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to celebrate the release of the new failing lights "s/t" disc on intransitive, we are running a "4 for the price of 3" incentive on all in-stock intransitive cd releases !!! simply place an order for any 3 intransitive discs, making sure to mention in the comments field which title you want as your 4th and voila, we'll include it free of charge !!! act fast, as the incentive is limited to the inventory on hand ...

mimaroglu music sales best of 2009

 ( - )  page ::  (1)  2  3  4  year :: (2009)   2008   2007   2006   2005  ( + ) 

better ever than never, i always say ...

of the 1,330 new-to-stock titles received throughout 2009, the listings below represent the best-of-the-best ; the titles that we can recommend uncategorically to anyone with even a passing interest in experimental & electronic sound ... or at least the best of the titles that we still have in stock !!!

... and therein lies the stumbling block that has kept this list at bay for the past 6 months ; do we represent every "limited to 100" title that we loved & distributed only for a blip before it instantly sold out only to canonize them and / or add to their aftermarket value, or do we adhere to our long-standing "everything on the site is in print, in stock, and available" modus ? ultimately we decided to go with the latter ; everything below can be yours at a button's press ... and you do need most of these in your life ; it was an incredible year for new music & reissues, with excellent work abound from the labels & artists with which we were lucky enough to be in league ...

i'm never one for playing favorites, but i'd like to single out the reissue of peter liechti's amazing documentary about voice crack, "kick that habit" on drag city (as well as his separately-issued roman signer film ; hadn't watched a dvd more than once in a long time, but these were on constant rotation around the house) ; of course bill orcutt's "a new way to pay old debts" on palilalia was a revelation ; the christina carter 2lp on root strata (seeing her @ the on land fest in september was one of the near-religious concert experiences of 2009) ; the reissue of the destroy all monsters "1974-1976" set reminded me just how incredibly prescient they were & the new vinyl issues of both charling nothing's "the psychedelic saxophone" & the sperm's "shh !" dragged some whispered-about but rarely heard gems out into the limelight ; stephen cornford's incredible sound-art single via the permanent gallery made me wonder how many of our long-term customers were secretly musical geniuses ; the kito mizukumi rouber lp on ultra eczema provided repeat "!!??!!" listening to our many visitors ; and it felt awfully good to be able to offer the spate of "originals" we sourced throughout the year (i.e. the daniel steven crafts & roberta settels lps) ...

geoff was key in bringing in the richard bone disc (going so far as to visit mr. bone at his rural rhode island estate to source our copies directly) ; he also wanted to mention that the james ferraro "last american hero" lp on olde english spelling bee was near the top of his list (ok, i'll admit ; mine too) ... and i know he'd never nominate one of his own records, but his split with christopher "c.f." forgues (as mark lord, geoff as morgan egg) was incredible, as was his expert-level tape edition of my own hallicrafters inc. music (i can nominate the edition, he can nominate the music ; that way neither of us is guilty of that egregious act of self-preservation) ...

bonne année & bon appétit ... -keith fullerton whitman (mms' pied-au-cochon) & geoff mullen (mms' sous chef)

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$21.92

new to stock as of
september 15th, 2009


threads:
lafms
1970s-electronic
electro-acoustic-improvisation
experimental-instruments
psych-prog

 best of 2009 !!! 
harbinger sound (uk) #harb 047 lp
lafms (usa) #lafms #06 lp

airwaylive at lace” long playing record

  • live at lace (1) (20:35)

  • live at lace (2) (20:35)
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "live at lace (2)"
april 2009 release ; lp reissue of the legendary “live at lace” concert, featuring the lafmssupergroupairway (joe & rick potts, tom recchion, chip chapman, dennis duck, vetza) ...

with it’s roots in a 1977 eponymous ep by joe potts (based around processes of vetza’s voice), airway had, by 1978, evolved into a fully fledged “noise orchestra” consisting of most of the lafms key players & hangers on ... for this concert (at the still-active los angeles conemporary exhibitions space) the 6-strong crew played an array of “traditional” instruments (drums, bass, mandolin, saxophone), the sum total of which was run through a device built by chip chapman that rendered the sound into a gritty flange of distortions, not unlike contemporary bit-reduction techniques (although assuredly done in the analog domain ; audio input as control voltage, ala moog’s recent “freqbox”) ...

listening to the chaos that ensues pretty much straight-out-the-gate, it’s easy to see how profound an effect this lp had not just on the burgeoning japanese noise scene (keiji haino himself even went so far as to travel to l.a. to track these guys down in 1982 - there’s a great psf disc of this collaboration that we’ll have ... some day) but on the 30+ years of countless noise-rock and freak-out acts that have eloped from greener pastures in the interim ...

easily one of the top 5historical noise” documents ; this “deluxe” edition comes as a full-color paste-on, with a veritable treasure-trove of reproductions (gig flyers, posters, manifestos, polaroids - see below) inside the sleeve ... highly recommended !!!
harbinger sound press release...

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$6.72

new to stock as of
november 30th, 2009


threads:
lafms

 best of 2009 !!! 
lafms (usa) #lafms airway cs

airwaylive at lace” cassette single

  • live at lace (excerpt 1) (

  • live at lace (excerpt 2)
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "live at lace (excerpt 1)"
november 2009 release ; legitreproduction” of one of the rarest artifacts in the lafms canon, joe potts1978 cassette-single edition of the airwaylive at lace”material ...

comes as a variable-color, professionally-duplicated cassette (in your choice of colors ::


... use the “comments” field when you check out to specify) with full-color labels and a reprint of the original insert (detailed below) ; essential for any lafms completist ...
lafms press release...

live at lace cassette single

artist:  airway
label:  lafms
format:  cassette

a faithful reproduction of the 1978live at lace” cassette single made by joe potts in an edition of 20. the 2009 edition cassettes were made exclusively for sale during the airway performance at “a fantastic world superimposed on reality: a select history of experimental music”, the 2 day noise fest curated by mike kelley for the performa 2009 biennial that took place nov. 20 and 21, 2009 at the gramercy theater in nyc.

this edition of 200 features sonically enhanced sound and restored artwork, down to the color xerox labels and “informative” insert expertly recreated by tom recchion. please note this is only a six minute cassette! the original concept for the cassette was fueled by potts’ discovery at a thrift shop of a tranche of cheap, short, pre-recorded children’s cassettes. joe then would take a cassette and record a section of the “live at lace” lp by randomly dropping the turntable’s needle on different parts of the record and recording that section for three minutes per cassette side. he originally intended to produce 100 cassettes, but after realizing how much work would be needed to accomplish this, he stopped at 20, making the original cassette one of the most sought-after collectibles in the lafms catalog.

the cassettes are available in eight different colors (25 each color): blue, green, lime, magenta, orange, red, white, yellow.


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$67.75

new to stock as of
july 15th, 2009


threads:
sound-art
site-specific
sound-poetry
printed-matter
modern-composition

 best of 2009 !!! 
edition rz (germany) #rz 9006/9007 lp

john cage / terry foxhigh fidelity • artists' records in the marzona collection” double long playing record set

  • john cage - mureau part 1 (14:07)
  • john cage - mureau part 2 (16:54)

  • john cage - mureau part 3 (19:10)
  • john cage - mureau part 4 (17:24)

  • terry fox - culvert part 1 (20:04)
  • terry fox - culvert part 2 (8:12)

  • terry fox - culvert part 3 (27:08)
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "culvert part 1"
january 2009 release ; just an awesome package from robert zank & company, containing ::

(1) a reissue of the 1972 s-press cassette of john cage reading “mureau(on the first lp - the entire thing surprisingly, in something of a record-mastering feat)

(2) the first issue of a 1977 terry fox piece, recorded at the clark fork river in missoula, montana ; just about the most mysterious / intriguing piece i’ve heard from terry, involving some wobbly tape-recorder action (listen to the sound-sample) and what sounds like a glass armonica being dipped in water ...

(3) a 36-page 12” x 12 book(let) acting as the exhibition-catalogue for the “high fidelity” showing of artists’ records from the egidio marzona collection at the national museums in berlin, containing writings (in both german and english) by wolfgang brauneis, moritz wullen, peter-klaus schuster, and michael lailach, plus the “mureau” score, photos from the staging of the terry fox piece, and a mini “digest” version of a “broken music” style discography ...

... all trapped inside a triple-gatefold lp sleeve. needless to say this comes highly recommended !!!
edition rz press release...

ed. rz 9006/9007 2lp
highfidelityartists' records in the marzona collection:

"john cage speaks mureau"
terry fox, culvert performance (24 hours)

lp 1:
john cage speaks mureau
by john cage edition s press, hattingen 1972
(s press tape no. 14)
duration: 68:07

lp 2:
terry fox, culvert performance (24 hours)
with bootz hubbard and bill gilbert (1st two hours)
clark fork river, missoula, montana, usa, 1977
duration: 55:39


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$25.21

back in stock as of
july 23rd, 2010

first in stock on
august 11th, 2009


threads:
modern-psych
guitar-themed
minimalism-drones
bedroom

 best of 2009 !!! 
root strata (usa) #rs-36 lp

christina carterlace heart” double long playing record set

  • dream long (7:50)
  • i am seen (7:53)

  • to surrender (2:29)
  • walking on the sand (11:20)

  • intentions (6:01)
  • long last breaths (15:38)
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "walking on the sand"
august 2009 release ; psyched that this barely-dispersed private-press edition from christina carter is getting a second lifespan, especially as a deluxe-spec double-lp (replete with a “blank” fourth side containing an etching of christina’s design) ...

some of the more entrancingly bewitching music i’ve heard this year thusfar, consisting largely of long stretches of finger-picked single-chord build, culminating in wistful-yet-winsome sung fragments ...
root strata press release...
christina carter
lace heart
x2 lp

double lp reissue of a 2005 cd-r released on christina's own many breaths imprint. six love songs comprised of elliptical bell like guitar phrases, barely there, sometimes even coaxing silence, set behind the extended vowel sounds of voice. soft gentle performances here, like this whole record was cut very very late at night or in the early hours of the morning. an unhinged 'nowness' is pervasive in christina's work, and 'lace heart' is no exception. there is a very private feeling here, some kinda intimacy that just feels really rare. lovers of past, present & future all collapse into one. memories of smells, tastes & textures all channelled into wide open song. no one really does it like this.

three sides of music & and an etching of one of christina's drawings on the fourth side. red vinyl with maroon splatter. edition of 500.

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$16.81

back in stock as of
may 29th, 2010

first in stock on
june 23rd, 2009


threads:
modern-psych
lo-fi
folk

 best of 2009 !!! 
de stijl (usa) #ind 070 lp

circuit des yeuxsirenum” long playing record

  • the first day
  • visions
  • folk ii
  • calling song
  • swallowing hearts
  • a siren

  • shedevil
  • paranoid
  • daylight
  • binding feet
  • serenade to siphia
  • he came from orion
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "shedevil"
june 2009 release ; second de stijl outing (after a “private press” style paste-on wonder) from lafayette, indiana’s haley fohr ...

some of the more destroyed-sounding music i’ve heard in a while, largely comprised of ms. fohr’s pained vocalisms (forwards, occasionally, but mostly in reverse), ominous chordal drones, & wasted, in-the-red style drumming ; nary a shred of form nor development ... highly recommended !!!
de stijl press release...
circuit des yeux
sirenum
070 lp

from a small town in the middle of the land of milk and honey, where the air is filled with the blossoming of the fruit trees for a big part of the year, comes these perfect little lilies of bands that make perfect little records that reflect this fertile and flowery region. it's a timeless land, and making records there is possible during this surely short period of history wherein the youth of this era feel as if they've solved the mystery of life and love and it's really loving that is the answer to everything.

all of which has nothing at all to do with circuit des yeux and sirenum, which was made in indiana, and there aren't exactly pipers at the gates of lafayette. sound? it's the sound of "issues", and the sound of "troubles". you don't get but one phone call and honey, the girl's voice makes this message a bit rubbly anyway. take the manic snorts of captain liberty, dissonant as chalk and the next moment as melodic as sharp yet slick, metal teeth. take the mermaid, 1988, turn the tides, gently, gently away. selected breath / silences / selected feedback. take an argument you have here with an empty street while the memory of high traffic is leaking back. sirenum has a real "spiritual food" vibe and it's fucking pain and pleasure relief in this real met en zonder sort of way.

this world is her world, and pipe if you like it ..

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$13.44

back in stock as of
january 27th, 2010

first in stock on
february 10th, 2009


threads:
guitar-themed
free-improvisation
site-specific
lo-fi
field-recordings

 best of 2009 !!! 
family vineyard (usa) #fv 64 cd

loren connorsthe curse of midnight mary” compact disc

  • chant 1 (2:28)
  • chant 2 (5:41)
  • chant 3 (3:39)
  • chant 4 (2:35)
  • chant 5 (7:12)
  • chant 6 (2:13)
  • chant 7 (2:31)
  • chant 8 (2:24)
  • chant 9 (2:52)
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "chant 3"
february 2009 release ; hot on the heels of family vineyard’s archival release of duo recordings with jim o’rourke comes this first-ever issue of a series of acoustic guitar & voice solos, recorded in a new haven, connecticut graveyard back in 1981 ...

