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there are 7 titles featuring john clyde-evans in stock.
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$19.32

back in stock as of
august 17th, 2011

first in stock on
march 1st, 2008


threads:
modern-psych
minimalism-drones
experimental-instruments
analogue-synth

 best of 2008 !!! 
amen absen (canada) #aa-001 lp

john clyde-evansdelight in the stream” long playing record

  • delight in the stream (18:37)

  • etonal ricedance plug music for noah (23:39)
... it’s been 10 years since i picked up a copy of john clyde-evans’ “(for ht/rp/j&s)” lp on fisheye ; quite blindly, most likely due to a sticker applied to the cover tying him to the mid-90s bristol-based group hood, of which i was (and remain) a fan ...

in the interim, mr. clyde-evans has attained something of a backstory, first moving to india to attain sikhdom, changing his name for a spell to tirath singh nirmala - under which he released an impeccable stream of eastern-leaning avant-psych drone records, all heavily influenced by a palpable sense of spirituality; nothing at all like the mostly derived-from-boredom strain of “the other” channeled by the majority of cross-continental travelling drone-psych umlauts you come across these days but borne of a true devotion - finally returning the the u.k. over the last year & continuing on under his xian given ...

where his head is at at present is anyone’s guess ... but the music on this here record certainly speaks volumes - huge swaths of un-named exotic instrumentation (bells, bowed rebab, analogue synthesizer patterns, etc ...) interjected by high-pitched flutes (almost sounding like mic-feedback arcs when blown with all of his might) swimming around in the broth ; their placement fully in accordance with some underlying logic-grid (moments of almost minimal development give way to dense pile-ups of acoustic & electronic sound)

excellent stuff ; very hard to compare it with anything else going on right now, really ... always a good sign.
amen absen press release...
john clyde-evans
delight in the stream
amen absen lp

delight in the stream is the first solo vinyl outing for john clyde-evans (aka tirath singh nirmala) in close to a decade. recorded during a year-long stay in india, the album seamlessly weaves together an array of piercing bowed objects, flutes and voice with electronic and audio embellishments over the course of three extended tracks. the scattering of sounds swirl around to disorienting effect yet still manage to mesmerize as the music draws itself out.

pressed in a limited edition of 300 copies.

  • previous releases (both solo and collaborative) on foxy digitalis, hp cycle, fisheye, sloow tapes, chocolate monk, etc.
  • frequent collaborator of richard youngs and neil campbell.

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$8.41

back in stock as of
december 7th, 2011

first in stock on
april 19th, 2010


threads:
modern-psych
electro-acoustic-composition
digital-musics
analogue-synth

autumn (usa) #ar 016 cs

john clyde-evansgo gracious kiki change” c28 cassette

  • solfarrd time change
  • go gracious kiki change

  • the nest of delinquent gaijin
  • salt burning smoke
april 2010 release ; straight banger from johntirath singh nirmalaclyde-evans, comprised of four “movements” of his uniquely detail-heavy / pan-directional spray of synthesized & processed elements ...

heavy on the “short-attention-span” tip (there’s a near-constant whiz-bang of layered, asynchronous blare) & quite raucous ; on par with his clarion-calling amen absen lp from a few years back ...
autumn press release...

ar016
john clyde-evans - go gracious kiki change cassette (c28)

release date: 04/13/2010
120 copies
professionally duplicated cassette with laser printed j-card
artwork by ryan storm

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$8.82

back in stock as of
december 16th, 2010

first in stock on
march 28th, 2007


chocolate monk (uk) #choc.142 cd

neil campbell / john clyde-evanslive at transmission gallery, glasgow” compact disc recordable

  • live at transmission gallery glasgow 22 november 1998
chocolate monk press release...
neil campbell & john clyde-evanslive at transmission gallery, glasgow (cd-r)

recorded 22 november 1998 this is a bliss blister of cello, violin, tapes and voice. like some shortwave radio broadcast straight from the porch, the duo conjuer up sticky foster as a 'ghost presence'. karen constance done did the artwork. you needs it.

