We have finally cleared out the backlog of great music and present some new episodes.
Episode 711 features music from The Jesus and Mary Chain, Zola Jesus, Duster, Sangre Nueva, Dialect, The Bug, Cleared, Mount Eerie, Mulatu Astatke & Hoodna Orchestra, Hayden Pedigo, Bistro Boy, and Ibukun Sunday.
Episode 712 has tunes by Mazza Vision, Waveskania, Black Pus, Sam Gendel, Benny Bock, and Hans Kjorstad, Katharina Grosse, Carina Khorkhordina, Tintin Patrone, Billy Roisz, and Stefan Schneider, His Name Is Alive, artificial memory trace, mclusky, Justin Walter, mastroKristo, Başak Günak, and William Basinski.
Episode 713 brings you sounds from Mouse On Mars, Leavs, Lawrence English, Mo Dotti, Wendy Eisenberg, Envy, Ben Lukas Boysen, Cindytalk, Mercury Rev, White Poppy, Anadol & Marie Klock, and Galaxie 500.
Skolavordustigur Street in Reykjavík photo by Jon (your Podcast DJ).
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Timely outing from two grand masters of exploratory electronics. Kassel Jaeger is the moniker of French musician François Bonnet who works at the GRM and has released a number of books including the highly regarded The Order of Sounds, A Sonorous Archipelago published by Urbanomic in 2016. Jim O’Rourke is known to most through his explorations of the song and shapes, the high and low, the east and south.
Wakes on Cerulean is a joint adventure where process folds upon process and the operation of procedure remains unknown. Amongst a mysterious cloud of excited high frequencies tiny whistling howls. Frog leaps in technique lay out a thrilling and uplifting journey that runs from the soothing to ecstatic and back to the buoyant again.
Wakes on Cerulean is a staggering feast of the joys found in electronic process. A malleable bubble of hovering excitement, melody and joyous refrain.
Staalplaat's tireless trawl through Bryn Jones's endless archive yielded yet another fine pair of releases to close out 2016.  Jerusalaam, the stronger and more traditionally Muslimgauze-esque of the two,  is not so much a new find as it is a straight-up reissue of the fourth album from 1998's Tandoori Dog boxed set.  However, that absorbing and varied release is expanded with a couple of lengthy unused pieces recorded for the Return of Black September album.  The much stranger Mohammad Ali Jinnah album has an even more perplexing and convoluted provenance, as it is basically an alternate version of 2002's Sarin Israel Nes Ziona, with significant variations in sequence and song lengths.  Staalplaat rightly describes it as "a release unlike anything else in Jones' discography," as classic Muslimgauze fare rubs elbows with some rather spirited forays into frayed breakbeats, experiments in obsessive repetition, and four-on-the-floor house thump.
My interest in Staalplaat's Muslimgauze archive has alternately waxed and waned quite a bit since its inception, but I have definitely found myself appreciating the curatorial decisions quite a bit more than usual lately.  As I get deeper and deeper in Bryn Jones's oeuvre, it has become clear that there were definitely brief periods of white-hot inspiration mingled with work that does not feel particularly visionary or crucial by 2017 standards.  To their credit, Staalplaat have been doing a stellar job digging into and expanding upon the body of work that still feels fresh and contemporary today.  Also, my exasperation over the sheer volume and repetition of the Muslimgauze discography has unexpectedly dissipated quite a bit as well.  Case in point: the Mohammad Ali Jinnah album is essentially the Sarin Israel Nes Ziona album obsessively tweaked and reworked by Jones as he restlessly awaited Sarin's release.  Naturally, there is a lot of duplication and redundancy between the albums, but given how insanely sprawling the Muslmgauze discography is, it is probably safe to say that plenty of fans that have never heard Sarin and now they probably do not need to, unless they are floored by Mohammad Ali Jinnah and desperately crave more of the same.  It is certainly confusing, but there is no harm in supplanting previous releases if the newer incarnations are good.  This one is good.
Understandably, most of Mohammad Ali Jinnah's best pieces were already present on Sarin, though many reappear in altered form.  For example, the manically kinetic and digitally burbling "Imam Fainted" has been wisely stretched from just over a minute to over three minutes.  The obsessive and sputtering locked groove brilliance of "Yousif Water Pipe Habit" is similarly expanded for good reason.  The album's most classic piece ("Rafia, In Her Voluminous Black Tent") stays roughly the same though.  Notably, "Rafia" is not radically different in structure from any of the other pieces, as just about all of Mohammad is devoted to simple percussive vamps with a minimal melodic hook and some peripheral snatches of field recordings.  Sometimes there are also sputtering and sizzling dub-wise production disruptions as well.  The key difference is primarily just that "Rafia" has the coolest and most sensuous groove on the album.  The crackling, head-bobbing rhythm of "Zahir Din, Cab Driver of Zind" and the blown-out clattering of "Kurds Eye View" are also stand-outs, but they mostly adhere to the expected template.  It is easy to see how Jones was able to churn this stuff out on an industrial scale given the "Ok, this loop goes with this beat-done!" approach clearly employed here, but the clarity and simplicity of the process does not make the end results any less effective.
While "Rafia" is probably the only legitimately essential piece on the album, the real appeal for me lies in the sheer exuberance and the unexpected pop influences present in some of the other material: roughly half of Mohammad feels like business as usual, but the rest feels like a very strange and fun party.  In particular, the relentlessly insistent beat of "Abu Kaff, Your Guide Around A West Bank Bedouin Shack" is an especially entertaining treat, even if the actual music feels kind of like an afterthought.  I think Bryn basically just came up with the perfect beat and hit "play." "Because He Had A Mustache And Beard, They Thought He Was An Arab" is a similarly successful attempt at a floor-filling club banger, though it is fleshed out a bit more with a cool backwards string melody and some echoing and unexpected stops.  Elsewhere, "Abdullah Kosher Halal" feels like Jones attempted to apply his dub techniques to hip-hop with interesting and fitfully successful results.  Those pieces are what make Mohammad such a genuinely fun and worthwhile release, as there are already plenty of great Muslimgauze songs and albums out there in the world, but not many that capture Bryn Jones in full-on party mode.
By contrast, Jerusalaam feels like an album where Jones had a very clear vision and poured considerable time and care into realizing it.  That makes sense, as the Tandoori Dog vinyl boxed set is one of the more ambitious and significant releases in the Muslimgauze canon, even if I have not exactly loved all of the previous reissues from it.  I guess Staalplaat saved the best for last, as Jerusalaam is the final of the four original LPs to finally be reissued as a stand-alone album.
Stylistically, it is not a far cry from the bulk of Mohammad Ali Jinnah, albeit with all of the contemporary dance elements excised.  Instead, there is plenty of traditional hand-percussion, thick and distorted bass, drifting field recordings, and exotic snatches of melody.  In short, all the elements of a classic Muslimgauze album are in place and in sharply realized and vibrantly percussive form.  Also, there is a minimum of filler and atmospheric meandering to boot.  This is a strong collection of fully formed and thematically coherent songs that feel like they belong together.  That is certainly not something that I can say about every Muslimgauze album, even the ones that were not compiled posthumously.  The crown jewel from the original album is probably the woozily dissonant and off-kilter groove of "Under the Burka," which somehow manages to sound simultaneously sinister and clunkily infectious.  Also, its deep and fuzzed out sub-bass sounds like it could have been recorded today.  Another great piece (after a bizarre and unrelated-sounding intro) is the sexy and understatedly beautiful "Sufiq Gulf Breeze 1-2."
Elsewhere, I was quite fond of the reckless and disjointed "Lime Green Turban Gang," which is based upon an obsessively repeated and dramatic string loop, but is jarringly disrupted by unexpected volume shifts and blown-out, in-the-red textures.  Also, it sounds like most of the song is pushed so far into the background that it seems like another song altogether playing in a separate room–it is a very strange piece indeed.  If Jerusalaam had not been an actual album that Jones created in his lifetime, I would swear that "Gang" was just an unfinished sketch in the very early stages of songhood.  Bryn definitely made a lot of bizarre and adventurous decisions with this album, but that is probably why it works: Jerusalaam is not necessarily packed full of Muslimgauze’s greatest motifs, but there is a hell of a lot happening here and almost all of it is interesting.  I could listen to Bryn Jones mangle and twist his grooves all day long.
