be called project today, tha certainly fits it well) would not be able to fill a whole album anyone could enjoy. But there was my friend Dieter, who had his band Splitter, but who was full of more mindless ideas, so he agreed in recording on side of the record with me. We found the name when sitting at the bar of the M8, a tiny pub amidst the city of Bonn. Dieter was playing with a box of matches and the print on it 'Haushaltswaren' (translated
Household supplys) suddenly was recognized by the both of us. That was it. Of yourse the name turned into a bit of a concept (see the photo and some of the titles).

Anlieger Frei came to life after Cliff and me had been playing together in other bands and were hanging around together anyway. That name was thought to be concept as well, it hinted to our adoration for the old farts from San Fransisco. Sadly enough our ability to play was not as big as that of the Residents (but maybe they just have better weed in California…), so the music turned out to be different.

The whole album was recorder on a Teac 4-track at my home. I was in school than and still lived with my parents and so it happened – specially when we were singing – that my Mom stood with a red face and tears of laughter in her eyes in the door of my room. We used everything as an instruments that we layed our fingers on, backing tins, bottles, guitars, bass, MS-20 and the unbeatable DR-Rhythm-beatbox. After a few month we had enough material Dieter, Stefan W. and me took a drive throught he snowstorm to somewhere near Limburg where Tom Dokupil had his Schokostudio' in the basement of his parents house. There everything was mixed and and eventually some effects were added by Tom and his electronic helpers. Mainly Dieter was very much in to production quality, so we had to listen over and over to the songs. Finally even Dieter
was happy, a mastertape was made and the stuff was send to the record plant. Some time later we had a whitelabel (this was used as the source for the CDr, because the mastertape got lost somewhere) and the first 500 were printed. Despites of expectations it turned out to sell quite well so there was a second printing of 250 pieces. It even sold to Japan! I always imaging how earnest little yellow men take out the record with heavy nodding, put it on and listen with respectfull
silence).

After the record everything went astray in the following years. Cliff and me had a couple of gigs as Anlieger Frei and had another group with Lutz B. – who were actually rehearsing – in the former cowshed of his parents, which made me create the name 'The Fearless Cowyard Cowards in Clinch with their owm Ideas'. Some of this stuff was release on the 'Bonner Rache' and 'Bonner Blutrache' tapes on the Datenverarbeitung label. Dieter turned back to his dreams of popstardom and more or less to his university studies. He never believed in 'Haushaltswaren' as you can see from the title 'Einweg-Platte. Kein Pfand – keine Rückgabe' (Oneway record, no deposit – no return') tp be found on the album cover, but I'm sure in retrospect he liked it.

So here is a second and third reason for rereleasing this concoction: Cliff is dead for some years now, he never managed to realize when the fun was ending with drugs and gave us the Sid Vicious – This Rerelease is dedicated to him, we had so much fun, I miss you! Dieter disappeared form my sight sometime, he was last seen in Cologne and I have been told he had turned to heavier music with young man wearing tights. Dieter, if you read this, please contact!
Bonn, November 2001
Stiev A.

The funny musicians are called:

Dieter Duck
Cliff Stiff and
Stiev A.

A list of who made what noise can't be made as everyone played everything at one point. The singing (more or less) is by all three as well.

A comment to some tracks:

Nervös (Nervous) is from drinving with the metro one morning with a girl who had no ticket. Hearing her say 'I'm so nervous' all the time must have crawled into my mind somehow

'Ode an mein Haar' (Ode to my hairdo) was the sole politically meant song on the album. Cliff and me had skinhead hairdos but where against the then rising Nazi-skins

'Spion' (secret agent) has turned out to be a historical document after the end of the cold war and the fall of the wall. These voices, somewhere at the edge of the radio scale, reading numbers for hours are gone now.

'Laufen mit Yrrch' (Walking with Yrrch) was partially recorded when walking with my friend Jörg. I had a tiny dicating maching and left it recording during the walk to the metro-station. Jörg from time to tim beat stuff with his walking stick (he was an a Oscar-Wilde-Dandy thing at that time). Later Jörg took the hairdryer into the bathtube… I miss him too

Alas, what can I say to the Haushalstwaren tracks, they go from simple fiddling around over adolescent mockery to dark obsessions and and in a great punksong. As I heard this all again after many years, I even had to laugh sometimes…

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DOKTOR KETTU-HIGH REVOLUTION, CDR, 2003 + I REALLY LIKE DIAMONDS, CDR, 2003 + GOBMI KALASNIKOV, CDR, 2004, FINLAND








As requested, here's volumes 4-6 of Circle member Jussi Lehtisalo's muzzy and opaque sounding solo project. Like the three previous Doktor Kettu titles I posted, these were all blink-and-you-missed-it micro-editions, High Revolution and I Really Like Diamonds limited to 100 copies, Gobmi Kalasnikov, just 50 and just like them as well, these three further installments wrap a thick dank shroud of post-psychedelic smog slowly around your temporal lobes in a way that renders critical analysis as compromised as your equilibrium.

Get High Revolution part 1 Here

Get High Revolution part 2 Here

Get I Really Like Diamonds Here

Get Gobmi Kalasnikov part 1 Here

Get Gobmi Kalasnikov part 2 Here

Xoris Perideraio-Xoros gia Mousiki.,LP,1985+Anwsh,7",1983,Greece







Here's a post that i guess you were all waiting.The LP and 7" of the phenomenal Greek minimal synth band Xoris Perideraio.Anxious rhythms,electronic angst,surrealistic lyrics!One of the best Greek LPs ,not only in the minimal synth genre,but ever(imho) and of course one of my favorites ever!I had posted it ages ago in a greek blog but i think here it will recieve the recognition and attention it deserves!
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Tuesday, July 17, 2007

GINNUNGAGAP "Remeindre" CD 2005 (US)

GINNUNGAGAP are a project of Stephen O'Malley (SUNN O))) ), KHANATE and several other drone/doom/metal projects and collaborators Anthony Sylvester and Alexander Tucker. Abandoning the doom drone guitar sound of their previous efforts for an excessive use of acoustic instruments, they intend to pay tribute to krautrockers POPOL VUH on this one. The atmosphere is heavy (something you'd expect from O'Malley), but the acoustic nature of the sounds within the psychedelic folk drones add a meditative ambience. The record closes with an electronic dissonant pulsing drone, in a tense atmosphere of cacophonous voices. Recommended modern experimental folk.

