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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Tarab, "Wind Keeps Even Dust Away"

cover image This is the second release from Eamon Sprod's field recordings project and a wonderful collection of sound collages. In spite of a fairly hackneyed premise (the beauty in decay), he has created a number of fragile compositions that wander somewhere between Chris Watson's clear recording style and Francisco Lopez's disorientating approach to presenting sound.
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Mustafa Ozkent, "Genclik Ile Elele"

cover imageRare records are funny things; to some people the value of the record is in how many were pressed and the quirks of individual pressings. To others it is the music that counts, to hell with catalogue numbers and whether it has misprinted labels. This is a release to appeal to those in the former category, rare as hen's teeth but nothing to write home about.
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Rolan Vega, "Documentary"

Rolan Vega's ambiguous debut on Community Library suffers from its unfocused genesis. In part a tribute to movie and television soundtracks, Documentary is an intriguing compilation of Vega's synthesizer compositions but not an entirely successful album.
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Marc Hannaford, "The Garden of Forking Paths"

Accessible, improvisational jazz is given new life at the hands of this exceptional quartet. Australian pianist Marc Hannaford leads his group through a variety of musical approaches, drawing a lively dialogue out of each of them that entertains with ease. This quartet reaches deep into their imaginative bag of tricks and pull out one stunning performance after another.
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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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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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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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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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PureH, "Signia"

cover image Although ostensibly a remix album, there is no need to be familiar with the source material to enjoy the remix work here.  From what I gather, PureH are a successful electronic rock band out of Slovenia who invited a slew of electronic artists to rework a single track, "Signia."  Not being familiar with the original track, I purposely avoided listening to the initial song to fully appreciate the remixes, which all vary greatly and, as a whole, make for strong, diverse tracks.
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The Residents, "The Voice of Midnight"

cover image The eyeballed-ones recent foray into storytelling and radio plays has been patchy to say the least. Tweedles was disappointing and the Timmy YouTube viral videos frequently seemed to be lacking something. However, it has never been written anywhere that The Residents had to placate their audience all the time (in fact, if anything should be written it is that The Residents should not placate any of their audience any of the time). That being said, this latest album seems to work far better than its predecessors as it melds a number of musical (and other) styles in that inimitable Residential fashion.
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