mercredi 31 décembre 2008

Jasper TX - Closet Ghosts (Fenêtre Records, 2008)


1 I’m Asleep On The Floor While Sunbeams Grace My Tired Head
2 Gone, Away…
3 Warmth
4 And When We Die, God Makes Angels Of Us All
5 Golden
6 To Felixstowe

Dernière production en date de Dag Rosenqvist, toujours d'excellents drones où s'immerger....

A six-track EP release on new label Fenetre Records, Closet Ghosts follows on from Dag Rosenqvist's Black Sleep album, released six months or so back via Miasmah. These compositions call upon a similar blend of sensitive acoustics and immersive electronics, although at times Rosenqvist seems to unplug from his computer altogether and opt for bare, spartan purely instrumental interludes like 'Golden', which leaves a lonely piano figure to its own devices, stretching out loose chords and contemplative exchanges over the course of a frozen minute. 'Gone Away...' brings to mind the more post-rock oriented aspects of Rosenqvist's work, isolating acoustic guitar passages so clean they might be equally at home in a De La Mancha record as in a Jasper TX outing. Eventually the music weaves itself into droning spirals of distortion and delay, fizzing below the surface and petering out almost as quickly as they built up, leaving a lonely acoustic guitar to wend its way to the ending. In terms of the more drone-like pieces on the disc, 'I'm Asleep On The Floor While Sunbeams Grace My Tired Head' is indicative of the powerful, unsentimental driving force behind this music: these aren't fluffy, lightweight drones but coarse, clanking outpourings of sound. You have to look beneath the surface to find any glimmers of emotional resonance, but there's always a real depth lurking behind that stark, abrasive facade. 'Warmth' stays true to its title and opens up, revealing stretches of infinite tone and glacial tunefulness, but the two finest pieces here are 'And When We Die, God Makes Angels Of Us All' and the stunning closing track 'To Felixstowe'. Both represent a finely harmonised union of faded electronic sustains and carefully plotted out, organic melodies, with the former sounding like a Jewelled Antler take on Mogwai while the latter is like a slowed-down Loren Connors blues solo. Closet Ghosts is a great way to spend twenty minutes of your life. Highly recommended.
Boomkat

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Jasper TX - This Quiet Season (Slaapwel Records, 2008)


1 Things Could Stay (11:05)
2 Moments (2:44)
3 A String Of Broken Lights (5:21)
4 Home (4:49)
5 Twilight (8:27)
6 Embers (7:14)

Drones dont la texture est renforcée par une ligne de guitare simple... Evolution lente mais résolue.... Mélancolie et calme....

Not dissimilar to his previous releases This Quiet Season is full of minimal melancholic ambient music. Dag Rosenqvist builds up soft drones with guitar sounds running through effects. In a familiar approach, that is not so much different as that from his partner in crime Rutger Zuydervelt (machinefabriek), he is not so much a computer musician as someone playing around with analogue instruments and effect pedals. Sounds from guitars are stretched and looped and as such an organ like drone files the room. Slowly the sound evolves and more tones are added. By this soft melodies appear. Though, Jasper TX is about more than this. In Moments for example there are no drones at all but it’s a soft piano piece with field recordings in that background. It’s a welcome break with the familiar sound that so much of these artists have.

As a whole This Quiet Season makes me think back to the times when I was a young boy playing out in my parent’s garden in the snow or going ice-skating in the nearby park. Not because it’s such a playful album, because it’s not. It is dense melancholic music. Instead, it sounds so winterlike, which apparently is becoming more and more some Scandinavian thing.
Musically seen This Quiet Season doesn’t give us anything we didn’t know yet, but as not everything has to be new and refreshing, it actually is a really nice album and my favourite so far by this young musician from Sweden. I do hope in the future he will develop more his style and keeps surprising us with different approaches and takes a step into a new direction.

Recommended late in the evening while reading a good book or just dreaming away on the music.

EARLabs

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Jasper TX - Pilgrims (self release, 2007)


1 A Beacon To Lead Us There (3:15)
2 The Glow Of Minerals (1:57)
3 Through Dusk... And Falling Leaves (7:19)
4 Our Way Through The Field (3:58)
5 A Quiet Gloom (3:42)

Côté sombre des drones de Jasper TX, long cheminement comme le titre l'indique...

It does feel very nice indeed getting in these special releases, and it feels even nicer when they're as lovely as this latest from Swedish droney feller Jasper TX (known to his friends as Dag Rosenqvist). 'Pilgrims' is the latest chapter in the producer's career, and as each release sidles out of almost nowhere the bar seems to be set that little bit higher. This time Rosenqvist has opted to explore his darker side, and as the track titles calmly dictate, we are on a quiet road to doom. Of course this isn't the sort of misanthropic, blackened offering you'd expect to hear from any of the Southern Lord folks, but there is a sense that Rosenqvist is more than aware of the acoustic griminess of a certain Svarte Greiner as he begins his shadowy journey with 'A Beacon to Lead us There'. Through guitar crackle and ear-pummelling drone we hear what sounds like very distant screaming voices and small animals scratching at the floor around us as the earth's surface readies itself for an earthquake. There is the sense throughout that something is ready to happen, something dangerous but at the same time exciting, a change, and when the track builds into static and splutters into the second piece 'The Glow of Minerals' we realise that the change has happened and lasted merely seconds. This track is where the doom escapes whole heartedly and is a seismic bass-heavy slice of terror, through this however is a glimmer of hope, a feeling that this producer is merely showing his hope in a different way than we might usually expect. This sentiment is confirmed when mid way through the EP the gloom turns to gorgeous, melancholic ambience without feeling jarring or unwelcome. Rather it feels like we always knew this was going to happen, it was always part of the story but it hadn't quite happened yet. The twenty-minute disc ends with the lo-fidelity hum of 'A Quiet Gloom', and never has a track been so aptly titled as this - it might be Rosenqvist's vision of acoustic meltdown, but it is a quiet, sensitive vision and one which can be absorbed by anyone. Absolutely beautiful and without a shadow of a doubt the finest Jasper TX offering to date....
Boomkat

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Jasper TX - I'll Be Long Gone Before My Light Reaches You (Lampse, 2005)


1 Blown Out To Sea, I'm Never Coming Back (9:53)
2 Braille (5:03)
3 Letting Go (The World Is Coming To An End) (10:22)
4 Help Them Die (4:14)
5 Rounds (3:52)
6 My Heart Is Broken, I've Lost My Way (9:28)
7 All Those Broken Birds Singing Winter Into Spring (12:14)

Lampse, label suédois de musiques novatrices et audacieuses, présente cette année un panel d’artistes dont l’effet ressemble à celui d’une re-découverte totale du monde des sons. Jasper TX, alias Dag Rosenqvist, et son premier album, I’ll be gone before my light reaches you, en appelle à écouter sa musique comme on écoute les bruits de l’intérieur de son corps dans une chambre sourde.

Plongé d’emblée dans une nappe de souffle chuintant, on perçoit le rapport aux instruments comme très lointain. Il s’agit en effet de faire comme si chaque timbre était entendu pour la première fois, en enveloppant les évolutions mélodiques dans une respiration quasiment indissociable du corps qui perçoit la musique. Le thème répétitif à la guitare, très serein, creuse à chaque fois la régularité d’une forme de vitalité qui a pour première particularité de s’étendre sans discontinuer dans le temps, et pourtant de varier en même temps à l’infini. Les bruits de fond du micro, augmentés de manière à faire le cadre de toute la progression musicale, se mèlent à tel point avec le corps qui perçoit, qu’on finit par avoir l’impression que c’est le bruit de la salive qu’on avale, dans l’étonnement d’une musique qui rend mon corps sonore. Les phases d’intro sont remplies de ces bruits que d’habitude on considère comme polluant le silence. Les distorsions sont extrêmes, agressives, les sons sont à l’image de la diversité des affections possibles du corps, tant dans l’agréable que dans le difficilement supportable. Ainsi, Jasper TX nous fait osciller entre le plaisir et la douleur, en supportant ces variations de plans de guitare spatialisés, qui font comme de grandes inspirations devant l’horizon infini de la pure sensation d’être en vie.