... as the “unaccompanied acoustic guitar improvisations” lps referenced below are amongst my favorite of connors’ work, the issue of this material is cause célèbre ; listening to these gorgeously captured (mono cassette, rife with pause-button interjections & distant crow-calls) set of improvs, i can only imagine connors’ fingers numbed from a combination of the new england winter night air & his chasm-wide / river-deep vibrato, mumbling majestically as he improvises his way through semblances of “amazing grace(listen to the sound-sample for but one) graveside ...

this recent flurry of new & reissued material has sparked a renewed interest in connors’ whole oeuvre ; whether you’re a grizzled vet of his recorded work or only just now discovering this unique voice, this is a fine, fine set covering loren at his wild & wooliest ... highly recommended !!!
family vineyard press release...

loren connors
the curse of midnight mary
fv64 cd

in 1981 guitarist loren connors took his tape recorder to the graveyard where the legendary midnight mary's grave lies in new haven, conn. the curse is: anyone who gets caught in her graveyard past midnight will die the next day. but connors, like a young fool, taped in that place, making this album that was lost and forgotten until uncovered in 2008.

recorded between connors’ eight volume unaccompanied acoustic guitar improvisations lp series and the folk albums he would make with tom hanford and kath bloom, these nine pieces meld those distinct forms. connors, singing in a trance like moan, reforms the mississippi delta blues on his acoustic guitar with flashes of melodic hooks and a percussive guitar style that erupts into boogie-woogie riffs and other world spirituals. it’s an album for fans of connors’ solo avant work and colloaborations with jim o’rourke or jandek; and will enthrall devotees of early the 20th century blues of blind willie johnson and charlie patton. a rare and essential peak into the still mysterious early years of this american guitar master.

recorded march 1981, at the evergreen cemetery in new haven, connecticut.

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$13.44

back in stock as of
january 27th, 2010

first in stock on
april 28th, 2009


threads:
guitar-themed
site-specific
modern-psych
field-recordings
free-improvisation

 best of 2009 !!! 
family vineyard (usa) #fv 64 lp

loren connorsthe curse of midnight mary” long playing record

  • chant 1 (2:28)
  • chant 2 (5:41)
  • chant 3 (3:39)
  • chant 4 (2:35)

  • chant 5 (7:12)
  • chant 6 (2:13)
  • chant 7 (2:31)
  • chant 8 (2:24)
  • chant 9 (2:52)
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "chant 1"
april 2009 release ; awesome “daggett-style(i.e. paste-on cover & back, black sleeve) lp of the “midnight mary” material, easily the best in the most recent wave of loren connors output & single-handedly renewing my faith in the power of this music ...

re: the cd edition from a few months back, i wrote ::

... hot on the heels of family vineyard’s archival release of duo recordings with jim o’rourke comes this first-ever issue of a series of acoustic guitar & voice solos, recorded in a new haven, connecticut graveyard back in 1981 ...

... as the “unaccompanied acoustic guitar improvisations” lps referenced below are amongst my favorite of connors’ work, the issue of this material is cause célèbre ; listening to these gorgeously captured (mono cassette, rife with pause-button interjections & distant crow-calls) set of improvs, i can only imagine connors’ fingers numbed from a combination of the new england winter night air & his chasm-wide / river-deep vibrato, mumbling majestically as he improvises his way through semblances of “amazing grace(listen to the sound-sample for but one) graveside ...

this recent flurry of new & reissued material has sparked a renewed interest in connors’ whole oeuvre ; whether you’re a grizzled vet of his recorded work or only just now discovering this unique voice, this is a fine, fine set covering loren at his wild & wooliest ...

given the warm & fuzzy nature of the recording, this music absolutely sings on vinyl. highly recommended !!!
family vineyard press release...
loren connors
the curse of midnight mary
fv64 lp

in 1981 guitarist loren connors took his tape recorder to the graveyard where the legendary midnight mary's grave lies in new haven, connecticut. the curse is: anyone who gets caught in her graveyard past midnight will die the next day. but connors, like a young fool, taped in that place, making this album.

lost and forgotten, a cassette of this music -- made at evergreen cemetery -- was found by chance in 2008. recorded between connors' eight volume unaccompanied acoustic guitar improvisations lp series and the folk albums he would make with kath bloom, these nine pieces meld those distinct, haunting styles. connors, singing in a trance like moan, reforms the mississippi delta blues on acoustic guitar with flashes of melodic hooks and a percussive guitar style that erupts into boogie-woogie riffs and other world spirituals.

it's an album for followers of connors' spine tingling solo albums and his collaborations with suzanne langille or jandek. devotees of early 20th century blues artists such as blind willie johnson or charley patton will be equally enthralled. a rare and essential peak into the still mysterious early years of this american guitar master.

the lp version is a recreation of connors' daggett-style releases, featuring pasted on cover art and back liner notes with handstamped labels. unlike the cd version, the lp is in a stark black sleeve with a reworked black and white cover drawing and limited and hand numbered to 515 numbered copies -- available april 14, 2009.

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$8.41

back in stock as of
february 8th, 2010

first in stock on
september 3rd, 2009


threads:
sound-art
playback-music
experimental-instruments
sound-installation
machine-music

 best of 2009 !!! 
permanent gallery (uk) #permanent cornford ep

stephen cornfordtwo works for turntables” seven inch single record

  • 4’ 53”

  • 4’ 28”
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "4’ 53”"
september 2009 release ; excellent sound-art single from long term mms customer stephen cornford, a devon, uk based composer and installation artist rooted in kinetic sculpture (i have a feeling that jean tinguely’s constructs are a big touchstone) inasmuchas experimental music’s many octopus-like tendril-manifestations ...

the two pieces here (presented in an impeccably-laid-out gallery edition, replete with an essay from anne hild neset) are gorgeously captured acoustic transcriptions of stephen’s turntable-based sculptures, removed entirely from the world of surface-noise and motor hum, instead concerned with rotational trajectories involving physical interaction between microphones, springs & little trinkets, and the plate itself ...

one of the finest examples of the “broken music” spec in application in recent times ; highly recommended !!!
permanent gallery press release...

works for turntable: stephen cornford
22. aug - 20. sep 09

permanent gallery is pleased to present works for turntable, an exhibition of amplified kinetic sculptures for used record players by stephen cornford.

stephen cornford is a sculptor working with music, sound and noise. borrowing strategies from bricolage, process music, kinetic sculpture and free improvisation, his interests lie in the relationship between the physical attributes and acoustic properties of sounding objects, musical instruments and audio technologies. he has previously reworked electric guitars, pianos, bicycles and other large objects, but with works for turntable the site is confined to the spinning twelve-inch record player.

springs, wire, guitar strings, and elastic bands are fixed between the centre of the turntables and the stylus, forming an intimately constructed sculptural barrier. flea market trinkets and other found objects, placed on the rotating turntables, strike these barriers and produce sounds both acoustically and through the amplification of the events, drawing the audience’s attention to the tonal and timbral differences between the acoustic and the electric.

continuing the lineage of turntablism (from john cage to christian marclay et al), stephen cornford adds to this discourse his intricate constructions that emphasise the kinetic and sculptural qualities of the work and their determination of sound. cornford’s intention is to draw the audience into the work, allowing them the space to study the auditory and kinetic minutiae, in order that their navigation between turntables encourages an active mode of both viewing and listening.

to accompany the exhibition, a limited edition 7-inch record has been pressed and is available to purchase. the record features two short sound pieces composed from recordings of the prepared turntables. sleeve notes include a commissioned text, written in response to the work by anne hilde neset.

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$14.49

back in stock as of
june 29th, 2009

first in stock on
may 22nd, 2009


threads:
1980s-electronic
electro-acoustic-composition
plunder-phonic
musique-concrète
originals

 best of 2009 !!! 
lutra (usa) #lutra 1001 sealed lp

daniel steven craftssoap opera suite / snake oil symphony (sealed)” long playing record

  • originalsealed copies of this 1982 tape-collage gem !!!
soap opera suite (29:00)
  • the essence of melodrama (5:16)
  • the art of hearing (5:55)
  • brief interlude: the woods (0:28)
  • living in fragments (4:34)
  • the conversation (7:51)
  • brief interlude: the telephone call (1:39)
  • the human condition (3:49)
snake oil symphony (30:15)
  • part i (5:05)
  • part ii (2;55)
  • part iii (3:11)
  • part iv (5:35)
  • part v (3:11)
  • part vi (7:50)
  • part vii (3:03)
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "snake oil symphony - part 1"
1982 release ; sealed, original copies of this private-press lp of home-studio musique concrète by one daniel steven crafts ...

the first good omen about this record was that i was made aware of it by graham lambkin (there’s a track on “the breadwinner” that specifically references it) ... it had somehow managed to elude my own radar (despite being programmed in recent years to sniff out exactly this sort of thing) ; graham even sent me a note about how “this record always seemed very exotic to a non-tv owner such as myself. crudely sampled dialog and music excerpts, ripped from t.v. adverts and soap operas - slowly whipped into two side-long repeat pattern brain freeze epics. a great exercise in turning domestic banality into high art banality” ...

starting with a side consisting solely of re-arranged snippets & dialogue from soap-operas, the madnessmethod is immediately apparent ; the whole thing’s a critique of consumer culture, at every step pointing out the absurdity of the soap opera lexicon ... but for me, the winner here is the b-side, wherein the tonal palette is expanded to bring in snatches of sci-fi movie music, dialogue sampled from television, and all manner of era electronic processing techniques ...

mms’ copies of this fine, forgotten slice of “outsider” american electronic music come directly from mr. crafts’ stash, with no efforts made towards price-gouging or any sort of “collectro-baiting” ... bon appetit.
lutra press release...
daniel steven craftssoap opera suite/snake oil symphony

"found sound" or tape-composition is an increasingly popular technique among avant-garde composers as well as "new wave" musicians. as a rule, however, such sound elements recorded off the radio or in the street are used primarily for their tonal or rhythmic values. their original significance tends to be suppressed in the process, especially after the sound elements have been run through the elaborate array of technical processes available in the modern recording studio. in the two works presented here, daniel steven crafts has proceeded in an almost diametrically opposed direction. while making often ingenious use of the musical qualities in the sounds and speech he takes as his raw material, he concentrates primarily on their meaning, so that each fragment of spoken or musical "discourse" is made to comment on the others, and vice versa. in doing this, moreover, he relies on only the simplest of recording techniques.

both pieces on this album rely heavily on "found" sound. the snake oil symphony includes everything from a salesman's instructional record, by way of old science-fiction movie soundtracks, to fragments of rock music; where the soap opera suite, as its name implies, consists mostly of snippets of speech from daytime tv. but instead of flattening these elements into a typical minimalist mush, crafts has painstakingly organized and overlaid them in a way that exploits their semantic as well as their rhythmic value - their meaning as well as their sound.

crafts casts a cold ear, as it were, on the banalities of the mass media, takes them apart and reorganizes them so as to ''defamiliarize" them and thereby reveal their essential content. in this he picks up the trail of the avant-garde of the nineteen-teens and twenties-the dadas, the futurists, and other radical modernists. like them, crafts is "experimental" in technique but does not limit himself to doggedly running one or two technical innovations through every possible permutation without regard for content. again, daniel steven crafts, like the early modernists, actively engages with contemporary mass culture. but he does not simply contemplate this mass culture; instead, he sets out to subvert it. devo once billed their music as "the sound of things falling apart." crafts is not content to listen to "things" ("a mighty symphony of prosperity") fall apart. he wants to help them along, (with a view to making room for something better).

snake oil symphony

the first three "movements" of the symphony establish the basic themes, along with an underlying rhythmic structure that crops up again and again throughout, as the tempo and pitch of phrases are used to create a sort of melody.

part one presents the surface reality of society as an endless movement of buying and selling, through the use of clips from a sales instruction talk, ads and so on. woven through this is an ironic verbal-musical motif: "now you can have this amazing new symphony, right in your own home," (which parodies cheap tv commercials), with piano notes underscoring the spoken pitches. the word "symphony" refers not only to a single work of art, but in the greater sense to "a mighty symphony of prosperity" (i.e. present social and cultural institutions). with the same phrase the composer is also letting the listener know that he knows his own work, too, is a commodity on the culture market.

part two is built around a multiple pun on the words "alien" and "alienation." "alienation" originally meant "sale." marx used the terms to describe the way people give up control over their own lives in working for wages to create a society that "stands over and against them as an alien and hostile power." crafts shows capitalism up for what it really is - a b-grade horror flick.

in part three, irony is piled on irony in a kind of "allegro of cynicism." voices of hysterical angst and ominous, barely-controlled fury, both provide a counterpoint to the "sales" motif and show how such "negative" emotions are now successfully merchandised along with everything else. the "symphony of prosperity" has begun to falter.

parts four and five further develop and elaborate these themes. part four with its monster obbligato, concludes with a codetta which might be called a duet for baritone and psychobabbler. part five steps up the level of anxiety with a dreamlike, echoey mosaic of emergency" sounds and paranoid whispers. but even the crisis is turned, in the absence of genuine radical opposition, into fuel for the system, driving it forward.

part six picks up the music and rhythmic motifs from the early segments and elaborates them through a mixture of prerecorded, direct-electronic and "live" sound (chiefly solo piano). the piano part is constructed entirely from fragments of the main theme ("now you can have..."). this is perhaps the most traditionally musical section.

part seven, the finale, reintroduces the main verbal themes and summarizes them, accelerating out of a 6/8 rhythm into a powerful ostinato in which a rapid repetition of the upbeat "now you can have" is slammed into counterpoint with the staccato roar of "you cannot." without false optimism, crafts delineates the cracks running through the edifice of modern society, just in case a listener or two might happen along with some dynamite.

soap opera suite

the opening movement of the suite, "the essence of melodrama," is just that. begining with an hysterical, threatening voice, it takes the listener on a high speed tour through all the major themes of daytime tv serials martial and sexual strife, alcoholism and drugs, career problems, crime, neurosis, unwanted pregnancy, deception, disease and death. part two, "the art of listening," starts off sounding like a conversation but quickly dissolves into a hilarious, jump and jolt firecracker string of nonsequiturs out of which gradually emerge three interwoven themes - sex, selling and religion. the religion of sex, the sex of selling, the selling of religion...

