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there are 3 titles featuring adam nodelman in stock.
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back in stock as of
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threads:
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agaric (usa) #ag 1996 cd

borbetomaguslive in allentown” compact disc

  • untitled (1) (32:30)
  • untitled (2) (21:27)
2007 release ; cd reissue of the lowlife cassette covering the band’s performance at “the 3rd annual halloween extravaganza” on october 29, 1986 ...
agaric press release...
borbetomagus - live in allentown
by phil freeman

like many music journalists/critics, my listening habits are in continual flux, my tastes evolving and mutating day by day. there are some constants - anything that could be called metal will get at least an idly curious half-listen, anything that could be called indie will get binned without a backward glance. jazz of the "free" variety (however one defines that), particularly 60s reissues, will get a warm welcome; post-bop or smooth fusion will have to argue much more strenuously for itself. but i'm always willing to be surprised. i was recently blindsided by the kompakt label compilation total 6, after years of ignoring techno. it's important to always be ready to hear something that will totally change the way you think about music.

the first record i can remember pressuring my father to buy for me was judas priest's screaming for vengeance, in 1982, when i was about to turn eleven. by 1987. i was a metalhead to the marrow of my bones, making an occasional side trip into punk - black flag, dead kennedys, flipper, bad brains, the minutemen. (remember, this was america - suburban new jersey to be precise. to this day, i have not heard never mind the bollocks in its entirety, and the only version of the clash’s debut i know is the one with “i fought the law” on it.) i owned exactly five jazz records: miles daviskind of blue, bitches brew and tutu, and john coltrane’s a love supreme and meditations.

spin magazine, which had recently supplanted rolling stone as my primary source for information about new music, featured byron coley’s “underground” column in its record review section. it was the most interesting thing in the magazine by a long stretch. i couldn’t always decipher his prose to figure out what he was praising about the acts he discussed, and anyhow i'd never heard of a single one of them, but it was a fascinating, must-read section, month after month. it was there that i read about borbetomagus, specifically their cassette-only release live in allentown. i don't have the magazine anymore, so i can't quote coley's prose, but whatever he wrote about this sax-sax-guitar trio from upstate new york, i had to hear them.

i knew there was no way my local record store was going to be able to get live in allentown for me. i was going to have to go somewhere that really catered to the obscure and outre - bleecker bob's, in greenwich village. i'd never been there before, only walking past a few times on the way to a nearby comic store. but somehow i was certain that they would have this thing, if anyone would. so i made the tremulous journey into what i thought was the very beating heart of underground music. i walked in the store, awed by the vinyl sleeves that covered the walls and the surly, leather-and-black-denim-clad clerks who i was certain would beat my suburban ass and throw me back to the sidewalk, knowing how unworthy i was to sully their punk rock shrine with my presence. but they didn't. and sure enough, in the glass case where they kept their cassettes, there it was. red-and-black construction paper cover, white plastic case. i think i paid six dollars. i put it in my battered walkman on the way out the door.

when the first hideously distorted shrieks and roars hit my ears, i almost fell over from the raw force of it. that couldn't be a saxophone - it sounded like someone being torn limb from limb. was that a guitar, or someone revving up a gigantic engine to the brink of explosion? in truth, it was hard to even discern one sound from the others. nothing on the tape had any obvious reference points in anything else i owned, or had ever heard. even meditations, the screechiest album in my collection, sounded like lounge music compared to this. i was terrified, but i couldn't stop listening. i had to hear what came next.

the first side of the tape contains a single long piece, ending in tape slice. the second side picks up with what might be the same piece. after eight minutes or so, there’s a brief burst of applause, and some shouts of “encore!” from a very enthusiastic woman, then the next (and final) section begins. the borbetomagus lineup documented is a quartet, with adam nodelman on bass in addition to saxophonists jim sauter and don dietrich and guitarist donald miller. nodelman actually plays some fairly straight low chords near the end of the second side, as though attempting to anchor the music and keep it from becoming total noise. toward the end, someone (maybe a borbetomagus member) begins vocalizing in a manner reminiscent of early butthole surfers, as miller's guitar and at least one of the saxophones continue to sputter, snarl and squeal.

i listened to live in allentown almost daily for a couple of years, even forcing it on friends who wanted no part. i began to memorize the subtle, almost intuitive shifts in what had initially seemed like an unceasing, undifferentiated roar. the interplay between group members revealed itself. and this repeated close listening began to alter the way i heard other music. i sought out harsher and more punishing sounds in general, yes, but i also started to pick apart all the music i heard, trying to understand what each player was contributing to the whole, rather than hearing a record as a solid mass with the vocalist slapped on top like a pizza topping. live in allentown taught me to listen like a critic.

i’ve still go my original cassette copy of live in allentown (which until now has been ridiculously rare, not even listed in many borbeto discographies). to my amazement, it’s never melted down or spooled out of its case. i recently took it out and converted it to cd-r, and stuffed its two long tracks into my ipod. to this day, it’s my favorite borbetomagus recording, and to my ear the best thing they’ve ever done. now that it’s been reissued on disc, i can go back anytime i want and get whacked in the head by it all over again, just like when i was fifteen and first discovering that there was more to music than metal.

