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$26.18

back in stock as of
september 2nd, 2011

first in stock on
june 15th, 2010


threads:
contemporary-classical
electro-acoustic-improvisation
analogue-synth
experimental-instruments
free-improvisation

alga marghen (italy) #alga planamoffe lp
planam (italy) #planamoffe lp

instant coffee!instant coffee!” long playing record

  • don’t buy dope from strangers
  • clumsy dumpster
  • coming to with a gag on

  • dark garage
  • holy pot, holy can
  • at ypres more than 300, 000 died; killed more efficiently thanks to improvements to technology.
march 2010 release ; neat catch-all experimental instrument / electro-acoustic improv trio-date shared by renowned improv bassist lisle ellis (member of what we live & partner of paul plimley’s on many a recording), jaunties / dramatics / leprechaun catering member & megaphone proprietor jason willett, and matmos / phase chancellor’s martinm.c.schmidt ...

it’s a crunchy, aktion-heavy affair, with a grainy wash of mutant electronics being the only constant from piece to piece ...
alga marghen press release...

i n s t a n t   c o f f e e !
"instant coffee!"
(cat no. planaffe)
lp record

edition limited to 380 copies

a bizarre love triangle strung between the baltimore noise scene, contemporary electronics and the new york jazz world, instant coffee play improvised music which spontaneously assembles itself into ‘song’ shapes that blossom, catch fire, explode and distort in ways that are unpredictable and disorienting.

a trio comprised of lisle ellis, m. c., schmidt and jason willett, the band members boast some unusually chequered pasts. lisle ellis in one of the foremost bassists in modern jazz, and having played with the likes of cecil taylor, fred frith and john zorn, he’s now exploring the electroacoustic combination of traditional jazz techniques with realtime computer processing. m. c. schmidt has been one half of the conceptually oriented electronic provocateurs matmos since 1997, and has made music with bjork, the kronos quartet, terry riley and zeena parkins; in this band he plays a perverse array of percussive objects and many recalcitrant synthesizers. jason willett is a baltimore veteran of avant and “out” music both on the fringes of rock and noise; he has been in too many bands to mention, but was a longtime member of half japanese and collaborator with jad fair, and also plays in harsh free noise ensembles such as leprechaun catering. in these sessions, jason plays contact-mic-ed rubber band and an improbable cluster of custom electronics created by noted baltimore instrument maker peter b.

you would expect the results to fall into a bermuda triangle between jazz, electronic music and noise, but in fact instant coffee’s sound rages further afield: unexpectedly lovely ambience, murky italian movie soundtracks, humid mirages of drone that take sharp turns towards rhythm, and a closing brush with mittel-european mournful lyricism. there are no noodly solos and no tedious, predictably loopedgrooves”: this music stakes itself on a casually surreal series of “dissolves” from one form to another.

edition of 380 copies with hand printed coffee front cover.

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back in stock as of
december 1st, 2011

first in stock on
august 25th, 2008


drag city (usa) #dc 266 cd

david grubbsa guess at the riddle” compact disc

  • knight errant (4:14)
  • a cold apple (4:41)
  • wave generators (2:25)
  • magnificence as such (1:50)
  • the neophyte (4:34)
  • rosie ruiz (1:15)
  • you'll never tame me (2:01)
  • your neck of the woods (3:18)
  • one way out of the maze (3:15)
  • pangolin (1:53)
  • hurricane season (8:43)
  • coda (breathing) (5:19)
drag city press release...
david grubbs
a guess at the riddle
dc266 cd

to offer a guess, you have to start with words.

david grubbs has worked simultaneously at records of songs and records of longer, immersive instrumental pieces. a guess at the riddle is a record of songs.

it feels like an unburdening. matching experimentation with articulateness, a guess at the riddle is to david’s other solo records what gastr del sol’s camoufleur was to their preceding records. one finds acoustic instruments (david’s piano and nikos veliotis’s cello) brokering peace agreements with electronics (matmos), one finds full bands going full-bore (adam pierce and thomas belhom kicking ass behind the drums, david returning to the electric guitar, david’s freshest, most lively-sounding production), and one finds david’s strongest collection of songs.

david’s lyrics have always presented a degree of surface difficulty, in an effort to bring the listener to a closer involvement with the music. starting with 2000’s the spectrum between, it’s become easier to say what each of his records is “about.” the spectrum between marked his move from chicago to new york with a collection of songs about a new city and new love. rickets & scurvy was made immediately in the wake of the september 11 attacks, and it feels like it, capturing the leadenness and dread of those months. the comically bleak title rickets & scurvy was itself an acidic reply to post-september 11 pronouncements of the death of irony.

a guess at the riddle finds shock ripened into anger. the task is to find the right words. the record opens with “knight errant,” a song about going awol: “i’ll choose the next / i’ll choose whatever’s next / i’ll choose the nearer stopping place.” “your neck in the woods” reports on insularity: “what’s new in your neck of the woods? / i’m curious because people here don’t care / don’t kid yourself / the thought is it’s an annoyance / unnecessarily pricks the conscience.” “one way out of the maze” is a laundry list of responses to an unnamed conundrum, culminating with the singer again settling in to watch robert bresson’s “a man escaped”: “i watch it when i can’t otherwise do.” “you’ll never tame me” is an anecdote from an iggy pop concert. these are songs of escape, worlds of words unto themselves. novelist rick moody who plays with grubbs and hannah marcus in the wingdale community singers — contributes lyrics to two songs (“wave generators” and “hurricane season”) and collaborates on a third. finally, “magnificence as such” is a cover of one of mayo thompson’s finest and most underrated songs — a song about the staying and slaying power of beauty.

bursting forth with energy, wit, and sudden poignance, a guess at the riddle is the definitive david grubbs record.