Get it here.

PS. The album was released in two formats on two different labels. As a CD in early 2005 by Southern Records on their limited edition Latitudes series (limited to 1000 copies) and out of print nowadays. The LP version was released in the summer of 2006 by Aurora Borealis. The vinyl came in two colors (white or clear) and was limited to 700 copies. It featured a translucent vellum insert with artwork printed in bronze.

Eela Craig-One Niter ,LP/CD,1976,Austria


It took EELA CRAIG five years between full blown LPs. They did release a single in 1974 ("Stories"/"Cheese") that totally turned away from the bluesy/jazzy psych and prog of their debut, and was to define their symphonic prog sound of the late '70s (specifically "Hats of Glass" as both were re-recorded for that album). By 1976, they were finally recording for Vertigo Records in Germany, giving them exposure outside of Austria. The band now started going hog-wild on all sorts of equipment. The original LP shows the band members with all their gear on the back cover (an analog keyboard lover's dream come true). There's vocalist/keyboardist Hubert Bognermayr (hard to miss him since he was partially bald, although he was always like that, and he was still in his 20s when "One Niter" came out) with a Hammond organ, two VCS-3 synthesizers, a Wurlitzer electric piano, and a couple keyboards I can't recognize (looks like I see an RMI electric piano, but can't be sure). Bassist Gerhard Englisch is standing next to an amplifier, and two bass guitars are standing by it (including a Rickenbacker). Frank Hueber is seen playing his drum set. Vocalist and guitarist Fritz Riedelberger is seen holding a Gibson "The Les Paul", keyboardist/flautist Hubert Schnauer is seen standing next to a vibraphone, and a custom made Mellotron 400 courtesy of EMI, with a black top, and Harald Zuschrader is seen playing his Mini Moog, and although hard to see, I think it's a Hohner D-6 clavinet (as plent is used throughout the album). This photo is taken in some place in the countryside (I wouldn't mind living), with some overgrown vegetation, and some small valley down below. Love the picture of giant sculpture of a telephone, makes me wonder where that is, and if it's still there? Well, not only was the band going hog-wild on their equipment, it also shows they now had three guys handling keyboard duty as well as the usual other prog rock gear. They were going for a more funky-brand of prog rock, often dominated by the clavinet. "Circles" is a four movement suite that starts off with some really loud and startling Mellotron brass, before things quiet down with some synthesizer and very pleasant flute. Then they go in to a killer jam dominated by clavinet and Moog. Then they go in to a gentle ballad. This is where the vocals first appear, courtesy of guitarist Fritz Riedelberger. Then they go back to the Mellotron and pick up speed. "Loner's Rhyme" is the track Hubert Bognermayer handles the vocal duties. The band goes in to an extended solo, including some great Moog solos and funky clavinet, as well as Hammond organ. "One Niter Medley" is a five movement suite, starts off with synthesizer and Mellotron, before you hear a short song from Bach with an experiment in phasing. After that the band goes in to funky jam, before mellowing out with string synths. "Venezuela" is a nice acoustic song with Fritz Riedelberger handling vocals. "Way Down" starts off with some really nice flute and some droning keyboard in the background. Once again they go in to a funky jam before mellowing out and the vocals kick in. A totally wonderful album to have in your collection.
Ben Miler as reviewed for ProgArchives]
Possibly their best effort .Bognermayer and Zuschrader later formed Blue Chip Orchestra
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Eduardo Bort - st,LP,1974,Spain




Eduardo Bort's self-titled album from 1975 contains four long tracks of spacey, melodic progressive rock with several longer acoustic/folky passages as well. The first track "Thoughts" reminds me a bit of the 70's Italian bands (especially the better parts on the Uno album). "Pictures of Sadness" has some great mellotron and excellent spacey guitar playing. Bort' s guitar playing reminds me both of Jimi Hendrix and Steve Hillage. By far the weakest point are the vocals. The flat, heavily accented singing is rather poor, but it doesn't spoil the album for me. The last, 12-minute track "Yann" starts with incredible mellotron/guitar/mini-moog interplay. This section could have been culled from Steve Hillage's masterpiece Fish rising. Superb. After about four minutes, part two of the track starts in a more acoustic setting, unfortunately with the worst of the vocal contributions. About two minutes later an instrumental section follows with nice guitar strumming and soloing by Bort. At about nine minutes, the mellotron re-enters with a romantic symphonic theme (and variations) until the track ends. Not a flawless album, but despite the weak vocals an enjoyable piece of work with occasionally some outstanding passages. (Sjef Oellers, as reviewed in Gnosis)
get this masterpiece here

Aidan Baker- I fall into you,2002+At the Fountain of Thirst,2003,CDRs,Canada




Following yesterdays post of Aidan Baker's weird soundscape recordings here are 2 more.

