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Piezo sensor and contact speaker attached on rear side of each plate
Amplifying and mirroring their subtle and naturally occurring vibrations
Evoking the characteristic resonant frequencies of each type of metal
The sound art of Jacob Kirkegaard explores ways to reflect on immediate complex, unnoticed or unapproachable aspects of the human condition or civilisation. His works have treated themes such as radioactivity in Chernobyl and Fukushima, melting ice in the Arctic, border walls in Palestine, and tones - otoacoustic emissions - generated from the actual human ear.
Currently Jacob Kirkegaard works on two projects, one on the sound of global waste and waste management. The other on sound environments related to the immediate human post mortem.
With his peculiar alchemist approach and extensive research, complex phenomena and current conditions are portrayed through composition, installation, video and photography. Rather than providing answers, his portrayals create spaces for reflection.
Kirkegaard has presented his works at galleries, museums, biennales and concert spaces throughout the world, including MoMA in New York, LOUISIANA - Museum of Modern Art and ARoS in Denmark, The Menil Collection and at the Rothko Chapel in Houston, The Sydney Biennale in Australia, Aichi Triennale in Nagoya, the Mori Art Museum in Tokyo, Japan.
More information can be found here.
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"When I was a child I lived in a small house on the outskirts of a small village in Sardinia.
The house was located 100 meters from the countryside (close to San Gavino Monreale castle).
I spent my whole childhood playing and exploring all these uninhabited places, sometimes there were dangers but the love for nature was much stronger.
This song and its artwork reflect those beautiful moments spent with my dearest and old friends in those magnificent places where human beings have not yet built anything."
-Andrea Porcu
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Always enigmatic, the latest work from David Jackman is a single 47 minute piece that, for some reason, has been issued under his own name rather than Organum. I have never been clear as to what determines the name that will go on the record, and this is the first Jackman release since a split 7" (with Organum) in 2005. Additionally, the overall feel of the piece is distinct, but not far removed from the Amen/Sanctus/Omega trilogy from 2006-2007. Deliberately minimalist in arrangement, but with an unquestionable dedication to the finest detail of sounds, it is another work of fascinating beauty by the legendary artist.
Herbstsonne (german for Auutum Sun) is a sparse composition, recorded only using tanpura, piano, organ, and bells, and is performed rather deliberately, with Jackman leaving long, open spaces between the sounds of each instrument.On the whole the piece features recurring themes:the tanpura and organ being used to create expansive tones, with the bells scattered throughout.The piano tends to appear in heavy, loud outbursts of single chords, sometimes jarring in volume but complementing everything else perfectly.
There may not be an immediate sense of complexity to Herbstsonne, but Jackman's arrangement does an amazing job at highlighting the minute details of each instrument.The metallic twang of the tanpura expands into space, blended with the sustained organ sounds.There is little in the way of effects or treatment to the sound; I only hear reverb which may just be part of the actual recording, so there is a distinct purity in sound.Some subtle panning adds some dynamics to the recording, but on its own it still sounds amazing.The same goes for the bells, which echo out beautiful in each and every appearance they make.
I could not help but be reminded of the Amen trilogy in both the simple arrangements and the precise detail in each instrument, but there is a different mood here.That amazing trilogy, while not explicitly religious or spiritual in nature, did have a sensibility rooted in ancient holy music, presented in a very abstract setting.There does not seem to be that same underlying feel here, and is instead one that seems more rooted in nature itself.Autumn sun is a fitting title, because there is a sense of warmth from the tonal passages and the occasional chill of bells or abrupt piano chord that heralds the coming of winter.
With constant Internet speculation that each new release may be his last, I always feel a surge of excitement when a new Organum or David Jackman release is announced, and Herbstsonne did not disappoint.With a casual listen this may seem like a simple piece, but like all of Jackman's work, the attention to detail he works into the recording is apparent with intent listening and makes for some of the most engrossing music I have heard all year.
samples:
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The town of Clifton Park, New York, does not have anything resembling an experimental music scene, other than the basement studio of Mike Griffin. Under the Parashi name, he has been building up an impressive catalog of releases running the gamut from ambient spaciousness to pummeling distortion. These two collaborative releases make it clear how well his personal brand of electronic mangling works alongside another artist as well, and with a contrast from Anthony Pasquarosa's largely guitar-focused work and the darker electronics of Noise Nomads, showcases his versatility.
On the two-disc collaboration with Pasquarosa, Griffin's electronics provide a synthetic counterpoint to Pasquarosa's largely stringed instrument contributions, making for an excellent juxtaposition of conventional versus unconventional instrumentation."Ursus Minor" opens the first disc in a rather contemplative space, with complex guitar workbalanced by some sparse bass guitar and then scraping noises, but with a mix that is rather open and pleasant."Iron to Gold" is another case in which the pair keep things light, constructed from largely just intertwining guitar playing from Pasquarosa and some six string bass from Griffin.
At the other extreme would be something like "Three Sided Coin," where Griffin cranks up the pedals to create some excellent chugging electronics and Pasquarosa throws some heavy distortion and feedback on to his guitar playing to make for a harsher, yet warm and enveloping sound overall.On "Set the Timer for Last Days" there is a similar feel, with distorted rock freakouts on guitar and swelling electronics coming together with a feel that is overall looser and more free feeling compared to the deliberate performances that surround it.
The mood also varies significantly from piece to piece, such as on the frightening drones of "Ashes in the Well," in which Griffin’s crackling electronics oscillate between subtle punctuations and heavy walls.Pasquarosa’s guitar at the onset of "Times Filter (Repaired)" is initially almost new age-y in tone, but is transformed via multiple echoes and delays, and the menacing foghorn like electronics in the background keep it from becoming too airy.The darkness on "Tombstone Chips" is less menacing in nature though, and the ghostly guitar tone and haunted house ambience make it more of a '60s campfilm soundtrack than a horror one, and bonus points for the Flavor Flav/Public Enemy reference in the title.
samples:
For Sluice Gate, Griffin teamed up with Noise Nomads (aka Jeff Hartford) in a less contrasting arrangement, as both work primarily with electronics.Comparably these are also more varied, dynamic compositions where the two layer a multitude of different, often hard to distinguish sounds into complex mixes, such as the opening title piece.From an introduction of sinister amp hum and clinking bottles, Hartford and Griffin layer on passages of crunchy loops and bending frequencies, getting a bit spacier in the closing minutes.
On "Their Cherished Pseudopods," the two create a mass of sputtering electronic tweets and pulsations, and with the erratic bursts of static and noisier segments there is a sense of movement throughout that only relents in the closing moments via an orchestra of slowed down cassette tapes.The collaboration’s bleakest moments occur on "Knacker's Yard," where some pseudo-rhythmic loops collide with pounding metal and decaying tapes, casting the whole thing with a dark clang.The subsequent "Among the Vipers" is less menacing and more bizarre in sound.The duo mangle a variety of synthetic tones, twisting them in an oddly open mix punctuated with strange organic sounds.The whole thing is wonderfully erratic and as things come apart become weirder and weirder.
Taking these two collaborations in together made me appreciate Mike Griffin's work with Parashi even more than I already did.Being familiar with his solo releases, hearing how he collaborated with two distinctly different artists demonstrated not only his versatility, but also how another artist impacts his performance.The set with Anthony Pasquarosa makes it clear how he can both support a more conventional performer with his electronics, and also his ability to bounce off a guitarist like a jazz soloist would, trading their distinctly different sounds while still making for a unified piece.With Noise Nomads, there is more of a band feeling for lack of a better term.Rather than a sense of playful conflict within the instrumentation, the two work alongside each other seemingly as a single unit, layering electronic passages that seemingly become more and more abstract as the pieces continue on.The full range of Griffin's performance and compositional abilities shine through here, and with the other artists doing their own thing so well, the final products are fascinating works.
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This latest collection from Analog Africa is another detour of sorts, as curators Samy Ben Redjeb and Carlo Xavier headed to Brazil for a very deep dive into the underheard musical treasures of Belém. The genres covered (Carimbó, Samba-De-Cacete, Siriá, Bois-Bumbás and bambiá) were all entirely new to me, but I felt better when I learned that they were all fairly new to Redjeb as well. Characteristically, however, he was drawn to the Amazon-bordering coastal city due to its unique collision of cultures and therein lies the African connection: Belém was a crucial port for the sugar, coffee, and rubber trades, which resulted in plenty of West African slaves being sent to the region. Those that managed to escape often fled to outlaw settlements called quilombos where African religions and cultural traditions established a tenacious foothold (including those of Redjeb's beloved Benin). Naturally, those cultures evolved into something unique over the years and the best pieces on Jambú capture quite a wonderful marriage of relentlessly propulsive Brazilian grooves and African rhythms (though the latter is not quite as prominent as I would have expected).