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back in stock as of
december 1st, 2011

first in stock on
august 25th, 2008


threads:
modern-composition

drag city (usa) #dc 224 cd

david grubbsrickets & scurvy” compact disc

  • transom
  • don't think
  • a dream to help me sleep
  • the nearer by and by
  • i did no such roaming
  • aloft
  • precipice
  • crevasse
  • kentucky karaoke
may 2002 release ; third solo album from mr. david grubbs, featuring input from matmos (who contribute two short abstract solo pieces to the tail-end of the record) & french improv-guitarist noël akchoté ...
drag city press release...
david grubbs
rickets & scurvy
dc224 cd

rickets & scurvy is a ten-song recording, the follow-up to david grubbs’ acclaimed the spectrum between album. and that’s just the tip of the iceberg!

this sales sheet can only hope to begin to communicate on what rickets & scurvy really is. a ten-song recording, true; yet something more than the sum of the songs. a follow-up album; yet still, a record standing completely on its own. these things and much more make up rickets & scurvy.

three albums into his solo adventure, david has clearly learned how to make records work as records, filling them start to finish with entertainment, moments, insight. rickets & scurvy is a very complete, start-to-finish kind of beast. the songs kick ass, rocking harder than david’s songs have in ages. the process goes further as a result. rickets & scurvy’s best moments are presented with disarming directness, an ability to plunge to great depth, with abandon.

full-band electrical arrangements are a featured part of the album, which includes contributions and collaborators both old and new. the assembled cast for rickets & scurvy includes john mcentire, matmos, noël akchoté, dan brown and nicolas vernhes. rick moody, author of the ice storm and demonology, collaborated on lyrics for two songs. this diverse and talented group provided support and unexpected challenge to the songs and proceedings on rickets & scurvy. grubbsian electric guitar stylings step to the fore on rickets & scurvy, replacing the acoustic at the core of the arrangements. the camoufleur era of gastr del sol is evoked by grubbs’ most confident use to date of electronics on his solo recordings.

in the resultant fray, we find david grubbs — right in the thick of things, reclaiming moments of youth, shouting, straining for more.

get rickets & scurvy into your life soon — it’s all about changes. and that’s just the tip of the iceberg.

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$21.59

new to stock as of
august 10th, 2007


threads:
film-video
digital-musics
sound-installation

l-ne (usa) #line 30 dvd

dmitry gelfand / evalina domnitchcamera lucida” digital versatile disc

  • taylor deupree + richard chartier - specification.sixteen 8:54
  • alva noto - sonolumi (for camera lucida) 4:04
  • evelina domnitch + dmitry gelfand - xenon wind 9:03
  • alexander kaline - analyzing turbulence 3:16
  • asmus tietchens - camera lucida 4:08
  • kenneth kirschner - august 19, 2006 3:10
  • matmos - photisms 6:48
  • coh - not sweet without honey 3:04
  • carter tutti - the noise of chance 4:35
l-ne press release...
evelina domnitch + dmitry gelfand with: alva noto, carter tutti, coh, taylor deupree + richard chartier, alexander kaline, kenneth kirschner, matmos, and asmus tietchens
camera lucida
line_030 dvd

line is proud to announce the release of its first dvd, camera lucida. the project by russian/american installation and video artists, evelina domnitch and dmitry gelfand and developed in collaboration with scientific laboratories in japan, germany, russia and belgium.

camera lucida (chamber of light or lucidity) is a 3-dimensional sonic observatory that directly transforms sound into light by employing a phenomenon known as sonoluminescence: ultrasound, propagating within a liquid, triggers the formation and implosion of micro-bubbles that reach temperatures as high as are found on the sun, and emit light in the shape of sound waves. the authors of the installation, evelina domnitch and dmitry gelfand, joined forces with multiple sound artists to create the sonochemical compositions presented on this dvd.

this dvd also contains a data partition with uncompressed high resolution audio files of all the works.

evelina domnitch and dmitry gelfand create sensory immersion environments that merge physics, chemistry and computer science with uncanny philosophical practices. having dismissed all forms of fixative and recording media, domnitch and gelfand's installations exist as ever-transforming phenomena offered for observation. because these rarely seen manifestations take place directly in front of the observer without being distorted and flattened onto a screen, they often serve to vastly extend the observer's sensory envelope.

their works have been exhibited worldwide, including shows at v2 institute for unstable media (rotterdam, netherlands), nijo castle (kyoto, japan), museum of dreams (st. petersburg, russia), i-20 gallery (new york, usa), die schachtel (milan, italy) and tesla (berlin, germany).

"camera lucida is a highly introspective immersive spatial art work creating a fleeting ephemeral materiality by intersecting ultrasound with hyperlight... in essence the creation of a sonic aurora. domnitch and gelfand's piece rejects any possibility to be fixed in space and time, but rather offers up the very definition of an unstable work of art, existing entirely for and within the perceptive realm of the viewer." - stephen kovats, director of transmediale 2008

due to the detailed and subtle visual nature of this work and phenomenon the artists have chosen to use pal over ntsc encoding to maintain the maximum resolution possible for the movie and sound files. this dvd is region free and can be played on any computer dvd drive. no region switching is necessary for television screen viewing, it can only playback on a pal or multi-system dvd player. playback in a darkened space with monitor brightness turned up is encouraged.

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$13.61

back in stock as of
february 20th, 2007

first in stock on
august 24th, 2004


threads:
beat-research
digital-musics
field-recordings

locust (usa) #locust 54 cd
met life (united states) #met life 6 cd

matmosrat relocation program (met life 6 / location sound series 1:6)” compact disc

  • rat
  • rat relocation
matmos here providing the last entry into the locust “met life / location sound series” series with their unadorned recordings of a captured street rat (track 1), then their krautrock-centric response piece...
locust press release...
a street rat was breaking into our apartment, eating our food and chewing holes in our clothes, skittering across our kitchen in the dark, scuttling inside our walls late at night. since we already had a pet rat, the prospect of trying to kill one rat while feeding another struck us as intolerable hypocrisy, so we bought a non-lethal "have-a-heart trap". after several days of luring the invader closer and closer towards and then inside the trap with peanuts, we captured her. the first track is an unedited recording of the rat protesting its incarceration. the second track is our response, in which the timing and duration of the rat screams from the first track have been preserved. the following morning we took the rat to a wealthy suburban neighborhood and set it free.” - drew daniel

the dynamic hybrid electro-rock duo matmos strike again with this zany, completely mesmerizing 2 track contribution to the met life series of field recordings and ingenious sound responses.

the matmos boys stretch an ominous canvas with the bare sounds of an incarcerated rat ensconced in a friendly trap and paint an unlikely response. rat relocation program is a heavily elevated, gleeful electro-rock epic that combines matmos' patented blend of humor, drill & bass with cinematic krautrock reminiscent of the animated cult fantasy sci-fi film the fantastic planet. volume 6 of our location sound series, met life.

