Category Archives: General - Page 48

Playlist 11.10.20

Tonight we’re wavering between beats and no beats, between wafting folk and harsh noise. Inspiring sounds all.

LISTEN AGAIN to the dance of the lockdown… Stream on demand from FBi, podcast here.

Claire Deak & Tony Dupé – before dark [Lost Tribe Sound/Bandcamp]
Saddleback – Scramble To [Preservation]
Saddleback – Singing Scribbles [Preservation]
Claire Deak & Tony Dupé – from a rooftop [Lost Tribe Sound/Bandcamp]
Back in the ’90s Tony Dupé started off his career in indie bands, but he moved to production work by the early 2000s, putting his fine stamp on the early albums of Holly Throsby and Jack Ladder, and solo work of Jamie Hutchings among others. He moved from inner Sydney down to the south coast and made many legendary recordings in the town of Gerroa, and then in a cottage on Mount Saddleback, which gave its name to his much-loved organic studio-collage solo project released on Sydney’s Preservation. In the meantime, he met the fantastic musician Claire Deak, who had studied music at the Uni of Western Sydney and then screen composition at AFTRS. They moved to Melbourne together, started a family, and also started work together with a studio of their own.
About a year after I first heard these wonderful recordings, their duo album is now released, and it couldn’t be better paired than with US label Lost Tribe Sound. There are a plethora of organic instruments involved here, played by both musicians (indeed, after I played cello on many of his early productions, Tony went off and learned the instrument himself!), and it’s just as you’d want it – the mysterious inde/folk/postrock creations of Saddleback grown up and augmented with the widescreen arrangement & composition skills of Claire Deak. Not to be missed!

part timer – FN [Part Timer Bandcamp]
There was a time in the mid-’00s when a week couldn’t go by without some new music appearing on CD-R, and then in my inbox, from John McCaffrey aka part timer. An Englishman now long-established with his family in Melbourne, John eventually became busy with work and raising kids, but in the last few years a small flow of new tunes has trickled out. FN is four tracks that harken back to the clicky beats & folktronica of the tunes he was sending me way back when – it’s a head-nodding funk stripped right back, bass music without the bass. Just lovely.

Church Andrews & Matt Davies – Roadtrip [Health Bandcamp]
Church Andrews & Matt Davies – Elixir [Health Bandcamp]
Mid last year I was pleased to be sent the music of Kirk Barley released on 33-33, which followed an album as Bambooman on Matthew Herbert’s Accidental Records. He has a delicate touch, whether it’s the layered guitars and electronics under his own name or the beats & electronics of Bambooman. Now he’s revealed another alias, Church Andrews, under which he’s collaborating with drummer Matt Davies (who appeared on his recent solo work), to create their most discombobulating, un-moored music yet. Neighbours documents a live setup in which Davies’ drum performances trigger the synthesis of Barley’s setup. In this 7-track release, strange time signatures and tunings are explored, all with a distinctive, minimalist sonic pallette, with accelerated stop-start rhythms echoing jungle, hip-hop, jazz and dub. If you’re like me, when it finishes you’ll want to turn around and listen to the whole thing again.

ZULI – 3ankaboot [Sneaker Social Club]
Christoph De Babalon – Where Are You Going? [Sneaker Social Club]
Speaking of jungle, here we are in the land of amen breaks and half-time sub-bass. Bristol label Sneaker Social Club are exploring the continuing legacy of what UK music critic Simon Reynolds calls the hardcore continuum – the music that came out of ’80s rave music in the early ’90s, hybridising acid techno, hip-hop breaks, and dub/dancehall bass into something utterly new and utterly UK. Sneaker Social Club’s compilation Evident Ware is being released in two parts – Pt.01 is out now, Pt.02 coming in November. It’s a very gregarious mix – Pt.01 starts with the regrouping of a duo from the early 2000s “ragga jungle” resurgence, Soundmurderer & SK-1, and reaches back to hardcore’s beginnings with a contemporary remix of Manix’s “Special Request“. And then we have one of the Digital Hardcore originals here too, Christoph De Babalon, in fine form. As well as artists like THUGWIDOW and Sully making pitch-perfect ’90s-style jungle, this music is also leaking into techno and experimental electronic again nowadays, and who better than Egypt’s ZULI to carry that flag tonight?