D’une certaine manière, les bruits qui constituent le fond sonore creusent dans le corps un tunnel, qui permet à la mélodie de s’incorporer véritablement au corps. Ainsi cette musique s’impose comme une expression de l’intérieur, elle s’immisce en nous de manière incoercible, à tel point que quand elle s’arrête… On éprouve de la douleur, comme si le tunnel se vidait tout d’un coup de quelque chose d’étranger, qui faisait violence à l’intériorité, et qui a réussi à se fondre avec elle suffisamment vite pour qu’on en ressente un manque, lorsqu’elle cesse.

Jasper TX, tombé dans la marmite des sons quand il était petit, d’abord avec une basse, ensuite avec un quatre-pistes, et finalement un diplôme d’ingénieur-son, présente ici un monde très personnel, mélancolique, qui n’en finit pas de prendre des formes diverses au fur et à mesure des écoutes et des mélanges de cette lo-fi minimaliste avec le corps de l’auditeur.
DMute

The most recent full length release from the avant-garde experimental Lampse label is Norwegian Dag Rosenqvist's grim, lonely mood piece I'll Be Long Gone Before My Light Reaches You. There are obvious parallels to be drawn with the work of outfits such as Sigur Ros (particularly in the opening and closing pieces) both in style and in the heavily extended nature of the seven tracks included here, but Jasper TX chooses an altogether more esoteric direction with his sonic palette.

Perhaps the finest (and, tellingly, the most accessible) moment on the album is the deceptively simple "Braille," which begins with searing distortion shrouding a lilting, piano lullaby and acoustic guitar arpeggios that gradually decreases in intensity until only the acoustic elements remain. "Letting Go (The world is coming to an end)" begins with a tinkling music box melody and the imagining of a guitar played by someone in the corner of a small, chilly room as people pace back and forth across creaky floorboards. This movement terminates four minutes into the ten minute piece, and the remainder of the track consists of nothing more than a drifting, misty drone: yes, that's right, over six minutes of it. This extended section is clearly designed to sedate the listener in preparation for the somber nature of the pieces that follow, and at least in this sense it is very successful.

The peculiar, desolate and isolated seaside shanty-town atmosphere the album seems determined to evoke is heightened by "Help them die" and "Rounds," the former featuring mournful accordion melodies underneath more acoustic guitar and the distorted sounds of heavy, gusting winds, the latter another drone piece that conjures images of dark, wind-swept and rain-soaked wooden buildings, sickly yellow light seeping from filthy windows into the half-light of the late evening. The imagery is followed through in the next piece, and would add up to a seamless and immersive experience if it weren't for one thing: mid-way through the nine and half minute "my heart is broken, I’ve lost my way," Rosenqvist irrevocably ruins the entire experience with several minutes of horrendous, scratchy and distorted noise that tears the listeners nerves to shreds. This section is excruciating: impossible to listen to it destroys the credibility of the album and actively discourages further listening of the work as a whole.

An album that is experienced more than enjoyed, I'll Be Long Gone Before My Light Reaches You is perhaps rather too personal a body of work, fatally damaging its accessibility. Desolate, stark, introspective and manipulative, this fascinating album will reward on those occasions in which you feel the need to sit and brood; it's just a shame that many listeners will most likely be woken from their reverie by the aforementioned minutes of aural torture and forced to scrabble for the remote control.
Igloo Magazine

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Xeltrei - Litotes (Symbolic Interaction, 2007)


1 Letargi (2:20)
2 Frugal (3:23)
3 Litotes (2:29)
4 Korossion (2:50)
5 Trampolin (2:45)
6 Karuseller (2:43)
7 Porslin (2:14)
8 Sicksack (3:17)
9 Landfotografi (3:35)
10 Gränser (3:39)

Dans le grand bouillonnement de notre monde moderne, aussi rapide qu’énervé, Xeltrei livre un de ces albums oubliés du temps et des hommes. Bribes de piano et de field recordings suffisent à tisser, entre silences et mélodies romantiques, des atmosphères aussi douces qu’irréelles. Aussi, ce premier disque ambiant de Xeltrei, duo composé d’une certaine Erica et de David Wenngren des Library Tapes, ne s’adressera qu’aux fans de pianos esseulés et de craquements de parquets, à ces rares paires d’oreilles amatrices des albums paraissant chez Type, Resonant, Miasmah et autres labels nordiques.

Ce qui n’aurait pu être qu’un énième disque vide et pompeux se révèle pourtant, un titre après l’autre, d’une redoutable efficacité. Enfin, à sa façon. Les field recordings rythment parfaitement la curiosité du spectateur, alors que les notes éparses de piano assènent la dose nécessaire d’émotion. Enfin, la relative rapidité du tout permet que cet intérêt ne cesse que lorsque cette « musique lo-fi au piano faite avec amour » s’éteint. Evanoui dans le silence, Litotes laisse une belle impression de douceur et de chaleur. Un disque en forme de souvenir auditif préfabriqué, en quelque sorte.

Autres Directions

Xeltrei hails from Sweden and consists of Erica on piano and David Wenngren(of Library Tapes) on piano, field recordings, and computer. Their album is made up of ten tracks of delicate, muffled piano melodies mixed with an array of crumbling sounds. Xeltrei explains their collaboration as "lo-fi piano music made with love." The music sounds almost like a forgotten, homemade cassette where each melancholy note on the piano is allowed to resonate before it fades. Piano is only half of the story, of course. The various found sounds and effects, add to the atmosphere. These manipulations enhance the feeling that this is a lo-fi recording affected by incidental noise. The real success of Litotes is that it draws the listener into this simulated space with its sonic quirks. Xeltrei has succeeded in creating an essential piece of mood music that is both achingly beautiful and timeless.
U-Cover

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Prince Valium - Andlaus (Resonant, 2006)

***désolé, la piste 12 manque / sorry, track 12 is missing***

1 Mixed State (4:01)
2 Crying Hearts (Prince Valium Mix) (4:02)
3 Butter Cookies (4:21)
4 Afsal (4:27)
5 Tómleikar (4:01)
6 Redecoration In Four Dimensions (2:24)
7 Burning My B.A. (4:41)
8 Goofy Takes A Bath (4:43)
9 Pupu's Shoes (4:02)
10 Romantic Shopping (4:12)
11 Broken Shower (4:02)
12 Guð Blessi Þig (4:16)

Disque repêché dans les eaux parfois grises de l'année 2006, "Andlaus" propose une musique hybride, oscillant entre l'electronica dentelée et des lambeaux de bure noisy. Ces compositions non identifiées font en tout cas honneur au credo du label qui les héberge : échos stratosphériques et guitares cristallines comme dans les bons vieux Cocteau Twins (circa "Treasure"), boucles hypnotiques, la résonance est partout. Son maître d'œuvre, Thorstein Ólafsson (par ailleurs membre de sk/um), sait instiller des ambiances indécises, débusquer des humeurs entre chien et loup, faire pleurer les mandolines, parsemer ses compositions de petits effets délicats, ou encore ouvrir sa chambre à une mélodie pop ("Crying Hearts", seul morceau chanté - et très gracieusement - de l'album). Alternant, comme le recto verso de sa pochette, embellie soudaine du ciel ("Redecoration in Four Dimensions") et sol plombé ("Burning My B.A.", ou "Goofy Takes a Bath" et sa basse suicidaire), il livre un album maîtrisé, qui déjoue à la fois de l'emphase et du misérabilisme, et creuse un sillon intrigant entre post-rock et ambient.
Popnews

Engaging ambient music, if this is not a misnomer, can sometimes teeter on the edge of too ‘nice’ (read insipid). An album that in one mood appears calming and meditative may reveal itself as hackneyed and trite under different listening conditions.

