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Scissortail
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Ekhein
LR2- M. Geddes Gengras – ‘Choices’ CDr $7(US)/$8(CAN)/$10(EU)
Two pieces of frantic modular synthesis by Los Angeles’ M. Geddes Gengras. On his second release for Ekhein, Gengras takes the possibilities of chaos and unpredictability within his growing modular set up to the next logical space. Avoiding the cliches of present day synthesizer based music and focusing on more abstract textures and approaches in pacing and the listeners endurance for sounds presented. East coast tour starting 9/21.
LR3- Earn – ‘Performance II’ CDr $7(US)/$8(CAN)/$10(EU)
The second “Performance” release documents a set at the BCA center in Burlington, Vermont during the US tour with Mirror To Mirror in November of 2011. Performing using only live cassette playback and manipulation of guitar recordings as the sound source. This release captures a more subtle, ambient side in a number of shorter pieces with a finale of heavily layered waves of loops using the 4 track recorder as an instrument, with detail paid towards the mixing of sound and the speed of the cassette as a tool for expanding melodies. Recorded by Oliver Mitchell, mastered by M. Geddes Gengras, and photos by Greg Davis.
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Sound of Cobra
Dead Skeletons – ‘Orð’ EP
This is the first release since 2011’s, Dead Magick which sold out in one day. “Orð” is Dead Skeletons first release since 2011’s Dead Magick, a record which nearly sold out in one day. “Orð”, which is an ep of 4 songs/meditations, gives a glimpse into the Dead Skeletons current state of mind. Just as the “Dead Mantra”, the songs “odauðleg orð” and “odauðleg orð (museum version)” were made for an art installation by Jón Sæmundur. The second track “Dead is God” is the closest the band has come to pop structure yet while communicating the “all is one, one is all” philosophy. “Cemalym” is a dark traditional Turkish folk song (most notably recorded by Erkin Koray), though the lyrics have been translated to Icelandic. “Orð” comes out in a first limited edition of 600 copies. It’s a 12″ onesided with the B side silkscreened.
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Chris Lawhorn
Chris Lawhorn – ‘Fugazi Edits’
Chris Lawhorn will release his fifth album Fugazi Edits on October 30th on Case/Martingale Records. Fugazi Edits features 22 tracks, which were pieced together using excerpts from every song in the band Fugazi’s discography. The album’s been in the works for almost two years. It’s entirely instrumental and combines over 100 Fugazi samples with a variety of effects. Ian Mackaye (from the band and their label Dischord) has authorized the album’s release. And, the profit from will be donated to a pair of charities—one that works with senior citizens in Washington, D.C. and another that provides aid globally to folks impacted by disaster and civil unrest. Lawhorn started the Case/Martingale label in 1996, while playing drums for the (admittedly Fugazi-influenced) band Cataract Falls. A decade of disastrous tours and middling solo albums followed. Along the way, he became the staff DJ at a spring break company—playing for drunk, college students on South Padre Island each March—and recorded the rap album Pole Position. This gradual switch from rocking to beat-making isn’t exceptionally unique. But, it led to an 18 month stint as the resident DJ for Marie Claire magazine. When that concluded, Lawhorn began work on Fugazi Edits—in an attempt to make something that employed both the musical influences of his youth and his love of cutting up tracks and reassembling them.
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Bathetic
ANGEL OLSEN – ‘Half Way Home’ LP
After her highly-acclaimed debut Strange Cacti landed in the hands of listeners, it became very obvious the special presence Angel Olsen offered to listeners. She had a fresh edge to her sound, a warm and wonderful range, and a level of skill and charm out of this world. And now here we are, a mere 2 years since her initial Bathetic release — the original cassette version of Strange Cacti. The release of Half Way Home is something everyone has been excited for. We’ve always wanted to see and hear what Angel brings out through her music. Half Way Home is a continuation of her elegance brought forth on Strange Cacti, a collection of both new and old music, honed and matured, thoughts revisisted. We’re hearing this same beautiful girl with that same beautiful voice, this time brought up to a new level, in no doubt a growth and reach brought on by several roadtrips with the one and only Bonnie “Prince” Billy and crew. The work of Angel Olsen is entirely her own: a raw, glowing sound that stands out now just as much as it did in 2010. It’s an emotional stew with Angel’s robust voice up front, bold and engaging, coming out of the background, aching to be heard. With the help of Emmett Kelly (The Cairo Gang) behind the board and playing throughout the songs, Half Way Home is a natural progression showcasing the wondrous sounds of a songwriter with such a voice that is rarely found. In Angel’s words herself: “I couldn’t say it’s about love lost or found or whatever. It’s about many things, things that have happened to me, feelings I’ve had. Situations that have occurred to some I know. I think no matter how stable I am I will always be searching, I guess that’s what this album is about. The endless searching, the fruitless waiting, the idea of a home that is inside yourself.” Cover art by Plastic Crimewave. Vinyl comes shrink-wrapped with lyrics and liner notes printed on an inner sleeve.