Fatwires – Boreal Riddim [Depth of Field Music]
Fatwires – Tools that we’ll be swinging [Depth of Field Music]
German bassist John Eckhardt is adept at bass in all styles – contemporary classical double bass, jazz bass, electric bass – and he’s also a fan of bass in the club context. So with his project “Fatwires“, he’s just released an incredible album of dark music drawing on dub fused with club styles, including jungle and techno. From The wicked Path tonight I followed the last batch of tunes with the two junglist monsters, but the whole varied album is hugely recommended.

Summer Of Seventeen – Spirits of Redeemer [Karlrecords/Bandcamp]
Summer Of Seventeen – Theatre needs an Audience [Karlrecords/Bandcamp]
Courtesy of Berlin’s Karlrecords, we move from dance music back into soundscapes with the incredibly evocative, heavy music of Cascadian supergroup Summer Of Seventeen. It’s a group of musicians who orbit around Faith Coloccia and Aaron Turner‘s excellent SIGE Records. Coloccia & Turner join Monika Khot aka Nordra, who orchestrates the sounds recorded by them along with Portland noise music mainstay Daniel Menche and dark drone artist William Fowler Collins. Recorded with legendary producer Randall Dunn in 2017 just before horrific wildfires swept through Washington State, it carries a sense of creeping horror and melancholy that makes it feel very much of this time. It’s some of the most moving and effective work that these musicians (many of whom I’m a massive fan-for-life of) have created.

Michalis Moschoutis – Archery [ROOM40/Bandcamp]
The last guitar chords of Summer of Seventeen ring out resoundingly, and meld into the ringing tones that run through the stunning opening track from Greek sound artist Michalis Moschoutis‘s new album Classical Mechanics, released by Brisbane’s ROOM40. Inspired by the visual art of Roman Signer, Moschoutis’s album presents four tracks of acoustic & electric instruments patiently unwinding their progressions, gently processed or at times growing towards harsher distortions. It’s intimate and mostly peaceful, quite a special release.

Otro – (Again Someday) [Eastern Nurseries/Bandcamp]
Otro – Untitled (10 March 2020) [Eastern Nurseries/Bandcamp]
From Valencia in Spain, Otro is an artist whose earlier releases were situated in the deconstructed club world – indeed he had a track on the second compilation from Sydney’s Eternal back in March last year. This new stuff, from Portuguese label Eastern Nurseries, is the product of the lockdown – it bears imprints of club music at times, but also blooms with acoustic instruments and lush arrangements, sometimes electronically glitched, occasionally joined by drums & beats. It’s really impressive stuff, highly worth checking out!

Teho Teardo – Systehme de Mr Kirnberger [Spècula]
Teho Teardo – Cadence féminine [Spècula]
I’d been waiting for this for ages. The new album Ellipses dans l’harmonie from the great Teho Teardo, Italian industrial musician who moved into classical-influenced soundtrack work, was released in March, just in time for Italy to be struck with the worst first wave of COVID-19, and everything shut down. For some reason it wasn’t easily available digitally (although it now seems to be streaming on Sp*tify etc), and it wasn’t until I discovered it in a Portuguese record store’s Discogs collection that I was able to get the CD sent here to Australia.
This isn’t a soundtrack, although it sounds like it could be – for this album Teardo found himself in the massive library of Milan’s Fondazione Giangiacomo Feltrinelli, where he discovered a chapter on music in the Encyclopedia of Diderot & D’Alembert which contained many examples of the elements of musical composition. So Teardo created this album inspired by an Englightenment encyclopedia, long-lost but politically highly influential. The music does fuse some of his industrial and electronic roots with the baroque & classical music he’s “sampling” – it’s “classic” Teho Teardo, and I’m glad to have found a way to get hold of it in this strange world we’re in.

Tilly Webb – sun (parts i & ii) [Tilly Webb Bandcamp]
Melbourne composer & producer Tilly Webb is originally from Sydney, but has made a career in Melbourne soundtracking dance and film works. Her first standalone work is this lovely piece which grows from reedy drones into flittering minimalist tapestries of keyboards and voice, layered with distortion & granular processing. An auspicious debut.