Until earlier this year, I'd never heard of Aidan Baker, which is strange since he seems to be a fairly prolific artist. In addition to a couple other releases, he was featured as an earlier release on the Piehead Records limited series (which Matmos contributed to under the name Vague Terrain Recordings with their A Viable Guide To Actual Sexual Contact release), and with I Fall Into You, it makes at least his third release on the year.
While I don't have either of those other releases (although I've heard parts of the aforementioned Piehead release Repercussion), I can say that after hearing I Fall Into You, I'll have to make more of an effort to seek out his work. Mixing drone with post rock and experimental electronics, this 5 track, 50-minute release takes inspiration from tons of different sources and stirs them together into one drifting mass of sound.
The release opens with shifting tape loops and several layers of drones (strings, voices) on top of one another. The heaving layers shift over one another like a Stars Of The Lid track, but instead of letting the washes go wherever they want, he introduces a very subtle beat behind it all that plays off the tape squiggles, yet never overwhelms. While it's a little more aimless and slightly more inconsistent, the nearly 25-minute second track of "Lysis" still has lots of good things going on for it. Again layering some lush drones and mingling them with some subtle layers of feedbacked guitars, it takes much longer settling in, though, and only a few female vocal snippets fade in and out over the first half. About halfway through, the track again changes, adding another haunting drone and a propulsive beat that builds the track into something downright ominous.
"Symbiosis" arrives as the centerpiece to the album, and it mixes drone sounds with plucked stings and bass that sound like they were recorded inside a cavernous tank. Again, Baker show remarkable restraint on the track, adding layers and taking them away in subtle shifts that allow the track to unfold in a slow release of tension. Combined, the first three tracks on the release are some of the best work in the area of drone and ambient that I've heard this year. The album closes out with two tracks that don't really offer a whole lot more to the workings of the disc. "Phage" is a one-minute piece of layered and looped vocal bits, while "Lethe" is basically a slight rework of the opening track "Lapse" in which the only real difference is that the beat is looped backwards. Still, if you're a fan of drone and ambient music, definitely seek out this release, as Baker is definitely doing some great things.
from Almost cool music reviews
A busy bee this Aidan Baker, whose name popped up already a few times in Vital Weekly. He is both a writer and a musician, although I am not sure how (and if at all) they are connected. I haven't seen any of his writings, but his music is quite alright. It tends to be on the ambient side, and within that genre it comes quite close to the releases on Hypnos. Certainly, the opening piece of 'At the Fountain of Thirst' is in that direction. Unlike what one would suspect though is that Aidan Baker plays guitar. Certainly not easy to recognize, because it may seem a wash of synths. The four length pieces on 'Fountain' certainly grow, and culminate in 'Undine' the final piece in which the guitar in the background sounds like frying bacon. The rhythmical element is not ignored here either, so all in all it's a pretty varied release.
Frans de Waard - Vital Weekly


Monday, July 16, 2007

Heute-Noch ist Polen nicht verloren,tape,1983,Germany

Here's another minimal synth/NDW gem released in 1983 on tape through Intoleranz label.

Get it here

Ocaso Épico-Muito Obrigado,LP,1988,Portugal




Ocaso Épico released one album - 'Muito Obrigado' - in 1988 and was ready to record its second one some years later when band leader and menthor Farinha Master died unexpectedly, putting a premature end to the project. The remaining members scattered and José Paulo Andrade begins learning and exploring new tools, mainly software based ones. Pedro Leitão
A great electronic /experimental yet urban folk LP that will for sure appeal to all fans of weird music over there.
get it here


Fourth sensation-st,LP,1970,Italy

Another of those mystery groups that were so common in Italy at the end of the 60's, Fourth Sensation only appeared on an album released on the Ricordi International label, as if they were a foreign group. No names are mentioned on the cover though there are four musicians pictured on the back, but two of the band members may have been Vince Tempera (later with The Pleasure Machine and Il Volo) and Ares Tavolazzi (Area).All the tracks are composed by Massimo Catalano (that was one of The Flippers, a very popular beat band of the early 60's).
Musically speaking the album has the same style as The Underground Set or Blue Phantom, a totallly instrumental psych-influenced acid-jazz sound, with the Hammond organ in evidence. The ten tracks have all women names.
From:http://www.italianprog.com/a_fourthsensation.htm
This album is more typical of the instrumental psych/blues/jazz tinged library film/TV music, with roller rink organ and half Les Paul era electric leads/half psychedelic fuzz.

get it here

Quarteto 1111-A Lenda do Quarteto 1111,CD,1993,Portugal

Quarteto 1111 was a band that featured Portugal's pop star José Cid. This group got started in the late '60s, and weren't exactly the darling of the Salazar regime as a lot of their music was banned outright during that time. By 1974, the second dictator, Marcello Caetano was ousted, and the following year, Quarteto 1111 recorded their final album together, called Onde, Quando, Como, Porquê Cantamos Pessoas Vivas, released on the Decca label. It also marked José Cid's first outing into progressive rock. Since Portugal never had much of a prog rock scene to begin with, he's considered the granddaddy of Portuguese prog rock (as well as pop in that country in general).
This CD is a collection of their e.p. s.

get it here

Sunday, July 15, 2007

Aidan Baker-Pretending To Be Fearless,2002,CDR,Canada

Aidan Baker is a musician and writer currently based in Toronto, Canada. Classically trained in flute, he is self-taught on guitar, drums and various other instruments. A regular performer in and around Toronto, he has also performed in New York, Montreal, Chicago, San Francisco and such festivals as The Om Festival, Saturation Bombing and The Distillery Jazz Festival. He has released numerous cds on independent labels from around the world and is the author of two books of poetry, two poetry chapbooks and has published poetry, fiction and criticism in various international and scholarly journals.As a solo artist, Baker explores the deconstructive sonic possibilitiesof the electric guitar as a primary sound source, creating music that ranges from experimental to post-rock to contemporary classical. He performsthe experimental collective ARC & the ambient/doom metal project Nadja.He has also composed work for the The Penderecki String Quartet& The Uxbridge Chamber Choir.