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back in stock as of
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first in stock on
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threads:
free-improvisation
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circuit-bending
experimental-instruments
harsh-noise
free-jazz

agaric (usa) #ag 1987 cd
ulhang produktion (switzerland) #up 06 cd

borbetomagus / voice crackfish that sparkling bubble” compact disc

  • we don't need no warrior goddess (8:38)
  • vungavunga (10:56)
  • cracked magus (7:15)
  • floonder king (3:12)
  • my tongue in your cheek (9:27)
1998 release ; cd issue of the 1988fish that sparkling bubble” lp (originally co-released by agaric & ulhang produktion) documenting the band’s first meeting(s) with the “cracked everyday electronics” duo voice crack (norbert möslang & andy guhl) ...

this was my personal entry into not just the voice crack / borbeto axis, but to pretty much any kind of non-metered / harmonically-linked music (remember, i was but a high school sophomore when this was launched !!!) ; as such, it of course holds a special place amidst my chest-cavity gelatin ... 20 years on, the harsh electronic wail hasn’t lost even one iota of its power ...
agaric press release...
fish that sparkling bubble

right. so this record is wild enough to send maurice sendak running for mama. but something gets lost in translation during the critics' hyperbolic feeding frenzy that inevitably surrounds each passing borbeto release. i mean, sure it's "gut crunching" ... "a vortex of infernal energy" ... "a giant paleozoic monster belch-roaring and casually swatting house-sized cockroaches with its massive toil." all perfecfty true. but their music is also very subtle. just like chemical experiments that can only occur at extreme temperatures, borbetomagus cranks up the volume so high to enable the overtone alchemy only possible in such zones. on this occasion, their sensitivity is further focussed by the collaboration of voice crack, a swiss duo dedicated to the extension of the futurist homebuilt vocab. vc assembles a sonic urban center built from electronic flotsam, a cold city then populated by the hot blood of borbeto, blazing. in this landscape, one can easily hear the echoes of xenakis, hendrix, ayler - each a colossal ghost of post-industrial extremism. but it's not study in retrospection or combinatorics; from the opening skronk of "we don't need no warrior goddess" to the (what?) quiet passage at the outset of "vungavunga," it is entirely new and unyieldingly irreverent. music like the face of a cliff: monumental. but the detail on this monument is etched oh-so fine!

- john corbett butt rag, 1990

fish that sparkling bubble was a full-fledged collaboration between borbetomagus and voice crack. at that time, in 1988, the brilliant swiss group was a duo; when they later collaborated again with the borbeto boys on asbestos shake two years later they hod added drummer knut remond. borbetomagus first began corresponding with andy guhl and norbert möslang soon after hearing the 1977 fmp record deep voices, which featured the pair on acoustic horns, percussion, bass, as well as home-made instruments and cassette machines. before they adopted the voice crack moniker, möslang and guhl released their first excursion into electronics-land, knack on, on the uhlklang label.

but it was voice crack, recorded in 1984, that saw the consolidation of the duo's working methodology: spreading out a panoply of sound making devices on the floor or on a table, voice crack erects a miniature sonic city. disarticulated woofers and cones are connected to technical hybrids - radio-cassette-turntable-circuitboards - through cables that stretch like so many intraveneous tubes to a patient. indeed, it's like an electronic vivisection in which the beating heart tokes on the timbres of beat up electronic gadgets. extending the gradualist, laminar industrial improvising tradition of britain's amm, voice crack constructs jogged topographies of electronic endproduct noise and detuned radio signal-shimmering, looping, phased-out landscapes that are at once seductive and at the some time sharp, brittle, and dangerous. in this context, their "cracked everyday electronics" bring the volume down a few notches, shift the energy, and draw out a wonderful combination of mechanical and cheapo-electronics aesthetics.

borbeto's response is in places reminiscent of their killer acoustic-saxed zurich; the interface with dusty electronics also brings to mind their encounter with hugh davies, work on what has been spoiled, as well as their recently reissued eponymous first record, recorded in 1980, which featured brian doherty on electronics. remember also that fish that sparkling bubble was recorded during the year borbeto spent as a quartet, with bassist adam nodelman adding his completely wrecked bass concept to the bottom-end of the borbeto-crack barrel. nodelman's addition to the group, also stunningly documented on seven reasons for tears, transformed the longstanding trio into something else altogether. no place is this more evident than in the incredible guitar/bass interplay on "my tongue in your cheek" - battling fuzztone and static saxes, nodelman blankets the low end with energy-packed bass, at times even breaking into breakneck linear runs.

