Playlist 17.12.23 – Best of 2023, Part 1!

Well, it’s been a year. A year divided into two, I daresay.
Nonetheless, it’s been another year of incredible music, and this first “Best of 2023” show is attempting to focus on vocal music. “Songs”, if you will.
I have had to cut so many darlings, you have no idea of the pain. But what’s left is 100% excellence.
The below words are mostly taken from the original playlist where I played the track, except when they’re not.

LISTEN AGAIN to the first part of the best. Stream on demand from FBi, podcast here.

Freda D’Souza – The Love Song of J Alfreda D’Souza [demo records/Crossness Records/Freda D’Souza Bandcamp]
I’m very grateful to the brilliant & adventurous singer-songwriter/producer Ana Rita de Melo Alves, aka Anrimeal, for sending me this stunning EP from fellow London-based musician Freda D’Souza, which Ana has co-released on her own demo records in conjunction with friends Crossness Records. D’Souza plays free improv, does experimental performance-arty stuff, and even fronts a black metal band, but the music here is a collection of sumptuous songs which owe as much to Jenny Hval as the obvious Joni Mitchell, Linda Perhacs and perhaps Kate Bush comparisons. The smart lyrics are perhaps best embodied by the wistful but slyly humorous “The Love Song of J Alfreda D’Souza”, with its references to T.S. Eliot (“Do I dare? Do I dare?”), echoing the paralyzing anxiety of growing old, albeit from a more youthful perspective. As Alves’ label name may suggest, these are demos or derive from them, but D’Souza’s vocal performances are so rich and confident that one can’t pretend these are in any way incomplete. Still, the idea of using demo recordings to capture a particular feeling, a space or a time, is something a lot of creators will connect with.

Mayssa Jallad – Baynana [Ruptured Records/Bandcamp/Six of Swords Bandcamp]
Ziad Nawfal & Fadi Tabbal’s Ruptured Records is a dependable source of brilliant music from Lebanon and further afield in the MENA region. And so often a new release is a surprise – take Mayssa Jallad‘s album Marjaa: The Battle Of The Hotels. Originally released in March, it was re-released by UK label Six of Swords in November with a handsome vinyl edition. It merges Jallad’s research work in architectural history and her parallel career as a singer-songwriter. These interests and imperatives have combined in the past: see last year’s collaboration with Syrian musician Khaled Allaf which examines the trauma of post-explosion Beirut (incredible video here). But this is different, a walk through only slightly less-recent history, focused on urban warfare in the Hotel District of Beirut during the Lebanese Civil War (specifically 1975-76), which Jallad discovered was “the first high rise urban battle in the world”. With the help of Fadi Tabbal and a selection of Ruptured-affiliated musicians, we’re treated to a highly evocative & moving collection of narrative songs (even for those of us who don’t speak Arabic), which musically inhabit a space on the corner of 1970s US folk, Arabic melisma and sound-art. A haunting, engrossing work.

Minhwi Lee – Borrowed Tongue [Alien Transistor: LP here/Bandcamp]
South Korean singer/songwriter Minhwi Lee is an accomplished soundtrack composer, jazz musician, indie rock musician, and also plays bass in doom metal band Gawthrop. She is also responsible for this wonderful solo indiefolk album Borrowed Tongue, released in Korea in 2016 and now available more widely on LP via The Notwist‘s label Alien Transistor. The album shows off Lee’s composition and arrangement talents with instrumentals at the start and end and in between (check out the Sakamoto-like cello & piano work that closes the album!), but you’ll also find classic folk and acoustic chamber pop songs that owe a lot to her composing style but also recall Japanese psych-folk like Eddie Marcon and Nick Drake. A thousand thanks to The Notwist for bringing this incredible music to our attention.
I should add here that Lee released a new album in November which I’m only just now getting to listen to.

YATTA – Fully Lost, Fully Found [PTP/Bandcamp]
Absolute stunner from Ricky Sallay Zoker aka YATTA, originally from Houston and now I believe based in New York. Their music has mostly come out through the mighty PTP, and twists and turns so that it can be lonely accidental acoustic recordings at one moment, fully-orchestrated jazz or neo-classical, then switch into electronic processing. Their 2020 release with Moor Mother, DIAL UP, is also genius, and slowly new solo work is forming. This track, which is featured in the soundtrack to the movie Nanny, perfectly encapsulates YATTA’s skilful melding of musicianship and technology.

Reverend Kristin Michael Hayter – I Know His Blood Can Make Me Whole [Perpetual Flame Ministries/Bandcamp]
As Lingua Ignota, Kristin Hayter released three electrifying albums – two on Profound Lore, one on Sargent House – that were based around her piano and voice, classical training filtered through noise and metal. Her guest spots with the body, and as part of Sightless Pit with Lee Buford of the the body and Dylan Walker of Full of Hell, were phenomenal as well, bringing deep emotion and musicality. But the suffering that infused the Lingua Ignota projects was drawn from life, and performing her personal trauma through that music became too much of a burden. So SAVED! comes to us from Reverend Kristin Michael Hayter – she really is ordained, although as she told The Quietus, “it is also true that you can become ordained as a minister in about five minutes online”. SAVED! is by no means an easy listen, even compared to her previous work, but there’s humour as well as redemption strung through these gospel covers and original songs. Recorded with Seth Manchester at Machines With Magnets, the all-analogue production suffuses the album in hiss and tape warping, although thankfully the shuddering stops and starts of the first track are toned down later. There are still jarring splices – particularly shocking when Hayter’s anguished (or is it ecstatic?) glossolalia interrupts a hymn-like piece. This postmodern treatment aims to evoke the dubbed-and-redubbed tapes of gospel music shared among Christian households when Hayter was growing up. The final summation is an album with real beauty and sincerity that nevertheless undercuts itself fiercly throughout, its protagonist forever marked by trauma, but finally arriving to her salvation.

Popular Music – Lifetime Achievement [Sanitarium Sound Services]
Back in the mid 2000s I loved the music of Parenthetical Girls, the experimental pop project led by Zac Pennington, with contributions from the likes of Jherek Bischoff and Xiu Xiu’s Jamie Stewart. Pennington disbanded Parenthetical Girls in 2017, but the strange orchestral, electronic, cabaret vibes continue with Popular Music, a collaboration between LA-based Pennington and Melbourne-based musician Prudence Rees-Lee. Jherek Bischoff’s there too, along with Deerhoof’s Greg Saunier. As often is the case with great pop, there’s an aura of “reminiscent of” about it, and everything it’s reminiscent of is great, so. This was the first single from Minor Works of Popular Music, a song cycle about Armageddon in Los Angeles, as you do. It’s all this good.

Mary Ocher – Love Is Not A Place (feat Your Government) [Underground Institute/Bandcamp]
Berlin-based Russian-Jewish musician Mary Ocher incorporates activism into her art, to the extent that her album Approaching Singularity: Music for the End of Time comes with a substantial (and great) essay about politics, philosophy and art (if I dare sum it up with such broad strokes). She writes movingly about how she holds two passports – Russian and Israeli – both of which she is ashamed of, as Russia invades Ukraine and Israel pummels Gaza to dust. Of course, nothing’s simple, but the simple fact that nothing justifies killing civilians anywhere, much less children, should hardly be controversial. Anyway, I love this track so much. “Love Is Not A Place” features her old band Your Government, and was initially released earlier in 2023 as a fundraiser for Kyiv charity repair.together.

The God In Hackney – In This Room [Junior Aspirin/Bandcamp]
You may remember nigh on 3 years ago, I discovered transatlantic band The God In Hackney via the cover CD on an issue of experimental music mag The Wire. “The Adjoiner” is still one of my favourite tracks from their second album Small Country Eclipse but there’s way more to enjoy there, and now we can extend our enjoyment further with 2023 album The World In Air Quotes. This is left-field art-pop with leanings to ’80s pop experimentalists like Peter Gabriel or Magazine, but with everything and the kitchen sink thrown in, whether krautrock, drum’n’bass, free jazz… It’s undeniably arch (I mean, “The World In Air Quotes”), and “art”, but there’s some kind of sincerity there too, such as the Tears For Fears-ian “In This Room”. After all, an album about the current moment is going to be struggling with the visibly collapsing anthroposcene and the rise of far-right populism, as well as the degredation and atomisation of the public sphere. Meanwhile “Bardo!”, also heard tonight, somehow manages to encompass live d’n’b drums, big band brass, and… Peter Gabriel fronting Talking Heads? The album is co-dedicated to the late Andrew Weatherall, drawing in other clear influences: dub and techno. The second dedicatee is the late Brian Catling, an often challenging performance artist, poet and sculptor, whose various artistic pursuits overlap considerably with those of TGIH singer Nathaniel Mellors.