As is this case with all Analog Africa compilations, the tales told in Jambú's liner notes are every bit as intriguing and colorful as the actual music (sometimes even more so).In this case, the story mostly takes place in November 2012, as Xavier and Redjeb arrived in Belém for a month of scavenging for rare and forgotten records and the even harder-to-find musicians that made them.Redjeb was primarily searching for work by Mestre Cupijo, who was responsible for revolutionizing the quilombo-descended Siriá style through the incorporation of mambo and merengue influences.The "first ever recording of modern Siriá" ("Despepida," recorded in 1973) is included here as the album's closer and it is indeed quite a striking piece, resembling a sultrier, sexier take on big band mambo.Sadly, Redjeb did not get to interview Cupijo, who had just passed away a few months before, but he did find some great albums and meet some unique people.And the search began in a similarly unique place: the Ver-o-Peso, which is purportedly the largest open-air market in South America.Redjeb describes it as "the pounding heart of the city," but also notes the "unbearable heat," "excruciating smell," and the "hundreds of disturbed vultures loudly arguing over a piece of rotten meat."I was similarly charmed by the description of one of the record dealers the pair encountered who would spend hours "restoring" record covers with pen, pencil, and brush because "a good cover would considerably increase the price of the record."
Aside from Cupijó, Redjeb singles out a trio of other artists who had a profound impact in modernizing the music of the region: Verequete, Orlando Pereira, and Pinduca.While Pinduca’s opening "Vamos Farrear" unquestionably boasts one of the album’s most insistent and smoldering grooves, it did not strike me as particularly unusual (it is just extremely good).The other two artists, on the other hand, are a much more eclectic and revelatory find.Verequete, in particular, is by far my favorite artist on the album.A former butcher and lumberjack with a nickname borrowed from "a vodun (divinity)" in "the jejes-nagos cults of Mina," Verequete was devoted to traditional styles of Carimbó.Apparently, that is what I am into, as the two Verequete pieces on Jambú are raucously thumping and clattering percussion workouts with little more than a banjo and a saxophone as accompaniment."Da Garrafa uma pinga" is probably the most wild and fun song on the album.Orlando Pereira's work, on the other hand, is a bit more hooky and musical, but no less vibrant.Also, the percussion unexpectedly shares the focus with some great flute solos and organ motifs.The latter is especially usual, as the less-than-ideal availability of electricity in the region is a recurring theme in the interviews with the artists.Aside from the four central visionaries anchoring the album, a few other artists make strong impressions simply by virtue of impressively tight and explosive ensembles.Os Muiraquitãns' "A Misturada" is especially wonderful, as it is a stomping and throbbing party of a song.Almost everything on the album is strong and distinctive in some way though, as only a couple of Pinduca's more funk-influenced pieces leave me cold.
Aside from the music, Jambú is also noteworthy for featuring the single craziest touring story that I have ever heard: as he was buying an Os Muiraquitãns record, Redjeb was informed by a record dealer that most of the band had perished in a boating accident that likely involved a drunken captain.When Redjeb met the band's Clorio Margahlo several years later, "the very surprised and amused" artist corrected the record: they had actually been riding to a gig in the back of a city council-provided dump truck (driven by drunk man with no dump truck license), but the end result was roughly the same.Fortunately, most of the band members had wisely decided to hitchhike to the show instead, so the casualty total could have been much higher than it was.While that tragedy is an extreme case, the varying fortunes of the artists that burned brightest in that mostly unknown regional scene make for fascinating and occasionally heartbreaking reading.For example, Verequete got repeatedly burned by record labels and had to abandon music to devote himself to selling barbequed food, while Mestre Vieira's death resulted in thousands of fans flooding the streets for a cacophonous funeral procession of blaring music and car horns.Knowing things like that definitely deepens my connection to this music and I love Redjeb for uncovering such biographical background–I cannot think of any other label that rivals Analog Africa in providing such a compelling and vivid musical history for each fresh release.As for the music itself, Jambú is not quite as revelatory as some of Redjeb's other collections, but it is quite a solid release packed with good songs and I will certainly be digging deeper into Verequete's oeuvre.Analog Africa remains the gold standard for international music compilations.
Samples can be found here.
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As befits the curious and unpredictable arc of His Name is Alive, this first installment of a planned trilogy of Warren Defever's adolescent/teenage tape experiments is a truly wonderful and bewildering revelation. Defever must have been one hell of a precocious 10-year-old back in 1979, as his formula of combining field recordings, copious reverb, and samples of records played at the wrong speeds would have easily been strong enough to build an entire career on–I daresay it was a positively Basinski-esque flash of inspiration. Instead, however, Defever opted to move onto more song-based work and this side of his artistry was relegated to some dusty, long-forgotten boxes, which I suppose worked out quite well too. These lovely, haunted sounding soundscapes would have made quite a huge impression if they had been released during the band's 4AD heyday though: the liner notes amusingly suggest that Defever accidentally invented shoegaze while trying to make new age music. Fortunately, these elegantly blurred miniatures still sound absolutely wonderful today, even if the window has passed in which Defever might have been hailed as one of the most important and influential voices in ambient music (or as a proto-Slowdive shoegaze savant).
To a large degree, All The Mirrors in the House sounds much too good to be true, as it is hard to wrap my mind around the fact that some kid in Michigan was making better ambient music than Brian Eno in the early '80s.That caveat will likely appear in every single review of this album and for good reason (there is even a healthy degree of disbelief expressed in Mike McGonigal's liner notes).Warren Defever has been a willfully mischievous and unreliable narrator at times and it is not unreasonable to think that there is some deliberate myth-building behind this release.If there was, it certainly worked on me, as I was very eager to hear it.According to Defever, however, the only post-production magic worked upon these recordings was "the overlapping of the songs for flow" (though he also notes "I really can't remember how any of it was made, or exactly when.").By any measure, these songs sound improbably and suspiciously clean and contemporary.And it is damn hard to imagine a pre-teen with a guitar sampler and a boombox anticipating the evolution of underground music by years, much less doing it this skillfully.Still, I would not put it past a teenage Defever to genuinely have been this advanced at manipulating recordings, as he is a legitimate studio visionary and that did not simply happen overnight.Also, limited resources tend to inspire innovative methods.Anything is possible, I guess.In all likelihood, Defever's backstory is probably at least true in spirit, as this album does not bear much resemblance to any of Defever's other recent releases.Also, the stylistic leap from these pieces to the earliest HNIA albums is not a improbably huge one.
It would probably be apt to say that this album is the result of three perfect sets of circumstances spanning more than three decades and could not exist if any one piece to did come together just right.The first, obviously, is that Defever acquired a tape recorder and began ingeniously misusing it immediately.The second is that he grew up in a religious household, so the record collection that he was raiding for his sound collages was an eclectic array of "folksongs, polkas, and waltzes."Most kids probably would have just borrowed their older brother's Zeppelin and Sabbath albums and devoted themselves to starting a rock band.Defever also stumbled upon a CBC show in the mid-80s (Brave New Waves) that awakened his ears to fringe-dwellers like Psychic TV, so he certainly had a host of eclectic influences rewiring his brain during those years.The final key puzzle piece is that the adult Warren Defever is singularly adept at assembling compelling and gorgeously hallucinatory album-length collages of short vignettes (1992's Home is in Your Head being easily one of my favorite HNIA albums).Also of note: Defever had some curatorial assistance from Tyvek’s Shelley Salant, which likely played an indispensable role in distilling only the most sublime moments from the dozens of old tapes (he instructed her to specifically search for anything that was "new agey, ambient, or had echoey guitars"). Defever also jokingly suggested that McGonigal use lots of adjectives taken from Slowdive's wikipedia page in order to appeal to today's kids.