Icelandic bedroom producer Þorsteinn Ólafsson’s debut effort under the Prince Valium moniker should NOT be listened to in the car, on the freeway. This is what could be referred to as not giving an album a ‘fair go’ (supposedly a defining characteristic of the Australian national psyche). This is an album made for headphone listening, or on a quiet Sunday morning when the world is at peace. Under such conditions, Andlaus grew on me—I had been initially inclined to dismiss it as pseudo-new-age massage music.

Stylistic comparisons could be made with label-mate Stafrœnn Häkon’s releases—occupying a sugary space where the melodies and atmosphere almost need a good kicking to give them a bit of attitude, but are nevertheless compelling. The Kranky label’s releases by Labradford and Roy Montgomery inhabit a similar space to Andlaus.

The opening three tracks are wonderful, especially the single vocal track of the album ‘Crying Hearts’. The remainder of the album drifts by in ambient shoegazing mode. Small nuances and effects come to the surface only to be wrapped up in the aural equivalent of fairy floss. Which, depending upon your mood, could be a good thing.

Cyclic Defrost

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Teaism: Music Inspired By The Art And Culture Of Tea (Static Caravan, 2008)






1 Max De Wardener - Kettle Song (2:11)
2 The Break-Ups - Assam (6:08)
3 Inch-Time - Snow Jewel (3:05)
4 Carlos Y Gaby - This Tea, Makes Love To Me (3:10)
5 AM/PM - Shennong (7:34)
6 Serafina Steer - Mr Sands Has Left The Building (0:32)
7 Pimmon - Silver Needle (5:46)
8 Tunng - Shove It (4:19)
9 Root 70 - Immaculate Conception (5:18)
10 Lord Jim - Teapot Waltz (4:23)
11 Qua - Lapsang Souchong (Iced Tea Mix) (4:23)
12 Dollboy - One Liner (5:07)
13 Xela - Genmaicha Dorou (6:52)
14 Oblong - Four PM (3:51)
15 Cibelle with Josh Weller - Mr & Mrs Grey (3:50)

Teaism is a music compilation featuring a diverse range of artists who each created a unique song based around the theme of music inspired by the art and culture of tea.

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Matthew Robert Cooper - Miniatures (Gaarden Records, 2008)


A1 Miniatures 1
A2 Miniatures 2
A3 Miniatures 3
A4 Miniatures 4
B1 Miniatures 5
B2 Miniatures 6
B3 Miniatures 7
B4 Miniatures 8
B5 Miniatures 9

Le premier album que Matthew Robert Cooper (Eluvium) sort sous son vrai nom, chacun des morceaux constituent effectivement une miniature soit simples, soit plus orchestrées, tout en douceur....

Since every one of Matthew Robert Cooper's Eluvium releases has highlighted a slightly different musical persona—the solo pianisms of An Accidental Memory In The Case Of Death followed by Talk Amongst The Trees' elegiac drones and Copia's neo-classical chamber settings, for example—the most curious thing about Miniatures isn't the degree to which it stylistically differs from his other works but why he opted to issue it under his birth name. It's an incidental point musically, however, and ultimately more a marketing issue for Gaarden Records than anything else. Hopefully no one'll be too misled by the title either, as only about half of the thirty-four-minute album's nine pieces could be classified as miniatures, if duration is used as a barometer that is. One thing that is different is that it's Cooper's first proper vinyl release (2000 copies with the first 1000 on coloured vinyl).

The collection begins strongly with a beatific organ-styled opener whose hypnotic ebb and flow points the listener skyward, and the slow and measured unfurl of the song's interwoven melodies proves to be as haunting as anything in the Eluvium catalogue. The subsequent pieces alternate between shorter interludes—three piano nocturnes (number two gentle, four dramatic, and eight romantic), a robust church organ piece (five), and gentle interlude of glassy tones (six)—and more elaborate set-pieces. In number three, strings swell into an oceanic mass while a slow-motion melody softly calls out its yearning theme at its center, and in seven, the repeating tinkle of an Eno-like melody floats along the surface of a peaceful, ambient-styled piano meditation (that Cooper, for whatever reason, clutters with extraneous field noises); miniature nine ends the album gracefully with sweeping melancholia clothed in a full-bodied orchestral arrangement.

Regardless of instrumental differences, all of the pieces exude Cooper's signature blend of sweetness and longing, making Miniatures a more than worthy addition to Cooper's discography and, for listeners new to his work, a perfect starting point given the degree to which its individual pieces point in the direction of the individual Eluvium releases.
Textura

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mardi 30 décembre 2008

Yuko Ikoma - Moisture with Music Box (Garule, 2008)


01 1ére Gymnopédie
02 2éme Gymnopédie
03 3éme Gymnopédie
04 Je te veux
05 "Menues Propos Enfantins"
06 Chant guerrier du roi des haricots
07 Ce que dit la petite princesse des Tulipes
08 Valse du Chocolat aux amandes
09 Prestidigitateur Chinois
10 Rêverie du Pauvre
11 1ére Gnossienne
12 4éme Gnossienne
13 Berceuse

Second album de Yuko Ikoma, dans la même veine...

Second release of Yuko Ikoma

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Yuko Ikoma - Esquisse (Windbell, 2007)

01. shijima 4:17
02. waltz op.1 1:02
03. moderato 2:12
04. kiki 1:11
05. small window 1:46
06. underwater 2:43
07. powdery 2:50
08. in the air 2:29
09. no color 3:50
10. temperature 4:28
11. migiwa 1:06
12. minamo 3:24
13. waltz op.2 1:58
14. a little drop 4:52
15. more slowly 1:24

Yuko Ikoma, l'accordéoniste de Mama!Milk signe son premier disque solo : toy piano, boîtes à musique, casiotone, field recordings. Musique fragile pour coeurs fragiles....

Yuko Ikoma, Mama!Milk's accordeonist, first solo release : toy piano, music boxes, casiotone, field recordings...

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Mama!Milk - Gala de Caras (Raft Music, 2003)


01 August
02 Greco on Thursday
03 Gala de Caras
04 Intermezzo, Op. 28
05 0
06 Greco on Monday
07 Zizi
08 Waltz for Hapone
09 Sones
10 A Piacere

duo accoustique composé de la joueuse d'accordéon Yuko Ikoma et du contrebassiste Kosuke Shimizu, leur musique a été décrite comme de la "new japanese exotica", de la musique comme du sumi-e (la peinture à l'encre noire) ou du cinéma pour les oreilles...

Mama!milk is a acoustic instrumental duo with an accordion player Yuko Ikoma and a contrabass player Kosuke Shimizu. Their music has been described as "Japanese New Exotica", "music like SUMI-E (black ink painting)" or "Cinema for Ears"

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Peter Broderick - Music for On Paper Wings (self release, 2007)

***sorry, no cover art***

01. A Song For The Cranes
02. Balloon Bomb 1
03. Changes
04. Variation 1
05. Censorship Variation
06. Balloon Bomb 2
07. Slow Guitar Song
08. Variation 2
09. Balloon Bomb 3
10. Tule Lake
11. Growing Up With The War
12. Balloon Bomb 4
13. Variation 3
14. Censorship Pt. 1
15. Another Song For The Cranes
16. Balloon Bomb 5 (Guitars)
17. A Song For The End

Musique composée par Peter Broderick pour le film On Paper Wings... Elégance....

no review

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MV & EE with the Golden Road - Drone Trailer (DiCristina, 2008)


01 Anyway (4:29)
02 The Hungry Stones (6:39)
03 Weatherhead Hollow (10:33)
04 Drone Trailer (6:46)
05 Twitchin' (6:15)
06 Huna Cosm (6:34)

Nouvelle production du duo Matt Valentine Erika Elder, toujours de l'excellent psych folk....

