Brainwashed Radio: The Podcast Edition

Solstice moon in the West Midlands by James

Hotter than July.

This week's episode has plenty of fresh new music by Marie Davidson, Kim Gordon, Mabe Fratti, Guided By Voices, Holy Tongue meets Shackleton, Softcult, Terence Fixmer, Alan Licht, pigbaby, and Eiko Ishibashi, plus some vault goodies from Bombay S Jayashri and Pete Namlook & Richie Hawtin.

Solstice moon in West Midlands, UK photo by James.

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MASTER MUSICIANS OF BUKKAKE, "THE VISIBLE SIGN OF THE INVISIBLE ORDER"

The Master Musicians of Bukkake take their name from the famous2,000-plus-year-old Moroccan band, replacing the traditional "Joujouka"with "Bukkake," a Japanese term for a particularly vile form ofpornography, which I won't describe here, except to say that ininvolves a large group of men doing something rather humiliating to onewoman.
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Judee Sill, "Heart Food"

JUDEE2Released in 1972, Judee Sill's second album is very much in the same mold as her debut. However, for this, Sill took greater control over the production and orchestral arrangements as David Geffen granting her complete artistic control. The result is an album full of arrangements that are a closer match with her cosmic lyrics—celestial vocal harmonies, baroque horns and church organ, shades of gospel music and the ever-present vocal multitracking that is Judee's trademark.
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Judee Sill

JUDEEThe 1970s was the decade of the singer-songwriter: a golden age in which anyone with passable guitar skills, decent vocal ability and a handful of good songs could land a recording contract. But just as in every other era in popular music, the most original artists tended to be largely ignored in favor of easily digestible, crowd-pleasing pap. In a decade in which Joni Mitchell and James Taylor were selling out football stadiums, an artist like Judee Sill had no chance.
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"How To Kill The DJ Part Two"

Tigersushi is obviously trying to exceed the benchmark they set forKILLDJ2 themselves with last year's Miyage mix orchestrated by vegan DJ collective K.I.M. This double-disc mix is billed as the second volume in the How To Kill The DJ series, and is by far the most schizophrenic, eclectic and downright random collection of tunes ever presented under the pretext of a continuous DJ mix. The first volume was a relatively tame affair mixed by Ivan Smagghe, containing a standard cross-section of danceable material drawn from vintage 80s sides, with a full complement of newer electroclash and dancepunk material.

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JAN DUKES DE GRAY, "MICE AND RATS IN THE LOFT"

Breathless
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Hope For Agoldensummer, "I Bought a Heart Made of Art in the Deep Deep South"

A warm, honest record from the deep south.
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HOPE FOR AGOLDENSUMMER, "I BOUGHT A HEART MADE OF ART IN THE DEEP DEEP SOUTH"

Hope for Agoldensummer
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QWERTY, "THE SORROWS OF YOUNG QWERTHER"

Piehead
Standing as a fill-in for the unfortunately absent Edward Ka-Spel asPiehead's 11th release this year, Qwerty more than manages to keep theseries interesting as it draws to a close. Qwerty is a solo Croatianelectronic artist who is working in the well-traveled but stillenjoyable paths cut by Warp Records trailblazers and theircontemporaries nearly a decade ago.
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ROBOKONEKO, "SHADES OF GENKI"

Piehead
With Piehead's 10th installment this year, the label offers up apleasant slice of lo-fi electro in the form of the Nippon-o-centricalbum from Robokoneko (or Robot Cat for the gaijin.) The record beginswith a sample from 2010wherein the professor and the machine are wondering if computers dream.From that simple sample, the rest of the agenda for Robokoneko is laidout.
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MONOS, "LANDSCAPES"

ICR
I have to wonder what the trio of Darren Tate, Colin Potter, and PaulBradley has in mind when they record a set such as this one. Perhapsthey have in mind the construction of psychic hammer dedicated to theeradication of the sensual world or perhaps they simply mean to open upa space where it seems that no such space could possibly fit or exist. Landscapes has the strange quality of being both musical and completely self-indulgent.
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