Category Archives: UPDATE

I Had An Accident

Andrew Felix – ‘Intermediate State (Enter)’ C21 $5
Andrew Felix remains one of our favorite producers. A fine tuned illustrator of beats and drone sounds always finds a warm place in our souls. Intermediate State (Enter) is the second half, or continuation of July, 2011’s Intermediate State. Following the conceptual 6 Bardo’s (Enter) mirrors the transcendental feelings of luminosity and rebirth. The ebb and flow of your breath as you fade away into yourself, eyes closed as your worries melt away. Limited to 50 “jelly red” cassettes on chrome tape. Free mp3 download with purchase.

Blvck Ceiling – ‘Shvdow’ C25 $5
Disrupting sounds of evil, and eruption of vile synth mixture of intrusive beats and blasts of thunder under a blackened sky. Shvdow’s acid rain pours out of the blvck ceiling as dead skin drips off bones in the cinematic treat by Blvck Ceiling. Master producers claims his art of sampling to create an atmospheric thriller drenched in synthesized sound collage. Limited to 50 green cassettes on chrome tape. Free mp3 download with purchase.

Big Epoch – ‘Double Reserve’ C56 $5
Big Epoch combines the earthly beats and electronic essence of live performance with the collaborative genius of the Gothic Cholo. Echoing effects and tripping beats with lyrical madness on what is being titled Double Reserve. Masterfully constructing a fusion of visual stimulation and artistic expression. Two long auditorial experiences, “Face It, Nobody Loves You And You’re Going To Die Alone” and “Scheele’s Green” on a light gray c56 chrome cassette. Limited to 30 copies. Free mp3 download with purchase.

Coyote Clean Up – ‘Double Doom’ C32 $5
Coyote Clean Up brings about Double Doom – the latest release of chilled beats and amazing dub bliss.  Take it all in because it won’t be long before these tapes disappear.  Limited to 70 lilac cassettes on ferrous tape.  Mp3 with purchase.

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Sincope

INDIGENTS – ‘Bottomless Sinking’ C20 5
INDIGENTS is a french-catalan duo, born in 2007 from a live collaboration between Stephane Kerandel/Terrortank and Héctor O./Mindload. They merged their effort and record jams in Barcelona directly to tape or walkman.  “bottomless sinking” is composed by two tracks of free heavy industrial noise and phantasmagoric impro drone. artwork by truculentboy. limited to 50 hand-numbered copies.

WAND. AND PRINCESS – ‘Locust 9’ CDr 5
Wand.and Princess were formed in 2006 by Isabelle Spyridonos and George Kanavos from Athens, Hellas. Their audio output could be described as an exercise in between form and abstraction, structure and improvisation. They tend to utilize a large variety of sound sources, instruments, field recordings and noises as well. “Locust 9” is a four pieces of charming minimal noise drone. landscapes of deep melancholy, faint lights and worrying ambient noises. artwork by truculentboy. hand-painted cdr. limited to 50 hand numbered copies.

CLAUDIO ROCCHETTI & LUCA SIGURTA – ‘Sevigny’ C21 5€
Collaboration tape by this great italian musicians: Claudio Rocchetti (3/4HadBeenEliminated, In Zaire, Olyvetty, Vrooom!) and Luca Sigurtà (Harshcore, Luminance Ratio). “Sevigny” is three tracks of trip made of very fine drones, hypnotic awakenings and electroacoustic sound. Pics by Stefano Majno and layout by truculentboy. limited to 50 hand-numbered copies.

DAO DE NOIZE – ‘Ishtar Voice’ CDr 5
DAO DE NOIZE is Artem Pismenetskii from Ukraine. this project started in january 2011 has many releases out. here are two tracks where he mixes great skill drone, field recordings and noise bursts. artwork by truculentboy. hand-painted cdr. limited to 50 hand-numbered copies.

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Green Records & Tapes

GR211: Idle Hour – ‘Full On Idle’ C30 $5
Newest recordings of this bedroom duo. A huge pile a circuit bent keyboard sludge and tape loops was mixed live to stereo, and then further deconstructed for a slow-moving electronic confusion mix on side B. Edition of 20 copies with xerox art.

