Author Archives: Peter - Page 109

Playlist 23.08.15

Another week, another show! Tonight we’ve got NEW! NECKS!, postpunk freejazz electroacoustic craziness, other discoveries from this month’s issue of The Wire, post-bass techno and experimental electronica.

LISTEN AGAIN if you dare… whether the podcast from here or the (stereo) stream from FBi.

It’s always an event when a new Necks album comes out. Will it feature ultra-minimal sound textures, krautrocky motorik grooves, will it be one of those rare albums with a few shorter tracks (like, 20 minutes rather than 60)? Their latest, Vertigo, is out in Australia on CD in a couple of weeks (Sept 11th) and it turns out that it’s a gorgeous-sounding experimental sound piece. There’s brief bursts of free piano & drums over long-form piano & bass drones, out-jazz bits and loud bits… But it all hangs together around a certain feel. I’m not sure it’s exactly vertiginous, but it’s not exactly a calm, comfortable listen either. As highly recommended as ever!

Earlier this year, The Necks’ pianist Chris Abrahams teamed up with Italian sound artist & vocalist Alessandro Bosetti for an album on the excellent Greek experimental label Unsounds. Ambient, glitched electronic textures and vocal layerings, spoken word, slippery piano – it’s beautiful stuff.

So I was reading the latest issue of The Wire this week (as a subscriber I get to read it on my iPad as soon as it comes out, and then dutifully file my print copy along with the other 20-odd years’ worth on the bottom of my CD shelves… *ahem*)… and there was an article on the fascinating English post-punk free jazz saxophonist and poet Ted Milton and his band Blurt. I was thinking that I had to check him out, when I read a sentence near the end referencing new work with an electronic producer called “Britton”, and I had to skip back through the pages to confirm that it was Sam Britton of Icarus – favourite post-drum’n’bass duo whose other half, Sam’s cousin Ollie Bown, is based in Sydney (and incidentally plays in bands with me).
There’s not nearly enough material from this combo available. I asked Sam and In Kharms Way has not been properly documented – tonight’s tracks are live versions streamable from the duo’s websiteOdes is a project that collects Milton’s collaborations outside of Blurt, and is available in a live rendering by Milton & Britton from Icarus’s label Not Applicable. Britton also produced the latest Blurt album, from 2010, which is angular post-punk and free jazz, with Milton’s saxophone squealing over almost-funk grooves, and his working-class poetry over the top – so, not that different from the work with Britton, albeit a bit more muscular and a bit less “sound-arty”. Milton’s voice is like a more together Mark E Smith, although this is probably rude to both artists.
It’s all fantastic, and in excellent news there is a new album on the way in which the duo are joined by Graham Lewis of Wire. Something to look forward to!

Now back to The Wire, who were the catalyst of this whole Milton / Britton discovery, and who also released with this issue their latest download comp Below The Radar Vol 21. So we have a few more discoveries, or at least special tracks… Map 71 sees the spoken word and singing of Lisa Jayne combined with the music production of Andy Pyne. It’s a nice segue from Milton’s work. The hypnotic percussion and scraping jazz drums of Pyne add to the disquieting aura of Jayne’s poetry and strangled singing.

Leafcutter John‘s new album Resurrection earlier this year was a welcome return for the artist after a long absence from recorded work. For the latest Below The Radar he reworks elements from that album (and many that never made it onto the album) into a 5-minute piece of ambient vocals and something like head-nodding acid techno. It’s a typical tangential left-turn for the artist, nicely done even if I can’t readily identify the connections to the album.

Finally from Below The Radar we hear a track from the new mini-album from Acre & Filter Dread, first release on experimental grime artist Visionists‘s Codes imprint of Bill Kouligas’ PAN. Filter Dread’s dabbled in junglist revival, and both he & Acre represent a kind of grime-meets-techno sound that’s coming up of late.

Dublin-via-Berlin duo Lakker put out one of the best techno albums of the year with Tundra, a few months ago. Coming up from the net label idm culture of the mid 2000s, they’ve found a good home with the legendary Belgian ambient/techno label R&S Records (home to Aphex Twin’s early ambient & techno works for instance) – and the Berlin techno sound can certainly be heard in their work as well. They’ve just put out a remix LP of Tundra tracks, one of which is from none other than one half of Lakker, Eomac. And my Google-fu is completely unable to uncover Lahun, but it’s a lovely take on the original, with Eileen Carpio‘s vocals layered in new ways, and the original’s pounding beats broken up.