Spires That In The Sunset Rise – Nobody [STITSR Bandcamp]
Louise Bock – Incandescent Misspelled Word [Feeding Tube Records/Bandcamp]
Spires That In The Sunset Rise – Geomantra [STITSR Bandcamp]
Earlier this year I discovered US musician Louise Bock aka Taralie Peterson via an incredbile EP called Abyss: For Cello. As well as cello, she plays sax and sings, and she’s a member of the long-running psych-folk group Spires That In The Sunset Rise, for some time now a duo with Ka Baird, whose own elliptical works are released on RVNG Intl. On their latest album Psychic Oscillations Peterson’s cello is strummed and richoceted as well as sawed, her saxophone and Baird’s flute tumble over each other, and vocals soar. It’s wonderfully unrestrained music, not held down by musical convention or moderation. Meanwhile, rather than this year’s EP, I went back to Peterson’s 2017 release on Feeding Tube Records, Repetitives in Illocality, and played as much as I could of the eldritch, gorgeously freakish “Incandescent Misspelled Word”.

Listen again — ~195MB

Playlist 04.10.20

It’s a long weekend here in Sydney, and daylight savings has just started. It’s a very electronic Utility Fog tonight, mostly music with beats, from Australia but also Egypt, the UK, Germany/Israel, the US and more.

LISTEN AGAIN to the glitches, percussion and the rest. Stream on demand @ FBi, podcast here.

friendships – come on in precious [Anterograde/Remote Control/Friendships Bandcamp]
friendships – Big Farm In The Sky [Remote Control/Friendships Bandcamp]
friendships – smokers area 19 [Anterograde/Remote Control/Friendships Bandcamp]
Four years after their stunning debut Nullarbor 1988-1989, Melbourne duo friendships – with music by Nick Brown and art by Misha Grace – have released their follow-up LP Fishtanks. Where the debut was driven by post-dubstep and grime beats (with the occasional jungle), the new one leans instead on booming acid techno. Where the debut drafted in various MCs on a number of tracks as well as Brown’s rasping spoken word, the new one is characterised by frequent vocoded vocals. Like their debut, the dancefloor-ready beats are juxtaposed with ambient tracks, often featuring lovely meandering piano, and like the debut it’s accompanied by a series of music videos – Misha Grace’s visual art is a major part of the creative process. Fishtanks documents a person going through a loss of self – suitably enough for the COVID-19 era’s warped passage of time. The album also features the same deadpan sense of humour as their debut – witness the disturbing ravey yelps through “smokers area 19”.

Warm Stranger – Digital Sensuality [Warm Stranger Bandcamp]
After a pair of strangely disqueting EPs in 2016 and 2018, Melbourne jazz musician and electronic producer James Annesley has now released two EPs in 2020. The second Warm Stranger EP for this year is Chambers, and it moves further away from the disquieting industrial electronica of his earlier releases, with a melodic computer funk here, presaging a percussive that wafts through tonight’s selections.

DJ Plead – Ess [Livity Sound/Bandcamp]
Jared Beeler was a fixture in Sydney’s dance music scene for many years, as a writer, DJ, and producer in particular with the beloved Black Vanilla/BV. Now based in Melbourne/Naarm , as DJ Plead he’s making a name internationally with music that incorporates percussion and drum patterns from his Lebanese background into UK club styles. Each track on his new Going For It EP for the great Bristol label Livity Sound is better than the last, culminating in the driving “Ess”, held down by a mostly one-note bassline and coloured by syncopated synth stabs.

Loraine James – Marg ft. Tardast [Hyperdub/Bandcamp]
After a bunch of Bandcamp Friday odds-and-ends specials from Loraine James, she returns to Hyperdub for October’s Bandcamp Friday with the excellent Nothing EP. As usual it’s intricate, un-pin-downable electronica with various guests (including HTRK‘s Jonnine Standish on one track). On this track her glitchy jitters and thundering low-end accompany Liverpool/Birmingham-based Iranian refugee MC Tardast, rapping in Farsi.

Abdullah Miniawy & HVAD – The Dirty Canes Lake [irsh Bandcamp]
ABADIR – XLR@T [irsh Bandcamp]
Egyptian DJ Rama and Egyptian electronic producer/genius ZULI started irsh at the start of the year as a way of hanging out with friends and playing music together (and sharing it online). Unfortunately COVID lockdowns put an end to the live version and even the in-person hangouts. So that means that all around the world we get to enjoy what I hope is the first of many compilations of amazing experimental electronic music from Egyptian musicians – this one with the jokey title did you mean: irish. Tonight we have two selections from the wealth of talent. Poet, actor and musician Abdullah Miniawy, who we’ve heard solo & in collaboration with German trio Carl Gari, appears here with the stuttering, limping percussive loops of half-Danish/half-Punjabi producer DJ HVAD. And Berlin-based Rami Abadir abandons his recent ambient excursions with a high-energy piece of percussion, breakbeats and ravey bass drops.