"living in fragments," the third section, is the most emphatically rhythmic section of the suite-patterns of quick flashes from ads and programs seguing into a brisk "allegro for cliche and orchestra." the section ends with a series of cheerful double-entendres revealing the current of prurient excitement that flows just beneath the surface of even the "straightest" soaps.

listeners who have been baffled up to now can relax with part four, "the conversation." here the composer has synthesized the entire history of a typical soap-opera relationship out of snippets of phrases from dozens of shows, assembling them into one continuous man/woman dialogue which takes us through the phases of flirtation, exploration, consummation, misunderstanding, argument, flight, incipient breakup, breakup, nostalgia, attempted reconciliation and (literally) "starting over." if anyone believes at this point that crafts has gone sentimental on us, the following brief interlude with its bizarre and alarming telephone conversation, should correct them.

in the fifth and concluding segment, entitled, "the human condition," crafts once again recapitulates themes from the rest of the suite while revealing his hidden critical agenda. "work" (or rather, the idea of work, since except for the activities of doctors and nurses, work is almost never shown in soap operas) is juxtaposed to the fantasylife of the serials. the composer organizes his material to show that vicarious identification and roleplaying are not limited to the soapopera life, as "everything that was once lived has moved away into its representation." i guarantee that after listening to this record, you'll never be able to watch tv again in quite the same way. you may also have trouble listening to yourself using the habitual phrases to talk about your feelings-especially "love." so much the better. as one of the rebels of may '68 put it: "the blue of the sky will remain grey as long as it is not reinvented."

adam cornford
january 1982

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threads:
1980s-electronic
sound-art
electro-acoustic-composition
experimental-instruments
modern-composition
analogue-synth
site-specific
minimalism-drones

 best of 2009 !!! 
kye (usa) #kye 05 cd

moniek dargesoundies • selected work 1980-2001” compact disc

  • sand (22:34) 1980
  • stormfugle (7:19) 1981
  • fairy tale (6:46) 1983
  • harpje (0:32) 1995
  • caete (6:11) 1997
  • verbondenheid (11:48) 1999
  • turning wheel (8:53) 2001
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "sand"
october 2009 release ; wonderful collection of mid-period sound-art pieces from the logos foundation’s moniek darge (often mentioned alongside her partner-in-crime godfried willem-raes) - the first new issue of her work since the 1995 experimental intermedia (xi records)logos works” disc ...

... starting with the electronic drone & punctual, pointillist percussion of 1981’ssand(erupting into a terrifying fury of howls & screams just when you get in the “zone”) & continuing on through “stormfugle’s” low-end hiss & errant electronics, “fairy tale’s” vocal pips & scratchy violin ... even the relatively contemporaryturning wheel’s” in-transit interplay (which sounds remarkably like something komissar & mama would do, btw) it becomes clearer & clearer that ms. darge has been on the true path lo these past 30+ years, wading not in the traditional sound-art or electro-acoustic compositional waters, but inhabiting some nether-region grounded in happenings, self-built / experimental instrument culture, and site-specific performance scenarios that are squarely hers & hers alone ...

excellent, essential work & telling as the first non-graham lambkin / shadow ring-related release on graham’s young kye imprint (who promises a series of releases by moniek in the near-future ; joy !!!) ; highly recommended !!!
kye press release...

moniek darge soundies (selected work 1980-2001) (kye 05)

moniek darge has been active as a composer, violinist, performer and audio artist since the early 70s. she is most widely recognized as one half of the pioneering new music group logos duo alongside her partner godfried-willem raes. the logos duo, which operates under the umbrella of the logos foundation, have been celebrated both at home in their native gent, belgium and on the international stage. they have performed their work in countries as diverse as brazil, new zealand, japan and the us. however, moniek's solo work has been harder to locate, the last published collection being sounds of sacred places (igloo records, 1987).

soundies is the first in a series of releases from kye that aims to bring moniek's solo material before a wider audience. soundies contains the following work: sand (1980) - for two percussionists with tape (electronics) and one participant from the audience / stormfugle (1981) - for two performers, voice, tape (electronics and voice), slides, film, clarinet and violin / fairy tale (1983) - for vocals, violin and tape (koala sounds and dog-growling) / harpje (1995) - for harp samples and performance / caete (1997) - for soundscapes, live musical objects and duo / verbondenheid (1999) - for voices, turkish turtle and live musicians / turning wheel (2001) - for voice, live violin and soundscape.

comes in an attractive 4-panel digipak graced with original art by moniek.

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threads:
modern-psych
electro-acoustic-improvisation
free-improvisation
modern-composition

 best of 2009 !!! 
alga marghen (italy) #alga planamesm lp
planam (italy) #planamesm lp

dendoshidendoshi 2” long playing record

  • dendoshi 2 (1) (16:55)

  • dendoshi 2 (2) (18:07)
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "dendoshi 2 (2)"
december 2008 release ; controversial first evidence of a one-off meeting between raymond dijkstra, timoaf ursinvan luijk, and the no-neck blues band’s dave nuss & keith connolly ...

first, in raymond (and timo)’s words ::

the record dendoshi 2 was released without the agreement or even without the knowledge of raymond dijkstra and timo van luijk.

i completely distance myself from this release, which goes against everything i stand for artistically.

in 2006 we, (van luijk and i) met dave nuss and keith connolly of the no neck blues band. they told us they were in a creational gap, and were eager to work with us, to find new creational pathways. end 2006 we played two times. end 2008 i got an email from them a 'dendoshi' record was released on planam. they had without agreement (of van luijk and i) given permission to publish the music, and have applied a theory to the music, a theory which was not involved on any given moment of the project. (in reality, the music was totally improvised on a fully equal basis.) the fact alone that they bring it now as if the music was based on this theory, i find it artistically fake, and without any artistic integrity.

i believe in artistic purity. it is either the truth, or a fraud. unfortunately, the record dendoshi 2 is a fraud, since the theory applied to this music is a lie. which makes the release and the whole project without any artistic value. this is the reality in which this release must be seen.

i have never given permission to release this music  in this physical form. and i don't have any artistic connection to the theory as now applied to the music. moreover, it goes against everything i stand for artistically.

the fact that nuss and connolly have given permission to release this music without our permission, and applied a fake theory to it, proves that they are without any artistic integrity. i can only feel sorry for them, and distance myself completely from this music release.

raymond dijkstra, january 2009
co-signed by timo van luijk.

then, alga marghen / planam organizer emanuele carcano’s statement ::

i send you this email to let you know that the planam responsible do not agree with the contents concerning the dendoshi2 edition as presented on the email you received from raymond dijkstra and timo van luijk.

planam would have appreciated the group to eventually inform the publisher about their decision to send out a pseudo-official communication. as a matter of fact planam did not receive this same communication from a part of the group and would like to underline that he consider this action a very unprofessional one.

as a publisher i will not enter the eventual problematic dynamics of the group.

sorry for this misunderstanding. i will keep you updated about this matter. at the same time i send you my positive feelings about continuing working on the distribution together.

very best regards. planam

nuss and connolly have yet to issue missives ...

all of this aside, let’s assess this edition on the merits of the music played / contructed / presented here ... personally speaking, i think it’s excellent ; there’s a focus and attention to detail often lacking from the no-neck axis’ myriad shadow-outings ... dijkstra’s woozy pump-organ styling act as a leitmotif throughout ; a solid precipice scaled by the other members of the group, each leaving their respective spike-prints via haphazard guitar / percussion / electronic augmentation ...

lp comes in a gold-ink sleeve, with connolly’s “fake conceptlogo on the cover, along with a pack of four photo-stills, some involving known iconography (vermeer’s “girl with the pearl earring,” for example, apparently from timo’s basement) , each emblazoned with, again, connolly’s cryptic symbol ... completely lovely ; the armchair enthusiast of any/all involved parties will immediately see the merits here, despite 1/2 of the creator’s misgivings ... highly recommended !!!
alga marghen press release...

d e n d o s h i
"dendoshi 2"
(cat no. planamesm)
lp record

dendoshi is keith connolly (no neck blues band), raymond dijkstra (asra), dave nuss (no neck blues band) and timo van luyk (af ursin, in camera). dendoshi: "he who comes to propagate the ceremony" or "missionary" (japanese). there had actually been a previous incarnation of dendoshi (hence dendoshi 2), which was a large group performance in new york which concentrated on elucidating the memories of a dead tree which had been re-contextualized as a sculptural exhibit.

some thematic reference: the name "dendoshi" originates from the work of japanese filmmaker kyoshi kurosowa, whose films also inspired the content of the first performance. when the opportunity presented itself for connolly, dijkstra, nuss and van luyk to come together to make a session, it was the perfect opportunity to realize dendoshi not as a one-off performance on a theme, but as a recurring ritual in development. the resulting music widened the conceptual reflection of the band, bringing to mind the history and ideas of franz mesmer. mesmer, the eighteenth century austrian spiritualist healer, was among the first to put forth the theory of what he termed "animal magnetism", regarding a universal fluid which permeates all matter and can be influenced by the will, not dissimilar to some of eliphas levi's concepts. what seemed to set mesmer apart was an attention to mood and atmosphere, an aesthetic component to what were scientifically quite dubious theories, which lent to his work an aura of portent - thus the parallel with the music captured as dendoshi 2. reflecting the qualities that all four musical sensibilities had in common, the album is a statement upon the ephemeral nature of atmosphere and will, and the relation of reverie to oblivion as opposed to ecstacy.

the symbol, or mark on the front cover created by connolly came intuitively and without revision. it's applied function is that of distinction rather than that of protection or as a seal. it was first applied to the photograph by clarence h. white form 1904, where the first resonant depiction, or personification, of reverie and oblivion as applied to dendoshi was found. by applying the mark connolly is ceremonializing the image, thus rendering it distinct from its original form, not as an appropriation, but as a recognition. the other images followed, and each of them was recognized instantly without having to search. the last was vermeer's image from van luyk's basement, and upon recieving this the series of 4 inserts was complete. there is a trace of fear and a sensation of suspended time in these images which suits the music very well.

edition limited to 300 copies on gold cover.

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threads:
psych-prog
free-improvisation
anti-music
electro-acoustic-composition
free-jazz
electro-acoustic-improvisation
lo-fi
plunder-phonic
harsh-noise

 best of 2009 !!! 
compound annex (usa) #compound #dam cd
the end is here (usa) #tein dam cd

destroy all monsters1974-1976” triple compact disc set

  • reissue of the classic ecstatic peace! set !!!

    gospel crusade

  • to planet m2-40
  • siren
  • conga
  • hungry for death
  • blow hole
  • nixonoxin
  • ride the fuzz
  • vampire
  • drone
  • jungle cracker
  • church
  • mack the knife
  • shiver
  • bounce
  • paranoid of blondes
  • indian war beat
  • bird song of detroit
  • take me with you
  • base
  • into
  • energy is happening
  • egypto
  • you can't kill kill
  • low and warped
  • gospel crusade

    crying in bed

  • imagine
  • jam smear
  • t.h. queen
  • puke like a motherfucker
  • the pothead speaks
  • squat march
  • whistle space
  • it hurts me
  • wahs
  • from the edgar cayce foundation
  • i love you
  • but you're dead
  • electro banshee
  • metal
  • that's my ideal
  • space beat
  • go for it
  • charlie
  • japanophile
  • noodlin'
  • useless life
  • the depressed horn
  • alien love call
  • evil works
  • fades before 5
  • cosmo beat
  • what a beauty
  • ann arbor blues

    to the throne of chaos where the thin flutes pipe mercilessly

  • intro
  • boots
  • an audio letter
  • roscoe
  • sheep-faced monster
  • child of the night
  • rock out
  • afro-zen
  • mom's and dad's pussy
  • barnyard
  • spacey
  • acid monster
  • throb
  • to the throne of chaos
  • it's just your mind
  • i want to live
  • pass
  • mocha
  • shakin' all over (live at u of m)
  • dueling drum boxes
  • detroit
  • crunch drone
  • dinah shore / t.h.
  • 21st century
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "ride the fuzz"
june 2009 release ; this essential overview of the earliest work of mike kelley, jim shaw, carey loren, and niagara’s destroy all monsters, finally back in print !!! (the prior, ecstatic peace! edition is one of the most sought-after/prized cd sets in existence) ...

