Friday, February 25, 2011

The The - Soul Mining


The The are an English musical and multimedia group that have been active in various forms since 1979, with singer/songwriter Matt Johnson being the only constant band member. Their debut, Soul Mining stands tall as a new wave masterpiece with really tight songwriting. Lyrically, it is otherworldly, you have to hear this to believe it. 






" All desires have been denied to put me in this state of mind
Another year older and what have I done
My aspirations have shriveled in the sun
I'm crippled by guilt
Blinded by science
I've been waiting for tomorrow all of my life."


Luciano Cilio - Dialoghi del presente



Born in Naples in 1950, Luciano Cilio was an Italian avant garde composer. He only released one album before his suicide in 1983, 1977's Dialoghi del presente, which was reissued with extras as Dell'Universo Assente. 


A wonderful insight from dusted magazine:

"In a macro sense, it’s been a big year for Jim O’Rourke - what with the picking ‘n knob-twiddling on the anticipated follow-ups from Wilco and Sonic Youth - but on a smaller scale, it has been a success, too. There was the archival issue of his early work, Two Organs, but deeper underground, his seal of approval tastemaking has shed some much needed light on crucial artists. One recipient was singer-songwriter Judee Sill, as her two stunning early-'70s albums finally appeared on CD in the States (O'Rourke's touching up her unreleased third album some 25 years after her death). His kind words about the enormous and excellent '70s Swedish free-jazz collective Arkimedes Badkar no doubt helped their exposure. His crowning achievement this year, though, rests on the rediscovery of Italian composer Luciano Cilio and his 1977 composition, Dell’Universo Assente(translated: “The Absent Universe”), released by the knowing Italian label, Die Schachtel.
O'Rourke's introduction describes Cilio’s music as kin to the rarefied air of the first This Heat record, as well as Bill Fay and Nick Drake’s last albums from the edge. Those expecting prime mope/car-cruising songs will be frustrated, though; there's little semblance to that sort of song craft here. Instead, its parallels to the aforementioned albums come from that painful, isolated, deeply human sensation that they all deal with, where the artist is most withdrawn from the outside world, in near-silent communion with the Creator. O’Rourke describes it as “this enormous weight that is bearing on its creators.” For a hapless writer like myself, there are barely words to contain it.
“Dialoghi dal presente,” the first of five movements, opens like an orchid, gorgeous yet with an air of flesh surrounding it. Wordless female vocals move and reverberate with the cello and guitar, reminiscent of recent Charalambides, but even as the haunting voices blend into the cello and saxophone squawk, they soon fall away into a rapturous duet between guitar and piano, with the cello returning to swell the profound sound.
For the second section, Cilio inhabits a space close to the melancholy of This Heat’s “Not Waving,” or else the high and lonesome sound of bamboo flute player, Watazumido-Shuso. “Terzo quadro” is a stark piano piece, laconic in its gentle, devastating sound. Even when writing for percussion, Cilio’s touch is certain yet open-ended. It fits somewhere between Cage’s lovely percussion pieces of the 1940s and the evocations of gifted contemporaries like Tim Barnes or Glenn Kotche.
A gifted musician, Cilio plays guitar, piano, flute, bass and mandolin here, laying out graphic notation to help the other players achieve his concept of sound. Described in the silver-on-white liner notes as an attempt to “return to sound, (to) hold it,” Cilio realizes it to be an end in itself, not just a rhythmic or harmonic component. It’s not unlike fellow visionary Italian composer Giacinto Scelsi, nor is his means of notation and indeterminacy far from American godfather Morton Feldman. This is no austere minimalist composition though; consider it an exquisite, gossamer veil rippling over the void, gorgeous even as it reveals the chilling blackness beneath."

Monday, February 14, 2011

Camera Obscura - Let's Get Out of This Country


Camera Obscura are a pop group from Glasgow, Scotland. They formed in 1996, and have released 4 albums to date. 


Unabashed pop perfection. You're unlikely to hear pop records this good very often. The whole package ladies and gents - beauty with brains. 


Razzle dazzle rose

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Bark Psychosis - Independency


Compiles the EPs of one of the most complex and consistent band of the 90's. When you listen to this stuff, remember that it was a bunch of 15-16 year olds recording it. Yes, amidst all that grunge and commercial bastardisation of rock music, these kids saw the future, and played alongwith it. Immense, layered and gorgeous in its simplicity, Independency should open a few doors for those treading these grounds afresh. 

blood rush

Gang of Four - Return the Gift


Simply one of the finest bands to grace the alternative scene, Gang of Four are a post punk quartet who play a stripped down, intelligent brand of punk with influences from funk, dub and modern minimalism, topped off with biting socio-political commentary. Insanely infuential (really, the Red Hot Chilli Peppers are a poor man's Gang of Four - something even Flea admitted) and with songwriting chops that rival the greats from any era, I'd call their first two albums ("Entertainment!", "Solid Gold") essential to any music catalog. And having seen them live just a week ago, I'd say, somehow they still manage to rock your balls off 32 years. Here's a good compilation of their best material - Raw, urgent and mandatory listening for anyone reading this. 


