Searchability

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

Horaflora & Secret Boyfriend - (2010) Split LP


"I met Raub of Horaflora during his tour down from New England when he had his entire set-up on a bicycle. Using a clever and economical system that included a hand drum, trumpet mouth piece, balloon, computer sub-woofer, transducers, hand-held tape recorders and various found objects, he created an immersive shuddering meadow mecha-organic sound environment. Empty cans and scrap metal rattled to the same pulse, balloons exhaled lost-in-the-fog tones on the taut drum skin, tapes whirred weird in their lascivious carriage in the front and back : the sum being a barnyard of coldly throbbing sounds from all angles harmonizing with the resident frogs and insects. Two years later we have this, the vinyl debut of both Horaflora and Secret Boyfriend. On his side, Raub wrings pleasingly alien sounds from his systems - taken in this instance from a live session with Andrea Williams on KALX. The electro-acoustic room-rattling is crisply recorded but still very inscrutable ... strange sounds mingling spatially guided by unseen hands of a restless poltergiest . . . The Secret Boyfriend side begins stunned in the still room where Horaflora left us, oozes and flirts with a baroque chamber mentality giving away to exquisite / blown speaker melodies and drooling song-form, morbid and tender. A sense of calm and peripheral melancholy is held, abrasion dialed back. One quarter alive in a cold apartment for twenty years. The windows are open.


Secret Boyfriend - (2013) This Is Always Where You've Lived LP


Secret Boyfriend is Ryan Martin, a singer, songwriter and noise artist from Carrboro, North Carolina (a scene that's also home to Profligate, Lazy Magnet and LACK). He already has a slew of cassettes and vinyl to his name, including titles on Ren Schofield's I Just Live Here and his own Hot Releases. Martin's music is a post-hypnagogic expression of the lo-fi rock tradition (as originally pioneered by the likes of Jim Shepard, Peter Jefferies, The Dead C, et al.). Much like those artists, he creates grainy home recordings that cut across a number of styles, in the process extinguishing the distinctions between song and sound collage, self-expression and sonic experimentation. Indeed, by the halfway mark of This Is Always Where You've Lived, listeners have already been exposed to guitar-driven slowcore ("Silvering The Wing"), harsh drone ("Flashback"), Giallo pastiche ("Summer Wheels"), and primitive synth-pop ("Beyond The Darkness").


Secret Boyfriend - (2015) Haunt Stress CS



clearly a noise experiment more than anything else, and yet even within that difficult sphere it lacks any sense of structure