Significantly, Defever's distance from these recordings enabled him to have the perspective necessary for shaping them into such a deliberate and fully-formed vision.There are probably many different directions that this collection could have gone, but he chose to present these years as something beautiful, ghostly, and bittersweetly dreamlike (an aesthetic that is even more pronounced in the album's eerie trailer).While these fifteen pieces amount to quite a mesmerizing and emotionally resonant whole, there is a purity and simplicity to the individual pieces that makes their purported provenance seem arguably plausible: each piece seems to be built on just a single theme and some reverb (though Defever purportedly mimicked multitracking with strategically placed boomboxes).For example, "Because Piano" seems totally believable as a bit of Defever's juvenilia, as it is just a minor key piano melody layered and reverb-ed into a lushly wobbly soundscape."Tape Slow" achieves a similar feat, as it is impossible to tell what the raw material behind the shivering, smeared reverie possibly could have been (tape experimentation at its finest).Some of the other pieces are much harder to swallow as authentic remnants from the '80s though, particularly "Liadin" and the closing "F Choir."Both are swooning, shimmering, and angelically beautiful miniature masterpieces.In fact, the latter approximates an Arvo Pärt piece remixed by someone like Tim Hecker.The shuffling and hypnagogic groove of "Outside The Window" is similarly striking–it is only a mere thirty seconds long, but it sounds like it could have been plucked from a cutting-edge dub album released this year.Yet another highlight is "Something About Hope," which masterfully intertwines looping guitars to approximate something that could have been a stand-out on 1993's Mouth By Mouth.
While I cannot shake my skepticism about the veracity of the album's backstory and timeline, it genuinely delights me to think about a young Warren Defever gleefully deconstructing polkas and making beatscapes out of his neighbor shoveling the driveway.Ultimately, however, how and when Defever made these recordings is far less important than the fact that All The Mirrors In The House is a legitimately wonderful album that reminds me exactly why I grew to love His Name Is Alive in the first place.While it is always interesting and unique, Defever's output in recent years has been increasingly inscrutable, prickly, and prone to excess (or at least to outsized ambitions).As such, an understated, intimate, and quietly beautiful album like this one is hugely welcome.All The Mirrors in the House is a flawlessly crafted release and Defever's curatorial and sequencing instincts were unerring: there are many truly wonderful pieces here and they all flow together seamlessly in an immersive and poignant spell that never breaks or wavers.In fact, I actually wish this album was longer, as it goes by so quickly that I find myself immediately restarting it as soon as it ends.Not many albums have that effect on me these days.Happily, I will likely get my wish when the rest of this trilogy eventually surfaces, but for now All The Mirrors in the House has definitively joined the ranks of Defever's strongest and most distinctive albums.
Samples can be found here.
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Thanks again to everyone who contributed to this year's readers poll and has over the last two decades. All the best wishes for 2019!
Album of the Year
- Low, "Double Negative" (Sub Pop)
"Low never let me down but with Double Negative they managed to completely blindside me. This is a stunning album that simultaneously pushes their sound further than ever before while still sounding utterly like themselves. Pure witchcraft!" - John Kealy
"Breathtakingly beautiful and bold, Double Negative seems to have caught nearly everybody off-guard, despite Low's occasional challenges of the conventional pop/rock structure. Considering the 2016 single "Not A Word," it shouldn't have been a complete shock where they were headed, but to do an entire album void of a "hit song" was unexpected. (Am I the only one who thinks some of this strikingly resembles Coil's Summer Solstice EP?) Experiencing the music live was a definite highlight of my year." - Jon Whitney - Current 93, "The Light Is Leaving Us All" (The Spheres)
"This is probably my favorite Current 93 album in roughly a decade. "A Thousand Witches" is an absolutely heart-stoppingly beautiful piece of music." - Anthony D'Amico
"I have to agree. I haven't really been grabbed by a lot of recent Current 93 but this one blew me away. The band are perfect for David Tibet's ambitious lyrics, somewhere between a meditation on death (as always) and a strange story that Robert Aickman would be proud to call his own." - John Kealy - Tim Hecker, "Konoyo" (Kranky)
"Hecker took some real gambles with the structure and tone of this comparatively difficult and darkly serpentine release. It is heartening to see that our devoted readers appreciated such a departure from the expected territory." - Anthony D'Amico - Chris Carter, "CCCL Volume One" (Mute)
"I didn't learn much real chemistry listening to this but I did love listening. The classic Chris Carter rhythms and elegant, minimal structures sound as good as ever, and the development of the artificial voices first heard on some of Sleazy's post-Coil experiments sound really cool here." - John Kealy - Sarah Davachi, "Let Night Come On Bells End The Day" (Recital Program)
"I was increasingly questioning my sanity as I read one end-of-year list after another that heaped praise on Gave in Rest and completely ignored this significantly stronger release. I like both, but this was Davachi's definitive 2018 statement as far as I am concerned." - Anthony D'Amico
"I'm with Anthony here, both albums are great but this is a clear leader in the Great Davachi Race of 2018. The subtlety of the music and restrained power of the final two pieces floors me every time." - John Kealy - Drew McDowall, "The Third Helix" (Daïs)
"I really like all of McDowall's releases but they were starting to blur into one long piece for me. The Third Helix expanded his tonal palette well beyond his previous works, a haunting and engaging album that I have been returning to a lot on these long winter nights." - John Kealy - Grouper, "Grid Of Points" (Kranky)
"A curiously insubstantial and ghostly release that feels more like a flickering dream than an album. Liz Harris's songwriting is in peak form though, as both "Driving" and "Parking Lot" rank among the most achingly gorgeous pieces that she's ever released." - Anthony D'Amico
"Brief but perfect, Grid of Points commands an alarming amount of attention despite its deceptively delicate sound. I was extremely fortunate to attend the sold-out concert this year and was blown away. Liz Harris' evolution as a songwriter, composer, and performer is astonishing." - Jon Whitney - Dedekind Cut, "Tahoe" (Kranky)
"Fred Warmsley's second full-length release as Dedekind Cut may be free of beats, cuts, and vocals that characterize much of the music released under his Lee Bannon moniker but it is far from what I would consider ambient or background music. Tahoe is a fabulous multilayered adventure in eight distinct movements, which, as is cover sticker suggests, have numerous optimum listening locations. It sounds great on my home hi-fi, which wasn't listed." - Jon Whitney
"Solid contender for best cover art. We should really add a category for that." -Anthony D'Amico - Current 93, "The Stars On Their Horsies" (The Spheres)
- Sarah Davachi, "Gave In Rest" (Ba Da Bing!)
