Realized over a four-year period, Sean McCann's Ten Impressions for Piano & Strings is a document of transition and maturation. Slow-moving cloud forms over corporeal landscapes, these impressions whisper of McCann's imminent & decisive lean towards classical & avant-garde musics, culminating in 2013's Music for Private Ensemble on his own imprint, Recital. Less a final statement on ambient music, more a meditation on change, discovery and process.
More information can be found here.
Miscontinuum Album documents an impressive new work by seminal electronic musician Jan St. Werner, whose innovations with Mouse on Mars and Microstoria are well-documented. Over a period of approximately four years, Miscontinuum has been developed and refined as an operatic live performance in Munich, as well as a radio play. This recorded incarnation of the work is the third entry in Werner's lauded Fiepblatter series, and features contributions by Dylan Carlson (Earth), Markus Popp (Oval), Kathy Alberici, and Taigen Kawabe (Bo Ningen). It is a challenging listen not compromised for casual music consumption habits, but with time and close listening, it yields vast rewards. Miscontinuum Album is a radical convergence of sound exploration and storytelling that has few precedents.
The central concept of Miscontinuum explores misconceptions of time and memory, inspired by unique acoustic phenomena derived digital phasing and musical time-stretching techniques. There is an aura of doom that pervades the work. Much of the album's evocative nature comes from the interplay of Werner's electronics with Alberici and Kawabe's voices and the contrast between those organic and inorganic elements. Popp, a longtime collaborator with Werner in Microstoria, wrote the libretti, which is presented in five distinct scenes and recited redolently by Carlson. The surreal plot involves a progressive distinction of time as a force rather than a structuring system, and an individual who can shift consciously between states within that force. The high concepts and unusual creative partners combine for an album that is uncommonly emotionally resonant.
Miscontinuum was first performed as a part of Werner's Asymmetric Studio series in Munich on June 18th, 2013, and also featured video by Werner and Karl Kliem and stage design by Christina del Yelmo & Sonia Gomez Villar. It was broadcast by Bayerischer Rundfunk public radio ten days later. The striking visual elements, flowing dresses and impressionistic masses of color, make appearances on the album's art, and will be presented in new forms in the coming months. The first revised version of the Miscontinuum, featuring live video by Zoya Bassi, will premiere at the St Luke's Church in London on Feb 8th 2015 and is the first in a series of more shows to come in 2015.
More information can be found here.
Barons Court is the debut full-length album by Canadian electroacoustic composer Sarah Davachi, following short-run releases on Important Records' Cassauna imprint and Full Spectrum.
Trained at Mills College, Davachi's work marries an academic approach to synthesis and live instrumentation with a preternatural attunement to timbre, pacing, and atmosphere. While the record employs a number of vintage and legendary synthesizers, including Buchla's 200 and Music Easel, an EMS Synthi, and Sequential Circuit's Prophet 5, Davachi's approach to her craft here is much more in line with the longform textural minimalism of Eliane Radigue than it is with the hyper-dense modular pyrotechnics of the majority of her synthesist contemporaries.
Three of the album's five compositions feature acoustic instrumentation (cello, flue, harmonium, oboe, and viola, played by Davachi and others) which is situated alongside a battery of keyboards and synths and emphasizes the composerly aspect of her work. "Heliotrope" slowly billows into being with a low, keeling drone that is gradually married to an assortment of sympathetic, aurally complex sounds to yield a rich fantasia of beat frequencies and overtones. Later, "Wood Green" opens almost inaudibly, with lovely eddies of subtly modulating synth clouds evolving effortlessly into something much larger, as comforting and familiar as it is expansive. In an era in which the synthesizer inarguably dominates the topography of experimental music, Davachi's work stands alone - distinctive, patient, and beautiful.
More information can be found here.
Medical Records presents a hand-picked selection of the early recordings of Germany's Bal Paré.
The band started as Jeanette & das Land Z in 1981 with a 7“ on Konkurrenz Rec./ Phonogram which included two cover versions (a piece from a weird science fiction TV series soundtrack and a sixties Grand Prix Eurovision number one hit). The 7” became an underground hit.
The band then changed their name to Bal Paré and begin recording independently. The band name was based on the song "Es war beim Bal Pare" from the German chansonette Hildegard Knef, which was a musical influence beside bands like Kraftwerk, Depeche Mode, Erasure, Yazoo, etc.
The first Bal Paré LP, Hamburg-Paris-Catania, was released in 1982 on Konkurrenz Records. Since they had a large fanbase in Sweden, the second release (Metamorphose) came out in Stockholm on the Krautrock label.