to say that this collection of zonked, basement-discovery-wonderland wastoidisms was an influence on successive / current generations of said (i’m looking at sonic youth through royal trux through the whole wolf eyes universe, specifically) would be an understatement ; in many ways it’s the future/past blueprint of everything “art-damaged” covering all of the bases, from free-form garage skrank to mysterious electro-acoustic experimentation (listen to the sound-sample) to cross-genre plunderphonic / cut-ups, to an astonishingly prescient take on contemporary harsh noise (seriously, a few of these pieces could be lifted from any number of american tapes, tit for tat) to even some great bits of unfettered electronic droning, this kind of has it all ...

this band-produced, no-frills edition keeps the costs down while offering everything from the e# version, bit for bit. if you have even a passing interest in roots of the grand majority of contemporary underground modes held dear here @ mms, you’ll want this material in & under your skin. highly recommended !!!
compound annex press release...

destroy all monsters: 1974-1976 (3-cds)
the end is here / compound annex

"the original primal stew." - rolling stone

long out-of-print, this reissue of the 1996 cult-classic ecstatic peace / father yod release collects all three cds in a simple eco-friendly digi-hub package. look for the lavish artwork, photos and extensive liner notes to be posted on the web soon. 210 minutes, 76 tracks, 3-cds - a thick slice of underground history, re-issued on the occasion of the 35 year retrospectacle "hungry for death" at printed matter, nyc, may 30th- aug 29th, 2009.

to the throne of chaos where the thin flutes pipe mindlessly
(destroy all monsters: 1974/77)

some thoughts on the period of transition from progressive rock to punk rock, in the form of liner notes for a three cd box set.

part 1

music is eternal; it is ahistorical. so says the polliwog. music in time is muzak: floating strains, the meaningless pap that provides the background soundtrack for other peoples lives. it lies behind those that have history, who are old. like embarrassing cartoon music, this mush shows its age and, in an amusing way, provokes disgusted looks on the enfeebled listeners who are familiar with it, who once thought that it was impervious to cooption. how pathetic . . . to hear these once "hot" sounds demoted to punctuation for children's entertainments, to be made present again . . . but only for the pre-adolescent. this is what happened to raymond scott's "powerhouse" when applied to bugs bunny, when cab calloway crooned along with betty boop, and even now when jimi hendrix, in his death, supplies the soundtrack for today's "adult toy" car commercial. it is said that the old always return to their original childlike state, unless they are lucky enough to die first; they sink back to the square-one level of powerlessness. this deflation in caused by the realization that one is in time. then the potent fuck beats of your prime become limply infantile. i am speaking now from the vantage- point of the old frog. and i tell you, once you have a music history these observations are painful and obvious facts. to the young soul these are incomprehensible notions. to these naives, music is of the moment. there is evolution, but in a constant present . . . always in a state of becoming. changing reactions to music, and conscious improvements in taste, are not made in reference to a time before but are simply realizations that something could, not . . . be different, but better. new music is an outgrowth - a living thing emerging from a vibrant parent body and not a sickly response to that which has passed away. these sad observations are provided as an around-about way to introduce the genesis of a band, a band that never was - destroy all monsters, and to reveal some of the problematics of that attempt.

for me, these old recordings from 1974/76 are still very present. when i listen to them i am again back at their point of creation - because they never came to a conclusion. the "history" that they are part of is not yet written, at least not adequately. i am quite aware of the reasons for their production, and also the reasons why they are, perhaps, failed attempts. i also realize that the general listener will, more than likely, not understand them at all. this puts me in the position of having to construct a history for them, to set them up to age. and i sincerely hope they do become familiar enough to suffer the embarrassment of their position in time . . . to be used in cartoons and soft drink commercials. why not? everything else has. to set this process in motion means i must separate myself from my "pure" experience of this noise (which i hope still has the capacity to move other listeners in some approximately similar "pure" sense). i will now attempt to explain these recordings into historical importance, and through this explanation convince you that they are not mere kitsch, that they are still alien enough to be worth examining.

destroy all monsters is a band that never was, because it is a band that has become historicized (whatever minor history it does have) in an incorrect way. destroy all monsters is generally a footnote in the history of american punk rock. it has been described in terms of, either, an american proto-punk history (as an outgrowth of the stooges because of the presence of ex-stooges guitarist ron asheton in the line-up starting in the late 70s); or as a post-british punk reaction . . . as one of the many bands to spring up in the states in response to the sex pistols. these pigeonholings are dependent on the point in time in which the chronicler became familiar with the band, and also their knowledge of american pre-punk rock music. to many writers, punk history is automatically a british history, and whatever manifestations of it that may have occurred in america are only twisted reflections of the real thing. in a sense i agree with this interpretation. the american bands that were influential in the development of british punk: the stooges, the new york dolls and the ramones, were indeed minor american bands in there own times, without any of the celebration and critical response that the sex pistols garnered. and second-string american punk, especially california hardcore, was obviously more of an outgrowth of the media-conscious and fashionable sex pistols than midwestern and east coast garage rock of the late 60s and early 70s. i know this for a fact since i was in l.a. in the late 70s. the scene was primarily glam oriented when punk hit, like a disease - a british germ that infected everyone overnight. one day there was no punk, the next day the city was crawling with torn-clothed, safety-pinned spike heads. in any case, this discussion of punk as the british invasion of the late 70s has little to do with destroy all monsters, which was already in existence in 1974. we were completely ignorant of the british underground musical developments then in a protean neighborhood state of development . . . just like we were. warning! to all anglophiles, this is a history that predates the american popularization of punk. and this history only finds its flowering in a later, supposedly post-punk development - namely, industrial music. warning! also to stoogeophiles. this is a history of destroy all monsters before the arrival of ron asheton. stooges fan club members will not find any missing nuggets of wisdom here.

to understand destroy all monsters one must put themselves into an early 70s mindset. the first wave of alternative rock, and by this i mean the incredible outpouring of garage psychedelia in the late 60s, was long dead by this time. musically, this was the era of broken promises. the psychedelic avant-garde vision of a new pop music to mimic the new social experiment had proven a pipe dream. there was the sense of living in the decadent twilight occasioned by this fall. and in the mindless flight from this altamontian negativity a wave of escapist feel-good pap became the dominant musical trend. the music scene was dominated by pseudo-back-to-folk-roots ballads of the james taylor (or one of his innumerable siblings) variety. the thunderous counter-movement to this laid-back sound was prole-rock. heavy metal, despite its surface difference from folk and country rock, was similarly "roots rock", though admittedly a more high energy and body-conscious version of it. yet, it was still a music that was meant to console "the people", not confront them.

in this cultural suburban wasteland there was only isolation, and a sense of being betrayed. the strange brew of avant-garde experimentation and populism of late 60s acid rock had failed in its social promises. to someone of my age (too young to be a hippie, to old to be a punk) there was definitely a feeling of resentment at having missed the short hedonistic flowering of this dream. these fantasies were only then available on records stolen at k mart or the mall along with other packaged fantasies: conan the barbarian novels and other adolescent juvenilia. and by the time you got these records, the "stars" who made them were already in decline: dead, drugged out, or producing corporate rock. where was my utopia? where was my free sex? nowhere to be seen. it only existed in a corporate dream of packaged freedom, in the pathetic sense that thirteen-year-olds wish to be the eighteen-year-olds they see in movies - movies like "pretty poison," where hot teen-age girls snuff their parents and put the blame on a nerd. but, i was the nerd. because of this overall mood of betrayal, rock music was something to be abandoned and left to the dolts: the new armies of ex-high school football players, now hipster longhairs, who filled stadiums to see "righteous" acts like grand funk. in revenge for this betrayal, in revenge for the popularization of rock music, for the rise of arena rock, for the rise of country rock, the most moronic musics of the progressive acid rock period of the late 60s all of a sudden seemed its most important products. the thuggish sounds of the stooges, blue cheer and the insipid acid-whinings of the seeds revealed the pomposity of the "grand experiment". thirteen-year-old-music of the late 60s became more important than the technically superior and politically savvy music of the twenty-year olds. "progressive" english and san francisco rock was abandoned. inspirational noise had to be found elsewhere. even in high school, before any of the self-conscious "criticality" of college, i had these leanings. even then, i found myself tiring of rock music and explored it in its furthest outposts, where the definition of "rock" was stretched beyond recognition. noise fests like the weird "songs" by silver apples, the more annoying pink floyd tunes like "set the controls for the heart of the sun", the mc5s "starship", the stooges "l.a. blues", the mothers of invention' "weasels ripped my flesh" the velvet underground's "sister ray" were my preferred listening. these oddities led to the realization that there was "another" history behind these records, a much more brutal, and anti-pop, history that deserved looking into. brutality, cutting through the pop boundary line, seemed to be the order of the day. thus i was led to sun ra, morton subotnik, harry partch, lamont young, john cage, stockhausen, dadaist bruitism, and the futurist noise music theories of luigi russolo. rock was a thing of the past. disco music was already starting to eclipse it in popularity. i was convinced that what had been interesting in rock all along was just the volume, your physical response to it. everything else was just packaging - the marketing strategies necessary to sell pop product.

georgio morodor was god and donna summer his feminine voice, a voice that only feels the need to speak in orgasms. the first time i heard "i feel love", it was a revelation. here was a pure example of pop strategizing. all musicianship was removed; all pretenses to avant-garde theorizing as exemplified by rock acts like the jimi hendrix experience which, to preach their message of freedom, had to make the listener un-free. by that i mean . . . progressive rock required a god-like technician, a skilled adept that, like the catholic priest, was a necessary intermediary between you and the "truth". this focus on technical expertise produced the "rock god" - the guitar hero. though, at this point, before the rise of codified heavy metal guitar worship, there was still a symbiotic relationship between musician and listener. in psychedelic music this relationship centered on feedback and random noise, which equalized musician and listener. feedback was a sign that the musician was out of control, and the musician and listener shared equally in their experience of this out-of-control state. feedback was the revolutionary component of acid rock, the anarchic sign of revolutionary freedom. it is the product of the electric instrument monitoring itself, and this self-examination leads to a breakdown of control that is evidenced in the mantra of the feedback loop - the technical equivalent of the acid trip. this was the same sound produced by the free jazz saxophone player. the instrument becomes the voice speaking in tongues; it is a pure extension of the voice. the wail of the saxophone is the voice and instrument mirroring each other, eyeing each other, feeling each other out until the one and the other are indistinguishable.

after the fall of the acid rock religion and the loss of faith in its revolutionary signifiers feedback, as a sign, became suspect. the voice no longer seemed an especially true voice. in morodor's techno pop, feedback is synthesized, is domesticated, it becomes pseudo-feedback. what had been hot became cool. and with this change the various categories of rock music as they had existed no longer made sense. progressive rock became "art" rock - that is, "fake" rock. the digital sequencer roar of georgio morodor is feedback harnessed, anarchy pantomimed a confusing contradiction of terms. it is push button rebellion. yet, oddly, pseudo-feedback still has the same physical effect on the listener as the real thing. now, the rock god became disposable and the religified communion produced by the relationship between musician and listener, the unequal relationship of devotee to idol, could be rejected. in progressive rock, the technical virtuoso allows you to commune with god only through them. they reveal their equality with you through the symbolic "failure" of feedback. their "mistake" reveals them, like jesus, to be also mere man. but with the mechanization of chaos there is no need of a technical virtuoso to symbolically fail. everyone is equalized automatically because no technical skills are needed. and with this erasure of upper and lower, so also the mystical aspects of rock music are undone. rock becomes materialistic; its effects have to be explained in somatic terms. if some rock was still "progressive" this term must now be expanded to accommodate market discourse. the question now is: what separates progressive materialist rock from corporate materialist rock?

with the demystification of rock music, its "artistry" shifts away from its truth-value to its codes of irony. the new cognoscenti are those who are steeped in the dictionary of the signs of rock's commodification. rock stripped of its political trappings becomes, like early rock and roll of the chuck berry sort, linked with the purely hedonistic. except that it is no longer associated with the lower classes, it becomes an intellectual property. this is implicit in the ironic eurotrash posturings of roxy music. rock now is simply a sign of the "trendy"; it is pure image. rock becomes a word put to something to signify its acceptability. avant-garde bands like tangerine dream and kraftwerk all of a sudden were acceptable to large audiences of teens once they packaged themselves as a rock bands and separated themselves from the intellectual ghetto of electronic music. after "i feel love" it was apparent that all you needed to produce a pop hit was a machine rhythm and a sexualized image. techo pop (and punk, techno pop's sloppy cousin) were born. punk was born out of this same freedom from virtuosity. punk shared techno pop's rejection of virtuosity, but also rejected the intellectual removal and irony of this gesture as seen in art rock bands such as roxy music, kraftwerk and devo. anti-virtuosity was a democratic, populist gesture in favor of a decadent one. the pop hooks and guitar solos of prole rock might have been dismissed, but not the class affiliation, and the musical signifiers of that class: guitar, bass and drums.