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PAN
ELI KESZLER – ‘Catching Net’ (PAN 32) 2CD
Catching Net is a collection of selected installations and compositions Eli Keszler created during the last two year. The double-CD set includes both stand-alone recordings of the installations and the integrated ensemble scores performed in conjunction with those installations. The first disc features two ensemble versions of Cold Pin, previously released in a 2011 LP of the same title on PAN, plus a 26-minute, previously unreleased live ensemble recording (mixed sextet and piano quintet; these are captured in contrasting acoustical spaces). The personnel for all three tracks is Eli Keszler drums, percussion, crotales, guitar; Ashley Paul, alto saxophone, bass harp; Geoff Mullen, prepared guitar; Greg Kelley, trumpet; Reuben Son, bassoon; and Benny Nelson, cello. The second disc begins with the title track, Catching Net, a 17-minute score for string quartet and piano with the Cold Pin installation. It is performed by pianist Sakiko Mori and the Providence String Quartet: Carole Bestvater, violin; Rachel Panitch, violin; Chloë Kline, viola; Laura Cetilia, cello. The score is fully notated, timed with stopwatch markings rather than tempo or meter. Following are two recordings of Keszler’s large-scale installations functioning on their own. Collecting Basin features piano strings/wires up to 250 feet long splayed from a two-story water tower in Shreveport / Louisiana, across two large, empty water purification basins, which acted as an amplifier for the sounds produced by the installation. A ‘solo’ version of Cold Pin (without live performers) concludes the album. Tracks 1 and 3 on the first disc and track 2 on the second disc were recorded at the historic Cyclorama, a massive dome at the Boston Center for the Arts. Cold Pin was installed directly on a large curved wall in the dome, using micro-controlled motors and beaters to strike extended strings ranging in length from three to 25 feet. Born in Brookline, Massachusetts, visionary composer/percussionist/multimedia artist Eli Keszler began playing drums at eight, and composing at twelve. Before finding an interest in experimental music and improvisation, he played in rock and hardcore bands; his work retains an intense physicality and churning, often ferocious energy. He is a graduate of the New England Conservatory, where he studied composition with Anthony Coleman and Ran Blake. A self-taught visual artist, his aesthetic outlook owes as much to Richard Serra and Robert Smithson as it does to musical icons like Xenakis, Nancarrow, and Ornette Coleman. He has collaborated with Phill Niblock, Roscoe Mitchell, Joe McPhee, Loren Connors, Jandek, and many others, and has recorded more than a dozen CDs and LPs for ESP-DISK, REL, and PAN. Keszler’s installations employ piano wires of varying lengths; these are struck, scraped, and vibrated by microprocessor-controlled motorized arms, giving rise to harmonically complex tones that are percussive yet resonant. These installations are heard on their own and with accompanying ensemble scores. Said Keszler in a NPR All Songs Considered interview, “I like to work with raw material, like simple sounds, primitive or very old sounds; sounds that won’t get dated in any way. I was thinking of ways I could use strings or acoustic material without using pedals or pre-recordings, so the live aspects appealed to me.” In addition, the patterns formed by the overlapping piano wires allow Keszler to create visual components that relate directly to the music, without having to use projections or other electronic equipment. The 2xCD is mastered by Rashad Becker at Clunk, in a limited edition of 1000 copies. It is packaged in a pro-press digisleeve jacket which itself is housed in a silk screened pvc sleeve with extensive images from the installations, program notes, sketches of the installations, scores, electronic schematics from the projects, and accompanying drawings and artwork by Eli Keszler and Bill Kouligas.
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I Had An Accident
Babelfishh – ‘Howl Bender’ C32 $6
Howl Bender is the latest banging tape from Babelfishh’s warped and twisted thriller mind. The album’s movement masterfully follows a notebook style collage of beats and raging riffs of metal defiance with thunderous screams, field recordings, and flowing lyrical stylings. The most intriguing blend of hip hop and metal makes for an overtly stunning album. Howl Bender spits fire from the very beginning and does not let loose until the final note is slammed across the surface. Limited to 96 on rust orange cassettes and chrome tape.
Son Of A Bricklayer/Andrew Felix – ‘Aquatic/Forsaken Worship’ C21 $7
Son Of A Bricklayer and Andrew Felix contend one another in a rare complimentary split tape. Aquatic – the beat driven track of Son Of A Bricklayer lays intricate drum patterns with auditorial visualizations that produce the experience of being smashes with heavy waves like a boater lost at sea. Searching in a lost sea of unforgiveness – Son Of A Bricklayer produces sentimental remorse and tranquil inhibitions. Forsaken Worship the spiritual track of Andrew Felix resonates a trance like state of mind as the layered effects delicately carry the beats like waves across the calm ocean before the storm. The ebb and flow of sensual movement and spiritual calmness produce a meditative breathing exercise that eases the listening experience into a slumber. Limited to 100 on blue/yellow cassettes and chrome tape.