Drone Trailer might be an apt name for a record that owes much to both avant-rock drone and rural acid folk, though not exactly in easy measures. If there's any rough reference point to be had in the world of above-ground rock to MV & EE, it could be the most eccentric side of Neil Young at his most country-acoustic. But if Young can sound a little stoned, enigmatic, and/or peculiar on some of his odder excursions into that territory, MV & EE sound far more disassociated and far less accessible, rambling away in a manner that suggests they wouldn't even notice if the earth swallowed them up whole. If a song like "The Hungry Stones" can't help but beg comparison to an arty, primitive slant on Young, other tracks owe relatively little to folk-rock, "Anyway" getting the album off to a lurching start with clamorous anthemic trash rock in which Erika Elder's singing can barely be made out. Steel guitar by Elder and guest Doc Dunn supply much of the drone throughout the album, loopy licks enveloping Matt Valentine's languid vocals on "Weatherhead Hollow" and "Huna Cosm" to the point where the duo sound a little like a cross between Young and Jandek. Stoner folk fights it out with creepy atmospherics on other tracks as well, the hard rock moves of "Anyway" never resurfacing. It's an unfocused album that defies comfortable listening, perhaps deliberately so, but the collision of half-baked folk tunes and uneasy soundscapes isn't as stimulating to hear as it might have been to create.
Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide

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Tender Buttons - Tender Buttons (Foxglove, 2007)


01 A Petticoat / Cold Climate (2:45)
02 A Shallow Rose (2:38)
03 A Waist (4:04)
04 Cranberries / It Was Black Book Took (2:50)
05 A Shave (4:41)
06 Instrumental (2:30)
07 Nothing Elegant (5:10)

Charmante folk par un trio danois, le quatre-piste étant mort durant la session, l'enregistrement s'est fait sur un mini-disc en pleine forêt....

Tender Buttons was a one-off - "let's go to Sweden and make a folk record!" - and so it was... Tanja Jessen, Marie A Jensen and yours truly traveling to a litlle cabbin out in the woods with instruments, a 4-track, an old echo-unit and some poems by Gertrude Stein for inspiration. On the second day the 4-track broke, and then we moved into the wood with a mini-disc instead.A limited edition 2x3"-cdr housed in a handmade cover with lino-cut prints was the result. Later we made a track for a forthcomming compilation on BBSTA of covers of songs by David Neuer, called Anybody's Anthems: a Tribute to David Neuer's "Mr. Anybody's Anthems", and that's more or less it. The 2x3" is currently out of print, though it might still be locatable at Sound Station, but a new, criticaly revised and wisely condensed, single (5") cdr version is out on Foxglove now. And as for new music...who knows? All of Tender Buttons are currently working together in Pink Luminous Invocation along other projects, but one day we might travel to Sweden again... MK
Thecatboxcorp

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lundi 29 décembre 2008

Fire on Fire - The Orchard (Young God Records, 2008)


1 Sirocco (5:09)
2 Heavy D (4:31)
3 Assanine Race (6:24)
4 The Orchard (4:07)
5 Flordinese (5:28)
6 Hartford Blues (3:31)
7 Toknight (6:12)
8 Squeeze Box (4:13)
9 Flight Song (4:23)
10 Grin (5:02)
11 Tsunami (4:44)
12 Haystack (8:37)

Avec la percée en cette fin d'année d'un groupe tel que Fleet Foxes, on se dit que Fire On Fire n'a pas beaucoup de chance. Car si White Winter Hymnal avait placé les Foxes bien haut, il faut dire que la suite est loin d'attendre les mêmes sommets, allant même parfois jusqu'à sentir le mauvais CSN&Y. C'est tout l'inverse chez Fire On Fire, dont l'album ne contient pas beaucoup de titres marquants, mais qui ne met pas moins une sacrée claque. Facile ici d'y voir la sempiternelle vague revival folk avec instrumentation à l'ancienne (dobro, guitare acoustique, harmonium, banjo, mandoline, etc) et les inmanquables harmonies vocales, mais il sera bien plus dur à l'écoute de The Orchad de se dire que ce groupe n'est autre que la suite de Cerberus Shoal !

Visiblement défaits de leurs instruments électriques et de leurs diverses substances psychotropes (que ce disque est posé et paisible...), les membres du groupe (parmi lesquels figure Micah Blue Smaldone) n'en ont pas moins gardé leur habitude de vivre en communauté, ce qui s'entend à merveille sur le disque.

Chacun mettant la main à la patte pour les parties vocales, Fire On Fire réalise un album presque en dehors des âges (est-ce du bluegrass ? Est-ce du folk ? Du folk des Appalaches ? Du psychédélisme acoustique ? Est-ce bien important après tout ?). La douceur des arpèges acoustiques répond avec justesse au minimalisme des autres instruments en une osmose réconfortante qui s'impose en toute discrétion.

Tout cela confirmera une nouvelle fois la sûreté des goûts de Michael Gira, qui après Akron/Family ou ses Angels Of Light, propose une nouvelle fois un groupe irréprochable sur le catalogue de son label Young God.

Webzine Mille-Feuilles


For anyone who has experienced the genre-bending and ranging music of Cerberus Shoal any time in the past decade, this rebirth known as Fire on Fire should come as no surprise. That band seemed to make a habit of reinventing their sound every couple of years or so (or evolving might be a better word). A band that required loyalty and a healthy sense of wanderlust and adventure.

With Fire on Fire they’ve done it again, or some of them anyway, but this time unplugged and firmly entrenched somewhere in a dimension far removed from those musical roots. The trappings now are rough-hewn and varnished implements: guitar, mandolin, fiddle, banjo, upright bass, accordion; plucked, strummed, pressed and purposefully bowed. But bubbling under the surface and woven in the words, that genesis of youth and anger and cynicism and sense of irony and sarcasm blend with newfound purpose like dandelion wine, and into something that wets the palette but leaves behind an aftertaste of bittersweet satisfaction. This is music for folks who may not be ready to stop being contrary and skeptical, but who have matured to a point where those emotions can be effectively channeled into something useful.

Right out in front of the toe-tapping acid bluegrass and new-generation Americana folk instrumental arrangements the band lays out a rich layer of vocal harmonies that’ll keep your ears glued to your iPod or Media Player or car stereo or to whatever portal-to-your-soul of choice this CD happens to land in. I’ve a bit of a soft-spot for sincere folk music (and what folk music isn’t sincere)? But this ain’t folk any more than Neil Young is a country singer. We’ve gone beyond that and more. The dirge-like apocalyptic lament “Sirocco” with its hypnotic fiddle and unrelenting bass lays a trance-like bed on which something akin to a post-apocalyptic and sickly gleeful chant issues forth: “and if we tear this kingdom down (tear it down!), let it be with a deserving and joyful sound”. I suppose this is close to what A Silver Mt Zion might have sounded like if they’d grown up just south of the border instead of on Mile End Street. And with a keener sense of harmony.

The years of experimentation and experience manifest all over this album, from the plucking bluegrass-tinged title track to the Jesus-freak throwback “Toknight” to Colleen Kinsella’s chilling vocals on the accordion tribute “Squeeze Box” to the all-acoustic post-rock (did I just say acoustic post-rock?) “Haystack”. An enchanting closer to a stunningly engaging album. All I can do at this point is hope like hell these guys somehow wind their way to South Dakota USA so I can see them live. Not likely, but you never know.

Musicgeek


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Donovan Quinn - October Lanterns (Puissant, 2007)


1 October Lanterns (3:12)
2 Blackbird Headchamber (4:13)
3 The Guttering Flame (3:19)
4 At The Tent Revival (1:20)
5 One Thousand Matchsticks (3:39)
6 Saw A Ghost On The Water (3:32)
7 The Crooked Smile Of A Jack-O-Lantern (1:29)
8 Along The Hollies (2:19)
9 Miner (3:23)
10 October Lanterns (1:07)

Premier album réalisé sous son propre nom, après sa participation aux Skygreen Leopards et l'utilisation du pseudo Verdure, grand disque de folk....

Sean Penn's Into the Wild would have been a much better movie if, for its soundtrack, Penn had replaced Eddie Vedder by Donovan Quinn. For the ten tracks on October Lanterns show just the right degree of hinterwaldlerdom without ever venturing too far off the beaten track. Sure, when Quinn recorded these fine songs in '02 and '03, he used a wide array of folk instruments. But whether hammond organ, melodica, mouth harp, or mandolin: They all blissfully sound as if the still wore the price tag of the music supply store. That, however, is not a problem at all, but provides track like At the tent revival with an awkward quality not to be found elsewhere.