the german bands were the most willing to play with and extend rock signifiers, perhaps because it was not a music born there and the class ties were not so strong. in the early 70s german trance bands like tangerine dream and kraftwerk were on the cutting edge of rock music. tangerine dream was still avant-garde in an old-fashioned way. the drone might be synthesized but the wail was still the mystical siren song of hendrix's acid-soaked guitar. tangerine dream made a hippyish attempt to humanize technology. they were a modernist science fiction band. their populism is obvious in the fact that they added guitar solos to their live concerts - a kind of gesture of contact with their rock audience. in fact, no one needed to be on stage to perform tangerine dream's music. the machines could do it themselves, if they were allowed to. kraftwerk, on the other hand, like the pop art-inspired roxy music in england, were cool and ironic. their synth work was meant to be overtly kitsch - a modernist joke. how could it not be? the moog had already become the more up-to-date replacement for the wurlitzer organ: a wondrous machine to charm the lower classes with its power to mimic and make exotic the worn-out. every old musical chestnut, from easy-listening mush to classical music to hard rock was available in "switched on" versions. like the theramin before it, the synthesizer quickly fell from grace as the great technological hope that would change music, to become a humorous "specialty" instrument used for novelty records and fantasy soundtracks. kraftwerk mined this kitsch potential to produce phony "art" music. unlike tangerine dream they would never sink to such proletarian populist gestures as a live guitar solo. sometimes, in fact, their music would be performed on stage by showroom dummies that stood immobile in front of the self-operating machines. populism to kraftwerk was not heroicized class unity, but a word connoting the infantile products geared toward an infantalized social group. pop music is inherently kitsch music.

this rock decadence was obviously in the air in the early 70s, in the states as well as in europe. at the ann arbor film festival, sometime in the mid 70s, i saw a short comedic promotional film (a kind of precursor to a rock video) by a group called devo (short for de-evolution). i was very impressed with devo's whole package: their adoption of everything that was hated in rock music at the moment. they ditched the macho lead singer of boogie rock for a pudgy costumed nerd "boogi boy', who would sometimes perform in a playpen making overt the infantilist nature of rock music. rock music: industry produced pabulum for the masses. every rock band was the monkees in their eyes. this industrial aesthetic was overt in their packaging of themselves: that they were a "corporation" not a band, that they did overt promotional commercials for themselves, made dysfunctional by stripping away all of the sexualized glamour that was there in both rock and disco. i don't think a band like this could have come out of detroit because of the city's rich history of class-conscious rock culture. detroiters were embarrassed. there was such an important history there to mine: the psychedelic stooges, mc5, src, amboy dukes, alice cooper, früt - all important local bands during my junior high school years. but now, there was not one single good rock band in detroit. detroit, like all of the other industrial cities of the midwest had died an ignoble death. but detroit still had its cultural pride; it was still "rock city" (to quote kiss). detroit was pathetically in denial. it makes perfect sense that ohio would be the place that a vibrant grunge scene would spring up. buckeyes were more willing, and able, to see the cultural death surrounding them and to capitalize on it. besides devo, ohio produced pere ubu, a less ironic band whose approach to the "industrial" aesthetic was to adopt the tonalities of the gothic sublime the romance of the ruin applied to the dead husk of modernist industrialization. no, in ohio there was no glorious past music history to get in the way - inn detroit, on the other hand, it seemed as if the world had ended, and all outside communication to whatever small outposts were left was cut off. destroy all monsters operated in this vacuum. we truly thought we were the only ones doing what we were doing.

in a way, destroy all monsters are a mixture of the two trajectories (prole rock/punk, art rock/techno) i have outlined. we reveled in the death of rock. we gave up straight rock instrumentation by playing mostly old electronic cast-offs, tape recorders and noise makers, but we felt no qualms about using standard rock instruments either - or playing rock cover versions, albeit very fucked up ones. we had slightly artistic and avant-garde pretensions, we were in your face but we also had a sense of humor - albeit a very sour one. and as with the punk rockers, there was a definite class affiliation which we were unwilling to give up, even if we weren't very happy about it. we would, or could, not adopt totally the ultra-cool ironic and commercially packaged stances of kraftwerk and roxy music. the pure noise we cranked out was still moving to us; there were vestiges of the uplifting psychedelic rock aura left about it. though this might have been apparent only to us and not the average listener. we could hear it. we still were, after all, a detroit band. we had our cultural pride. and, i was not particularly interested in making sense. all the best bands of my youth were ones that were full of contradictions: captain beefheart, the stooges, the doors, the velvet underground, early pink floyd. all of these bands were simultaneously ironic and heartfelt, funny and serious, pop and experimental, lowbrow and highbrow. they were hard to figure out.

after i moved to los angeles in 1976 i discovered that there indeed were other bands working in the world who had somewhat the same interests as destroy all monsters: suicide, airway, pere ubu, throbbing gristle, half japanese, devo, the screamers, non, the residents and such new york no wave groups as teenage jesus and the jerks and dna. all of these bands were of interest to me. i, however, found the l.a. scene not very supportive of this type of ugly noise and i quickly gave up the idea of continuing in bands. i began to do solo performance work geared toward an art audience. l.a. was dominated by hardcore and british-style punk. destroy all monsters, as it still existed in detroit, switched directions after ron asheton came into it, going after more of a hard rock sound. and soon the only original member left in destroy all monsters was niagara, on vocals. this band bears no similarity to early dam and belongs solely within the confines of a punk rock history.

part ii

destroy all monsters was formed in ann arbor michigan in the winter of 1974. the founding members were: cary loren, mike kelley, niagara, and jim shaw. niagara, shaw, and myself met as students at the art school at the university of michigan in 1972.

niagara was one of the first persons i met upon my arrival in ann arbor in 1972. i got onto a bus giving new students an orientation tour of the u of m campus and was immediately struck with her beauty. she stood out from the busload of typical hippie youth as a dark star. she was a freak, no doubt about it. pale, introverted, and trashy, she looked like some sort of b movie star - a sickly anti-blonde marilyn monroe, the negative reversal of healthy sex kitten marilyn. niagara had a reciprocal beauty, fed by nyquil, tab and sanders' chocolate cake. she was what anita pallenberg was to jane fonda in barbarella. the dead marilyn, as filtered through the decadence of warhol's factory was very important to niagara i was to find out. at this point niagara was not yet niagara. she had not yet given up her "slave name" ala malcolm x to take on her new name derived from an old marilyn movie. at this point niagara was sequestered away in an all girl dormitory that made her difficult to visit. unlike other dorms where you could walk right in and knock on the door, in this one you had to call ahead and make a reservation, very formal. at least this is how i remember it, though this might be an example of false memory syndrome wish fulfillment. even so, it adds to my construction of niagara as a remote and unreachable ideal - a surrealist girl. it turned out we were both in art school and shared some first year classes. i remember specifically being in a life drawing class with her. i do not, however, remember her ever drawing from the models. instead, she did small delicate watercolors reminiscent of 19th century fairy tale illustration. they were not the flowery hippie sort that i was familiar with, the kind filled with mushrooms, rainbows and unicorns. niagara's drawings were a scarier, more darkly realistic version of this aesthetic - one that might now be called "gothic". they were the bad acid trip, somehow appropriate to a town where a major university building was named after arthur rackam. but, sadly, even if someone in the dim past had felt like paying homage to rackam by naming a portion of the university after him, rackam 's aesthetics themselves were not given much respect in the school of art. i am fairly sure that niagara did not attend art school after this first year. she never quite seemed to be there in any purposeful way anyway. niagara had already developed her own aesthetic, so it only seemed natural when she dropped out of school.

some of niagara's drawings included a nude male figure with long dark hair. this was her mysterious friend cary, who she spoke of often. cary loren soon moved to ann arbor to join niagara. they got an apartment not far from where i now lived, myself having also gotten out of my dorm (though not out of school). i would visit them there to listen to records and see the various items, the interesting trash, that they would collect off the street to decorate their home with. cary made trash art - odd lumpen sculptures made of brightly painted papier mache which reminded me of the kinds of disturbing biomorphic forms found in paintings by arshile gorky as would be produced in a elementary school art class. he also made evil psychedelic collages on posterboard composed of low imagery cut from magazines intermixed with pulpy peaks of painted papier mache and small objects, such as bits of cheap jewelry and plastic trinkets from bubble gum machines. this street trash aesthetic extended into the social as well as the artistic, with the collection and documentation of ann arbor's rich street people community. cary would post flyers on telephone poles around ann arbor advertising a free party. when the resulting strange mix of people showed up, the event was documented on film. cary made film collages as well, utilizing cutup commercial super 8 films and his own films of deviant behavior by his friends and young relatives, as well as more abstract stop motion animated films of common objects, like light bulbs, moving about. he also was constantly taking photographs and making audio recordings on a cheap portable cassette recorder. his photographs where especially interesting and ranged from close up still lives of small odd objects, to set up tableaus utilizing his friends that looked like dysfunctional perfume adds, to photos of niagara: niagara in underwear laying in a pool of blood at the bottom of a cellar stairway, or niagara as a murderous vixen ala a cheap mexican movie, or niagara in gloomy cheesecake photos looking somewhat like vampira, all looking as if they had been clipped from the pages of police detective magazine. he also made zines and chapbooks of his own writings, much of which was inspired by the imagery of jack smith (cary every once in a while alluded to a mysterious episode when he ran off to new york to live at jack smith's lower east side plaster palace). cary interfaced with the world through media. it was as if he took warhol's novel a

(a verbatim transcription of "superstar" ondine's conversations in the course of one day) as the model for his life. daily life was art, and it should all be recorded. interestingly, it was the act of recording, more than the final product, which was of interest. there was little attention paid to the quality of the various recordings themselves. photographs, which he printed himself in a home darkroom, were poorly printed and fixed improperly so they soon faded, audio was taped on the cheapest cassettes (mostly used cassettes bought second hand or k-mart brand three-pack cheapies). daily life filtered through the media immediately became trash itself. trash was life.

i lived a couple of blocks away in a three-story victorian house housing a large enough group of freaks to make the rent affordable to everyone. i think around seven or eight people lived there. i moved into the basement, which cost me between 40 and 50 dollars a month. this house, it could be called a commune except no one shared anything, was called god's oasis drive in church because a sign saying as much was nailed to the front porch. this sign was just one of many oddities that the house was museum to. the place reminded me of the adam's family home. jim shaw, who also lived in the house, had found most of these cultural cast-offs. jim had a bloodhound's nose for weird things. he was dedicated to finding them. garage sales and thrift stores were magnets to him. unlike cary, who had a fondness for junk with suburban pop appeal, jim went for the most surreal of cultural rejects: the crackpot, the outmoded yet unhip throwaways of all cultural periods. and all of these were piled in one immense heap oozing its way throughout the building. god's oasis was decorated with a strange mix of 40s overstuffed furniture and flowery print curtains mixed indiscriminately with 50s boomerang pattern curtains, harlequin and ballerina paintings and lamps in the form of maraca-playing latin musicians, all swamped in a tide of knick knacks and cultural oddities too numerous to list. in fact the house was barely habitable because of the large amount of garbage it was storehouse to.

i had met jim very soon upon my arrival in art school. i noticed him immediately because of his odd dress. he wore the most amazing things: ladies' stretch pants, message-oriented t shirts that he would hand alter to pervert their uplifting slogans, bits of fast food restaurant uniforms, and a long flasher-type 40s storm coat that had a hump sewn on the back. to this hump he affixed a boy's jacket with award patches; he looked like charles manson with a cub scout growing out of his back. he was hard to miss. i also quite admired his artwork. among many other things, he made paintings utilizing various psychosexual images derived from old advertisements mixed together in a seemingly random fashion on top of splatter color fields. these were often painted on top of the same kind of ugly old drapes, stretched over canvas stretchers, that were hanging in the house. the coloration of these paintings was quite dismal and weird, due to the fact that much of the oil paint that they were painted with was scrounged from the garbage can in the art school painting studios, deposited there after other students had scraped it off the pallets. i remember him distinctly using the garbage can itself as a palette, mixing the paint he found there right on the rim of the can. he was fond of the gray/brown sludge that accumulated on the bottom of the communal cans of paint thinner used to clean brushes. this would be used as the ground on which he painted - the primal void, if you will, that the painting cosmos grew out of.

i lived in the basement of god's oasis. it was a large space, well suited to working and with all the luxuries of a true home - its own slop sink and toilet. my own world. in one corner was a raised concrete slab, about 4 by 8 feet in size. this is the corner where i slept, on an old single-frame metal hospital bed, which seemed appropriate since the basement was painted in fading hospital green. to differentiate my sleeping corner from the rest of the space i painted it pink. next to my bed was the water heater for the house. the murmur of its pilot light lulled me to sleep at night. this underground enclave was to become the rehearsal room for destroy all monsters.

it was at a party in 1974 that the four of us, jim, cary, niagara and myself decided to form a band. it was the natural thing to do, the perfect way to encapsulate the various public actions we were already engaged in. the form was right - popular, people will come see us instead of us having to fool them (this was a strategy jim had employed before to get people to attend actions of his - he would make false flyers for nonexistent events, a speech by baba ram das for example, to attract an audience). no one, except cary, had any musical abilities. cary could play guitar a bit. i went to k mart with jim and he bought the cheapest electric guitar you could buy, a tesco, i think. he proceeded to "prepare" it in the manner of john cage's pianos, with old tie clips, etc. we went to the organ shop and bought a used drum box to solve the drummer problem. i accumulated odd bits of electronic equipment - cheap electric organs, old pa systems and tape recorders which often would only feed back, and sound producing toys which i would highly amplify. i was a big fan of the way in which the art ensemble of chicago used small sounds: bird calls, rattles, toys, which were put together in a fabric of never ending shifting assortments of little events that punctuated their frenetic shows. these little events, when highly amplified, had the power of heavy metal power chords. each little sound could be an atomic explosion. jim named the band. there was not much argument about it. the film, destroy all monsters, was loved by us all. it was "the ultimate monster party", the meeting of every japanese monster on monster island to battle it out. this cacophony of bestial battle was what we were after. we loved the sound of godzilla's roar - that backwards-sounding growl with a subliminal tolling bell buried in it, and the sweet cadences of the singing twins who were the consorts of mothra. that was the dialectic we were after, those was truly inspiring musics.