New album for the canadian artist Aidan Baker, who seems to be multiplying the CDR appearances quite fast at the moment. Using mostly accoustic instruments (or so it seems), Aidan Baker writes long tracks whose hearts are guitars and string lines, while the drumming and (slight) electronic elements get on the foreground only for a few moments (the beginning of the title track for example). Introvert and depressive, this album is a nice piece of relatively classic composition, stretched with a light post-rock approach (as can be heard on "The dog sleeps oblivious in the den"). Using accurately a combination of low rumbling drones in the background, a traditionnal smooth and light drumming, and long, repeated guitar lines, Aidan Baker immerses the listener into an ample, though claustrophobic mood, which unfolds as soon as the melodies dominate each piece. In the background, the droney elements, without being particularely original, work well and add to the weight and the mesmerizing aspect of the album. Playing a lot with loops, both with the beats and the riffs, "Pretending to be fearless" works as an hypnosis experiment, numbing little by little with many repetition and tiny changes. Therefore, the tracks are quite long to develop, integrating the various layers little by little. Although I do not know how exactly Aidan Baker writes his music, the five tracks on this album seem to be the product of long improvisation with the guitar, edited, selected and mixed with an textured background in order to fill up the silence between the melodies. And though this might sound plain, the result is pretty tasty and well done. My preference would go to the most post-rockish of the tracks ("The dog sleeps oblivious in the den", "A small neat wound"), who creat the strongest and most touching ambiences, though, unlike most post-rock, they are not constant building ups, and do not reach any climax, choosing never to unsettle the fragile mix of drums, loops and strings. By reading this, a comparison might arise between Aidan Baker and Maghweels, another act somewhere at the border between noise / ambient and guitar works. But although he might use the same instruments, Aidan Baker's music sounds much more accessible than his american counterparts. Where he uses loops and very slow evolution, Magwheels creates mixture of sharper noise and more epic melodies. Aidan Baker choses instead to walk a warmer and more accessible way. Still, it might take some time for the usual noise fan to get used to the current collision of guitar and noise elements, but I definitely hope that the word is spread, since musicians such as Aidan Baker are definitely up to something beautiful.
Nicolas Chevreux - Recycle Your Ears
Aidan Baker, from Toronto, Canada, combines warm drones with minimal post rock structures. The drone parts are really pulsing, deep and minimal and are very well done. They remind one of the works of Amon/Never Known or perhaps Moljebka Pulse. The post rock parts are a bit too subtle for my tastes as nothing seems to happen really, the atmosphere in them is really nice however, and remind me of Stars of the Lid or Ultrasound. Overall a recommended release for people who like both genres.
Funprox

Excellent droning minimal post rock weirdness here!More to come!
get it here

RICHARD EARL-THE EGG STORE ILK, LP, 198I, UK




Exceedingly obscure and consummately damaged sounding U.K. DIY lunacy operating in a rarified strata of sonic mutation that takes a leaf from the spare but nerve rattling songform disfigurations of The Lemon Kittens and yokes it to a chassis that moves in a specific and elliptical post punk fashion that I previously thought was the sole reserve of Aussie underground outfits like Laughing Hands or The Makers Of The Dead Travel Fast. Devastating!

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COMPUTER SEX-BODY ELECTRIC, LP, 198?, USA




I know. That cover.... yeesh! It's almost impossible to believe that a couple that look like they're getting ready to get physical with Olivia Newton John (named Jewel and Jason Star, just to compound the agony) could produce minimal synth shite of the caliber featured on the best bits here, but no kidding...some of this is seriously superb, especially the Richard Bone cum Dennis Weise-like masterpiece "The City Of The Seventh Sun". I won't lie...parts of this do cheese and cheese royally, but even these bits are sorta perversely endearing, possessing the same knuckleheaded (and distinctly American) inanity of, say, XeX. That they close out the proceedings with something wonderfully Tuxedomoon-esque just seals the whole absurd deal with a kiss.

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SACK & BLUMM-S/T, CD, 1999, GERMANY





The astounding first missive from Germany's masters of naif art brut quasi-folktronica, long time cassette culture operative/orchestral french horn player/part-time Mouse On Mars collaborator Harald "Sack" Ziegler together with one Frank. S. Blumm manufacture exquisitely fey musical miniatures that owe something to both Woo and early Pascal Comelade. Their equally dizzying Zack Bumm CD will follow shortly...

Get it Here

VAN BEBBER/HUBWEBER-VINYL + BLECH, CDR, 1999, GERMANY






Brain-scrambling improvisations from one time Z.D.L. member turned turntable manipulator Claus Van Bebber (several of whose other works I've posted in the past) and one Paul Hubweber on trombone, vocals and "electrofuzz". Sandwiched between a square chunk of vinyl and a steel plate, this 50 copy CDR is a dirty-needle-drag through crunchy, mulchy, scurfy accretions of media fragmentation, "electrofuzz" buzz and burr and obtuse trombone-y blurt, all managing to remarkably sound far more musical than the above might imply, a testament to the instant-composition improvisational brilliance of both parties here.

Get Vinyl + Blech part 1 Here

Get Vinyl + Blech part 2 Here

D. FLEMMER-LAS ASTILLAS, TAPE, 1978, GERMANY




Nope...not another Neue Deutsche Welle tape; rather, this is something altogether less peggable. Flemmer's wheezy, queasy arrangements of weedy electronic timbres cyclically rasp along the perimeter of vague musicality, obscurely huffing and chugging in subtly disorienting fashion for the duration.

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PANDEMONIUM "Non, jamais l' esperance" LP 1976 (France) _Jean-Baptiste BARRIERE



As I promised, here is the second PANDEMONIUM album. "Non, jamais l' esperance" explores Jean-Baptiste Barriere's more contemplative mood. There is a more sparce texture to this work, than on his previous album, mainly due to the improvisational nature of the music. Minimal pieces of drone synth music, dark and atmospheric on the surface, with an overflow of complex structures below. Absolutely amazing!