Recorded at his former home studio on a horse ranch in Walnut Creek, CA, October Lanterns is Quinn's debut under his own name. He has recorded with The Skygreen Leopards and solo under the Verdure moniker. This cd-r, limited as it is to 100 copies, should help him to get established further in a field ruled by the likes of Hala Strana or Hush Arbors. There are plenty of good folk songwriter tunes out there, but Donovan Quinn's strange ability to end all the songs before they seem to even have begun, to hint at unforgettable melodies without ever fully delivering them, to allow strumming glimpses of golden indie pop songs without ever leaving the experimental field ? all of this should see Donovan Quinn become a regular fixture in the field. In fact, it's difficult to see why this is only a limited cd-r release. There's so much stuff getting a regular release that isn't half as good. Unfortunately, October Lanterns might already be pretty hard to find. It's well worth tracking down, though.

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The Jewelled Antler Library Book 3 et 4 (Porter Records, 2008)




Book Three
Wayside
3-1 Claypipe Wayside (1:38)
3-2 Claypipe Constant (1:50)
3-3 Claypipe Industry (The Provision Of Cairns) (1:37)
3-4 Claypipe The Math Of Random Fractures (3:59)
3-5 Claypipe Crouching (4:09)
3-6 Claypipe Midnight At Mangawhai Beach (Skeleton) (4:57)
3-7 Claypipe ~~~ (1:47)
-
3-8 Loren Chasse Footpath 7 (1:13)
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The Well At Land's End
3-9 The Muons Green Man (4:03)
3-10 The Muons Space Man (4:22)
3-11 The Muons Flowers (3:33)
3-12 The Muons Land's End (5:32)
3-13 The Muons Fishes (2:14)
-
3-14 Loren Chasse Footpath 8 (1:27)
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Fable
3-15 Thuja Fable 1 (9:39)
3-16 Thuja Fable 2 (12:17)
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3-17 Loren Chasse Footpath 9 (2:49)

Book Four
Harbinger Of Spring

4-1 Fursaxa Harbinger Of Spring (17:50)
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4-2 Loren Chasse Footpath 10 (2:26)
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Nuuhanihaka
4-3 Kemialliset Ystavat Kyy2 (4:01)
4-4 Kemialliset Ystavat Kyy1 (5:37)
4-5 Kemialliset Ystavat Kw (4:19)
4-6 Kemialliset Ystavat Kyy4 (2:35)
4-7 Kemialliset Ystavat Kx (3:13)
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4-8 Loren Chasse Footpath 11 (1:13)
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As Far As Anything, Nothing
4-9 The Ways Of God To Man Nothing (11:27)
4-10 The Ways Of God To Man Everything (7:18)
4-11 The Ways Of God To Man Anything (9:37)
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4-12 Loren Chasse Footpath 12 (1:52)

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The Jewelled Antler Library Book 1 and 2 (Porter Records, 2008)


Book One
Green Laughter
1-1 Loren Chasse Green Laughter (18:11)
1-2 Loren Chasse Footpath 1 (1:02)

The Dreadful Gift
1-3 Tomes Part 1 (10:04)
1-4 Tomes Part 2 (10:38)
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1-5 Loren Chasse Footpath 2 (1:11)
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The Sun Is The Lamp
1-6 The Ivytree The Withering Year (2:53)
1-7 Ivytree Inner Groves (6:13)
1-8 The Ivytree White Sun (5:41)
1-9 The Ivytree Lake Of Fire (3:29)
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1-10 Loren Chasse Footpath 3 (0:47)
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Karst E.P.
1-11 Hala Strana Cutting Durmast (3:13)
1-12 Hala Strana Karst (5:12)
1-13 Hala Strana Sztajer (Trad. Polish) (3:13)
1-14 Hala Strana Cantecul Miresei (Trad. Romanian) (3:08)
1-15 Hala Strana Nettles (3:14)

Book Two
Their Feet Are The Foraging Ground Of Wolves
2-1 Dead Raven Choir Night Scene (8:29)
2-2 Dead Raven Choir The Horn's Sound In The Wood ... (5:45)
2-3 Dead Raven Choir The Shepherd's Hour (6:50)
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2-4 Loren Chasse Footpath 4 (2:01)
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Silvery Branches
2-5 The Famous Boating Party White Butterfly (3:37)
2-6 The Famous Boating Party The Orange Bears (3:36)
2-7 The Famous Boating Party Albion Moonlight (3:37)
2-8 The Famous Boating Party The Great Sled-Makers (3:20)
2-9 The Famous Boating Party The Deer Is Humble (2:40)
2-10 The Famous Boating Party Follies Of Summer (2:33)
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2-11 Loren Chasse Footpath 5 (1:27)
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Zwuij
2-12 Uton Zwuij 1 (5:35)
2-13 Uton Zwuij 2 (8:06)
2-14 Uton Zwuij 3 (5:29)
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2-15 Loren Chasse Footpath 6 (0:37)

réédition des douze volumes de la Jewelled Antler Library plus le CDR limité de The Ways of God to Man et des fields recordings de Loren Chasse.... Pour les amoureux de folk étrange....

With 13 groups, 59 tracks and over 4 hours and 40 minutes of music and sounds, the Jewelled Antler Library 4 CD box-set brings together experimental music from the U.S., Finland and New Zealand that ranges from psychedelic, abstract drone, soft psych, noise, folk and field recordings, to the outright strange and bizarre. Four CDs that collect together the entire 12 volume set of the limited edition Jewelled Antler CD-R Library, plus the limited edition recording of The Ways of God to Man and also 12 new field recordings by Loren Chasse. Musicians include: Fursaxa, Uton, Loren Chasse, Tomes, The Ivytree, Hala Strana, Dead Raven Choir, The Famous Boating Party, Claypipe, Muons, Thuja, Kemialliset Ystavat, The Ways of God to Man. This is a 1000 limited edition box-set. The box-set is made of chip board stock with the Jewelled Antler logo debossed in metal foil, includes 14 heavy stock panels with original artwork, CD faces have printed photos by Loren Chasse.
Porter Records

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Peter Wright - At Last a New Dawn (Students of Decay, 2007)


1-1 Urban Wolves (10:50)
1-2 Death Ships Approaching (9:24)
1-3 Glass Floor Vertigo (3:58)
1-4 The Big Fight (18:00)
1-5 The Whole Facade Will Come Crumbling Down (7:06)
2-1 Blue Light District (9:53)
2-2 Punishment Drugs (7:15)
2-3 At Last A New Dawn (34:06)
2-4 When It Was Calmer The Bleeding Stopped (3:46)

Sans doute le chef d'oeuvre de Peter Wright, drones de guitares fantomatiques et field recordings parfaitement à propos. Mort, douleur, perte mais aussi espoir et rédemption....

Since Peter Wright dropped his last record the field in which he operates, guitar-based drones augmented by field recordings, has become increasingly crowded. Few other contenders, though, are making records with this much class and emotional enormity.

Talking about specific tracks on an album like this seems a little redundant (most of the titles seem like afterthoughts anyway, hardly fitting descriptions of Wright's glistening and churning universes of sound).

The album opens quietly before escalating into seething undulation that treads nimbly along the chaos/beauty divide. This gives way to distant whistling and hollering. Midway through disc one there a merciful lull in the emotional overload as chiming fingerpicking rings out into space.
Disc two opens with a track containing samples of news reports of the London underground bombings, the track was composed by Wright on the morning of the bombings as police sirens made their way through the city. Where so much drone-based music seeks to evoke galaxies and clouds and strives for transcendence rather than be concerned with anything as earthbound as terrorism, Wright has created a beautiful and distinctly human moment of sadness.

