Category Archives: General - Page 24

Playlist 09.10.22

Warped, theory-laden hip-hop, industrial sounds a’plenty, electronic pop, jungle and dubstep, glitched folk from black-metal, African ragga and IDM tonight.

LISTEN AGAIN and your head will explode (in a good way). Podcast here, stream on demand @ FBi.

MSRMNT – Substance is Subject [MSRMNT Bandcamp]
MSRMNT – Fantasy [MSRMNT Bandcamp]
Starting tonight with something unique. You could call this industrial hip-hop, but we can’t ignore that the lyrics are drawing on some pretty high-concept theory, from Hegelian dialectics to Marxist politics to Lacanian psychoanalysis. This is all done, mind you, with sardonic humour, with entertaining spoken word samples, and Australian-accented rapping alongside noisy, ramshackle beats made from hardware and homemade found-sound samples. The closest thing I can think of is Curse ov Dialect, but MSRMNT comes in on a different tangent of his own. It’s a pseudonym of a member of a well-loved Aussie indie rock band, but that’s all I’m sayin’.

Terrificus – Tylex’s Decadent Sitcom [self-released]
Shaggy and Tyler are Terrificus, making industrial garage, as they call it, out of Eora/Sydney. It’s insane in the best way, especially when they take to the stage, but during lockdown Tyler took it upon himself to learn production in his garage. Both members have been active in the Sydney scene for a while – you can find Shaggy around Utopia Records, and both are part of Face Command as well as MC Filth Wizard. The more aliases the better, the more insanity the better!

Penny – Crucial [Thanatosis/Bandcamp]
“Crucial” is the debut single of Stockholm-based Penny Elvira Loftéen, once a child actress, who co-produced this song with fellow Swede Anton Toorell with extra synth from busy experimental musician Alex Zethson, who also runs the Thanatosis label. The glitchy vocals and throbbing bass express the idea of “crucial” words from someone to bring a person back from a paralysing state of anxiety.

Aphir – Pomegranate Tree [Provenance Records/Bandcamp]
Aphir – Equinox [Provenance Records/Bandcamp]
The new album from Becki Whitton’s Aphir is more long-awaited than it may seem. Although Whitton released a collection of improvised, processed vocals last year called Plastichoir, and the wonderful album Republic of Paradise in 2020, the latter album actually replaced the original release of Pomegranate Tree, which Whitton considered at the time not to reflect the strange feeling of that early pandemic time. The album has thus spent three years being overhauled and has benefited for Whitton’s epic vocal experimentation which resulted in Plastichoir, as well as her ever-growing experience mixing and mastering work of her musician colleagues. Whitton draws from the choral masses of 17th century composer William Byrd, a connection between her current songwriting and the church experiences of her youth. The album is about her eventual loss of faith, the resulting disconnection from the community around her Christian church – and the continued need for connection and community.

Jessica O’Donoghue – Awakening [Art As Catharsis/Bandcamp]
Jessica O’Donoghue – Good Grief [Art As Catharsis/Bandcamp]
We follow immediately with another powerful album from an Australian woman, Jessica O’Donoghue. The classically-trained O’Donoghue combines moving folk songs, drones, electronic beats, string arrangements and transcendent vocals to tell stories of female resilience, from the legendary to the very personal. The album captures her unique talents, with help from the brilliant creative (and family) partnership of Alyx Dennison and David Trumpmanis.

Liturgy – संसार [Thrill Jockey/Bandcamp]
Hunter Ravenna Hunt-Hendrix has often been a controversial figure in black metal, with her band Liturgy not just straying from whatever “real black metal” should be, but often doing so in a structured way that Hunt-Hendrix theorised and proselytised about in essays. At this point, nobody expects a Liturgy album to be anything except whatever complex vision Hunt-Hendrix has, often influenced by her theological studies, and musically drawing from classical composition, folk, and glitchy production techniques. Liturgy have just announced double album 93696 to be released in March 2023 – quite a long wait! In the meantime, the 15-minute title track has been released on a new EP As the Blood of God Bursts the Veins of Time, split into three continuous tracks but also accompanied by the highly contrasting “संसार” (“world” in Hindi), in which acoustic guitar and kind-of clean vocals meet stuttering digital edits.

Senyawa, Lawrence English, Aviva Endean, Peter Knight, Helen Svoboda, Joe Talia – Perjamuan (The Supper) [Room40/Bandcamp]
Collaborative work is the bread & butter, the soul of what Indonesian metal duo Senyawa do. Wukir Suryadi constantly creates bizarre instruments to make industrial noises with, while Rully Shabara has a highly powerful, instantly recognizable voice in any context. Last year, with the pandemic doggedly refusing to go away, Room40‘s Lawrence English, in Brisbane, was discussing the regional effects of the pandemic with Melbourne sound-artist & trumpeter Peter Knight. They reached out to Rully and Wukir and started exchanging recordings. Along with various other Australian-based musicians – clarinettist Aviva Endean (also on harmonic flute), double bassist Helen Svoboda (also contributing vocals), and drummer Joe Talia – they made music via a kind of deconstructed improvisation. Knight also manipulated sounds on a Revox tape machine, and English played organ as well as corralling the sounds into completed pieces. What results is an often dark and foreboding work, but also quite moving; different from whatever a “normal” Senyawa recording might be, and different from the individual work of any of the artists.

clipping. and Speaker Music – Say the Name [_] Something Underneath (Speaker Music – Longsuffering Remix) [Sub Pop/Bandcamp]
clipping. and Stazma – Say The Name (Stazma‘s Driller Bees Remix) [Sub Pop/Bandcamp]
And clipping.‘s REMXNG onslaught continues, with 2.3 out of four parts released this week. DeForrest Brown, Jr’s Speaker Music chops up Daveed Diggs’ voice because this is clearly irresistable, along with his scattershot drum machine beats. And French breakcore producer Stazma aka The Junglechrist aka Repeater Eater brings not just jungle breaks but guitar riffs to the table with his version of the much-remixed “Say The Name”.