Finally, we have a collaboration between two experimental electronic artists, English researcher Guy Birkin & US drone/post-bass artist Sun Hammer. They’ve been working together for a while (we heard a remix from last year up front), and came up with an interesting way of gamifying collaboration. The familiar act of sending files across the internet is turned into a kind of exploratory competition where each iteration is completed when both parties agree that it’s more complex than the previous. So from an initially very simple seed, interesting works arise, with a clear lineage between the pieces, although obviously there’s still enormous freedom with where they can take the pieces. It’s a little conceptually rigorous than Birkin’s work on symmetrical (or reversible) works, but a cool idea which is interesting to listen on the concept level but also good music.

The Necks – Vertigo (15 minute excerpt) [Fish of Milk]
Alessandro Bosetti & Chris Abrahams – Observatories [Unsounds]
The Odes (Ted Milton & Sam Britton) – Nogales [Not Applicable]
The Odes (Ted Milton & Sam Britton) – O! Pity Us! [Not Applicable]
Ted Milton & Sam Britton – The Incubating Period [unreleased, stream at Milton / Britton website]
Ted Milton & Sam Britton – The Incubating Period [unreleased, stream at Milton / Britton website]
Blurt The Bells [LTM]
The Odes (Ted Milton & Sam Britton) – Where You End [Not Applicable]
Map 71 – Laced [Blue Tapes courtesy The Wire]
Leafcutter John – Slab (rework) [reworking of material on Desire Path Recordings, courtesy The Wire]
Acre & Filter Dread – Blood Artist [PAN X CODES courtesy The Wire]
Lakker – Halite (Eomac remix) [R&S Records]
Lakker – Milch (feat. Eileen Carpio) [R&S Records]
Lakker – Milch (feat. Eileen Carpio) (Lahun remix) [R&S Records]
Sun Hammer – SH-remix-1c (by Guy Birkin) [Sun Hammer Bandcamp]
Guy Birkin & Sun Hammer – Complexification 01GB [Entr’acte]
Guy Birkin & Sun Hammer – Complexification 01GB [Entr’acte]
Guy Birkin & Sun Hammer – Complexification 02SH [Entr’acte]
Guy Birkin & Sun Hammer – Complexification 09GB [Entr’acte]
Guy Birkin & Sun Hammer – Complexification 03SH [Entr’acte]
Guy Birkin & Sun Hammer – Complexification 04GB [Entr’acte]
Guy Birkin & Sun Hammer – Complexification 10GB [Entr’acte]

Listen again — ~104MB

Playlist 16.08.15

Hey you! Electronics meet indie pop, grebo, and the weird outer reaches of metal tonight!

LISTEN AGAIN because your ears need the treatment… podcast here, stream on demand over there.

Only last week, we had a sneak preview of the excellent cross-continental collaboration that starts the show. As I said last week: Brisbane artists Subsea & Pale Earth have worked together a bit in the past. Subsea is the ambient electronic alias of Jim Grundy (also of Ektoise), and Pale Earth is Benjamin Thompson of indie/tronic legends The Rational Academy. They’re joined by London electronic producer & vocalist Kini, with an album of indietronica, crunchy electronic beats, glitchy textures, and altogether superb production all round.

Sydney’s Fabels have just put out a new single, which they will be launching soon around the east coast. Hiske Weijers is a visual artist and has played in psych rock bands, while Ben Aylward was lead singer in legendary Sydney shoegaze band Swirl. Together their music shares these influences but also has a hefty amount of ’80s post-punk, which we hear in this beautifully morose piece, with oh-so-European delivery.

The revival a few years ago of Pop Will Eat Itself as basically a new band fronted by Graham Crabb was a cause for as much consternation as joy for a lot fans (including myself). Clint Mansell has meanwhile made a name for himself as a well-regarded and in-demand soundtrack writer with many brilliant works under his belt, so it’s not surprise that he’s not that interested in being involved in a punky indie/hip-hop/electronic band – but the first “nu-Poppies” album didn’t really bode well for anything other than a fun-loving piece of slightly embarrassing retro.
So it’s interesting that between that first revival album and this new one, something’s triggered a whole lot of creative energy and anger – that something being the pretty dire political situation in the UK, I daresay. The Poppies were always forward-looking, combining their “grebo” riffage with samples galore, club/rave music, and of course their English take on hip-hop. The new album doesn’t exactly push in any iconoclastic musical directions, but almost 2 decades on from their last real album, it manages not to just feel like it’s looking back to the ’90s. Their snotty-nosed beginnings notwithstandings, anti-fascist politics were an important part of the old-school Poppies (“88 Seconds” below is a reference to a famous PBS broadcast about the horrific Greensboro massacre in 1979 by the KKK & US Nazis), and Graham Crabb’s EP1 Je Suis Crabbi takes this to its logical conclusion with a collection of ranty ditties set to mostly drum’n’bass beats. It’s fun, and the instrumental and (hilarious) spoken-word versions are a welcome addition to the EP.
Lyrically these releases are miles away from the slightly winceworthy previous nu-Poppies effort, and it’s entertaining hearing sardonic, pronoun-shifted references to old PWEI songs (“lift the lid on the things we did”, “it’s war that they got”) in there too.