"An excellent album that should really be ranking higher than it is but that's Davachi's fault for producing another exquisite record this year. And really, there is plenty of room for both this and Let Night... in my life." - John Kealy - Dead Can Dance, "Dionysus" (Play It Again Sam)
- Ian William Craig, "Thresholder" (130701)
"I am delighted that so many people shared my love of this album, as this is quite a comparatively hookless, experimental, and texture-centric affair. I am also delighted that Craig is still perfectly happy to explore his genius for wobbly, scratchy, and flickering soundscapes despite evolving into such an excellent songwriter. I have ample room in my heart for both sides of his artistry." - Anthony D'Amico - Abul Mogard, "Above All Dreams" (Ecstatic)
"I know the whole air of mystery about Mogard could be seen as a novelty but the music speaks for itself. It is so beautiful that perhaps it was necessary to create a persona that matched the otherworldly, romantic sensations evoked by the sounds on this album? In any case, it is a mesmerising release." - John Kealy - Puce Mary, "The Drought" (Pan)
"Heavy, seething with menace, and chiseled to glistening perfection. Easily one of my favorite albums of the year." - Anthony D'Amico - Christina Vantzou, "N°4" (Kranky)
"She is such a fantastic composer that it baffles me how she isn't winning nominations for film scores at this point. Her mastery of composition for ensembles of strings, piano, synth, and vocals is indisputable." - Jon Whitney - Edward Ka-Spel & Steven Stapleton / Colin Potter & Quentin Rollet, "The Man Who Floated Away / The Closer You Are To The Center, The Further You Are From The Edge" (Bisou)
"Quite an illustrious cast, but the resulting album fell a bit short of my expectations. Collaborations between iconic artists rarely work out the way I hope they will." -Anthony D'Amico
"This was not my cup of tea. Which is surprising as Quentin Rollet has taken to playing with NWW live to great effect. It probably doesn't help that I'm not a Legendary Pink Dots/Edward Ka-Spel fan." - John Kealy - Jóhann Jóhannsson, "Mandy (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)" (Invada)
"Such a sad loss of an amazing composer in the prime of his career. Mandy, one of three of his film scores released in 2018, is certainly a departure from his orchestral works plus electronics but it fits the dark, disturbing, gruesome movie perfectly and can also stand on its own." - Jon Whitney
"Probably my least favorite of his works. I'll cherish seeing him play in Knoxville in 2017 and the albums which came entirely from his own imagination." - Duncan Edwards - Zu93, "Mirror Emperor" (House of Mythology)
"This unexpectedly surpassed Myrninerest as my favorite of David Tibet's non-C93 channelings. Zu proved to be quite a sympathetic foil to Tibet's apocalyptic vision, but it is the ambition and scope of that vision that makes this such vivid and deeply absorbing nightmare to get lost in." -Anthony D'Amico - Meat Beat Manifesto, "Impossible Star" (Flexidisc)
"A slow burner indeed, months after first hearing I found myself craving it more and more." - Jon Whitney - Uruk, "Mysterium Coniunctionis" (Ici D'Ailleurs)
"This was really great, even better than the first album (which I loved). It's very easy to lose yourself completely in this music." - John Kealy - Mary Lattimore, "Hundreds Of Days" (Ghostly)
"Lattimore is easily becoming one of the hardest working musicians with a seemingly endless tour schedule and a continuous flow of self-released songs. This is another amazing start-to-finish album from her and the music released since is evidence of her evolution both as a performer and composer." - Jon Whitney
"I am not quite as rapturously in love with Hundreds of Days as I was with the last two Lattimore albums, but "Hello From The Edge of The Earth" is definitely one of the most tenderly beautiful pieces that she has ever recorded." -Anthony D'Amico - Gas, "Rausch" (Kompakt)
- Alva Noto & Ryuichi Sakamoto, "Glass" (Noton)
- Anna Von Hausswolff, "Dead Magic" (City Slang)
- Heather Leigh, "Throne" (Editions Mego)
- Andrew Chalk & Daisuke Suzuki, "Yama To Nashi" (Siren)
- Kali Malone, "Cast of Mind" (Hallow Ground)
- The Necks, "Body" (ReR Megacorp)
"We all know that The Necks are probably the most consistently brilliant band in the world, right? Yet they never really stray too far from their core settings of "Contemplative" and "Intense". Well, you should have seen my face when I first heard this Krautrock-esque monster of an album." - John Kealy - Alexander Tucker, "Don’t Look Away" (Thrill Jockey)
"Wonderful songs, catchy tunes, slightly indebted to the proto-pop of '70s Cale and Eno." - Jon Whitney - William Basinski + Lawrence English, "Selva Oscura" (Temporary Residence)
"I love Lawrence English and I love William Basinski, but this album felt like a dilution of both. Alas." - Anthony D'Amico - Marissa Nadler, "For My Crimes" (Sacred Bones)
"She is easily becoming one of the most prolific and flawless singer-songwriters of our time and For My Crimes is added proof of this." - Jon Whitney - Félicia Atkinson, "Coyotes" (Geographic North)
- Alva Noto, "Unieqav" (Noton)
- Ashley Paul, "Lost In Shadows" (Slip)
"This was my personal favorite album of the year. Paul strikes the perfect balance between intimacy, sensuousness, and queasily unsettling dissonance. I've loved her last few albums as well, but this one definitely got under my skin more than anything else that she's done." -Anthony D'Amico - Objekt, "Cocoon Crush" (Pan)
- The Caretaker, "Everywhere At The End Of Time - Stage 4" (History Always Favours the Winners)
- Organum, "Raven" (Siren)
- The Body, "I Have Fought Against It, But I Can’t Any Longer." (Thrill Jockey)
- A Place To Bury Strangers, "Pinned" (Dead Oceans)
"Like everyone else, I got into APTBS for the pedal-stomping, blown-out guitar firestorms, but that aesthetic started to yield diminishing returns for me pretty quickly. Consequently, I did not notice that this band had sneakily gotten so goddamn great at crafting taut and hooky post-punk gems. In an alternate reality that is a pure meritocracy, "Was It Electric" was deservedly the college radio smash of the summer. This album is wonderful." - Anthony D'Amico
"More cerebral than visceral, Pinned was a departure from APTBS sound, however it was an exciting listen and an album I returned to numerous times over the year." - Jon Whitney - Nurse With Wound, "Experimente II: Son of Trippin' Music" (United Dairies)
- The Stargazer's Assistant, "Resurgam I, Resurgam II" (House of Mythology)
- Bruce Gilbert, "Ex Nihilo" (Editions Mego)
"I have always preferred Gibert's 1980s work, but this was a nice surprise after a long period of silence." - Creaig Dunton - Sleep, "The Sciences" (Third Man)
"I found this to be a real disappointment. Sleep's reformation was initially quite welcome as I finally got to hear them live but the releases have been so-so at best for me. Part of me resents Sleep for taking Al Cisneros away from Om, who appeared to be heading for the outer regions of musical experience when they were last sighted. Sleep seem content with plodding the same path." - John Kealy
"Sleep always seemed far better in theory than in actuality to me, as their genius for sludgy, godlike riffs is rarely matched by their songwriting talents. It is cool that they are back and getting to finally reap the rewards of their well-deserved legacy though. That said, I heartily agree that Cisneros's true calling is Om." - Anthony D'Amico - Jim O'Rourke, "Sleep Like It's Winter" (Newhere)
- Spiritualized, "And Nothing Hurt" (Bella Union)
- Félicia Atkinson and Jefre Cantu-Ledesma, "Limpid as the Solitudes" (Shelter Press)
- Senyawa, "Sujud" (Sublime Frequencies)
"This is one cool fucking record. I don't know what I was expecting from it but heavy doom throat singing wasn't top of the list. One of those incredible albums that completely confounds and delights you." - John Kealy - Demdike Stare, "Passion" (Modern Love)
- Alessandro Cortini & Lawrence English, "Immediate Horizon" (Important)
- Dean McPhee, "Four Stones" (Hood Faire)
- Yo La Tengo, "There’s a Riot Going On" (Matador)
"Every Yo La Tengo album has at least two great songs. This one is no exception." - Anthony D'Amico - Alvin Lucier, "Criss-Cross / Hanover" (Black Truffle)
- Gnod, "Chapel Perilous" (Rocket)
"I am not sure how anything could've followed the brilliantly brutish Just Say No... album and not feel like a pale shadow of its predecessor, but Gnod are too restlesslessly creative to care. I dug a few of the more experimental pieces here, but the more thrashing and heavy pieces felt like they hadn't quite been perfected yet." -Anthony D'Amico - Demdike Stare + Il Gruppo di Improvvisazione Nuova Consonanza, "The Feed-Back Loop" (DDS)
- Aïsha Devi, "DNA Feelings" (Houndstooth)
- Thomas Ankersmit, "Homage to Dick Raaijmakers" (Shelter Press)
"Another of my favorites of the year, though Ankersmit's unapologetically dissonant and harrowing aesthetic of triggering aural hallucinations does not exactly lend itself to heavy rotation." -Anthony D'Amico - Roy Montgomery, "Suffuse" (Grapefruit)
- The Caretaker, "Everywhere At The End Of Time - Stage 5" (History Always Favours the Winners)
- Marisa Anderson, "Cloud Corner" (Thrill Jockey)
"Her most challenging listen and release to date, it's certainly far more dissonant than her previous releases and less influenced by bluegrass and Americana, however it was still incredibly rewarding. I only wish she would include more background on the songs in the LP because the stories she tells live between songs enhance the listening and understanding of each piece." - Jon Whitney - Scanner, "Mass Observation (Expanded)" (Room40)
- The Breeders, "All Nerve" (4AD)
- Eleh, "Home Age" (Important)
- Beast, "Ens" (Thrill Jockey)
- Glenn Jones, "The Giant Who Ate Himself and Other New Works For 6 & 12 String Guitar" (Thrill Jockey)
"Brilliant as ever." - Jon Whitney - Mogwai, "KIN soundtrack" (Temporary Residence)
- Mouse on Mars, "Dimensional People" (Thrill Jockey)
- Jon Hassell, "Listening To Pictures (Pentimento Volume One)" (Ndeya)
- Norman Westberg, "After Vacation" (Room40)
- Dylan Carlson, "Conquistador" (Sargent House)
- Andrew Chalk, "Baroque Steps" (Faraway Press)
"I have a stack of woefully neglected Andrew Chalk and Elodie vinyl sitting on my stereo. Several months from now, when I finally get around to listening to it, I am sure I will belatedly discover that I slept on a masterpiece or two. I need an intern." -Anthony D'Amico - Klara Lewis & Simon Fisher Turner, "Care" (Editions Mego)
- Jake Muir, "Lady's Mantle" (Sferic)
"I am still not sure if I love this entire album, but "High Tide" is definitely one of the most hauntingly beautiful pieces that anyone released this year." - Anthony D'Amico - Hawthonn, "Red Goddess (Of This Men Shall Know Nothing)" (Ba Da Bing!)