Blvck Ceiling – ‘B/\STI/\N’ C25 $6
Turn around, look at what you see. In her face, the mirror of your dreams. B/\STI/\N is Blvck Ceiling’s conceptual neverending story. Synth driven beats and freak effects B/\STI/\N produces absorbed psych thriller screams and shattered dreams of internal thunder. A tender dance of horrific witch wave and Neverending Story reverence. Limited to 99 on pink cassettes and chrome tape.
TEXTBEAK – N – TNDROND – ‘The Spirit Of Opposition’ C48 $6
Featuring the self-proclaimed cult THE NEW DEAL REPRESENTATIVES OV NORTHERN DISCO (TNDROND), TEXTBEAK produces mayhem drag disco, flowing beats and chaotic grind with the collaborative assistance of DEFA and VOCTAVE. The evil noise pumps vile sounds deep within the ear canal. A deliberate attempt to produce chilling industrial soundscapes with throbbing noise beats like showing up to a costume party for the dead. The Spirit Of Opposition continues the dark dreaded disco sounds of TEXTBEAK. Featured remixes by NATTYMARI and Adam Boose (of Brandtson/Swarm of Bats/Furnace Street). Limited to 50 on orange cassettes and chrome tape.
Julia LaDense – ‘Pussy Willow’ c44 $5
Developing a different style of found sound and myspace DJ style, Pussy Willow was Julia LaDense’s first album release. Pussy Willow is a display of anti-art and 90’s pop culture. With a sabatoge of existing elements of the grunge and punk scene and deconstructed found sounds, the album intertwines raw noise and remixes – a style Julia has continued to develop over the past 4 years. Deciding to follow her own revelations, Julia has created a cult following. Repress limited to 8 copies on purple tint tapes.
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Deathbomb Arc
ALPHABETS – ‘Sweatbee: Dance Mix’ C34
To those in the know, Denver’s Alphabets have been true stars for a
long time now. Dedicated to minimalism, these beats have a poetry to
them that comes from never quite lodging themselves in atypical 4 to
the floor techno. An obsession with marimba-like timbres and rhythms
that swing just as much as they drive, Alphabets is able to do what
true minimalism should: Open up grand spaces, worthy of lengthy
exploration. And don’t let the “dancemix” title fool you. This is all
100% amazing original music.
YOLA FATOUSH – ‘Thugs Intro, Dreamland Wakes’ C30
London’s Yola Fatoush bring lush soul to their raw, DIY beats through
their elegant and powerful voices. Catchy dreamlike harmonies truly
take their glitchy electronics and make them soar. The results
certainly are catchy pop music, but their methods of getting there are
truly unique. Masterful song crafting allows them to inject some very
“out” ideas into the mix while never feeling esoteric. Just beautiful
in a truly alien way. Their take on contemporary urban styles is akin
to Pet Shop Boys work in the 80s/90s.
CLIPPING – ‘Untitled’ C10
Debut physical release from LA’s Clipping, featuring Jonathan Snipes
of Captain Ahab and William Hutson of Rale on electronics, with rapper
Daveed Diggs fronting the band. Their deep and experienced
understanding of both hip hop and harsh noise lets them explore new
territories of sound unlike anything you’ve ever heard. We guarentee
it. All cassettes are pro-dubbed with silkscreened art on the shells.
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Prairie Fire Tapes
PF- 047 Jane Barbe – ‘Alert’ C30 $6
Jane Barbe, the ambient/drone project of Leo Brookes, first came to our attention with the submission of last year’s Jane Barbe/Akrotiri Poacher split; since then, both artists have been hard at work, developing their styles into truly unique and breath-taking vistas of sound. The latest Jane Barbe recording, “Alert,” brings us nearly 30 minutes of ethereal ambient drone that seems to unfold itself at a distance, ever so slowly, like unfurling of clouds on a cold winter’s day. Inspired by the cold beauty of Alaska, the sounds on “Alert” will seduce your ears in the most hypnotic manner possible, causing your eyelids to droop but never allowing sleep to take you over. Side A’s “Stony River/Crooked Creek” shivers with a gradual progression of loops, sounding at once both synthetic and like field recordings from the inside of some distant, snow-packed cave; Side B’s “White Pass/Glacier View” begins on a quieter note, coaxing you to come in closer, its subdued tonal palette meandering as graceful as the passage of the mass of ice referenced in the track name. The sheer level of tasteful restraint on display here is absolutely stunning, and a rarity at that. Far and away from the lo-fi, hissing creep-out of his contribution to our discography last year, “Alert” sees Brookes exhibiting slow-motion delicacy that is at once chilling and quietly moving. Very highly recommended. w/ Download.