JOBS – Ask New York [Ramp Local/Bandcamp]
Here’s some more experimental pop from a bunch of experimental musicians including renowned jazz/improv violist Jessica Pavone, along with bassist Ro Lundberg, guitarist Dave Scanlon, and drummer Max Jaffe. Jaffe recorded & mixed the album but all contribute some keyboards, and all sing. Their music can be deceptively straightforward postpunk pop, but there are a lot of electronic elements (Jaffe plays a custom hybrid drumkit), and Pavone’s viola is a significant force throughout.

alice does computer music – Coiled [JOLT Music/Bandcamp]
New Yorker Alice Gorlach’s primary instrument is the cello, but she dubbed herself alice does computer music for her indietronic pop project. Shoegaze 5G is her debut album proper, drawing equally from the scratchy cello-fuelled outsider pop of Arthur Russell and the idm/indietronica of the early oughts. And shoegaze, obviously. There’s the kind of cut-up glitchy production and manic beats that this show has cleaved to for almost 2 decades, but it’s made special by the blissful songwriting that the instruments and programming are supporting. I’m still a little dubious about the artist name, but that’s on me. Highly recommended.

Water From Your Eyes – True Life (Nourished By Time Version) [Matador Records/Bandcamp]
New York experimental indie/postpunk duo Water From Your Eyes released their latest album Everyone’s Crushed in March this year. It’s an excellent mix of snappy songs and weird tangents. But then right near the end of the year they inverted the title as Crushed By Everyone, a track-by-track remix album from friends and touring mates of the band. I’ve always had a soft spot for remix albums – even for artists or albums I’m not familiar with – because I guess the concept of the remix is so close to the heart of what Utility Fog’s mission has been: music recontextualised, taken out of normal standards of genre and presentation, hybridised, de/reconstructed. That’s all present on Crushed By Everyone, where strong original material is turned inside-out. There’s everything from noise to black metal to folk-ambient here, but all with the DIY-punk-dance thing going on. And perhaps because the artists are almost all touring friends, a lot of care has gone into making these well-rounded tracks. It was hard to single one out, but Nourished By Time expand the original “True Life” with an incredibly catchy refrain… kinda genius.

Mandy, Indiana – Pinking Shears [Fire Talk/Bandcamp]
Somehow lately “pop” music (whatever that is, broadly taken) has once more become accommodating of experimentation and extremeness – maybe it’s the political climate, or just where we are now. Maybe you’ll turn around to me and say, “Come on, Manchester’s Mandy, Indiana might sound like raucous noisemakers with their live industrial beats, squalling synths and shouted vocals, but this comes from a great tradition going back at least to punk and new wave if not further”. And you’d be right, my friend. Even so, it’s exciting hearing stuff as uncompromising as this being fêted by the arbiters of the zeitgeist. Touchpoints for their debut album i’ve seen a way have been the unusual recording techniques – recording drums in a cave, vocals in a shopping mall, field recordings on iPhone… The noise, for sure, but also the fact that Valentine Caulfield’s vocals are entirely in French – a distancing effect for much of their audience despite the fact that they are emphatically personal and defiantly feminist. On “Drag [Crashed]” she’s shouting out phrases that she’s been subjected to as a woman: “She’s gonna pop some fly buttons”, “Cover your shoulders, you’ll distract the boys”, and of course “Souris, souris, souris, souris” which you may recognize is “Smile, smile, smile, smile”. It’s a visceral evocation of how tiring and infuriating this treatment is. And “Pinking Shears”, recently subjected to a clipping. remix, is a paean to how fucking tiring this shitty world is. So right.
Oh – also, Mandy, Indiana contributed a great remix for Water From Your Eyes above. Nice.

Armand Hammer – Empire Blvd (feat. Junglepussy & Curly Castro) [Fat Possum Records/Bandcamp]
Around 5 years ago, Armand Hammer released their Paraffin album on various labels on cassette, vinyl and CD, and it brought them the highest level of acclaim they’d yet seen. This was further cemented by billy woods’ incredible Hiding Places with Kenny Segal the following year. So by now woods’ Backwoodz Studioz is known as a vital home to NYC underground hip-hop, and he and Elucid have the recognition they’ve deserved for a good decade. We Buy Diabetic Test Strips finds them on Fat Possum Records as part of the label’s growth from a Mississippi blues focus into other genres, but they’re no less adventurous or incisive in their commentary on the state of the USA. The album’s title itself refers to the signs that turn up in economically disadvantaged neighbourhoods where those not fortunate enough to have health insurance purchase unused diabetic test strips necessary for them to manage their diabetes.
Following Haram, which was entirely produced by The Alchemist, woods and Elucid bring their tremendous intelligence and experience to a suite of tracks produced by many of their usual collaborators like Segal and Willie Green, and JPEGMAFIA on a number of tracks. Meanwhile a jazz ensemble headed up by Shabaka Hutchings brings some additional cohesion to the proceedings, but this has never been lacking on Armand Hammer albums, as the duo bring poetically-chosen spoken word samples and other aural oddities into play. As I mentioned when discussing woods in my 20th anniversary special, hip-hop has always been an experimental genre, but woods and Elucid consistently make super leftfield shit just work perfectly. What could be more perfect than the Sun Ra call-and-response referenced in “Total Recall”?

billy woods & Kenny Segal – Babylon by Bus featuring ShrapKnel [Backwoodz Studioz/Bandcamp]
OK so. The 2019 album Hiding Places was a phenomenal collaboration between the aforementioned iconic underground rapper billy woods & the creative producer Kenny Segal. The sequel Maps had a lot of expectations hanging on it – but as fans we know these two artists well enough to know that defying expectations is built into their art. Segal as usual pulls samples from everywhere & anywhere, pitching guitars way down inside drones and sub bass, dropping pop snippets, looping lopsidedly, scratching – and I had to highlight the (heavily slowed-down) Aphex Twin sample at the start of the ShrapKnel-featuring “Babylon by Bus”. While Hiding Places was about hiding from the darkness of the world, Maps is a post-pandemic album about venturing out. The theme of travel & touring permeates the album, from the joy of flight and seeming freedoms to the pain of separation and the exhaustion of having no home. Although every album from billy woods’ and Armand Hammer’s repertoire is of the highest quality, this second Kenny Segal collab does feel destined to become a classic on the level of Hiding Places.

seina sleep & YoursTruuly – Soothsayers [PTP/Bandcamp]
You can always trust Geng and his Purple Tape Pedigree to turn up really interesting music. Here we have the first album from a very young Austin, TX producer calling themself YoursTruuly, with surrealist rapper seina sleep, also from Austin. The sounds from Xóchitl aka YoursTruuly are full of psychedelic & spiritual jazz samples, but through a grainy, tape-decayed filter (especially see the two instrumental interludes). And seina sleep, who likes to call this genre “gift rap”, has a talent for surrealist lyrics and wordplay, and is joined by a number of other Austin crew throughout the album.

Blockhead – The Cella Dwellas Knew ft. Quelle Chris [Backwoodz Studioz/Bandcamp]
New York beatmaker Tony Simon aka Blockhead has a long history of solo albums, and has released a bunch on that once home of instrumental hip-hop Ninja Tune, as well as billy woodsBackwoodz Studioz. There are no instrumentals at all on The Aux, his latest for Backwoodz, and the guest list is enough to leave the most casual underground hip-hop fan salivating, with woods and his duo Armand Hammer, Danny Brown, Open Mike Eagle, AKAI SOLO, ShrapKnel and many others appearing, as well as his frequent collaborator Aesop Rock. Quelle Chris‘s feature is a stand-out though, with his customary drawl rhyming “lost” with “source”/”sauce”, and Blockhead’s funky sampled jazz choir and skittering boom-bap beats. Check the cool animated video just released with the album.

Aesop Rock – Black Snow (feat. Nikki Jean) [Rhymesayers/Bandcamp]
Blockhead used to be Aesop Rock’s main production partner, going way back to at least 2000’s Float, although in 1999, Appleseed was already mostly self-produced, with just one Blockhead number. Aes’s last album saw the two get back together – Garbology is officially credited to both – but Integrated Tech Solutions is more of a follow-up to the last self-produced opus Spirit World Field Guide. Like that album, ITS is a sardonically parodic concept album, and once again Aes’s production is the perfect foil for his nimble dictionary-in-a-sentence raps. For years now Aes has commented on his anxiety & depression, and his tendency to keep to himself. On “Black Snow”, the album closer, he imagines himself prepping for a climate doomsday augured by the snow turning black: “Precipitation should be clear or not at all, but…” Nikki Jean‘s sweet bridge is just as chilling when you listen closely, and the change-up for the last verse is a genius of perky beats and dark-as-fuck lyrics. “Aes get the dark cloud active” as depression takes hold, and “See you in the morn, the forecast ain’t right”. A helluva finish to another brilliant album.