What can you say about Pyramids? Classed as black metal despite not featuring much in the way of eldritch screaming, opting instead (mostly) for angelic vocals buried in a miasmah of double-kick rumbling drums and layers of guitar noise… It’s melodic, like a beautiful aria emerging from an active volcano in hell…? That’s about right. Their first album was released on the glorious Hydra Head in 2008 along with an incredible set of remixes that only fucked up the sound even further. Between that and their new “solo” album they’ve collaborated with various people including the equally transcendence-seeking doom band Nadja – from which album we hear an extract from a piece of spine-chilling noise-meets-acoustic song. “Bake me a funeral cake / Molly here she comes…”

Locrian could also be vaguely connected with black metal, along with doom, but have a long background in dark drone and experimental before being joined by Steven Hess on drums & electronics in 2009. Their last couple of albums on Relapse have seen them adopt shorter song structures with more “traditional” drums and riffage, and there’s a certain amount of the expected screaming in there, albeit often obscured by massive reverb and massive guitars & drums. Their back catalogue features a number of collaborations, including a stunning one with the wonderful Mamiffer (all tracks way too long to play tonight) and a revelatory album (for both bands) with the very exploratory black metal (among other things) Horseback.
Although I didn’t have time to explore that connection tonight, Steven Hess also plays in the very un-metal Pan•American and last year’s wonderful related Anjou project, among other things.

Subsea, Pale Earth and Kini – Recital [Pale Earth Bandcamp]
Subsea, Pale Earth and Kini – Choir [Pale Earth Bandcamp]
Subsea – Iris [Subsea Bandcamp]
Pale Earth – Queen Bee & Counterattack [Room40]
Pale Earth – Racey Leopard [Pale Earth Bandcamp]
Subsea, Pale Earth and Kini – Kick [Pale Earth Bandcamp]
Fabels – Liège/Montréal [Fabels Bandcamp]
Pop Will Eat Itself – 21st Century English Civil War [only available from Shop Will Eat Itself]
Pop Will Eat Itself – The Fuses Have Been Lit [RCA/Cherry Red]
Pop Will Eat Itself – 88 Seconds… & Still Counting [RCA/Cherry Red]
Je Suis Crabbi – Bend Over Boris [only available from Shop Will Eat Itself]
Je Suis Crabbi – Pouring Perfume on a Pig Instrumental [only available from Shop Will Eat Itself]
Pop Will Eat Itself – Set Sail for Death [only available from Shop Will Eat Itself]
Pyramids – In Perfect Stillness, I’ve Only Found Sorrow [Profound Lore]
Pyramids – The House Is Like Any Other World [Hydra Head]
Pyramids – The Echo of Something Lovely (James Plotkin remix) [Hydra Head]
Pyramids with Nadja – Another War (10 minute excerpt)_ [Hydra Head]
Pyramids – I Have Four Sons, All Named For Men We Lost To War [Profound Lore]
Locrian – An Index of Air [Relapse]
Locrian – Obsolet Elegy in Effluvia and Dross [At War With False Noise/Small Doses]
Locrian – Coprolite [Relapse]
Locrian – Eternal Return [Relapse]
Locrian – KXL III [Relapse]
Locrian – Dark Shales [Relapse]

Listen again — ~58.2MB

Playlist 09.08.15

Postrock, noise, drill’n’bass, doom, indietronica… we’ve got quite the selection for you tonight!

LISTEN AGAIN via the usual channels – here for podcast, there for streaming in stereo.