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$10.01

new to stock as of
april 7th, 2007


threads:
sound-art
experimental-instruments
sound-poetry
minimalism-drones
modern-composition
free-improvisation
plunder-phonic

 best of 2007 !!! 
institute for contemporary art/boston (usa) #icab overheard cd

music overheard” double compact disc set

  • two discs of music curated by bhob rainey & ubuweb’s kenny g !!
cd 1 curated by bhob rainey
  • greg kelley thistlalia (03:47)
  • sean meehan sectors (study ii) (09:03)
  • charles curtis unison offset (06:30)
  • bhob rainey fold-out (05:30)
  • taku unami kitsune 5 (09:13)
  • chris corsano island of hammers (dumb as an) (07:12)
  • liz tonne ristretto (03:53)
  • ellen fullman hiss, louder (10:00)
cd 2 curated by kenneth goldsmith
  • gregory whitehead the problem with bodies (01:19)
  • language removal services marilyn monroe (00:55)
  • henri chopin le corps est une usine à sons [excerpt] (05:19)
  • matmos memento mori (07:32)
  • john duncan the keening towers [excerpt] (07:35)
  • caroline bergvall about face, part 1 (05:00)
  • paul dutton lips is (03:49)
  • language removal services marcel duchamp (00:47)
  • lauren lesko thirst [excerpt] (05:09)
  • christof migone crackers [excerpt] (05:00)
  • miya masakoa ritual with giant hissing madagascar cockroaches [excerpt] (05:00)
  • jim roche straight razor (09:20)
  • language removal services william s. burroughs (00:56)
  • people like us hayfever (02:36)
  • christof migone p (01:00)
  • leif elggren and thomas liljenberg zzz... [excerpt] (09:33)
well thought-out double disc compilation curated by bhob rainey and kenneth goldsmith as an “answer” to the ica boston’s inaugural exhibit, “super vision.” - one disc of acoustic music using language from electronic music, another focusing on “the body as a sound factory”.

some/many/all of you composer/performer/artist-types might remember my frantic emailing last summer about contributing to a project involving the ica before i had something of a meltdown & lived in a barn for 2 months... this is that compilation.
institute for contemporary art/boston press release...
music overheard, edited by damon krukowski

an audio response to the exhibition super vision at the institute of contemporary art/boston, december 10 2006 to april 29 2007

introduction
damon krukowski

art can predict technology - jules verne was the first to launch a ship under water, and méliès traveled to the moon long before apollo 8. perhaps this is even a logical necessity; after all, without conceiving of something first, how could anyone invent it? but super vision, the inaugural exhibition for the ica boston's new building, is more interested in the inverse of that relationship. "the question posed," says curator nicholas baume in his essay for the show's catalogue, "is how artists have responded to and interpreted the changing nature of visuality" in the emerging digital era. to answer that question, super vision gathers work executed almost exclusively in traditional (pre-digital) media: paintings, sculpture, photographs, film. it is not a futuristic, or speculative show-it does not ask the work to predict technological times to come. rather, super vision measures the technological times we are in, by their warp and pull on the art that already is.

in constructing an audio response (you could call it a soundtrack) to super vision, i followed this lead. rather than look to the latest computer-based electronica-the futuristic sounds of tomorrow-i wanted to gather work made by traditional means, which would not have been possible outside today's digital audio environment. thus cd 1 poses the question: what happens to the sound of acoustic instruments, once musicians are familiar with the tools and techniques of electronic music? and cd 2 asks a related question about our ur-instrument, the body: how do we hear the body's sounds, now that technology has given us superhuman ears?

the title, music overheard, is a term from anthropologist christine r. yano's study of japanese enka, tears of longing-there, she uses it to describe the music we cannot help but absorb as members of a given culture, even if we never choose to listen to it. in the same manner, i feel the musicians and artists on these cds have thoroughly absorbed our current technological relationship to audio, even as they continue to focus on our most ancient soundmakers: the instrument, and the body. or, given the approach many of these musicians and artists take, we might say: the instrument as body, the body as instrument.

credits
music overheard
© institute of contemporary art, boston 2006

copyright to individual works retained by the artists

edited by damon krukowski
curated by bhob rainey and kenneth goldsmith
produced for the ica by david henry, director of programs
mastering by bhob rainey

...

cd 1 : curated by bhob rainey

introduction
bhob rainey
i often hope that things go wrong: the guitar won't wail; the singer fails to croon; the cello lacks melancholy; the trumpet doesn't herald the arrival of anything. the bread in my toaster fails to become toast. despite the frustration of things not panning out as expected, there's a gleeful satisfaction and woozy sense of hope in the unexpected failure of a hitherto trustworthy object. witness the misbehavior in greg kelley's "thistlalia." no minimally cultured, reasonably sane human being would hear it and cooly remark, "ah, the regal sound of the trumpet." the knowledge that a trumpet is behind that prickly jet of air-sqeals would have to come from a trusted, external source, and trying to pin that particular sound to the idea of "trumpet" is a giddy, sometimes nauseating process. it is one of those processes that humor and horror have in common, which may be why it elicits such powerful and polarized reactions.

but the (dis)connection between sound and source is dangerously misleading. it is too easily noticeable, too likely to define the music as something merely novel. it hides a more troubling disconnect between music as such and the sounds here presented as music. on this compilation are artists whose strengths lie both in the novelty of their performance techniques and, more significantly, in their ability to force a broader definition of music through the compelling nature of their works. there is an internal logic in all of their music that plays a chicken and egg game with the sonic material, and this immanence of structure and sound ultimately prevents the extraction of one or the other as the music's dominant quality. conceptual and avant-garde readings tend to fall apart in this light, and the idea of music goes haywire. it breaks and bleeds in hypnotic swirls and unimagined colors. unlike cellos and toasters, it thrives on its own disaster, growing new limbs, adopting a rosy complexion, quitting its job at the department store. who wouldn't want things to go wrong in this way?

the musicians on this compilation undermine prescribed ideas of music not by attacking its dominant manifestations, but by working with all that is dear to music sans the aid of conventional musical expression. as a result, their works are clearly contemporary, but contain a strong does of the atemporal. music, as it breaks, is timely; its reinvention is timeless.