TMUX – Metropolis [False Industries/Bandcamp]
Berlin-based Israeli producer Yair Etziony has been known for idm, ambient and industrial sounds under his own name and as part of Faction. His latest is under a new moniker, TMUX, finding that being under lockdown in Berlin drew out his love of ’90s jungle, drum’n’bass and hardcore (Alec Empire gets a dedication among other people). It’s filtered through Etziony’s particular approach, but it’s nice hearing the jungle breaks splattered through the melodic electronica here.

Mark Pritchard – Be Like Water [MP Productions/Warp]
Last year Sydney-based UK ambient/techno/jungle/grime/electronic music legend Mark Pritchard put out a series of electronic tracks under the banner of MP Productions. They were meant to be monthly (or at least regular) things but that seemed to stop at some point; now Warp are set to announce the release of the first MP Productions EP, coming out on either the 23rd or 30th of October. Direct from the artist, the lovely, fluid, percussive grime track “Be Like Water” might briefly be an exclusive on this show!

Hanz – Advice Ad [Tri-Angle/Bandcamp]
Brandon Juhans – Dead Weight Y [Brandon Juhans Bandcamp]
Brandon Juhans – Floating in Traffic [Brandon Juhans Bandcamp]
In 2018, Brandon Juhans released a couple of insane, detailed, glitchy EPs on the now sadly defunct Tri-Angle Records label. After a few single tracks seeped out on his Bandcamp, we’ve now got his first album Essential Dread, released under his own name. Strange percussive edits, glitchy rhythmic sampling and odd collage are the order of the day. I liked hearing a tiny bit of Ravel’s Valses Nobles et Sentimentales in there (Mvt VI since you asked).

dgoHn – Monsoon Mercenary [Analogical Force]
Back in April, Love Love Records released one of the best albums of the year in dgoHn‘s Undesignated Proximate. Fans of his mix of drumfunk and jungle are lucky to get another four tracks now, on the Monega EP couresy of Spanish label Analogical Force. Hard-hitting jungle breaks and warm subs combine with synth melodies and an unerring sense of rhythmic flow – early Dillinja if he went idm, early Squarepusher if he was less lo-fi and more dancefloor-friendly.

Rian Treanor – Debouncing [Planet µ/Bandcamp]
Rian Treanor – ATAXIA B2 [Planet µ/Bandcamp]
Rian Treanor – Metaplasm [Planet µ/Bandcamp]
For his second album on Planet µ, Rian Treanor continues his deconstruction of rave in all its colourful aspects. Indeed the title, File Under UK Metaplasm, might suggest a rearranging of UK dance music – but actually this is highly rhythmic stuff, rendered perhaps undanceable only because of its speed. It’s got a lot in common with ’90s drill’n’bass and idm, but with more emphasis on bass, and influences from Chicago footwork, UK garage and elsewhere. In the middle I played the Lollywood-sampling B2 from ATAXIA, which also appeared on his vinyl-only RAVEDITS from 2018.

Carl Stone – Pasjoli [Unseen Worlds/Bandcamp]
Carl Stone – Xiomara [Unseen Worlds/Bandcamp]
Active since the late ’70s and early ’80s, LA musician Carl Stone has seen a resurgence of interest in the last few years courtesy of two wonderful retrospectives on Unseen Worlds, demonstrating his use of granular synthesis to create live glitchy edits from all sorts of sound sources decades before we thought about glitch, drone or indeed “mashups”. His new album Stolen Car was written between Los Angeles and Tokyo, and draws heavily on mashed-up pop music, with a surprising emphasis on something resembling beats – a subversive recontextualisation of pop perhaps. It’s fun and weird, and fits strangely next to Rian Treanor’s rave edits and dancefloor deconstructions.

Tom Hall – 1542 [Errorgrid/Bandcamp]
Tom Hall – Pre Code [Errorgrid/Bandcamp]
Carl Stone’s weapon of choice has long been Max/MSP, so it’s fitting that he’s followed by Los Angeles-based Aussie Tom Hall, who has for some time beeen a Senior Content Developer for Cycling ’74, developers of Max/MSP and Jitter. Tom’s been a staple on this show whenever he releases new music, either with the more noisy-based AXXONN or with his ambient sound-design under his own name. The sound-design is there on new album Bestowed Order on Chaos but it’s in service of fidgety, often high-speed beats (except when it’s not). High-tech future music.