destroy all monsters in actuality never was one band but an agreement between two bands to share a name and sometimes perform together. on one side were cary and niagara, and on the other were jim shaw and i. cary and niagara were more interested in song structures and had a love of pop trash, glitter rock and gloom and doom mansonesque imagery -very "witchy". they were fans of bowie, t rex, roxy music, the new york dolls and such. jim and i were more interested in pure noise and had little interest in bothering with song structures or pop licks, except as simple book-ending devices for the noise - like free jazz players, coltrane for instance, would use pop standards such as disney tunes to build off of and eventually fuck up and distort. our tastes were somewhat different. jim had a soft spot for gothic sweetness. he liked to listen to the death folk of the incredible string band, john fahey, and the more depressing folksy led zepplin songs, and even pomp rock like yes, which i could not stomach. yet we did share a love of psychedelia and sun ra. at this time i was listening mostly to free jazz: albert ayler, archie shepp, the art ensemble, etc, and to german psychedelia and trance music: popul vuh, can, terry riley. but there were a few things all of us could all agree on, and that was the noise rock of the first mc5 album, the stooges, and the velvet underground. those bands allowed for both the factory-driven pulse of metal and the electric wail of pure noise. cary and niagara began to write songs, jim and i set up a situation where there was constant noise improvisation.

this structure did not allow for elaborately worked-out product. instead, we would pick a situation, and just show up and play. we did not play publicly very much for the simple fact that there was no place to do so, and no audience for the kind of thing we were doing. our first gig was at a comic book convention. we were not invited. we simply crashed the event, set up and played. this was how we got the majority of our gigs. we asked the band to use their pa system but after one song, a variation on black sabbath's iron man, we were asked to leave. we also played a halloween show at the u of m art school where we did a minimalist version of shaking all over, the loft of local jazz musician gerhard schlanzky, and several private parties one gig consisted only of an endless trance version of "nature boy." these are the only public gigs i can remember; though we also played quite often at open parties held at god's oasis. sometimes it would just be the god's oasis half of the band, where jim and i would be joined by some of the other peoples who lived at the house: john reed on guitar, kalle nemvalts on trumpet or dave owen on clarinet. these were pure noise-fests dominated primarily by jim shaw's huge walls of distorted guitar feedback, and my other varied noise products: squealing amplified toys, saxophone or voice, tape effects, bashing metal and drums, etc. when cary and niagara joined us, we would try to accompany their gloomy lyrics (songs like: i'm dead, you're going to die, i'm bored, acid monster) as best we could, with me sometimes on drums and niagara on scratchy john cale-inspired violin. cary and niagara would take turns on the various songs. cary had the better voice: a jim morrisonesque low tone, but niagara was the center of attention. niagara's anti-stage presence was captivating. her emotionless monotone made nico sound like a screamer, and generally she sang so softly you could barely hear her over the din. oftentimes she would sing seated, facing away from the audience, and in one memorable show, she lay on the floor in a fetal position with her head on the pillow inside of the bass drum, letting out a pitiful cry every time the bass was struck, yet unwilling, or unable, to get up.

not surprisingly, our music was pretty much despised. there was, at most, an audience of 50 people who had any interest in noise music in the detroit area at that time. all of the members of destroy all monsters had grown up during the alternative cultural renaissance of the late sixties. we had all been raised on the psychedelic excesses of the mc5 and the stooges, and the general feeling of that time: that every form could be combined and all excesses were possible. now we were in the dark ages. detroit's economy had collapsed and taken with it its radical culture. detroit was a dead city. and ann arbor, once the "drug capital of the midwest", eden to every unhappy teen-age runaway, home of the sds, the white panther party, and a thriving radical intellectual scene, was now slipping back into being a sleepy and conservative fraternity-row college town. all of the musicians of the previous generation were trying to adapt to the cleaner hard rock sound of the day. fred smith's sonic rendezvous band and ron asheton's new order were dull plodding outfits, trying to match the success of ted nugent. i believe they were embarrassed at the psychedelic extravagances of their youth. and those of our own age were basking in the mellow sounds of country rock and the tired noodlings of the alman brothers and the grateful dead. things were very depressing. this was the milieu that birthed destroy all monsters. we were designed to be a "fuck you" to the prevailing popular culture.

i, personally, saw no future in it and left for california to attend graduate school, soon followed by jim shaw. after our departure, cary brought ron asheton into the band. the trials and battles of that group are another story - though a quite interesting one, and i'll leave that to the participants to tell.

mike kelley
1993

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$37.98

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july 3rd, 2009


threads:
modern-composition
sound-art

 best of 2009 !!! 
le souffleur (netherlands) #ls 38 lp

raymond dijkstrade schroef” long playing record

  • de schroef (1) (1:00)
  • de schroef (2) (1:00)
  • de schroef (3) (1:00)
  • de schroef (4) (1:00)
  • de schroef (5) (1:00)

  • de schroef (6) (1:00)
  • de schroef (7) (1:00)
  • de schroef (8) (1:00)
  • de schroef (9) (1:00)
  • de schroef (10) (1:00)
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "de schroef (4)"
may 2009 release ; always glad to be able to offer a new raymond dijkstra work here @ mms ... in this case, a suite of 10 1-minute pieces (scored for his now-familiar orchestra of pump-organ & screeching metals)separated by a lock groove and a blank (grooveless) space” ...

a spartan edition (just a printed sheet of recycled newspaper in a sleeve w/ the record) but the innate complexity of both the included music (as obfuscating as ever) & it’s presentation (each piece is an island, beginning & ending in silent locked grooves with no lead-in / lead-out to speak of ; manual needle placement is necessary to advance to each new segment) makes it worth all the while ... highly recommended !!!
le souffleur press release...

de schroef ~ raymond dijkstra

 lp. de schroef consists of 10 short pieces.
each piece is separated by a lock groove and a blank (grooveless) space.

edition of 200 copies.

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$11.76

new to stock as of
september 24th, 2009


threads:
guitar-themed
harsh-noise
electro-acoustic-composition
analogue-synth
digital-musics
electro-acoustic-improvisation
live-electronic

 best of 2009 !!! 
dagda hammer (usa) #dagda 001 cd

kevin drummimpish tyrant” compact disc

  • untitled (1) (4:30)
  • untitled (2) (4:53)
  • untitled (3) (20:47)
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "untitled (1)"
september 2009 release ; straight out-of-left-field re-issue of this 2004 kevin drumm burner (originally issued by joelspitest. germain & “released” at that year’s no fun fest) remastered & re-prepped for cd release, then made tangible by kevin himself (as the debut released on his new dagda hammer imprint) ...

absolutely gnarly rectified cut-ups, up there with “sheer hellish miasma” as one of kevin’s lofty peaks during his “harsh” investigation(s) of full-bore guitar / synth / computer tactics (as opposed to the butterfly-winged eai of yore) ... fans of the noisier end of his spectrum ; this one comes highly recommended !!!

ps. always love to see this in the wave-editor ::

dagda hammer press release...

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$11.76

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march 18th, 2010

first in stock on
april 23rd, 2009


threads:
1970s-electronic
1980s-electronic
electro-acoustic-composition
analogue-synth
musique-concrète
minimalism-drones

 best of 2009 !!! 
kvist (usa) #kvist 004 cd

j.d. emmanuelsolid dawn • electronic works 1979-1982” compact disc

  • movement into lightspeed (3:05)
  • sunrise over galveston bay (5:52)
  • 7 note trance (7:30)
  • grandioso (10:18)
  • march of the colossus (4:57)
  • through the inner planes (9:45)
  • whirlwind (8:53)
  • changeling (22:31)
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "7 note trance"
april 2009 release ; long-awaited collection of obscure and unreleased pieces by texan electronic musician & composer danielj.d.emmanuel, known far & wide through his early-80s self-released “wizards” & “rain forest music” lps, repped as the missing link between terry riley’s 60s / 70s time-lag accumulator improvs and the 70s / 80s home-studio electronic music / new age revolution ...

this disc is rife with great material, much it on par with “wizards’” filtered-out emanations ... personally i’m drawn towards the two sequencer based tracks “7 note trance(listen to the sound-sample ; odd-time gets me every time) & the 22-minute “changeling(“persian surgery dervishes” recast with a slight motorik-chug) - but the more laminal pieces have a nice desert-sunrise feel to them that’s ultra-inviting, and the more out moments such as “whirlwind(9 minutes of rising bleep) are just icing on the cake ...

john tamm-buckle and michael ferrer have done a great job w/ the edition ; the disc housed in a gatefold cd sleeve, with four individual sheets offering some relevant iconography and notes from the composer himself ... highly recommended !!!
kvist press release...

kvist 004: solid dawn

jd emmanuel

release date: april 2009
limited run of 500 on cd

collection of electronic works recorded between 1979 and 1982.

i was first introduced to jd emmanuel’s work two years ago through the re-release of his “wizards” lp, hailed as “a transcendent blend of terry riley, the bbc radiophonic workshop, popul vuh and early kraftwerk”. the bottom line for me is that it sounded damn good, in the way that a couple of records i buy every year do - it remains in rotation on the bedroom turntable. without going into too much depth, a conversation about the aforementioned lp led to contact with mr. emmanuel and the tracks that make up solid dawn, a compilation of tracks written between 1979-1982 and originally released in very limited quantities on cassette. these are not dusty old tracks dug up from someone’s basement, they are sparkling new tracks resurrected from the recesses of forgottenness.

basically, i am a seeker, someone who is always interested in learning more about my relationship to the “universe” and the “source of my being”.

a seeker has two tasks in their life-path, to be a student and a teacher.

it is sort of a metaphysical internet, ie, i take what i learn from my different teachers and become a teacher by sharing it with others.

anything i get involved in, whether it is spiritual, business management, human resources, music, etc., i do so to learn how to create a better relationship to the universe and all the beings that make it up
.

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$15.54

back in stock as of
july 26th, 2010

first in stock on
january 6th, 2009


threads:
modern-composition
electro-acoustic-composition
musique-concrète

 best of 2009 !!! 
robot (usa) #rr 39 cd

luc ferrariarchives génétiquement modifiées • société 2” compact disc

  • archives génétiquement modifiées (24:46) 2000
  • société 2 (27:35) 1967
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "archives génétiquement modifiées (2)"
december 2008 release ; two works from the late luc ferrari here making their debut on disc ...

archives génétiquement modifiées” is a six-part electro-acoustic work from 2000 thank ranks as one of the more amazing / busy pieces in his decades-long career ... a constantly shape-shifting array of concrète and synthesizer noises on par with his 50s/60s tautologos pieces (proof that he was making relevant music up until his final decade) ...

société 2” is a three-part chamber work from 1967, more than capably realized here by konstantin simonovich and the ensemble instrumental de musique contemporaine de paris ... originally appearing opposite “presque rien” on the original deutsche grammophon lp release, the alternatingly sparse/dense tapestries created as each instrumental section of the ensemble vies for attention of the piano (ferrari’s figurative “woman”) makes the perfect counterpoint ...

cd comes in a full-color digipack, with a 20-page booklet containing extensive liners (including a long dialogue between jim o’rourke and jay sanders in both english and french) ... highly recommended !!!
robot press release...

luc ferrari: archives génétiquement modifiées / société 2 cd (robot 39)

robot records is honored and pleased to present two historic compositions for the first time on cd by the late, great luc ferrari. the programme opens with "archives génétiquement modifiées" (genetically modified archives), a work for "memorized sounds" from 2000. this composition (subtitled: exploitation of the concepts 3) was the third in a series of later pieces in which mr. ferrari revisited aspects of his early concepts and compositional strategies to create wholly new works. the result here is a very bizarre, sensual, and beautifully-paced electroacoustic work of aural memories and (re)collections created by mr. ferrari utilizing sounds from his vast archive of musical activities.

after a short "intermission", the programme continues with a true highlight of mr. ferrari's early instrumental work entitled "société 2" from 1968. subtitled "and if the piano were a body of a woman" (for 4 soloists and 16 instruments), this composition appeared opposite "presque rien" on the legendary deutsche grammaphon lp. "société 2" may be viewed as an erotically charged piece of musical theatre where the soloists "compete" for the attention of a woman (the piano). this concerto with its gestures and a fantastic kaleidescope of styles and color shows the extravagant qualities of the piano in its "harmony, imagination, and brutality".

packaged in a full color digipak with 20 page bilingual booklet featuring mr. ferrari's early artwork, notations, and programme notes along with an extensive commentary by jim o'rourke and jay sanders. remastered sound with audio restoration by fellow ina grm alumnus jean schwarz. a wonderful glimpse into the world of one of the most legendary, unique, and inspiring musical figures of the 20th century.