Aho Ssan – Away (feat. Exzald S & Valentina Magaletti) [Other People/Bandcamp]
When I previewed the stunning new album Rhizomes from Aho Ssan back in August, we heard the track featuring both clipping. & Polish cellist Resina. The Paris-based West African producer, Désiré Niamké to his family & friends, has gathered an incredible cast of collaborators for the album, released on Nicolas Jaar’s Other People. The physical format is a further collaboration, with illustrator Kim Grano exploring Deleuze & Guattari’s concept of the “rhizome” through abstract shapes which respond to the music. The book also makes available bonus tracks and a sample pack from the artist – if only postage to Australia didn’t basically double the price! Check the full album for the rest of the awesome collaborators, but for our best-of I chose the phenomenal piece with Exzald S (fka Fawkes, aka Sarah Foulquiere) and ubiquitous percussive genius Valentina Magaletti.

Shapednoise – Poetry (feat. Moor Mother) [Weight Looming]
Nino Pedone has been destroying speakers and dancefloors with his since 2010 as Shapednoise. Pedone has one foot in the noise realm, with releases on Prurient’s Hospital Productions among others, and one foot in the bass world, collaborating with Mumdance & Logos on the cyberpunk project The Sprawl. His latest Shapednoise album, Absurd Matter, is the most “musical” yet, grounding the crushing, heavily overdriven beats with some basslines and hints of melodic content, as well as some star turns on the mic, including Armand Hammer. Moor Mother speaks of resisting erasure on “Poetry”. Allowing hip-hop to shape his noise here inspires the best work yet from Pedone.

Teether & Kuya Neil – MYTH [Chapter Music/Bandcamp]
STRESSOR hell of a mixtape from Naarm/Melbourne underground rapper Teether and producer Kuya Neil. The amen-breaks-infused single “RENO” was a sign of things to come – the rest of the tracks follow a similar trajectory, with impeccable productions that reference the distorted, time-out-of-joint club musics of the moment, skittery chopped beats & plenty of bass, with low-key melodic raps from Teether and occasional guests like Realname. Best shit.

Izambard – Leather Me [Kingdome Recordings/Bandcamp]
Bizarre mutations of bass music from London enigma Izambard, affiliated with the Kingdome crew and a2b2, the deeply confusing project of Death Grips’ Andy Morin. Izambard’s 2023 EP B4 collects four tracks of digitally cut-up beats, syncopated bass and the artist’s ever-changing voice, from gruff to high-pitched, spat into the mic at speed. It’s fun stuff, as is his debut album Y from 2021, with a similar range and approach. It takes SOPHIE’s industrial crunch a la Faceshopping or Ponyboy and grinds off the more overtly pop elements. Don’t try and understand it, just take the pummeling.

Chimpo – All Of The Above [Box N Lock]
Manchester’s Chimpo is never one to shy away from pop fun in his bass music, and he’s a dedicated junglist. He’s released a bunch of music this year on various labels, but Box N Lock is his own home and “All Of The Above” is classic Chimpo, d’n’b with swooping basslines and lyrics about embracing all types.

ben sloan – toomuchinternet (feat. serengeti & josiah wolf of why?) [New Amsterdam Recordings/Bandcamp]
You may not realise it, but you’ve probably heard Ben Sloan‘s playing before. He’s a drummer who’s played with artists such as *quotes from bio* The National, Moses Sumney, Beth Orton, Mouse on Mars, Rozi Plain, Serengeti, and WHY? – many of whom as you can see here appear as guests on his restless, rhythm-heavy, eclectic debut solo album muted colors, released by New Amsterdam Recordings (a label known for boundary-pushing contemporary classical music, but also branching out into other kinds of experimental music and indie/pop). In amongst the expert playing & singing from himself and his guests there are field recordings and other found sounds that he’s collected over many years. The result is a very dense, very enjoyable record that retains a core of skilfully skittery percussion through myriad briefly-touched-on genres, from schoolchildren singing through drill’n’bass with half-heard hip-hop vocals, to contemplative piano, modal jazz, hints at r’n’b pop and more. Nothing is immune to interruption from manic drums or beats, although the closing track featuring Moses Sumney does the best at keeping to a sunny jazz-pop template with experimental edges. If you missed this when it came out, don’t waste time now!

Liv.e – Gardetto. [In Real Life/Bandcamp]
Here’s Dallas r’n’b innovator Liv.e (the “e” is silent), whose indubitale r’n’b chops shine through on many tracks on her new album Girl In The Half Pearl, but more than ever the sweet harmonies and orchestrations are heard through a patina of experimental techniques – industrial distortion, technoid loops or, on a few tracks, drum’n’bass beats. Anyone who found Janelle Monäe’s early work too challenging will run a mile, but this is catnip for leftfield music fans – it was FBi Album of the Week in February when it was released. Much of the production is from Liv.e herself, developed after an Artist in Residence stint at London’s Laylow, and it feels like UK dance music crept into the mix with adventurous jazz/soul & r’n’b a la FlyLo, Thundercat et al.

Debby Friday – Good Luck [Sub Pop/Bandcamp]
Debby Friday is a musical polymath: she can chop jungle breaks with the best of them, but she plunders hip-hop, r’n’b and pop, often with a penchant for industrial-level distortion and plenty of bass, and is a talented rapper & singer too. Her album Good Luck was first class, taking in all those influences at once. Also notable was the standalone single “let u in“, a co-pro with Darcy Baylis recorded while she was on tour in Naarm/Melbourne earlier this year. Again with the jungle influences, this one eschews the industrial heaviness to the extent that it could be a PinkPantheress song – no shade! It’s lovely.

fromjoy – seraph (feat. iRis.EXE) [fromjoy Bandcamp]
The latest album from Texans fromjoy handily combines industrial metal with breakcore, as well as ethereal pop in places. There’s plenty of twisted breaks sliding into double-kick metal drumming, plenty of hardcore vocals and lovely clean vocals (especially in the cameo from iRis.EXE). The ’80s easy-listening sax music in the second last track and the album fadeout is the vapourwave icing on the cake of this cyberpunk dream made real.

BRACT X BAYANG (tha Bushranger) – HOMESICK [Bract Bandcamp]
Some 5 years ago or so I discovered an Eora/Sydney band called Coward Punch, making growling, throbbing industrial metal & noise, and sending all the profits of their EPs to Grandmothers Against Removal (debut) and Black Rainbow (follow-up). Those releases sat in my collection, but somehow I missed that the band renamed themselves BRACT, so when this phenomenal collaboration with Dharug/Western Sydney-based rapper BAYANG (tha Bushranger) came out, it took me a minute to make the connection. Anyway, BAYANG has clear delivery and hella flow (check this drum’n’bass-laden track produced by Kuya Neil), and hearing him over these chugging industrial rhythms and murky textures is a strange thrill. The artists see it as a musical representation of the often-hellish melting-pot that is Sydney, a place where (thankfully) punk, noise, hip-hop and club sounds rub freely up against each other – something I’m convinced we can at least to some degree thank FBi Radio and its various music directors for. In any case, this is a no-holds-barred, vicious, scungey piece of filth, with occasional flashes of light.

Joseph Branciforte & Theo Bleckmann – 10.14.4 [greyfade/Bandcamp]
The second album from New York duo Joseph Branciforte & Theo Bleckmann came out at the start of December. Bleckmann usually moves in the worlds of jazz and new music, but here sings in a fragile, high register, not unlike Arve Henriksen in Supersilent. Bleckmann’s vocals are liberally sampled and cut up by Branciforte, using techniques the duo use in live settings – and although the basis of the recorded tracks is live, there are overdubs that enhance the structure of their compositions. Frequently bewitching.

Farhad Bandesh & David Bridie – Freedom [David Bridie Bandcamp]
Melbourne treasure David Bridie may be cast these days as a pleasant “adult contemporary” pianist-singer-songwriter, but he’s always worked in unexpected areas musically, from the ambient/proto-postrock/global-folk gregariousness of the frankly uncategorisable Not Drowning, Waving to the post-Penguin Cafe Orchestra chamber pop of My Friend The Chocolate Cake (never quite as twee as their name would suggest). Lyrically, Bridie has often focused on stories of working class, middle Australians, little people – and also on his dedicated activism, whether for the freedom struggles of West Papua or against the inhumanity of Australia’s punishing treatment of refugees. All this comes to the fore on his 2023 album It’s Been A While Since Our Last Correspondence. Each track is a short story or piece of poetry, spoken (and occasionally partly sung) by its writer, and all the breadth of Bridie’s lyrical interests is there. I really recommend the whole album, even if you’re leery of spoken word and music (he says, having just released such an album this year too, maybe check it out?) All contributors have risen to the challenge with deeply engaging and moving vignettes, and I really wanted to showcase Kit Kavanagh-Ryan‘s gently heartbreaking “Thanks For Five Years“, but in the end I settled for the essential piece from Kurdish refugee, artist and musician Farhad Bandesh, freed as part of Medevac but still fighting for resettlement (ten years on from fleeing Iran). The mixture of his spoken word and electrifying singing with Bridie’s postpunkish backing is a highlight.