- Rudolf Eb.er, "Om Kult: The Ritual Practice of Conscious Dying Vol. I" (Schimpfluch Associates)
"Gloriously disturbed and quite unlike anything else that I have heard." -Anthony D'Amico - Beach House, "7" (Sub Pop)
- Lea Bertucci, "Metal Aether" (NNA Tapes)
"This ticked off an improbable number of boxes on my personal "things I really like" list: free-jazz sax eruptions, menacing use of shifting harmonies, wonderfully textured and evocative use of field recordings in collages, etc. In some ways, it felt like each song was by a different artist, but they all seemed like artists I would love." -Anthony D'Amico - Qluster, "Elemente" (Bureau B)
"A near-perfect balance of rhythm and stillness. Still learning, still creating, still satisfying. I hope this is not the final album but if it is then critics will say the end was a high." - Duncan Edwards
"I had no idea that these guys were still this good. Damn." -Anthony D'Amico - Eartheater, "Irisiri" (Pan)
- Eiko Ishibashi, "The Dream My Bones Dream" (Drag City)
- serpentwithfeet, "Soil" (Secretly Canadian)
- The Skull Defekts, "The Skull Defekts" (Thrill Jockey)
"Certainly my favorite rock album of the year." - Jon Whitney - Charalambides, "Charalambides: Tom and Christina Carter" (Drawing Room)
- Merzbow & Hexa, "Achromatic" (Dais)
- Acid Mothers Temple & The Melting Paraiso UFO, "Hallelujah Mystic Garden Part One" (Important)
- Jemh Circs, "(untitled) Kingdom" (Cellule 75)
- Sandro Perri, "In Another Life" (Constellation)
- Lori Scacco, "Desire Loop" (Mysteries of the Deep)
"Sometimes a bit too "synth album" for me, but the more lushly melodic pieces were quite a wonderful surprise. "Red Then Blue" is an absolutely mesmerizing swirl of warmly shivering and undulating heaven." -Anthony D'Amico - Mount Eerie, "Now Only" (PW Elverum & Sun)
- Meg Baird & Mary Lattimore, "Ghost Forests" (Three Lobed)
- Caterina Barbieri, "Born Again in the Voltage" (Important)
"This older release is not quite the bombshell that Patterns of Consciousness was, but "How To Decode an Illusion" is an absolutely rapturous bit of bittersweetly burbling synth bliss." -Anthony D'Amico - Kyle Bobby Dunn / Wayne Robert Thomas, "The Searchers / Voyevoda" (Whited Sepulchre)
"I am still somewhat awestruck by the sublime beauty of "The Searchers." Dunn really outdid himself with this release." -Anthony D'Amico - Zola Jesus, "Okovi: Additions" (Sacred Bones)
- Andrew Chalk & Jean-Noël Rebilly, "L'état Intermédiaire" (Siren)
- Alex Zhang Hungtai, "Divine Weight" (Non Worldwide)
- Less Bells, "Solifuge" (Kranky)
"It's a beautiful debut from violinist/cellist/composer Julie Carpenter and friends as Less Bells. While Carpenter has stated the album is influenced by the experience in the California desert, the sound—enhanced by an ensemble including Optigan, Buchla Music Box, Moog Modular, and vocals—is both chilling and magnificent." - Jon Whitney - Yves Tumor, "Safe In The Hands Of Love" (Warp)
"This album is a complete labor to listen to start to finish. I can't understand why it has placed so high elsewhere as it is so dull, drab, and unengaging." - Jon Whitney - KTL, "The Pyre: Versions Distilled To Stereo" (Shelter Press)
- Essaie Pas, "New Path" (DFA)
- Randall Dunn, "Beloved" (Figureight)
- James Ginzburg, "Six Correlations" (Subtext)
Single of the Year
- Carla dal Forno, "Top of the Pops" (self-released)
"This was supposed to just be a modest, tour-only covers EP and it wound up being one of the year's most beloved releases. Top of the Pops seamlessly and ingeniously took everything I already loved about dal Forno's work and channeled it into an eclectic and unabashed celebration of infectious hooks and underappreciated pop obscurities." - Anthony D'Amico - UUUU, "UUUU" (Editions Mego)
"I was a little lukewarm on the UUUU album from last year but this 12" is incredible. The band feels like a solid unit here, the trepidation of the album completely gone. I look forward to seeing where they go from here." - John Kealy - Aphex Twin, "Collapse EP" (Warp)
"Man with good marketing team releases EP." - John Kealy - Julee Cruise, "Three Demos" (Sacred Bones)
"This was fine but could easily have been a bonus to the Falling reissue rather than a release in its own right." - John Kealy
"Perhaps they could have added some of the remixes or the early version of Mysteries of Love to make a more complete listen, however I'm sure there were licensing issues to begin with." - Jon Whitney - The Legendary Pink Dots, "The Legendary Pink Dots' Hallowe'en Special 2018" (self-released)
- Midwife, "Prayer Hands" (Antiquated Future)
"Even better than last year's LP. Three haunting, sensuous, and hiss-ravaged gems in a row." - Anthony D'Amico
"Madeline Johnston wears her heart on her sleeve for this one, resulting in an incredibly powerful and personal statement." - Jon Whitney - Drew McDowall & Hiro Kone, "The Ghost of Georges Bataille" (Bank)
- HTRK, "Drama" (self-released)
"With this and the excellent other single, I'm eagerly anticipating the next full-length." - Jon Whitney - The Legendary Pink Dots, "The Tunnel" (Noise Noise Noise)
- Kali Malone, "Organ Dirges 2016 - 2017" (Ascetic House)
- The Legendary Pink Dots, "8118" (self-released)
- Mary Lattimore, "It Feels Like Floating (Jónsi Healing Fields Remix)" (self-released)
"Feels like more of a collaboration with Jónsi's voice and the spacious synths. Probably wouldn't be my first choice for collaborator but perhaps it may hint to future music of Lattimore's with vocals and other collaborators." - Jon Whitney - Ben Frost, "All That You Love Will Be Eviscerated" (Mute)
- Laurie Spiegel & Don Christensen, "Donnie and Laurie" (Unseen Worlds)
- Antonin Artaud/Nurse With Wound, "Ti-git/To Another Awareness" (Lenka Lente)
- Mary Lattimore, "Glamorous Mom" (self-released)
- HTRK, "Dying of Jealousy" (self-released)
- Mazzy Star, "Still" (Rhymes of an Hour)
"Yes, I can still fall in love with music, thanks for this release which completely melts me inside." - Jon Whitney - Low, "Let's Stay Together" (Chairkickers' Music)
- Windy & Carl, "Water Song" (Blue Flea)
- Lee Chubby King, "Yo' Pusface!" (Artoffact)
- The Breeders, "Wait in the Car" (4AD)
- Jenny Hval, "The Long Sleep" (Sacred Bones)
- Biosphere, "The Hilvarenbeek Recordings" (Biophon)
- Belly, "Feel" (self-released)
- Jullia Kent & Jean D.L., "The Great Lake Swallows" (Gizeh)
- Ladytron, "The Island" (self-released)
- Lou Rebecca, "Lou Rebecca" (Holodeck)
- Amanda Palmer & Jasmine Power, "Mr. Weinstein Will See You Now" (8 Foot Records)
- Amy Douglas, "Never Saw It Coming" (DFA)
"We need more catchy tunes like this." - Jon Whitney - The Stargazer Lilies, "Love To Hate" (self-released)
- Papa M, "Badtime Stories" (self-released)
- Soft Kill, "Let's Believe in Love" (self-released)
- Songs: Ohia, "Travels In Constants volume 14" (Temporary Residence)
- Fluxion, "Upsides & Sideways" (Echocord)
"An absolutely perfect EP of classic Chain Reaction-style dub techno. I dearly wish that the Ripple Effect LP had kept this party going, but Konstantinos Soublis had more cinematic alternate plans." -Anthony D'Amico - Xin, "To Shock The Sky And Shake The Earth" (Subtext)
- Bonnie "Prince" Billy, "Blueberry Jam" (Drag City)
"Everyone seems to hate this and the video but I think it is Will Oldham in fine form. Funny, satirical and bloody catchy!" - John Kealy - Laurel Halo, "Raw Silk Uncut Wood" (Latency)
- Oneohtrix Point Never, "Love In The Time Of Lexapro" (Warp)
- The Stargazer Lilies, "Supernatural" (self-released)
- Nkisi, "The Dark Orchestra" (Arcola)
- Philip Jeck, "Arcade" (Touch)
- Teleplasmiste, "The wishing machine" (House of Mythology)
- LAPS, "Who Me?" (DFA)
- Papa M, "The Piano Sessions" (self-released)
- Soft Kill, "Just a Body" (self-released)
- Marcus Marr, "Familiar Five: Remixed" (DFA)
- JK Flesh, "Wasplike" (Inner Surface)
- Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds, "Distant Sky (Live in Copenhagen)" (Bad Seed Ltd.)