Rerecorded material of the best Go4 tunes. Enjoy! 

To hell with poverty

Friday, January 28, 2011

Boredoms - Vision Creation Newsun


Rateyourmusic has the genre tags of Boredoms as such: no wave, experimental, punk rock, psychedelic rock,  noise rock, electronic, trance rock, tribal. Basically, they know their shit when it comes to music. There really aren't any bands on this side of the ocean quite like them, whether its genre bending or putting out quality tunes. But I'll let the music speak for itself, here's my favourite of theirs, 1999's Vision Creation Newsun, with an insight from the legendary Julian Cope


First time I heard this album was like a deluge overload euphoria had descended from the highest heavens and whipped me screaming, whirling, teenaged and drooling into my first acid trip/first hard on/first astral projection into a region of unfathomable and untameable NEWNESS. Didn’t even know what the singer was singing. Had the record and didn’t even know what it was called. Heard all seven songs and thought they were all one piece (still don’t know the individual titles). I felt like the mystery of all music had been boiled up over one Hindu kalpa (8,640,000,000 years of human reckoning) and had then been distilled through this Boredoms album. I fell asleep listening to the album and woke up several times during it, only to fall asleep again overwhelmed and tearful and with a butterfly belly of surging gnawing passion. 
In the middle of the night, my toy doubleneck (which I used for all the TOO difficult parts of the LAMF album) fell over on its face next to my bed. I shot up in bed, looked down at this riffing orange toy playing familiar music alone and unprompted. I jumped outta bed and grabbed the thing and took it (still riffing) to the farthest corner of my bathroom and closed the door.
Lay there. Motionless.
Couldn’t sleep.
Needed to create a new sound.
Needed... to create a... new sound.
Is that what the singer was singing?
Was that the Boredoms’ lyric?
New sound?
Sound sound sound.

Shamanic 4 a.m.
I put the record on headphones loud as hell.
No way could it possibly sustain that sheerly mystical feeling of that first coupla listens. No way at all.
IT FUCKING DID!
Single voice starts the record.
"New Sun!"
Then, we’re off into thee single greatest rush of music since the last Millennium.
This time I listened again and again without falling asleep, until the sun came up and the birds were dawning their chorus thang, and I was a reborn earthling.

So what does it sound like? I dunno - maybe like the Faust Tapes’ most euphoric uplifting moments were digitally tape-sped into some kind of Beyond Time.

You know how you occasionally read a review of some new Fall LP and they say the Fall are back on form and you just gotta hear this particular record and you get all excited and hopping cause if the Fall just got genuinely back on it (even briefly) U-Know it would be a pagan free-for-all to live for. And it has intriguing song titles like "Dame J. Burchill Art Gulag" and a supposedly great cover version of Don Covay’s "It’s Better to Have & Don’t Need (Than Need & Don’t Have)". And in that brief time between reading about the album and hearing the album, you’re a kid again with a kid’s dreams and a whole world of possibilities (not just musical) is thrown up in front of you. Then you hear that new Fall record and it’s just more embittered semi-mystical coded fraudulent ramblings about NOTHING nothing NOTHING.

BUT......... it does not matter because you’ve still enjoyed AND lived fully through those moments of possibilities.

Well this album is all those possibilities AND it achieves. Those of you who always wanna dig my Album of the Month but then get disappointed because its way too weird and not weird enough and too rock but not rock enough and too obscure but not obscure enough - well, this is the album for you! You are all gonna get down on your knees and crawl to my front door after this one. Crawl crawl crawl.