Djinn – Tempest [RuptureLDN/Bandcamp]
Appropriately enough for a tour of the solar system, London drum’n’bass label Rupture‘s “Planets” series has taken a while to get to the big gas giants, but this week both Saturn and Jupiter are covered. Each 12″ is a mini-compilation, with some artists taking more directly to the planetary theme than others. Manchester’s Djinn references the storm that powers Jupiter’s Great Red Spot with her absolutely storming track “Tempest”.

Alan Johnson – Stillness [Sneaker Social Club]
Tom Neilan and Gareth Kirby adopted the very normcore name “Alan Johnson” to release bass-heavy music sporadically over the last 9 or 10 years. Their latest EP Stillness comes courtesy of Sneaker Social Club, sitting somewhere around dubstep-land, and the title track makes use of the legendary Poem by Count Ossie from 1972, while muscular beats drop in & out across its 5 minutes.

Hippoflip – Assif [FKOF/Bandcamp]
French producer Hippoflip turns in only his second release via FKOF (Fat Kid On Fire), a digital EP that leans nicely on the “dub” aspect of dubstep.

Commodo – Widebody [Mysterious Trax]
Commodo – cclarity [Mysterious Trax]
After the brilliant Deft 1s for Black Acre earlier this year, Commodo inaugurates his new Mysterious Trax imprint with an EP that follows suit with a collection of tracks that owe clear allegiance to his dubstep/grime roots, but are built from postpunk bass guitar riffs and weird jazz-inflected stabs. For the last few years Commodo has been following a path all his own, taking UK bass into strange noir TV soundtrack lands – you’re missing out if you’re not following.

Second. – Rasuba [TemeT Music/Bandcamp]
More French bass music next, from Simo Cell‘s TemeT Music. The Rasuba EP is the first solo work from Victor Paud as Second., better known as one half of techno duo Society of Silence. Much like the label boss, Second. is not tethered to any particular tempo or genre except for bass and infectious rhythm. There’s a bit of IDM in there and some ambient textures along with syncopated beats, all very fun.

SLIKBACK X SWORDMAN – 22GAZA [Slikback Bandcamp]
The latest drop from Kenya’s Slikback on his Bandcamp finds him joining with Ugandan dancehall-influenced master rapper Swordman Kitala, showing how versatile Slikback is – always an experimental edge, but always with hard-hitting rhythms, comfortably supporting Swordman here, who himself works comfortably with pretty experimental beats much of the time.

Clark – Re-Scar Kiln [Warp/Bandcamp]
Clark – Herzog [Warp/Bandcamp]
There was a time when Clark was a youngster playing in the venerable Warp stable – when he joined as Chris Clark around 2001 with some early albums that showed bright talent combining Aphex-style quasi-classical piano and, well, Aphex-style melodic IDM. But in 2006 Clark came out with the extraordinary Body Riddle, certainly still IDM but with incredibly organic, physical-feeling drums and chiming melodies that seemed like electronic music come to life. Around that time, there were a series of surrounding releases, including 3″ CDs, EPs and download tracks, and some of that material is now compiled on 05-10, along with some unreleased contemporaneous material – also released with the remastered original album as Body Double. “Re-Scar Kiln” comes from the 3″ Throttle Furniture, the point at which Clark lost the “Chris” and became mononymic. There’s some great stuff among the extra material, although none of it quite reaches the genius of Body Riddle.

Tim Koch – Nocturne [CPU Records]
Tim Koch – Vowelstwo [CPU Records]
Adelaide’s own Tim Koch has been on the IDM tip since before young Chris Clark – his excellent Isolated Rhythm Chock came out in 1999. Out on Sheffield’s Central Processing Unit in a couple of weeks is his latest IDM release – as meanwhile he’s stretched into granular ambient, electronic shoegaze, glitched folktronica and more. On Volplaning the melodies are sweet and the beats are crunchy, and all is well in the world.

Listen again — ~204MB

Playlist 02.10.22

Various variants of song in all its experimental glory tonight, as well as other genre-mashing and electronic delights.

LISTEN AGAIN to the sounds of tomorrow – today! Stream on demand from FBi Radio, podcast here.

Julia Sabra and Fadi Tabbal – Signs [Beacon Sound/Bandcamp/Ruptured Music/Bandcamp]
Julia Sabra and Fadi Tabbal – Still Life [Beacon Sound/Bandcamp/Ruptured Music/Bandcamp]
Out in a couple of weeks from excellent Portland label Beacon Sound and great Beirut label Ruptured Music is the beautiful album Snakeskin from Lebanese duo Julia Sabra and Fadi Tabbal. Sabra is one third of dream pop trio Postcards, all of whose releases have been produced by Tabbal. Inevitably it’s deeply influenced by the massive Beirut port explosion of August 2020 that left hundreds dead, thousands injured, and destroyed countless people’s homes, but it also references other events from the region: the Palestinian uprising and Israeli crackdown in Sheikh Jarrah, and Azerbaijan’s invasion of the Nagorno-Karabakh region of Armenia. Sabra’s soft voice expresses tragedy and loss, and the duo bring glitches and drones along with dubby Arabic percussion at times, all embedded in reverb. At times the more aggressive aspects of Postcards’ shoegazey rock emerge, but mostly it’s more quietly compelling. Don’t sleep on it.