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$10.08

back in stock as of
march 5th, 2010

first in stock on
october 12th, 2009


threads:
electro-acoustic-composition
experimental-instruments
site-specific

digitalis recordings (usa) #digi044 cd

john clyde-evansapetal thunderfall” compact disc

  • apetal thunderfall
  • star trualx
  • cutting down orange towers
2007 release ; reverting back to his christian given, tirath singh nirmala dropped the precursor to the much-loved-around-these-parts “delight in the stream” lp (on amen absen) ...
digitalis recordings press release...
digi044: john clyde-evans "apetal thunderfall" cd

it's been a monumental year for john clyde-evans. he recently returned from a year living in the punjab region of india, and after a slew of releases under his sikh name of tirath singh nirmala, he's back to the good ol' jce. that's not all that's changed, though. his latest opus, "apetal thunderfall," spins off into a new web of cacaphony, leaving behind the pastoral anthems of yesteryear and taking aim at a more abrasive ways to leave behind the rust.

"apetal thunderfall" was recorded entirely during jce's stay in jalandhar in 2007 using found software and audio sources. the resulting recordings feel almost primitive. evans uses his uncanny ability to blend and mix multitudes of tones into sprawling thickets of sound. it is hard to call this music drone, but at the same time there is a continous flow to these three pieces that works in a similar way. over the course of 43 minutes, this music etches itself into your skull, drilling itself in deep without drawing blood. divided into three tracks, "apetal thunderfall" is more a singular entity than a collection of works.

this album is cathartic, both musically and as a vehicle for jce himself. but make no mistake, this is not spiritual music with mystic over/undertones. simply, it is the new aural vision from one person made while living in india for a year. it is abrasive yet beautiful, and harkens back to a time and place when things were far less complicated.

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$10.08

back in stock as of
march 5th, 2010

first in stock on
october 12th, 2009


threads:
electro-acoustic-composition
modern-psych
minimalism-drones
experimental-instruments

digitalis recordings (usa) #digi031 cd

tirath singh nirmalabluster, cragg, & awe” compact disc

  • nagg clef seatpoint
  • moor edge hush
  • the burning moon
  • ravine mists rising
  • sehaj
  • faleaflowstreem
  • rytsn 7.14
may 2007 release ; believe this was the firstrealcd release from john clyde-evans under his nom de guerre tirath singh nirmala (after a stream of label-less home burns with titles like “birch clove burst,” “tattv-guna-mala,” “blossom dawn freckles,” etc ...)
digitalis recordings press release...
digi031: tirath singh nirmala "bluster, cragg, & awe" cd

not too long ago, john clyde-evans made a huge splash with his phenomenal solo lp on england's fisheye imprint. he also performed as an collaborator with the seminal uk group, hood. after taking a seven year hiatus and committing to the path of sikhism, he returned as tirath singh nirmala. his continually unfolding backstory is interesting enough, but it's his music where the real magic and mystery stretch their silver wings.

nirmala returned to making music after his close friend and collaborator, vibracathedral orchestra's neil campbell, gave him some free software and set him on his way. nirmala responded with nearly a dozen self-released, highly limited cdrs. the releases were filled to the brim with eastern-influenced, transcendental drones and uplifting spiritual sound explorations. his manipulation of sine waves and use of obscure asian instruments creates a wholly original and unique sound. as on his solo lp as john clyde-evans, nirmala's ability to concoct sprawling, majestic drones using such simple terms is unmatched.

"bluster, cragg, & awe," nirmala's first non-cdr release, is the perfect beginning. it collects the best tracks from those now impossible-to-find releases and adds two new songs and one collaborative piece with scottish guitar guru, richard youngs. it is a journey that lasts less than an hour, but contains a lifetime of aural experience, wrapped into one, shimmering golden package.

oh yes, tirath singh nirmala has returned.