Get it here.

Saturday, July 14, 2007

SLEEP "Jerusalem" aka "Dopesmoker" CD 1996 (US)

(Private issue cover)

This is an album that was almost never to be, but ended as one of those few records that are instantly established not only as underground classics but as genre-defining milestones. When these Californian doom metallers took the opportunity of a '90s major-label deal with London records, they blew the advance on 70ies vintage amplification equipment and loads of the highest quality grass and returned to the label with a massive 65 minutes track dedicated to dope smoking. Imagine the reaction of the freaked out corporate manager upon first listen… the tape was immediately returned and demanded to be reworked into a series of songs. SLEEP did nothing about it and a legal battle ensued, resulting in the shelving of the album as unmarketable.



(Music Cartel cover)

Musically "Jerusalem" is the definitive doom metal track, nothing more than a monolithic masterpiece, sloooooow to the verge of monotonous repetition. Matt Pike tuned down his guitar some scales lower than BLACK SABBATH's Tony Iommi, to get that unrivalled sonic wall-of-sludge mood and Al Cisneros's massive bass drone and wasted vocal growl topped everything, conducting in a narcoleptic listening experience. Chris Hakius pounds the skins at a funeral pace adding a torturous lethargic repetition to the overall atmosphere of hypnosis. Huge stacks of Orange amplification and Green loudspeakers are responsible for all that thick, dense, ultra-lysergic trance of an album. Devoid of any heavy metal clichés other than sheer heaviness, "Jerusalem" is definitely NOT recommended to the average metal fan. Crank it on the highst volume your speakers can bear, light up the bong and let the smoke slowly inhale you to the lower end of the riff-filled land. "Stoner caravan from deep space arrives"

Proceed the weedians here.

(Tee Pee cover)

PS. 1 # Audio tapes soon found their ways into the underground and a privately issued bootlegged (approved by the band) CD appeared in 1996. The album was then licensed to "Music Cartel", that issued a 6 part sliced edition of it in 1997 and then "Tee Pee", which re-entitled the original rough version of a band as "Dopesmoker", adding the extra track "Sonic Titan" for the definitive 2003 extended CD edition. This is the privately issued rough first version of the track, as it was first introduced to London Records and issued in the private edition.

2 # A great review of the album from Julian Cope can be found at his Head Heritage site: http://www.headheritage.co.uk/unsung/albumofthemonth/1058

RA CAN ROW "Ra Can Row" LP 1982 (US)



An instrumental band from the USA that predates the space-rock boom of the early 90ies. Built around guitars, throbbing bass lines and a solid drum drive, moog synths and electronics, enrich with a spatial feel four lengthy improvised spacerock jams, strongly reminding the experimental side of DJAM KARET. Through most of the album RA CAN ROW move from rhythmic space jams to slow moving, multi-layered, out-there rock. Absolutely mindblowing music from start to finish.


Get it here.

V/A-MORE CREATIVE POP, LP, 1971, FRANCE




This seriously fantastic library music LP intersperses cuts from early Magma members Teddy Lasry and Claude Engel alongside those of top notch jazz drummer Bernard Lubat (featured on the Laurent Petitgirard LP I posted a while back), who would himself shortly thereafter record a live album with Engel as part of the Lubat/Louiss/Engel group (soon to be posted here). As you'd expect, this being a library music album, none of what's contained here really qualifies as zeuhl, despite the pedigree. The back cover's description of the contents as "hard pop light" perhaps comes a bit closer, provided that you're definition of pop is Wolfgang Dauner's The Oimels or the soundtrack to Vampiros Lesbos. Yes, some of this is that groovily swinging, notably Engel's album opener "Freedom Fiesta". Engel also turns in two other exquisite bits here, both in a sort of poignant Alain Markusfeld cum Total Issue psych mode that's really rib-sticking. Other stellar turns here include the doomy Besombes-like acid rock blowout of Teddy Lasry's "Fiction Melody" that closes out side A and two of Lubat's cuts ("Beat It Hard" and "Dancing Penguins") which traffic in a species of jazz rock grooviness that wouldn't be out of place on one of Roberto Colombo's albums. An essential missing piece of the puzzle for this wing of the French 70's underground.

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ZUT UN FEU ROUGE-WHO'S AFREUD, LP, 1985, SWEDEN




Whether recording as J. Lachen, Lach'n Jonsson or with his groups Ur Kaos and Zut Un Feu Rouge, musical projects involving
Sweden's Lars Jonsson are always extraordinary affairs, his doomy R.I.O. steeped musical ethos offering a fascinating counterpoint to the much more recognized R.I.O. manifestations of his countrymen in Samla Mammas Manna, who's joyous soundworld stands in stark contrast to Jonsson's doings. Having said all that, the music of Zut Un Feu Rouge represents perhaps the least fevered dimension of any of Jonsson's varied musical universes, the angular horn driven arrangements here at times calling to mind Germany's The Blech; the sound at other times glancing off post-Etron Fou Leloublan units like Art Moulu and Gestalt Et Jive. Masterful.

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DOKTOR KETTU-BLACK ZENITH, CDR, 2003 + KRIEGSPHILOSOPHIE, CDR, 2003 + YKSI MIEKKA YKSI KIRVES, CDR, 2003, FINLAND








This Finnish project of Circle's Jussi Lehtisalo (which couldn't possibly resemble the mothership less) create amorphous plumes of hazy, glaze-y washed out free rock sonics that sound something like hearing Fushitsusha jamming in an adjacent room while laid up in bed with a head full of cough syrup. I find it hard to precisely articulate the appeal of music like this, Doktor Kettu's narcotized brainfog effectively undermining all attempts at analysis while caught in it's purgatorial nebulousness. These 100-copy edition CDR's were the first three of the six that they've issued, all but one released simultaneously and I find them all to be perfectly opaque and indivisible and best confronted en masse, preferably under sedation.

