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Sunday, December 26, 2021

Ekin Fil - (2021) Feelings

 

A Sunken Mall  none

Turkish ambient shoegaze reductionist Ekin Fil recovers from the anxiety of 2020 with a foggy set of introverted folk and melancholy cinematic piano. RIYL Grouper, Deaf Center, William Basinski.


Following an impressive run of releases for Helen Scarsdale Agency and Students of Decay, Ekin Fil's latest album is an exercise in emotional catharsis. Her soft vocals are the album's anchor, and add a beam of optimistic humanity through the thick fog of doom. On 'Little One', he voice cuts through piano and sounds like a lost Cocteau Twins demo, while on 'Infinite Space', it's almost reduced to a ghostly whisper, struggling to be heard beneath the sound of rain.


The album's most successful moment is the title track, a collaboration with Bulgarian artist Krāllār. Here, Fil's voice is blown out into psychedelic harmonic prisms that swirl through slow-moving frozen soundscapes. The piano is still there, but re-sculpted into warped icicles - it's disarmingly beautiful.

Aidan Baker & Ekin Fil - (2020) The Dark Well CD

 

Torn Light Records – ART 01

"The Dark Well" contains four new compositions from the collaborative debut of Ekin Fil and Aidan Baker that spill out in a slow cascade of organ, guitar, and voice. In the works for over a year, the duo have created a soundscape saturated with swells that hum and hiss but ultimately pacify instead of crash.

Various Artists - (2018) Wound 2xLP

 

Carbon Records – CR239

Continuing the tradition of its milestone-marking compilations, Carbon is using the occasion of its 25th year to bring together an impressive roster of guitar-based artists. Showcasing the use of guitar in its many forms, this compilation consists of some of the most exciting new and established purveyors of Americana, psych, free-improv, rock, and experimental sounds.

Artists:

Alexander
Bill MacKay
Bill Nace
Brett Naucke
Bruce Russell
Campbell Kneale
Curanderos
Daniel Bachman
Eric Hardiman
James Plotkin
Joe+N
Jon Collin
Kryssi Battalene
Loren Connors
Michael Morley
Mike Shiflet
Morning Scales The Mountain
Rat Bastard
Rob Noyes
Ryley Walker
Tashi Dorji
Wendy Eisenberg

William Parker - (2021) Migration of Silence Into and Out of the Tone World 10xCD

 

Centering Records – 1020–1029 / 1.58GB

William Parker is one of the most recorded bassists in jazz history, a celebrated, wide-ranging composer, multi-instrumentalist, bandleader, poet, essayist, and painter. Migration of Silence Into and Out of the Tone World comprises ten unissued albums written and recorded for various soloists and ensembles between 2017 and 2019 -- he doesn't always appear -- including seven for vocalists.


The music is not limited to jazz: There are excursions into classical, soul, free improv, blues, global sounds, and more. Blue Limelight features vocalist Raina Sokolov-Gonzalez fronting a piano quartet with two drummers, chamber strings, and oboe. The music ranges from crystalline ballads ("Listen,") to bumping R&B ("Cosmic Funk"), gospelized soul ("A Great Day to Be Dead"), and syncopated jazz recitatives (Recall"). Child of Sound contains 14 songs for piano performed solo by Eri Yamamoto. They showcase Parker's love of simple melody.

"Baldwin," the opening track on The Majesty of Jah, features James Baldwin's disembodied voice alongside Jalalu Kalvert Nelson's muted trumpet and sonic effects. Ellen Christi lends her voice to the strolling jazz-cum-reggae of the title track to the vanguard scatting in "Freedom" and the provocative spiritual drift of "Sun Song."

The experimental fourth disc Cheops is performed by vocalist Kyoko Kitamura and a group consisting of vibes, tuba, soprano sax, drums, and bass. It ranges across classical, world, and freely improvised terrain. Harlem Speaks, fronted by Fay Victor, engages bop, swing, and blues with Parker and Hamid Drake as her accompanists. Mexico consists of four long vanguard works, performed by an international ensemble of artists/activists fronted by Mexican vocalist Jean Carla Rodea.

Seven of its songs are titled for Italian directors, reflecting Parker's long obsession with cinema and film composition, extending the medium he exercised on his contemporary score for Alphaville did. The final two discs are instrumental. They include The Fastest Train wherein Parker and trio play dozens of wind, reed, and percussion instruments between them in spacious improvisational pieces. Manzanar comprises abstract folk suites played by string quartets, with reeds, winds, and percussion. Parker plays ethnic flutes and a khaen mouth organ, while saxophonist Daniel Carter guests on the provocative closing suite "Being Native."