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$15.48

new to stock as of
february 25th, 2009


threads:
minimalism-drones
electro-acoustic-composition
beat-research

textile (france) #t 17 lp

astral social clubmodel town in a field of mud” long playing record

  • mud compress #1
  • hydroponix
  • crex fucking crex

  • mud compress #2
  • all that glitters is not chocolate
2008 release ; first release (that i’m aware of at least) by the full-on duo asc lineup of neil campbell and johntirath singh nirmalaclyde-evans ...

john’s sound-world meshes nicely with neil’s off-kilter techno weirdness ; for every “banger” there’s a much more subtle stretch of bi-directionally looped field-ambience and errant electronic squiggle (listen to the sound-sample) ...

keep ‘em coming guys ; long may you reign ...
textile press release...
astral social club - "model town in a field of mud" model town in a field of mud is the result of a collaboration between neil campbell and john clyde-evans. this album was recorded largely thru the post during john’s year long stay in india. (although the very last few minutes are the duo live in sheffield right after he returned). this album is a 50/50 collaboration, hopefully the first of many!

john clyde-evans has a lenghty career, even if he did "disappear" for a few years. john was in the band hood (domino recordings) then cut a couple of great solo records, then disappeared, reappearing using his sikh name of tirath singh nirmala, cutting an lp with richard youngs, then reverting his original name and dropping the magnificent "apetal thunderfall" cd on us earlier this year!!

neil campbell is a cornerstone of the uk underground and played in vibracathedral orchestra, sunroof, a band, with richard youngs, damo suzuki and many many other artists. despite some esoteric path, model town in a field of mudd reconfirms john and neil’s intentions to blast techno into the stratosphere.

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$13.42

back in stock as of
january 26th, 2010

first in stock on
april 26th, 2007


threads:
modern-psych
minimalism-drones
electro-acoustic-improvisation

 best of 2007 !!! 
vhf (usa) #vhf 100 cd

astral social clubastral social club” compact disc

  • untitled (1) (7:39)
  • untitled (2) (2:18)
  • untitled (3) (4:55)
  • untitled (4) (4:30)
  • untitled (5) (7:10)
  • untitled (6) (7:17)
  • untitled (7) (5:55)
  • untitled (8) (2:50)
  • untitled (9) (6:54)
  • untitled (10) (14:32)
  • untitled (11) (2:46)
vhf press release...
vhf#100 astral social club s/t cd

first generally available release by neil campbell (vibracathedral orchestra) and co’s genre-destroying astral social club unit, following a series of instantly sold-out limited editions. compiled by vhf and neil from asc’s now unavailable catalog, vhf100 is a dense mega-mix of continually peaking sound-flow. working a tricky hybrid ground between contempo uk teams like sunroof! and vco, and the influence of kompakt-style pulsating electronic “techno,” asc’s music shimmers and throbs in a truly psychedelic manner. neil and tirath singh nirmala have radically re-worked these tracks to be unrecognizable from their original cdr issues, but they are instantly recognizable as part of the unrelenting asc rainbow stream. in lovely silver and orange card folio printed by stumptown.

neil campbell, in his own words :

i don't avoid the obvious - i stare straight into its eyes and ride it wherever it's taking me. but i never consciously try to imitate any form of music - that just wouldnt work. ive enjoyed some zen approaches, but im more basic northern european pantheist pagan in my worldview. make a pile of new records and keep on playing. they seem to be popular with some people. new primitive twenty-first century elevation sunburst music for heavy nervous systems.

i like to feel wild and out of control and like im ripping a small hole in reality when i play, so theyre the zones i aim for. thats climax for me. i guess i naturally gravitate towards harmony rather than melody too. my kids, and i think most kids, just seem to respond to music from birth onwards. but it's the primal thing that music has that, for me, gives it the edge over other art forms - instant celestial transport, probably works as much on our physiologies as it does our aesthetics.

but im as profane as i am sacred, so i can get the same feeling from certain dance music or noise or elevated rock music or whatever. there are many routes to the top of the mountain, as the saying goes. i use any instruments i can get my hands on that sound right. i just open up and listen, and let the music take me wherever it wants to. i listen to a wide variety of music, so maybe that rubs off? but i dont stop, wait for applause then do another number. i just let it all roll together.

because of this i was never too sure about the thing as a cdr when he asked me if he could keep it available in that format - seemed like it was then elevated into something "finished" or whatever, which it was never intended as. but he still loves his nursery rhyme tapes too. that kind of neurotic approach was blighting my solo recordings for a while, so very little came out for a while because i was always wanting to do one last overdub, one last edit, one more mix, etc etc. i'd like to approach it more like a dj set than a greatest hits type of thing, layering and smashing different pieces together to create something a bit new.