"The live concert movie that this is taken from was an immersive experience in the cinema, members of the audience losing themselves in the moment and clapping at the end of songs (before self-consciously realising they were not actually at a gig). I would have loved a full home release of it but this EP is a nice stopgap. I'm surprised it hasn't ranked higher, it captures more than a little of the magic that Cave is bringing to his recent live shows." - John Kealy - Ladytron, "The Animals" (self-released)
Vault/Reissue of the Year
- Swans, "Soundtracks for the Blind" (Young God)
"A massive release finally made available again, sounding better than ever." - Jon Whitney
- Nurse With Wound, "Homotopy To Marie" (Rotorelief)
"While there is nothing new added here, this is a really nice edition of this classic album. Rotorelief seem to be picking up where Dirter have left off with their NWW reissue campaign." - John Kealy - Current 93, "Soft Black Stars" (The Spheres)
- Tim Hecker, "Radio Amor" (Kranky)
- Black Light District, "A Thousand Lights in a Darkened Room" (Dais)
"I picked up the CD of this as I already had the Eskaton 2LP and I wanted a copy to listen to in the car. Dais have done a great job here but the less said about the wonky Russian "reissue" that came out at the same time, the better." - John Kealy - Tim Hecker, "Haunt Me, Haunt Me Do It Again" (Kranky)
- Swans, "Die Tür Ist Zu" (Young God)
- Throbbing Gristle, "Journey Through a Body" (Industrial)
- The Legendary Pink Dots, "Any Day Now" (Metropolis)
"My first significant plunge into the LPDs happened in the mid-90s and I somehow never got around to giving this classic my full attention until this year. When I finally did, I was completely knocked sideways, as Any Day Now captures the Dots in singularly tight, lively, and hook-heavy form." -Anthony D'Amico - Stereolab, "Aluminum Tunes" (Duophonic)
"I'm in a couple worlds with this release: the Amorphous EP provides a strong opening but the randomly arranged songs and remixes included make for a more awkward second half. Good to have this available again, however. I haven't heard the remastering on the new version." - Jon Whitney - Throbbing Gristle, "Mission Of Dead Souls" (Industrial)
"I was disappointed this was left out of the first round of reissues, so a new remastering is appreciated. Just too bad there was not a bonus disc with this one." - Creaig Dunton - This Mortal Coil, "It'll End In Tears" (4AD)
"Largely an emotional and sublime beautification of neglected heroes Tim Buckley, Alex Chiton, and Roy Harper." - Duncan Edwards - This Mortal Coil, "Blood" (4AD)
"I know reissues are killing music and the vinyl boom is basically performative consumerism, but I am still human and this reissue absolutely delighted me. One of my favorite albums of all time by a landslide. Now 4AD just needs to reissue ...Smile's OK and I can finally finish replacing all the cracked, dusty CDs in my Ivo Watts-Russell shrine with eye-catching new vinyl and die content." - Anthony D'Amico
"These are beautifully repackaged, indeed, but the sounds is still superior on CD." - Jon Whitney - This Mortal Coil, "Filigree & Shadow" (4AD)
"Sprawling, indulgent, melancholy, uneven and great anyway. I am still occasionally struck by sneakily sublime passages that I failed to fully appreciate over the last three decades." - Anthony D'Amico - Stereolab, "Refried Ectoplasm" (Duophonic)
"Arguably features the group at their most experimental. Definitely contains my favorite Stereolab track: 'John Cage Bubblegum.'" - Duncan Edwards - Terry Riley, "Persian Surgery Dervishes" (Shanti)
- Julee Cruise, "The Voice of Love" (Sacred Bones)
- Stereolab, "Switched On" (Duophonic)
- Taj-Mahal Travellers, "Aug-74" (Aguirre)
"Superb reissue of one of the most essential albums of the 70s. I'm deep into this." - John Kealy - Ian William Craig, "A Turn of Breath" (Recital)
"Nice to have this at a reasonable price. The bonus material is beautiful, complementary, and appropriately gets its own record." - Jon Whitney - The Legendary Pink Dots, "Shadow Weaver" (Metropolis)
"Sounds fantastic, art looks great, but I can't agree with the font change." - Jon Whitney - Coil, "Astral Disaster sessions un/finished musics" (Lion Productions)
"The unreleased piece is really interesting and I am enjoying the alternative takes of the familiar tracks, however they really should have put together a nice deluxe package of this and the main Astral Disaster album(s)." - John Kealy - Nurse With Wound, "Sinister Whimsy To the Wretched" (Dirter)
- ELpH vs. Coil, "Worship the Glitch" (Dais)
"I gave away my 2x10" to a friend so this filled the hole in my collection. I don't know why they did it as a 12" instead of a 10" but that's a small criticism to have." - John Kealy - Eliane Radigue, "Geelriandre / Arthesis" (Important)
"Yeah this is great and all but what about that 14CD box set from INA/GRM?" - John Kealy - Faust, "The Faust Tapes" (Superior Viaduct)
"I bought the original album when it came out on Virgin during the economic crisis of 1974 at the "crisis price" of 44 pence (around 50 cents). It made the charts although many people probably never made it to Side Two. This was when Virgin was basically just a record shop. The label also promoted brilliant shows with Gong and Hatfield & The North co-headlining for a similar giveaway price. Faust have always seemed to exist in a dreamlike state midway between laziness and inspiration. Essential listening." - Duncan Edwards - Alice Coltrane, "Lord of Lords" (Superior Viaduct)
"If you only own one record from Alice Coltrane, fix that." - Jon Whitney - Oren Ambarchi, "Grapes From The Estate" (Black Truffle)
- Eliane Radigue, "Jouet Electronique" (Alga Marghen)
- David Sylvian & Holger Czukay, "Plight & Premonition Flux & Mutability" (Grönland)
- Belong, "October Language" (Spectrum Spools)
"Such a simple, yet brilliant concept: make a great shoegaze album, but get rid of everything besides roiling, warm oceans of warped guitar. And the flickering, darkly hallucinatory "David Lynch" vibe makes it even better still. I can't believe I didn't hear this album until this year. I really need to get some cooler friends." - Anthony D'Amico
"Resonating with a fragmented washed-away atmosphere, this classic (which I count as coming from the less known underground of New Orleans) has embedded itself in my false memory as a comment on the post flooded disaster of the city. If I were in power Belong (not that bloated third-rate big-mouthed, bunch of Irish bandwagon jumpers) would have played the half-time Superdome show when the Saints returned." - Duncan Edwards - Hula, "Murmur" (Klanggalerie)
- Elodie, "Le Manteau D'Étoiles" (Faraway Press)
- Spacemen 3, "Dreamweapon" (Superior Viaduct)
"This is the kind of thing that makes me roll my eyes at the "has to be on vinyl" trend. What was an intentionally lengthy, hypnotic performance is now interrupted half way through for a record flip. I will just stick with my CD." - Creaig Dunton - Nurse With Wound / Aranos, "Acts / Bicycle" (United Jnana)
- Elodie, "La Passion D'Elodie" (La Scie Dorée)
- Sun Ra, "The Cymbals / Symbols Sessions: New York City 1973" (Modern Harmonic)
- The Fall, "I Am Kurious Oranj" (Beggars Banquet)
"A favorite Fall album from the period when the brittle grit was toned down a little and I saw them live at Sadlers Wells ballet performing with the Michael Clark "asses-out-of trousers" dance company." - Ducan Edwards - Sun Ra, "Disco 3000" (Art Yard)
- Muslimgauze, "Mullah Said" (Staalplaat)
"Bryn Jones hit almost self-parodying heights of self-cannibalization with this album, but it does not matter because he somehow managed to stretch just a few motifs into an exotic and darkly hallucinatory outsider dub epic." -Anthony D'Amico - Wolf Eyes, "Dread" (Lower Floors)
- Irr. App. (Ext.) / Nurse With Wound, "4 Orphans" (Errata In Excelsis)
"Hard to expect this to rank higher given the small edition but this expanded version of the 4 Orphans EP is gorgeous. You can feel the love Matthew Waldron has put into each copy." - John Kealy - Thought Gang, "Thought Gang" (Sacred Bones)
"Honestly, I was so excited for this but it turned out to be a bit of disappointment. The best tracks on it are the ones on the Fire Walk With Me soundtrack." - John Kealy - High Rise, "II" (Black Editions)
"Fuck. Yeah." - John Kealy