How do I know? Because I’ve listened to this album so many times and just kept coming back and coming back and it never fails me. Played this fucking record so much on the last tour that I had to consciously NOT put it on before every set, or risk appearing like some teenybopper asshole with one CD in the collection. This is truly enlightened music which encompasses the Lofty-est rock’n’roll moments of every entirely necessary group of all time without sounding like any of them.
Imagine those heights of ludicrously optimistic utopianism achieved occasionally by the Mellotron’d Hawkwind of side one of Warrior on the Edge of Time, the pre-Velvets menstrual-cycling of the Jaynettes’ "Sally Go Round the Roses", the eternally rainy-day monostare of "Hiroshima" from The Flower Travellin’ Band’s classic LP Made in Japan, the strangely Chuck Berry-based hard cissy weeping vision of Justin Hayward’s "The Story in your Eyes" by the Moody Blues, the 11-minute guitar destruction of "Love Is More than Words or Better Late Than Never" by the late-period heavy version of Love, led by Arthur ‘I’m-one-of-the-greatest-lyric-writers-of-all-time-but-right-now-I’m-gonna-shut-the-fuck-up’ Lee, the cartoon-y but nonetheless real sense of loss on The Residents’ "Ship’s a-going Down" from Not Available, the one-off death trip despair of Slapp Happy’s genius one-off 45 "Johnny’s Dead", the unlikely overloaded-Spanish-Galleon-over-arranged enlightenment of Sabbath’s "Spiral Architect", the someone-help-me-help-me-help-me-please Puppy Love-Effect at the gasping-for-air tailend of the Tubes’ "White Punks on Dope", the breathtakingly ever-upwards powersurge that is "You’re in America", the opening track from the first Granicus LP. Imagine all these things, and then imagine them compressed and digitally enhanced and sampled and used purely to empower you. Pow. Pow. Used in order to bring an emotional Pow-Wow, equivalent to applying a psychic garlic poultice to your poor fuzzbitten inner streetplan.

Who are these Boredoms? Well they been around for two decades and they’re led by a figure called Eye. Eye? Aye. And, clearly, there’s only the one Eye. And they’ve been a punk band, and they’ve been an all percussion chanting shamanic ensemble, and they’ve had 20 years to prepare us for this. And are we prepared. No No No. How do you describe true psychedelia? Do I write:
"There’s one beautiful period on track 4 when the whole group becomes Hawkwind on "Silver Machine" rising upwards in a space boogie which digitally transforms itself into that percussion and guitar freakout from the middle of Chicago’s "I’m A Man" 45 (by the way, if you haven’t heard that cover version of Spencer Davis’ finest moment, get it now now now - it is still a transcendental earth-moving moment from a group that is otherwise utterly unworthy of consideration)."

Do I write that? No. There’s a whole vibrational otherness coursing through this record which, if I’m stretched to compare, again reminds me of the Faust Tapes. But really it’s just the sound of fine fine music made by people who live at a higher level than every other fucker. Sure those other reference points I’ve thrown in are there to ground the review in whatever the real world is. But Vision Creation New Sun is a masterpiece. And I mean that in the old sense. It’s a masterpiece insofar as it creates a new genre. A new die has been cast. It’s a sustainable sonic orgasm where before there was no sustainable sonic orgasm. Other musicians can now rip this masterpiece off (I surely fucking will) and humanity will be higher because of it. Nothing less.

Album of November? Album of the Year!





Sun worship

Monday, January 24, 2011

Broadcast - HaHa Sound + Trish Keenan's Mind Bending Motorway Mix


On the 15th, I was greeted with some horrific news - Trish Keenan of Broadcast passed away at the age of 42 from pneumonia. I'd seen her live in 2009, it was an amazing, intimate show; and Broadcast's brand of outer space pop was as thrilling as ever. It almost seems like we'd taken Broadcast's music for granted, being an outsider band with a penchant for breaking genre boundaries and experimenting with sound. I can't believe we won't hear anything from them again. Here's their best album; HaHa Sound. 


HAHA Sound isn't funny. The rolling monster drums - combined with the BRRRREEEEPing primitive electronics and Trish Keenan's deadpan delivery - are reminiscent of 1920s horror movies. "Colour me in", "Man is not a bird", "Valerie", "Ominous Cloud" and "Lunch Hour Pops" are sweet, abused child-like songs (with monster drums, ok), while "Pendulum" and "Hawk" try to be a hypnogogic My Bloody Valentine on Mars. Recommended, and strangely accessible. Buy it.


Colour me in






Before her tragic, untimely passing, Ms. Keenan sent a friend an intriguing mixtape filled with wonderful music whose level of obscurity and beauty accurately reflects the wondrous vision which one could always find in Broadcast. This list is an attempt to find the pieces to the puzzle.


1) Emerald Web – “Flight of the Raven”
2) Harumi – “What a Day For Me”

3) Truck -- "Earth Song"
4) Mandy More – “If Not By Fire”
5) Tages – “You’re Too Incomprehensible”
6) Twice as Much – “The Spinning Wheel”
7) Tangerine Peel – “Trapped”
8) Twice as Much – “Playing with Fire”
9) Catharsis – “Masq”
10) Victor Jara – “El Aparecido”
11) Natty Bumpo – “Theme from the Valley of Dolls”
12) Koji Ueno – “Professor Parsec”
13) Fuat Saka – “Atladm Girdim Baa”

14) Unknown
15) The Vampires of Dartmoore – “Tanz der Vampire”
16) Rock Revival – “Venus 2038″
17) Mark Charron – “The Girls and the Boys”



Trish's Mind Bending Motorway Mix


Rest in Peace Trish. You will be sorely missed.