Brainwashed Radio: The Podcast Edition

Rubber ducks and a live duck from Matthew in the UK

Give us an hour, we'll give you music to remember.

This week we bring you an episode with brand new music from Softcult, Jim Rafferty, karen vogt, Ex-Easter Island Head, Jon Collin, James Devane, Garth Erasmus, Gary Wilson, and K. Freund, plus some music from the archives from Goldblum, Rachel Goswell, Roy Montgomery.

Rubber ducks and a live duck photo from Matthew in the UK.

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Christus & the Cosmonauts, "From Atop This Hill"

This group's latest album is a slowly evolving narrative of sorts concerning cyclical transcendental matters, as evidenced with song titles like "Beyond Belief (The Wishful Thoughts of a Pain-Free God)," "Surviving the Fanatics," and "Nod If You Were the Last Man Alive." Even when some of the songs take an inevitably gloomy turn, the journey is still intriguing and sufficiently bizarre.

Beta-lactam Ring

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The Disco Students, "I Beg to Differ"

This double-disc retrospective compiles this Aylesbury group's vinyl releases dating from 1978 onwards and includes recent material as well. Since there have been so many reissues and collections from this time period hitting the shelves over the last few years, I wasn't sure what to expect from yet another one by a band I hadn't heard of. I Beg To Differ turned out to be quite a pleasant surprise because it positively overflows with catchy material.

Yeah! Yeah! Yeah!

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Supersystem, "A Million Microphones"

Having never heard El Gaupo, this band's early incarnation on Dischord, or Always Never Again, their previous album, I had no preconceptions or expectations with A Million Microphones. As a result, I was taken aback at how much I enjoyed these deceptively complex and addictive dance tracks.

Touch and Go

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Liars, "Liars"

Four albums into their career, Liars take yet another artistic sharp turn; a set of relatively conventional rock songs.  For listeners used to the contrary experimentalism of their last two records, Liars will be as polarizing as anything the group has done.
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Vladislav Delay, "Multila"

In the Sasu Ripatti oeuvre, this savagely deep album stands as a hallmark of the producer's virtuosity. Enraptured by his latest album under this moniker, Whistleblower, I take special delight in returning to his long out-of-print Chain Reaction classic and reconnecting with the artist during his rise to infamy. 

 

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Daniel Menche, "Wolf's Milk"

cover imageIt's important to note Menche is an experimenter of sound, not an academic. Here, he takes this opportunity to deconstruct the sounds made by conventional instruments and use them to create something far removed from the original source.
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Aaron Martin & Machinefabriek, "Cello Recycling/Cello Drowning"

cover imageThe international collaboration between electronics mangler Rutger Zuydervelt (aka Machinefabriek) and cellist Aaron Martin makes for an ominous, foreboding piece that would make for an excellent Hitchcock movie soundtrack.
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Zelienople, "His/Hers"

cover imageThe fifth album from this Chicago trio manages to create its own unique take on so-called psychedelic rock by clearly showing some influences that will give newcomers a familiar point to grab hold of while still taking them somewhere entirely new.
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Einstürzende Neubauten, "Jewels"

cover image Over the last few years, Berlin's beloved have been intensely busy. Much of their time has been spent working concurrently on various projects, releasing around a dozen studio albums over the last five years. During this latest phase of the ongoing supporter project they set themselves a goal of producing an album over the course of a year, one song a month as a gift to those who were helping to fund their forthcoming album, Alles Wieder Offen. With three "bonus" tracks thanks to the phase lasting a few months longer than intended, the 15 Jewels are quite unlike Neubauten's entire back catalogue. Even the frequently challenging releases of the Musterhaus project do not prepare me for the sheer freedom expressed by the band.
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Marcus Schmickler with Hayden Chisholm, "Amazing Daze"

The Phill Niblock dedication on the first track's title is a dead giveaway to this album's sound and method of production; solo instruments processed into sheets of static tones that are held indefinitely. Schmickler and Chrisholm succeed in turning out two good tracks in that tradition, but the appeal of this album will certainly be limited by its self conscious austerity.
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