That said, I am still quite grateful that this version of Jerusalaam also includes one of Muslimgauze’s greatest extended motifs in the form of an orphan from the Return of Black September album.  Clocking in at about 15 minutes, the first of the two identically named pieces more or less steals the entire show, unfolding as a shifting, slow-burning, and hallucinatory ride cymbal groove.  Snatches of dialogue fade in and fade out and echo away into oblivion while the beat unpredictably dissolves and re-coheres again and again.  In fact, for the longest time, it just feels like Bryn just spontaneously erupted into a simmering drum solo alone in his room, but a subtly haunting two-chord progression kicks in around the half-way point to give a hint of structure and darken the mood.  Unlike most Muslimgauze pieces, however, the structure never fully locks in, so the piece evolves like an organically unfolding, richly vibrant, and half-menacing/half-beautiful dream.  Curiously, the second "Unused Return Of Black September" is a very different, lesser, and perversely placid piece, though several of the components seem to be the same.
Much like with Mohammad Ali Jinnah, Jerusalaam probably only has one truly essential piece to make it stand-out ("Black September," of course), but there are a handful of other legitimately great pieces here as well.  While there are probably other Muslimgauze songs out there that sound a hell of a lot like some of them, the cumulative effect is still quite impressive.  More significantly, I find the sheer depth, dynamic variety, and passion for experimentation here even more compelling than the unusually high volume of strong "singles."  While I do not think Jerusalaam is quite a stone-cold classic, it is quite a remarkably good album and it strikes a perfect balance between immediately gratifying hooks and absorbingly complex experimentation.  Some Muslimgauze albums are easy to wrap my head around in just one or two listens, but this one is a bit more mysterious than most. I appreciate that.
Masterful guitarist Glenn Jones' debut This Is The Wind That Blows It Out issued on vinyl for the first time on January 27th
Features duet with Jack Rose
Fully re-mastered with full artwork, detailed notes, & bonus download
“. . . gorgeous luminous settings . . . scored across a series of open tunings, which he threads with beautiful rolling melodies, his slide work soundings like the flutter of tiny metal butterflies... one of the best .” — The Wire
“His tunings are counterintuitive and mesmerizing; his use of partial capos and muted strings is novel and intriguing. But to Jones' great credit, those only feel like tools for telling stories.” - Pitchfork
"Glenn Jones' music is remarkably intimate: It feels so close, you'd swear you could reach out and touch the airwaves vibrating between strings.” - NPR
“Jones ..a brilliant scholar whose technical virtuosity is, fortunately, matched by an emotional intelligence that shines through” - Mojo
“It’s a remarkable set of music – as most of Jones’ solo albums are – that continues push the American primitive tradition into new directions using a narrative style that’s become his trademark.” - Acoustic Guitar
Following a stellar year for the masterful guitarist, Glenn Jones will be releasing his debut album This Is The Wind That Blows It Out on vinyl for the first time ever on January 27th, 2017. The album was originally released by Strange Attractors Audio House in 2004 on CD only and features a duet with Jones and the late Jack Rose. From Strange Attractors Audio House:
“At long-last, the time is nigh for Jones to release his debut solo album. This Is The Wind That Blows It Out - Solos for 6 & 12 String Guitar is a collection of stylistically ambitious, utterly sublime acoustic steel-string compositions, proving beyond a shred of doubt that Jones is of a rare class of modern compositional guitarists in today's burgeoning avant folk scene.
In the spirit of the great Takoma Records releases of the 60's and early 70's, This Is The Wind That Blows It Out winds its way through rich expanses of varied stylistic terrain, charting a rich and unique course. "American Primitive" folk and blues, Spanish guitar, slack-key, rustic Mississippi Delta slide and classical forms cozy up fluently to one another, sometimes within the same tune. Glenn Jones' fingerstyle and slide technique is on dazzling display, guiding the music across scenic vistas of mood and color."
Recently, Glenn Jones released his most ambitious work to date, Fleeting, which was named one of NPR's best solo guitar albums of 2016 and received praise from,Pitchfork, Premier Guitar, Guitar Player, and more.
I think at some point in the near future Richard Chartier will be releasing new material under his own name again, but as of late his focus has been on his Pinkcourtesyphone project. There are similarities between the two monikers, but PCP tends to eschew the conceptual academics of his other work for the sake of tongue-in-cheek kitchiness, but still is an unabashed showcase for his subtle touch when it comes to performance and composition. Additionally, this new record shows him honing his craft even more, making for his most fully realized album to date.
While I assume the title of the record is meant to be somewhat facetious, Taking Into Account Only a Portion of Your Emotions is actually the record I have felt that conveys emotions the most compared to others in the PCP catalog.Of course this is is entirely relative to the nature of the project, and the aforementioned emotions seem tapered by Xanax and red wine, leaving the emotions conveyed defined in the loosest of senses.
For example, opener "New Domestic Landscape" brings a bit more of a dark side to the album, with its cavernous sonics and occasionally menacing electronic scrape.As a whole the piece is sparse in construction, but the occasional clattering passage and frequently shifting dynamics keep it active, which contrasts with my interpretation of the title as a commentary on the mundane life of the 1950s housewife. Heavy stabs of what could be choral samples pepper the otherwise lighter sounding "High End Smalls", but with the inclusion of slowly twinkling melodies and voices that appear at the end, the piece as a whole is more unsettling and disorienting than it would seem at first.
There is a more inviting mood that leads off "Reference Point Intermission 1", with its shimmering opening tones.The fragments of voice do give the piece a creepy edge, but as a whole it is a more comfortable piece, where sweeping passages of drama keep it fresh, but the hypnotic repetition that Chartier builds upon is still very captivating.The companion piece, "Reference Point Intermission 2" sits somewhere between the lighter and darker moments of the record, in a sustained humming drone suspended in gauzy passages of sound.It again sees Chartier going for a more repetitive structure, but the far off gurgling noise makes for a tasteful, diverse accent.
The album's high point, and one of the most powerful works Chartier has done ever,is the nearly 17 minute closer "Schlaflied (für PvK)".Composed as a memorial for one of his dearly loved cats, the sense of sadness pervades the entire work, more poignant and direct than before.Based upon a simple, sad melodic progression, he blends in a multitude of additional textures and tones carefully through the mix.A bit of crackle here, a heartbeat like passage there, it all comes together in a beautiful, yet very melancholy piece that is amongst the most fascinating he has ever done.
As a follow up to last year’s somewhat terse vinyl release Sentimental Something, Taking Into Account… is a more sprawling endeavor, with lengthier pieces that would not as easily have fit on a traditional vinyl record. But this is Richard Chartier, an artist who has never had a problem working with an extended canvas, and that is all the more explicitly clear here.There are definite highs and lows, frustration and sadness to be heard within the pink fog of this album, which just makes it all the more compelling to listen to.
For Eric Hardiman’s Rambutan project, 2016 was an uncharacteristically quiet year. This new tape from the Upstate New York multi-instrumental experimentalist did not appear until November, and as best as I can tell it was the only release of the year. Perhaps that singular focus on this album was a good thing, because Universal Impulses is another fascinating release, up there with Remember Me Now and Inverted Summer as a complex, beautiful and mysterious work.
The instrumentation Hardiman utilizes throughout this tape are, as usual, rather ambiguous.The brief opening piece "Aside from What Matters" seems to be built from a slightly malignant sounding bit of scraped guitar playing.It stays as a repeating element to which more dissonant electronics are added, to the point that the piece eventually dissolves into a melodic mass of decay.Beyond that, however, the instrumentation is most definitely less apparent.
It is that juxtaposition between melody and noise that Hardiman does consistently through these seven compositions that gives Universal Impulses its greatest strengths.For "The Slow Pulse," he leads off with a bit of aggressive, dense noise that obscures a churning foundation that eventually takes the focus.With its subtle panning and processing and low, pulsing passage of what may be bass guitar, it overall feels reminiscent of Motion Pool era Main with its hint of traditional music scattered throughout the more fragmented moments.
A bit of crackling on "Backwards to Never" acts almost as a rhythmic backing track to which a subtle melody is added.The aforementioned melody eventually swells to a more distorted outburst and takes on a humming drone-like quality to shift things up very well before closing on a gentle, soothing fade out."Inside the Minute" has Hardiman pairing an almost marimba like base layer to which he adds scraping noises and bells, and enshrouds the entire thing in a wonderfully murky ambience that adds just the right amount of obtuseness.
The album culminates effectively in the nine and a half minute conclusion "Surface Elevation."At first a combination of filtered bell like tones and random noises, sputtering bits of radio static are slowly mixed in.He again keeps a repeating melodic layer the focus, suspended by a grimy accent of audio dirt.The pace is slow but piece opens and envelopes beautifully.The weird clipping effect that appears, sounding almost like a rat or insect, is a bit unsettling, but as a whole it is a wonderful, if occasionally bleak sounding piece to end an already powerful album on.