What Wright injects into his music to separate it from the drone horde is difficult to define, but it seems to me that this record is permeated by the same kind of longing and indefinable sadness that defines the best work of artists like Richard Youngs and Alastair Galbraith. One of the year's monumental works.
Foxy Digitalis

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Machinefabriek - Stukjes (self release, 2008)

1 Stukje 1 (0:48)
2 Stukje 2 (2:03)
3 Stukje 3 (1:29)
4 Stukje 4 (0:56)
5 Stukje 5 (0:57)
6 Stukje 6 (0:47)
7 Stukje 7 (1:56)
8 Stukje 8 (1:36)
9 Stukje 9 (1:42)
10 Stukje 10 (1:15)
11 Stukje 11 (0:55)
12 Stukje 12 (1:30)
13 Stukje 13 (1:10)
14 Stukje 14 (1:10)
15 Stukje 15 (1:12)
16 Stukje 16 (1:47)

Bien si mes comptes sont bons Machinefabriek aura réalisé 21 disques cette année, record de l'année précédente enfoncé, mais il reste encore deux jours.... Excellent travail, comme d'habitude....

Given his unprecedented work rate, you might find it difficult to believe that this will be the final Machinefabriek release of 2008, but Stukjes seems like a reasonable place to let the year end for Rutger Zuydervelt - he'd certainly be rounding things off with a high. It's been another busy, prolific twelve months for the diligent Dutchman, and Stukjes is as fine a short-form release as he's come up with, taking the shape of a sixteen track collection of sketches and enigmatic miniatures, drawing on processed location sounds, instrumental dissections and drawn out electronic tones. There's an eerie emptiness to much of this music, and the proliferation of wispy, high register drones and deep, low frequency resonance gives the music a peculiar ambiguity. At times all this sounds like sound design for a film, a meeting of low-down soundtrack music and detailed acousmatic foley work. Occasionally the stillness is broken however, and you might hear the odd glaringly loud guitar recording towards (complete with waspish fret buzz) and even some noisy, sliced up shortwave sound towards the end, but the magic of Stukjes resides in those wonderfully understated dialogues between digital sound and abstract field recording. Excellent, as usual.
Boomkat

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Peter Wright - Air Guitar (Drone Records, 2006)


A Air Guitar (6:34)
B1 The Sunday Hangover (3:31)
B2 The Last Post For Michael J. Hex (3:38)

Le label décrit ce disque comme des "guitar-mantra-drones", ambiance rêveuse et relaxante....

New Zealand's Peter Wright has been experimenting with guitar sounds and field recordings for the past few years. His myspace page, and let's face it who isn't on myspace these days?, states that he plays “disconnected avant guitar gloop distilled through a series of electronic filters and single malt, heavily influenced by guitar pop, free jazz/improv, atonal guitar noise, cats and city trash”. While the label info for Air Guitar says that it should be filed under “Guitar-Mantra-Drones”. This certainly makes the, now London based, Kiwi artist sound intriguing.

The title track of this 7” is luscious daydream of warm rich tones. A gentle drone that carries the listener away floating in a calm blue ocean of sound. This is the most relaxing thing I've listened to in ages. The Sunday Hangover is a perfect aural hangover cure. A simple melodic guitar line over a collection of found sounds evokes lazy Sunday just relaxing around the house or lying in the garden. Another great chillout track in a different style than the first piece. The Last Post for Michael J. Hex continues the dreamy feel of the previous tracks but again takes a different direction. This piece has the warm overtones of the first piece with the found sound ambience of the second. Sounds of lapping water and waves of sound flowing over the listener make this a very physical experience. In fact there is a very bodily quality to this whole listening process.

Overall this Air Guitar EP is very different from the usual stuff that I review here. There's a warmth and light to this that is the antithesis of most of the releases crossing my path. Personally I thoroughly enjoyed it and will be looking up more of Peter Wright's material. Anyone looking for something to relax to or music to accompany a contented day should check this out. Also anyone who likes quality expressive, guitar work that is outside of boring rock genres, this should be on your purchase list as well.

This EP comes on orange vinyl in a limited edition of 300.

Heathen Harvest

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Emeralds - Solar Bridge (Hanson, 2008)


1 Magic (12:34)
2 The Quaking Mess (14:14)

Réalisé sur le label d'Aaron Dilloway, deux drones qui illustrent la maîtrise du genre par Emeralds....

Cleveland trio Emeralds may share many common aesthetics with their Midwestern noise brethren, but their sound has emerged as a distinct entity in a scene already stacked with analog electronics, psychedelic improv and industrial drone. Born and bred in the "Nohio" tape underground, the group's guitar and synth concoctions have maintained a certain level of hallucinatory horror that puts them at ease among the scuzz and squalor of fellow Ohioans Burning Star Core, Mike Shiflet and Tusco Terror. But since their inception in 2006, Mark McGuire, John Elliott and Steve Hauschildt have proven quite amorphous, slowly molding their sound into the interstellar drone unit exhibited here on Solar Bridge – their most definitive statement yet.

Though Solar Bridge may be Emeralds' first "official" full-length, it's certainly not their debut. The boys have already amassed over 20 cassettes and CD-Rs in their discography. And while each past release exhibited touches of the analog grittiness associated with experimental tape enthusiasts, their music isn't as emphatically "lo-fi" as many of their peers. More than anything, Solar Bridge distinguishes the group from the chaotic sadism of Aaron Dilloway's Hanson catalog through the clarity presented within, building patiently on woozy weirdness and weighty ambience.

In fact, the rich synth textures and lengthy compositions on Solar Bridge seem to have more in common with kosmische musik and Terry Riley than the depraved volatility of their noise compatriots. Signaled from the record's title, the album's two tracks convey a feeling of cosmic void, floating with a zonked awe and possessing a magnificence all their own. But it's the way the group so successfully blends the abrasive edge of their No Fun contemporaries with the epic minimalism of a Tangerine Dream suite that makes them unique, evoking an awe-struck oddity that is undeniably gorgeous, but still vaguely unsettling.

"The Quaking Mess" most accurately embodies the Final Frontier feel, playing like a psychedelic field trip beyond the sun. Shuddering synths deliver the introduction, quickly coalescing into a thick tone peppered with tinkles and processed guitar. The paralyzing fuzz of the synthesizers slowly overtake the track, their intensity growing with each delayed pulse. And then, one final heave – the strongest yet – signals exit from the orbit, once again drifting out into black expanse as the rumble fades.

Clocking in just shy of a half-hour, Solar Bridge is a bit brief for a full-length, but the impact left by the density and cohesiveness of the record's two compositions could be taken for fitting concision. Given the diverse palette of their discography to date, it's difficult to plot Emeralds' future trajectory. But if they keep in the heavenly direction of Solar Bridge, the trio will at least steer clear of becoming the Bullshit Boring Drone Band they warned about in 2006.
By Cole Goins, Dusted Review

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Aidan Baker - I Will Always And Forever Hold You In My Heart And Mind (Small Doses, 2007)

1 I (5:37)
2 Will (5:30)
3 Always (2:49)
4 And (3:20)
5 Forever (3:33)
6 Hold (7:09)
7 You (7:04)
8 In (2:04)
9 My (5:03)
10 Heart (6:10)
11 And (2:19)
12 Mind (1:15)

Drone de cinquante minutes séparé en douze parties, une pour chacun des mots du titre, chacune formant la totalité de la narration et du morceau... Beau et hypnotique....