GR213: Kommissar Hjuler – ‘Separationsaengste’ C30 $5
Solo organic recordings of this German dada/fluxus madman. Extremely personal, minimal, and alarming tracks of someone flattening their frustrations. Sounds like a normal day around the Hjuler household. Edition of 30 copies with xerox art.

GR214: The Brides Wore Blood C90 $5
Four girls, potential brides of a man of evil mystery are lured into a night of terror. Three of them meet violent deaths. And the remaining one is imprisoned in the dark mansion and chosen to be the bride – a fate worse than death. She finally escapes – fated to become the mother of a future vampire. “Sometimes Death Is The Easy Way Out”. Transferred from VHS direct to cassette. Edition of 20 copies with xerox art.

GR215: Lidless Eye – ‘Sand Sickness’ C30 $5
Weird fractured rhythms and slow crawling circuits make up this strange landscape – recorded live to cassette from synths, tapes, and rewired electronics. Sounds like a hallucination from the desert. Check out a live version on the M.U.G. Live CD-R released on Michigan Underground Group. Edition of 20 copies with xerox art.

GR216: Powerless – ‘Crisis Orbit’ C20 $5
Malfunctioning synths and homemade circuit manipulation recorded live to 2 track cassette. Tapes created by damaged electronics to be sent into space. Edition of 20 copies with xerox art.

GR217: Violent Mood Swings zine + CDr $7
Audible mental terror via field recordings heavily bathed in bad days. Sounds created 2006-2011. Comes with an full size 10 page xerox zine of recent visual confusion. Edition of 20 copies.

GR218: 1%er – ‘Tomorrow Will Be Worse’ C32 $5
The first new recordings in nearly a year find this duo in deep synth territory. Minimal thuds and transmissions slowly transform into a dark, murky ground of electronic waste. Recorded live to tape at the Michigan Underground Group. Edition of 20 copies with xerox art.

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m=minimal

Nicholas Desamory – ‘Like You’ CD
“empty your pockets – unzip your soul – move your assets” Nicholas Bussmann has shed his skin once again, now transforming into Nicholas Desamory to release “like you” – a House album of such warmth and rough elegance, it will leave the scene all excited.  House has always been an open genre, allowing to sample, adapt and incorporate other styles. On “like you” however, each of the 7 tracks opens a new window, one leading to Bollywood, another one to Bernhard Herrmann, and the next time it might be Morton Feldmann. It’s the reduced string and vocal arrangements that lead to this album’s specific sound – the warmth – and evoke the great Norman Whitfield. But all of the sudden the sound changes direction again to make us realize: It is 2012! And this is how House music has to be in 2012! In recent years, Nicholas Bussmann has brought manifold works into being. His last release was a cooperational album with Chico Mello: Telebossa – a mélange of Brazilian songwriting, precise electronics and minimal music, receiving rave reviews and gaining nominations for many rankings of the year. In addition, together with drummer Martin Brandlmayer (Radian) Nicholas Bussmann released two complementary electro-acoustic albums: Kapital Band 1 “2 CD” and “Playing by Numbers” and in 2010, he brought to stage a concept for a modernized opera with Barnes Dance.  Hence it is not surprising to find several illustrious guests on his new record: Hanno Leichtmann, Florina Speth and Todosch support as instrumentalists. And alongside Nicholas Desamory, Charles Ndubisi, Yusuf Ergün and notably Lucile Desamory lend their voices to the album.