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new to stock as of
june 22nd, 2009


threads:
1950s-electronic
1960s-electronic
1970s-electronic
1980s-electronic
electro-acoustic-composition
musique-concrète
field-recordings

 best of 2009 !!! 
ina-grm (france) #ina g 6017-6026 cd

luc ferraril’oeuvre électronique” decuple compact disc set

  • étude aux accidents (2:13) 1958
  • étude aux sons tendus (2:48) 1958
  • étude floue (2:40) 1958
  • échantillon pour mimes (3:36) 1959
  • visage 5 (10:33) 1958 - 1959
  • tête et queue du dragon (9:13)1959 - 1960
  • tautologos 1 (4:20) 1961
  • tautologos 2 (14:53) 1961
  • music promenade (20:29) 1964-1969

  • hétérozygote (26:19) 1963 - 1964
  • j'ai été coupé (13:52) 1969
  • petite symphonie intuitive pour un paysage de printemps (28:09) 1973 - 1974

  • presque rien n°1 ou le lever du jour au bord de la mer (21:11) 1967 - 1970
  • presque rien n°2 ou ainsi continue la nuit dans ma tête multiple (21:28) 1977
  • presque rien avec filles (13:54) 1989
  • presque rien n°4 ou la remontée du village (16:00) 1990 - 1998

  • danses organiques (50:35) 1971 - 1973

  • ouvert-fermé (12:45) 1993
  • unheimlich schön (15:40) 1971
  • dérivatif (27:11) 2008

  • dialogue ordinaire avec la machine ou trois fables pour bande doucement philosophiques (30:41) 1984
  • strathoven (3:19) 1985
  • capricorne (1:28) 1958
  • chute libre (19:24) 1958

  • far-west news 1 : de santa fé à monument valley (29:35) 1999
  • far-west news 2 : de page à grand canyon (29:45) 1999

  • far-west news 3 : de prescott à los angeles (28:01) 1999
  • archives génétiquement modifiées (25:23) 2000

  • les anecdotiques, exploitation des concepts n°6 (54:28) 2001 - 2002

  • l'escalier des aveugles (34:20) 1991
  • les arythmiques (40:25) 2003
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "petite symphonie intuitive ..."
may 2009 release ; entirely prescient that this all-encompassing box-set of luc ferrari’s “tape music without any classical instruments” would enter through reality’s gates, just as his work is enjoying an increased resonance with contemporary composers, sound-artists, and tape-traders the world over ...

easily the most enigmatic of the classic-era ina-grm composers, ferrari’s adherence to his ideas of “anecdotal music” set him apart from the straight schaeffer-ian acolytes, with much of the music here based on raw, untouched field-events, captured on location over a 40-year period ... naturally, i’m drawn to his late 50s / 60s compositions (of which there are a full two-and-a-half discs herein) ; largely utilizing highly cut-up arrangements (on par with parmegiani’s work from the era) of concrète sound ... but as the 60s drew to a close, the emphasis on travelogues and more free-flowing forms came to the fore, yielding some of his most finely nuanced music...

the set continues in a roughly chronological fashion, right up until his final piece, “les arythmiques,” from 2003 ... anyone with even a passing interest in ferrari’s life’s-work(or musique concrète in general) will immediately see the appeal of this complete & well-annotated set (the booklet contains many writings and interviews on & with ferrari, in both french & english) ; the price-point has been kept as low as possible to encourage you to sit down and take in this phenomenal music without too much strain on the wallet ...

needless to say, this comes highly recommended !!!

ps. to celebrate the mere existence of this thing, i’ve put up a longer-than-usual sound-sample for your enjoyment ; marvel at the final “movement” of the 1973-1974petite symphonie intuitive pour un paysage de printemps” in all of it’s pan-flute / dissonant-drone / scatter-shot close-mic’ed hand-percussion glory ... bon appétit !!!
ina-grm press release...

foreword

the decision to make a boxed set called luc ferrari, electronic works, and defining the word electronic in the widest sense possible, was to bring together an essential part of this composer's work: tape music without any classical instruments.

from l'etude aux accidents (1958) to arythmiques (2003), the 31 works in this compilation will help the listener to discover all the facets of his art based on «captured» sounds. he tried and tested all the different techniques of studio work: brilliantly elaborated electroacoustic works, radio-phonic story-telling or hörspiele, which he particularly appreciated or other semi-improvised works.

this editorial choice is not a question of drawing lines between electroacoustic music with live instruments which he mastered perfectly, and this one here that is only composed of fixed and manipulated sounds. what we wanted was to show the strong links between natural sounds and their score on this subject, pierre schaeffer always insisted on the necessary balance between sound material and music. just the strength of recorded sounds (voices, landscapes, strange sounds, everyday scenes, etc.) without formal mastery is not enough to maintain an attentive ear. in this way, each work of ferrari's is a discrete lesson in music.

ferrari was always very lucid when he claimed that a composer was a little like a «journalist» who, through his composition, witnessed the state the world was in while at the same time creating a work of art. this is another aspect of this edition: as we listen and in filigree, half a century unfolds before us. technological progress, political awareness, reports and essential encounters are witness to a committed artist.

daniel teruggi / david jisse

...

luc ferrari is one of the great composers who made a mark on the history of the ina grm and on the music of the second half of the 20th century. driven by its ambition to build a common heritage of images, sounds and music, ina is delighted to make these works, which bear witness to a fascinating human adventure, available to the greatest number.

emmanuel hoog
ina's chief executive officer

...

an open door into luc ferrari's electro-acoustic music

as a complement of the too short biography and his more intimate portrait, in the 2006 interview with luc ferrari's wife, brunhild, we felt it was important to explain more clearly the relationship luc had with concrete sounds and electroacoustic composition techniques.

when he composed in the studio, luc ferrari simply put into practice the «do and hear» theory inherited from pierre schaeffer, back in the day when they had worked together at the grm at the end of the fifties : record sounds, listen to the recording, change it by editing and some simple experiments, listen again, change, listen again, mix, and so on. any new production started with several sound recordings, usually done outdoors with a tape recorder and a mike. he was not directive, when, for example, he passed on his knowledge during a training session or workshops. after a short technical introduction, he encouraged a collective effort around an initial general idea like, for example, eros and thanatos ... and let the musical ideas come to light. during his sound reports, he tried to be the most receptive possible to the events he encountered, even directing himself by asking some passers-by questions. he was stimulated by all the sound sources he could find: nature's sounds, voices, classical instruments, and synthetic sounds. then, while listening to the rushes in the studio and at all the other stages of composition, from editing to the final mix, he fine-tuned his understanding of the sound material in order to extract its «essence».

he used to check out morphologies, spatial relationships and natural theatrical games between sound sources and arranged them like stories. the sounds were seen as characters with adventures. he was interested in the sound treatments inasmuch as they were able to reinforce the first impressions while listening or as a specific formal objective: to create a contrast or even a touch of humour with another sound or sequence, reinforce a movement, give extra depth to a fly-on-the-wall scene. he often worked with allegories: women laughing or speaking represented the eternal feminine, sheep baaing symbolised nature that he loved so much or even the attitude of panurgian sheep that men sometimes took. according to him, every technique was valid to reach this freedom of expression, so typical of his character, notwithstanding as wide a range of sounds possible. to do that, he integrated the different successive technical advances, from the vcr to the synthesizer to the computer.

finally, all these accounts converge to remind us of his wonderful ability to mix sounds. he knew how to keep a sound sequence alive while losing the anecdotal side to it. he was able to bring us to the edge between the concrete and the abstract, between sounds with recognizable sources and sounds thereto unheard of, thereby giving us extra depth to those events.

it was in this form of art, which went hand in hand with the trends in vogue among artists in the sixties, situated somewhere between american pop art and french new narrative figuration, that luc ferrari constantly called for and perfected his electroacoustic repertoire; his piece heterozygote (1963/64), is considered a prototype of «anecdotal» musical works. however, he returned regularly to the most classical writing because he never followed any one style or method exclusively; the chronology of his repertoire is there to prove it

evelyne gayou, 2008

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new to stock as of
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threads:
modern-psych
free-improvisation
electro-acoustic-composition
electro-acoustic-improvisation
harsh-noise

 best of 2009 !!! 
wodger (usa) #wodger 3 lp

nick fortédefeated” long playing record

  • i exaggerate my own defect
  • glob mockery
  • pouring town
  • another kind of toil

  • born thorny
  • upended
  • a rag of pride
  • sketching the façade
  • under a dumb flame
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "i exaggerate my own defect"
april 2009 release ; third wodger, a solo lp from christmas decorationsnick forté, recorded live to cassette during the summer of 2008 ...

an impressively wide array of approaches, from clattering drum kit abuse, to segments of harsh noise, to company-week-lineage scrabbly improv, to the kinds of effected, arbitrary instrumental performance seen mainly in the “sound-art” sector (on a blind listen in a “listening room” context i would more likely guess this was something from the anton bruhin / alga marghen axis than anything contemporary - the cassette-master fidelity lends well to a certain timelessness) ...

comes in a 3-color silk-screened / letter-pressed sleeve, with a bright red “discojacket holding the lp inside ; highly recommended !!!
wodger press release...

nick forté - defeated

nick from christmas decorations took a break from his many collaborations to hibernate in his mountain home with piles of instruments and electronics. tiny fragments of his voice turn up too.

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$26.18

back in stock as of
june 15th, 2010

first in stock on
january 8th, 2009


threads:
1960s-electronic
electro-acoustic-composition
musique-concrète

 best of 2009 !!! 
alga marghen (italy) #alga 25 lp

malcolm goldsteinearly electronic / tape collage music” long playing record

  • sheep meadow (6:34) 1967
  • images of cheng hsieh (15:51) 1967

  • it seemed to me (5:42) 1963
  • judson #6 piece (6:43) 1963
  • illuminations from fantastic gardens (13:03) 1964
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "judson #6 piece"
december 2008 release ; jaw-dropping collection of early electronic work from violinist/composer malcolm goldstein ...

the lp starts with “sheep meadow,” composed by feeding recordings of indigenous music(s) into an overloading tape recorder (eerily prescient of something like aaron dilloway’s “sounds of nepal” experiments) ... this is followed by “images of cheng hsieh,” a collage of room-tone events (footsteps, scrabbling objects, brushed metal) with short tape-interjections/juxtapositions (blasts of similar sounds, often suddenly jumping up 24db and/or played backwards & at varispeeds ; imagine a more through-composed tape piece comprised largely of the sort of mystery sounds heard on “changez les blockeurs” ; if that gives you any sort of indication) ...

on the b-side, “it seemed to me” hedges plundered opera-singing with the kind of spectrally-processed tones often heard emanating from milan’s rai during the same era (see: luigi nono’s tape music) ... “judson #6 piece” (listen to the sound-sample) ups the ante with a rich tapestry of constantly-changing synthesis & concrète-noises, not something i’d normally associate with goldstein, but imho the best piece on the record ... finally, “illuminations from fantastic gardens” is a chamber-piece largely involving the operatic recitation of nonsense sounds with occasional taped-counterpoint (ala milton babbitt’s “philomel”) ...

comes in a double-wide sleeve, with an 11” x 1112-page booklet (reprinting the score/minutiae of “illuminations from fantastic gardens”) with the lp in it’s own card-stock inner sleeve ... of the 7 titles in this december 2008 alga marghen batch, imho, this one takes the cake ... highly recommended !!!
alga marghen press release...

m a l c o l m g o l d s t e i n
"early electronic / tape collage music"
(cat no. plana-g alga25)
lp record
edition of 350 copies

alga marghen proudly presents an lp edition including some of the seminal electronic / tape collage pieces by malcolm goldstien, created in close connection to the sulphuric new york pre-fluxus environment of the early 1960s.

the 1960's, downtown new york city, rich with activities, doors opening upon a world fertile with possibilities: the delightful unknown. malcolm goldstein, first working at the columbia-princeton electronic music center, then joining the judson dance theater with dancers, musicians, poets, and visual artists all interacting in the common ground of improvisation / exploration. for the judson dance theater most of the music on this recording was created.

"sheep meadow" (1966), a collage of two musics, folk & court music, was realized on a very cheap single tape recorder that offered its own electronic distortion embellishments. it was created for an anti-war demonstration to be held in that meadow of central park, with a dancer on top of a flat-bed truck and with loudspeakers. "images of cheng hsieh" (1967) was for a dance by carol marcy at judson church, simultaneously with an instrumental ensemble performing from the calligraphic graphic score, the name cheng hsieh. "it seemed to me" (1963) was composed for a dance by arlene rothlein; a collage of traditional musics chosen by her to be incorporated with electronic sounds. "judson #6 piece" (1963) was for ruth emerson, using only electronic sounds. finally "illuminations from fantastic gardens" (1964), the only composition for a vocal ensemble on this recording, was composed for elaine summers' "an evening of fantastic gardens", a multi-media event of dance, music, film and visual projections, as part of the judson dance theater concerts. it is the first music notated by malcolm goldstein with graphic renditions of the words of rimbaud and without traditional music notation. two performers were trained singers while the others were a visual artist and an actor; two women & two men, all in the spirit of the times, sources coming together, as art & life blended in an overflowing of exploration.

edition limited to 350 copies, also including a 12 page large booklet with the reproduction of the complete "illuminations from fantastic gardens" graphic score.