Shortly after, the band experienced a major line-up upheaval. There were many tracks produced during this time that ended up unreleased. Much of the material from this selection of tracks were culled from those unreleased sessions (which were later collected on the “Best of” CD-only release in 1996 on Tatra Records).
The original two LPs are long out-of-print and demand very high prices on the collectors market. This is the first time this collection has been reissued on vinyl.
The opening track "Rien" is a perfect display of what synth pop is modeled after: rich lead synth textures, male/female interplayed vocals, and electronic percussion. Though the entire record flows with ease and captivates the listener from beginning to end, other stand-out tracks include "Palais d’Amour," "Die Idioten," and "Meilleur Du Monde." This collection is absolutely crucial for fans of early new wave such as Deux, Moderne, Performance and other similar acts of the genre.
The tracks have been lovingly restored by Matthias Schuster.
More information can be found here.
Active since 1979, Maurizio Bianchi is an Italian pioneer of noise and industrial music.
Untitled 1980 was originally released in 1980 on cassette in Japan. This release marks the first re-issue of this work and pairs it with a 2013 re-working of the original material into four entirely new compositions.
This work was created using only a single semi-modular, monophonic synthesizer or, as Maurizio says:
"Originally composed in October 1980 simply by using a synthesizer KORG MS20, but with so much imagination. Dedicated to technological sophistication."
More information can be found here.
Untitled #274 was composed by Francisco Lopez and and performed by Kasper T. Toeplitz at GRM Studios in Paris, France.
Francisco Lopez is internationally recognized as one of the major figures of the sound art and experimental music. For more than thirty years, he has developed an astonishing sonic universe, absolutely personal and iconoclastic, based on a profound listening of the world. Destroying boundaries between industrial sounds and wilderness sound environments, shifting with passion from the limits of perception to the most dreadful abyss of sonic power, proposing a blind, profound and transcendental listening, freed from the imperatives of knowledge and open to sensory and spiritual expansion.
Kasper T. Toeplitz has worked with academic research organizations, such as GMEM, GRM, IRCAM, and Radio-France, as well as with experimental musicians, such as Éliane Radigue, Zbigniew Karkowski, Dror Feiler, Tetsuo Furudate, Phill Niblock and Art Zoyd. Citing Giacinto Scelsi and Iannis Xenakis as influences, his early work was mostly written for traditional instruments.
More information can be found here.
Thanks again to everyone who contributed, nominated, and voted.
It's difficult to avoid mentioning Graham Lewis when talking about Klara, but only because it's shocking to hear a talented innovator born from a talented innovator. ALL music-making children of rock stars are incessantly annoying while most of the children of our favorite brainwashed-type artists probably think "your shit's weird, dad." Klara isn't bound by conventions and has introduced herself to us with a collection of gems that aren't merely sonically nerdy enough to be cool, but are actually quite enjoyable. I can only hope to see some of her live performances because the album seems to lay the groundwork for a much more massive development, as my only complaint was that some of these songs on her debut were too short. - Jon Whitney
Regardless of her famous father, Klara's two releases this year would have been impressive coming from any artist, even more so considering her young age. Shades of the post-punk/early industrial experimental sound abound on Ett and Msuic, but feel entirely contemporary in her hands. I echo Jon's sentiment though, as I feel her work is dying to be presented in a more long-form approach. - Creaig Dunton
Justin is one of those guys that is possibly too talented to live. So many seminal musical stages of my life have involved him; Napalm Death and Godflesh were two of my first entries into extreme music and later Jesu and Final complemented my other interests. Around the time of the self-titled album, Jesu put on one of the greatest sets I have ever seen (blowing the headliners Isis off the stage) and Final have cleared my ears out entirely. I have seen him put on robes with Sunn O))), adding a noticeable extra layer to the already thick sound. Even when I have not enjoyed his music (and there have been quite a few times I haven’t), I can recognize his willingness to take risks and avoid stagnation at all costs. Most artists would give life and limb to be associated with one of his many acts, the fact he can span such a spread of styles is a testament to him. - John Kealy
I don't think the man wastes any time of day doing anything _but_ music. When new albums aren't popping up on his bandcamp, he's fixing to tour or remastering something from the vault to reintroduce. And it's all worth a listen. He continues to be unbounded by genre lines and expectations as his numerous projects are multidimensional, even within themselves. On top of that he's a very genuine person, quite approachable, and appreciates every fan. - Jon Whitney