Dominic Voz – Dan Ryan [Accidental Records/Bandcamp/Beacon Sound/Bandcamp]
A couple of weeks ago we premiered some tracks from Dominic Voz‘s album Right to the City, also co-released by Beacon Sound, with none other than Matthew Herbert’s Accidental Records. The album’s out today, and I wanted to showcase this track, named for Dan Ryan Jr, who helped construction of expressways around Chicago including the Dan Ryan Expressway, opened shortly after Ryan’s death. The track combines all the album’s characteristics, from sliding synths supported by classical instruments to urban field recordings and glitched rhythms.

Oren Ambarchi – III [Drag City/Bandcamp]
Oren Ambarchi – IV [Drag City/Bandcamp]
Ever since 2012’s Audience of One, Sydney/Melbourne experimental hero Oren Ambarchi has had a strain of rhythmic-melodic longform work based around repetitive patterns on guitar, shimmering ride cymbal and other instrumentation. I think of it as a form of krautrock, but it’s as much influenced by Ambarchi’s childhood love of heavy metal, minimalist composition, techno, funk fusion and more. The latest, Shebang, is constructed from recordings made around the world by Ambarchi’s collaborators, who include Joe Talia on drums as usual, Jim O’Rourke on synths, Chris Abrahams with a characteristically restrained piano solo, Johan Berthling on double bass, Julia Reidy on 12-string guitar (seemingly tuned in an orthodox manner here rather than just intonation), the legendary BJ Cole on pedal steel, and Sam Dunscombe on bass clarinet. These are all musicians whose work, like Ambarchi’s, extends from the most challenging climes of anti-music through to expressions of harmoniousness your least adventurous family members could enjoy. Shebang, despite existing as one 35-minute piece (divided into four for digital), is probably the most approachable yet of Ambarchi’s compositions, despite also being pieced together from separate musicians’ recordings during the pandemic, with counter-intuitive elements like guitar-triggered piano riffs blending into the whole undetectably. It’s a wonder.

Keeley Forsyth – Wash (Yann Tiersen Remix) [The Leaf Label/Bandcamp]
Keeley Forsyth – Limbs (Simon Fisher Turner Remix) [The Leaf Label/Bandcamp]
A couple of weeks ago I played the brilliant Ben Frost remix of British actor-turned-singer Keeley Forsyth. The Phantom Limbs remix EP is now out in its entirety, and it’s all just as good. Yann Tiersen we’ve heard quite a bit on the show – if you think he’s just the Amelie guy you’re missing out on French chanson melded with indie, postrock, electronic and “neo-classical” before there was such a thing. Here he shows that he can still surprise, with soft and then heavy drones supporting Forsyth’s powerful voice. On a completely different tangent, the brilliant sound-artist Simon Fisher Turner (also once an actor, turned pop musician, turned experimental sound-artist) turns in a sparse glitch-space in which to situate Forsyth’s avant-garde song.

Saint Abdullah & Eomac – In One Corner The Male Relatives [Other People/Bandcamp]
Lakker – Thought, Voice & Hand [Lakker Bandcamp]
Yes, here’s another album we previewed a few weeks back – the collaboration between New York-based Iranian brothers Saint Abdullah and Dublin’s Eomac. Patience Of A Traitor came out this week from Nicolas Jaar’s Other People. Those familiar with Saint Abdullah’s work will find this takes a similar tack, with field recordings and sampled voices in Farsi and Arabic weaving through electronic textures and beats. The brothers’ IDM tendencies are brought out here by Eomac. That’s Ian McDonnell, who is one half of Lakker with Dara Smith aka Arad, and we’ve been hearing a bit of Lakker through the year as they release an EP every month. LKRTRX009 has just come out for September, and it’s a bit less on the fierce side, but still repurposing rave signatures with bass and beats.

Eusebeia – Hopes + Dreams [Livity Sound]
Wiltshire’s Seb Uncles has been releasing modern jungle & drum’n’bass along with some slower-paced music for a few years as Eusebeia. It’s a slight surprise to find him on Bristol’s Livity Sound, who generally inhabit the dubstep-techno-house space, but jungle is certainly part of their make-up, and creative genre-crossers like Forest Drive West have found homes for their music there. On the Cosmos EP there are a couple of full-on drumfunk numbers like this one among ambient tunes and more trip-hop-paced pieces. As good an intro as any to the Eusebeia sound.

Kuedo – Ant City (µ-Ziq Remix) [Planet µ/Bandcamp]
Jamie Teasdale was known as Jamie Vex’d for a little while after his groundbreaking industrial dubstep duo Vex’d, with Roly Porter, dissolved sometime around 2008 when the pair moved to different cities. A couple of years later he’d settled on Kuedo as a split from the dubstep history. His first album under that name was the sci-fi Severant, reissued this month on 2LP with a bonus track. While the music has more to do with classic synth soundtracks than the UK dance continuum, Planet µ boss Mike Paradinas’ µ-Ziq is first cab off the rank for the associated Severant Remixes, sending the Blade Runneresque sounds into overdrive on the junglist tip of his recent 2022 releases.

clipping. and ZULI – Make Them Dead (ZULI‘s Life After Death Remix) [Sub Pop/Bandcamp]
A mere week after REMXNG 2.1, clipping. have followed it up with the second out of 4 remix EPs coming this year. There’s a very nice junglist remix by LA’s Baseck on there, but I’m not going to pass up the opportunity to play Cairo’s ZULI, here mashing the amen breaks at hip-hop tempo and somehow scrambling Daveed Diggs’ vocals in amongst the rhythmic stuff.