John Wall – M – B [ version 1 ] [John Wall Bandcamp]
John Wall & Alex Rodgers – Wrongfoot the Servants & Darkshop [John Wall Bandcamp]
UK autodidact John Wall has worked since the early ’90s in avant-garde electronic music, starting with plunderphonic sample-based creations, and then expanding his self-created musical language into glitchy electronic tones and careful use of silence. He’s performed live improvisations with various British avant-garde and improv musicians, and also collaborated frequently with British poet Alex Rodgers; the latest release on his Bandcamp is a new pair of tracks with Rodgers’ lockdown-inspired musings integrated into Wall’s electronics with strange pitch-shifting and glitching. The music echoes the latest in Wall’s styles, found on M – [ B ] from May this year, where warm synth chords and hover over decontextualised chopped hits of electronic beats – properly deconstructed club music.

Listen again — ~213MB

Playlist 27.09.20

This week FBi Radio is asking you for your support. The small team of staff and many volunteers who’ve kept the station running through this devastating pandemic have done an incredbile job, but we can’t do it without the support of our listeners – the station is literally listener-funded. If you get something out of what I do on this show, please support the station.

If you LISTEN AGAIN & again, help support us! FBi provides streaming on demand, or you can podcast it here.

Sufjan Stevens – Ativan [Asthmatic Kitty/Bandcamp]
Sufjan Stevens – Ursa Major [Asthmatic Kitty/Bandcamp]
Another 5 years, another Sufjan Stevens album… Well, we’ve had collaborations and other little drops in between, but it seems like the big albums take their time. You’ve probably heard the story with this one by now – it’s an album about the loss of faith, but not (probably) his faith in God so much as his faith in America as an institution. In that sense it’s extremely timely, even though the title track was written some years ago. There’s personal stuff too though – “Ativan” seems like a depiction of an anxiety attack of the sort the eponymous drug is meant to treat. Musically there are the beautiful harmony changes and melodic deftness we love Sufjan for, and it’s almost entirely performed & programmed by Sufjan, like a muted, reflective Age of Adz. Depressing times, let’s wallow in Sufjan.

Aphir – The Republic of Paradise [Provenance Records/Bandcamp]
Aphir – Evelyn Said [Provenance Records/Bandcamp]
Aphir – The Harpies (feat. Sia Ahmad) [Provenance Records/Bandcamp]
In the wake of last summer’s bushfires and then the ongoing pandemic’s effect on the music & arts world, Becki Whitton aka Aphir had a crisis of creativity – she had a joyous pop album ready to go, but couldn’t square that with the current times. So instead she set out to write & record a completely new album during the pandemic, and we are blessed with the fruits of that work now with The Republic of Paradise. Like the Sufjan album, it responds to dark times with a dark outlook, with pounding beats and poetry often set in rhythmic half-spoken vocals. Nevertheless, Whitton can’t help but write moving melodies, and relief from the sonic assault comes in the form of vulnerable a capella interludes or sweeping drones.

Shoeb Ahmad – flaw, featured [Shoeb Ahmad Bandcamp]
Aphir releases are usually full of collaborations, and the new one is no exception. “The Harpies” (which feels musically like an agitated extension of the previous track, “Evelyn Said”) features Sia Ahmad, whose solo work is still credited to Shoeb Ahmad.
Sia’s new album comes out in November, and “flaw, featured” is the first single – a meditation on gender disphoria with dark drones, clattering percussion and some cello bits from some guy called Peter Hollo…

MJ Guider – The Steelyard [Kranky/Bandcamp]
MJ Guider – Simulus [Kranky/Bandcamp]
Melissa Guion aka MJ Guider‘s second album for Kranky has a similar postpunk/industrial undertow to Shoeb Ahmad’s work, melded with a Cocteau Twins style shoegaze approach to her vocals, often buried in a mix of swirling guitar drones and echoing percussion. That tough-but-soft-but-loud sound was a characteristic of ’90s shoegaze, and one of the percursors for postrock’s dynamic juxtapositions, but Guion gives it a unique and vibrant update, and quite a shift from the less brash first album.