1. thistlalia (03:47)

greg kelley - trumpet
recorded and edited by bhob rainey

greg kelley has performed throughout the united states, europe, japan and argentina at numerous festivals, in clubs, outdoors, in living rooms, in a bank, and at least once on a vibrating floor. he has collaborated with a number of musicians across the globe performing experimental music, free jazz and noise, releasing a number of recordings in the process. he constantly seeks to push the boundaries of the trumpet and of "music."

he is the minister of fanfares for the kingdoms of elgaland-vargaland.

track notes: for the most part, this is an unaltered live recording of greg kelley playing trumpet. the trumpet is close-mic'ed, but not unreasonably so. there are two instances in which the same recording is played through a cheap di box, which produces some surprising results. the high density of sound and activity in the first half of the piece followed by the formally static but sonically complex second half is representative of kelley's play on interest and boredom in music, and his comic/critical approach to "personal expression."

2. sectors (study ii) (09:03)

sean meehan - snare drum, cymbals
recorded by sean meehan

sean meehan became musically active in the late 80's at the amica bunker series for improvised music which was then housed at abc no rio in new york city.

current performances generally find meehan playing only the snare drum in a manner that sheds conventional usage and reconstructs the conception and function of the instrument. concert activities, both at home and away, are generally divided between playing in conventional settings for experimental music and in seeking out unique locations that are often in the unobserved and unconsidered corners of the city.

meehan's recordings document some of his collaborations and solo work. other contributions to the material world include the construction of performance objects that serve as "compositional things." included in this are the pieces "gift iii" which musically activated a sink full of dishes; "gift iv" for woodblock; and audio, a boxed set of four cassettes to be played in the mind.

track notes: the roomy sound of this recording is an indication of meehan's predilection towards open, city spaces. but, despite the distant sounds of traffic and deliberate low fidelity, the singing purity of meehan's rosin-coated snare drum and friction-coaxed cymbals cuts through and transforms both the recorded and playback spaces. the striking use of silence, especially at the beginning of the track, sensitizes the listener towards the subtly emerging and declining sounds and their gentle relationship to each other.

3. unison offset (06:30)

charles curtis - cello
recorded by charles curtis

charles curtis is a cellist. he has worked closely with la monte young and marian zazeela, alvin lucier, and eliane radigue, all of whom have made solo pieces expressly for him. curtis is one of the few instrumentalists to have perfected young's highly complex just intonation tunings, and is one of only a handful of musicians to have appeared in duo formations with young, performing works by early minimalists richard maxfield and terry jennings.

for a number of years curtis has maintained an interest and a presence in the downtown new york free music scene, collaborating with poetry-rock pioneers king missile, john s. hall, dogbowl and kramer. he has been a guest of artists and groups such as alan licht, michael j. schumacher. donald miller, dean roberts, elliott sharp, david first, ben neill, bongwater, borbetomagus, circle x, and members of the bands television, pere ubu and public image limited.

he teaches contemporary music performance at the university of california, san diego.

track notes: this two-track recording presents two performances, layered in a loose canon, of a singularly fascinating sonic phenomenon on the cello. combinations of bowing technique and carefully tuned harmonies excite an improbably complex timbre from the cello, rendered even more lively by the multiple tracks.

4. fold-out (05:30)

bhob rainey - soprano saxophone
recorded by bhob rainey

bhob rainey's music has become a model in the world of experimental sound. he is the founder of both nmperign (with trumpeter greg kelley) and the bsc, which he also directs. collaborations with musicians such as ralf wehowsky, le quan ninh, gunter mueller, and lionel marchetti, dancers nicole bindler and yukiko nakamura, and filmmakers loren boyer, harvey benschoter, and william pisarri highlight rainey's broad experience and outline a complex body of work that continues to expand and surprise. his music occupies a charged space between synthetic and organic sound, bringing forth improbable sensual and narrative experiences through virtuosic extended techniques, homemade synths and sound processors, found recordings, and a kind of living silence that is apt to wreak havoc with the perception of time.

recordings of rainey's music have been released on labels such as selektion, grob, sedimental, rossbin, twisted village, and siwa. they number in the dozens and have garnered a wealth of international accolades. festival appearances have included musique action, instal, amplify, densites, fruits d'mhere, high zero, and improvised and otherwise.

rainey has also performed the works of christian wolff (with the composer), john cage, and cornelius cardew and is the orchestral arranger for pop artists damon & naomi.

track notes: the use of microtones, multiphonics, and multi-timbral techniques brings forth a palette of electronic-sounding elements reminiscent of feedback, modulated filters, and tape edits, but the melodic and timbral fluidity of this piece are unmistakably driven by a more traditional musician/instrument relationship. rainey has always adamantly opposed purely technical readings of his music, and the sometimes pure, medieval qualities of this track help direct attention away from the mechanics of its production and towards the more oblique mysteries revealed in its unfolding.

5. kitsune 5 (09:13)

taku unami - motors, objects, speakers
recorded by taku unami

taku unami plays objects with the vibarations generated by various speakers and motors steered by subsonic frequencies generated electronically. this might be considered acoustic computer music. he has worked with mattin, taku sugimoto, masafumi ezaki, otomo yoshihide, burkhard stangl, nikos veliotis, among others, and he manages the influential japanese record label, hibari music.

track notes: "kitsune" is unami's series of compositions that focus on limited materials and simple time structures. the airiness of the recording emphasizes the acoustic nature of the sounds produced, but the mechanical rhythms and apoetic structure belie the electronic source of the music. the uneasy marriage of these two elements evokes a kind of enchanted world of personified utensils that is as likely to produce a duchampian smirk as a stargazer's awe.

6. island of hammers (dumb as an) (07:12)

chris corsano - percussion
recorded by chris corsano

chris corsano has quickly emerged as the go-to drummer for all musics defying definition. he brings formidable power and elegance to the kit, and has, like fellow percussionists sean meehan and le quan ninh, developed a hitherto unheard approach to drumming and its role in ensemble and solo settings.

track notes: the detailed list of instruments used in this piece includes alto sax mouthpiece connected to tub-to-shower attachment nozzle connected to funnel, street cleaner bristles, snare drum, finger cymbals and butter knife. all are employed to produce a piece that feels joyfully unhinged. it is no surprise, however, that close listening reveals corsano's command of his self-inflicted chaos, a signature in all of his work.