This super limited cd-r, which went out of print in a flash, is available once again, for a limited time, in slightly less elaborate packaging, but still with the same gorgeous music. Here's our review from when we first listed it:
Another slab of blissed out dreaminess from AQ fave Aidan Baker. His umpteenth release this year, every single one of them fantastic. This one, titled like a Damien Hirst piece, I Will Always And Forever Hold You In My Heart And Mind, is one single 50+ minute piece, separated into 12 parts, one for each word of the title, all woven into a single expansive whole.
The opener took us right back to Oval's Diskont 94, a shuffling shimmering underwater swirl, but instead of skipping cds as source material, Baker seems to be using some sort of loping Three Mile Pilot like bass, chopped and looped and smeared over a wash of drawn out synth drones, totally tranquil and dreamlike, but with that bass, lending the track a bit of subtle forward momentum. In fact the whole disc seems to be rooted in the interplay between droning synths and that processed bass. It's a bit krautrocky at times, a little bit Popol Vuh, ambient and abstract but propulsive at the same time. Some of the tracks are more layered, with strange muted bits of percussion, or more distinct melodies (also muted), while others get more and more distorted threatening to crumble to pieces, and still others, remain austere and minimal, throwing a shimmering sonic cloak over the hypnotic circular melodies and slow shifting sonic swells.
What more to say? As always, totally beautiful and completely hypnotic. Another perfect late night soundtrack for spacing out and drifting off...
Aquarius Records

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Kiyoshi Mizutani - Bird Songs (Ground Fault Recordings, 2000)



1 Binzui (9:13)
2 Toratsugumi (5:52)
3 Hokora No Mizuba (16:08)
4 Tokyo Bay Bird Sanctuary (7:09)
5 Aokigahara (14:29)
6 Nimbo (5:15)

Disque dont l'essentiel est constitué de field recordinggs d'oiseaux, mais Kiyoshi Mizutani a été bien au-delà en les réhaussant d'electronique, d'une boîte à rythme ou en en faisant des collages....

Essentially these are field recordings of various nature locations. The focus mostly remains on bird songs, but it goes a little bit beyond that: Mizutani arranged and enhanced the material a bit. The song of the "Binzui" is echoed by electronic treatments, broken down to its constituents for us to marvel in its complexity. That's as far as the artist goes though. In "Aokigahara," the only non-nature sound is the tinkling of a music box (or a jack-in-the-box or other toy) played very slowly, two or three notes at a time. "Hokora no Mizuba," recorded near a spring fountain, features metallic sounds, like someone lightly hitting a metallic grid. A similar addition is heard in "Nimbo". This piece is a collage of recordings in a Chinese city. It is the only manifestation of human civilization on this album and also features a metallic "klang "(a fence?, rods of different lengths?). All these alterations (except for the electronic "birds" in the first tracks) vanish into the recorded environment.
François Couture

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Koen Holtkamp - Field Rituals (Type Records, 2008)

1 Half Light (2:44)
2 Sky Flowers (14:09)
3 Bee Change (1:42)
4 Bear Bell (9:10)
5 Walker (4:45)
6 You Mean The World To Me (2:41)
7 Night Swimmer (5:17)
8 Haus Und Spirale Im Regen (15:09)

Ces spirales de guitare acoustique traitée aidant, le court et inaugural Half light est là pour nous rappeler que le berceau originel du New-Yorkais Koen Holtkamp n’est autre que Mountains. On retrouve ici ce goût immodéré pour les motifs de guitare à la tonalité pastorale, retouchés à l’outil informatique, mêlés à des samples naturalistes et une kyrielle de sources acoustiques numériquement remaniées. Sur près de 15 minutes, Sky flowers illustre parfaitement ce propos, dans un registre nécessairement onirique et rêveur, où les guitares se délitent et s’étirent sur fond de gazouillis enfantins.
Si l’on décèle ci et là des éléments qui trahissent nettement son implication dans le génial duo épris de nature, on note par ailleurs que l’héritage de Brian Eno pèse dans la fondation de ces paysages sonores. Bear bell, par exemple, explore une veine plus ambient, où les notes de guitare se font, sinon absentes, beaucoup plus éparses, comme perdues dans cette immense étendue de nappes où harmonica et mélodica tirent leur épingle du jeu. Walker, parcouru de samples signes d’une urbanisation massive et survolés du violon(celle) ténu de Jesse Peterson, convoque l’ambient orchestrale de Stars of the Lid. Ensuite, quelques notes perlées et gouttes de piano sous delay viennent choire sur le tapis oscillant de You mean the world to me, tandis que la contribution vocale de Scott Mou métamorphose Night swimmer en un rendez-vous entre Anthony Harding de July Skies (la voix) et les traitements aquatiques de RF. Résolument ambient, le caudal Haus und spirale um regen superpose 15 minutes durant, une abondance de scintillements avec d’épais drones lâchés par l’harmonium de Ben Owen qui laisseront assurément l’esprit de l’auditeur engourdi.
(8.0)
Sébastien Radiguet
, Onde Fixe

Koen Holtkamp, one half of the bliss-inducing Mountains, has two solo records to his credit as Aero on the Apestaartje record label he started in 1998, but he hasn’t aligned a project with his given name until now, a decade into his career as one of the avant-garde’s more sublime performers. One can understand the decision after listening to the truly radiant Field Rituals. You don‘t let nicknames take credit for albums of this caliber.

Opening amid a flange-damaged guitar chords ("Half Light") and ending on a bed of whirling crystals ("Haus und spirale im regen"), Field Rituals‘ humming expanse of scintillating flux is pierced by leviathans of ice that crest and dip back into the mineral shimmer. These wrinkles might prevent your standard supine drift, but there’s enough atmospherics and acoustics that we wouldn’t rule one out. His headphone daze lingers, lustrous and evanescent.

As its title suggests, Field Rituals transforms the potentially mundane into the mystical. Raw "field" recordings and other organic components – such as the schoolyard cries and chatter of "Sky Flowers,” snippets of pattering feet and rustled objects throughout – become spectral signals leaking from cracks in the memory bank or the liminal edges of consciousness. The subaquatic resonances of "Night Swimmer" seem to buoy the ghost of Arthur Russell, turning the wordless pleas into a tranquilized blur. “Bear Bell,” a glistening marsh of radioactive fluorescence, comes limned with the same electric slipstream of phased throb that once fixated J. Spaceman.

Throughout, Field Rituals mixes soil and plasma, the rattle and creaks of handiwork with astral filaments and geodesic drones. Holtkamp’s guitars have a percussive ring – chattering, chiming, switching between metal, glass and wood – or they’re dissolved into analgesic billows of carbonated ointment. He, thankfully, never finds it necessary to challenge his audience with shards of hiss or distortion, to ensure that these bows of honeycombed incandescence aren’t perceived as laserium soundtracks. Holtkamp’s just comfortable being comforting, so bask in the balmy glow.

Bernardo Rondeau, Dusted Magazine

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dimanche 28 décembre 2008

Fabio Orsi - Audio for Lovers (Last Visible Dog, 2008)

1.01 Yesterday Love (8:00)
1.02 Rising Love (6:24)
1.03 Secret Love (1:40)
1.04 Pure Love (6:24)
1.05 Lost Love (1:40)
1.06 Young Love (6:24)
1.07 Tender Love (1:40)
1.08 Last Love (8:00)
1.09 Shining Love (6:24)
1.10 Tomorrow Love (8:00)
2.01 2 Or 3 Moments In 1 Day (12:34)
2.02 The Psychedelic Power Of Bubbles (You And Me) (16:12)
2.03 Before Long, Before Anyone The Stars Will Be Walls In My Mind (18:18)
2.04 Last Dream Lost Carefully (12:56)

Fabio Orsi continue dans sa veine minimaliste pour nous servir presque deux heures de morceaux ambient particulièrement mélodiques....

Fabio Orsi (collaborator on last year's 'Wildflower's under the sofa') returns with a double disc effort that is at once a highly satisfying 2 hour entry in the ambient genre. Although LVD's catalog often leans toward noiser, less melodic works, Audio for lovers shows both the same modernistic and minimal sensibilities that we've heard from Fabio in the past, while also drawing on the earlier, atmospheric work by Eno, which is to say that the album does precisely what most of us would like out of an ambient work. The tracks are highly melodic and memorable, the nature of the music is experimental enough (at least in theory) that I think a lot of fans of the label will enjoy it, and most importantly, the environments created here will please just about everyone--this might even be the LVD release to please your non-LVD listening acquaintances. Purchase the soundtrack to your new life today!
Last Visible Dog

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Wixel - Heart (MechanizedMind, 2005)


1 Zaventem (4:07)
2 A December Goodbye (7:25)
3 Breaking Up Sucks (8:00)
4 Distraction (4:29)
5 I Know I Tried (4:32)
6 Mirrors And Flowers (7:45)
7 You're Right On (4:14)
8 Your Home Is My Last Resort (6:03)

Disque introspectif à base de guitares accoustiques mélancoliques et d'électronique douce et chaude....