but, anyway, i like to keep some of my releases a bit underground and difficult to get hold of i’ve no problem with the elitism of that. having kids has been a kick up the arse really, and i've become more productive and happier with what i produce as a result. im old school - vinyl is still king in our house. last time it was a total ridiculous joyous gush of idiot excitement that just seemed to go higher and higher - it was like the ramones, only even better. i havent found musical differences a problem why should they be? i think theyre a strength. i just let it all hang out and see what happens.

it seemed to take the 60s pop music i grew up listening to and gave it an extra twist. speaking abstractly, then sure id like to improve, but ive no idea what this would entail, as my own musical progress suggests the best way to improve is to stop trying to do or be anything that doesnt feel right. i get my love of sustained tones and pentatonic melodies from bagpipes. its more about feeling than intellect. i just do what i feel like doing, and like to keep the astral social jams really mixed up and incongruous.

there's no intellectual "point" to my music - it's just stuff to take me, and hopefully anyone who experiences it, higher. i guess, to me, all good music gives you what indian music describes as rapid transit elevated, joyous, intoxicating. its that simple - thats what i listen for in music. that said, its generally ideas i have that may not have worked in the band, so it sometimes tends towards being more electronic and process-based. but i've been doing it long enough that i can just surrender myself to the music and let it do the talking.

i'm often incapable of conversation after i've played. its the raw joyous rocket lift-off starting from a simple tune. the limited editions were there because id been a little too precious about my solo recordings, so was using the early cdrs as psychic enemas and testing grounds for ideas - i wanted to release them then forget about them, to encourage me to work more quickly and experiment with more ideas. probably too many to remember. totally claustrophobic and intense. he shook every man's hand before they left, and kissed all the ladies.

and anyway, i think the best music is usually that which is cut quickly and without too much premeditation, so my circumstances just keep me sharp and on my toes. ah, so much happiness. i love playing music, it really gives me a lift, and i like to convey some sort of feeling of joy through it, so i couldn't really pinpoint any one piece. but i often fall into natural structures when i play, and i dont shy away from them theyre like breathing, or birth, or the seasons. that pleases me - it's a huge cliche?? but i do feel like some sort of conduit/lightning rod for sounds and feelings that are already out there and just waiting to be unleashed.

basic pagan worldview, with little need for late-christian/materialist "genius" crap, y'know? no idea - whatever makes life easy for you. keep it simple. i think its great when someone can devote themselves utterly to one instrument and really perfect their style, but its not a route to the summit that im particularly interested in. as ive got looser and less organised over the years, ive got better at taking musical hints as to how pieces should develop.

i don't take psychedelic drugs, if that's what you mean. beautiful monotony. i spent a lot of time sitting around talking about producing things. to me, it sounds like they’re picking up from certain places we’ve hit on and really moving the sound forward into higher realm alien territory. as much as anything you do can be a celebration - cooking a meal, having sex, walking the dog. there are times when the mood is so festive when i play, then others when it's more of a glorious purging of all misery and frustration.

i dont understand your distinction between a musical instrument and a sound generator theres no real hierarchy there, is there? it's always been like that with me i spent much of my late teens/early 20s on the dole, hanging out, partying, being "bohemian", and producing very little of note. whatever, i didn't argue, so he fired ahead. strange thing is that it does prefigure my approach in astral social club, where i've stopped trying to present things as "finished" and stopped worrying if the whole thing doesn't run together as a completely smooth whole.

seems like that stuff often really only comes alive on vinyl, flipping it over every 15-20 minutes, gazing at beautiful big 12" sleeves while listening. largely, take it as it comes. drones just resonate really well with the human body, they're really obvious pleasure-givers, spirit-lifters, ass-shakers, head-spinners. nothing particularly esoteric. ah, it's no big deal - there are plenty of us out there juggling all manner of other commitments with the absolute necessity of making music or whatever. its just how my music sounds best to me.