"I pounced on this reissue immediately, but it has not aged quite as well as some other classic Japanese in-the-red freak-outs. There really are not any great songs here. Nevertheless, High Rise were certainly visionaries at delivering half-baked garage rock with a bracingly unhinged level of messy intensity." - Anthony D'Amico - Sun Ra, "Astro Black" (Modern Harmonic)
"There are lot of underwhelming Sun Ra albums out there, but this is certainly not one of them. In hindsight, it is astonishing that someone was skillfully combining wild electronic noise with great free-jazz all the way back in 1973. Saturn had quite an advanced music scene, apparently. I wonder what they're up to these days. It'd be nice if some enterprising label dug into that milieu a bit more." - Anthony D'Amico - Nurse With Wound, "Experimente" (United Dairies)
"This was a challenging listen, especially as I first put it on in the car. Not one I'll be returning to much but it certainly left an impression." - John Kealy - The Residents, "The Warner Bros. Album" (New Ralph Too)
"Never thought this would happen but I'm so glad it did. Well worth waiting in an RSD line." - Jon Whitney - Franco Battiato, "Clic" (Superior Viaduct)
- Sun Ra, "Crystal Spears" (Modern Harmonic)
- Sun Ra and His Solar Arkestra, "On Jupiter" (Art Yard)
Various Artist Compilation of the Year
- "The Black Book" (iDEAL)
"I thought I was fairly familiar with Joachim Nordwall's iDEAL label, but this 20-year retrospective made me feel like a chump several times over for sleeping on some truly excellent albums over the years." - Anthony D'Amico - "Don't Look Now: Aural Apparitions from the Geographic North" (Geographic North)
"A Halloween theme is definitely fertile ground for a collection of contemporary sound artists, but there are a handful of exclusive gems here that transcend any seasonal theme. Jefre Cantu-Ledesma's lushly elegiac organ piece was an especially wonderful surprise." -Anthony D'Amico - "In Death's Dream Kingdom" (Houndstooth)
"This quadruple LP was quite an unexpected bombshell, assembling an improbable murderers' row of underground dance and experimental luminaries that are generally associated with other labels. I guess that makes perfect sense given the label's association with Fabric, but it is still quite a singular feat of curatorial ambition." -Anthony D'Amico - "Pop Ambient 2019" (Kompakt)
- "Calendar Customs" (Folklore Tapes)
"Folklore Tapes' seasonal collections are wonderfully arcane, eclectic, and lovingly assembled artifacts. And, of course, scarce as hell as well. Finally getting to hear the ones that eluded me in years past was one of 2018's most exquisite cultural delights." -Anthony D'Amico - "Listen All Around: The Golden Age Of Central And East African Music" (Dust-to-Digital)
- "Sowas Von Egal: German Synth Wave Underground 1980-1985" (Bureau B)
- "Holodeck Vision One" (Holodeck)
"I am not a big fan of digital only releases, but this sprawling collection of almost everyone involved with the Holodeck label makes the most sense given its breadth. A great snapshot of what the prolific, synth heavy Austin label has been up to in recent years." - Creaig Dunton - "Paris To Calcutta: Men And Music On The Desert Road" (Sublime Frequencies)
"Sublime Frequencies has gotten a lot of flak over the years for their freewheeling and informal approach to global compilations, but this massive collection celebrating the field recordings of Deben Bhattacharya is an unimpeachable feat of ethnomusicology. I've admittedly enjoyed some other SF compilations more, but Bhattacharya's previously unpublished travel diaries are quite a fascinating read." -Anthony D'Amico - "Technicolor Paradise: Rhum Rhapsodies & Other Exotic Delights" (Numero Group)
- "Golpea Tu Cerebro: Spanish Underground Cassette Culture, 1980-1988" (Insane Muzak)
- "The Art Of Magic: Aid To Practice" (Folklore Tapes)
- "Music of Northern Laos" (Akuphone)
- "Music of Southern Laos" (Akuphone)
- "African Scream Contest 2" (Analog Africa)
- "Disques Debs International Volume 1 (An Island Story: Biguine, Afro Latin & Musique Antillaise 1960-1972)" (Strut)
- "Two Niles To Sing A Melody: The Violins & Synths Of Sudan" (Ostinato)
- "Voices Of Mississippi: Artists And Musicians Documented By William Ferris" (Dust-to-Digital)
- "Sichten 1" (Raster)
- "Total 18" (Kompakt)
Boxed Set of the Year
- "Voices Of Mississippi: Artists And Musicians Documented By William Ferris" (Dust-to-Digital)
"Raw and touching. No sign of quality control slipping at Dust to Digital. I try to hear everything they curate and issue. The past may be a foreign country but I'm keeping my passport up to date." - Duncan Edwards
- Wire, "154" (Pink Flag)
"Of the three Wire reissues this year, this one was easily my favorite. It does not hurt that 154 is my favorite of their entire catalog and quite possibly my favorite record of all time, but the demos are excellent as well. The material that was left off of Behind the Curtain was just as good as what was included, like the early version of "I Should Have Known Better" ("Ignorance No Plea"). One of those rare reissue cases where the bonus material is not just interesting, but enjoyable." - Creaig Dunton - Wire, "Pink Flag" (Pink Flag)
"Not to be a contrarian, but I have ranked Pink Flag as third of their first three ever since hearing it. Which is by no means an insult, but it is a bit less diverse than what followed. I feel the same about the reissue, with the added material giving some new insight into the early days, but not adding as much." - Creaig Dunton - Autechre, "NTS Sessions" (Warp)
"There's maybe one decent CD buried in this but really, Autechre have become so boring that I'm not sure what there is to take home from this bloated release beyond the feeling that they need an editor." - John Kealy - Wire, "Chairs Missing" (Pink Flag)
"I'll keep this one brief: lots of good stuff here, but the early version of "Used To" was a disappointment." - Creaig Dunton - Eliane Radigue, "Œuvres Électroniques" (INA-GRM)
"This should be number one in all categories. A monolith of sound." - John Kealy
"Agreed." - Jon Whitney
"A 14-CD brick of pure drone mastery. Radigue has an almost supernatural gift for creating slow-burning longform epics from the most elegantly simple components." - Anthony D'Amico - Wire, "Nine Sevens" (Pink Flag)
"A very nice set, very well assembled, artwork is fantastic. Some people have complained about the sound but I was pleased." - Jon Whitney - Chris Carter, "Miscellany" (Mute)
- Harold Budd, "Budd Box" (All Saints)
- Holger Czukay, "Cinema" (Grönland)
- Songs: Ohia, "Love & Work: The Lionness Sessions" (Secretly Canadian)
- Peter Murphy, "5 Albums" (Beggars Banquet)
- The Durutti Column, "Without Mercy" (Factory Benelux)
- Tangerine Dream, "The Pink Years Albums 1970-1973" (Esoteric)
- "Calendar Customs" (Folklore Tapes)
- Suicide, "Live 1977-1978" (Blast First Petite)
- Omit, "Enclosures 2011-2016" (Pica Disk)
"This was an excellent deep dive into a less than well known artist, but one who is easily deserving of the attention. A multitude of odd, hermetic electronics that I quite enjoyed." - Creaig Dunton
"Clinton Williams is a bit overly fond of unnecessarily extreme song lengths and dark ambient gloom, but this is otherwise quite an impressive collection of simmering and stark industrial atmospheres. Almost like a shadowy dub version of classic Throbbing Gristle, but a bit more sophisticated and understated than that. There is at least one killer album lurking amidst all of this." -Anthony D'Amico - Images In Vogue, "Incipience 1981-1983" (Artoffact)
- Stephan Mathieu, "Radiance" (Schwebung)
- Tim Blake, "Lighthouse - An Anthology 1973-2012" (Esoteric Recordings)
- Vainqueur, "Reductions 1995-1997" (Scion)
- "Paris To Calcutta: Men And Music On The Desert Road" (Sublime Frequencies)
- Roland Kayn, "Simultan" (Die Schachtel)
- Controlled Bleeding, "Blistered Bags of Fodder Swaying" (Artifact)
"Controlled Bleeding have always been difficult to pin down stylistically, but this beautifully presented set compiles a substantial portion of the band's early, noisier work as well as a few modern classical excursions." - Creaig Dunton - "Technicolor Paradise: Rhum Rhapsodies & Other Exotic Delights" (Numero Group)
Artist of the Year
- Current 93
- Sarah Davachi
- Tim Hecker
- Nurse With Wound
- The Legendary Pink Dots
- Ian William Craig
- Drew McDowall
- Mary Lattimore
- Autechre
- Andrew Chalk
Label of the Year
- Kranky
- Superior Viaduct
- Pink Flag
- Thrill Jockey
- Dais
- 4AD
- The Spheres
- Sacred Bones