Two enclosed booklets contain liner notes from Parker, interview fragments and beautiful art, as well as lyrics. Each disc is unique, intimate, revelatory. Migration of Silence Into and Out of the Tone World offers proof that Parker's vast, edifying sound universe seeks nothing less than to decode the world with beauty, inspiration, revolutionary lyricism, and spiritual aspiration, without pretension or artifice

Worth - (2019) Black Medicine CS

 

Wonderland Media, LLC – WM012

Worth - (2020) Heroin Vampires CDr

 

Nefarious Activities – NF43

The Offset: Spectacles - (2020) 2010-02-02 燥眠夜 Zoomin' Night 2xCS

Rose Mansion Analog – RMA-008

Compressed, self contained, and brazenly unique, each song by the Offset: Spectacles hits like a short, sharp shock. Percussive guitar and organ scrape at the surface of the left eardrum, and the bass hits like a combination of a synthesizer and a bongo. Get ready to be hectored by the ghosts of Cantonese poets and the Kowloon King. Sure as you can draw a straight line from The Offsets’ birthplace in Hong Kong to the site of their self-imposed exile in Beijing, there’s a connection between their music and the Velvet Underground, just somewhere along the 24 hour train ride things got muddled. Oscillator solos are reinterpreted for guitar, Bo Diddley blues get played drum-less, with only phantom rhythm for company. Songs like “Bodies’ Descendents” and “Snags” may bring to mind the endless empty highway, but the only possibility here is a brief sprint on an overpass above the midnight lights of a rotting port. Today, no escape is possible from a(ny) city, so the Offsets simply claim ownership, pushing back against at the neon signs, TV’s, and computers with a seductive spectacle of their own.
 

Wince - (2019) Shame CD

 

White Centipede Noise – WCN035

Jeph Jerman - (2019) Arcane Facture CD

 

White Centipede Noise – WCN038

Star - (2020) Last Vestige Of Malehood CS

 

White Centipede Noise – WCN051

Kjostad - (2020) Red Iron Knife CD

 

White Centipede Noise – WCN054

Altar Of Flies - (2020) Work Ethics CD

 


White Centipede NoiseWCN060


Paranoid Time - (2016) Rat Life CS

 

White Centipede Noise – none

Savage Gospel - (2020) ST CD

 

White Centipede Noise – WCN053

 

Aaron Dilloway /Jeph Jerman - (2021) Casual Collisions CD

 

White Centipede Noise – WCN063


Casual Collisions is a collaborative album by two of the most prominent voices in experimental sound, Aaron Dilloway and Jeph Jerman. Recorded in 2013 and originally self-released on CDR by Jerman in a small edition, New Forces and White Centipede Noise are pleased to make these recordings widely available for the first time. Across four tracks the unique voices of these artists meld seamlessly together. Jerman’s tactile, physical sounds are wrapped up in Dilloway’s magnetic wizardry. Damaged electronics and hissing tapes form the canvas on which objects crunch, grind, and clatter. Temporality blurs as field recordings, loops, and live acoustic sounds meld together in sonic alchemy.

Two masters in perfect sync. Remastered by BJ Nilsen, packaged in a full color 6-panel digipack.

Sewer Election - (2020) Blizzard Amplification 2xCD

 

White Centipede Noise – WCN050

"Originally released as a private edition 6 cassettes box, instantly sold out * Sewer Election at their finest. Double-CD reissue of the six-tape-box. Improvised harsh electronics & feedback. Recorded & mixed at Studio Malign early 2020. "Sewer Election is a name to be held in the highest regard. While initially hooking audiences on one of the most hard-hitting takes on harsh noise available, he also proved to be the master of an unsettling and emotive tape music style which has come to be widely imitated. Naturally, the moments when these two concepts converge are considered to be nothing short of utter perfection. “Blizzard Amplification” is no different in quality from past releases, but focuses on a third speed at which Johansson can dominantly take the wheel.  The tracks which encompass these two discs are some of the most chaotic sounds you could imagine being wrangled, an unrelenting blast of energy which can only properly be compared to the most revered recordings of the 90s. Although sourced from improvisations, Sewer Election’s signature control and consideration are present throughout every moment. High-pitched oscillating tones and feedback ride along the crust of a more familiar static and rumble, all while coming across as fully intentional. The compositional strength of these recordings is unexpected given their categorically raw nature; you’d think amongst hours of material there would be unwanted sounds or lacking moments, but there just aren’t. Instead, you find a slab of harsh noise crafted by someone who has lived deep within the appreciation and practice of such for decades. This is essential listening for any fan of Dan’s work, a clear example of getting the goddamn job done."  Deutsche Asphalt

