Crush Collision 9/11/14

September 12, 2014 at 5:58 pm | Posted in Crush Collision | Leave a comment

Hour 1
10:03 PM Rival Consoles ~ Helios
10:06 PM Simian Mobile Disco ~ Calyx
10:10 PM Soul Of Hex ~ Lip Reading (Larry Heard Midnight Mix)
10:16 PM Esteban Adame ~ The Grind
10:22 PM Aphex Twin ~ minipops 67 [120.2]
10:26 PM Kidkanevil ~ Inakunaru
10:29 PM Moiré ~ Mr Figure
10:33 PM Telegraphy ~ How Are You Today
10:38 PM Via App ~ Ace
10:41 PM My Panda Shall Fly & Maulin ~ Gingerbread House (5 a.m. Minimal Dub)
10:44 PM Snuff Crew ~ Berlin
10:50 PM Hal Floyd ~ All Ventures Overboard
10:54 PM Mr. Flash ~ Midnight Blue (Jon Convex Remix)
10:58 PM Perc ~ Tri-City
Hour 2
11:02 PM Timoka ~ Borogoves
11:06 PM Kasper Bjørke ~ Grit
11:11 PM Permanent Heartbreak ~ Sorry Not Sorry (Raíz Remix)
11:15 PM dynArec ~ Safe Scouting Guide
11:19 PM Prism House ~ Drift (Thug Entrancer Remix)
11:22 PM Hagan ~ 1991
11:25 PM Ikonika ~ You Won’t Find It Here (VIP)
11:28 PM Marcelus ~ Red Dance
11:33 PM Sinden Presents The Crystal System ~ Got Me Moving (Moiré Remix)
11:36 PM Synthek & Audiolouis ~ Headroom
11:41 PM Jeremiah R ~ Interplanetary Phenomenon Unit
11:43 PM Somepoe ~ Woodstate (Blood Vibes Remix)
11:46 PM Mike G ~ Blackjack (Korma Pulse Mix)
11:51 PM Driftmachine ~ To Nowhere Pt. 2
11:55 PM Strategy ~ Osmosis

Slow Magic: How To Run Away (Downtown Records, 2014)

September 11, 2014 at 8:34 pm | Posted in Reviews | Leave a comment

Slow Magic: How To Run Away

Slow Magic: How To Run Away

Anonymous masked producer Slow Magic stole the show when he opened for Gold Panda’s tour last year, and he’s embarking on a headlining tour now (and playing the Blind Pig on 10/1!). His recordings simply do not prepare you for his illuminating, thundering live presence, which involves electric voodoo masks, huge drums, and audience interaction. But taken as they are, his albums are enjoyable slices of post-chillwave bliss, with sunny melodies, chopped vocal samples (few actual lyrics, and usually they’re just the title repeated, as on “Let U Go” and “On Yr Side”), and electro-funk synths (especially on “Youth Group”), with a few somewhat trancey melodies thrown in (“Waited 4 U”). There’s moments where tracks seem downtempo and melancholy, but then switch to an uptempo dancey beat (as on “Bear Dance”). The album’s 6-minute final track is appropriately called “Closer”, and pulls out all the stops, with trap-influenced beats and ecstatic cut-up vocal samples, building to the album’s emotional climax, breaking it down, and then doing it again.

Damian Catera: Baroque Treasures (Praxis Classics, 2014)

September 10, 2014 at 10:05 pm | Posted in Reviews | Leave a comment

Damian Catera: Baroque Treasures

Damian Catera: Baroque Treasures

I’m not sure if Damian Catera is still a professor at Rutgers, but he was when I went there, and I saw him play a free concert that WRSU was presenting (in which Drop The Lime was booked but never showed up), and he played a noise set during the day to a small but oddly captivated audience. Catera was in a group called ConDemek in the ’80s and early ’90s, which released an LP on RRRecords in 1988, and he also collaborated with KK Null and released several albums on the Harsh House label. Since 2006, however, he’s been exploring deconstructions of baroque music, releasing an entire album of algorithmic variations on Bach’s Well Tempered Clavier in 2011. This release finds him tackling Handel, Vivaldi, Scarlatti and Albinoni. His take on Handel’s Water Music starts near-silently, slowly fading in with sliced-and-diced recognizable fragments of the melody, and ending up with a warm drone, with more pieces of the melody flaring up. “Vivaldi Concerto In G Minor Pop” starts with a disconcerting violin drone loop, then switches through several levels of time-folded-over manipulations of violins. “Albinoni Adagio For Strings & Organ” renders those instruments unrecognizable; there’s glitched-out classical guitar and insect-like buzzing, all being transformed and warped inside some sort of forcefield. “Scarlatti Sonata In D Minor” is 9 minutes of classical guitars tumbling and falling backwards and somehow upwwards throughout eternity, ending up a mountain of unspooled, rewound tape. “Vivaldi Concerto In G Minor” expands on the concept of the previous 5-minute “Pop” version, for 20 minutes of mind-melting string transformations, at turns drastic, dramatic, and bordering on noisy. Available at Bandcamp.