Sophia Loizou – Celestial Web [Houndstooth/Bandcamp]
Sophia Loizou – Genesis 92: The Awakening [Kathexis]
Sophia Loizou – Morphogenesis [Cosmo Rhythmatic]
Sophia Loizou – Shadows Of Futurity [Houndstooth/Bandcamp]
Sophia Loizou – Hypnotik [Houndstooth/Bandcamp]
Intense percussion and expansive textures have been at the heart of Sophia Loizou‘s work for a few years now too, albeit drawing from quite different eras from MJ Guider. Since Singulacra in 2016, Loizou has mined the splintered remains of rave – particularly jungle and hardcore techno – for material to build new worlds. Initially she focused on the synth pads and basslines in particular, but more recently the splattered breaks are up front as well, still structured as more of a memory of the dancefloor than an invitation to dance. Her latest album Untold is part of a larger project that includes a beautiful hardcover book poetically imagining biotech futures called A Tellurian Memorandum, as well as audio-visual elements and planned lecture performance.

Olivier Alary & Johannes Malfatti – My Night, My Day [130701/Bandcamp]
Hearing Is Our Concern – Fragmented [Bubble Core Records]
Ensemble – proposal 3 [Rephlex]
Ensemble – Things I Forget [Fat Cat/Bandcamp]
Olivier Alary – Defeat [130701/Bandcamp]
Olivier Alary & Johannes Malfatti – I Can’t Even See Myself [130701/Bandcamp]
Back in 2000, French-born, Montréal-based musician Olivier Alary released his first album as Ensemble, for the venerable idm label Rephlex (and I dropped a really early idm track from Alary as “Hearing Is Our Concern” tonight too). Ensemble’s debut Sketch Proposals does have glitchy beats and even glitchier electronic textures, but it combines this, strangely and effectively, with a sort-of shaky take on French chanson courtesy of the already-departed singer Chanelle Kimber. Following this, Ensemble became known to many through Alary’s work with Björk, including a co-write and co-production on “Desired Constellation” and a series of remixes. Fat Cat released two albums by Ensemble which continued this melding of glitchy electronica and indie songwriting – and by the second, 2011’s Excerpts, the indie/postrock elements, and string arrangements, outweighed the electronics considerably. I consider Excerpts to be a hugely underappreciated album, one that I return to often, with vocals from Alary and Darcy Conroy, and co-writing and arrangements on many tracks by Alary’s longtime collaborator Johannes Malfatti.
Both Alary and Malfatti, despite their roots in experimental electronic music, have been writing ambient & classical-adjacent music for film for some years, an album of which came out through Fat Cat’s 130701 label from Alary in 2017. Now the two have paired up under their own names rather than Ensemble, along with various string players & vocalists, for a gorgeous album called u,i that reflects these isolated times through the medium of Skype & other VOIP services which the pair have long used to keep in touch. So vocal melodies struggle to cut through static and drop-outs, while accompanied by strings and electronics – an inverted reflection of Alary’s original melding of cracked electronics and song, and one that pays off with some true heartstring-pulling moments.

Nick Wales & Stereogamous – Graceful Learning [Nick Wales Bandcamp]
Nick Wales & Stereogamous – Shimmering Spirits [Nick Wales Bandcamp]
Nick Wales is a longtime composer of scores for Sydney Dance Company, but as well as being a trained composer he’s a string player with CODA and has appeared on numerous indie albums through the years. He’s also made his fair share of electronic music, and here he’s paired up with two great Sydney DJ/producers, Johnny Seymour and Paul Mac, as Stereogamous. This album, counter to the background of those involved, focuses on the guitar – it was produced for an exhibition on the Australian guitar brand Maton, on at the Powerhouse Museum until the 11th of October. Different styles of guitar playing are showcased by various different guitarists, set in ambient soundscapes, at times chopped into fragments like on “Shimmering Spirits”.

Zoltan Fecso – From the Chest [Whitelabrecs/Bandcamp]
Finally tonight, we have some more guitar pointilism from Melbourne’s Zoltan Fecso, who has made his very own genre from live-sampling his own guitar playing and creating literally pointilistic new musical structures on the fly. His latest album is Daylight in an Empty Room, released by UK label Whitelabrecs, and follows an album frome earlier this year on Dutch ambient label Shimmering Moods.

Listen again — ~194MB

Playlist 20.09.20

Experimental music from across the African continent tonight, plus weird & wonderful sounds from the UK and Colombia-via-Berlin, and some Australian drones, remixes & noise…

LISTEN AGAIN to a world of sound… Stream on demand @ FBi, podcast here.