Le Cri du Caire – Sadiya (Purple feather) [Les Disques du Festival Permanent]
Poet, singer, trumpeter, actor, electronic producer: it seems there’s little that the Europe-based Egyptian Abdullah Miniawy cannot do. He has a long-running collaboration with German trio Carl Gari, fusing dub, techno and trip-hop influences with rapturous sufi singing and jazz trumpet, and those same inputs from Miniawy are present in his 2020 album with French bass producer Simo Cell. His own Bandcamp carries obscure electronic self-productions and poetry, and a different take on pre-Islamic Egyptian spirituality can be found on his collaborative album with Danish producer of Indian descent HVAD (previously Kid Kishore). Meanwhile the jazz comes to the fore with the astonishing ensemble Le Cri du Caire. The group started with Miniawy’s meeting with French saxophonist Peter Corser, a little later the legendary French trumpeter Erik Truffaz joined. This is notable enough, but the group really comes together with the addition of Paris-based German cellist Karsten Hochapfel. Sensitive playing and creative arrangements support and augment Miniawy’s songs and compositions, making their self-titled debut album a thrilling listen, whether you’re a fan of jazz or not.

Yirinda – Yuangan (Dugong) [Chapter Music/Bandcamp]
Butchulla songman Fred Leone is starting to blow up, with A.B. Original‘s producer trials remixing his first single “Yirimi Gundir”, and some high-profile live apeparances. He’s one of three Butchulla songmen left, a custodian of endangered Butchulla language and song. Yirinda is a remarkable project linking Leone with double bassist and composer Samuel Pankhurst. The intimate voice and strings setting of this first track immediately draws the listener in, and the rest of the album promises horns, synths, piano and percussion added into the mix.

Listen again — ~204MB

Playlist 10.12.23

Strange echoes tonight as we hear some (quite avant-garde) freak-folk, prog-folk(?), alt.hip-hop and plenty of proper drum’n’bass – but also very modern sound-design jungle, acoustic experimentalism edging on classicalm, free jazz and postrock, and… more?
This is our last “new music” show of the year. The next two shows will be “Best of 2023” Parts 1 & 2, and I’m taking a break on the 31st of December.

LISTEN AGAIN and embrace the new! Stream on demand from FBi, podcast here.

Jameson Feakes – Preston Point [Jameson Feakes Bandcamp]
Jameson Feakes – Neutral Pausy [Jameson Feakes Bandcamp]
I first heard Perth guitarist Jameson Feakes performing contemporary compositions and improvisations on …until…, released in 2017. More recently he was developing a practice of improvised folk guitar that must have fed into this major new work, Albany’s Famous Gardeners. Here we have a suite of “freak-folk” songs performed by a band made of musicians from the Perth experimental scene – it reminds me a lot of Annika Moses‘ incredible 2021 album Of Cloven Hoof in Honey, and indeed Feakes played on that and Moses plays on this. The songs here are inspired by the colonial history of the Whadjuk Noongar, Wiilman and Minang boodja. The guitar phrase that opens “Preston Point” indicates an expressionist style which is mostly only hinted at, as the songs take on rather a melodic, harmonically rich, rapturous style like Grizzly Bear or perhaps Punch Brothers. Fans of indie-folk and the more adventurous ends of folk and country/bluegrass should adore this.

Junkboy – Chase the Knucker (feat. Hannah Lewis) [Wayside & Woodland/Bandcamp/Junkboy Bandcamp]
Junkboy – So Breaks Tomorrow [Wayside & Woodland/Bandcamp/Junkboy Bandcamp]
The roots of Jameson Feakes’ folk seem very American to me – American Primitive or country blues. Junkboy, on the other hand, are from the south-east of England, and their approach to psych-folk owes a lot to the English folk revival, along with certain arms of postrock and psych/spacerock. On Littoral States, co-released with epic45’s Wayside & Woodland label, brothers Mik and Rich Hanscomb gather a group made up of violin, cello, trumpet and lapsteel banjo(!), and on a couple of songs the vocals of Hannah Lewis. Around the lush folk arrangements are synths and little bits of electronic processing to remind ourselves we haven’t slipped back a century or so.

Abstract Concrete – Almost Touch [The state51 Conspiracy/Bandcamp]
Few musicians have been as prescient and creative over as long a period as British drummer Charles Hayward. His earliest group This Heat bridged art rock and postpunk, while also developing tape techniques and studio production in parallel with early industrial music. Hayward’s drumming from the start was proto-breakbeat, and in most of his projects there’s a rhythmic drive that’s almost like jungle – but the flipside to the experimentalism and virtuoso drumming is Hayward’s talent for yearning melodies, often sung in high register, like the great Robert Wyatt. With Abstract Concrete, Hayward has connected with a group of first-class contemporary musicians: Agathe Max plays viola (she appears on the incredible UKAEA album that I was talking about last week), guitarist Roberto Sassi appears in a long list of experimental bands, and I’m familiar with both clarinettist/keyboardist Yoni Silver and bassist Otto Willberg from their work with experimental songwriter Ashely Paul. This pedigree results in a band that’s part-improvisation, part-songwriting, with a sweeping range that incorporates everything from art rock to post-punk to psychedelia, with rich arrangements courtesy of the unusual, brilliant line-up. Really, what a gift.

Buck 65, doseone, Jel – Kill Or Be Killed [Handsmade/Bandcamp]
Buck 65, doseone, Jel – Not Weird [Handsmade/Bandcamp]
North American Adonis exists! Way back in 1998, these three Anticon-affiliated artists put together a set of demos that never properly saw the light of day. Jeffrey Jel Logan is one of the great early proponents of fingerdrumming, creating beats live on the pads of E-Mu SP-1200 and Akai MPC samplers. He was half of Themselves with Adam Drucker aka doseone, whose nasal tones and avant-garde cut-up poetry are synonymous with that “alt” hip-hop strain that Anticon represented. Richard Terfry, meanwhile, as Buck 65 did start off in that scene but found more major success. What’s interesting about this now-completed album is that it was all recreated now, with Jel building the beats from the original SP-1200 disks, and doseone and Buck 65 riffing on the original raps but pretty much creating them anew. And it’s great hearing dose – who’s been busy writing computer game music – and ’65, whose style has moved in different directions since this period, both rapping in ye olde leftfield style. Jel’s beats are as insane as you’d expect, it’s a real joy. You can read more about it via Buck 65 here.

TLF Trio – Suite X [Latency/Bandcamp]
TLF Trio – March-like, Wild (Moritz von Oswald Variation) [Latency/Bandcamp]
French label Latency, which I know mostly for minimalist electronic music, prides itself (absolutely correctly) in covering a broad spectrum of music from around the world. That’s how the Danish TLF Trio have ended up on there, made up of cellist Cæcilie Trier (aka CTM, heard on Danish experimental labels like Posh Isolation), pianist Jakob Littauer and guitarist Mads Kristian Frøslev. With this acoustic lineup they can mimic early classical or baroque music, but even on last year’s debut album Sweet Harmony they introduced a drum machine beat on one track; now their follow-up EP New Songs & Variations sees two of their tracks reworked by minimal techno pioneer and post-jazz explorer Moritz von Oswald, and given another beat by Claus Haxholm. TLF Trio are one of those postmodern entities entirely at home in the liminal now where seemingly there’s no such thing as genre anymore. Given that’s kind of what this show’s always been seeking out, I can hardly complain.

Pelayo Arrizabalaga & Eli Gras – Turbio [La Olla Expréss/Bandcamp]
Pelayo Arrizabalaga & Eli Gras – Agua Negra [La Olla Expréss/Bandcamp]
Two well-established Spanish experimental musicians join up for the second time on their album Áridos. Pelayo Arrizabalaga is a bass clarinettist but also employs turntables and electronics, while Eli Gras is known as an experimental luthier, but here plays electric guitar and acts as sound engineer, producer and mixer. Their very abstract music is sometimes created entirely acoustically, but here is very electronically-mediated. I love the mystery of many of the sounds, and the way they flit between free jazz musicianship and experimental electronics.

Slowfoam – Sporadic Dawning [mappa]
Slowfoam – Phantom Memories, Iambic Limbs [mappa]
Berlin-based musician Madelyn Bird aka Slowfoam has an MSc in Neuroaesthetics, and the connection between art and science is present in their music and curation as well as their research. Their music blurs the line between dance music and sound-art, between organic and digital, and none moreso than on their new album Worlding With Earth on Slovakia’s might mappa label. Here Byrd evokes the sounds of the post-Anthropocene, a time when (hopefully) humans no longer dominate the environment but rather live in harmony with it. Thus these pieces are part faux field recordings, but as much as they conjure up the sounds of future biotech, they also shape the sounds into flittering dance rhythms. It’s rare for conceptual instrumental music to make its themes as audible as they are here.