7. ristretto (03:53)

liz tonne - voice
recorded by liz tonne. edited by bhob rainey

liz tonne is a sound artist inspired by the unorthodox use of the human voice. she is both an improvisor and an interpreter of contemporary composition who reconfigues the traditional role of a singer. her voice is simply a sound source, another intstrument among many. her palette is an abstraction of singing styles ranging from jazz to bird songs, classical technique to the casual sounds of machinery. tonne combines air, breath, whispers, overtones and disconnected text to evoke present and unconscious associatons; memories dredged up only by the power of the human voice.

presently, she is a member of the bsc, a large ensemble of the boston area's finest electroacoustic musicians led by bhob rainey. she is also a member of undr quartet, one of the pioneering ensembles of boston's lowercase sound, formed with james coleman, greg kelley and vic rawlings in 1998.

track notes: spectators of liz tonne's performances often report that, while they see her sitting before them with her mouth wide open, they have great difficulty connecting the sounds produced with that open-mouthed figure. and yet, we all recognize at some level, even on recording, that the human voice is involved. for many, this is a disquieting revelation. tonne's use of the voice strikes at the arteries of our identity via language and can create a sonic nightmare, a kind of monstrous id that threatens sense and order. it is somewhat paradoxical that her extreme control and sensitivity to sound only serve to exacerbate the nightmare, but there is no indication that the desire to inflict horror is behind her music. the nightmare is our own, and, when confronted, offers a window to the sublime.

8. hiss, louder (10:00)

ellen fullman - long string instrument
recorded by ellen fullman

in 1981, at her studio in brooklyn ellen fullman began developing her life-work, the 70 foot "long string instrument," in which rosin-coated fingers brush across dozens of metallic strings, producing a chorus of minimal organ-like overtones which has been compared to the experience of standing inside an enormous grand piano. fullman has recorded extensively with this unusual instrument and has collaborated with such luminary figures as composer pauline oliveros, the kronos quartet, and cellist frances-marie uitti.

fullman was awarded a prestigious daad artists-in-berlin residency (2000-2001); her music was represented in the american century: art and culture, 1950-2000 at the whitney museum; and she has performed in numerous venues and festivals in europe, japan and north america. her release ort was selected as one of the top 50 recordings of 2004 by the wire.

track notes: this piece is a single pass solo recording of the long string instrument, no edits. the density, harmonic richness, and sheer singularity of the sound result from fullman's rare and remarkable combination of craftsmanship and musicianship. her role as designer, builder, and performer of the long string instrument has renaissance overtones: she is the architect of an entire structure of expression, intoxicating and awe-inspiring, connecting the personal with the astronomical in a way that is immediately sensually and intellectually pleasing but in no sense frivolous.

...

cd 2 : curated by kenneth goldsmith

the body as sound factory
kenneth goldsmith

"no matter which way you flap them, all openings into the body, above all those that open into the head, invite the risk of foreign particulate invasion -- the reason for antibodies. in a world without lips, let's consider the proposition proved." - gregory whitehead

there's a series of vienna actionist films made in the 1960s that i've recently been hosting on ubuweb. made by artists such as otto muehl, otmar bauer and kurt kren, it's wildly disturbing, yet somehow very sexy stuff. there's endless amounts of explicit sexual action, s&m, bondage, genital close-ups, enemas, foodstuffs, animal sex and animal slaughter, and so forth. they've got the underground quality and graininess of, say, super-8 stag films that your dad might've watched at a bachelor party in some wood-paneled suburban basement. yet the films are undeniably art not porn: jittery, quickly cut, out of focus and fast-paced, the camera never lingers long enough on a body part or action to trigger a scopophilic reaction, rather, its formalism keeps us on the outside. there is no typical porn narrative beginning with the unexpected encounter, leading to foreplay and culminating in the cum shot; instead, due to its essentially structuralist nature, we witnesses choppy dionysian orgies of epic proportions with which we are never permitted to engage.

there's a strong dialogue with 1960s art world trends in these films, be it the jump-cut editing typical of the new york underground film scene of the time or the obsession with the materiality of paint, albeit with foodstuffs rather than oil or enamel; there's also a deep connection to the everyday performance works of the judson church, happenings and fluxus. but checking into all my avant-garde film history books, nowhere do the names kren, bauer or muehl appear: these films have been, by and large, ignored. too risqué to be shown in galleries, dismissed by the avant-garde cinema community, and kept out of theatres by blue laws, they are lost documents.

yet somehow, looking at them today, they seem so prescient. it's hard to imagine matthew barney's vaseline-fueled fantasies without them. likewise, the works of mainstream art world figures like chris burden, vito acconci, paul mccarthy, mike kelley, bob flanagan, kathy acker, karen finley, tracey emin and vanessa beecroft all bear the mark of viennese actionist cinema. it's a hidden history-long relegated to the margins-whose relevance is now speaking to the center.

in the history of music and sound, a similar migration has occurred with the body-centric concerns of sound poetry. unrecognized in the eyes of the official art world (kurt schwitters is more famous for his merzbau or collages than for the "ursonate"), its legacy is cropping up in a vast amount of audio works by younger artists.

beginning in 1913 when the russian futurist aleksei kruchenykh put forth the concept of zaum, a transnational language which focused on non-sense rather than sense, our relationship to language was forever altered. non-verbal and non-linguistic sounds could now be included within the scope of language. by extension, labial mouth sounds played a large role in zaum. kruchenykh's manifesto seems to predict the viennese actionists a half-century later: "wild, flaming, explosive (wild paradise, fiery languages, blazing coal)." kurt schwitters "ursonate" (1922-32) along with many other dada and futurist sound poems brought this tendency into normative practice during the first half of the century. at the end of wwii in paris, pierre schaefer began distorting human voices using musique concrète techniques, which opened the floodgates for altered, amplified and micro sounds of all types as sources for compositions, including those of the body.

the french sound poet henri chopin, in particular, applied musique concrète's principles to the body. by the 1960s, he coined a term for this practice: le corps est une usine à sons (the body is a sound factory), a slogan which reverberates to this day. chopin took his directive literally-his own body was the site of sound. compare this with the famous john cage story of his visit to an anechoic chamber at harvard in 1951 where he "heard that silence was not the absence of sound but was the unintended operation of [his] nervous system and the circulation of [his] blood." it's curious that cage-self-admittedly apollonian in his musical tendencies-never worked with those actual body sounds he heard that day. thankfully, chopin did.

these mp3s are the legacy of kruchenykh, schwitters and chopin. they're the stepchild of the viennese actionists: at once sensual, sexy, and dionysian, yet at the same time structural, rigorous, and gridded. from the dance floor, to amplified body cavities, to more conventional forms of narrative, this disc surveys the variety of ways younger artists are using the body as sound factory.