Show #255 – 9/6/14

September 6, 2014 at 12:06 pm | Posted in The Answer Is In The Beat | Leave a comment

Hour 1
3:00 AM Harmonia ~ Watussi ~ Musik Von Harmonia ~ Lilith
3:05 AM Conrad Schnitzler ~ Krautrock ~ Rot ~ Bureau B
3:25 AM Roedelius ~ Goldregen ~ Wenn Der Südwind Weht ~ Bureau B
3:27 AM Roedelius ~ Auf Leisen Sohlen ~ Wenn Der Südwind Weht ~ Bureau B
3:32 AM Don Slepian ~ Awakening (excerpt) ~ I Am The Center: Private Issue New Age Music In America, 1950-1990 ~ Light In The Attic
3:37 AM S U R V I V E ~ Omniverse ~ MNQ026 ~ Mannequin
3:42 AM Autechre ~ Pen Expers ~ Confield ~ Warp
3:49 AM Suitor ~ Gradient ~ Corndogs002 ~ Sly Fox Records
3:54 AM The Siege ~ Way Down Low ~ Conditions ~ We Are All Machines
Hour 2
4:02 AM Brian Chase ~ Melody Drum Drone ~ Drums & Drones ~ Pogus Productions
4:05 AM Longmont Potion Castle ~ Clown Motel ~ 9 ~ D.U. Records
4:10 AM Monogamy ~ track 19 ~ Anaconda 2 ~ cd-r
4:12 AM Failed Flowers ~ When You Said I Love You ~ Demo 2014 ~ tape
4:14 AM Circuit Breaker ~ Grey Materials ~ 12″ EP ~ Tombed Visions
4:19 AM Half Japanese ~ We Are Sure ~ Overjoyed ~ Joyful Noise
4:22 AM Cellular Chaos ~ Wrecquiem ~ Cellular Chaos ~ ugEXPLODE
4:24 AM Naomi Punk ~ California Truth ~ Television Man ~ Captured Tracks
4:25 AM Minus9 ~ Bloodbath ~ Drown ~ Flying Blood
4:27 AM The Cramps ~ Garbageman ~ Bad Music For Bad People ~ I.R.S.
4:31 AM Taylor Deupree ~ Live In Osaka ~ Lost & Compiled ~ 12k
4:38 AM Music Blues ~ It’s Not Going To Get Better ~ Things Haven’t Gone Well ~ Thrill Jockey
4:43 AM Botanist ~ Erythronium ~ VI: Flora ~ The Flenser
4:45 AM Coachwhips ~ UFO, Please Take Her Home ~ Get Yer Body Next Ta Mine ~ Castle Face
4:49 AM Ty Segall ~ The Clock ~ Manipulator ~ Drag City
4:51 AM Bill Baird ~ Skull Castle Decorator ~ Diamond Eyepatch ~ Moon Glyph
4:54 AM The Garment District ~ Soon We See Green ~ If You Take Your Magic Slow ~ Night People
4:58 AM Lawrence English ~ Wilderness Of Mirrors ~ Wilderness Of Mirrors ~ Room40
Hour 3
5:01 AM Quttinirpaaq ~ Malvert ~ The Wire Tapper 35 ~ The Wire
5:04 AM Land Observations ~ The Brenner Pass ~ The Grand Tour ~ Mute
5:09 AM Brian Eno/Karl Hyde ~ Moulded Life ~ High Life ~ Warp
5:14 AM Lia Ices ~ Creature ~ Ices ~ Jagjaguwar
5:18 AM Saturday’s Cab Ride Home ~ White Stone New Name ~ When We Were All There ~ self-released
5:21 AM God Help The Girl ~ Musician, Please Take Heed ~ God Help The Girl soundtrack ~ Milan
5:25 AM Mirel Wagner ~ What Love Looks Like ~ When The Cellar Children See The Light Of Day ~ Sub Pop
5:29 AM If, Bwana ~ Toys For Al ~ Red One ~ Pogus Productions
5:37 AM Khun Narin’s Electric Phin Band ~ Lai Sing ~ Khun Narin’s Electric Phin Band ~ Innovative Leisure
5:41 AM The Bug ~ Fat Mac ~ Angels & Devils ~ Ninja Tune
5:45 AM Mndsgn ~ Txt (MSGS) ~ Yawn Zen ~ Stones Throw
5:47 AM FaltyDL ~ Grief ~ In The Wild ~ Ninja Tune
5:50 AM Moiré ~ No Gravity ~ Shelter ~ Werkdiscs
5:56 AM Pjusk ~ Falmet ~ Solstøv ~ 12k

