Brainwashed Radio: The Podcast Edition

Aurora Borealis image from California by Steve

Look up

Music for gazing upwards brought to you by Meat Beat Manifesto & scott crow, +/-, Aurora Borealis, The Veldt, Not Waving & Romance, W.A.T., The Handover, Abul Mogard & Rafael Anton Irisarri, Mulatu Astatke, Paul St. Hilaire & René Löwe, Songs: Ohia, and Shellac.

Aurora Borealis image from California by Steve.

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Heidi Mortenson, "Wired Stuff"

This is one of the most uninspiring albums I’ve ever heard. Heidi Mortenson’s debut is self indulgent, boring and forced. It makes me feel envious of the congenitally deaf. Although it does make the rest of my records sound better now.
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Adem, "Love and Other Planets"

If the opening lyrics to this Fridge member's latest solo album aren't provocative enough, then the music will seduce anyone that listens to it immediately. Adem has crafted an elegant, feathery-soft record full of soaring melodies and intricate arrangements. It all sounds so natural that it's hard to believe he didn't just breathe this record into existence.
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Scuba, "SCUBA003"

His third installment in Hotflush's numbered series, Paul Rose's SCUBA003 proves that he is one of the most innovative producers in the constantly mutating dubstep genre. 
 
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Ellen Allien, "Thrills"

It’s been about 22 years since I grooved to my first AfrikaBambaataa record, and it makes me almost giddy that I can pick up a newrecord today and bounce to it in the same way. Ellen Allien may come tothe party by way of minimalist German techno and dub, but I can’t helpbut think she’d be welcome in the Zulu Nation any time.
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Leyland James Kirby, "Sadly, The Future Is No Longer What It Was"

This ambitiously sprawling triple album marks the beginning of a third phase in James Kirby's career.  The haunted murkiness of his previous work as The Caretaker remains intact, but Kirby has recently made the bold (and possibly ill-conceived) move of playing everything himself and entirely avoiding samples. The result is certainly quite strange and difficult, but it is also a gutsy rejection of all prevailing trends in contemporary music.
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Vertonen, "We Had a Few Sprinkles Today, But Not Enough to Help Out in the Garden"

cover imageLong-time Chicago based sound artist Blake Edwards has developed an impressive resume in the experimental and noise scenes over the years, and this newest full length album is no different.  Here he focuses on the manipulation and treatment of sounds recorded some 31 years ago, and the result is, for better or worse, a static gray wall of dour sounds that has its high points, but not as many as one would hope.
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Githead, "Landing"

cover imageHaving kept both Githead and Wire active in the past couple of years, it is unsurprising that there has been some cross-pollination of style due to Colin Newman’s presence in both bands.  Last year’s Object 47 pushed out some of the more aggressive elements from Wire Mk. 3’s sound and instead embraced a more ethereal pop sound parallel to that project’s classic A Bell is a Cup album.  Similarly, this new full length from Githead retains Wire’s sharp and dynamic rhythm section, but brings in a greater pop sensibility along with Newman’s unabashedly wonderful angularity.
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Nurse With Wound, "Space Music"

cover imageAfter six years of being just a title on the Beta-lactam Ring Records website, I was losing hope of this album ever materialising. There was the danger that if it did ever arrive on earth that it would be an anticlimax but thankfully I can report that it is one of the best realised Nurse With Wound albums yet. Steven Stapleton and his crew, including first mate Andrew Liles and chief of engineering Colin Potter, voyage through the outer limits of The Outer Limits and Sun Ra's most cosmic offerings. Influenced by those haunting electronic soundtracks of vintage Sci-Fi, Stapleton guides the U.S.S. Nurse With Wound through the furthest regions of the universe, documenting spatial anomalies and creating some of the best sounds audible in the Milky Way.
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Nurse With Wound, "Paranoia in Hi-Fi"

cover imageCelebrating 30 years of Nurse With Wound and inspired by Faust's 49p album, The Faust Tapes, categories strain, crack and sometimes break under their burden as Steven Stapleton and company step out of the space provided to create a best of compilation like no other. Featuring loads of familiar music but all in a totally new context this “party mix” is great fun; surprise juxtapositions of material and trying to identify the sources of the various sounds make for a nerdy but highly enjoyable hour of listening.
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Leyland James Kirby, "Sadly, the Future Is No Longer What It Was"

cover   image The latest from Leyland James Kirby is not only his best album to date, it's one of the best ambient albums I've heard in the past decade. It is both the culmination of Kirby's past efforts as The Stranger and The Caretaker and also his point of departure from those projects. Sadly, the Future Is No Longer What It Was takes everything I love about Kirby's previous work and infuses it with a greater diversity of ideas, moods, and colors.
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