Besides this balance between melody and noise, Eric Hardiman's Rambutan also excels on this tape with the sheer dynamics of his sound.The pieces are never disjointed or inconsistent, but never overstay their welcome either.He keeps elements constant long enough to be appreciated, but not so much that they start to feel dull or repetitive.Because of that, repeated playing results in a work that unravels more and more of its secrets each time, but always seems to maintain a sense of being a mystery that is never entirely solved.
Richard Skelton was atypically quiet in 2016, as he and Autumn Richardson seemed to be focusing primarily upon their publishing ventures, poetry, visual art, and Skelton's esoteric and multifarious research projects.  Fortunately, however, the duo managed to release this EP in December to accompany a series of collages they completed during a month-long residency in the Orkneys.  While it only clocks in at a lean 20 minutes, Earth by Means of the Currents is one of the more focused and powerful releases in the duo’s collaborative oeuvre, featuring both a solid foray into their warmly beautiful drone comfort zone and a buzzing, gnarled plunge into its negative image.
In classic Skelton fashion, the residency where this album was birthed was both hyper-specific and geological in nature, as this work is part of a commission for ØY, a "festival of island magnetism."  Since this EP is not a radical divergence from typical *AR fare, it is unclear how much that commission directly shaped the couple's musical decisions, though there are apparently field recordings from Papa Westray used throughout the album.  I suspect most of them are well-concealed and subtle textural touches, however, as I could only pick out the sound of waves washing up on a shore in the opening "The Primary Menstruum or Mother-Liquid."  Much more evident is the commission's impact on the song titles, as "primary menstruum" was Evan Hopkins' description of the ocean in his 1844 book On the Connexion of Geology with Terrestrial Magnetism.  That book was the subject of Skelton and Richardson’s collage series.
To the duo’s credit, "Primary Menstruum" certainly sounds appropriately oceanic, albeit far more like a calm and sun-dappled bay than a raging sea.  It is quite a simple and organically flowing piece structurally, built from warm and slow moving swells of strings embellished with a Siren-esque nimbus of Autumn’s hazy, wordless, and cooing vocals.  While it is a strong motif on its own, a lot of secondary appeal lies in the piece's nuances (such as sneakily massing harmonic overtones) and subtle dynamic shifts (the gently churning and throbbing undercurrent).  The undulating harmonic cloud that it leaves in its wake as it fades away is especially beautiful.  Beauty was presumably not the intention for the following "The Winding of a Galvanic Wire" though, which seems to be inspired by Hopkins' theories about the world being turned by a powerful current.  Naturally, the piece feels suitably like a deep and terrestrial electrical hum, as its core motif is a densely buzzing and oscillating bed of shifting drones from a tone generator.  There are a few ominous and cavernous sounds in the periphery and some twinkling, buried, and fried-sounding strings to give the piece a bit of an epic and massive feel, but the meat is primarily just the mass of thick, buzzing drones.  It is an enjoyable and effective piece as a counterbalance to "Primary Menstruum," but it would not stand with the pair's finest work on its own, as Skelton has previously channeled crushing elemental force far more viscerally on The Inward Circles' Nimrod is Lost in Orion and Osyris in the Doggestarre album.
Given that Earth by Means of the Currents was created to coincide with a series of visual works, it is probably not entirely fair to judge it as a stand-alone work.  However, that is presumably how most people are going to experience it, aside from those who snapped up the limited edition booklet. Happily, it holds up quite well to that unintended scrutiny: it is certainly a rather modest release, but quite a strong one too.  Both pieces flow nicely and feel like they have been painstakingly chiseled down to their clutter-free essence.  While "Galvanic Wire" is a bit of a departure, the stronger and more characteristic "Primary Menstruum" is the EP's true centerpiece.  As such, Earth by Means of the Currents unavoidably feels a bit like *AR treading water creatively and perfecting familiar themes between more substantial endeavors, but they certainly manage to do that beautifully: Skelton and Richardson's instincts, craftsmanship, and attention to detail remain in peak form.
Available for the first time since being issued privately as extremely limited vinyl, Dirter are pleased to announce the CD issue of the ultra rare 2014 two-track LP The Great Ecstasy of the Basic Corrupt. The additional track "Circles of Confusion" comes from the equally rare Silver Bromide LP.
Indulge yourself in these three immersive, ocean deep and intensely powerful tracks of sinister whimsy for the wretched. Yet another classic from the timeless and ever evolving Nurse With Wound.
World-renowned as one of experimental music's most vital and impressionistic composers of the past few decades, William Basinski’s tape loop works have been especially influential, particularly on the historic series, The Disintegration Loops, where distorted, orchestral tape samples burrow deep into the listener's psyche through meditative repetition. On his new album, A Shadow In Time, Basinski plunges deeper than ever for the plaintive, solitary eulogy to David Bowie, aptly titled "For David Robert Jones." Conversely, the title track, "A Shadow In Time," is a subtle, celestial escalation of melody and drone. The result is one of the most truly transcendent pieces of music he has ever committed to – or wrung from – tape.
Thanks again to everyone who participated in the Annual Brainwashed Readers Poll.
and now, the results:
Album of the Year
Swans, "The Glowing Man" (Young God)
"The final album from this configuration of Swans saw them re-tread a lot of ground covered by the other reunion albums. Sure it rocked but I agree with Gira and company that this line-up has run its course. Swans have always been about breaking things down and starting again, The Glowing Man is a decent full stop to this period but for me it was swamped by a year of incredible career-capping albums where frontiers were pushed and explored (I don't need to name names here). The Glowing Man instead felt like more of the same by an artist known for avoiding familiar territory." - John Kealy
"Can Swans do no wrong? I don't expect any band to be perfect, especially one that's been going this long, but I'm surprised that one of their middling albums would earn the top spot. There are other tried and true Brainwashed-esque bands on this list that did adventurous things in 2016 (Xiu Xiu's take on Twin Peaks seems like an obvious choice) and others that managed to pull out one of their best albums after 30 years (see the next entry). So what is it about Swans that keeps them at the top of the heap? They're a fantastic unit, but at this point they're not nearly so surprising as, for instance, Valerio Tricoli, Radian, or Jenny Hval. Maybe we should exempt them from the next poll, if only to give more space to the bands who can't count Thor as one of their members." - Lucas Schleicher
"I suppose this line-up may have creatively run its course, but Swans still have a genius for making even their weaker songs feel convincingly epic. More importantly, why aren't any of the Norman Westberg solo albums on this list? Go sit in the corner and think about what you've done, readers." - Anthony D'Amico
"I have to agree with John. This was unquestionably a good album, but with the trilogy of this, The Seer, and To Be Kind, I think Gira and company have worked as much as they could with this approach. The title song is definitely one of my favorites of this era, however." - Creaig Dunton
"For an act that has announced that this is the 'end' of a phase, The Glowing Man certainly has an incredible amount of momentum. For 10 songs that stretch two hours, it moves along without dragging. Gira has changed his mind before and this certainly does not sound like the end of anything." - Jon Whitney
Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, "Skeleton Tree" (Bad Seed Ltd)
"In a year of heavy albums, Skeleton Tree might be the heaviest. Often sounding uneven and unfinished, there is a bare bones quality to these songs that make them relentlessly crushing. Paired with Andrew Dominik's documentary film, One More Time With Feeling, this album entirely breaks the mold for what to expect from Nick Cave or the Bad Seeds. His work has always incorporated the brutal and the beautiful with a wry and dramatic flair but Skeleton Tree comes from the heart, capturing grief in a way that is rare in music." - John Kealy
"I haven't enjoyed a Nick Cave/Bad Seeds record so much since Blixa left. Push the Sky Away was very strong. Skeleton Tree, uneven as it may be, is outstanding. I like to complain and moan a lot in these year-end lists, but this is a pick that absolutely deserves to be in the top five spot. Name another band or a songwriter who has gone for 30-plus years and still has the imagination and work ethic necessary to release one of their strongest albums ever. The list is short, but I suppose that's to be expected. What's surprising is that Skeleton Tree feels like a natural continuation of what Cave has been doing the last decade. It's not a surprise return to form or an out-of-the-blue gem, it's just a product of what Nick Cave has always worked at. The man is a rock." - Lucas Schleicher
Lustmord, "Dark Matter" (Touch)
"Man, you people sure liked this album a lot more than I did." - Anthony D'Amico
Loscil, "Monument Builders" (Kranky)
"I have mixed feelings about this one, as I could have definitely done without the Philip Glass influence. I like "Weeds" a lot though and I certainly appreciate the attempt to try something new. And I probably would not have read John Gray's brilliant Straw Dogs if it had not been mentioned as one of the Scott Morgan's primary inspirations." - Anthony D'Amico
"Dark but dense this album certainly isn't one of Morgan's happiest records. Brainwashed readers certainly like the dark stuff." - Jon Whitney
Tim Hecker, "Love Streams" (4AD)