- Warp
- Duophonic
New Artist of the Year
Less Bells
"Texan-born multi-instrumentalist Julie Carpenter is based in Joshua Tree, California. Over the years she has toured as a violinist with Eels, Spiritualized, and Love, and is credited on releases from Transona Five, The Autumns, Lavender Diamond, and many more. Her gorgeous debut as Less Bells, Solifuge, is unlike any of the above and showcases her talents as a composer unifying the organic with the electronic, and easily one of my favorites of the year." - Jon Whitney
Lifetime Achievement Recognition
Low
"I first got into Low around the time of Trust and they blew me away then. Working back through their catalogue at the time was a joy and each album since was a gift. They consistently performed some of the best live shows I've witnessed (including a cathartic and much needed Christmas concert in Dublin's Christchurch Cathedral a couple of years ago). They also appear to be really, really nice people. What more could you ask for in a band?" - John Kealy
"Low appeared at a perfect time for me, releasing I Could Live in Hope at the height of my obsession with slow-motion melancholia, but they were different enough to stick with me long after that phase had passed. At some point, however, I started to take them for granted and stopped buying their albums. I never stopped viewing them as a beacon of integrity, soul, sincerity, and excellent songwriting in a sea of forgettable bands, forgettable trends, and general shallowness, but my tastes had changed and their body of work had started to blur together for me (though the trickle of truly great songs never ceased). This year's Double Negative was a wonderful reminder that bands contain actual people and that those people can evolve and change too. It was a striking late-career creative breakthrough, but it still maintains the sublime essence that makes (and made) Low so vital in the first place." -Anthony D'Amico
"A quarter century into their career and they continue to defy expectations. I have been in love with their songs for over two decades and they continue to astound me both on record and in concert. They have gone from the band that sounds like they're playing in your kitchen, to the band in the Gap ad, to the band that makes you uneasy enough to not want to share with anyone else, to the band that makes something so abstract that listening results in more questions than answers. In these tumultuous times where cruelty is so painfully ubiquitous, Low reacted with a statement that made us all stop in our tracks and listen. Now that's power. " - Jon Whitney
Worst Album of the Year
- Soccer Mommy, "Clean" (Fat Possum)
"This honestly isn't that bad. Readers are just hating because of the name." - Jon Whitney - Newaxeyes, "Black Fax" (Important)
- Okkyung Lee, "Cheol-Kkot-Sae" (Tzadik)
"Tzadik has an uncanny knack for releasing albums that sound right up my alley, yet go inexplicably awry somehow. This is the most recent example of that phenomenon." - Anthony D'Amico - Stine Janvin, "Fake Synthetic Music" (Pan)
- Idles, "Joy as an Act of Resistance" (Partisan)
- Deafheaven, "Ordinary Corrupt Human Love" (Anti-)
- Panopticon, "The Scars Of Man On The Once Nameless Wilderness" (Nordvis)
- Parquet Courts, "Wide Awake!" (Rough Trade)
- Proc Fiskal, "Insula" (Hyperdub)
- Interpol, "Maurauder" (Matador)
"You know what, I don't care. I liked this album. Not the best of the year, and not even their best overall, but I still enjoyed it." - Creaig Dunton
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A monograph made in the Winter of 2018, with a microscopic camera, paints, pens, and ultra-marine powder. Texts are hung throughout the book; revering dreams of night, sea life, and the fluid of romance. Includes an audio cassette to coat the reading experience. A perfume I concocted (seaweed, tobacco, and moss points) scents each book.
166 color pages, 8.5″ x 10″ perfect bound
Scented with “Stupid Fish” perfume
Comes with 30-minute cassette of music made for the book
Limited edition of 18 copies, signed and numbered
More information can be found here.
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"The first time I called myself a 'Witch' was the most magical moment of my life... dare to look within yourself and you are a Witch." - M. Adler
"Underneath it all is an appreciation of nature." - Kenneth Anger
This 2-disc set of recordings includes 10 new compositions, one never physically released track ("Totality") plus 5 favorites together in a single collection. With the right intentions one or more of these works can serve as aids down your own path of study, discovery, practice, and enlightenment.
More information can be found here.
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Slow, methodical organ recordings on this major new work from Kali Malone; a quietly subversive double album featuring almost two hours of concentrated, creeping organ pieces governed by a strict acoustic and compositional code with ultimately profound emotional resonance.
The Sacrificial Code takes a more surgical approach to the methods first explored on last year's Organ Dirges 2016 - 2017. Over the course of three parts performed on three different organs, Malone's minimalist process captures a jarring precision of closeness, both on the level of the materiality of the sounds and on the level of composition. The recordings here involved careful close miking of the pipe organ in such a way as to eliminate environmental identifiers as far as possible - essentially removing the large hall reverb so inextricably linked to the instrument. The pieces were then further compositionally stripped of gestural adornments and spontaneous expressive impulse - an approach that flows against the grain of the prevailing musical hegemony, where sound is so often manipulated, and composition often steeped in self indulgence. It echoes Steve Reich's sentiment "..by voluntarily giving up the freedom to do whatever momentarily comes to mind, we are, as a result, free of all that momentarily comes to mind."
With its slow, purified and seemingly austere qualities, The Sacrificial Code guides us through an almost trance-inducing process where we become vulnerable receptors for every slight movement, where every miniature shift in sound becomes magnified through stillness. As such, it's a uniquely satisfying exercise in transcendence through self restraint - a stunning realisation of ideas borne out of academic and conceptual rigour which gradually reveals startling personal dimensions. It has a perception-altering quality that encourages self exploration free of signposts and without a preordained endpoint - the antithesis to the language of colourless musical platitudes we've become so accustomed to.
More information can be found here and here.
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Lena Andersson is a fictional character created by Berlin-based Japanese artist Kyoka and Irish producer Eomac. Both met in 2016 during a residency at the Stockholm EMS studios. The initial spark of their collaboration was a joint session on the studio's Buchla system, later expanding to multiple other sound sources and instruments at sessions in the Etopia studio in Zaragoza supported by Fuga.
During the improvisations, a call-and-response working principle emerged immediately which joins the special talents of both musicians. Kyoka's free and experimental approach forms part of the source material that is contrasted with Eomac's skillful editing; unconventional reflections face a driving force. From Kyoka's extensive field recording collection, an arabesque of disturbing vocal fragments arises that is set against Eomac's hard rhythmic framework, as in "Das Tier," for instance. "37 Years Later" or "Mystic" live on a vivid texture that has been condensed directly at the mixing console into a kind of dramaturgical capturing of the moment. The immediacy of the collaboration forms the basis for a synergy of the individual production techniques. A strategy that lacks neither absolute creative freedom nor an awareness of musical function.
Söder Mälarstrand thus captures an intuitive cooperation between the two producers, which also refers back to the place of origin through its dialogical, moment-related production principle. The album title is a tribute to the Stockholm studios where the project began.
More information can be found here.
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