Oblaka – Infinite Cycles [YUKU/Bandcamp]
Czech producer Ladislav Zensor, previously known as Exhausted Modern, initiates a new moniker, Oblaka, for the album Petrichor Memories on YUKU (also based in Prague). It’s intricate sound-design and deconstructed club forms, with jungle’s jackhammers appearing even when there aren’t constant beats.

Prado – Overload [Buh Records]
Prado – Hysteria [Buh Records]
Nicolás Prado introduced his surname’d project with the album Machines last year on Peruvian label Buh Records. For the follow-up, a very short EP called Overload, the machines are indeed overloaded, while jungle & breakcore beats, with heavy bass thump, clatter and sometimes sputter out. When it really gets going, if still only briefly, it’s got heaps of energy.

TRC2 – Facing The Void [Offish Productions/Bandcamp]
TRC2 – Straw Hat [Offish Productions/Bandcamp]
Poland’s Offish Productions specialise in drum’n’bass & jungle from all round the world, from drumfunk to halftime to techy stuff. On his full-length Deep Audio Introspection, Welsh producer TRC2 covers plenty of ground, with breakbeat choppery and massive bass. Jungle & drum’n’bass heads will find a lot to love, and should explore the rest of the label’s catalogue.

Abstract Drumz – Ambient Illusion [Over/Shadow/Bandcamp]
Nectax – Voychek [Over/Shadow/Bandcamp]
The Over/Shadow label was formed a few years ago by hardcore/jungle originals 2 Bad Mice, aiming to bring back the halcyon days of the Moving Shadow label, including artists of the time like Dom & Roland, DJ Trax, Paradox and others. Their latest project features four contemporary producers with an EP each making up Quadrant Vol 1. Detboi and Overlook each contribute, and tonight we heard Abstract Drumz from Quadrant 2 and Nectax from Quadrant 4, each with drum workouts, Abstract Drumz’ more ambient and Nectax on a dark & heavy tip.

Hassan Abou Alam – Te3ebt (ZULI Remix) [YUKU/Bandcamp]
The great YUKU may be based in Czechia, but they draw artists from around the world. Here’s Hassan Abou Alam, from the thriving Egyptian scene, bringing percussive beats and bass, with four remixes, two of which are also Egyptian artists. The great ZULI drives “Te3ebt” into crunched distortion and ragged breaks.

DRUGONDRAGON – せーぞんせんりゃく (Saison Senryaku) [Virgin Babylon]
DRUGONDRAGON – もんくつらつら (Monk Tsuratsura) [Virgin Babylon]
It’s been 5 years since Virgin Babylon released DRUGONDRAGON‘s last album DokkanoNaneka DarekanoNanika (“something for someone else”). This new one, イ​ノ​セ​ン​ト (Innocence), is along the same lines: punkish indie songs with breakcore madness slipping in all over the place. It’s classic Japanese stuff, where not conforming to genre is the norm! Love.

Nicholas Remondino – its [shhpuma]
Nicholas Remondino – stick [shhpuma]
Finishing tonight with the Italian drummer & experimental musician Nicholas Remondino, whose work as LAMIEE I’ve played a lot in the last couple of years. One of the great things about Nicholas’s music is that every release is different, whether in his many groups or solo, ranging from extreme electronic editing & processing to contemporary jazz to noise to singer-songwriter. His solo album on Portuguese label shhpuma, Ocra Rossa (Red Ochre), is for prepared drums only, beautifully mic’d up so that you can hear every movement of every object. Sounds tumble around, anchored (sometimes) by a booming bass drum. It’s always rhythmic although never in recognisable patterns. But it’s sonically so interesting that it doesn’t need bar lines.

McCorman – sfiorarsi//perdersi [Kohlhass/Bandcamp]
McCorman – posarsi//ritrovarti [Kohlhass/Bandcamp]
In McCorman, Remondino plays prepared bass drum and synth, and whistles on one track. He’s joined by two other jazz-trained Italian musicians, Stefano Calderano on prepared guitar and electric guitar, and Francesco Panconesi on tenor sax and “extended sax”. Panconesi also sings, somewhere in the back of the room, on our closing track, “posarsi//ritrovarti” (settle//find yourself again), an eerie piece primarily for slow-moving electric guitar. The slow-moving lines on guitar and sax make “sfiorarsi//perdersi” (touch each other//get lost) quite eerie too, with shuffling drums pushing it along. Their album A Page Is Turned | A Mountain Collapses | A Guy Leaves is evocative music in the interstices of jazz, postrock and folk. Highly recommended.

Listen again — ~210MB

Playlist 03.12.2023

Many crunchy, glitchy sounds tonight, voices submerged in beds of audio soup, folktronica, post-classicism and uneasy ambient.

LISTEN AGAIN and experience the glory. Stream on demand via FBi, podcast here.

Richie Culver – Swollen ft. billy woods [Participant/Bandcamp]
Richie Culver – Say 4 sure [Participant/Bandcamp]
Conceptual artist & poet Richie Culver collaborated with Blackhaine in 2021 on a provocative pair of tracks before releasing his autobiographical album of spoken word and heavy electronics, I was born by the sea in late 2022. This year we’ve heard an incredible remix collection from that album, as well as a harrowing piece about sleep paralysis for Drowned By Locals (with its own remixes), and he now rounds out the year with another full length album, Scream If You Don’t Exist. Again his spoken word is centred, but often swamped by industrial drones and sometimes crunching beats. The connection with underground hip-hop is made explicit here with guest spots from billy woods, Moor Mother and MOBBS, who contribute further to the oppressive atmosphere. I don’t exist, but I must scream.

BAYANG (tha Bushranger) – Bioluminescent [Prod. Ryan Fennis] [CONTENT.NET.AU/Bandcamp]
Sydney’s finest purveyor of underground hip-hop BAYANG (tha Bushranger) has a mixtape out this week called Antarctica, with many guests on mics and production duties. Ryan Fennis gives post-rave vibes to “Bioluminescent”, in which BAYANG (the Bushranger) meditates on choosing light over darkness.

General Magic – g1000 [GOTO Records/Bandcamp]
General Magic – Nervoesnigg [GOTO Records/Bandcamp]
Way back in 1995, the duo of Andi Pieper and Ramon Bauer collaborated with Peter Rehberg on a series of Fridge Trax, under the name General Magic & Pita. These strange, clicky, frigid pieces were ostensibly based around the buzz of an old fridge, and their focus on malfunctioning material kicked off the Viennese strand of “glitch” music, with samples cut to emphasise sharp discontinuities, granular processing turned to the max, digital clipping celebrated. The trio ran the influential Mego label for many years until it was dissolved and turned into Editions Mego, enthusiastically run by Rehberg until his untimely death in 2021. Pieper and Bauer’s General Magic was always one of the most playful and varied of the Mego acts, incorporating rhythm and beats more than most (other, perhaps, than Farmers Manual), and injecting humour even when at their most abstract. Their Bandcamp showcases music made over the last few years, including multimedia collaborations with Tina Frank, who was responsible for the distinctive collaged art of the Mego releases. After the very short Softbop last year, Nein Aber Ja (“No But Yes”) is the first album of new material from the duo in many years, released on CD and cassette by GOTO Records. Never ones to sit still, Pieper and Bauer here traverse viciously crunched techno, ersatz krautrock and some kind of mashed & mulched-up hip-hop. It’s a very different paradigm from the current crop of high-fidelity deconstructed club and experimental producers, a reminder that everything new is old again, and vice versa.

Water From Your Eyes – True Life (Nourished By Time Version) [Matador Records/Bandcamp]
Water From Your Eyes – Structure (The Cradel Version) [Matador Records/Bandcamp]
A few weeks ago I played Mandy, Indiana‘s remix of Brooklyn indie pop duo Water From Your Eyes, one of the first cuts from Crushed By Everyone, a collection of remixes of their 2023 album Everyone’s Crushed. I’ve always had a soft spot for remix albums – even for artists or albums I’m not familiar with – because I guess the concept of the remix is so close to the heart of what Utility Fog’s mission has been: music recontextualised, taken out of normal standards of genre and presentation, hybridised, de/reconstructed. That’s all present on Crushed By Everyone, where strong original material is turned inside-out. There’s everything from noise to black metal to folk-ambient here, but all with the DIY-punk-dance thing going on. And perhaps because the artists are almost all touring friends, a lot of care has gone into making these well-rounded tracks.