"For a long time, Tim Hecker could do no wrong for me. However, Love Streams was a chore to get through. Gone was the warmth and the human touch to his wonderful music and instead this felt like a commodification of what was once a good thing." - John Kealy
"I was somewhat underwhelmed by Love Streams initially, as I could not help but compare it to the considerably more audacious and singular Virgins. It has definitely grown on me a lot since then though, as "Music of the Air" and "Violet Monumental I" are easily two of the most beautiful pieces Hecker has ever recorded." - Anthony D'Amico
Matmos, "Ultimate Care II" (Thrill Jockey)
"In our house, I am the king of the washing machine. I have a system that I like to work with and there is an efficient and steady flow of dirty laundry rejuvenated into clean, fresh clothes for the week ahead. The only thing lacking from the process, is a suitable soundtrack and luckily Matmos have delivered. This is a terrific album that merges the best ideas of musique concrète and experimentation with a great idea and a genuine sense of adventure. It's good, clean fun!" - John Kealy
"The only downside is that the parts aren't indexed. It kinda bothers me, but it's a great listen still." - Jon Whitney
"I definitely did not expect such a gorgeous and revelatory reinvention of the Biosphere aesthetic this deep in Geir Jenssen's career. While it is not quite a perfect album, the high points were beautiful and mysterious enough to decisively make this one of my favorite albums of the year." - Anthony D'Amico
Nurse With Wound, "Dark Fat" (United Jnana/United Dirtier)
"Compiled from various concert recordings, this NWW could have been a redundant release given the numerous live albums that Steve Stapleton has already released. Instead, this feels like an entirely new entity that fits perfectly with some of NWW's murkier and sinister works. Matt Waldron's sculpting of the NWW live sound is impeccable, truly one of the best NWW in years (I seem to be always saying this, every year is always a good year to be a NWW fan)." - John Kealy
"If you are going to release nothing but vault scrapings, this is definitely the most ingenious and satisfying way to do it." - Anthony D'Amico
The Body, "No One Deserves Happiness" (Thrill Jockey)
Puce Mary, "The Spiral" (Posh Isolation)
"It is nice to see something hostile and ugly place so high up on the list. You folks have warmed my black heart." - Anthony D'Amico
Benoît Pioulard, "The Benoît Pioulard Listening Matter" (Kranky)
Roy Montgomery, "R M H Q: Headquarters" (Grapefruit)
"I am still trying to process this insanely ambitious mountain of new material. There are certainly a lot of cool songs, but not four albums worth. Maybe the next release could be winnowed down to just a double- or triple-album?" - Anthony D'Amico
"Stunning. Each new listen reveals how brilliant some of these songs are. It's a warm, welcome return for Montgomery for me." - Jon Whitney
Hypnopazūzu, "Create Christ, Sailor Boy" (House of Mythology)
"This uneven collaboration with Youth seems to have creatively reinvigorated David Tibet, as it features some of his strongest performances in recent memory." - Anthony D'Amico
Blixa Bargeld & Teho Teardo, "Nerissimo" (Specula)
"While I enjoyed this duo's first album, Still Smiling, this one feels like a step up. Poetic, delicate and full of beauty, Nerissimo proves that Teardo and Bargeld make for an intriguing duo. They make no attempts to be experimental for the sake of being experimental (neither artist needs to prove any such credentials at this point) but instead focus on the kind of songwriting that I feared would be lost along with Leonard Cohen." - John Kealy
Ian William Craig, "Centres" (FatCat)
"All of Craig's many facets came together in perfect harmony for this lushly beautiful and woozily warped dream-pop masterpiece. This is probably my personal favorite album of the year." - Anthony D'Amico
Demdike Stare, "Wonderland" (Modern Love)
Christian Fennesz & Jim O'Rourke, "It's Hard for Me to Say I'm Sorry" (Editions Mego)
Marissa Nadler, "Strangers" (Sacred Bones)
"It felt like Nadler has been on a rocket for her career with each successive album reaching new heights, new regions of musical space. However, Strangers felt to me like she had eased off the accelerator pedal (do rockets have accelerator pedals?) after the sensational July. It's by no means a mis-step or a bad album but comes across a little like treading water after trailblazing for so many years." - John Kealy
Ulver, "Atgclvlsscap" (House Of Mythology)
Paul Jebanasam, "Continuum" (Subtext)
"Easily one of the most impressively visceral and wildly ambitious albums of the year. This sounds like space exploding. Or at least a black hole ripping apart an excellent drone album." - Anthony D'Amico
B/B/S/, "Palace" (Miasmah)
"A perfect exercise in simmering tension and slow-burning intensity." - Anthony D'Amico
Oren Ambarchi, "Hubris" (Editions Mego)
"I truly do not understand the appeal of Oren Ambarchi's rhythm-centric recent work at all. The last few albums have just felt like a bunch of friends jamming on krautrock vamps to me." - Anthony D'Amico
Roly Porter, "Third Law" (Tri Angle)
"Third Law feels like the Paul Jebanasam album re-envisioned as a complex and prog-damaged space opera during a coke binge. That is mostly a compliment. Both are quite stunning production achievements." - Anthony D'Amico
Aethenor, "Hazel" (VHF)
"I have listened to Hazel so many times and still cannot formulate a clear opinion on it at all. Sometimes it seems plodding, indulgent, and meandering and other times it seems like Stephen O'Malley and company are successfully channeling Bitches Brew-era Miles Davis." - Anthony D'Amico
Scott Walker, "The Childhood of a Leader OST" (4AD)
"This more than makes up for the lukewarm Soused. This is an absolute beast of an album." - John Kealy
Cindytalk, "The Labyrinth of the Straight Line" (Editions Mego)
"I have admittedly not had a chance to delve too deeply into this one yet (it is currently in my review pile), but so far it is an impressive modern take on some of the earliest 1980s industrial sensibilities." - Creaig Dunton
Mamiffer, "The World Unseen" (Sige)
The Legendary Pink Dots, "Pages of Aquarius" (Metropolis)
"One of the catchiest Dots full-length LP in years, it's full of some fantastic tunes and is an instant hook." - Jon Whitney
Aluk Todolo, "Voix" (Norma Evangelium Diaboli)
Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith, "Ears" (Western Vinyl)
Brian Eno, "The Ship" (Warp)
Cavern Of Anti-Matter, "Void Beats/Invocation Trex" (Duophonic)
Ulaan Passerine, "The Great Unwinding" (Worstward)
"Steven R. Smith is an inspiration. The man constantly puts out interesting music, switches styles with ease, and has a knack for interpretation to which anyone planning on covering a song should pay attention. If these year-end lists do any good for anyone, it will be because they urge people to go out and buy Smith's music, in whatever form. Both this and Moss Cathedral were highlights of 2016. If you're smart, you'll pay attention to Worstward and grab the physical editions released there while they're available. Smith often gives as much attention to the packaging as he does to the music, whether they're wrapped in cardstock or cloth. Only digital copies of The Great Unwinding remain, but there's sure to be lots more in 2017." - Lucas Schleicher
Surgeon, "From Farthest Known Objects" (Dynamic Tension)
Rashad Becker, "Traditional Music of Notional Species Vol. II" (PAN)
"I've only listened to this a few times, but it seems every bit as deliciously unhinged as the first volume. Rashad Becker is a goddamn visionary." - Anthony D'Amico
Silver Apples, "Clinging To A Dream" (Chicken Coop)
The Stargazer's Assistant, "Remoteness of Light" (House of Mythology)
"I'm currently frowning at my mailbox waiting for this to arrive. My annual obsessive plunge into end-of-the-year lists did not yield nearly as many surprises as usual, but I am delighted that my efforts at least turned me onto this." - Anthony D'Amico
The Caretaker, "Everywhere at the end of time - Stage 1" (History Always Favours the Winners)
Controlled Bleeding, "Larva Lumps And Baby Bumps" (Artoffact)
"A lengthy set, but one that does an admirable job of capturing the many (sometimes conflicting) facets of Paul Lemos' long standing project. It is an "everything but the kitchen sink" approach to music, but it manages to actually work." - Creaig Dunton
Shackleton, "Devotional Songs" (Honest Jon's)
MJ Guider, "Precious Systems" (Kranky)
"It's a fantastic introduction to MJ Guider, however I imagine future recordings may be more focused." - Jon Whitney
Natural Snow Buildings, "Aldebaran" (Vulpiano)
"There are unquestionably some great songs strewn throughout this overwhelming tour de force, but it is going to take me months to absorb it all." - Anthony D'Amico
The Body & Full Of Hell , "One Day You Will Ache Like I Ache" (Neurot)
Pinkcourtesyphone, "Taking into Account Only a Portion of Your Emotions" (Editions Mego)
"Richard Chartier may not have reinvented himself on this album, but it stands strong as a further refinement of this guise, and includes some of his best material to date." - Creaig Dunton
Shirley Collins, "Lodestar" (Domino)
"I am probably a fraud and a cretin for not picking this up yet. A new Shirley Collins album co-produced by Cyclobe sounds like something that could only exist in my dreams." - Anthony D'Amico
Vatican Shadow, "Media in the Service of Terror" (Hospital)
"It's another Vatican Shadow tape. It isn't different than the last ones." - Creaig Dunton
"This project feels like it is on autopilot at this point." - Anthony D'Amico
Klara Lewis, "Too" (Editions Mego)
"This understated and dreamlike album took a while to fully seep in, but its high points are among some of the most strange and beautiful music that I heard all year." - Anthony D'Amico
Pye Corner Audio, "Stasis" (Ghost Box)
Emma Ruth Rundle, "Marked For Death" (Sargent House)
Xiu Xiu, "Plays The Music Of Twin Peaks" (Polyvinyl)
"I honestly don't know how much I like this, but give Xiu Xiu credit for tackling one of the most beloved soundtracks ever. It takes a little more than confidence to tackle Angelo Badalamenti, Julee Cruise, and David Lynch. Plus "Into the Night" sounded great, whatever you think of their treatment of Laura's theme, "Falling," and the rest of it." - Lucas Schleicher
The Dead C, "Trouble" (Ba Da Bing!)