Mindy Meng Wang 王萌 & Tim Shiel – My Love Is Not What It Was 嗔念 (3ASiC Remix) [Music In Exile/Bandcamp]
Nervous Energy, the collaboration between Melbourne-based guzheng player Mindy Meng Wang 王萌 and tireless electronic producer and broadcaster Tim Shiel, was one of the most exciting releases of last year. MMW’s beautiful, creative playing on the ancient Chinese zither, her dedication to bringing the guzheng into new musical contexts, brought out the best in Shiel, with four tracks of the best kind of fusion. Now each track is remixed, one by Tim Shiel himself, one by Brisbane violinst & contemporary musician Flora Wong, one from Sydney-born, London-based pan-Asian musician Justin Tam aka Tzekin and finally Shenzhen-based bass producer 3ASiC. Each takes the compositions in their own directions, and while the originals are untouchable, this is a lovely way of revisiting and extending the collaborative works.

Madobe Rika – ばく [Virgin Babylon/Bandcamp]
Madobe Rika – 炉心融解(cover) [Madobe Rika Bandcamp]
So, who is Madobe Rika? She is a virtual girl. Virgin Babylon, who have just signed her, claim they don’t even know who she is. Or should I say “she”? The Baklava EP up on Virgin Babylon’s Bandcamp is a three-track Pay What You Want introduction to her music, with tracks from her two OpenWindow volumes. The second track I played today comes from last year’s OpenWindow vol.2 and is a cover of “炉心融解” (“Meltdown”) by Kagamine Ren, a Vocaloid and obviously a virtual girl herself. The song is actually by producer iroha(sasaki) and you can see the video here – it’s demented enough in itself (although there are many versions of the song so I can’t be sure which this even is), but Madobe Rika takes it into full breakcore territory, like much of her music. Vocals that could almost be real until that zoom up into stratospheric pitch, sentimental melodies splattered into concrete. You can see why World’s End Girlfriend wanted to release her music, and hopefully this EP precedes a full album and a lovely Japanese CD.

PETBRICK – Ayan (Bubblelogue Mix) [Rocket Recordings/Bandcamp]
PETBRICK – Pigeon Kick [Rocket Recordings/Bandcamp]
PETBRICK – Raijin [Rocket Recordings/Bandcamp]
The interface between breakcore and metal has always been eldritch thin. Here’s a perfect example: one half of PETBRICK is Wayne Adams, who made breakcore for years as Ladyscraper, but has also been in hardcore bands like Death Pedals, and party noise rock band Big Lad. Adams’ foil in PETBRICK is none other than Igor Cavalera, founding drummer in Brazilian heavy metal band Sepultura, but also electronic music producer and touring drummer with Soulwax. I first discovered PETBRICK through their incredible collaboration with Brazilian punk/experimental/noise group Deafkids, DEAFBRICK. It’s hard to pin down what’s producing the noises on PETBRICK’s second album Liminal – there are metal/industrial riffs that could be synths, drones that could be guitars, beats that could be live drumming but are often clearly sampled and programmed. It’s at times intense and rhythmic, at other times sparse or doomy. Hardcore/metal vocalists guest as well as underground rappers. As a response to a world falling apart, it’s quite visceral and yet also pretty fun. Meanwhile, back in May they released the Ayan EP, with four versions of the eponymous track, including remixes from techno veteran Surgeon and ex-breakcore veteran Cardopusher, but the real gem is their own “Bubblelogue” remix, which despite the reference to Aphex Twin’s Analogue Bubblebath releases is more in line with the annagramatic Hangable Auto Bulb EPs, drill’n’bass madness.

Isolated Gate – Confusion Is Bliss (Full Version) [Darla Records/Bandcamp]
The latest release from Adelaidian IDM/glitch hero Tim Koch and Japan-based English shoegaze musician Ian Masters (ex-Pale Saints) is the EP No Heart No Home. The 15-minute title track is a gorgeous long composition by Koch with cut-up cello samples and melodies from yours truly, and angelic vocal lines from Masters. The shorter tracks on the other side are varied, with “Confusion Is Bliss” sounding almost like a lost shoegaze classic, interrupted by electronics between its verses. Isolated Gate is a pretty special thing and trust me when I say it, despite limited streaming provided by Darla Records.

JWPaton – Oxy Lance [Oxtail Recordings]
It’s a shame I was only able to preview the first 7 minutes or so of Western Sydney-based Yuin musician JWPaton‘s new work “Oxy Lance“. It’s a pretty stunning track, almost 20 minutes long, which you should experience in video form if possible, with lush drones and buried rhythms juxtaposing peace and domesticity with various interruptions. I strongly recommend checking the whole piece out, and purchasing it via Oxtail Recordings.

Perera Elsewhere – Hold Tite [Friends of Friends Music/Bandcamp]
Perera Elsewhere – Stranger [Friends of Friends Music/Bandcamp]
Berlin-based, London-born Sasha Perera aka Perera Elsewhere is a very versatile musician, a restlessly creative electronic producer and educator, as well as a creative vocalist and songwriter. Her new album Home, released by LA’s Friends of Friends Music, is balanced between pop and electronic experimentation, an extension of the style she’s coined as “doom-folk”, although it’s full of beats and bass as well. Not infrequently, Perera’s voice is distorted through pitch shifting and other effects, allowing Perera to express many personalities, while on this album nevertheless centring the idea of “Home”, and of some kind of peace and freedom, juxtaposed with the “Elsewhere” of her taken name, and the “doom” of her earlier work. It’s a catchy, enjoyable listen even at its weirdest.

