- Administrator
- Albums and Singles
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- Mark Weddle
- Albums and Singles
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- Graeme Rowland
- Albums and Singles
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- Maurice Underwood
- Albums and Singles
- Administrator
- Albums and Singles
Ashfordaisyak doesn't quite jibe as well in my opinion. The startingtrack 'Refugees' has all the usual clichés; distorted, delayed,clanking, walkie talkie vocals and screams pitch shifting into theupper registers - all told a rather pale Whitehouse imitation althoughthe tune is somewhat redeemed by the inclusion of cheesy electro-styledrums in the middle. The other two tracks don't fare much better - 'I'mPregnant' sounds to me like early sampler and tape loop experiments andthe final track 'Where do Balloons Go When They Die' has a 'pots andpans industrial' feel - lots of tinny metal clanking and ominousvocals. A good effort and some potential here, it just needs refining.
All told, the disc is worth the price for the Arc tracks especially forfans of the aforementioned C93, 23 Skidoo or even earlier, instrumentalCoil. Here's hoping we see more from both of these artists. -(Menschenfeind Productions - http://www.menschenfeind.com)
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- Carsten S.
- Albums and Singles
Recorded between 1998-2001, Thrussell dwells deeper into the themesthat are omnipresent in his projects - but this time no groove norsplendid electronica to distract the listeners from the text. Over asupportive soundtrack of creeping electronica blended with jazzyinterludes he speaks about media influences, the state of civilization,mass manipulation and consumer habits with a dark sonorous voice.Obvious Aspects of daily life like plastic, oil, money or electricityare questioned effectively in an astonishing way.Read in the style of an imaginary American radio suspense story, thelyrics gain an ironic value which is not far away from self-parody. Atleast the impression resulting is anything than dead serious.Added for further enlightment besides extensive linernotes are someillustrations by himself and a CD Rom clip of "The Plastic Wars Pt. I".
This is a careful skilled concept album which does not sell newinsights or doctrines but cleverly uses available information and setsit in context to encourage THINKING ABOUT IT ALL - including questionslike "Does he really mean this seriously?" and "Is this fact orfiction?" -
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- Mark Weddle
- Albums and Singles
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- Graeme Rowland
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- Administrator
- Albums and Singles
Bless Ba-Da-Ben Goldberg's sweet heart for keeping the magic going... Publishing a +200 page book with a various artist compilation CD doesn't happen easily, overnight, nor is it probably financially rewarding. Thankfully he's got the support of a number of great writers and wonderful musicians which I'm sure make the realization of the project worth it. The writings in the fifth book (I can't call these magazine issues), as Ben describes, is lacking a thematic tie. The music, however (recorded especially for the compilation) is somewhat of a tribute to Raymond Scott's classic, 'Soothing Sounds for Baby' LP without doing any cover versions or reinterpretations of the original.
This volume's decidedly more electronic cast than volume 4 includes Cex, Solex, Flowchart, Marumari, Bogdan Raczynski and Arovane alonside a number of others I can't say I'm familiar with, but afterwards am surely interested in. The music and the book work well together, as the soothing, electronic melodies have allowed for some quality "me time" with the book without being obtrusive. [Anybody who has fallen in love with the prettiness of Mum — and I know there are a ton — shouldn't avoid this package.] The book entries are relatively short and entertaining, ranging from a short play, a profile on Boston's best record store Twisted Village, features on upcoming indie rock stars I've never heard of, Raymond Scott, Franklin Bruno and Drew Daniel discussing dissertations, and a ton of music reviews more brief than we've ever been here on The Brain. All this for under $8 even! Mahvelous. This would have been the perfect Christmas gift to a music-loving loved one. -
samples:
- Flowchart - The Goo Goo in U
- Marumari - Indigo Florist
- Cex - And Now the Babies Are Playing Mozart For Their Parents
- Alea - Lullaby
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- Administrator
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- Graeme Rowland
- Albums and Singles
Tony's probably quite pleased to have thesereleased as they seem to back up his claims that Dream Syndicate sonichappenings were very much collective endeavours. The opening twentyminute Cale and Conrad string drone duet certainly has all the traitsof the previously released 'Day of Niagara' but is a better recording,although still sounding rough hewn. Perhaps it could be viewed as astepping stone on the path to Conrad's unrelenting skullfuck "FourViolins", but it's a transcendent portal in its own right. Cale's deepviola is the foundation with Conrad's violin cutting through the dreammist at spiky glancing angles. The viola is overwhelming, and everytime Cale shifts the drone up or down a notch colours swirl, shift,dissolve and reform. 'Ex-Cathedra' is Cale solo on Vox ContinentalOrgan with a beautiful shimmering tremelo loop underpinned by anintermittent half drowned lower chord. The third track is twelveminutes of what sounds like rummaging through the guts of a piano witha bunch of keys. Latterly the strings are bowed frantically to anintense maelstrom, and remind me of a couple of Thurston Moore'scomparatively polite duets with Nels Cline on "The Pillow Wand".'Carousel' is perhaps the most throwaway track, but only because it'sbeen done better so many times since. Cale makes 'electonic sounds'which thunk thunk thunk in the way that a guitar resting on top of itsamp might. The best is saved until last. The second duet with TonyConrad is as strangely beautiful and haunting as a track with a titlelike 'A Midnight Rain of Green Wrens at the World's Tallest Building'ought to be. The strings ooze retuned sadness for plummetinginter-dimensional avians. The final track finds Cale rattling off someextremely ragged guitar strumming with original Velvet Undergrounddrummer Angus Maclise bashing away on the cimbalom in a clatteringfreefalling ecstatic frenzy which perhaps shows a step in the evolutionof the glorious finale of the first Velvet Underground album. -
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