"A double album of gloriously messy, noise-guitar sprawl and absolutely no attempt to write anything resembling an actual song at all. No one understands the pleasures of simmering entropy better than The Dead C." - Anthony D'Amico
Landing, "Third Sight" (El Paraiso)
And Also The Trees, "Born Into The Waves" (And Also The Trees)
Current 93, "The Moons at Your Door" (Current 93)
"I've been struggling with the last few Current 93 albums but this pseudo-soundtrack to David Tibet's ghost story anthology of the same name was very nice. Recalling earlier "literary" works like Faust,I Have a Special Plan for this World and In a Foreign Town, In a Foreign Land, this is a strange and eerie soundscape that Tibet (and in this case Andrew Liles) does well. I would like more of this and another volume of ghost stories please!" - John Kealy
"The book was wonderful. I don't think it needed a soundtrack though." - Anthony D'Amico
Landing, "Complekt" (These Are Not Records)
Plaid, "The Digging Remedy" (Warp)
Ulaan Passerine, "Moss Cathedral" (Worstward)
"Have I mentioned that I love Steven R. Smith? This is one of two excellent albums he released as Ulaan Passerine in 2016. And if you weren't paying attention, you might have missed Salt at the end of 2015. There's no excuse for missing out now that so much of his work is available on Bandcamp. Get with it." - Lucas Schleicher
Croatian Amor, "Love Means Taking Action" (Posh Isolation/Alter)
"This was one of the biggest surprises of the year for me, as Loke Rahbek's weirdly shifting and pornography-themed conceptual art project unexpectedly blossomed into a warm, sensuous, and oft-gorgeous suite of songs that lie somewhere between sexy dance music and This Mortal Coil. I love this album." - Anthony D'Amico
Andy Stott, "Too Many Voices" (Modern Love)
"This was quite an interesting detour, as Stott seemingly took everything wonderful about Luxury Problems and reprised it in considerably more drugged, ghostly, and fractured form. I still like it, but Stott's aesthetic is a lot less immediately gratifying with all of his pop instincts drained away." - Anthony D'Amico
Sumac, "What One Becomes" (Thrill Jockey)
Gnod, "Mirror" (Rocket)
Valerio Tricoli, "Clonic Earth" (PAN)
CoH, "Music Vol." (Editions Mego)
Orphx, "Pitch Black Mirror" (Sonic Groove)
Yves De Mey, "Drawn With Shadow Pens" (Spectrum Spools)
John Carpenter, "Lost Themes II" (Sacred Bones)
Supersilent, "13" (Smalltown Supersound)
Kerridge, "Fatal Light Attraction" (Downwards)
Monolake, "VLSI" (Imbalance Computer Music)
Yves Tumor, "Serpent Music" (PAN)
Heron Oblivion, "Heron Oblivion" (Sub Pop)
Kemper Norton, "Toll" (Front & Follow)
Boris with Merzbow, "Gensho" (Relapse)
Claire M. Singer, "Solas" (Touch)
Glenn Jones, "Fleeting" (Thrill Jockey)
"Barbecue Bob in Fishtown was my pick for album of the year in 2009 and Fleeting is very near my favorite album of 2016. I guess I have to get used to the fact that Brainwashed readers and I have parted ways somewhat in the last 10 years because there's no way this isn't a top ten album. Glenn's guitar playing keeps getting better, his songwriting continues to bend and flex in surprising ways, and his ability to work miracles with seemingly basic ingredients singles him out as a master of the instrument. I'll never not be excited about what he's doing next." - Lucas Schleicher
Radian, "On Dark Silent Off" (Thrill Jockey)
"This was such a cool and inventive album. It should not be this low on the list. You people are making a mockery of democracy." - Anthony D'Amico
Acid Mothers Temple & The Melting Paraiso U.F.O., "Wake To A New Dawn Of Another Astro Era" (Important)
JG Thirlwell, "Music of the Venture Bros, Vol. 2" (Ectopic Ents)
Forma, "Physicalist" (Kranky)
Bonnie 'Prince' Billy, "Pond Scum" (Domino)
"This collection of BBC sessions is unfortunately woefully incomplete with one song from one of the sessions left off and with several other sessions left on the shelf that could have made for an immersive 2-3 LP set. Yet, the songs that did make it to press are a wonderful treat for Will Oldham fans, including a cover of "The Cross" by Prince to make you extra sad when listening to it now." - John Kealy
"The best thing Will Oldham has released since The Letting Go. Everyone should hear what Will and Dave Heumann did with "Death to Everyone." The Prince cover is a nice surprise, but the rest of the album is superb and surprisingly coherent, especially considering the span it covers." - Lucas Schleicher
Horse Lords, "Interventions" (Northern Spy)
"Rock band I most want to see live. Turn "Truthers" way up and get completely fucked up on their rhythmic trickery. This Heat fans will get a tingly feeling deep down inside." - Lucas Schleicher
Ashtray Navigations, "To Make A Fool Ask & You Are The First" (Blackest Ever Black)
Dalek, "Asphalt For Eden" (Profound Lore)
Single of the Year
Fovea Hex, "The Salt Garden 1" (Headphone Dust/Die Stadt)
"The first installment of a new series of Fovea Hex EPs is reason enough for 2016 to exist, given its awful reputation (the year, not the EP!). This is another startlingly beautiful gem from Clodagh Simonds, I look forward to hearing what 2017 brings." - John Kealy
"I kind of feel like John said everything I was going to, because it is an amazing (if all too brief) collection of songs that has me eagerly awaiting the next release in this series." - Creaig Dunton
"Both surprised and pleased to see this score so high. It's another beautiful piece in a flawless catalog and once again very promising for the following pieces of the series." - Jon Whitney
Wire, "Nocturnal Koreans" (Pink Flag)
Aphex Twin, "Cheetah EP" (Warp)
Lush, "Blind Spot" (Edamame)
"I actually find this one somewhat depressing now, because it seemed like such an optimistic introduction for new Lush material, and then the band imploded again. Especially because it was very good, with a sound more akin to the Split era rather than the Britpop catch up Lovelife stuff." - Creaig Dunton
Porter Ricks, "Shadow Boat" (Tresor)
"I am thrilled that Porter Ricks has returned, but these three songs are not quite on the same level as Biokinetics." - Anthony D'Amico
The Legendary Pink Dots, "A Scented Candle" (Noise Noise Noise)
Loscil, "Suns" (self-released)
JK Flesh, "Nothing Is Free" (Downwards)
Container, "Vegetation" (Diagonal)
"Pummeling, strange, and relentlessly kinetic. Possibly the best Container release yet." - Anthony D'Amico
Carla dal Forno, "Fast Moving Cars" (Blackest Ever Black)
Hope Sandoval & The Warm Inventions, "Let Me Get There" (Tendril Tales)
Meat Beat Manifesto, "Tour EP 2016" (Flexidisc)
Marissa Nadler, "Bury Your Name" (Sacred Bones)
Giacinto Scelsi, Chris Watson, and Joe Browning, "Scelsi" (SN Variations)
Braids, "Companion" (Arbutus)
Ramleh, "Conquest Play/Clockwork" (Entropy)
"Half electronic noise, half negative noise rock. Essentially the full Ramleh experience in 15 minutes, and that's a great thing." - Creaig Dunton
Mark Ernestus’ Ndagga Rhythm Force, "Walo Walo" (Ndagga)
"I didn't listen to this single much, but I played Yermande to death. This improbable project (German techno producer teams up with drummers from Dakar) has been consistently wonderful." - Anthony D'Amico
Sleaford Mods, "T.C.R." (Rough Trade)
"More of the same? Yeah, pretty much. But not necessarily a bad thing in my eyes, and the title track is one of the most catchy songs they've done to date." - Creaig Dunton
"I may be a bit biased since he's a friend of mine, but Joao Da Silva's ambient project Luciernaga does not get the attention it deserved. This was a great introduction to his work, with two of his richest compositions to date." - Creaig Dunton
Peder Mannerfelt, "Transmissions from a Drainpipe" (Peder Mannerfelt Produktion)
Surgeon, "Search Deep Inside Yourself" (Blueprint)
Death In Vegas, "Consequences Of Love" (Drone)
Ultimate Painting / Woods, "Into The Darkness / Know Your Minute" (Woodsist)
Immersion, "Analogue Creatures" (Swim)