right now our six week old son stops very still when music comes on - some of it holds his attention, some of it doesn't, but it's too early to discern any preferences. he had a great time with basement jaxx the other evening though. nah, totally quotidian - whatever time to myself i can snatch. i was more interested in pure sound, but i never heard any kindred spirits for a while - i was just listening to punk bands. i use whatever amuses me and works within the sound.

but the converse applies, and sometimes i may feel like i'm just coasting, or trying to find the right sound to hit the spot, but then i'll listen back to the tape and it'll sound wonderful and just right. once i stopped worrying, and invented astral social club as a "band" to be the receptacle for my solo recordings, i became much happier with them and the whole recording process. i'm so fired up for astral social action right now! or maybe let someone else do the talking: "the year is 1632, and you are astonished to find that your lute'n'flute band has been commissioned by the king to play at his grand hog roast in two days' time.

unfortunately your mate with the sitar has been staying at your cottage for the past few weeks and you've neglected to practice much. also unfortunately, you are all completely mashed on opium. no real reason for that, other than it felt right, and i may go in completely the opposite direction at any point. but i like to get myself and the listeners out of our minds/bodies, to suspend the inevitable flow of time, overload the senses a bit, so i guess that's pretty psychedelic. i just open up and let it happen.

my three-year old son genuinely likes abstract noise and has been known to throw a tantrum if i try to play anything too "normal". the mighty benevolence and indifference of the city of leeds. as for me, i have a very limited social life, don't play computer games, don't watch films, try not to waste too much time. i prioritise. i love the multiphonic sky-soaring textures. i like to foreground things like random overdubs, ridiculous processing, loops, electronic noise.

astral social club just lets me have full reign to indulge whatever folly i feel like indulging. id say all of those things occur in my music. i never held with that boring "artistic" notion of the pram in the hall being the enemy of creativity anyway. once i heard things that were a little further out, i knew there were other people out there who were making up their own rules, and that gave what i had been doing some kind of validity, made me feel as though there may be people out there who would be interested in what i was doing.

i might drink a beer or a glass of wine or a whisky first, then retire to the attic room and press the record button. i love records, but i'm no obsessive collector - i'm too tight to pay big prices, and i like to keep a healthy turnover of sound in my life, so am constantly getting rid of things. theres no real concerted effort to sound that way, or reference any ritual music, but sometimes ill hear some religious or trance music from some far flung corner of the world and be knocked out at how its hitting similar highs to the ones i aim for.

yeah, it's got harder to find the time over the past few years, with starting a family and all that, but that just encourages me to use my time better. if you can't do something worthwhile jamming live to minidisk or a tape recorder, then maybe you shouldn't be doing music (and i'm speaking as someone who often likes to layer and process things heavily using a computer). really? that's amusing to me, in that the thing was originally conceived as a cassette, cut out of all the left-over bits from some of my more dense workouts - backing tracks and early drafts if you like.

i cant play any instrument properly. everything is possible, nothing is permitted, yknow? no-one ever mentions that, which i guess says as much about my listeners and peers as it does about me. i dont always hit that spot, or hit it only fleetingly, but its worth it for the times when i do. i like simple melodies, rhythms and harmonics, but like to hear a slew of simple things stacked up and bouncing off each other. i knock the most things over when i play, break the most things. the others were great musicians i was either holding them back, or keeping them in check. the only thing i can't find a current use for is the songwriting seems dead to me now.

it's only comparatively recently that anyone outside my immediate circle of friends has paid any attention to the music i make it's nice to get some sort of recognition, but i'd still be plugging away at it if no-one else was interested. i've no idea. but now you put it like that, any good music can be as good a vision of the eternal as we're gonna get. i just let the grooves happen, and if they dont sound much like other western forms i just accept it, no problem. that said, i work within certain tunings, have certain modes of playing and have been playing long enough to make some of my jams seem as if they may have been in some way composed.

i like it best when there's the astral social tonal centre supporting me when i go right out on a limb, and i don't know what sound i'm playing, what my equipment is doing, what anyone else is doing, what my name is, nothing. that seems more like prog rock or something, really concerned with structure and progression, whereas im just dropping my pants, howling at the moon, and letting the music take me where it needs to go. but im constantly influenced by all sorts of things, and they maybe spring up in my sound (or maybe not!). ive gradually become less organised, less centred, and im really happy with this.