Clark – Silver Pet Crank [Throttle Records]
Clark – Pumpkin [Throttle Records]
Earlier this year, Chris Clark added a new string to his bow, having dived right into perfected IDM, birthed it anew with saturated live drums, filled dancefloors, and then turned his hand to soundtracks, complete with orchestra and choir. On Sus Dog elements of all this were gathered in service of songs, gently sung by himself. While waiting for the album to come out, he couldn’t sit still, and created a series of interstitial, looser pieces for social media. Cave Dog is that music developed into a full companion album, with orchestral and other contributions gleaned from Sus Dog‘s collaborators, and tbh it’s as enjoyable as the “album proper”. There are more songs, there’s more IDM, and the processed piano on “Pumpkin” is super pretty.

Fairie – Jillian [Provenance Records/Bandcamp]
Following three impressive singles, Melbourne’s Fairie, aka Lucy Li, has now released her full-length debut album Nastic Appeal. It’s likely the last single-artist release to come from Provenance Records, who will concentrate on regular compilations from the collective’s musicians – and if it is, it’s a high note to go out on. Li’s songs bear the influence of Kate Bush (of course a groundbreaking, multi-talented composer and performer), and also of the club music that Li has previously released. Throughout this entirely self-produced album there are snippets of everyday life and moments from the recording sessions that contrast nicely with the often dense electronic production. “Jillian” dispels the denseness, with gentle piano, layers of vocals and lots of field recordings and chatter threatening to overwhelm the song, all lending a touching delicateness to the work.

Niecy Blues – U Care [kranky/Bandcamp]
Delicate is one word that could be used to describe the unique music of Niecy Blues. Living in Charleston, North Carolina, she draws in the gospel music of her youth – but slowed down into a heavy-lidded miasmah, mixed with contemporary r&b, and slung through arrangements that are often closer to ambient and slowcore than what you’d expect from r&b. It’s beautiful and surprising and enveloping.

Massimiliano Cerioni – Kickin’ In [Elli Records/Bandcamp]
Massimiliano Cerioni – Inner Landscape III – Angst Vor Dem Trail (Feat. Function Store) [Elli Records/Bandcamp]
Massimiliano Cerioni – Ritualistic [Elli Records/Bandcamp]
The ever-reliable Elli Records, run out of Marseilles but with deep connections to Italy as well as France, presents a concept album from Amsterdam-based sound-artist & composer Massimiliano Cerioni. The opening, title track of Inner Landscape was created first, with a looped piano melody as a through-line within various electronic sounds, whether glitchy or percussive. Cerioni then shared the stems with three fellow musicians, but rather than remixes, these versions are collaborative reworks. Maybe most interesting then are the interstitial tracks, which are his own extensions from those collaborative sessions into shorter studies. Tonight we heard the version created with Berlin’s Function Store, which its preceding interlude, and then another short, experimental interlude.

Sully – Stop [Uncertain Hour]
In 2014, Jack Stevens aka Sully, who had heretofore made grime and 2-step-inspired music, released the extraordinary double EP Blue on Keysound, in some ways kickstarting the jungle revival. This year there have only been a few split releases from Sully, until now with the third 12″ on his Uncertain Hour label. Proving again what a master Sully is of jungle beats and pacing, these are both killer tracks worthy of dancefloors anywhere & everywhere.

Chimpo & Dub Phizix – Skyward [EQ50]
Everybody loves Chimpo. If you don’t, you just need to get into Chimpo, Manchester’s charming jungle & bass-music lover. Anyway, here he is collaborating with Mancunian d’n’b bod Dub Phizix, with their contribution to EQ50 Presents 4GAZA, a big (but not unweildy) compilation of drum’n’bass music of all stripes, which will send all profits to Anera and Decolonize Palestine. It’s a great collection of, as far as I can see, exclusive tracks from across the gamut of drum’n’bass & jungle, even though the mastering between different tracks is a bit patchy – a minor complain in any case!

PYUR – Intersections [Subtext Recordings/Bandcamp]
Following a debut on Scuba’s Hotflush Recordings, Sophie Schnell’s PYUR released a big, ambitious album on Subtext Recordings in 2019 called Oratorio for the Underworld, mixing the experimental and industrial ends of bass music & techno into classical composition, including violin and cello. It was intensely complex, and brilliantly executed. Her follow-up comes over 4 years later with Lucid Anarchy, to be released in January 2024. Eschewing the classical elements, it also replaces beats with rhythmic pulsing electronics – although this should come with caveats, as there are mangled classical samples groaning and flittering through the tracks, and some percussive elements. The whole album is rad, but in the meantime check the throbbing single “Intersections”.

HUUUM – Chapi [Accidental Meetings/Bandcamp]
Rojin Sharafi is a Vienna-based Iranian sound-artist and composer, who I was first introduced to through Ata Ebtekar’s Zabte Sote label. Her uncompromising spirit and musical depth is confirmed here in the trio HUUUM, which features the voice of Omid Darvish, a singer & musician with Kurdish roots born in Tehran, and is rounded out by the expressionist reeds of Astrid Wiesinger (along with a few guests). Many streams of avant-garde, including free jazz and noise, unite with folk forms from Iran and beyond, in what HUUUM call “folk futurism”. It’s a unique and moving offering that I can’t recommend highly enough.

WSR – Flatwound [WSR Bandcamp]
WSR – Aria [WSR Bandcamp]
Earlier this year we received the unexpected gift of a second album from Berlin-based Italian brother-and-sister duo Aperture. In Aperture, musician and acoustician Emanuele Porcinai is joined by his sister Elisabetta Porcinai, whose spoken and whispered poetry and visual art adorn their releases. When Aperture’s brilliant debut Threads came out in 2018, I initially didn’t realise that I’d been following Emanuele since his second EP Chambers, released under the name WSR. Now, three years after the last WSR release, Dicasmia showcases a similar aesthetic to the earlier releases: close-mic’d acoustic instruments – notably cello – are moulded into dark, heavy masses of sound, seamlessly mutated into industrial electronics. The juxtaposition of acoustic and electric instruments with digital sound-design is very much what WSR is about, and as you know it’s very much what Utility Fog is about too, so I couldn’t be happier to have this new work alongside Aperture’s album from earlier this year.

Jérôme Noetinger, Anthony Pateras – Coruscation 2 [Penultimate Press/Bandcamp]
Jérôme Noetinger, Anthony Pateras – Coruscation 4 [Penultimate Press/Bandcamp]
15 Coruscations is the second duo album of Jérôme Noetinger and Anthony Pateras on Mark Harwood’s Penultimate Press. Harwood is originally from Melbourne, as is Pateras, a powerhouse modern composer and performer on piano and other keyboard instruments. Noetinger is an electroacoustic composer based in France, who’s often found at Cafe OTO in London, which Harwood was associated with for a long time. The pair, who have worked in different configurations together since 2009, will sometimes perform with Pateras on piano and Noetinger on his tape machines, but here they are both working with concrète sound manipuation and electronic noisemakers. Even at their most abstract these coruscations are rich with compelling mystery.

Alexander Tillegreen – Re-Orientate (Intermezzo) [raster/Bandcamp]
In Words is the debut album for Danish artist Alexander Tillegreen, who has hitherto created visual art and installation works while also study psychoacoustic phenomena. Many of the pieces on the album are based around manipulated voices, manipulated with granular synthesis into glitchy swarms of phonemes, in keeping with raster-media‘s place in purist post-club experimental electronics. Through the album there are also beautiful tectonic ambient works of synth pads and sub-bass rumbles, but the glitched vocals are the heart of it.

Toada – Duet [Toada Bandcamp]
Portuguese producer Valdir da Silva aka Toada looks to early ’90s folktronica on his new EP Slow-Paced Tangents. There’s a delicateness to the fidgety melodic and rhythmic sounds that harken back to the UK garage and hip-hop-inspired early sounds of Four Tet and Caribou (then Manitoba), with a welcoming breeziness.

Adam Coney – Seal Sands [Trestle Records/Bandcamp]
To judge Adam Coney‘s album from one track would be a mistake. Coney’s pure electric guitar intertwines with a synth and swishes of cymbals, only for us to switch to a kind of angular kraut/post-rock bass-and-drums-driven groove, and then a pentatonic guitar melody over a skittering snare pattern. If we thought we understood what we were hearing, the next track gives us another bass-and-drums groove, this time with a slightly unhinged distorted guitar solo/melody. Central to all of this is Coney’s guitar, and when we reach the gorgeous closing track “Seal Sands”, the guitar is is either acoustic or gently amplified, playing through arpeggiated chords that softly pull at the emotions, joined a minute in by Coney overdubbing simple cello lines, while a half-speed echo of the guitar provides a subtle low-end undertow. Ashwin & Above is an album whose logic unfolds from careful listening, and it certainly rewards repeat plays.