Back in 2008, I chose as one of my albums of the year the debut from Melbourne artist Mirrored Silver Sea. Mostly the solo work of Tim Condon, it was a sweeping concoction of noise & ambient, with electronics, guitars, drum machines and even strings in there – and just what I wanted for Utility Fog.
Not long after, Condon moved to Toronto, leaving most of his musical gear in Australia, and Mirrored Silver Sea was no more. But I’m glad for my initial encouragement, as Condon has moved on to form at least two new acts in Toronto, and Fresh Snow have already put out a fantastic debut album. Their new EP WON is coming out soon and tonight we heard the first track from it. It broadens the scope a little from the noisy kraut/psych-rock of their debut, and I’m lucky enough to have heard next year’s second album ONE (uh, yeah, I know) which is an even more eclectic beast – I can’t wait to be able to start playing it to you!

Brisbane artists Subsea & Pale Earth have worked together a bit in the past. Subsea is the ambient electronic alias of Jim Grundy (also of Ektoise), and Pale Earth is Benjamin Thompson of indie/tronic legends The Rational Academy. They’re joined on a shortly forthcoming EP by London vocalist Kini, and tonight’s track is a nice piece of glitchy drill’n’bass pop.

Changing pace a little, we head to Edinburgh (by way of US label Lost Tribe Sound) to hear some new remixes from Graveyard Tapes aka Euan McMeeken and Matthew Collings. Their album White Rooms from last year superbly mixed emotional pinao-based indie songwriting with surges of noise and Talk Talk-style ambience. It’s good to be able to revisit that along with some new remixes – the forthcoming remix album features artists like Benoît Pioulard, Dag Rosenqvist (ex-Jasper TX) and William Ryan Fritch as well as the artists featured tonight.

Next up, the debut album from Insect Ark, the new(ish) solo project of Dana Schechter of Angels of Light and Bee & Flower. There are hints of this dark sound in those other bands, but nothing to quite prepare you for the heavy doom riffs, detuned guitar chords and massive drum machine-plus-bass guitar rhythm section (all played by Schechter). It’s quite a revelation.

Insect Ark also appear on a compilation that’s just been released on Bandcamp to help raise funds for Keith Utech of Utech Records, a much-loved dark ambient/metal/drone/noise label, whose wife Kim sadly succumbed to breast cancer last month. With two young kids to care for and the costs of her care as well, it’s pretty hard going and he won’t be able to run the label for a while – so 41 excellent artists connected with the label have donated exclusive tracks to the compilation to help raise funds. With artists like Nadja, Mothlite, Locrian, thisquietarmy and those featured tonight, it should be a no-brainer right?
We’ve got a beautiful piece of minimalist postpunk electronics from Italy’s Architeuthis Rex, a moving piece of country-tinged dirge-rock from Horseback‘s Jenks Miller, and some more of the incredible processed baritone ukulele of Kevin Hufnagel that I featured a little while ago. Yes.

Hufnagel’s processed acoustics segue nicely into US ex-pat jazz musician Erik Griswold‘s captivating prepared piano pieces. We recently heard Griswold as part of the wonderful Daughter’s Fever project. Here, he accentuates the percussive and sometimes atonal qualities of the objects placed inside his piano, but his compositions are beautifully melodic even in their minimalist, repetitive shapes.

When World’s End Girlfriend (sincerely one of my favourite musicians in the world) formed his Virgin Babylon Records I never would have expected it to last 5 years (and counting) and release such an impressive array of mostly Japanese artists. It’s now definitely a label to watch, with twisted J-pop, postrock, metal, idm, post-classical and more passing through its doors. They’re celebrating 5 years with the compilation One Minute Older, which confusingly features tracks up to 1:30 long, but with 50 tracks you can’t complain that a few are longer than expected! We started with a soft, glitchy number from mergrim, then a bombastic bit of idm from legend COM.A, and some cut-up glitchtronica from でんの子P (pronounced “den-no-ko P”). Japanese poet BOOL gives us a short number produced by World’s End Girlfriend himself, and then we have a gorgeous glitched choir from hatis noit, and a typical genre mashup from Vampillia, with classical strings, ambient textures and metal insanity. I took the opportunity to pull out some of the goodies I picked up at their Sydney show a few months back – a self-released CD single and a cassette release featuring a remix by Fennesz – of a track originally featuring Jarboe, whose ghostly vocals can still be felt here and there. Finally we heard from the junk pop, indiepunk clatter of bronbaba, with some short, angular songs from their album neo tokyo and from the new compilation.

Kashiwa Daisuke has released an album of impressionist piano pieces on Virgin Babylon, but also produces classical-meets-drill’n’bass-meets-glitch in a very World’s End Girlfriend style. His album 9 Songs was released on Piana‘s label guns ‘N girls records, featuring herself on vocals, and while it’s disturbingly J-pop in places, it’s also got all the manic breakbeats, stop-starts and glitches that you could want (plus some ambient piano bits and string arrangements), especially on a few tracks.