1. "the problem with bodies" - gregory whitehead (01:19)

track 1: all voicings and voicalisms originated from the inside of gregory whitehead's own larynx. "the problem with bodies" originally appeared on the pleasure of ruins and other castaways (staalplaat, 1993).

gregory whitehead is an internationally acclaimed audio artist, radiomakerand playwright. he is the co- editor of wireless imagination: sound, radio and the avant-garde, and the writer of numerous essays on subjects relating to media technologies and the body.

2. "marilyn monroe" - language removal services (00:55)

language removal services is a pioneer in the arena of language removal for vocal applications. our laboratory is, we believe, the only one of its kind in the world. lrs facilities include our state of the art vocal observation chamber; a special storage facility for our archives, including the world-famous raymond chronic static language library; and the laboratory, which houses the latest developments in both static and ecstatic language development platforms.

3. "le corps est une usine à sons (excerpt)" - henri chopin (05:19)

track 3: henri chopin: voice, body & electronics. "the body is a sound factory" was featured on an lp of previously unpublished pieces accompanying the box set, revue ou published by alga marghen.

henri chopin (b. 1922) is one of the pioneers of sound poetry, both with his own works and with his work as a publisher. since the 1950s, chopin has explored the amplification of the voice and the body, the vibrations of the larynx, the labial snaps and the hiss of bodily systems. he pioneered the use of the tape recorder in sound poetry, extending the purview of musique concrète developments in france after the second world war. he edited the magazine cinquième saison from 1959 to 1963, and then the magazine-with-record series ou from 1964 to 1974. chopin lives in england.

4. "memento mori" - matmos (07:32)

track 4: matmos "memento mori" (professor ping publishing). composed entirely from samples of human skull, goat spine and connective tissue, and artificial teeth. m. c. schmidt: human skull, goat spine, teeth, mix. drew daniel: sampling, sequencing, digital editing, efx. courtesy of matador records.

matmos is m.c. schmidt and drew daniel, aided and abetted by many others. in their recordings and live performances over the last nine years, matmos have used the sounds of: amplified crayfish nerve tissue, the pages of bibles turning, a bowed five string banjo, slowed down whistles and kisses, water hitting copper plates, the runout groove of a vinyl record, a $5.00 electric guitar, liposuction surgery, cameras and vcrs, chin implant surgery, contact microphones on human hair, violins, rat cages, tanks of helium, violas, human skulls, cellos, peck horns, tubas, cards shuffling, field recordings of conversations in hot tubs, frequency response tests for defective hearing aids, a steel guitar recorded in a sewer, electrical interference generated by laser eye surgery, whoopee cushions and balloons, latex fetish clothing, rhinestones on a dinner plate, polish trains, insects, ukelele, aspirin tablets hitting a drum kit from across the room, dogs barking, people reading aloud, life support systems and inflatable blankets, records chosen by the roll of dice, an acupuncture point detector conducting electrical current through human skin, rock salt crunching underfoot, solid gold coins spinning on bars of solid silver, the sound of a frozen stream thawing in the sun, a five gallon bucket of oatmeal.

5. "keening (excerpt)" - john duncan (07:35)

track 5: excerpt from "the keening towers," john duncan, gothenburg biennial 2003. curated by carl michael von hausswolff. san pietro elementary school children's choir conducted by john duncan. soloist: timoti toniutti. audio system designed by giorgio tomasini. towers provided by e.d. knutsen, gothenburg. thanks to: giuliana stefani; peo karlsson for e.d. knutsen; lennart pettersson and the tech crew at göteborg konstmuseet; cecilia borgström-fälth, elisabeth rees, åsa nohlström and the gothenburg biennial staff; luisa tomasetig and the children of san pietro elementary school; massimo toniutti for the recording of timoti's voice.

john duncan was born in the united states, and currently lives and works in italy. his events and installations have recently been held at eco e narciso in turin, mutek in montreal, the compound in san francisco, teatro fondamenta nuova in venice, teatro piccolo jovinelli in rome, the noorlands-operan in umeå, fylkingen in stockholm, the watari museum of art in tokyo, the gothenburg biennial, quarter in florence and galleria enrico fornello in prato. his audio releases the crackling (1996, with max springer), tap internal (2000), palace of mind (2001, with giuliana stefani), fresh (2002, with zeitkratzer), phantom broadcast (2002), infrasound-tidal (2003), the keening towers (2003) and nine suggestions (2005, with mika vainio and ilpo väisänen, a.k.a. pan sonic) are considered by critics and composers alike to be benchmarks in the field of experimental music. his work in performance has been shown at the museum of contemporary art (moca), los angeles; the osterreichisches museum für angewandte kunst (mak), vienna; museu d'arte contemporani, barcelona (macba); and museum of tokyo (mot).

6. "about face, part 1" - caroline bergvall (05:00)

track 6: caroline bergvall, voice. the written piece of "about face, part 1" is featured in full in her recent text collection fig (salt, 2005).

caroline bergvall is a poet and performance artist based in london, england. books include: goan atom (krupskaya, 2001), and eclat (sound&language, 1996), rethought as an online book for ubu editions (2004). her most recent collection of poetic and performance pieces, fig (goan atom 2) was recently published (salt books, 2005) and her cd of readings and audiotexts, via: poems 1994-2004 (rockdrill 8) is available through carcanet. as an artist, she has developed text performances as well as collaborative pieces with sound artists, both in europe and in north america, including the installation little sugar for text festival (bury, 2005) and say: "parsley" at the liverpool biennial (2004). her critical work is largely concerned with emerging forms of writing, plurilingual poetry and mixed media writing practices. she is co-chair of the mfa writing faculty, milton avery school of the arts, bard college (ny).

7. "lips is" - paul dutton (03:49)

track 7: paul dutton: voice. no electronic effects or processing, no feedback, overdubs, or fades. "lips is" appeared on the cd mouth pieces: solo soundsinging (ohm editions, 2000). engineered by steve lebrasseur, avatar sound studios, quebec city. rights for "lips is" are administered by socan.

paul dutton is a writer and soundsinger who began publishing and performing in 1967. a member of the groundbreaking poetry performance group the four horsemen (1970-1988) and the free improvisation band ccmc, dutton continues to tour throughout north america and europe, solo and in ensemble. the most recent of his six books is the novel several women dancing, and the most recent of his five solo recordings is the cd oralizations.