It was a chance purchase of the Merciless EP in 1994 that put me on the road to weird and difficult music and out of my rut of industrial/EBM. Even though I still don't consider myself to be an actual metal fan, Broadrick's work in that genre has always clicked with me. It was his side projects (especially God and Techno Animal), plus his associations with other artists such as Robert Hampson and Mick Harris that lead me into more experimental music and noise. Now two decades later I continue to pursue his work (and plethora side projects) more intently than many other artists, and I am happy to see that he has kept both Jesu and Godflesh as his primary outlets. This year's reactivation of Godflesh via new material and a successful tour of the US makes him an easy choice for me for artist of the year. - Creaig Dunton
I bought Streetcleaner in 1989 as a teenaged metalhead and hated it instantly and intensely. Everything that I loved about extreme metal (complicated riffs, relentless double-bass drumming, speed) was conspicuously absent and I could not wrap my mind around why so many people were so excited about a band that seemed so rigid, so plodding, and so annoyingly dissonant. Then six months later, it all made sense to me and I've been following Broadrick's career ever since. I certainly have not liked everything that he has released, but he has always been a distinctive, smart, iconoclastic, and forward-thinking artist. Twenty-five years have now passed and he is still just as likely to release something totally crushing. - Anthony D'Amico
Regler, the Swedish combo lead by noise artist Mattin and Anders Bryngelsson (Brainbombs) is anything but subtle in their approach to music. On this double CD set, they lay out exactly what to expect from the disc titles: Noise Core is the group (featuring Henrik Andersson on bass) doing an hour of noisy, almost grindcore chaos, while Free Jazz is the trio plus Yoann Durant on sax, making an hour of vaguely jazz tinged racket. It’s not for everyone, but it is an impressive work no matter what.
The artwork for each disc clearly shows what I assume to be the score for each piece:"play as hard and fast as possible for an hour," which is exactly what the artists do.On the Nose Core disc, Mattin's guitar and Andersson's bass melt into an amorphous surge of overdrive and fuzz.Bryngelsson's rapid fire drumming is intense to put it lightly, with only a few brief pauses that result in even more dissonant, less structured moments.
At times Mattin takes the lead with some intentionally overt guitar noodling before falling back into the murk from which it came.The pace is relentless, and is at times exhausting to listen to.The second half of the piece sees Bryngelsson shifting his playing to focus on some heavy cymbal use to result in a harsher, more metallic and sharp sound before the performance abruptly ends in silence.
Free Jazz, on the other hand, starts out faster and looser than the other disc, almost thrash metal like at first before the sax cuts through.The sound is reminiscent of John Zorn's work as Pain Killer or Naked City in its most brutal forms.Comparably, this disc is more varied and intense than its Noise Core counterpart, with a throbbing heaviness that makes it stay fresher throughout its hour length.
Even though there is conventional instrumentation being used here, Regel #3 has far more in common with a harsh noise record than any of the genres referenced in the pieces.Moments of Noise Core, when the guitar and bass are at their most dissonant and the rapid fire drumming is pummeling away, reminded me of some of the best live Hijokaidan recordings.Just like that legendary band, however, the music here is definitely challenging to listen to.While those who like their music ugly and dissonant will likely dig this set as much as I do, anyone else should at least be able to appreciate the endurance and intensity of the players and performance that were involved in recording this material.
samples:
 
The word "dance" does not come to mind when I see Ralf Wehowsky's name, so I was intrigued by this collaboration from its title alone. Johannes Frisch is not known for working with electronic beats either, so the fact that they appear here in anything but a conventional sense is not that surprising. Between Wehowsky's electronics and Frisch's double bass, shards of dance music appear but extremely deconstructed, and blended up with free jazz and electronic experimentalism.
Both artists have cited Ornette Coleman’s landmark Free Jazz album as one of this album’s major influences."Crisis in Space" features some more conventional jazz rhythms and plucked double bass moments, but vintage synth sound effects and clattering sounds make it a different matter entirely.Wehowsky's trademark disjointed, jump edit compositional style features heavily, but the overall mood is far lighter than I usually would expect from him.
The electronic sounds appear frequently on the opening "Shutter Train Stoppage," resembling 8 bit video game noises and lo-fi techno being destroyed by a malfunctioning hard drive."Which Cloud Are You Coming From" also has the duo working with skittering, severely processed electronic beats in perhaps the closest approach to glitch techno the two get.With this paired with Frisch's sweeping bowed bass, the blend of melody and noise works excellently.
"Dub Clap Move" also sees the duo using more straight forward rhythmic elements, but in a jerky stop/start structure peppered with weirdly treated strings and harsh synth bursts, resulting in the most chaotic piece on the album."Acid Breakdown" might not heavily feature rhythms, but is no less boisterous than the rest, featuring dense and aggressive passages of processed sound."Acid" might fit in both techno and jazz as a subgenre, but here I feel the reference is more fittingly drug related.