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Turned Word

Turned Word #25: AMPS FOR CHRIST – ‘Circuits’ 2LP $18
Circuits was originally released in 1999 on the Vermiform label. It was well received, even charting on CMJ. Comprised of stellar originals, Scottish, English and North American folk songs and Child ballads, biblical lore, and choice pop folk cover tunes, Circuits is singular in its approach. Heavily referencing Steeleye Span and Pentangle’s moves in working with songs of the British Isles, as well as Jean Ritchie and North American Appalachian songlines in general, as well as DIY noisenik modalities, AFC uniquely adds to the history of these song lines. This reissue puts Circuits on vinyl for the first time as a deluxe double LP with a gatefold cover and a full bonus side of unreleased material . Circuits includes AFC collaborator Tara Tavi (ex-Blue Silk Sutures, Bastard Noise, Savage Republic, currently of Auto Da Fe) who plays yangqin (Chinese hammer dulcimer) and sings. Former Man Is The Bastard drummer Joel Connell plays tablas and percussion. Remastered for vinyl by Tim Stollenwerk (Mississippi Records, Sublime Frequencies, Fat Possum). Co-released by Turned Word Records. The four song bonus side begins with “Empire”, a song recorded for a compilation that was supposed to be released by L.A. venue, The Smell. Barnes and Tavi are joined by then AFC member Erika Anderson (EMA, Gowns).The comp never saw the light of day, but Empire now has. “Yamasuka” adds fellow former MITB member, Aaron Kenyon on bass to this release and rounding off the bonus side are folk standards Knight On The Road and Bonny Greenwoodside. The latter recorded live at the Claremont Forum in 2001. Amps For Christ use unique instrumentation in an eclectic approach to play”folkcore”, coined & defined by founder Henry Barnes. Mr. Barnes modifies Hammond organs to a fixed scale that defines AFC’s sound. He builds his own electric bouzoukis, sitars, guitars, violins, metronomes, oscillators and noise machines. Prior to AFC, Mr. Barnes was a founder of Man Is The Bastard and Bastard Noise. AFC has at least 15 releases in their prolific catalog on labels such as Kill Rock Stars, Shrimper, Vermiform, RRR and Woodsist.

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Tranquility Tapes

Pierrot Lunaire – ‘As Himself’ C30 $7(US)/$8(Canada)/$10(World)
After starting the year with a bang with his first vinyl release on Hooker Vision, California’s John DeNizio shares the magical fury that is Pierrot Lunaire in a live setting on ‘As Himself’. Working with saxophone, voice, tape, and semi-functional electronics, DeNizio conjures his singular and soulful blend of free jazz, noise, and outsider pop on the fly. The spaces where these recordings were made play as much of a role in the final product as DeNizio and his gear, with sounds echoing off of walls and telling inscrutable tales of all that’s happened in each room. A nimble and versatile player, you never know where DeNizio will take you next, but it’s always a thrill to behold. Pro-dubbed and imprinted chrome cassettes, featuring designs by Caroline Teagle. Edition of 100.

Thoughts on Air – ‘Glow On’ C53 $7(US)/$8(Canada)/$10(World)
Hamilton’s Scott Johnson is a wonderful soul whose brilliant sounds will always have a happy home on this label. It’s a pleasure to share almost an hour of new instrumental recordings from his flagship project, Thoughts on Air. Conceived as an homage to friends and fellow sound travelers, ‘Glow On’ is comprised of eight new works for guitar and synthesizer. Each extols the lo-fi warmth and intimacy you’ve come to know and love from the project, but surprising new avenues are explored this time around as well. From riffs fit to fill an arena to rhythmic organ grooves, Johnson is unafraid guide his bedroom star ship to many fascinating realms of the psychedelic universe. Pro-dubbed and imprinted chrome cassettes, featuring designs by Caroline Teagle. Edition of 100.

Eagle Altar – ‘Cut America’ C42 $7(US)/$8(Canada)/$10(World)
The alter ego of Tulsa’s Altar Eagle, Eagle Altar is Eden Hemming and Brad Rose’s outlet to set aside song structure and allow themselves to ride the electric current of improvisation. The first new release from the project in more than two years, ‘Cut America’ collects five pieces for synthesizer and drum machine. Blissful, blown out melodies cut through thumping, pulsing rhythms that aren’t quite meant for the dance floor, but are no less invigorating. Despite the loose nature of this project, each track is remarkably tight-knit, hitting all the right marks and building toward incredibly satisfying climaxes. Hemming and Rose are ready to take you on bullet train through the heart of our country, which may not always be pretty, but this is a glorious ride from start to finish. Pro-dubbed and imprinted chrome cassettes, featuring designs by Caroline Teagle. Edition of 100.