Arv & Miljö - (2012) Göteborg CS

 

Arv & Miljö Self-released – none


Arv & Miljö - (2018) Svensk Sommar I Stilla Frid LP

 

Omlott – MLR023


The 7 compositions on Svensk Sommar I Stilla Frid further explores the home- brewed, on-thin-ice ambient hinted at on a few recent Arv & Miljö recordings. Mainly inspired by Anna Själv Tredje and perhaps the lesser sides of Ralph Lundsten and such, this is the Gothenburgian outsider synth album no one certainly ever asked for.

Arv & Miljö - (2016) ST CS

Team Boro Tapes – none 

Arv & Miljö - (2020) Raelianerna CS

 

Arv & Miljö Self-released – none

Arv & Miljö - (2020) Element CDr

 

Förfall – 06

Saturday, December 25, 2021

Arv & Miljö - (2020) Himmelsvind LP

Discreet Music – 01


Arv & Miljö / LR - (2012) Påsk CS

 

Joy De Vivre – JDV015

Loke Rahbek ( Damien Dubrovnick, War, Posh Isolation) + Matthias Andersson (Heinz Hopf, Kallarbanen, Release the Bats).

A collaboration as a result of the Utmarken / Posh Isolation connection. Sources was provided by both acts, everything was mixed and finalized in Gothenburg in July 2011, although most of the material is older. The recordings are framed with field recordings from an Easter mass in a church in the Netherlands. Modern Scandinavian industrial tones.

Enhet För Fri Musik - (2015) Inom Dig, Inom Mig CS

 


Forever United – UTD02

Enhet För Fri Musik - (2015) Live Kommunhuset CS



Joy De Vivre – JDV031

Enhet För Fri Musik - (2015) Dokument 1: Improvisationer Och Bandmusik För Vilt Dansande Själar LP

 

Holidays Records – HOL 076


Enhet För Fri Musik - (2015) Låt Oss Vada Genom All Ängslan Tillsammans LP

 

Förlag För Fri Musik – 001


Various Artists - (2019) On Corrosion 10xCS

 








Helen Scarsdale Agency – HMS050


(Richard Allen)  -----------------------------------------------------------
The drone release of the season is finally here: ten tapes in a wooden box, featuring nearly seven hours of music.  This has been a labor of love for the Helen Scarsdale Agency as it celebrates its 50th release.  On Corrosion is about entropy: the corrosion of civility, of sanity, of society.  Many of the artists have a personal stake, writing about the end of relationships.  Some fear the end of the world.  Together they create a tapestry of things falling apart, with little hope of retrieval.  This is a bleak worldview, but in the hands of these artists, it’s also beautiful: the glory of decay.  Years from now, these cassettes will themselves erode, embodying the dreams of their creators.

Where to start?  The experience will be different for every person as they work their way through the box.  We’re especially in awe of the female artists on the roster, so that’s where we’ll begin.

“All Is Crushed All Is Perfect” is an evocative title for the opening track of 9 Dreams in Erotic Mourning, evidence that titles do count in instrumental music, if we allow them to do so.  Alice Kemp plants elongated tones in a meditative fashion, but it’s a bit of a curveball, as the electronics enter into the second track, accompanied by sighs.  What is erotic mourning?  Is it missing sex, or embracing the idea of sadness in eroticism (sometimes known as “beautiful agony”)?  She’s not happy ~ but she is.  She also makes dolls: Purge Dolls, Chapel Dolls, Little Dolls, Burned and Kissed.  As one might guess, these are not normal dolls, but beautiful in a charred manner.  “Song for Unnamed Things” returns to the sparse nature of the opener, but sounds more like an appliance being turned on and off, accompanied by chimes.  Then another left turn: painful exhalations akin to a rusty hinge; ritualistic tolling, as if for one lost.  Kemp turns her voice into a tea kettle, but we’re not sure it wants to be removed from the heat.  When “A Small Act of Violence” concludes with the sound of a spade, the implication is that Kemp may not be as passive a mourner as first believed.