8. "marcel duchamp" - language removal services (00:47)

9. "thirst (excerpt)" - lauren lesko (05:09)

track 9: excerpt from "thirst" by lauren lesko. producer: connie kieltyaka. engineers: brenda hutchinson, jonathan duckett. recorded in 1995 at harvestworks, new york. edition of 12.

i became friends with lauren lesko in new york in the early 1990s when we were both staples on the soho art scene. at the time, lauren was focusing on very strong feminist-oriented, body-centric works made of diverse mediums. in the mid-90s, she hit her stride as a poster-girl for the seminal bad girls show at the new museum. around the same time, lauren also began to assume a larger role as a curator of feminist art shows around the country. in 1995, she handed me her audio work "thirst," one of an edition of 12. i had never heard anything like it before or since. i had her give another copy to wfmu, where it received extensive airplay (and continues to do so). over the years, the piece has become somewhat legendary, discussed in chatrooms, forums and journals. in the late 90s, lauren headed off to india on a spiritual quest, ceasing her activities in the art and sound worlds. - kenneth goldsmith

10. "crackers (excerpt)" - christof migone (05:00) track 10: "crackers" (excerpt) taken from track 3 of the cd crackers (locust music, 2001). source: cracking knuckles, knees, wrists, jaws, toes, ankles, backs, necks, elbows, hips.

christof migone is a multidisciplinary artist and writer. his work and research delves into language, voice, bodies, psychopathology, performance, video, intimacy, complicity, endurance. he co-edited the book and cd writing aloud: the sonics of language (errant bodies press, 2001) and his writings have been published in aural cultures, s:on, experimental sound & radio, musicworks, radio rethink, semiotext(e), angelaki. he obtained an mfa from nscad in 1996 and is currently a phd (abd) candidate at the department of performance studies at the tisch school of the arts of new york university. he has released six solo audio cds on various labels (avatar, nd, alien 8, locust, oral). he has curated a number of events in the sound and radio arts: touch that dial (1990), radio contortions (1991), rappel (1994), double site (1998), stuttermouthface (2002). he has performed at beyond music sound festival (los angeles), kaaistudios (brussels), resonance fm (london), nouvelles scènes (dijon), on the air (innsbruck), ménagerie de verre (paris), experimental intermedia (nyc), méduse (québec), victoriaville festival, and in montreal at radio canada, quinzaine de la voix, musiques fragiles, galerie oboro, casa del popolo, théâtre la chapelle. his installations have been exhibited at the banff center, rotterdam film festival, gallery 101, art lab, eyelevelgallery, forest city gallery, studio 5 beekman. he has collaborated with lynda gaudreau, martin tétreault, tammy forsythe, alexandre st-onge, michel f. côté, gregory whitehead, set fire to flames, and fly pan am. a monograph on his work, christof migone - sound voice perform, was published in 2005. he currently lives in montréal and teaches at concordia university.

11. "ritual with giant hissing madagascar cockroaches" (excerpt)" - miya masakoa (05:00)

track 11: "ritual with giant hissing madagascar cockroaches" was performed by artist with thirteen madagascar cockroaches triggering the insects' amplified hissing while crawling over performer's body. courtesy of miya masaoka.

miya masaoka resides in new york city and is a classically trained musician, composer and sound/installation artist. she has created works for solo koto, laser interfaces, laptop and video. she has also made works for sculpture installations and written scores for ensembles, chamber orchestra and mixed choirs. in her pieces, she often works with the sonification of data, and maps the behavior of brain activity, plants and insect movement to sound.

12. "straight razor" - jim roche (09:20)

track 12: jim roche: voice. "straight edge razor" is from the lp learning to count (morgan gallery, kansas city, 1983). it is currently available as a double cd, jim roche early works (mary brogan museum of art, tallahassee, 2004).

jim roche was born 1943, florida. exhibitions include: solo exhibition at the whitney museum of american art, 1974; 37th venice biennial in 1976; and the 10th biennale de paris in 1977. movie appearances include: something wild (1986), silence of the lambs (1990), philadelphia (1993), beloved (1998), and the manchurian candidate (2003). roche's audio performance "fight it out" was used for the movie slacker. his work is archived on ubuweb and wfmu. a dvd, a jim roche experience, was recently issued.

13. "william s. burroughs" - language removal services (00:56)

14. "hayfever" - people like us (02:36)

track 14: dedicated to loretadine, without whom, this track would be much longer.

for 16 years vicki bennett has been making cds, radio, and a/v multimedia under the name people like us. by animating and recontextualising found footage collages, vicki gives an equally witty and dark view of popular culture with a surrealistic edge. people like us does an ongoing experimental arts radio show on wfmu, called "do or diy," and is currently artist in residence at the bbc creative archive.

15. "p" - christof migone (01:00)

16. "zzz... (excerpt)" - leif elggren and thomas liljenberg (09:33)

track 16: leif elggren and thomas liljenberg: voice. published by firework edition, 1996.

firework is the name of the group that leif elggren and thomas liljenberg founded in 1978 and under which they have put on several exhibitions and performances. as a result of the philosophical discussion engendered by the underlying essence of this work, a small publishing company, firework edition, was started in 1982. it has since then brought out many books and other printed matter, multiples and records and put on a number of exhibitions, not only by the founders, but also as a result of collaboration with various other artists.

track notes

when listening to henri chopin's music (3), it's hard to tell that it's body-derived; instead it sounds like much of the musique concrète of its day. it's only after reading the liner notes that you learn that the source for a composition was, say, chopin banging a speaker against the side of his head. chopin's direct bodily engagement has inspired younger artists: listen, for example, to matmos' memento mori, (4) where an abstract composition gradually morphs into a surprisingly rich-even pleasant-piece of music. it's only after we learn that it was composed entirely from samples of human skull, goat spine and connective tissue, and artificial teeth do we listen in a different way.

similarly, on first listening, miya masaoka's ritual with giant hissing madagascar cockroaches (11) sounds like any number of contemporary electronic compositions, yet again, once we learn of its methodology-sounds triggered by the movement of cockroaches on the performer's naked body-our relationship to the work drastically changes.

on first listen to christof migone's crackers (10) you might think you're listening to a garden variety of computer glitchwerks until you become aware that the source material for the piece is the cracking of human bones. in all three pieces, the procedural knowledge is not contingent on the success of the piece, for they are all gorgeous; rather, once you know, another layer of complexity is added.