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back in stock as of
january 19th, 2010

first in stock on
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threads:
analogue-synth
digital-musics
machine-music
harsh-noise
experimental-instruments
lo-fi

 best of 2009 !!! 
rare youth (usa) #ry-30 cs

hallicrafters, inc.10 poke 54272+int(rnd(1)*25),int(rnd(1)*256) : goto 10” c36 cassette

  • hallicrafters, inc. (18:00)

  • 10 poke 54272+int(rnd(1)*25),int(rnd(1)*256) : goto 10 (18:00)
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "hallicrafters, inc."
november 2009 release ; geoff, the thoughtful soul that he is, finally coerced me into compiling a tape of my “automatic electronic music” pieces from the past few months ...

the first side offers a piece entirely comprised of three takes (panned hard left, soft center, and hard right) of a particularly woolly modular synth patch that converts the incoming attacks, volume curves, ground hum, and audio signals emanating from this prime bit of 1961 audio tech ::


... into a control & audio voltages that “play” a series of panning, analogue delay, resonant band-pass filter, telephone modulator/demodulator, gating, and spring reverb circuits ... the result is not unlike my beloved dub taylor, costin miereanu, and luis de pablo lps in approach, only much louder (arguably the most “noise” thing i’ve ever done ... well until the kfw/gm 2lp drops in 2010) & nowhere near as “good” ...

the second piece is a bit of computer music nostalgia, harkening back to my first experiments with the commodore vic20 back in 1982 or so ... utilizing the titular code (thanks to noahshiftyvawter) plugged into a c64 emulator (running on an iphone no less ::


... had to earn enough “nerd cred” to warrant the title somehow !!!) ; the resultant peeks & pokes were then fed into a similar modular patch that “drove” an 8-bit loop-recorder circuit fed into an emulation of the russianpolivoksfilter & further analogue echo / band-pass configurations, building & decreasing in density until a melancholy random pulse-wave arpeggio comes in to close out the side ...

the tape comes as a norelco housing one of four different collages by geoff ; the tape itself if a lovely blue pro-duplicated affair with randomly chopped full-color labels, and there’s even a nice pearlized fold-over insert !!!

i tend to go on about the “side-long aleatoric electro-acoustic collage” spec ; here’s my stab at said ... enjoy.
rare youth press release...

hallicrafters, inc. "10 poke 54272+int(rnd(1)*25),int(rnd(1)*256) : goto 10" c36, ry-30

two utterly satisfying pieces of electronic music for automatic processes and modular synthesizer. to me, this just about sums up keith’s uncanny ability to blend technical prowess with an innate musicality - something that i find to be pretty rare in the world of “academic” electronics.

side a features an old shortwave radio (made by hallicrafters, inc.) run through keith’s ever-expanding modular set-up, while side b is fueled by old commodore patches being processed by an iphone and sent to the suitcases...


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$13.44

back in stock as of
august 10th, 2010

first in stock on
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threads:
electro-acoustic-composition
field-recordings
musique-concrète

 best of 2009 !!! 
intransitive (usa) #int 032 cd

jim haynessever” compact disc

  • : (18:38)
  • :: (6:24)
  • ::: (9:37)
  • :::: (17:18)
click the play button to hear an excerpt of ":::"
june 2009 release ; superb, creaking concrète studies from jim haynes ...

there’s been a spate of music concerned with “decay” over the past few years (especially from the harsh noise & power electronics sectors) ; yet little of it posit decay as anything less than a malevolent force (decomposition, erosion, etc ...) which is why jim’s take on it really stands out ; decay at the molecular level, almost imperceivable in real time but quite apparent in an exploded-view ...

the four pieces here involve field recordings (often made so far away from any given’s sound’s source that their room reflections and natural dispersion obliterate any trace of them) and subtle processing ; just enough to accentuate what’s already there - the gradual, organic change of chemistry over time ...

highly recommended !!!
intransitive press release...
available june 1, 2009

int032 jim haynessever cd

it gives me great pleasure to present sever, the third solo album by san francisco-based composer jim haynes, whose singular music evades simple attempts to describe it. the process of decaying and wearing down materials is implied in sever; its passages of rough clang and cyclic scraping metal seem implacably tangible, as if one is witnessing time-lapsed erosion in action. for me, sever conjures images of oncoming storms, abandoned industrial sites, huge empty warehouses, creaking glass, ships rocking in a port, the middle of the ocean far from land. sever is an engaging album of evocative, highly visual drone music made up of layers upon organic layers that are in constant motion, and yet seem somehow still.

jim haynes has exhibited at westspace (melbourne, australia), diapason (new york), jack straw productions (seattle), and works (san jose), eyedrum (atlanta). he has collaborated with loren chasse (as the duo coelacanth), keith evans, steve stapleton (nurse with wound), and irr.app.(ext.). he runs the acclaimed helen scarsdale label, and works as the editorial director for 23five, a nonprofit organization dedicated to the development and increased awareness of sound arts within the public arena. he has written extensively on sound art, noise culture, minimalism, and general music experimentation for the wire, the san francisco bay guardian, metro pulse, the sound projector, and chunklet.

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$16.81

back in stock as of
august 31st, 2009

first in stock on
march 6th, 2009


threads:
minimalism-drones
guitar-themed
modern-composition
electro-acoustic-composition
digital-musics

 best of 2009 !!! 
kranky (usa) #krank 130 lp

tim heckeran imaginary country” double long playing record set

  • 100 years ago
  • sea of pulses
  • the inner shore

  • pond life
  • borderlands
  • a stop at the chord cascades
  • utropics

  • paragon point
  • her black horizon
  • currents of electrostasy

  • where shadows makes shadows
  • 200 years ago
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "where shadows makes shadows"
march 2009 release ; second full-length outing for kranky from tim hecker ...

while overall it’s a much more mellow outing than “harmony in ultraviolet” ‘s metal-tinged overload, there’s a new-found focus on pulsing sub-bass activity that recalls tim’s roots as a producer of post-dancefloor music (see his jetone sides for force inc.) as well as ushering the music into new domains ... the deep, swirling chord-shapes that keep this from being an exercise in pure texture are always present ; tim’s expertise at riding the line between mood and sentimentality always in effect ...

a bunch of us have been waiting with baited breath for this one ; i’m glad to report that everything i’ve grown to love about tim’s music in recent years is here in droves ... highly recommended for fans new & old alike ...
kranky press release...
artist: tim hecker
title: an imaginary country
catalog #: krank130
formats available: 2xlp / cd
release date: march 9, 2009

an imaginary country continues from the trajectory of his last album, the critically acclaimed harmony in ultraviolet, while also showing a few new tricks. tim has incorporated more pulses into this work and also works with a sound pallete including overdriven mellotron strings and synthesizer. at times this album is less overtly aggressive than previous works, but the notion that this is pastoral work would be dead wrong as there are plenty of the agitated crescendos that he is know for. this music backs off from the void of immensity in favor of a terrain of lushness and warmth.

this heat, this work of musical abstraction, is largely made possible by the tools of digital technology that he employs. it is a means of musical production that allows for the obliteration of questions of representation or instrumentation. strings, synthesizers, pianos and guitars all fade away into the fog of what they once were. a tropical mist (or a northerly breeze) of sound is also a musical resonance of imagination.

the title comes from a quote, "the imaginary country... one that cannot be found on a map," uttered by debussy in regards to the sad state of musical affairs at the time, arguing that music was in dire need for alternate worlds of possibility. in some ways this is a utopian work, in the sense of the term meaning that of 'no-place'. all the tracks are landmarks in a dream cartography.

with this album tim hecker expands his palette as well as his range, further cementing his reputation as a singular and significant entity in the world of contemporary music.an imaginary country follows a collaboration with aidan baker for the alien8 label entitled "fantasma parastasie" released in the fall of 2008, and the harmony in ultraviolet album released in late 2006 on kranky.

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back in stock as of
june 3rd, 2010

first in stock on
march 14th, 2009


threads:
modern-psych
guitar-themed
folk
free-improvisation
outsiders-deviants
lo-fi

 best of 2009 !!! 
open mouth (usa) #om #23 cs

daniel arcus incus ululat higgsdevotional songs of daniel higgs” c90 cassette

  • devotional songs (1) (45:00)

  • devotional songs (2) (45:00)
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "devotional songs (2)"
march 2009 release ; 90 minutes of pure higgs, first running trough some 15 minutes of light-speed raga guitar, then, amazingly, informing us all of his deep christ-love through a series of seemingly improvised stream-of-consciousness couplets (listen to the sound-sample for the bit that geoff & i found the most illuminating - eerily reminiscent of the church universal and triumphant, inc “sounds of the american doomsday cults” disc ) that go on and on and on ...

there’s simply no doubt in my mind that this guy is a messenger ; for which particular deity / belief system / orb is up for debate, but you can’t knock how committed he is to spreading the gospel ...
open mouth press release...

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$13.44

back in stock as of
august 10th, 2010

first in stock on
may 21st, 2009


threads:
sound-poetry
lo-fi
electro-acoustic-composition
field-recordings
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 best of 2009 !!! 
intransitive (usa) #int 033 cd
schöne hjuler-memorial-fond (germany) #shmf siko14 cd

kommissar hjüler / mama bärasylum lunaticum” compact disc

  • hjcvgrimmelshausen (8:59)
  • lichtblicke (6:42)
  • ehrfurcht (25:17)
  • meine erste zeitmachine (13:00)
  • de nye rigspolitichefen (10:37)
  • lauf in eine herde (1:13)
  • asylum lunaticum (8:33)
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "hjcvgrimmelshausen"
june 2009 release ; first widely available release from this now-legendary german couple (yes, he’s actually a cop !!!) collecting something of a “greatest hits” from the legions of “artist edition” cd-r’s, tapes, and lathe-cut records “issued(mostly ... un-issued) over the last 10-odd years via their der schöne hjuler-memorial-fond ...

a great bringer-up-to-speed for the uninitiated, this offers a broad range of their inimitable styles ; right off the bat there’s komissar doing his best anton bruhin imitation (listen to the sound-sample), mama speaking about 1/4 normal speed through a wobbly cassette over a police-siren, mama singing to her son while riding a bicycle through the countryside for 25 minutes (amazing !!!), komissar bulding “his first time-machine,” etc ...

state-of-the-art contemporary “private universe” antics ; highly recommended !!!
intransitive press release...
available june 1, 2009

int033 kommissar hjuler & mama bärasylum lunaticum cd

intimate, absurd, feral and aggressive in its homemade weirdness, the music of kommissar hjuler & mama bär has been a well kept secret for too long. hjuler & bär have self published their dada esque sound poetry experiments on small edition lathe cut lps, tapes, and cdrs for years, usually adorning them with elaborate junk sculptures and paintings. intransitive is proud to collect their best recordings so far onto a single, widely available cd so that anyone can hear the music without making a major financial investment.

the husband and wife duo uses deceptively simple means – typically just their voices, a cassette tape recorder and a microphone – to create astonishing suburban dramas that are somehow both sweetly charming and staggeringly psychotic, sometimes at the same time. join kommissar hjuler and mama bär as they perform acts of banal heroics, like exploring the basement... taking their son for a bicycle ride... walking with a red shirt into a field of cattle... pondering reforms made to the danish police system... all viewed through the unhinged lens.

kommissar hjuler & mama bär are painters, sculptors, film makers, and musicians based in flensberg, germany, near the danish border. their artwork has been exhibited in galleries and at festivals around the world. they collaborated with like minded artists such as thurston moore, arnulf meifert, john weise, runzelstirn & gurgelstock, jan iwers, and af ursin, among many others.

asylum lunaticum is not just another name or title, it's an almost too harmless a description of the family hjuler/bar. over decades, kommisar hjuler provided me with his sick but mind blowing art. so rare their works are, it's truly time to dig 'em out and show the world! this cd shall do so.

rudolf eb.er (r&g / schimpfluch commune int.)

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$25.76

new to stock as of
february 13th, 2009


threads:
modern-psych
free-improvisation
minimalism-drones
folk

 best of 2009 !!! 
chironex (france) #cr 01 lp

the hunter gracchussacred object of yiye people” long playing record

  • elkadria priests’ ransacking of the pnac offices - parts 1 to 3
  • night is our tryst when silences ring as the pause of iron bells
  • with the fire of ogun, the axe-handed one
  • the blood never died

  • the pineal eye
  • in the soft typewriter of the womb you do not know the word armour you carry
  • the greater the jibbah the greater the blessing
  • for naguib mahfouz
click the play button to hear an excerpt of "for naguib mahfouz"
lovely lp (in both sight & sound) from this mysterious sheffield-based ensemble, “recorded into a mono microphone by f, j, and k in furniture makers, sheffield in 2007 / 2008” ...

starting off with a good round of clanking castanets & distorted ngoni (which wouldn’t be out of place on one of those yaala yaala discs) , the trio cut loose on a number of free-launch trajectories ranging from plaintive chord-organ & tumbling hand-percussion takes to sawing cello / drum-bash improv, all touching down on hallowed ground between the regional armchair ethno-musicology of vibracathedral orchestra and actual bedouin & north-african folk forms ...

always love a nicely laid out lp that gives little away as to the involved individuals / origins of some unique music ... this fits the bill quite nicely. highly recommended !!!

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mimaroglu music sales best of 2009

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