The duo do not focus exclusively on the heavy dense moments however, and a few of these pieces are as sparse and minimalist as Wehowsky's solo work as RLW."Theme For A Skyscraper" displays some conventionally bowed bass sounds, but through processed fragments and heavy use of silence, it feels very in line with his other work."Let's Now Interrupt For A Commercial" is similar as well, featuring a heavier use of interference like digital sounds and big open gaps of silence that could fit in to any of his solo albums.
The "dance" part of this album's title seems to be a facetious use of the term, as the thought of anyone being able to dance to this material is pretty absurd.The "head" part, however, makes perfect sense, because no matter if the material is rapidly chaotic mangled techno or stripped down electro acoustic experimentation, the sound of this album is undoubtedly cerebral.
samples:
 
New album "EXTENSIONS OF YOU VOL.1" is out now, a collection of remixes and reinterpretations of the Audio City compiled by Nadia Spier Vs. Nad Spiro.
Nadia Spier + Nad Spiro merge into the sonic environment with
project by Rosa Arruti.
Carter Tutti (Chris Carter and Cosey Fanni Tutti) are set to release a new album
on their own CTI label on the 17th of February 2015.
‘CARTER TUTTI PLAY CHRIS & COSEY’ will be available to download and is released on CD and double Vinyl and features eight brand new reinterpretations and re-workings of classic Chris & Cosey songs from the 1980s and 1990s.
The idea for the album originated from their recent much requested, live performances of ‘CARTER TUTTI PLAYS CHRIS & COSEY’ which led to an unprecedented series of shows in the U.K., Europe, Scandinavia and North America from 2011 to 2014. These dates in turn instigated so many requests for recordings of the live set that they were inspired late last year to re-record this collection of reworked classic versions in their own Norfolk studio.
Each format will feature an exclusive remixed track - Compact Disc copies feature ‘Vengeance’ (Exclusive Remix), the Digital Download album version comes with ‘Synaesthesia’ (Exclusive Remix) and the Vinyl edition includes all five tracks from their 2014 U.S. limited tour merchandise CD.
There is also a video to promote the album based on a new Carter Tutti edit of the C&C track ‘Sin (2015)', directed by Gavin Toomey from footage he has been shooting and archiving for a forthcoming Chris & Cosey biographical documentary.
TRACK LISTING FOR CD / DL:
1 Lost Bliss
2 Retrodect
3 Driving Blind
4 Obsession
5 Beatbeatbeat
6 Workout
7 Watching You
8 Love Cuts
9 Sin
10 Dancing On Your Grave
Vengeance (Exclusive Remix - Compact Disc album only)
Synaesthesia (Exclusive Remix - Digital Download album only)
TRACK LISTING FOR DOUBLE VINYL:
1 Retrodect (2015)
2 Driving Blind (2015)
3 Obsession (2015)
4 Beatbeatbeat (2015)
5 Watching You (2015)
6 Love Cuts (2015)
7 Sin (2015)
8 Dancing On Your Grave (2015)
CARTER TUTTI REMIX CHRIS & COSEY
1 Cowboys In Cuba (Extended Remix)
2 Dancing Ghosts (Extended Remix)
3 Deep Velvet (Extended Remix)
4 Lost Bliss (Extended Remix)
5 October (Love Song) (Extended Remix)
DETAILS FOR PRE-ORDERING THE ALBUM WILL BE ANNOUNCED SHORTLY
SIN (2015) Promo video:
http://youtu.be/uVda7eWDLtI
SIN (2015) Promo audio:
https://soundcloud.com/chris_carter/sin-2015-edit
October (Love Song) - Carter Tutti Remix:
https://soundcloud.com/thequietus/carter-tutti-remix-chris-cosey
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LONDON LIVE SHOW at HEAVEN - 15th FEBRUARY 2015
To coincide with the release, Chris & Cosey have announced a very special 'final' Valentines weekend live date by returning to the iconic Heaven Nightclub in London on Sunday the 15th of February 2015.
The show will be the last performance of the ‘Carter Tutti Plays Chris & Cosey’ set for the foreseeable future; the founding members of Throbbing Gristle plan to predominately refocus on working in their studio for next couple of years. The duo will then go back into the studio to finish recording a brand new CARTER TUTTI VOID album to be released later in 2015.
Support artists to complete this event come from fast rising cult Japanese all female trio Nisennenmondai (who last year played two sold out London headline club shows of their own at Corsica Studios and Birthdays) and the Quietus Magazine DJ's.
HEAVEN, The Arches, Villiers Street., Charing Cross Central London, WC2N 6NG
Doors open 7pm (11pm curfew)
Tickets £15 advance from:
https://ticketabc.com/events/baba-yagas-hut-pr-51/