Imperial Topaz – ‘Imperial’ C24 $7(US)/$8(Canada)/$10(World)
You’re most likely familiar with Caroline Teagle’s visual talent by now, but you should know that she makes great music, too. Her new duo with Jake Pepper (NT, Fergus & Geronimo), Imperial Topaz combines experimental sensibilities with finely-tuned pop, which falls within a warm space between reggae and the heyday of 4AD. Field recordings and improvised passages drop instantly into pop gems, layering Pepper’s catchy, reverb-drenched guitar lines and Teagle’s ethereal vocals with hypnotic keyboard melodies and drum machine rhythms. Nicely timed for spring, each of the four tracks on ‘Imperial’ is excellent accompaniment for sunshine and ocean breeze dreams. Like a beach party for everyone the luxury liner left behind. Features Jef Brown on saxophone. Pro-dubbed and imprinted chrome cassettes, featuring designs by Caroline Teagle. Edition of 100.

All Four New Tapes: $24(US)/$26(Canada)/$30(World)

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Vales

Vales – ‘Iridial’ 4CD $14(US)/$16(CAN)/$18(WORLD)
Iridial is a 4 CD album of no edit improvisations using the Casper Electronics Drone Lab analog synthesizer and effects processing. Each disc contains one improvised piece, totaling 3 hours of material. The first 20 orders will also come with a white bonus 5th disc, which has an extra 70 minutes of material from the two previously released cassettes: “Sun Sick” (2:00AM Tapes 2010) and “Fever Monument” (Baked Tapes 2010). CDs come boxed in a white 6×9 MediaPac box with full 12×9 wrap around art. 48 Copies.

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Sad Coven

Zashiki Warashi – ‘The Ghosts of 131th Street’ CS 5€
2 x 20 minutes – Cassette (SC003)  Recorded at the now demolished Hinthouse. Winter 2003. Excerpts from 12 hour piece played between 8PM and 8AM. Music by C. Thornton. M. Heyner. S. Scott-Moncrieff. Snacks and moral support by J Geisert. 70 copies. artwork by Tessa De Ceuninck.

Kosmische Keuterboeren – ‘The Waiting Grounds’ CS 5€
2 x 20 minutes – Cassette (SC002) Excursions in Dystopia by Geronimvs and Voaals, backed by fellow travelers Hellvete and Younes on the B side. Recorded in attics around the Kuype of Ghent and ground-controlled in the base of Fôrst.  artwork by Tessa De Ceuninck. 70 copies.

Die Urpf Lanze – ‘He Will Drink The Milk Of A Thousand Mothers’ CS 5€
20 minutes – Cassette (SC001)  Weirdly agressive outsider acoustic deathmetal and/or ectoplasm blues by Belgian visual artist Wouter Vanhaelemeesch, captured live in ‘O Tannenbaum’, Berlin 2011.   artwork by Tessa De Ceuninck. 70 copies.

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Pan y Rosas Discos

(pyr050): Marina Poleukhina – ‘LP1’
marina poleukhina is a composer and improviser based in moscow. her interest lies in composition and improvisation on various objects and the instability of sound; silence and silence as the sound; real life and real life as sound. amongst others she is inspired by ligeti, nono, feldman, waits, yoshihide, and hosseini. her first album is a collection of improvisations and compositions. it sounds kind of like: pulse flute flutter and trills. warble pops and muttering percussion. dropped cymbals. conversation in cries and rolls. natural space. quiet exploration of scraped vibrations. surface areas calculated. squeaks and hoarse voicings. thunder and roar, guttural friction and noise. everything at once. voice in the woods. quiet patience. strum rewards.

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De Stijl

TASHI WADA – ‘Gradient’ 7″
Tashi Wada is a San Francisco-based composer and performer whose recent work focuses on sound perception as a basis for direct modes of listening. His work has been performed throughout the United States and Europe, and for several years now he has performed alongside his father, Yoshi Wada. Gradient is two sustained tones, a fourth apart, positioned along a wall, one at each end. The string player produces a very slow glissando from one pitch to the other while physically moving from one pitch to the other – in other words, the string player moves so that pitch distance coincides with spatial distance. The two possible directions form a sculpture-like presence shifting through all of the blue notes. Harry Partch often worked with this type of harmony, so Tashi and Marc Sabat used one of his adapted violas for the recording.