Björk – Mycelia [One Little Independent/Bandcamp]
Björk – Her Mother’s House (feat. ísadóra bjarkardóttir barney) [One Little Independent/Bandcamp]
I had a lot of trouble with the initial singles for Björk‘s new album Fossora. I’ve been a fan of hers since before Debut was even released, but there have always been aspects of her art that I find difficult: the melodies that can be exquisite but can also prod and prod until my head aches; the weird phrasing that deliberately accents the wrong parts of words and stretches melodies over single syllables; harmonies that reach for atonality in awkward ways (from a composer capable of glorious harmonisation); rhythms that, especially on this gabber-inspired release, hammer even at slower tempos without remorse. Even “Ancestress“, the song on the album most directly about her late mother, which many have been powerfully moved by, I find quite painful listening, its verse melody strained by repetition and portentous pauses, and the the chorus, even as it recalls the beautiful “Unison” from her masterpiece Vespertine, still exhibiting so many of those foibles (the incredibly awkward scansion!). Perhaps it’s because it’s very operatic, and (I’m sorry) I hate opera.
In any case, it’s still Björk and there is still beauty and genius here. The bizarre fungal references are all over “Mycelia”, a lovely vocal vignette with increasingly glitched voice samples, and there, at the end, is the sublime “Her Mother’s House”, once again referencing Björk’s late mother Hildur while featuring her daughter Ísadóra (Dóa). Here the wind ensemble provides a bed instead of parping like a school band, and around Björk’s own vocal lines Dóa and an oboe weave glittering scale patterns. Anyway, this is one guy’s musical opinions and it’s all aesthetics, so don’t be offended if you love it all. You’re absolutely right, even if I’m not wrong. And Björk is a treasure, forevermore.

Listen again — ~207MB

Playlist 25.09.22

Vocals weave in & out of tonight’s selections, often in unusual settings, from minimalist arrangements to glitch-beats, mangled raps and stretched choirs…
If you’re in Sydney this week, can I recommend you pop over to the Powerhouse Museum for Powerhouse Late between 5 & 9pm on Thursday the 29th? I’ll be DJing for the whole four hours, so you can enjoy some Utility Fog selections in person!

LISTEN AGAIN because you can ‘Fog at home anytime. Stream on demand with FBi, or podcast right here.

Ellen Arkbro & Johan Graden – Close [Thrill Jockey/Bandcamp]
Ellen Arkbro & Johan Graden – Other side [Thrill Jockey/Bandcamp]
If you know the work of Swedish musician Ellen Arkbro, it’s probably as a composer of super-minimalist works for organ or horns or guitar, with strange chords ringing out one by one. Thus her stunning new collaboration with fellow Swede Johan Graden, a free jazz pianist & arranger, might come as a surprise. Yes, it’s minimalist, but the deceptively simple arrangements for multiple bass clarinets, tuba, contrabass and piano, as well as occasional sparse drums, trumpet and other instruments, underscore Arkbro’s fragile, candidly melodic voice. The opening track is a beauty, but “Other side” stands out from an already stand-out album with its unusual harmonies (each piano chord includes two notes a tone or semitone apart), the all-bass orchestration (bass clarinet, tuba and contrabass join the piano’s left-hand in the second half), and the gorgeous, subtle vocal loop that carries through the last phrases. No sign of Chet Baker among these originals, but I Get Along Without You Very Well achieves all the subdued emotion of the jazz standard it’s named after, with even fewer ingredients.

Ian William Craig – A Crack and a Shadow [130701/Bandcamp]
Ian William Craig – A Given Stack [130701/Bandcamp]
This album’s source comes as a surprise for the classically-trained singer and tape manipulator Ian William Craig. His free-floating, looped, fluttering and degraded vocal lines and modular synths don’t immediately scream “computer game soundtrack”, yet Music for Magnesium_173 is just that – full tracks (some over 10 minutes long) in Craig’s usual style, written to accompany a quantum mechanical puzzle game released on the Steam platform. As the game development was delayed (not an uncommon experience), some earlier works created for it came out on his 2018 album Thresholder. Suffice to say it’s vintage Craig, lovely experienced on its own.

Abdel Ja7eem Hafeth – Eed B Eed (Ma3 El Shaytan) ft. Sheekie Sheekie [Drowned By Locals]
Produced by 1800s Internet, this piece from the people behind the Jordanian label Drowned By Locals is a rather touching tribute to Daniel Johnson, mostly just piano and cigarette-stained voice, but steeped in noise and faint backing vocals. Lovely.

Jason McMahon – You Dear, Woody Houses? [Shinkoyo/Artist Pool/Bandcamp]
Jason McMahon – Enchant a Rare Time Wander [Shinkoyo/Artist Pool/Bandcamp]
Jason McMahon – Who’d Forecast Shade [Shinkoyo/Artist Pool/Bandcamp]
Run by Matt Mehlan of the experimental b(r)and Skeletons, Shinkoyo and the associated co-operative venture Artist Pool are gradually releasing some very creative & inspiring music. I loved Chicago cellist Lia Kohl‘s Too Small to be a Plain earlier this year, and now we have the second solo album, It’s That Time Again, from guitarist Jason McMahon. It’s a mostly-instrumental song suite meant to be played all the way through, and so we’re excerpting three tracks in a row here. It’s somewhere between psych-rock, psych-folk and folktronica perhaps, all performed by McMahon except for some memorable drumming from Greg Fox on one track. While the one vocal track isn’t featured tonight, I do want to mention that McMahon describes it as “sung in my faux-gibberish style”, and if that’s not a drawcard I don’t know what is.

Makaya McCraven – High Fives [International Anthem/Bandcamp]
Makaya McCraven – This Place That Place [International Anthem/Bandcamp]
I feel like by now Makaya McCraven has been heralded enough on this show and elsewhere that he doesn’t need a huge introduction. A brilliant drummer and producer of “organic beat music” in which improvisations and arrangements performed by the cream of free jazz musicians from around the world are carefully, both subtly and radically edited, he really is something of an iconoclast. New album In These Times represents a milestone for McCraven that’s been a long time coming, as he’s honed tracks in his songbook that are based around odd time signatures, recorded them in studios and performance spaces all around Chicago and further afield, and spent countless hours editing. The result is a little more smoothed around the edges than his previous albums for International Anthem, at times almost too polite, but that would be to ignore the stellar playing, the off-kilter rhythms, and the utter sumptuousness of the arrangements and compositions.