Turning now to another Alice (Kundalini/She Spread Sorrow), we find another complex artist whose work addresses issues of sex, pain, and degradation, while underlining female power.  This is a difficult twist, but Kundalini has managed to discomfort and energize in a cycle of releases over the past few years ~ her visual art being as important as her aural.  “The Solitude of the Giant’s House” begs for exegesis.  While the protagonist ~ a psychological captive? ~ roams the halls, foreboding tones drip from the walls.  “Star” offers a different sort of short story, in which another woman “had a little girl that she loved so much … she wouldn’t take care of herself, and she was always so tired.  She couldn’t feel anyone’s love.  She was lost in fairy tales and fantasies and darkness.  She was so alone; do you miss her eyes?  Her mind collapsed.”  Is the little girl real, or a memory of the girl she was?  The tale is harrowing, delivered in Kundalini’s signature whisper.  The listener may approach Orchid Seeds as a work of narrative poetry, and attempt to read between the lines ~ or simply give in to the darkness of this claustrophobic music.

At first, one is put off by the title of Torn Asunder – The Half Girl‘s opening track.  “Fucking Bitch” is an ugly epithet from which one wants to turn away.  But Ester Kärkkäinen (Himukalt) has another goal in mind: to expose the soulless nature of toxic masculinity.  Her music is an indictment of the violence directed at women, and is violent in return: abraded, distorted, industrial.  At times she sounds as if she is wielding a power drill over planks.  Is she reenacting “The Cask of Amontillado?”  The cover seems to dare the viewer to judge by appearance, but the photo is less about the viewer than the artist.  At the same time, it seems a self-assessment:  is this all I am?  Sadly, to some people, the answer is yes ~ but that doesn’t mean it’s true.  “Cruel by Most Estimations” smacks down every bit of dialogue with harsh feedback.  Himukalt is the destroyer of the degrader, and her album is a powerful document that is too loud to ignore, turning the tables on those who use volume as a weapon.  Many half-girls live throughout the world, but Kärkkäinen hears them ~ she may have been one herself ~ and seeks to lead them to wholeness.

Tacking a different subject, Kleistwahr offers two side-long meditations on the upcoming season.  Everything sounds pretty at the beginning, like the first flakes ~ but it doesn’t last.  The appropriately titled Winter is awash in synth, harp, and buried voices, and seems mournful and resigned.  Or maybe it’s just the titles, which include “Everything We Loved Is Gone.”  Ten minutes into Side A, the ambience is swallowed in a blizzard of drone, and then the cycle begins again, with organ tones laying the groundwork like permafrost.  “Rust Eats the Future,” says Kleistwahr’s Gary Mundy.  “The Solstice Will Not Save Us.”  And by Side B, the drones have indeed taken over the sound field.  Winter may not sound like winter, but it sounds like the feeling of fear and loneliness that winter can produce. There’s no reason to fear winter, but millions suffer from Seasonal Affective Disorder, and it’s unclear whether this tape will offer them solace or despair.  Either way, Mundy produces a cold, dark empathy, a soundtrack of the land’s apparent death before its inevitable ~ yet hidden ~ resurrection.

Pinkcourtesyphone (Richard Chartier) calms things way, way, way down on Shouting at Nuance, and the title suggests possible intention or interpretation.  In recent years, nuance has been devalued in public discourse, ceding space to ever-louder repetitions of dug-in themes.  No one wins in such exchanges.  Terry Tempest Williams’ recent Erosion: Essays of Undoing makes a connection between the erosion of objects and the erosion of civility; Chartier uses a pair of side-long meditations as metaphor, reflecting a myriad of deep emotions in the face of decay.  Memories fade; tapes corrode; the past becomes an untrustworthy loop.  The loops of “Problematic Interior 3” start in static and dissolve in wind; in “Alternatory,” they blow around as if trapped in a ghost town.  Snippets of classical music waft through the air, melodies forever incomplete.  By mid-piece, a dust storm of drone descends on the town; shuttered in their houses, the lonely residents hear harmonies borne on the breeze.  Is it safe to go outside?  Only as safe as it is to remember.

Francisco Meirino takes the loop experiment a step further.  If we didn’t know any better, we’d guess that he hates tapes.  After discovering an old set of reel-to-reels, he “scratched, crumpled, drowned and buried” these elderly victims, then exhumed them for A Collection of Damaged Reel Tape Loops.  One can imagine the tapes ~ seen in tangled Christmas light fashion on the cover ~ groaning “Why won’t you let us rest in peace?”  But in their new form, new beauty erupts: disembodied voices, sluggish songs, savage static.  The end of Side A sounds like a locked groove, the beginning of Side B like an alarm.  The music conveys the message that corrosion need not be a nemesis.  Ironically, the existence of this composition on cassette suggests that some admiring listener might break the case apart, remove the tape and dissect it for their own nefarious purposes, creating yet another generation of repurposed sound.  We can’t help thinking that Meirino would be proud.