And finally, there’s a new album (finally!) from Japanese postrock legends toe. They’re more from the Mice Parade school of postrock than say MONO or Mogwai, with jangly indie guitars and jazzy, dancey drumming. They’re very popular in Asia, for good reason, and are gaining fans in the rest of the world. Hopefully an Australian tour will come…

Fresh Snow – Proper Burial (feat. Carmen Elle) [Hand Drawn Dracula]
Subsea, Pale Earth and Kini – Comet Moth [forthcoming]
Graveyard Tapes – Sometimes The Sun Doesn’t Want To Be Photographed (Bastardgeist remix) [Lost Tribe Sound]
Graveyard Tapes – Dulcitone Grasses [Lost Tribe Sound]
Graveyard Tapes – Could You Really Kill? [Lost Tribe Sound]
Graveyard Tapes – Ruins (Fieldhead remix) [Lost Tribe Sound]
Insect Ark – The Collector [Autumnnsongs/Insect Ark Bandcamp]
Insect Ark – Octavia [Autumnnsongs/Insect Ark Bandcamp]
Architeuthis Rex – Pond of Heaven [Utech Family Benefit]
Jenks Miller – Called Home [Utech Family Benefit]
Kevin Hufnagel – Hallucination II [Utech Family Benefit]
Erik Griswold – Pleasure principle [Room40]
Erik Griswold – Hammer and tongs [Room40]
Erik Griswold – Hover [Room40]
mergrim – Silent [Virgin Babylon Records]
COM.A – YahiroHole [Virgin Babylon Records]
でんの子P – 60秒で○チャ○チャしたい [Virgin Babylon Records]
BOOL – will [Virgin Babylon Records]
hatis noit – chuchr [Virgin Babylon Records]
Vampillia – docomo [Virgin Babylon Records]
Vampillia – Micci is Stupid [self-released]
Vampillia – sea (fennesz remix) [Virgin Babylon Records]
bronbaba – 優柔不断妄想中 [Virgin Babylon Records]
bronbaba – リアルデス [Virgin Babylon Records]
bronbaba – blue [Virgin Babylon Records]
Kashiwa Daisuke – The spider’s thread (remix ver.) (feat. Piana) [guns ‘N girls records]
toe – A Desert Human [Topshelf Records/toe Bandcamp]
toe – The World According To [Topshelf Records/toe Bandcamp]

Listen again — ~107MB

Playlist 02.08.15

Very electronic Utility Fog tonight, from very experimental to almost straight dancefloor sounds.

LISTEN and groove AGAIN to the podcast here, or the stream at FBi.

We start tonight with some selections from an incredible selection of “ordinary remixes” by Buttress O’Kneel. Why “ordinary”? Because Melbourne’s riot grrl of breakcore mashups is best known for joyfully illegal sampling across the spectrum from pop to movies to TV & radio broadcasts. She first came to note for me making some powerful longform radio pieces for FBi‘s Sunday Night At The Movies (now moved to Thursday nights as the wonderful Ears Have Ears), themselves made up of mashed-up songs, splattered breakbeats and documentaries. But this mysterious artist had also been releasing masses of mashup and breakcore-ish material on CDRs via a Melbourne postcode for some time, and continues to do so sporadically today.
The remixes appearing on this latest album are all authorised in one form or another – commissioned by the artists or remixed from publically available material in the case of The Blacksmoke Organisation (a KLF-affiliated guerilla music act of sorts). Many of these have not been released before, including – embarrassingly – 5 (count ’em) brilliant remixes of my own band FourPlay String Quartet (from a remix album that’s been long delayed for many reasons).

Buttress O’Kneel also had a long working relationship with Sydney experimental artist & academic Shannon O’Neill (no relation), who released a few of her albums on his Alias Frequencies label. They both have a strong interest in appropriation in art, although their musical approaches are very different. Shannon O’Neill has also been very involved in experimental radio, going back to the early ’90s (or earlier?) as half of groundbreaking freeform radio show Wake Up And Listen (also sometimes a recording artist) – and he also used to fill in on Utility Fog when he was based in Sydney! The BO’K remix here is a fantastic piece of darkside jungle, great for it to see the light of day.