My Disco – An Intimate Conflict (Giant Swan Remix) [Downwards Records/My Disco Bandcamp]
My Disco – Act [Downwards Records/My Disco Bandcamp]
My Disco – Forever (Makeda mix) [Nice Music/My Disco Bandcamp]
My Disco – Equatorial Rainforests Of Sumatra (Cub Remix) [Downwards Records/My Disco Bandcamp]
Last year Melbourne trio My Disco released the quite revolutionary Environment album through Karl O’Connor’s Downwards Records, stripping back the heavy, angularly rhythmic postpunk they’re best known for, into a cold, sometimes percussive, industrial ambient sound. Liam Andrews’ vocals appear at sparse intervals – with the timely “Do I Do Enough? Do I Act?” on “Act”. Last year alongside the album, Melbourne label Nice Music released an excellent collection of Australian remixes, from which we heard Makeda‘s glitchy take on album closer “Forever”. Now Downwards themselves have compiled a set of remixes, with mostly UK & American artists. The 16-minute Rainforest Spiritual Enslavement version is a little too long for me to play tonight, but we heard from Bristol industrial techno duo Giant Swan, and later from Karl O’Connor, not as Regis, but with Simon Shreeve aka Krypric Minds under their alias Cub.

AMMAR 808 – Geeta duniki (feat. Susha) [Glitterbeat/Bandcamp]
AMMAR 808 – Ey paavi (feat. Kali Dass) [Glitterbeat/Bandcamp]
AMMAR 808 – Degdega (feat. Sofiane Saidi) [Glitterbeat/Bandcamp]
Tunisian musician Sofyann Ben Youssef released the incredible first AMMAR 808 album in 2018, collecting musicians and traditional music from across the Maghreb region of North Africa and augmenting the local instrumentation with distorted 808 drum machines and other electronics. When he was 20, he went to Delhi to study for a time – and for new album Global Control/Invisible Invasion he decided to head to Chennai in South India to work with local musicians. Susha is a bit of a local star herself, who performs as a singer-songwriter and jazz musician while also having a strong background in Indian classical music. I haven’t been able to find out who “Kali Dass” is though, on a track that more comprehensively merges AMMAR 808’s overdriven North African percussion with Indian melody. And from 2018’s Maghreb United, we heard a track featuring Algerian musician Sofiane Saidi.

Bantou Mentale – Mbonka Terra [Glitterbeat/Bandcamp]
Bantou Mentale – Hallelujah [Glitterbeat/Bandcamp]
Bantou Mentale – Moto [Glitterbeat/Bandcamp]
I did hear some of the music of Congolese band Bantou Mentale last year, but foolishly didn’t look deeper. So I’m glad to be correcting that now with a couple of tracks from their recent Congo Animal EP, pieced together in lockdown from the various musicians by Paris-based Irish producer Doctor L – a dub-fuelled affair with the distinctive vocals of Apocalypse and echos of Congotronics from the distorted kalimba melodies. The Congolese musicians are mostly also Paris-based, with the songs written by drummer Cubain Kabeya, and Kabeya’s drumming drives the drum’n’bass-inspired “Hallelujah” from last year’s debut self-titled album too.

Slikback – LAMA [Slikback Bandcamp]
Slikback – HERO [Slikback Bandcamp]
Slikback – HEARTFIELD (x MORGIANA HZ) [Slikback Bandcamp]
Slikback – WEICH [Slikback Bandcamp]
Kenyan producer Freddy Njau aka Slikback has had the attention of the European leftfield club world for a few years now, released on various labels including Nyege Nyege Tapes and PAN, and has also toured China, resulting in some amazing collaborations. Now he’s dropped not one but TWO 30-track releases on his own Bandcamp – /// and /// II, mostly short tracks that could be musical experiments, études, and also some characteristic collaborations. While gqom and trap are the most familiar influences on his sound, he’s a natural sonic experimenter, and there’s a general glitchy deconstructed club thing going on, manipulated vocal samples (even from his co-creators such as Polish experimentalist Karolina Karnacewicz aka Morgiana Hz), lots of bass, and razor-sharp edits. 60 tracks feels overwhelming, but as you’ll hear from the two tracks from each part tonight, there’s richness within.