Evy Jane: Closer EP 12″ (Ninja Tune, 2014)

September 4, 2014 at 8:59 pm | Posted in Reviews | Leave a comment

Evy Jane: Closer EP 12"

Evy Jane: Closer EP 12″

I missed Evy Jane when they performed at SXSW last year, and then again when they played NXNE this year, but I was excited to see that they’d signed to Ninja Tune, because maybe soon they’d have more than just 2 songs out (those 2 songs being the equally stunning double A-side “Sayso” and “Ohso” from 2012). Now their debut 12″ for Ninja Tune is finally out and, well… The title track is nice enough, a really woozy bummer R&B ballad, but it still kind of feels like it’s walking in place rather than actually going somewhere. “Nothing So Great” mostly consists of slow vocals, and soft synth, with a trip-hop beat trudging in only during the last minute of the song. Very much a slow burn, but it just doesn’t really excite me that much. “Sosoft” is more minimal R&B, with sparsely used bass and cascading vocals, which is intriguing, but it still ends up feeling like half a song. “Worry Heart” introduces a dub riddim to the band’s sound, suggesting an interesting direction the band might take on their album, and is much more of a proper song. I’m still excited for their album, but this EP feels like a work in progress or B-sides, when their first single had 2 arresting songs right out of the gate.

Kidkanevil: My Little Ghost (flau/Project: Mooncircle, 2014)

September 4, 2014 at 8:23 pm | Posted in Reviews | Leave a comment

Kidkanevil: My Little Ghost

Kidkanevil: My Little Ghost

Kidkanevil has several albums of abstract, experimental hip-hop on various British and European labels, but for this album he aligns himself with Japanese label flau for something veering a little closer to playful, melodic IDM. Tracks like “Earth To G San” waste no time finding bright, shiny melodies and gloopy, skittery beats, and the sounds of excited children. “Inakunaru” has an intricate, uptempo rhythm and childlike Japanese vocals, with a bit more of anthemic but not quite danceable feel. flau mainstays Cuushe and Cokiyu guest on a few tracks, one each and one featuring both of them together; Cuushe adds ethereal vocals to “Butterfly/Satellite”, Cokiyu’s “Tomie” is a short music box-like instrumental, and then “All Is Not Lost” stretches out past 7 minutes, with more music box-like chiming, hard, crunchy, static-y beats, and more samples of children’s laughter. Bonus track “Tales Of Moonlight And Rain” features samples from Lullatone, and has their familiar digital raindrop melodies along with video game bleeps and micro-thumping beats. The whole album is as charming as anything you’d expect to hear from flau.

The Garment District: If You Take Your Magic Slow LP (Night People, 2014)

September 2, 2014 at 10:28 pm | Posted in Reviews | Leave a comment

The Garment District: If You Take Your Magic Slow LP

The Garment District: If You Take Your Magic Slow LP

Jennifer Baron was in at least two prolific ’90s/’00s indie bands: The Ladybug Transistor (who were affiliated with Elephant 6 and signed to Merge Records) and Saturnine (who I vaguely remember as being more folky and were on labels much smaller than Merge). The Garment District is her newest project and has released a tape on Night People and a 7″ on La Station Radar, and now this LP. Listening to this album, it wouldn’t surprise you to know that it came from an E6 alumni, but it goes in a lot of other directions than her previous bands. There’s retro poppy melodies, vintage keyboards, and some psychedelic aspects, but also some synth-heavy instrumentals that push it more into electronic territory, but they still sound home-recorded and lo-fi. Watch out for the false ending on opener “Secondhand Sunburn”. “Weird Birds and Strange Days” is kind of a drowsy psych instrumental, then “Bell Book and Candle” returns to vocals, with kind a post Pet Sounds/High Llamas sunny day lilt. “Cavendish on Whist” is a curious synth instrumental with some crashy beats and gnome-like pianos and synths. “Miraculous Metal” is a bedroom-disco/space-rock synth/guitar instrumental, which could fit alongside plenty of Bliss Out-era Darla bands (I’m thinking Füxa especially). “Soon We See Green” is another easygoing lo-fi Pet Sounds-y track, and “Song For Remy Charlip” is another curious, somewhat baroque synth instrumental, with flute and harpsichord synth patches and more expansive, washy tones towards the end. “June’s End” gets a bit more uptempo, and seems to change a few times, but not jarringly so; a nice little prog-pop instrumental. “Velvie Woolvine” is a drifty, sunny instrumental with bird sounds (seagulls?) squawking away. “Jonquil Place” ends the album on a jaunty note with another organ-heavy instrumental, which fades out nonchalantly.