listening back to fish that sparkling bubble six years after writing my butt rag review, i guess it's still about: 1) borbeto-crack blowing on extra hole in your cranium; and/or: 2) voice-magus forcing a redefinition of the notion of subtlety. the first of these is obvious-of course, there is never any lock of energy and dead-on fun with noise in any of their work. as don dietrich once told me, "we don't play to fill a room with sound; we start from the walls and ploy in from there!" borbetomagus vibrates a column of air. it just so happens that in their case the column in question is indescribably huge and the vibration notoriously furious. certain guitarists have zany moments with difference tones; borbetomagus eats difference tones for breakfast, lunch and dinner, so by concert-time they cough up something else altogether. here we find borbetomagus, city of worms, digging deeply into their high-impact style. here we find voice crack - equally grungy, though more object-oriented in their approach. the classic session is all that much better on cd, since vinyl grooves barely ever held borbeto's mag-est moments, the sum of which sometimes threaten to spit out the needle like a watermelon seed from between your fingers.

but, as stated, it's about more than the steam-roller for borbetomagus and voice crack. fish that sparkling bubble has a redefined subtlety, a kind of blow-torch delicacy: the ballet of a construction site, the poetry of a scream. that is, within the massive windstorm one can hear slight, beautiful, graceful, sometimes even fragile voices. what, borbetomagus fragile? listen to the long, smooth, howling tones that lurk beneath the surface distortion and fuzz on "warrior goddess," or that impressive opening track's stuttering, post-evan parker acoustic saxophone moments (which also appear in "floonder king"). on "vungavunga" we find a regular pulse, nearly a unique moment in the borbet-ouvre; the voice crackers undulate the sound as if it was a giant magnetic transformer caught in the waves of a metallic sea, and the piece's repetitions are echoed in the repeating "vungas" of its own name. occasional bleeps and tweets of some squeezed machinery-walkie-talkie tones, gutted phone receivers, miniature amplifiers, close-n-play record players-slip through (on "cracked magus" for instance), audible at one level of the many in this noise layer-cake. and the intimate gurgling sounds that suck out the middle of "my tongue in your cheek." and that track's nearly sweet sounding ending. borbeto-ballad? surprises on every floor!

convulsive beauty, you've got it now. subtle as a flying mallet? and then some. sparkling bubbles? festering, i s'pose. or paint peeling under the heat of a torch. or a kid blowing through his straw into his coke, as magnified 10,000 times. sorry, gone fishin'. real, real gone.

- john corbett chicago, april 1995

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back in stock as of
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first in stock on
august 14th, 2008


threads:
modern-psych
guitar-themed
sound-poetry
electro-acoustic-improvisation
lo-fi
minimalism-drones

manhand (usa) #mh 82 cd

sunburnedthe spacial crime symbol” double compact disc-recordable set

  • untitled (1) (3:07)
  • untitled (2) (1:11)
  • untitled (3) (6:27)
  • untitled (4) (4:50)
  • untitled (5) (10:17)
  • untitled (6) (11:10)
  • untitled (7) (0:32)
  • untitled (8) (1:21)
  • untitled (9) (1:45)

  • untitled (10) (1:25)
  • untitled (11) (4:02)
  • untitled (12) (3:03)
  • untitled (13) (0:43)
  • untitled (14) (1:56)
  • untitled (15) (3:21)
  • untitled (16) (2:20)
  • untitled (17) (2:38)
  • untitled (18) (1:54)
  • untitled (19) (2:48)
  • untitled (20) (4:00)
  • untitled (21) (0:30)
  • untitled (22) (1:07)
  • untitled (23) (1:28)
  • untitled (24) (2:39)
  • untitled (25) (1:16)
  • untitled (26) (3:23)
  • untitled (27) (4:03)
august 2008 release ; ruthlessly eclectic set from variable-depth lineups of sunburned, recorded both over in the u.k. and back here in good ‘ol massachusetts ...

everything from thrash metal, poetry (quite a lot of poetry, actually), anthemic noise-punk, sparse / spacious group-mumble, electro-acoustic improv, and so on ... (my favorite moment ? rob thomas doing his best bizzy bone impression in a cavernous stairwell) ...

one of the better of these low-run, band-produced editions ; feels like their “new album” and not a throwaway side/vanity project (kind of ballsy for a band of sunburned’s stature to release their “new album” as a self-produced double-cdr, isn’t it?) - this is prob. the first single title i’ve heard of theirs that even comes close to capturing the wide range of influences & iconography that’s been haunting the various members of the troop since day one. highly recommended !!!

ps ; just realized why i recognize adam nodelman’s name ; he was (briefly) borbetomagus’ 4th member !!!
manhand press release...

sunburned - the spacial crime symbol - mh 82 - 2xcd numbered edition of 100

"sunburned's new 'album' recorded at the flowerhouse in leeds and bank row studio in massachusetts, a buffet of acoustic, spoken word, electronica, drone, hardcore, female front-psycho, rubber room, a one act play, and 70s classic rock, we're very excited about this one. features mick flower, phil franklin, conrad capistran, paul labrecque, john moloney, sarah o' shea, taylor richardson, adam nodelman, ron schneiderman & rob thomas."

previous artist:
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...and that's everything in stock featuring adam nodelman.
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... this page was last updated on wednesday, may 16th, 2012 @ 5:13 pm