Immersion, "Living On Land" (Swim)
Cold Cave, "The Idea of Love/Rue the Day" (Heartworm)
"This seemed like more of a throwback to the Cremation days of Cold Cave. Which means while I enjoyed it, it was not overly memorable either." - Creaig Dunton
Simon Shreeve, "Healing Bowl" (Downwards)
Autumns, "A Product of 30 Years of Violence" (Clan Destine)
SΛRIN, "Current Conflict" (Aufnahme + Wiedergabe)
Simon Shreeve, "Lust Product" (Downwards)
Norin, "Reflektarar" (Posh Isolation)
Theologian / Ancient Methods, "La Saignée" (Metaphysik)
Iggy Pop / Tarwater / Alva Noto, "Leaves Of Grass" (Morr Music)
Grebenstein, "Strong, Proud, Stupid and Superior" (Downwards)
Shit Robot, "OB-8" (DFA)
Yally (Raime), "Burnt/Sudo" (Boomkat Editions)
"Ok, let me get this straight: if I want to hear an album that sounds like Moin, I want Raime? And if I want an album that sounds like Raime, I want Yally? Do I have that right? Sheesh. You guys are killing me." - Anthony D'Amico
High Functioning Flesh, "Human Remains" (Dais)
"The boys were a bit more dour and restrained on this single. Less stompy and more moody, it still made for a great between-album teaser." - Creaig Dunton
Chrysta Bell and David Lynch, "Somewhere in the Nowhere" (Meta Hari)
Scheich in China, "Scheich in China" (V.I.S)
John Tejada, "Lakewood Drive" (Kompakt)
Minor Victories, "A Hundred Ropes/Scattered Ashes" (Fat Possum)
"Scattered Ashes is easily one of my favorite songs of 2016. Too bad the album was nearly ruined by the appearance of Mark Kozelek." - Jon Whitney
Micachu, "Taz and May Vids" (DDS)
Alex Under, "Olas De Quila Quina" (Kompakt)
Better Person, "It's Only You" (Mansions and Millions)
Dave DK, "Val Maira Remixe" (Kompakt)
Vault/Reissue of the Year
Coil, "The Ape Of Naples" (Important)
Coil, "The New Backwards" (Important)
Coil, "Astral Disaster" (Prescription)
"It goes without saying that having Coil back in print, especially on vinyl, warms my heart. The Ape of Naples and The New Backwards are, in retrospect, a muddled but moving effort at closing the door on Coil by Peter Christopherson but Astral Disaster reminds us of how potent Coil were at their (many) peak(s). Explorative, uncanny and utterly engaging, Astral Disaster is easily one of their finest works. This reissue of the original Prescription edition of the album is most welcome, seeing Coil recording with Gary Ramon in an old, sub-basement prison in London (formerly the studio of Iron Maiden). Bringing to mind their own work in the Moon's Milk seasonal EPs along with heavy Krautrock and Minimalist tendencies, this album still sounds like nothing else on earth." - John Kealy
"I've come back to this a lot in the last few months for reasons I can't explain. I enjoyed the Threshold House version released on CD a lot, but I never got to hear the Prescription mix until a couple of years back. Why it didn't strike me the first time is a mystery. This combined with the CD version make for some of the best late-era Coil listening you can ask for. While I think The Ape of Naples is beautiful and moving, Astral Disaster is a masterpiece that ranks among their best work." - Lucas Schleicher
Suicide, "Suicide" (Superior Viaduct)
Dead Can Dance, "Within the Realm of a Dying Sun" (4AD)
Dead Can Dance, "Dead Can Dance" (4AD)
Dead Can Dance, "Spleen and Ideal" (4AD)
Bowery Electric, "Beat" (Kranky)
Dead Can Dance, "Toward the Within" (4AD)
"There had better be more DCD reissues coming, as I cannot help but note the glaring lack of The Serpent's Egg. Reissuing a live album before that feels like a hilarious prank aimed solely at me." - Anthony D'Amico
Suicide, "Suicide: Alan Vega · Martin Rev" (Superior Viaduct)
Dead Can Dance, "Into the Labyrinth" (4AD)
Nurse With Wound, "Spiral Insana/A Missing Sense" (Rotorelief)
Dead Can Dance, "Garden of Arcane Delights/Radio Sessions" (4AD)
Colin Newman, "A-Z" (Sentient Sonics)
Einsturzende Neubauten, "Greatest Hits" (Potomak)
"Focusing on the latter half of their career, this "greatest hits" seems a bit lopsided in terms of telling the Neubauten story. Yet, it is this later period that seems to dismissed by the old guard despite it containing some of the group's most interesting and experimental work." - John Kealy
Pan Sonic, "Atomin Paluu" (Blast First Petite)
Bohren & Der Club of Gore, "Sunset Mission" (Wonder)
The Fall, "Hex Enduction Hour" (Superior Viaduct)
"I imagine this is good. I mean, it's the best Fall album in my opinion. I just already own at least two copies of it." - Creaig Dunton
Manuel Göttsching, "E2-E4" (MG.ART)
"This should be mandatory listening for anyone about to sit down to work with a synthesiser or a sequencer. Masterclass!" - John Kealy
The Fall, "Grotesque (After The Gramme)" (Superior Viaduct)
Abul Mogard, "Works" (Ecstatic)
Biosphere, "Cirque" (Biophon)
Colin Newman, "Provisionally Entitled the Singing Fish" (Sentient Sonics)
Colin Newman, "Not To" (Sentient Sonics)
Tony Conrad with Faust, "Outside the Dream Syndicate" (Superior Viaduct)
"While the 1990s live recording between Conrad and Faust usurps this as the ultimate Minimalist recording, it is impossible not to understand the historic and musical Big Bang that happened with this album. The world is a far better place for this being recorded and again for it getting a lovely reissue. I hope Tony is up there playing in tune with the stars now." - John Kealy
The Fall, "Dragnet" (Superior Viaduct)
AMM, "AMMusic" (Black Truffle)
Whitehouse, "The Sound Of Being Alive" (Susan Lawly)
"At first I thought this was totally unnecessary, but given that most of the material is out of print (it is essentially a greatest hits collection from 1998 to 2007), it is justified. It also does capture some of their best moments from that era." - Creaig Dunton
Jack Rose, "I Do Play Rock and Roll" (Three-Lobed)
"All of Jack Rose's albums should always be in print forever. I'm lucky enough to have an original, but big thanks to Three-Lobed for making this strange and engaging record available to anyone who didn't know about Jack when it came out. His mix of Hindustani or Indian classical music with Takoma-style playing, experimental sounds, and that distinct Rose style is unique in the world of the solo guitar record. If you like weird sounds and want a place to start with Jack, this is that place. Put "Sundogs" on first and breathe it in." - Lucas Schleicher
Biosphere, "Patashnik" (Biophon)
Camberwell Now, "The Ghost Trade" (Modern Classics)
The Fall, "Room To Live" (Superior Viaduct)
Pram, "The Stars Are So Big the Earth Is So Small... Stay As You Are" (Medical)
Loscil, "Plume" (Kranky)
La Monte Young & Marian Zazeela, "The Dream House" (Aguirre)
"This had a very official looking release on a respectable label as part of a series of Shandar reissues. However, I wonder what is going on behind the scenes as further reissues are yet to materialise (aside from the Steve Reich album that came out at the same time). This is a fantastic (and affordable) reproduction of the Shandar original but knowing La Monte Young's reputation, I'm surprised this has seen the light of day. Hopefully, it is the sign that his archives will finally make it out into the world. At the very least, seeing the already released albums in print again should be a minimum." - John Kealy
Eleh, "Radiant Intervals" (Important)
Charlemagne Palestine, "Cathédrale De Strasbourg" (Erratum)
Pram, "Helium" (Medical)
Muslimgauze, "Jerusalaam" (Staalplaat)
"If this was not an import that only came out a few weeks ago, I bet it would have placed much higher. Definitely one of the better finds from the archive, despite a general unevenness. One of the two "Black September" remixes is an absolute monster." - Anthony D'Amico
Yoshi Wada, "Off the Wall" (Saltern)
"Unbelievable album. Why is this only number 40?" - John Kealy
The Legendary Pink Dots, "Festive" (The Legendary Pink Dots)
Bert Jansch, "Bert Jansch" (Superior Viaduct)
Bert Jansch, "It Don't Bother Me" (Superior Viaduct)