Shannon also appears here under the alias of “Time Being” – at least it’s him according to Discogs – with a track from Tom Ellard‘s Oompa Loopma Riot 2015 compilation, intended as a continuation of his Terse Tapes label from the 1980s. I somehow missed it in April (if that is really when it came out), and it has a great selection of weirdo electronic artists from around the globe, including Ellard himself and also his old Severed Heads partner (for a time) Garry Bradbury appearing as Chlamydia Headlock. Final track from the compilation tonight is from UK ambient/experimental artist The Revenant Sea, an alias of psych rock/folk band Wizards Tell Lies.

We had a little feature last week on UK noise-folk duo Ambrosia(@), and just in time, they released their new album Neacute Veacute this week, so you get more of their sounds tonight. They cultivate in a way an almost naïve primitivist electronic sound, with simple sequenced synths and drum machines – except that it can all suddenly turn around into glitchy soundscapes, head-nodding grooves and gorgeous floaty vocals. Kind of barmy in the best possible way.

Next up Jamie Vex’d, who has for a while now been releasing music as Kuedo. The initial material, like some of the Jamie Vex’d stuff, seemed not totally my cup of tea, but his duo (with Roly Porter, collaborating on one track here) Vex’d made groundbreaking dark industrial dubstep back in the day, and there’s plenty of cyberpunk darkness and rain-swept streets in this new material, as well as a hefty amount of juke influence. Like so many artists today (including Roly Porter I believe), he’s relocated to Berlin, and it’s there he met Australian ex-pat Phoebe Kiddo, who contributes to the last selection from his new EP under the name Mind:Body:Fitness.

Also based in Berlin is the experimental electronic artist M.E.S.H., whose chopped-up, broken-down breakbeats draw from techno, glitch, idm and the post-bass/post-r’n’b world. It often approaches danceable forms, but tends to shy away, glitching and cutting away or the tempo suddenly shifting. Probably the Infra-Dusk/Infra-Dawn EP from earlier this year is the most regular his beats get, and even then it tends to syncopate in weird ways. It’s undeniably complex and smart stuff, and the new album has been touted as among the best this year in various places.

Jazzy dubstep melodist Silkie returns after a break, now on Distal‘s new Anarchostar label… He’s always been a supremely talented musician, keeping the dubstep faith with big basslines and head-nodding beats, but bringing a deep warmth through jazz harmonies on the keyboards, live-sounding breakdowns and heaps of feeling. On the new album he’s felt free to stray from core dubstep a lot of the time, into more explictly funk & jazz fusion-influenced material, so you get dubstep-heavy basslines accompanying uplifting world-funk… but also some lovely dark & tasty dubstep in the old school style – and one crazy jungle-fueled track near the end, kind of drill’n’bass Silkie style! Althought it’s not all as much to my taste as his past work, it’s unquestionably brilliantly done and should gain him lots more fans.

Buttress O’Kneel vs FourPlay String Quartet – 2 + 2 = 5 (Thoughtcrime Mix) [Buttress O’Kneel Bandcamp]
Buttress O’Kneel vs The Blacksmoke Organisation – Danger: Global Warming (Hot Hot Hot Mix) [Buttress O’Kneel Bandcamp]
Buttress O’Kneel vs Shannon O’Neill – Let The Dead Bury The Dead (Scary Questions Mix) [Buttress O’Kneel Bandcamp]
Time Being – Cosmic Ballet [Terse Tapes]
Chlamydia Headlock – Robespierre [Terse Tapes]
The Revenant Sea – Arche (for Krzysztof) [Terse Tapes]
Ambrosia(@) – Secretariat II [Bomb Shop]
Ambrosia(@) – White Subjects in Colour (partially under speaking) [Bomb Shop]
Ambrosia(@) – These Two Thoughts [Bomb Shop]
Kuedo – Event Tracking Across Populated Terrain (feat. Roly Porter) [Knives]
Kuedo – Border State Collapse [Knives]
Kuedo – Eyeless Angel Intervention (feat. Mind:Body:Fitness) [Knives]
M.E.S.H. – Pietous Gate [PAN]
M.E.S.H. – Thorium [PAN]
M.E.S.H. – Scythians [PAN]
M.E.S.H. – Infra-Dawn [Black Ocean]
M.E.S.H. – Methy Imbiß [PAN]
Silkie – Cascada [Anarchostar]
Silkie – Beauty [Deep Medi]
Silkie – Taxi Mi Get [Deep Medi]
Silkie – Anymusik [Deep Medi]
Silkie – Entrapment [Anarchostar]

Listen again — ~58.2MB