Wixel is the indietronica outfit of young Belgian Wim Maesschalck. His music can be described as a warm & organic mix of acoustic instruments and gentle electronic treatments with a lot of care for detail and subtle nuances. Comparisons have been made to bands ranging from Hood to Fennesz, from Manyfingers to Sigur Rós.
After several releases on small European CD-R labels like Soundzfromnowhere and Mechanized Mind, spring 2006 saw the release of Wixel's debut 'Heart'. The album generated quite some attention and resulted in several shows and appearances on compilations, including the Domino sampler that came free with the renowned British magazine Wire.
CD Baby

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Jasper TX - Harrisburg (self release, 2007)


1 Pt I (04:15)
2 Pt II (15:08)

jolis drones de guitare mélancoliques....

This little gem of a release sidled out on limited 3" cdr a couple of months ago and of course sold out in an afternoon, I guess when you press up copies in increments of a handful you can't expect to please everyone, but we're very happy to be able to offer 'Harrisburg' now as an UN-limited digital release for you, the consumer. Dag Rosenqvist has been a busy man of late and with cdr EPs popping up all over the place and a fresh new album (the gorgeous 'A Darkness') it seems the fans are the winners. This twenty minute EP is split into two 'parts' and explores Rosenqvists fascination with melancholic guitar drone, now this might not sound particularly interesting given the sheer amount of people doing this at the moment but the more discerning among you will already be aware of the man's command of the humble drone. Hidden in tides of tape noise, hiss and environmental recordings distant cascades of harmony float through your consciousness like ghosts through a moonlit forest, teasing you with their incredible half-seen beauty. I honestly don't know how he does it, but Rosenqvist composes music using just a guitar that manages to be as beautiful and as simultaneously moving as Arvo Part and yet we never get coaxed into sugared sentimentalism. There are still shards of the post-rock genre in there somewhere, but what's great about this EP is that Rosenqvist has clearly moved on from this, defining his own sound rather than re-treading the messy footsteps of others. Neither rock, experimental nor electronic but a meeting of so many fractured subgenres, 'Harrisburg' is the perfect example of why we're all frothing at the mouths about Jasper TX right now...

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Arca - Cinématique (Les Disques du Soleil et de l'Acier, 2001)


1 Baixa (4:08)
2 1957 (4:34)
3 L'organisation (5:41)
4 Personne (3:07)
5 La Zone (5:28)
6 Pearl Harper (2:07)
7 Monogatari (4:06)
8 Formes Vides (4:34)
9 Orly (5:09)
10 Quand Tombent Les Toits (3:47)

Nouveau projet musical pour le très prolifique Sylvain Chauveau, qui a près s'être fait remarquer sous son nom puis au sein du projet Micro:mega se lance dans une troisième aventure en compagnie de Joan Cambon sur le très ambitieux label nancéen "Les disques du soleil et de l'acier" pour un album à l'accent cinématographique et littéraire puisque on trouve dans les morceaux des samples extraits de films de Tarkovski ou de Charles Laughton mais aussi des passages de textes signés Albert Camus comme dans le très beau 1957.

Cinématique est véritablement un disque d'ambiances à la fois diverses et singulières qui prouvent que Sylvain Chauveau ne veut pas faire les choses simplement comme tout le monde mais offrir une musique riche faite de sons électroniques et d'instruments traditionnels et apportant des émotions particulières lies au climats développés tout au long des presque 43 minutes que dure cet album. Disque aérien, organique et mélancolique, cinématique prouve qu'il est également doué pour faire une musique post-rock touchante et exigeante.

Benzine


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Hrsta - L'Eclat du Ciel Etait Insoutenable (Fancy, 2001)

1 L'Éclat Du Ciel Était Insoutenable
2 Lime Kiln
3 Don't Let The Angels Fall
4 City Of Gold
5 I Can Transform Myself Into Anyone I Want
6 Jakominiplatz
7 21-87
8 Silver Planes
9 Blessed Are We Who Seem To Be Losers
10 Lucy's Sad
11 City Of Gold (Reprise)
12 Whip
13 Novi Beograd

Hrsta est le projet de Mike Moya, membre fondateur de Godspeed You Black Emperor !. En 98, Moya quitte le groupe et le label Constellation, pour passer chez Alien 8 avec le groupe Molasses et Set Fire To Flames alors qu'en 2001 sort l'album de son groupe. Le titre de ce premier LP nous met en garde vis-à-vis de l'ambiance et des sensations que peut procurer cet album. Il sera triste voire deprimant. Mike Moya ne l'éloigne pas forcement de l'esprit de Molasses et opte pour une orchestration reduite (guitare -sèche et electrique-, basse, piano, violon...), presque intime, avec également ses débuts au chant. Il n'y aura donc pas d'envolées célestes à la GYBE!, ni de long passge de musique "réelle", à la Set Fire To Flames (ouf). Hrsta se contentera de nous donner ce que l'on a envie d'entendre les jours maussades et les soirées où l'on se retrouve face à soi-même. Hrsta nous donnera tout ce que l'on pourra attendre d'un groupe dans la mouvance post-rock made in Constellation, Mike Moya reussit malgré tout à nous délivrer un disque beau et envoûtant.
XSilence

If you're a fan of Godspeed You Black Emperor, chances are that you've heard the name Mike Moya. He was a member of the group playing guitars on their first two releases, and the first track of their Slow Riot for a New Zero Kanada simply goes by the name "Moya" and is dedicated to all the cats who have gone missing at the Mile End in Montreal. In addition to being one of the founding members of the above group, though, he's also a member of Molasses, The Lonesome Hanks, and was also part of the recent Set Fire To Flames collective album Sings Reign Rebuilder.

That all may come as no surprise, though, as some of the best music I've heard in the past couple of years has come out of different collections of Canadian musicians. Spread out over the Alien8 and Constellation labels, almost 10 different bands or projects (and numerous more musicians) have been creating some amazing music. Hrsta is one of the newest of these bands, and although it's mainly a project by multi-instrumentalist Mike Moya, there are several other players. As one might expect, the tone of the album sort of fits in alongside work by contemporaries. It's not as stripped-down as Molasses, not as shimmering as Fly Pan Am, and not as psychedelic as Shalabi Effect, but there are little elements of each that creep through and add up to something new yet again.

The album titled track opens up the release and it's basically just an introduction of sorts, as the layers of droning guitars slowly wash by and drift directly into the following track of "Lime Kiln." While the track takes on a more traditional structure, the lyrics of decay and woozy instrumentation fit together into something that you might hear the ghosts of a mining town singing. From there, the album goes through several shorter instrumental tracks, some more simple guitar melodies ("I Can Transform Myself Into Anyone I Want"), while others are more experimental (the howling theremin-like sounds of "Jakominplatz").

Although the instrumental tracks on the release are sometimes excellent, it's the tracks on which Moya sings that really take hold. The lethargic pace of "21-87" is made even more languid with the addition of vocals that sound like they were done while half asleep, and when the final, louder part of the track hits, the words come falling out in a slurred mumble/growl that sounds like he was shaken awake. On "Silver Planes" (the most droning song on the album), the vocals never get louder than a whisper, while on "Lucy's Sad" (a dark, folk singalong) he damn near yodels.

This is nowhere near a fast-moving album, though. Although a couple different tracks reach an almost feverish pitch, things mainly move along at a steady pace with an overall feel that is slightly haunting and eerie. It's a combination of0 swirling instrumentation, and the lazy, sometimes bewildering vocals by Moya himself, but if you're into some of the bands mentioned above and their quieter moments, this is definitely something to seek out. Not immediately striking, but something to keep you company on a cold winter night.

Almost Cool Music Reviews

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