Get Black Zenith part 1 Here

Get Black Zenith part 2 Here

Get Kriegsphilosophie part 1 Here

Get Kriegsphilosophie part 2 Here

Get Yksi Miekka Yksi Kirves part 1 Here

Get Yksi Miekka Yksi Kirves part 2 Here

GETEILTE FREUDE-ZEITLOS, TAPE, 1985, GERMANY







1985 is sorta late in the game for describing something as Neue Deutsche Welle, but someone forgot to alert these boys that the party was over. The rhythm box underpinnings of Geteilte Freude's winning post punk praxis help locate the sound here somewhere between high strung Metal Urbain-like freneticism and the more off the cuff DIY constructs of The Instant Automatons.

Get it Here

Friday, July 13, 2007

COSMIC DEBRIS "3.7K" LP 1980 (US)


Based in Oklahoma, initially the group performed as a duo under the name of CONTEMPORARY SYNTHESIZER ENSEMBLE. Then Richard Bugg met folk rock guitarist/songwriter Shawn Phillips and became close friends. Before recording the first album, the group had gone through several changes (one was being renamed COSMIC DEBRIS) and asked Phillips to perform on the recording, thinking that having a famous player on the record would help them getting a major label deal. Thus begun one of the most unusual collaborations in music business.

The album name is taken from the echo of the 'Big Bang', which is found at 3.7 degrees above absolute zero (3.7 degrees Kelvin). Bugg and Young recorded the tracks in two days at Media Studios in Oklahoma and sent the master tape to Phillips at his home in Italy where he overdubbed his parts. Then they mixed the album in their living room.

Privately issued in their own Non Compos Mentis label, the mega-rare COSMIC DEBRIS album consists a perfect example of electronic spacerock. The music is virtuosic keyboard/guitar driven space-prog, anchored with a strong drum rhythm, improvisational at times, yet always strongly executed. Directly compared with the electronic sides of HAWKWIND, PINK FLOYD, GONG and Steve HILLAGE, "3.7K" is flooding with spacious keyboard effects, uplifting rhythm section and some exhilarating guitar work. Highly recommended.

Get it here.

Thursday, July 12, 2007

SPACIOUS MIND "Garden of a Well Fed Head" LP 1997 (Sweden)




Sweden's SPACIOUS MIND is one of today's finest psychedelic, progressive, spacerock, call 'em-whatever-you-like bands. Here is their 600 copies rare LP only released in the US by the Texan label Lone Starfighter Records in a wonderful die-cut gatefold sleeve reminding YATHA SIDHRA's "A Meditation Mass" legendary krautrock obscurity.

The music consists of acid, hypnotic spaced-out tracks of a dreamlike nature, immediately elevating the listener above the ground. The Swedish freaks set their course for the heart of the universe and never look back! Mind bending West Coast tinged space rock with drifting acid guitar, subtle electronic effects and influences that range from "Saucerful of Secrets" era PINK FLOYD, early HAWKWIND, acidheads like MAN and GRATEFUL DEAD and such krautrock bands as AMON DUUL II and GILA.

Get it here.

MIZUTAMA SHOBODAN-RED PETALS FULL IN THE SKY, LP, 1985, JAPAN






Both ferocious and intensely musical, Mizutama Shobodan (which translates to Polka Dot Fire Brigade, a name they're sometimes also referred to as) was a group of anti-glamour tough chick post-punk Japanese gals fronted by Tenko, the one time Mrs. Fred Frith. Unlike the overtly experimental doings on her Slope LP for RecRec or, later, work in her Dragon Blue band with Otomo Yoshide and Tatsuya Yoshida, Mizutama Shobodan are a direct and forceful post punk blast; Tenko's inimitable sore-throated hectoring lacing compositions that are incredibly clever and seething with passion. Their debut LP will follow shortly.

Get it Here

JEAN-FRANCOIS PAPIN-INSANE DANCES, LP, 1982, FRANCE





More brain addling whimsy mongering from wacky French people, this time from a fellow who comprises the other half of Luc Marianni's band Rock Critics. The way the destabilized acoustic wobble factor here collides with synthy wheezing smacks equally of NWW-listers Heratius and early Pascal Comelade at his most dizzy and mercurial.

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DER GOTLING-S/T, TAPE, 198?, GERMANY





A thing of Neue Deutsche Welle beauty, Der Gotling alternate between swaddling your brain in a warm, warped and wooly blanket of haunting but distant instrumental minimal synth etudes and aggressively exploding into a variegated array of visceral pulse-pounding tactics, the gloriously glazed giving way the the bracingly fucked at a moments notice.

Get Side A Here

Get Side B Here

V/A-ORANG-UTAN, CD, 2002, UK




Scarcely available even at the time of it's release (absolutely nil in the way of stateside distribution in any event), this rather essential compilation of bands/
artists who are either Irish, Ireland-residing or are in collaboration here with Irish artists culls tracks together from several significant parties, most notably Nurse With Wound (though in this instance more accurately Nurse With Wound/Current 93) who turn in a 10+ minute alternate version of Die, Flip or Go To India (from Bright Yellow Moon), a collaboration between Volcano The Bear and King Camera thats pretty touched in the head sounding, a lengthy swath of Artificial Memory Trace's eerie electroacoustics, Aranos' jaunty gypsy jazz mutation and Daniel Figgis' wispy Frippertronic-sounding mindwash to name just a few.