Catu Diosis – Choc Kedda [Syrphe/Bandcamp]
Mash – Sand Wave [Syrphe/Bandcamp]
Sukitoa o Namau – When I tripped and hit my head on the sink of the love hotel [Syrphe/Bandcamp]
These three tracks come courtesy of Congolese-Belgian artist Cedrik Fermont aka C-drík and his Syrphe label, for which he compiled the indispensable compilation Alternate African Reality: Electronic, electroacoustic and experimental music from Africa and the diaspora earlier this year. I’m very pleased that he went out of his way to include female artists, and I’ve chosen three women tonight. Ugandan DJ, journalist, fashion designer and now producer Catu Diosis is associated with the Nyege Nyege crew, and now Hakuna Kulala. This is deconstructed music with a groove. After a droney beginning, a groove enters too in the track from Tunisian musician Myriam Hamida aka Mash. The track from Morocco’s Sukitoa o Namau buries its percussion in bloops and noise. I really can’t recommend this compilation enough – and you can check out the massive four-part Retrieving Beirut fundraised Fermont recently put together while you’re there.

David Toop – Tiny human figurines made from sand. If you held these to your ear, you heard soft sweet music [Room40/Bandcamp]
David Toop – When I first came here (I thought I’d never get used to the trains; now when it’s quiet I get nervous) [Room40/Bandcamp]
Now 71 years old, English academic, writer, compiler and musician David Toop is so legendary & influential that davidtoop.com is a fan-site about his work. He’s deeply connected with sound-art and field recording work, but originally made his name with a book about hip-hop in 1984, and the expansive survey of ambient music, techno, drum’n’bass and more in 1995, Ocean of Sound. His writings can be found in liner notes for compilations and albums, including his own curated compilations. So it’s no surprise that his new album for Brisbane’s Room40, Apparition Paintings, is stunning and wide-ranging. Shards of distorted guitar invade the sonic space through the album, as well as “fourth-world” percussion, and voices from Elaine Mitchener, Keiko Yamamoto, and on the second track tonight, Yifeat Ziv. It achieves what Toop’s writing, compiling and music has often done throughout his career – art that is challenging and uncompromising, but approachable and comprehensible. Not to be missed.

Lucrecia Dalt – Disuelta [RVNG Intl/Bandcamp]
Lucrecia Dalt – Seca [RVNG Intl/Bandcamp]
Lucrecia Dalt – Atmospheres Touch [RVNG Intl/Bandcamp]
Lucrecia Dalt – Espesa [RVNG Intl/Bandcamp]
I’ve been a fan of Colombian experimental musician Lucrecia Dalt since I heard her as “The Sound of Lucrecia” over 10 years ago; she contributed vocals to a wonderful track by Shoeb Ahmad & Evan Dorrian‘s Spartak (track 7 on Verona). Her earlier albums are experimental takes on indie singer-songwriting, but since then she’s moved progressively further from those roots – as well as moving to Barcelona and then Berlin. On her last two albums, 2018’s Anticlines and the just-released No era sólida, her vocals are used as a sound-source, chopped up, ring-modulated, buried under pulsating modular synths and loping almost-rhythms, or sometimes present as spoken word meditations on science or philosophy. It would help to be as well-read and multi-lingual as Dalt, but without that we can appreciate the care and technological expertise with which she constructs these strange and beautiful musical theses.

Suburban Cracked Collective – So Much Unlicked Air [A Colourful Storm]
Suburban Cracked Collective – Half Sour [Aetheric Records]
Suburban Cracked Collective – It’s All Gone Sideways [A Colourful Storm]
Shaun Leacy of long-missed Newcastle neo-primitivists Castings has for the last few years been making (resolutely solo) music as Suburban Cracked Collective. His latest comes out through hotly-tipped Melbourne label A Colourful Storm, with lovely near-distorted synth drones and glorious percussive clatter. Less intense than the over-saturated electronics of the “collective’s” debut release Basquiat Upon The RSL (represented by “Half Sour” tonight), but equally blissful.

Shoeb Ahmad vs Alaska Orchestra – #8.5 [Shoeb Ahmad Bandcamp]
Ahead of the November release of her album a body full of tears (first in a diptych!), Shoeb Ahmad is releasing single “flaw, featured” tomorrow with two remixes. We’re finishing up tonight with the surging synth layers of Sydney’s Megan Alice Clune in Alaska Orchestra guise, adapting album track “#8”. Listen out for whispered vocals right near the end!

Listen again — ~199MB