"This was so much better than I expected it to be. "Blast Platter" instantly catapulted to the top of my favorite Severed Heads songs." - Anthony D'Amico
The Fall, "Live At The Witch Trials" (Superior Viaduct)
William Burroughs, "Call Me Burroughs" (Superior Viaduct)
Muslimgauze, "Mohammad Ali Jinnah" (Staalplaat)
Various Artist Compilation of the Year
"Music Of Morocco, From The Library Of Congress" (Dust-to-digital)
"Space Echo: The Mystery Behind The Cosmic Sound of Cabo Verde" (Analog Africa)
"Sacred Flute Music From New Guinea: Madang / Windim Mabu" (Ideologic Organ)
"Punk 45 Chaos In The City Of Angels And Devils (Hollywood From X To Zero & Hardcore On The Beaches: Punk In Los Angeles 1977-81)" (Soul Jazz)
"ICR Thirty Five - We Still Couldn't Agree On A Title" (ICR)
"While I was unable to make the event, the ICR 35th anniversary compilation at least serves as a decent stand-in. ICR remains a stallwart in electronic music, releasing things that reflect an open and exciting approach to music - even when it sounds like not much is happening. ICR reminds you to listen closer and hear the detail." - John Kealy
"Andrei Tarkowsky: Another Kind of Language" (and/OAR)
"Wayfaring Strangers: Cosmic American Music" (Numero Group)
"Nigeria Soul Fever (Afro Funk, Disco And Boogie: West African Disco Mayhem!)" (Soul Jazz)
"Nothing Is Enough" (Full Of Nothing)
"Total 16" (Kompakt)
"Boogie Breakdown (South African Synth-Disco 1980-1984)" (Cultures of Soul)
"Dope-Guns-'N-Fucking In The Streets (Volume 1-11 • 1988-1998)" (Amphetamine Reptile)
"Kenya Special: Volume Two (Selected East African Recordings From The 1970s & '80s)" (Soundway)
"Killed By Deathrock Vol. 2" (Sacred Bones)
"Cold Waves of Color: Volume 3" (Color Disc)
"An Anthology of Turkish Experimental Music 1961-2014" (Sub Rosa)
"Radio Caliban: Blackest Ever Black "Singles" 2015" (Blackest Ever Black)
"Fractures" (A Year in the Country)
Boxed Set of the Year
Autechre, "Elseq 1-5" (Warp)
"I still haven't had the chance to take it all in at once, but I love Autechre for making this happen. The way they approach their music now, putting out four-plus hours at a time makes perfect sense. Far from being disposable, their first all-digital release is one of their more exciting ideas. I'm not afraid of a 10-hour record, guys, just in case you're reading." - Lucas Schleicher
Gas, "Box" (Kompakt)
Cluster, "1971 - 1981" (Bureau B)
Harry Bertoia, "Sonambient" (Sonambient)
Front 242, "Geography" (Alfa Matrix)
"Probably the least essential of this not-essential reissue campaign (considering the other two had unreleased CDs of live material included." - Creaig Dunton
Richard H. Kirk, "#7489" (Mute)
"I'm very familiar with the Cabaret Voltaire discography, but for some reason I never delved too deeply into Kirk's solo work. Good remastering job, good unreleased material, and also a great companion piece to the 80s CV sound." - Creaig Dunton
Tor Lundvall, "Nature Laughs as Time Slips By" (Dais)
"Tor Lundvall has quietly and sneakily become one of my favorite artists over the last few years. This set is perfect for binge-listening." - Anthony D'Amico
Front 242, "No Comment/Politics of Pressure" (Alfa Matrix)
"Did I need to buy this? Probably not. But I have to concede that "Funkadafi" and "Commando Remix" sound extremely nice remastered here." - Creaig Dunton
Sandoz, "#9294" (Mute)
Lush, "Origami" (4AD)
Blonde Redhead, "Masculin Feminin" (Numero Group)
King Crimson, "On (and Off) the Road" (DGM)
"King Crimson broke up in 1974 and never recorded another note after Red." - John Kealy
"Well this band who stole the name did a pretty good job at making quirky prog tinged new wave. It may not be "Starless", but it is still pretty good." - Creaig Dunton
The Scientists, "A Place Called Bad" (Numero Group)
Howard Stelzer, "Normal Bias" (Ballast)
"Ok, this is an amazing set and Howie is one of the greatest, underappreciated noise artists working today. But considering this was limited to like 50, and I have not even finished my review of it yet, I question the honesty of your votes, reader. :)" - Creaig Dunton
Alessandro Bosetti, "Stille Post. Radio Works: 2003 - 2011" (Monotype)
Artist of the Year
The Body
"Not a big surprise given the amount of music both alone and in collaborations The Body have unearthed in 2016." - Jon Whitney
The Legendary Pink Dots
Swans
Loscil
Ian William Craig
Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
Autechre
Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith
Lustmord
Nurse With Wound
Ulaan Passerine
Matmos
Biosphere
Puce Mary
Sarah Davachi
Label of the Year
Superior Viaduct
"I did not see this victory coming, but Viaduct certainly seems to have unerring taste in what they choose to reissue." - Anthony D'Amico
4AD
Important
Thrill Jockey
"The strength of the top 3 is clearly in the popularity of their reissues, however Thrill Jockey impressively remains high with primarily all new releases well into their third decade." - Jon Whitney
Kranky
Editions Mego
Warp
Blackest Ever Black
House of Mythology
Medical
Kompakt
Sacred Bones
Touch
Drag City
Posh Isolation
New Artist of the Year
Carla dal Forno
"This category is almost always an interesting curveball and Carla dal Forno is a fine addition to that tradition: an Australian dream-pop chanteuse on a label best known for the bleak, heavy, and misanthropic sounds of Raime and Cut Hands. With Tarcar and F Ingers, Carla has certainly dipped her toes into such fare herself, but her solo career is refreshingly different, hooky, and darkly sensuous, albeit in a rather stark and willfully bloodless way. While her understated aesthetic makes some of her songs blur together a bit for me, an awful lot of people played the hell out of "What You Gonna Do Now?" this year (and for good reason)." - Anthony D'Amico
Lifetime Achievement Recognition
Pauline Oliveros
"Through her music, Pauline Oliveros not only challenged her audience with new sounds to listen to but also with new approaches to listening. Her music veered between the intense, visceral immersion of her early tape works, stark and complex scores for ensembles of various sizes and her truly transformative solo and group performances on accordion. Through her Deep Listening philosophy, she took the seeds sown by John Cage with 4'33" and let them bloom into fantastic, previously unknown blossoms. Through the Deep Listening Band, she took these concepts on the road and created some of the most beautiful music committed to the air. Her music was a deep intertwining of meditation and performance; where most artists use climax and crescendo as a mode of catharsis, Oliveros instead used a gentle and disarming wave of love. Deep Listening by implication lends itself to a more empathetic approach to sound and to interactions with others, it is sad to know she is gone but her legacy is a powerful one. Teach yourself to fly." - John Kealy
"One of the few few truly wonderful things about living in upstate NY was being around for EMPAC's prime and getting to have a beloved,accordion-wielding, and legitimately iconoclastic octogenarian as a hometown hero. In fact, Oliveros's 80th birthday concert stands as one of the single most impressive events that I have attended (I believe there were like 20 drummers and the venue recreated the acoustics of the cistern where her 1989 masterpiece Deep Listening was recorded). Significantly, that event highlighted something rather bizarre about Oliveros's career: everyone can agree that she is hugely influential, but I don't think most people are fully aware of the true depth and breadth of her vision, as no one has yet distilled her scattered recordings into anything resembling a comprehensive retrospective. As much as I enjoyed Important's 12-CD Reverberations box, it stopped at 1970 and Oliveros was just getting started at that point, as far as I am concerned: much of her finest, most listenable, and most distinctive work was recorded decades later with the Deep Listening Band. That period remains far too underheard for my liking.