Ahm & Defpet – Searching [Ahm Bandcamp/Defpet Bandcamp]
Ahm & Defpet – Slipping [Ahm Bandcamp/Defpet Bandcamp]
Following some intense solo IDM/deconstructed club releases and remix work, it’s great to hear Melbourne producer Ahm aka Andrew Huhtanen McEwan working in a more live setting with fellow Melbournite Hannes Lackmann aka Defpet on drum kit and myriad other instruments. It’s uncategorisable music that slips between experimental electronica, jazz, postrock and more. Just what we like on the ‘Fog.

Naco – Sanc [Scuffed Recordings]
Kyoto-based Naco runs the 85acid label and produces the kind of music that melds house & techno with breaks & jungle and more, which perfectly suits London’s Scuffed label. Here chopped amen breaks are inserted in increasingly complex, syncopated fashion into a 4/4 structure, dizzyingly joyful.

Patrick Brian – Flooring It [Sneaker Social Club]
This new release on Sneaker Social Club, home of UK bass music and that whole ‘aardcore continuum, comes from an LA native. Patrick Brian is highly influenced by grime and drill, as well as predecessors like uk garage, and he skilfully channels those styles on this new EP while putting his own spin on them.

µ-Ziq – Hello [Planet µ/Bandcamp]
It’s been a big year for Planet µ boss Mike Paradinas aka µ-Ziq, with the 25th anniversary re-release of his brilliant Lunatic Harness album, and a series of releases with new music on the same tip – melodic idm inspired by jungle and hardcore techno – the archetypal drill’n’bass. The final release in this series is the Hello EP, mirroring the Goodbye EP and, if his recent sets in Canberra & Melbourne are any guide, going deeper into the jungle. The CD edition features all the Goodbye tracks as well, for fans like me :)

pale sketcher – today [GIVE/TAKE/Bandcamp]
pale sketcher – golden skin [GIVE/TAKE/Bandcamp]
It’s been many years since we’ve heard from Pale Sketcher, the IDM project of Justin K Broadrick. It’s a long way from the pioneering grindcore of Napalm Death, the industrial metal of Godflesh, or even the shoegaze metal of Jesu, but in fact the origins of Pale Sketcher come from a set of deconstructed ambient/electronic remixes Broadrick made of his 2007 Jesu album Pale Sketches. The tunes on new album golden skin were created a little after this, up until 2013, and were originally going to be released on Aphex Twin’s Rephlex Records before the label shut down. They’ve now finally found a home on US label GIVE/TAKE, which is a blessing because this stuff is just so good. It’s got a bit of the shoegazey outlook of the Jesu origins, but with those wordless vocal snippets playing the same role they do on the recent µ-Ziq work, and among the crunchy beats are plenty of accelerated drill’n’bass funtimes to be had. JKB has hinted that there will be more actually-new Pale Sketcher material coming too – can’t wait!

Dev/Null – Time 2 Rhyme (GOOOOOSE Remix) [Evar Records]
Breakcore veteran Dev/Null released his tribute to jungle & jungle tekno, Microjunglizm, on LA’s Evar Records a year ago. Evar now follow that up with Microjunglizm Remixes, featuring a bunch of jungle/hardcore proponents from both sides of the Atlantic, but it’s excellent that they also chose to invite Shanghai’s GOOOOOSE to the party. It’s not the first time he’s mashed up jungle breaks in his music, and as usual it’s brilliantly skewed.

s8jfou – Soft [s8jfou Bandcamp]
s8jfou – Phase [s8jfou Bandcamp]
French musician s8jfou‘s name is a pun. It’s pronounce “‘suis-je fous?”, as 8 = huit in French, and translates as “Am I mad?”. And perhaps he was mad to create his new album Op-Echo using only the Operator synth and the Echo effect in Ableton. It’s an exercise in proving you don’t need modular synths and outboard gear to create something special, and it seems to me he’s succeeded admirably. It’s a bit of a love song for UK dance music and IDM, yet the melodies give it a distinctly French twist – I hear a similar temperament to the violintronica of Chapelier Fou or a much less manic Ruby My Dear. Well worth checking out.

Aphir – Red Giant [Provenance/Bandcamp]
Naarm/Melbourne mastering/mixing engineer, producer, singer and songwriter Becki Whitton is soon releasing her very personal electronic pop album Pomegranate Tree through Provenance, the label that she took over and rebuilt into a collective a few years ago. The album is an elegant and emotive exploration of her experiences growing up with, grappling with, and eventually leaving the Christian faith, and Whitton’s dedicated studies in electronically-mediated quasi-choral work, her beat-making and her well-honed production skills all serve to make this album something to anticipate.