Sophie Hutchings – Into The Wild [Mercury KX]
I’ve been playing cello with Sydney pianist Sophie Hutchings for over 13 years now, but when I first played her on this show, we’d never met. She’s a dear friend and I played a little bit on her new album A World Outside, but I’m also a fan, and on this new album she’s raised the bar, working with composer/producer/violist Nick Wales to build rich arrangements, incorporating sounds from remote areas in the north of this continent, and collaborating with the extraordinary Yolŋu songman Rrawun Maymuru and young Larrakia singer Lena Kellie. The album is accompanied by amazing visuals filmed on location: I recommend watching the video for “Into the Wild”, which I played tonight. It’s a song that’s unmistakeably Sophie, albeit driven forward by pattering drums and low-end synths, and expanded outwards by beautiful vocal drones.

IKSRE – dawn in a foreign city [Constellation Tatsu]
Steven Ramsey’s Constellation Tatsu is a wonderfully-curated label from Oakland that focuses on ambient and experimental fare. So it was great to hear from Melbourne’s Phoebe Dubar that her next IKSRE album abundance will be coming out on the label early next year. Her music is a blissful kind of theraputic ambient driven by electronics and her layered voice. The first single, “dawn in a foreign city”, is streaming everywhere now.

Martyna Basta – Diaries [STROOM.tv]
Martyna Basta – Beneath [STROOM.tv]
In a scant couple of years since her stunning debut Making Eye Contact With Solitude, Polish artist Martyna Basta has become compulsory listening. This year a follow-up album was released on Slovakian label Warm Winters, Ltd., and she closes out the year with the EP Diaries Beneath Fragile Glass via Belgium’s STROOM.tv. From her first release, her modus operandi has been to use field recordings and domestic sounds along with voice and various acoustic instruments including the zither, seemingly recorded while they weren’t looking. The music feels effortlessly casual, but is meticulously constructed with affecting tenderness. Not many have such a talent for emotive sound-art.

JWPATON – Aunty [Room40/Bandcamp]
Joshua William Paton aka JWPATON is a Yuin artist and musician currently living on Darug Country, Western Sydney. His interest in the intersection of rural and urban environments is palpable in his work, which can be both highly electronic and very naturalistic. Aunty (which is completed by a gorgeous video) is a case in point, with field recordings of rain and nature seemingly transforming into semi-rhythmic white noise like free jazz brushed snares while processed guitar bubbles over it, at times blooming into distortion. Even without the video these pieces tell a story about the natural world and the world created, for better or worse, by human cultures.

Listen again — ~199MB

Playlist 26.11.23

Future beats, folktronic hybrids, post-everything improv and more…

LISTEN AGAIN because you know it’s good. Stream on demand on the FBi site, podcast here.

Many Seg – wash ur mind [zzaapp records]
Many Seg – i guess [zzaapp records]
Non-binary Melburnian-via-Darwin Serge Balaam releases their debut EP as Many Seg on Kris Keogh‘s ZZAAPP Records, and it’s a helluva opening bout. First track “wash ur mind” has crescendos of drone that seem mostly made up of stretched vocal samples, glitching disturbingly while voices state “I want u to be happy”. The other two tracks are both driven by fast-paced kicks, but “the messages” overlays the stuttery kicks, and eventually harsh snares, with a kind of dub techno dronescape, while “i guess” leans on its repeating bass pulses to evoke a kind of dubstep-footwork hybrid by way of early Autechre. Big tip!

Sunken Foal – Esmeralda [Front End Synthetics]
Sunken Foal – The Verdict [Front End Synthetics]
I realised recently that Dunk Murphy’s music has been with me since the very beginning of Utility Fog in 2003, as he was (and is) a member of Ambulance, the Dublin duo who were released on Planet µ as early as 2002. The first EP and album from Murphy as Sunken Foal were also released on Planet µ, but he and Ambulance had a connection to Dublin label Front End Synthetics since the late ’90s, and of late Murphy’s more ambient releases as Minced Oath as well as the some Sunken Foal have come out through that label. The Ambulance sound was IDM characterised by processed guitar sounds, granular fizz and occasional vocals. With Sunken Foal, Murphy introduced acoustic instruments from the start – the piano and acoustic guitar on Dutch Elm, along with the vocoder vocals, still tingle my spine. Murphy’s talent for unusual, emotive chord progressions and melodies – and acoustic piano too – are present and correct on Reveal in Finder, his ninth official full-length, not to mention layers of cello (samples?) on “The Verdict”. Never not blissful.

Fairie – Ode [Provenance/Bandcamp]
The third and final single from Lucy Li aka Fairie‘s album Nastic Appeal – out next week on Provenance – is, she says, a tribute to the strength of her fellow Asian femmes. The first pop song she wrote, it combines the thumping beats of her previous electronic dance productions with hints of the beloved Kate Bush, channeling all of Li’s rage at the restrictive and harmful structures of patriarchy and whiteness. Powerful stuff.

Carrier – Markers [FELT/Bandcamp]
Guy Brewer, best known for his dark, sometimes industrial, minimal techno as Shifted, unveiled new project Carrier with a cassette on Trilogy Tapes early this year. It clearly has a lineage from Shifted’s techno, but also seems to point back to his brief, early membership in drum’n’bass group Commix (originally a trio, now a solo project). There’s strangely slowed-down techno, frenetic IDM, electro and something electro-drum’n’bass? The subs are pushed, the snares and hi-hats skitter and trill. Accomplished artists changing focus to other genres are often an exciting prospect, and with now three Carrier releases for 2023, I hope to hear more of this from Brewer next year.

R.A.W. – Take Your Soul (6 Ft Deep Mix) [Mictlan]
Raoul Gonzalez is one of LA’s earliest proponents of jungle and UK-style hardcore techno, since the early ’90s, and while 6Blocc is his most common alias these days for jungle, footwork and dubstep mashups and originals, R.A.W. was his first moniker I believe. These tracks aren’t mashups but still, on The Serpent and the Rainbow Remixes the tracks all sample liberally from the Wes Craven movie of that name – exhilirating and sinister junglism, classic-sounding but with modern production values.

Last Life – Tensor (Reeko Remix) [Samurai Records/Bandcamp]
Berlin-based Samurai Records have been pioneering a particular form of drum’n’bass for some years that’s minimal, percussive (it once might have been called “tribal”) and close to techno – not the same stripped-down sound as later-’90s techstep, but just as brutal. The label has started occasional forays into actual 4/4 techno too, so here we have two legends of Italian techno taking apart the also-Italian Last Life, one of the label’s front-runners over the last 5 years or so. Donato Dozzy and Reeko have released their takes on drum’n’bass (or at least 170bpm beats) on the label recently. I also recently loved Reeko’s breakbeat/breakcore offering on R&S Records as Architectural; on his remix here he’s certainly keeping the d’n’b vibe with syncopated kicks and programmed beats melding into sampled breaks. Dark and deadly.

Commodo x Crimewave – redacted [Black Acre/Commodo Bandcamp/Crimewave Bandcamp]
A team-up here of two genre-bending artists on Black Acre Records. Dom Tarasek aka Commodo released a string of great dubstep 12″s on Deep Medi from the early 2010s, but since 2020 he’s found a way to mix postpunk basslines and ’70s cop show styles into the 140bpm throb. Manchester’s Crimewave appeared on the scene only in the last year or two, somehow mixing shoegaze and indie rock with bass music and experimental electronics. Their collaborative track “redacted” sounds like a recent Commodo track with digital fuckery. Great stuff.

Azu Tiwaline – Long Hypnosis [I.O.T/Bandcamp]
Azu Tiwaline – Reptilian Waves [I.O.T/Bandcamp]
French-Tunisian DJ Azu Tiwaline brought her distinctive style of dub-infused techno to the world in 2020 with the incredible double album Draw Me A Silence – Parts I & II released separately and then combined into an album. She also released a couple of EPs on Bristol’s Livity Sound, and it’s notable how well her mixture of Berber/Amazigh rhythms and dub fits with the their dusbtep/techno aesthetic. Like her two-part debut album, The Fifth Dream is released on her own I.O.T Records, and again goes deep with windswept sound design and head-nodding grooves.