MICHAEL YONKERS – ‘Goodby Sunball’ LP
We found a very limited stash of these Original, Sealed LPs. They won’t be here long.  Michael Yonkers’ small cult following is mostly based on a record he cut in the late ’60s (though it wasn’t released until 2003), Microminiature Love, which is hard psychedelic rock so raw it verges on outsider music. Recorded several years later in his home studio and issued as a private pressing in 1974, Goodby Sunball is an entirely different proposition that might be surprisingly better or worse than listeners familiar with Microminiature Love expect, depending upon their tastes. There’s no hard rock at all here; instead, it’s haunting, even spooky acid folk, rather quiet and subdued in tone, though no less intense than what he’d been laying down in the late ’60s. Perhaps the slightly disturbing, distraught ambience of the LP could be put down in part to Yonkers having written the material on acoustic guitar while he was making a difficult recovery from serious spine surgery.

MICHAEL YONKERS – ‘Michael Lee Yonkers’ LP
What’s undeniable is that his music underwent a considerable change, Yonkers offering tremulous tunes with an off-kilter fragility and spiritual bent that makes some of these compositions sound almost like hymns, if of the spacy hippie folk variety you’d rarely hear in churches. The basic home fidelity, with vocals recorded in an actual bathroom for echoing ambience, adds to the strangeness, the tunes also sounding on occasion like holiday carols by and for celebrants not quite certain they’ll live to see another Christmas. Though not every fan of rare psychedelia will agree with this assessment, it sounds immeasurably better than Microminiature Love, as the songwriting is substantially superior; the melodies far more varied and affecting; and the vision far more likably personal. There’s no need to worry that it’s far more mainstream, either; while the playing is certainly competent and the fidelity OK if basic, it’s probably way too strange to have attracted the interest of any sizable major or indie label back in 1974, though not quite eccentric enough to qualify as outsider stuff. The closing, nearly eight-minute version of the title track (also presented in a very short rendition to open the record) is the only one that’s self-consciously weird and experimental, and not to good effect. Very difficult to find in its original pressing, the album was reissued as an LP in 2010 in an edition limited to 500 copies.  Again, a very small stash of these have been found.

MARK TUCKER – ‘Batstew’ LP
This is one of those lp’s that I’ve heard about for years. People’d say to me “Roland, it’s right up your alley” or “Roland it’s terrible. You’d love it!” but when I’d ask’em to describe it they’d go doe-eyed & get all pickle faced ‘n say “you just have to hear it for yourself.” Well finally, thanks to the De Stijl label, I have. And let me tell you something; I am perplexed about what I heard. Mostly, I guess, ’cause I ain’t hearin things what other scribes have insinuated I should. Department Store Santas? Desperate Bicycles? Not in my kung fu village! To me this lp teeters on a precipice between euphoria & anguish. It is certainly the work of an unstable mind & tortured soul. I mean, you can almost feel Tucker’s circuits shorting out as the record progresses. You don’t need to read the insert to hear that! There’s alot of sadness & confusion goin on too. It’s a record about a guy’s love for his car. It’s a record about guy’s love for his girl. There’s a song that’s evidently an ode to homosexual love (not that there’s anything wrong w/that). The guy records himself talkin to his car, slammin the doors, the girl whispers & sings along sometimes. Yeah, it has it’s moments; like the naif, art brut-ish noisescapes that Tucker occasionally creates or like the dingaling song at the end of side 2 that’s about a Cadillac (among other things) that eventually crumbles into a fuzzy guitar “freakout”. It is one odd fucker of an lp, there’s no denyin that. But how someone-& I won’t say who-winds up comparin it to the albums by Department Store Santas & Desperate Bicycles is beyond me. Oh sure, those’re nice lures your tossin out there, but they’re inappropriate. Those bands lp’s are challenging. Tucker’s is more challenged. Maybe what they meant to say was that one day Mark Tucker saw someone dressed as a department store Santa, went banana’s, then desperately rode a bicycle to the mental institution. I dunno. I wasn’t there. If I was to sell you this record I would say “imagine a record that sounds like someone who claims to be Daniel Johnston who rerecorded Smile” or “imagine if Larry Fischer had been commissioned to do the Pink Moon lp as literally a Volkswagen commercial”. Would you buy it? I know I would because that sounds like something that’s right up my alley & the descriptions are terrible enough that I’d probably love it. That said, Batstew is certainly a unique album. I dunno about a masterpiece, but shorter people are prone to exaggeration. And that’s a fact! I’m glad I got the hear it & props to De Stijl for reissuing it.

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