Aasthma – It’s Just Your Style (feat. Jonnine) [Monkeytown Records/Bandcamp]
Aasthma – Power Ambient Piano Ballad [Monkeytown Records/Bandcamp]
OK look, here’s what I said when I last played Aasthma on the show: Pär Grindvik and Peder Mannerfelt have been intrinsic members of the Swedish electronic music scene for the last decade or more – Grindvik runs the Stockholm LTD label, the latter his eponymous Peder Mannerfelt Produktion, as well as being part of the experimental duo Roll The Dice and a frequent collaborator with Fever Ray (Karin Dreijer Andersson of The Knife). That was 2019, and it’s taken a few years for their album Arrival to… arrive… courtesy of Modeselektor‘s Monkeytown Records. While there were collaborations on their singles (including the wonderful Penelope Trappes), it still seemed more of a club project than a pop project. That’s flipped on its head for this album, where even the instrumentals are full of sampled vocal hooks, big synths and sparkly melodies. It seems to lean into Euro-dance-pop rather gleefully, while still allowing itself to be charmingly weird, especially on the closing “Power Ambient Piano Ballad”. Among the guests is the very busy Jonnine Standish of HTRK, who also appeared recently on The Bug’s Absent Riddim.

clipping. and Evicshen – Sheba [Sub Pop/Bandcamp]
clipping. and TENGGER – Say the Name (TENGGER Remix) [Sub Pop/Bandcamp]
Six years after their last REMXNG outing, noise-hop masterminds clipping. are releasing a series of four remix EPs (compile them on CDs guys!) starting with REMXNG 2.1. The tracks are all credited to clipping. and the remix artist, with some more like collabs than remixes. Victoria Shen aka Evicshen destroys “She Bad” from Visions of Bodies Being Burned, further upping the horror quotient with blasts of noise and mangled vocal samples; but “travelling musical family” TENGGER, from Seoul, take a tiny bit from the outro of “Say the Name” and construct a blissed out ambient oscillation from it.

part timer – no voice [part timer Bandcamp]
part timer – with a whisper [part timer Bandcamp]
John part timer McCaffrey continues to make magic with just a laptop and a piano (I’m not sure it’s even a real piano). While in COVID isolation, he made five tracks of subtle post-classical beauty, with sparse orchestrations on wind instruments and strings conjured from the aether. It’s a fitting closer after Arkbro & Graden’s opening tracks tonight, so go support great music.

Listen again — ~202MB

Playlist 18.09.22

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Algiers feat. billy woods & Backxwash – Bite Back [Matador/Bandcamp]
When I first heard about Algiers, the idea of gospel-influenced vocals mixed with punk sounded decidedly unattractive. Yet the band makes it work, and the way they draw on politically-charged music of all sorts – particularly black musics like house & rap – means it’s even hader to pin them down to any style. That’s at the forefront of their return with new single “Bite Back” in which they’re joined by two of the greatest unerground rappers the moment, the low-key, experimental billy woods and the high-energy, metal-and-postrock-influenced Zambian-Canadian Backxwash. “Punk” hardly fits at all here, with a marching synth bassline, orchestral stab-style samples, and skittering hi-hats, and halfway through a righteous DJ Shadow-style beat. Electrifying.

Keeley Forsyth – Land Animal (Ben Frost Remix) [The Leaf Label/Bandcamp]
Gospel is also a touchpoint for the unique voice of British actor-turned-musician Keeley Forsyth, with Scott Walker and Talk Talk as frequent comparisons. Her second album Limbs has been remixed by four beautifully-chosen artists – the others are industrial royalty Cosey Fanni Tutti, post-classical don Yann Tiersen, and sound-art genius Simon Fisher Turner – but released first is Iceland-based Aussie Ben Frost, whose throbbing low-end growls and compositional sensibility are ideal to enhance the emotive, androgynous range of Forsyth.

Lueenas – Souls Sliding [Barkhausen Recordings]
Lueenas – Witches Brew [Barkhausen Recordings]
Copenhagen duo Ida Duelund (double bass) and Maria Jagd (violin) create improvised soundscapes as well as music for soundtracks and installations with their amplified instruments, voices and effects as Lueenas. Their self-titled debut album proper comes out on Barkhausen Recordings on November 4th, but in the meantime they’ve released two quite different singles. One leans on electronics, half-ambient and half a kind of throbbing analogue techno. The other uses strings and voices in a dark ambient folk fashion. It shows the range of these two women, and while we wait for the rest of the album, I’m going to check out their soundtrack material on their own Bandcamp! Also notable, Duelund was based for a time in Melbourne – always nice to have an Oz connection.

Bridget Chappell – And When You Reach The Plains After Crossing The Mountains [Absorb/Bandcamp]
Cypha – Mist Music [Absorb/Bandcamp]
Speaking of Naarm/Melbourne and strings, we turn now to the new(ish) compilation from new(ish) Naarm label Absorb, whose compilation The World I Want Would Be Celestial, Wet features experimental artists from the city and surrounds, from quasi-classical through ambient electronic to techno. Bridget Chappell, who also makes industrial/electronic/breakcore as Hextape, here brings their cello, multi-tracked with percussive sounds and processed delays. Gorgeous. And the comp ends with some jittery bass-techno from the excellent Cypha.

Wishmountain – Break [Accidental Records/Bandcamp]
Wishmountain – Hammer [Accidental Records/Bandcamp]
The programmed clunks of Cypha’s beats blend nicely into the sampled clonks of Matthew Herbert’s Stonework, recorded 1000 metres down in the UNESCO World Heritage Zollverein mine in Essen, Germany – and then sampled and edited assiduously in Herbert’s Wishmountain fashion. The last Wishmountain album was 10 years ago, deconstructing consumerism on Tesco. Wishmountain encapsulates Herbert’s old PCCOM Manifesto (Personal Contract for the Composition Of Music) in its most pure sense – among other things, it requires no sampling of existing recordings or sounds that exist prior to the music being created; no presets; no drum machines, and more. It’s not clear whether he still follows this as such – all Google results lead to forums and articles about it rather than his own sites. Nevertheless, here we have a set of fairly sparse rhythmic studies based around his recordings of rocks and stones, from the mine and also the Ruhr Museum and Mineralien-Museum Essen. There are pitched sounds and drawn out sounds as well as beats, and there’s something characteristic about the way they are processed that makes them clearly Herbert. It may be the opposite of the homely jazz-house of last year’s Musca, and it may be under the Wishmountain alias, but it’s certainly all Herbert.