i like file-share for my music, especially with things that go out of print, so its ok by me when people upload and download things. not particularly. in fact, im so indebted to the moe tucker stress-every-beat approach you wouldnt believe it. so the bits of the sound that are predetermined (the tunings and sustained tones) make it easier to get right out and free and, uh, "sound my barbaric yawp over the rooftops of the world". if i start with the basic premise that i'm never going to have enough time, then anything i get done is a bonus.

i guess, to me, all those musics give you what indian music describes as rapid transit theyre elevated, joyous, intoxicating. its that simple - thats what i listen for in music. it's been a friend, a comfort, a drug, a challenger, an inexhaustible source of inspiration to me over the years, so i assume it may perform similar functions for others. like odb though, ooh baby i like it raw. i get a real adrenaline rush off of the thing. they're my friends and soul-brothers/sisters. i've no interest in "concepts", only "results" if it doesn't hit me on a visceral level, then i've no use for it.

it began in horrible noise and drones in the late 70s/early 80s, became tempered with some loose songwriting toward the end of the 80s, then out into wide open rocking improvisation, looping electronics and more horrible noise at the start of the 90s, and then to where i am now. i liked how they sounded, so thought a cassette would be a cheap and unpretentious way of rounding them all up for anyone who was interested. in many ways, some of my modes of playing start at the energy level some bands end on, so im at some sort of climax point from the start. i just play everything is improvised.

in essence, i've found a sound and an approach, and im often attempting to play the same piece over and over again, and it's the failures and inconsistencies that are keeping me interested and hopefully interesting. i liked to take a few more chances and dive headlong into areas that the band couldn't or wouldn't go, often ones where i felt an antipathy towards the results of most other practitioners in that that field. but then so much generic "psychedelic" music doesn't do any of that it's just polite pop music with a few period stylings whereas, for example, japanese noise or renaissance choral music or indian classical music or techno all hit that spot much more reliably.

sometimes i can remember every moment, and at others hardly anything. music that swallows misery whole, as iggy once described the early stooges gigs. purely practical we played live music, so recorded live, straight to 2-track (so no remixing or anything at a later date). the mood was just right. no idea. i just felt it was something i had to do. we never had musical instruments around the house when i was a kid, but i started recording with tape decks and kitchen implements when i was 13, in 1979.

they're great spirit-lifters like that. ive always used a range of different sorts of instruments, from acoustic to electronic, but ive slowly moved towards a balance that is more amplified and electronic than it once was. i just plug in, tune up and play. but as soon as i bit the bullet and got a regular job that messed my life up and shagged me out, i became much more focussed and productive.

although i say i improvise, i often use certain notes and forms, so its not free improvisation. sometimes i think ive played terribly and people in the audience tell me its the best time they ever saw me, and vice versa. its all subjective. i dont mind elitism, but i also have a fair few widely available releases out there. beautiful. fried human loop loop wah sound.

bollocks to that - i have a mundane day job four days a week, look after the kids for the rest of the time, and do music whenever else i can, and i feel like i'm at the top of my game. y'know, look around it's not much of an overstatement to say that most music is based around sustained tones in some form, whether overt or otherwise. it may sound pretentious, but my most important instrument is the air that carries the sound. having kids has been a kick up the arse really, and i've become more productive and happier with what i produce as a result.

but, yeah, the feeling i get from playing music doesn't always transfer to the recording. i was the untrained idiot in the band, just trying to push it higher and higher. bad music that uses drones is as dull as dull can be, but good music that uses similar building blocks really takes off for me. nothing tangible, but it's good mental health to be attuned to your dreams, and like to be healthy. sometimes i feel a musical affinity with absolutely no-one, but at other loads of stuff all over the place. friends, family, friendly faces and good vibes when i play live, good food and drink, my music, other people's music, anything done with soul.

i was inspired by the "anyone can do it" punk ethos, although i never played "punk rock". not an exercise, that's too sterile. i love being in the same room as them, whether they're playing or not.

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... this page was last updated on saturday, february 11th, 2012 @ 5:23 pm