While her passing leaves a large hole in the international experimental music community, her legacy is a hugely inspirational one. Plenty of artists record one or two great albums, but very few manage to remain constantly evolving and relevant for their entire lives. Also, by all accounts, she was quite a wonderful person. I did not know her personally, but I did get a chance to see her attempt to save a Laurie Anderson concert that was plagued with technical difficulties and I know that she played at least one DIY show at Albany's small artspace with a handful of her students. I bet Luc Ferrari was not doing stuff like that in his 70s." - Anthony D'Amico
"On top of her lasting legacy as an electronic pioneer, she was an amazing person. I only met her a few times but she always came off as a friend. You could always feel like you belonged in her presence. So many losses in the music world of 2016 and Oliveros was another one who was still active until the moment her heart stopped beating, which is far more sad, to me, than an artist who hasn't created in years. She left behind a wealth of material to explore and I remain hopeful we will still be able to hear plenty of music yet to emerge." - Jon Whitney
Worst Album of the Year
Bon Iver, "22 A Million" (Jagjaguwar)
"It can't be _that_ bad,... Oh, sorry, maybe it actually is." - Jon Whitney
Weyes Blood, "Front Row Seat To Earth" (Kemado)
"What the fucking fuck? Weyes Blood is great and this album is strong, even if I prefer her first. Go see them live in 2017 and have your mind changed. "Do You Need My Love" bowled me over when I saw them in Los Angeles at the Echo. Seriously, what the fuck? Turn off your Swans records and get out of the house." - Lucas Schleicher
Wilco, "Schmilco" (dBpm)
Digitalism, "Mirage" (Magnetism)
Kate Jackson, "British Road Movies" (Hoo Ha)
Matthew Herbert, "A Nude (The Perfect Body)" (Accidental)
As a complement to 2014's Francisco Lopez curated audio-MAD, this is another work, compiling artists from his current home in the Netherlands (both permanent residents and those who were just spending time in the city) with the intent of giving lesser-known electronic artists a wider amount of exposure. However, for such a minimalist composer, Lopez has had a maximalist streak as far as presenting material as of late. The aforementioned audio-MAD (which compiled material from artists residing in Madrid) was a two data DVD compilation of 100 artists, and 12 hours of uncompressed audio. audio-DH (for Den Haag/The Hague) goes even further: issued on a custom USB card and is compilation of 190 artists and over 16 hours of audio. So a quick listen it is not, but it is a rich and unique compilation of many artists I had not been familiar with in the past, but now am most definitely interested in examining more closely.
The largest proportion of these compositions (largely around five minutes in duration) is unsurprisingly focused on abstract and experimental electronic sounds.Something like Nicky Assmann and Joris Strijbos' "Echo's Under Sunset" is a clear example of this sort of thing.A pastiche of subtle electronics, the two composers emphasize the lower end frequencies of the spectrum to generate a sinister sounding piece of dungeon ambience.Ana Morán’s "One" comes from a similar sonic place:a combination of shimmering tones and rumbling electronics that is forceful, but not overbearing, and while a sparse mix overall, the work evolves and varies greatly.
Other artists focus on using electronics to create more organic sounding compositions.Ezequiel Menalled's unfortunately titled "Sonic Contribution Audio DH" does an excellent job of crafting natural sounding crunches and creaking textures that, while not groundbreaking, are an exceptional example of the style.Sara Pinheiro's "Elephant Whispers" has some similar sensibilities, giving a great bit of crackling space enshrouded in a nice fuzzy distortion.There is also a unique depth to the crispy, open spaces of Tom Tlalim's "Curtain Master" that results in a specifically outstanding work.
In any compilation of these sorts of artists, there is always some more aggressive, abrasive works to be found, and this is no exception."Cables from Hell", courtesy of Lucho Pelucho, is a mass of harsh, aggressive loops and crashing, banging chaos that could potentially be a lost Merzbow work from the mid 1990s.The brief contribution from Sohrab Motabar, "A Miniature for The Hague" is an erratic outburst of ugly electronics that stands out as appropriately uncomfortable.Francisco Lopez contributes a piece himself, "Untitled #340" that, while not overtly noisy, is a mass of uncomfortably low frequencies, resulting in more of a physical experience of sound pressure pressure than a listening experience.
A few contributions skirt the line between noise and music quite effectively as well.Center no Distractor (Stephanie Pan and Stelios Manousakis)'s piece for taiko drum and electronics, "That Which Melts is Exaggerating" is a dense, pummeling pastiche of rhythm that is reminiscent of late 1970s/early 1980s industrial projects.Cocopino's "Niks Te Zeggen" is all echoing synth pulses and a cheap drum machine that, with the addition of spoken word vocals, has a unique lounge/electro sound to it."DDR", courtesy of Grand Mal has a vaguely melodic and rhythmic sensibility to it, even though on the surface it is abstract sounding.Jeff Carey's "20160411.1101_16bit" drifts more into chaos, but in the form of an erratic, deconstructed form of electronic music.
Much like the audio-MAD compilation, this set also features additional "recombinant" performances courtesy of the HARING (Humanless Audio Recombinator for Infinite Novelty Generation) software, which is an additional suite of three works just short of an hour each.Not just a bionic DJ mix of the material, the software instead analyzes, compiles, and rebuilds a composition based upon the initial building blocks.While I feel the original compositions feel more conceptually strong and focused comparison, it still is a nice and unique edition to an already expansive compilation.
Given the length and depth of this project, it is not something that is easily taken in all at once.I personally chose to dive in and out of the material over a period of time, picking random songs each time and listening to them individually.With that approach, audio-DH is not nearly imposing and is instead a wonderfully deep well of music that I was able to come back to multiple times and find new and captivating works to enjoy at each and every visit.
For the second part of the quadrilogy, the cage that composer David First decided to lock himself into is perhaps the most sonically diverse and flexible of the chosen cages: the venerable Korg MS-20 synthesizer. Compared to the previous work using an acoustic guitar, and the future two involving blues harp and sitar, the massive array of knobs and options almost seem not limiting enough, conceptually speaking. As a whole, First adheres to his staunchly ascetic approach to composition and delivers an appropriately focused meditation on the instrument.
The MS-20 is an excellent choice from both a conceptual and sonic standpoint:it has more flexibility and depth than the earlier analog units, but its semi-modular construction means it cannot go too crazy compared to true modular synthesizers.It also makes for an instrument that is well suited for hands-on improvisation, perhaps even more so than for conventional playing.There is a reason that everyone from indie hipsters to politically questionable European power electronic bands has favored this thing for a number years, and extra kudos to First for using the more recent mini reissue.
Even with the added flexibility of the instrument, First keeps things such as post-production and effects to a minimum, with most of the pieces being recorded simply in mono, and a few having only subtle accents added in the form of post production.The first side opens up with the sputtering electronics of "Dronemod2/ESP," locking into a rigid structure of repetition.First keeps the variations to a minimum to focus on the core sound, with only subtle changes being noticeable that may be either subtle tweaking of LFO effects on the filter or the generally unstable nature of analog electronics.
"S&H" is more commanding, patched into a 1980s video game like loop.The insistent pulse never changes for the piece's lengthy 12 minute duration, but his tweaking of the pitch knobs and filter effects makes it an overall diverse and dynamic experience.For the opener of the second side, "Bassdronemod", First eschews a more rhythmic approach to instead stay as a brittle, sustained bit of electronic noise.The composition ends up becoming crunchier and crunchier, and as a result it is one of the harshest and most intentionally abrasive pieces here.
For "Dronemod2," First goes back to a raygun like traditional synth pulse that never ceases, but for what seems so initially basic ends up being far more nuanced and expansive.By the end, the sound locks into an engine like chug that sounds more like a lawnmower than most synthesizers are able to.Comparably, "Pulse Filtering" is overall looser and more erratic, with a tremolo like dynamic that helps propel the weird shifting pitches.The final piece, "S&H-Switch-MW" is First opting for the most overly harsh noise sounding work here.With wet, sweeping noises scattering atop an unrelenting rhythmic throb, it could almost be a lost work from an Astro or CCCC album.The sci-fi tinged spacey depth, strong variation and diversity in sound comes together as a hyperactive, strongly varied recording that stands out as a high point on a very strong record overall.
Even with the diverse array of noises and sound that the MS-20 is capable of, David First keeps himself in check with these performances, which ensures that Solomonos for Analog Synthesizer stays within his self-imposed performance and compositional guidelines.I am personally expecting that this will end up being my favorite in the series, given my own affinity for the model of synthesizer, but I imagine that it will be an important piece of the overall series, even if it stands so distinctly on its own.