Dominic Voz – Las Cuentas [Accidental Records/Bandcamp/Beacon Sound/Bandcamp]
Dominic Voz – Right To The City I [Accidental Records/Bandcamp/Beacon Sound/Bandcamp]
Sound-art and social justice are at the heart of the work of Chicago-via Portland artist Dominic Voz. His Portland origins connect him with the adventurous Beacon Sound, who are co-releasing his new album Right To The City with Matthew Herbert’s Accidental Records. The title “Right To The City” references Voz’ dedication to fair housing and contestation within urban settings, but also more generally his love of cities (something I very much share). Instruments and voices of friends are found throughout, often disarmingly casually dropped into the recordings, and ruthlessly sliced digitally, along with Voz’s own instrumentation (is that him on cello?) and his folktronic, deconstructed production techniques. It’s a beautiful combination of early-’00s style folktronic acoustic manipulation, ’90s early jazz-fusion postrock and contemporary sound-art ambient. You’re gonna love it.

Marc Baron & Jean-Philippe Gross – B6 [Eich Records]
Marc Baron & Jean-Philippe Gross – Y2 [Eich Records]
Marc Baron & Jean-Philippe Gross – P4 [Eich Records]
Marc Baron & Jean-Philippe Gross – Y6 [Eich Records]
Black, Pink and Yellow noises is a collection 20 short tracks created with tape and electronics by two French musicians working in the intersection of instrumental music (Baron is a saxophonist as well as sound-artist) and electronics. Some tracks are repeating loops with tape fuzz and various types of instrumental distortion, strums and thrums. Others are flickering drones or waves of raucous noise. The analogue warp and weft of magnetic tape are frequently present, as is the unprocessed hiss. Fans of early Mego, noise and drone take note.

Scattered Order – Alastair Sim [Rather Be Vinyl (Scattered Order Bandcamp)]
Scattered Order – Rummage [Rather Be Vinyl (Scattered Order Bandcamp)]
Sydney’s venerable, oft-reincarnated postpunk/post-industrial group Scattered Order continue their latest reincarnation, now happily emanating noises for over 12 years in itself. These days it’s Mitchell Jones (the little hand of the faithful) on beats, guitar and processed vocals, Michael Tee (A Cloakroom Assembly) on guitars & bass along with fellow traveller Shane Fahey on synths and other electronics. It can be abrasive and chaotic, but also weirdly melodic and beat-driven. Always a pleasure.

Tim Reaper & Kloke – Museum [!K7 Records/Bandcamp]
Inveterate, energetic jungle collaborator Tim Reaper releases collabs on labels of his own such as Future Retro and other contemporary jungle & drum’n’bass labels, but here appears on venerable German label !K7 Records with two tracks made with Melbourne-based producer Andy Donnelly aka Kloke. It’s a reprise of their collab on Tempo Records last year, and both tracks are perfect for headphone listening and for dancefloors.

J:Kenzo ft Flowdan – Like A Hawk (Boylan Remix) [Artikal Music]
Remixes of J:Kenzo‘s 2019 Taygeta Code have been coming out over the last couple of years, with three 12″ packages so far from Artikal Music. Stylistically they reflect J:Kenzo’s own comfort inhabiting both the dubstep and drum’n’bass worlds, and the third remix EP that just dropped showcases this with three 140bpm reworkings, with grime producer Boylan‘s take particularly strong, supporting the menacing and deep voice of the don, Big Flowdan with heavy production.

Swimful – Backwards [SVBKVLT]
Swimful – More Distant on Approach (Phelimuncasi Remix – prod. DJ Scoturn) [SVBKVLT]
Shanghai-based producer Swimful‘s five releases on SVBKVLT have found him changing styles with ease each time, and Rushlight has a dubstep/garage feel but equally is influenced by South African gqom and ampiano – clearly evidenced by the brilliant Phelimuncasi crew remixing an older track with young producer DJ Scoturn at the helm. It’s music that should rip up dancefloors, and that Phelimuncasi remix is some of their best recent work too.

Andy Moor – Perseverance [Unsounds]
Robin Rimbaud (Scanner) – The Fall, The Freedom [Unsounds]
Scottish, Amsterdam-based guitarist Andy Moor aka Andy Ex co-founded the great exploratory label Unsounds with Netherlands-based Greek composer Yannis Kyriakides and graphic designer Isabelle Vigier in 2001. The label showcases sounds from contemporary classical to postpunk to field recordings and experimental electronic pop, always conceptually on-point and of unwavering quality. Their latest release, curated with Andrea Stillacci, is a double LP simply called CLAP, that sees 11 musicians dissect the concept of applause across different contexts. Kyriakides, for instance, samples and stretches the applause at the end of a Maria Callas performance; others like Moor Mother create collages from field recordings, street sounds, etc. Andy Moor‘s own piece uses handclaps along with sampled speech (recorded during NASA’s space probe Perseverance entering the Martian atmosphere and landing) and throbbing bass to build a house track, while Robin Rimbaud (Scanner) slowly builds a pulsing drone with slow-flanged beats and synths that gradually reveal the source material (the fall of the Berlin Wall). It’s always great to have a conceptual work where the music is first class, and that’s what we’ve got here.

Radboud Mens – Conversion [Radboud Mens Bandcamp]
Radboud Mens – Modular [Radboud Mens Bandcamp]
I first heard about Dutch instrument maker and producer Radboud Mens via numerous collaborations with Michel Banabila. His latest release is a double CD called Continuous Movement that encapsulates Mens’ various styles – drones, glitchy digital clicks and minimal (dub) techno, all together. The two albums exist separately but make the most sense together, with a cohesive feel whether it’s head-nodding beats, beatless pulses, deeply encompassing or more sparse. A great introduction to an interesting & sometimes challenging artist.

Listen again — ~205MB