UKAEA – La Stessa Croce (Gum Takes Tooth Remix) [The state51 Conspiracy/Bandcamp]
For the last few years I’ve been a subscriber to the online music mag The Quietus, because they publish a lot of highly invaluable music news, feature articles and reviews, and these days publishing online is a highly precarious proposal. While nearly all their content is available for anyone to read for free, being a subscriber comes at a few different levels with a few different bonus things, and if you’re willing to shell out for the top level (which admittedly I got at a discount at one stage), you get a new exclusive release from sympatico artists each month. There’s been music from JK Flesh, Sleaford Mods, Laura Cannell and Lori Goldston, Petbrick, Senyawa, 75 Dollar Bill, Nik Void and Alexander Tucker, Siavash Amini and many more. And to be fair to the creators, much of this music eventually makes it out into the wider world, by and large via The Quietus’ partners in this commissioning project, The state51 Conspiracy.
All of this is to say that I was lucky enough to hear the forthcoming album from UKAEA, Birds Catching Fire In The Sky, way back in March this year, and I’m stoked to be able to point y’all to it now. The first two tracks are available as this double single Habibi / La Stesa Croce, with remixes from Rommek and noise rock/electronic duo Gum Takes Tooth. Circling back to UKAEA themselves, this is the project of Dan Jones and many collaborators. In the past it’s tended to be a kind of industrial techno affair, albeit with wiiiide-ranging inputs, but discovering them here it sounds more like a kind of middle-eastern/eastern-European psych rock band with industrial electronic production? It’s music with plenty of predecessors, but nothing that quite sounds like it, which is high praise. Mixed by Wayne Adams of Petbrick and the Bear Bites Horse studio, enhancing the heaviness. Both remixes lean in to the style here, so I’ve played you Gum Takes Tooth’s viciously chopped club deconstruction.

AMIT – ‘Flow Off’ [AMAR]
AMIT Kamboj has been making drum’n’bass for about 2 decades (maybe more), but for most of that time he’s been a pioneer of the halftime and slow/fast melding of dub & drum’n’bass, and more to the point dubstep sensibilities with drum’n’bass. Earlier this year he dropped two tracks which chatter & skitter along at around 170bpm but thump the bass on the four beats of the bar, creating a menacing hybrid of techno, drum’n’bass and dubstep all together. ‘Flow Off’ is a single track with a halftime feel that would be straight dubstep if it was 30bpm slower, and the pitched-down vocal snippets and horn stabs make it deliciously dark.

Quade – Piles Copse [AD93/Bandcamp]
Quade – Circles [AD93/Bandcamp]
In case there’s any doubt that “genre” just isn’t a thing anymore, here’s UK band Quade, whose first album is out on AD93, a label most known for electronic music on & off the dancefloor. The song structures and some production elements do feel like they come from a post-club POV, but essentially Quade are a hybrid of postpunk, folk and postrock. Their bass player sings in a wonderfully self-effacing way, low in his register, and apart from drums the other two members switch between synths & electronics, tape machine, and violin & guitar. The genre-gregariousness is found also on the technical side: the album was recorded by Jack Ogbourne aka the noirish jazz-pop act Bingo Fury, and it was mixed by Larry McCarthy aka bass/techno bod Bruce – two very different sides of the Bristol music scene. The songs on Nacre are bass-led, introspective, but open out with shoegaze or dub-inflected blooms. I know I’ll be returning to this and being surprised all over again.

Glass House Mountain – Foundation [Glass House Mountain]
Melbourne duo Glass House Mountain started as the rhythm section in a psych-rock band, and while the duo project is their take on electronic music, it’s got a rock backing to it that places it somewhere between postrock, jazz and techno. Some of the tracks on their debut EP Curiosity came out last year, with some awesome videos – particularly recommend Perspective I. The beautiful video for opener Foundation takes us through nightscapes (mostly) of Melbourne. With live drums, lots of synths and guitars, it’s evocative stuff, well-suited to their creative video accompaniments, but it would also go down a treat live.

Saroos feat. Kiki Hitomi – The Sign (サイン) (The Leaf Library Remix) [Alien Transistor/Bandcamp]
Brothers Markus and Micha Acher are core members of German shapeshifting band The Notwist, who started off as hardcore punk, then moved through indie to create some of the most beloved indietronica of the early ’00s. They also run the Alien Transistor label, which showcases various side projects as well as many Japanese artists that they love. Since 2010 one of those side projects has been Saroos, although it’s more like a band in The Notwist’s orbit. Christoph Brandner has been in Village of Savoonga, Lali Puna, Tied & Tickled Trio, Console and others, all projects of the Acher brothers or other Notwist members. Florian Zimmer of Driftmachine has also played with Lali Puna. And Max Punktezahl has frequently been one step away from Notwist side projects, until he actually joined the band a little while ago. I guess this just goes to show that The Notwist have a lovely little incestuous world of multitudinous side projects which range from fully experimental electronic to punk, noise and lots of dubby krautrock vibes. And Saroos very much fits into that – a mostly instrumental affair of indietronica. But on Turtle Roll, released at the beginning of the year, the band enlisted seven singers to augment their instrumentals, ending up with a surprisingly varied collection of odd pop. Now two remixes push things further into the experimental realm, and really, who could be better than London spacerock experimentalists The Leaf Library, who layer and fold Saroos, with the great Kiki Hitomi on vocals, into a morass of pulsing sound.

Clark – Alyosha Lying [Throttle Records]
A month or so ago I discovered that the ever-creative ex-Warp legend Chris Clark is currently living in Australia. Based in Canberra, he has recently created the score for a dance work by his partner Melanie Lane, presented at Phoenix Central Park with members of the Canberra Symphony Orchestra. Earlier this year Clark released his first vocal album, Sus Dog, which worked surprisingly well as a continuation of his post-idm production style, but with his sensitive vocals leading the songs. It seems like the surprise digital follow-up Cave Dog develops on these themes, taking tangents, perhaps created in a more relaxed manner. Still, there’s an impressive list of guests: Thom Yorke (who “executive produced” Sus Dog) is there, and excellent contemporary violinist Rakhi Singh among others. Indeed, for an album of filler tracks created while he waited to usher Sus Dog into the world, it’s even ended up with an orchestra on a couple of tracks. That’s what you can do when you’re Chris Clark in 2023, and all power to him! Can’t wait for the whole thing next week.

Mesmer – 55°39’09.8″N 12°33’22.4″E [arbitrary/Bandcamp]
Mesmer – Slusen [arbitrary/Bandcamp]
Mads Emil Nielsen is a Danish musician, composer and sound-artist whose work, for me, bridges abstraction and tradition. On his label arbitrary, among other things he’s released graphical scores, beautifully reproduced on prints accompanying the CDs. So it’s quite interesting that improvising trio Mesmer very deliberately chose Nielsen to work on the final mix of their album Terrain Vague, which has now been released on Nielsen’s label. Spanish architect Ignasi de Solà-Morales coined the term “terrain vague” to describe leftover, abandoned spaces that emerge in cities over time, and become sites for the re-emergence of nature within urban space. It’s a concept that clearly inspired Matmos too, whose website has been Vague Terrain for some decades. In any case, Mesmer’s album developed out of field recordings made in these abandoned, not-quite-there spaces around Copenhagen, from which they formulated the structured improvisations that form the basis of the tracks. The group itself is a hybrid, with trumpet, drums and percussion joined by synths and samples and other electronics. The live performances were further deconstructed by the band and then glued together by Nielsen to create a collection that is part free jazz, part glitch, part postrock, a sonic evocation of the vague terrain.

ZÖJ – Hearts of Stone [Parenthèses Records/Bandcamp]
The Belgian label Parenthèses Records was formed originally in Perth, Western Australia, and still retains close connections with this country. From Melbourne, the cross-cultural duo ZÖJ are a great fit for the label, creating liminal music that’s intentionally hard to get a grip on, but is deeply pleasurable. Iranian-born musician Gelareh Pour plays two Persian string instruments, the Kamancheh and the Qheychak Alto, while Brian O’Dwyer’s drumkit winds within and around her melodies. The music can be filmic and evocative, or abstract and contemporary, and at times Gelareh adds impassioned vocals, including lyrics from a number of renowned Persian poets. This is emotive music to lose yourself in.

toechter – Epic Wonder [Morr Music/Bandcamp]
German trio toechter (it means “daughter”) are three women whose main instruments are violin, viola and cello. Along with their voices and electronic treatments, they build songs that seem to exist equally in the classical world, indie rock and the post-club spaces that used to be called chillout rooms. Their second album, Epic Wonder, comes out in February 2024 from venerable German indie/electronic label Morr Music, and from the first single and title track, it will be both epic and wondrous. Who am I to deny them this wording when it’s the pure truth?

Kirk Barley – Courtyard [Odda Recordings/Bandcamp]
I’m very pelased to say I’ve been supporting Kirk Barley‘s delicate, rhythmic music on Utility Fog since his 2019 album Landscapes. Although it’s the debut from “Kirk Barley”, it wasn’t by any means his first release – he’d previously appeared as Bambooman among others, at times making feints towards the dancefloor – but under his own name he consolidated a sound that filtered acoustic guitar, cello and field recordings through an idiosyncratic electronic lens – and often with drums from Matt Davies, with whom he has since frequently collaborated under the name Church Andrews. Here again, for the second release on Thea Hudson-Davies’ Odda Recordings, we have Kirk Barley as Kirk Barley. The music on Marionette comes from modular synths, guitars, and on this track cello upon cello, looping little phrases, undulating in amongst the sound of running water. Unassuming music, but please give it your attention!

Listen again — ~210MB