while chopin was busy exploring the sounds of his own body, composers such as karlheinz stockhausen were seeing what could formally be done by manipulating existing voices ("gesang der jünglinge"). whereas stockhausen was a formalist-seeing how far he could push the acoustic technology in the work-the younger composer john duncan takes a radical turn toward subjectivity and emotion for his installation the keening towers (5). using audio systems mounted at the tops of enormous steel towers, the source of the piece is a 30-voice italian children's choir. duncan states that, "the personal motivation for this project is to make a small gesture to give something back to kids, especially infants, that i've seen in my life who were victims of abuse by adults... i don't think it really matters whether 'the keening towers' communicates this aspect to anyone else-i'm satisfied that it works on this level for me whenever i hear the whispers, screams, etc., all made by kids having fun with their voices, moving as if they're coming down out of the wind, at times whispering directly into my ear, at other moments morphing into sexual groans that for several seconds sound as if they're being made by an adult couple hidden behind the museum façade." it's hard to image stockhausen making such a statement.

people like us's hayfever (14) is an audio vérité piece in the tradition of r. murray schaefer's world soundscape project which attempted to theorize acoustic ecology in the 60s and 70s. but vicki bennett (who records under the name of people like us) personalizes and embodies the devastating consequences of our untheorized polluted environmental space- using an odd mix of hayfever, pollen and ambient media-giving us a something that's closer to julianne moore in todd haynes' safe than to the lofty aspirations of schaefer.

lauren lesko (9) also favors a vérité approach and by using a contact microphone, gives us access to the sounds of the insides of her vagina. it's remarkably graphic, but not in ways that one might think: calming, warm and aquatic, and not surprisingly, womblike. the sensation produced in the listener is similar to the aforementioned viennese actionist films: jarring yet calm, art not porn.

a more staged approach is used in leif elggren and thomas liljenberg's zzz...(16) which is an hour-long performance of two gentlemen snoring. at the beginning of the piece, it simply sounds like two people sleeping, a snore here, a cough there. but as the piece progresses, the snoring gets more theatrical and obnoxious until, about half way through, it turns into a snoring opera, with the two protagonists taking turns belting out twisted arias of snorts, yawns and honks. it's a hysterical and self-reflexive take on the more sober documentary durational performance works of an earlier era, say, chris burden, as well as a response to a work like lesko's.

another strain of body-centric works found here is language and its constituent parts: the sounds of the mouth, spoken descriptions of bodily functions and sensations, philosophical questions of corporeality, and the power of the sheer absence of language. gregory whitehead's the problem with bodies (1) sets the philosophical tone for the linguistic aspect of the disc. in it, a disembodied voice (the voice of media) is asked to repeat a proposition first without using a tongue, next without opening the mouth, and finally without using the larynx, reducing the philosophical proposition to a series mere glottal clicks.

language removal services (2, 8, 13) takes whitehead's directive literally and removes all language from recordings of famous personalities, leaving us not with their jewels of wisdom, but rather with the peripheral detritus between the words. for this disc, i selected three tracks using figures as source material whom seemed to me particularly invested in corporeality: marilyn monroe, marcel duchamp and william s. burroughs.

paul dutton moves in a similar direction of linguistic non-sense. lips is (7) is comprised entirely of labial sounds. in it, the lips-conventionally thought of as our primary delivery system of linguistic communication- are used to create anything but conventional language. instead dutton makes an astonishing array of lip sounds including babble, breath, salivation, kissing, and electronic music; think of him as henri chopin unplugged.

christof migone brings a technological sense to bear on the body's urinary function in p (15). migone states of the piece: "i said / shouted / whispered (depending on the context) 'p' every time i went to pee until i reached 1000 times (took 149 days). the playback of the ps is in accordance to the timestamp of the original p (it's hard to discern a variance in spacing in the 1 minute version here, there's a 60 minute version where that's more obvious)." the rhythm of the piece is determined by the clicking on and off of the recording apparatus reminiscent of the stop-click tape recording experiments of anton bruhin, while the self's examination through technology gives an eerie aura to the work, reminiscent of coppola's the conversation.

cresting on the border between conventional language, deconstructed words, and glottal stuttering is a piece from caroline bergvall, about face, part 1 (6). prior to a reading in 1999, bergvall, a norwegian / british / french poet had a tooth removed yet decided to go ahead with the reading anyway. the result was a series of unintentional linguistic gaffes-stutters and hesitancies which added another layer of complexity to bergvall's already complex relationship to her stew of "native" languages. as bergvall says of the piece, "the sutured pain and phantom bone made it difficult to articulate the text to the audience. speech fluency is an articulatory feat. it presupposes the smooth functioning of speaking's motor skills. it is a choreography of the physiological mouth into language."

moving back toward a more conventional narrative is jim roche's straight razor (12), where he gives a graphically hypnotic accounting of what feels like to be cut with a straight-edged razor. circuitously chanted in a steinian way, roche articulates an almost slow-motion account of the incident. recorded in 1972, the piece grows out of a series of improvised performance works that roche performed in galleries. by throwing himself into a trance and adopting characters of his native south, roche's audio works are remarkable documents which still have the power to provoke and stun some thirty-five years later.

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temporary residence limited (usa) #trr 040 lp

everything comes and goes (black sabbath tribute)” long playing record

  • matmos - f/x
  • ruins - reversible sabbath
  • grails - black sabbath
  • four tet - iron man
  • curtis harvey trio - changes
  • paul newman - fairies wear boots
  • the anomoanon - planet caravan
  • racebannon - sabbath bloody sabbath
  • greenneess w/philly g - sweet leaf
temporary residence limited press release...
back in 1997, we at temporary residence ltd. had a novel idea: compile a black sabbath tribute album with experimental rock, folk, and electronic bands reinterpreting classic ozzy-era sabbath tunes. at the time it seemed like a unique idea, since such tributes were then executed primarily by washed-up glam bands or tired hardcore groups cheekily cashing in on nostalgic quasi-irony. much has changed over the last eight years, of course. black sabbath did the unthinkable by reuniting - and has since done so three times. ozzy osbourne became a household name with his startlingly popular mtv-produced reality show. everything comes & goes is full of genre-bending homages by genuine sabbath fans; each track serves to remind us of the stunning brilliance and innovation that was the original black sabbath. and that, first and foremost, makes it worth all the wait. artists include: matmos, four tet, ruins, paul newman, the anomoanon, racebannon, curtis harvey trio, grails and more.

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