Get part 1 Here

Get part 2 Here

OMOIDE HATOBA-SUICHI-JOE, CD, 1991, JAPAN






Following my recent post of their Mantako CD, here's another spasming musical hairball of proactively confusionist sonics from Boredoms' guitarist Seiichi Yamamoto's long term side project, their girning and effects shattered psych/punk/dada/improv shitfits assuming a more aggressively hectic stance on this earlier outing of theirs here than on the somewhat more psychedelicized Mantako.

Get it Here

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Burning Candle-st,LP,1981,Germany

German post kraut rock trio, keyboards dominated,complex compositions sometimes symphonic with no absence of some jazzy moments.Mostly instrumental leaves a psych/spatial feeling.

get it here

Kiem-st,LP,1984,Netherlands


A very strange avant-garde/aynthpop album featuring a quirky saxophone, onimous vocals and caveman-like drumming. As weird as new wave gets.Reminds me a synthy James White jam with Dark Day's keyboards and Don Van Vliet's voice.Excellent!
get it here

G. N. R.(Grupo Novo Rock)-Independança,LP,1982+2 first 7" from 1981,Portugal





Great Portuguese band from the early 80s,playing typical new wave/post punk with Echo and the Bunnymen,Teardrop Explodes,Cure,etc influences.Connections with Telectu,Mler ife Dada,etc.Listening closely some art rock hints can be found ,especially in the sidelong improvised song Avarius from the LP .The 7" are typical post punk minor gems.
get them here

Clivage-Regina Astris,LP,1977,France


Andre Fertier's Clivage is one of the most impressive, unheralded, French ensembles. Finding themselves in no-man's land betwixt Indian music, jazz, drone and progressive rock styles, the ensemble created three fascinating albums well worth the attention of those who seek music that falls in the cracks between genres.
The group's debut album is probably their signature statement. Featuring four long tracks, Regina Astris sets the stage for this ensemble's mesmerizing music. Instrumentally, the rhythm section is based on Armand Lemal's perucssion and Patricio Villaruel's tablas, upon which Fertier (guitar and keys), Jean Pierre de Barba (sax), Claude Duhaut (bass), and Mahmoud Tabrizizadeh (violin) weave a spellbinding tapestry, a sound that is reminiscent of Shakti, Archimedes Badkar, Oriental Wind, Aktuala and other similar groups where jazz meets the east. The drone stylings of the raga-esque music give the overall feel a trancy atmosphere where a drone is set up, and over the course of each piece, a build up slowly emerges where the instrumentalists improvise over the rhythms, continuing to advance the intensity of each piece. It ends up being over all too quickly, a virtual delight transcending several genres that should appeal to fans of east-meets-west music.



Mike McLatchey
24-April-2001 for Gnosis2000.net


Andre Fertier's Clivage released 3 albums from 1977 to 1985. The sound Clivage portrays might bring to mind, Italian band Aktuala for their similar use of eastern influence. Clivage fused together jazz, eastern and Indian influences creating a mesmerizing instrumental mixture. Listening to the music can offer the listener the opportunity of going into trance-like state with the droning atmosphere. With such instruments as tabla, saxophones, violin, acoustic guitar and synthesizer they deliver a compelling and rich sound, gentle melodies and magical mood. The music will please those looking for a meeting of musical cultures. The first two albums will be the most pleasing to people who like the style mentioned above (especially the first album, Regnia Astris), although the third album is not that far off the previous ones in terms of sound, only more concise. Clivage should appeal to people who like Aktuala, Third Ear Band and Shakti. ==Assaf Vestin (avestin)==

get this masterpiece here
NOTE:first posted many months ago to Mystery Poster blog,but link seems to be dead.

Udder Milk Decay -Take A Teat,LP,1980,UK


This album is one of my favourite and most mysterious LPs. The packaging itself is DIY at its most basic: Plain white jacket with spraypainted colour and the groups' name and album title rubber stamped on the cover. No date of release but I'm guessing early Eighties. The labels on the record itself are recycled and appear to be originally slated for a Saxon release on Carrere. There is a one-sided insert which carries the records information. There isn't much, so I can reproduce the entire liner notes here:"Take A Teat by Udder Milk Decay. Produced by Tim Hunkin and Jim Hunkin."Not very enlightening. There is a sculptor by the name of Tim Hunkin but when I emailed him regarding this album, he assured me that it wasn't him ("Good name though").On to the music which is primitive lo-tech electronics at its best. The album starts with a short track, which sounds like plucked strings (could be a guitar or a harp or bedsprings for that matter); the second has Wasp-like whirrs, beeps, bloops and whistles that evolve at a leisurely pace which has some similarity to Nik Raicevic's "Head" album but less circular. Track three sounds like a radio tuning in and away from white noise. Track four? Like track two after a bulk eraser had a pass over the tape.Side two begins with a triple-speed recording of a conversation. I can't make out what the voices are talking about, but it does sound quite earnest. The lengthy second track suggests a BBC Radiophonic Workshop soundtrack for a stop-motion version of Dr. Who. The final cut features heavily processed sounds (a treated orchestral recording perhaps?) broadcast from a cavern.In the event of finding a copy in a used shop or thrift store: buy it as it is a curious and improbable album that isn't likely going to get the deluxe cd reissue treatment.

A great and unknown experimental electronics LP,with Residents cartoonish parts,Heldon -like electronic violence,Asmus Tiechens-ish soundscapes.
get it here

Asmus Tietchens Medienlandschaft 5

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Quarteto 1111 - A Lenda De El Rei D. Sebastião

For an appetiser here's a great video by this exceptional Portuguese band.Lps coming shortly.

