Brainwashed Radio: The Podcast Edition

Solstice moon in the West Midlands by James

Hotter than July.

This week's episode has plenty of fresh new music by Marie Davidson, Kim Gordon, Mabe Fratti, Guided By Voices, Holy Tongue meets Shackleton, Softcult, Terence Fixmer, Alan Licht, pigbaby, and Eiko Ishibashi, plus some vault goodies from Bombay S Jayashri and Pete Namlook & Richie Hawtin.

Solstice moon in West Midlands, UK photo by James.

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Zeni Geva, "Maximum Money Monster"

The music of Zeni Geva has variously been described as heavy metal, noise rock, math rock (apparently because of their use of atypical time signatures), death metal, thrash metal, sludge metal, doom metal and industrial metal; in truth it is all of these categories while at the same time travelling far beyond the trite parameters and restrictions usually associated with them. Maximum Money Monster originally debuted in 1990 and here includes three extra live tracks as bonus material.
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Griefer, "Brute Force"

cover image Noise and power electronics is always so often heavily entrenched in fascist imagery, serial killer worship, sexual depravity, etc. Not that there's anything wrong with any of that, it just gets trite after a while. Griefer instead opts to create a thematic work based around the Internet and hacking, and the imagery seeps in from the packaging and track titles into the overall sound, giving it a very cohesive feel. Although it doesn't break any new ground genre-wise, it does offer a fresh take on the established that fans will enjoy.
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"Persian Electronic Music: Yesterday and Today, 1966-2006"

Expecting a compilation of various Iranian electronic artists from the past 40 years, I was a little disappointed to discover that this two-disc set only covers two artists, the older Alireza Mashayekhi and the more recent Ata Ebtekar, aka Sote. Even so, the music found within is as wild and vivid as anything I could have hoped for and a decent enough introduction to some of the ideas at work in avant-garde Iranian music.
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Maëror Tri, "Ambient Dreams"

Before becoming Troum, Stefan Knappe and Martin Git, plus Helge Siehl, operated as Maëror Tri, releasing a slew of strange, dark albums in limited runs on cassette. Ambient Dreams first appeared in 1990 in an edition of only 18 copies but finally gets a wider release in its CD debut. Using only natural sound sources without electronics, the group crafts an eerie and gripping recording that still sounds startlingly fresh today.
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Erikm [Luc Ferrari] & Thomas Lehn, "Les Protorhythmiques"

This live performance was to originally pair Erikm with Luc Ferrari in France but due to health reasons, Ferrari was replaced by Thomas Lehn. The sounds were developed and researched prior to the performance by Erikm and Ferrari and a musique concrète improvisation was performed by Erikm and Lehn. The result is a chaotic but uncluttered sounding piece that combines Ferrari's fantastic ear with Erikm's turntablist approach (although in this case all the sources were played from CD as opposed to a traditional turntable).

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Room 40

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Gown, "The March Towards the End Continues..."

Better known for kicking ass with Thurston Moore as half of The Bark Haze, Andrew MacGregor's Gown project returns with a three-tracker of intangible blues. Cut from the same trad-quaked cloth as Christina Carter's solo material, MacGregor's twists and coils guitar lines between form and air.

 

Blackest Rainbow

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School of Language, "Sea From Shore"

Albums like this quickly put me back in college radio music director mode. I skim everything quick, listen for hooks I can use for segues with the records I know well, and note which songs I think the other DJs will dig. But ultimately, this is one of those records that, aside from a couple good opening tracks, gets forgettable quickly, and would soon get lost in the new pile in the DJ booth.

 

Thrill Jockey

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"Expansion/Contraction"

Not comfortable leaving well enough alone, living legend Richie Hawtin's preeminent minimal techno label drops one final compilation at the end of a year where the imprint appeared reinvigorated with a ramped-up activity level implying a surge in newfound capital.  Contained within the eco-friendly packaging are all new tracks from seven dynamic artists on the roster, including one new high-profile addition.
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Tabata Mitsuru, "Lumrapideco"

cover imageMost of the discs that have been on Utech's ARC series have been consistently dark excursions in texture and noise.  Never full on harshness akin to Merzbow, but generally bleak, almost punishing works (in the best possible sense).  As it is drawing to a close, this seems to allow a bit of light to seep in, but only in the darkest shades of gray.  Former Boredoms/Zeni Geva player Mitsuru manages to take a unique spin on the series that has a greater warmth and somewhat less density, but it is by no means inferior.
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Uusitalo, "Karhunainen"

Roughly a year and a half after his prior album as Uusitalo, the prolific Sasu Ripatti returns with a new collection of reliable and sometimes engrossing tracks targeted for progressive underground dancefloors.  Though practically every one of its ten analogue cuts could keep a bespectacled Mutek crowd moving, his latest merely supplements his healthy catalog instead of strengthening it.
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