v/a: Corndogs #2 12″ (Sly Fox Records, 2014)

September 1, 2014 at 11:13 pm | Posted in Reviews | Leave a comment

v/a: Corndogs #2 12"

v/a: Corndogs #2 12″

Newest white-label comp from Detroit’s mysterious Sly Fox Records, who released an excellent Appian/Segv split 12″ in 2012, a clear lathe cut Corndogs #1 12″ last year (which I haven’t heard), and now this one. The Appian track that opens this 12″ is just simply sublime crystalline Detroit house, rich in melody and inventively programmed, only settling into a solid 4/4 thump for the last minute or two of the track. Gerald Norton’s track is a sly garage-house shuffler with repeating vocals pleading to “tell Peter Parker that he ain’t got what I got.” Segv’s track adds tons of crazy echo to some basic, repetitive piano chords, yet it manages to stay clear of the usual dub-techno cliches. The disc ends with a track from newcomer Suitor, a murky, mysterious techno track with cryptic synth patterns and clicky hi-hats. Solid release from a quality-over-quantity Detroit label.

Music Blues: Things Haven’t Gone Well (Thrill Jockey, 2014)

August 30, 2014 at 3:12 pm | Posted in Reviews | Leave a comment

Music Blues: Things Haven't Gone Well

Music Blues: Things Haven’t Gone Well

Music Blues is the solo project of Stephan Tanner, bassist for Harvey Milk, a doom metal group I’ve heard a lot about but never listened to. Even without knowing the group’s history, this album still seems like the work of a side project; it’s instrumental, and the songs seem like sketches or ideas that haven’t been fleshed out into proper songs, whether or not they’re supposed to have vocals. Tracks like “Premature Caesarean Removal Delivery” and “Great Depression” slowly lurch from one chord to the next, and you expect it to turn into something, but it doesn’t. “Tears Tie Children” is 50 seconds of a slowed-down Crosby Stills & Nash sample, for no discernible reason. “Hopelessness and Worthlessness” goes through various angles of doomy guitar chords, before segueing into “Trying and Giving Up”, which does eventually settle into a more steady, recognizable groove. “Failure” is where he seems to get struck down the most, shrouded in swarms of echo and producing the harshest guitar sounds on the album. The swirling dirgecore of “It’s Not Going To Get Better” is the album’s centerpiece, and “Tremendous Misery Sets In” continues in this vein. Despite the songs’ increasingly negative, depressed titles, the actual songs seem to get more inspired, developed and energetic as the album progresses, and by “The Price Is Wrong”, it feels like there’s even boiling-hot peak-of-summer sun burning through the rainclouds. There’s even some gallopping drum fills that make you think it’s about to turn hardcore or speed-metal. The “bonus track” seems to have electronic drums and synths, suggesting that it’s a demo or even a taste of a different side project altogether. As side project-y and almost comically self-loathing as this album may seem, it definitely does channel negativity into something productive and enjoyable.

Taylor Deupree: Lost & Compiled (12k, 2014)

August 30, 2014 at 2:31 pm | Posted in Reviews | Leave a comment

Taylor Deupree: Lost & Compiled

Taylor Deupree: Lost & Compiled

Taylor Deupree has been ceaselessly active since the early ’90s, releasing dozens of albums and singles under many different projects, running the 12k label, mastering hundreds of recordings by other artists, and being a noted graphic designer. It’s inevitable that his prolific work schedule results in plenty of material that never gets released on an album, so this collection compiles alternate versions, sketches, and live material. The pieces on here generally consist of warm digital ambient drone, sometimes with soft guitar plucking (“July 032013”, “Sketch For February”), fuzzy digital flare-ups (“Field (Beta)”), and even foggy vocals (the end of “Journal (Rough)”). As with most of his recent material, this barely resembles the more overtly techno recordings he made his name releasing in the ’90s, but “Sea Last (06.05.08)” has some sporadic, incidental pulses that feel like beats. 2 consecutive tracks have “Sleep” in the title, and while “Sleepover (Alt)” sounds like it’s nuzzled in a do-not-disturb slumber, “So Sleepy” sounds a little bit more restless and insomniac. An odds-and-ends collection to be sure, but the differences between the tracks aren’t jarring enough that it doesn’t seem like a cohesive, soothing listen.

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