Seesselberg - Synthetic (1975)

Seesselberg - Synthetik 1 ,LP,1973,Germany


Perhaps an early Konrad Schnitzler album in disguise? From all the random oscillations, squirly modular synth spirals and strange spacious effects, one could easily see this 1973 experimental electronics album as one tape in Schnitzler's vast catalog of studio trickery. There are nine tracks here of cold inhuman synthetics, and where one ends and another begins can only be ascertained by sheer persistence. Like Schnitzler, there are moments of quieter reflection, the sort of music one might find in a 60s B-movie sci-fi flick, where studio musicians reflect the vastness of space with proto-modulars and theremin tweaking. Not a melody to be found in sight, although there are plenty of abstract visions of sattelite orbitals, distant supernovas, radar pings, alien spacecraft and the like. Overall, it's kind of a neat album, especially considering most of Schnitzler's experiments that are similar were recorded later (a strong example is 1988's Constellations). But, considering its rarity, it's unlikely to be anything more than a serious collector's item for the abstractly inclined.
Mike McLatchey
10-August-2002

For Gnosis2000.net

get it here

Tomografia Assiale Computerizzata-st,LP,1983,Italy

Early 80s electronic/experimental jazzish outfit.In some parts reminding the jazzy moments of Pere Ubu, or David Thomas solo recordings.The second side is in a more electronics experimentation vein,reminding some early Cabaret Voltaire meets the Residents recordings.Great by all means!This is their first LP released in 1983 through Azteco label.

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Som Imaginário-st,LP,1970,Brasil

A progressive rock band formed in the early '70s in Rio de Janeiro by a core of musicians from the Minas Gerais state, the Som Imaginário developed an influential career and also backed artists like Milton Nascimento, Elis Regina, Gal Costa, Fafá de Belém, Sueli Costa, Carlinhos Vergueiro, and Jards Macalé in live performances and recordings. The group was formed by Wagner Tiso (keyboards), Zé Rodrix (organ/percussion/voice/flutes), Robertinho Silva (drums), Tavito (12-string guitar), Luís Alves (bass), and Laudir de Oliveira (percussion), around which Toninho Horta (guitars) and Nivaldo Ornelas (saxes) eventually performed. Their biggest hits were "Feira Moderna" (Fernando Brant/Beto Guedes), "Hey Man" (Zé Rodrix/Tavito), "Cenouras" (Fredera), and "Nova Estrela" (Wagner Tiso). The group was formed to back up Milton Nascimento in his show Milton Nascimento, Ah! E O Som Imaginário, in 1970, at the Opinião theater (Rio de Janeiro). Soon afterward, Laudir left the group (he would work with Chicago), having been replaced by Naná Vasconcellos, who also left the group in the same year, while Fredera (guitar) joined it. In that same year, the group recorded its first LP, Som Imaginário, and participated in Nascimento's Milton. In 1971, the Som Imaginário did the film Nova Estrela, already without Rodrix. With Fredera, Alves, and Silva having left the group, Novelli (bass) and Paulo Braga (drums) were admitted. The third album, Matança do Porco (1973), had as its title track a Wagner Tiso composition that had been the theme of the Rui Guerra film Os Deuses e os Mortos (1970), and the album had as highlights "Armina" and "Nova Estrela," both by Tiso. ~ Alvaro Neder, All Music Guide
While not as countercultural as Os Mutantes or other Tropicalia artists, Som Imaginario shared with them a sense of pure musical inventiveness, and a love of psychedelic flourishes -- and they had a lasting impact upon MPB through their backup work for Milton Nascimento on some of his best albums. This rare first album is a killer -- and features fantastic organ and piano riffs, heavy guitars, and stunning songwriting, with lots of jazzy touches -- all very much in the best mode of the Minas Geras scene that also birthed Nascimento and Lo Borges. Wagner Tiso is on keyboards, but the whole band's great -- and the vocals are produced to a very cool effect -- and titles include "Hey Man", "Poison", "Nepal", "Pantera", "Super God", and "Morse".

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Stomu Yamashta-Red Buddha,LP,1972,Japan


Stomu Yamashta has had a varied career, beginning with his electronic excursions such as Red Buddha, recording with the supergroup Go, and, most recently, a few releases that are very much in the "space music" category. Sea and Sky, released in 1983, falls into this new category, and is a blend of very ethereal synth music and grandiose, symphonic passages, akin, perhaps, to the sound of artists such as Deuter, Kitaro, and the like, but with sections that sound almost orchestral, comparable to Constance Demby, etc. Stomu Yamashta put together Go in the mid-seventies, and recorded the Go, and the well-received Go Live From Paris. Go Too was their third and final release. For those unfamiliar with the band, it included Al DiMeola, Klaus Schulze, and Michael Shrieve, among others, the result of which was an effective mixture of rock, electronics, fusion and soul! Of the three, this is probably their weakest work, influenced as it was by the disco and soul movement. However, the underlying instrumentation gives evidence of a strong guitar/rhythm section, with Mr. Schulze announcing his presence with an occasional, well-placed "whoosh." Seriously, if you are at all curious to check out this star line-up, this might be worth your while. And, if you do enjoy the jazz/soul-inflected fusion genre, you could do much worse than this.


A percussive tour de force, RED BUDDHA is as unlikely a record to be found on Vanguard (traditionally renowned as a jazz label) as possible. Stomu Yamash'ta was still toying with the synthesizers heard on SEA AND SKY. Here, he's a one-man rhythm machine, using delicate electronic processing and the vocabularies of multi-tracking and musique concrFte to construct two large-scale percussive blow-fests. "Red Buddha" is an astounding feast of hand-swept drums, iron plates, studio-enhanced will-o-the-wisps, arcane noisemakers, and various other devices. This dense tribal stew conjures up the heartbeats of Far Eastern gods. "As Expanding As" begins as a mini-symphony of steel drums arising out of ether and joined by mingling chop blocks that begin to excite the atoms in the surrounding soundfield. The listener is eventually caught up in a maelstrom of objects struck, bent, attacked, hissed, and left adrift in the prickly underbrush of sound. At least ten years ahead of its time on release, RED BUDDHA deserves ...
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