Fossil Aerosol Mining Project is known for excavating the past; their practice is portrayed by their name.  But unlike its peers,, Hydration Equilibrium also contains phrases of funkiness, as found in the opening piece, “Not Intended As.”  The effect recalls Tom Petty’s video for “You Got Lucky,” which begins with members of the band finding an old cassette player in a post-apocalyptic landscape.  FAMP also works with VHS and 35mm film, creating montages that rummage through raw material while offering a tangled nostalgia.  The group calls the opening sample “an ugly reminder that not all things from previous decades should be treasured;” yet the fact of its inclusion means that it is treasured, if only as an example of what not to treasure.  What will listeners make of this aural spaghetti?  Some may muse on the disposability of popular culture.  But others, hearing tracks like “Beneath the Rails,” may be buoyed by the resurrection of sounds thought lost.

G*park (Mark Zeier) offers the sparsest album of the boxed set, packing protuberances of percussion with distorted snippets of everything from water to screams.  Nosode is a chopped-up affair in which every sound receives a dark reception.  We think that’s an ear on the front, but we’re not sure; the implication is that every sound is important, from a dripping drainpipe to broken pottery.  While much of the tape celebrates found sound and the glee of smashing things up, there’s also a sense of the macro ~ the sound that lasts only a second, but resonates in the mind.  As such, the composition focuses on echo as erosion, reminding listeners that while decay is a slow process, sometimes things fall apart quickly as well.  The glass is neither half empty nor half full, but lies in shards at one’s feet.

Relay for Death stretches from drone to noise on Mutual Consuming.  The project is comprised of twin sisters Roxann and Rachal Spikula, whose music taps the ritualistic, occasionally receding (in the middle of “Intone the Morph Orb”) to allow room for meditation.  In contrast, “Terminal Ice Wind” leaves little room for anything but survival.  One imagines the generator dying at a polar encampment, the scientists battling the forces of nature, walking though white-out conditions with one hand on a rope.  The music is a reminder of the harshness of nature; sure, we’re destroying our planet, but our planet can also destroy us with fury raw and untamed.  The piece’s most powerful moment arrives nine and a half minutes in as it descends to silence: the silence during which someone decides that it’s safe to go outside, and then gets eaten.  The full fury of the storm arrives in the final minutes, the sisters taking out their frustration on the world’s ills by imagining themselves as a purifying fire from which only crows can escape.

And now to the tenth tape, an outlier from Swedish noise duo Neutral (Dan Johansson and Sofie Herner). Their drones seem perpetually on the verge of eruption, even when accompanied by abraded whispers and sparse monologues.  Lågliv (Lowlife) is preoccupied by “murk,” which the duo describes as a discontent with the staid condition of rock.  Their solution is to apply their own brand of aural corrosion to the pre-existing corrosion of creativity, hoping that two negatives make a positive.  The music is lo-fi, a purposeful avoidance of the glossy.  Each dead fly might be the corpse of another band who allowed their punk spirit to die.  The suite on Side A concludes with “Punkt,” which seems less the MTV show (“Punk’d”) than a new application of the punk ethos.  It’s refreshing to hear a modern act so unconcerned with the mainstream.  On Side B, an organ accompanies their plaintive, distorted vocals.  Handel’s Messiah this is not; it’s not trying to be high art, but raw emotion, a response to the corrosion around us.

This boxed set weaves a tapestry of anger and despair, raging at the forces that be.  On Corrosion is a rejection of misogyny and moral bankruptcy.  These ten artists may be aghast at the forces of societal corrosion and the resulting effects on the planet, but they’ve channeled their emotions to create a new artifact for the 21st century.  Open the box and one will encounter many of the world’s dark forces; but as Pandora once discovered, at the bottom of the box is hope. 

Neutral - (2014) Grå Våg Gamlestaden LP

 

Omlott – MLR 004

Gothenburgers’ Dan Johansson (Sewer Election) and Sofie Herner’s Neutral is the product of Sofie’s instruments and voice, and Dan’s manipulation and reel-to-reel technique. After previously making music together, in 2013 they had the idea to start compiling the recordings to make an LP. Originally released as a cassette edition of 25 on Ingen Våg.

Grå Våg Gamlestaden was released in the fall of 2014, with strong themes of a certain kind of bleakness, but with a wry smile, closely relating to the area of Gamlestaden. The title “Grå Våg Gamlestaden” was chosen after jokes were made with Matthias Andersson (IDDB label boss and project Arv & Miljö), about the neighbourhood Gamlestaden, where Dan, Sofie and Matthias lived.