PF-049 Akrotiri Poacher – ‘Seminary’ C30 $6
Hot on the heels of his collaboration with Jane Barbe on last year’s split (PF025), Kiran Leonard (Akrotiri Poacher) strikes back with a mammoth slab of mind-warping drone. “Seminary” delivers 30 minutes of absolutely wonderful tonal shifts and exquisitely stacked sounds, inspired by stories of abandoned tube stations. You can almost feel the dark, reverberating aura of those tunnels resonating between your ears as the drones lay themselves bare before you. Opening track “Aldwych” begins with lo-fi droning guitars that are at once claustrophobic and intensely full of depth; a torrent of harmonics saturate the track almost to the breaking point, before breaking half-way through and dissolving splendidly into a cloud of levitating synth pads and halos of meandering, muted chords. We’ve gone from a subterranean vibe and dived deep into the murky water below, and it’s an absolutely thrilling trip. The track closes with an almost sci-fi sounding coda, machines beeping softly while modulating high-pitched drones cascade into one another in a drunken haze. On the flip side, we have “Inbound,” maybe one of the most spectacular dark ambient pieces to grace our ears this year. Tumultuous bass rumbles collide with shimmering piano stabs, like the aftershock of an earthquake resonating the ivories in slow motion. Almost betraying the sub-surface moans of “Aldwych,” here we are transported to incredible night-time canyons, and as the first movement fades away, the moon crests the horizon amidst the sound of distant bird calls. A voice in the distance is babbling in schizophrenic Russian as echo-chamber tones rise to the surface. And then the babbling stops, falling away to ethereal, Eastern-tinged chants that pair with soft synth textures to absolutely mesmerizing effect. You could almost imagine someone having a religious experience to sounds like this, that is until the final shift of the track comes in and buries everything that came before it beneath vibrating low-end chords, calling the tape’s subterranean inception back for one more fateful ride down the tracks. Essential listening. w/ Download.
PF-049 Oak – ‘Silent Spring’ C60 $7
All the way from Stockholm, Oak grace Prairie Fire with one of the hottest, most visceral sludge recordings we’ve heard in a long time. In the first track alone, the listener is assaulted by gut-crushing bottom-end chords, built up by spacious, reverberating crescendos, entranced by hypnotic drum work, and enveloped by echoing, consuming vocals. Blissfully exhausting fare for the faint of heart, and there’s still five more tracks to go. What becomes most evident upon repeated listens is the sheer amount of control and composition that Oak mange to wrestle out of their instruments. The brutal intelligence contained within “Silent Spring” easily matches with the best of the sludge/psychedelic metal genre — and that’s saying something. Take “Realms of the Soil” as a prime example: the chords come slow, hard and slightly stuttered, only adding to the neck-snapping propulsion driven by the accompanying caveman drums. A third of the way through its 11-minute march, the drums break off to leave only lone menacing guitar pawing away in the distance; the drums slither their way across the foreground before resuming a gentle pounding, as the band builds the looping crescendo up to the perfect pitch; and finally, the hammer-drop — a renewed sense of rhythmic sloth, each player exercising the greatest of care while driving the hook deep into yr skull. And yet, there’s more than perfectly-executed sludge on display here. “No Birds Sing” opens with guitars humming across a desert plateau — far from brutal, but no less likely to pull you in with their addictive melodies. “Indiscriminately From the Skies” stretches a lonely, overdriven guitar across a void of subtle tone and reverb; chest-thumping drums join the fray, but only add to the sense of isolation as they echo across the space; squealing, high-end strings scream at the sky, and the track closes with a deep sense of desperation looming overhead. “Nature Fights Back” closes the album out in spectacular style, a war march with all the splendour of a cataclysmic landslide, boulders of tone and vocals piling overtop each other in a display of sheer, natural power. The entirety of “Silent Spring” has been recorded, mixed and mastered with jaw-dropping clarity while retaining a raw, abrasive feel; the vocals never over-power the instruments, but nothing gets buried in the background, either — each part is clearly discernible, a further testament to the precision with which this recording has been executed. We’re thrilled to welcome Oak to our catalogue, and can’t wait for this tape to sell out so we can convince them to make another with us. Trust us — you’ll be jamming this on repeat until the apocalypse descends on your doorstep. w/Download.
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((Cave)) Recordings
Calypso Borealis C30
After amazing releases on labels such as Housecraft, Existential Cloth, and Hooker Vision, Calypso Borealis returns with these sublime explorations of pure sound and emotion. There is a wide range of instrumentation on display here, yet each piece coheres into the lyrical drift unique to this project. Specters of melody are on the periphery, yet very much present, evoked at times by peals of feedback, while at others by gentle collisions of meandering tones. C-30, edition of 100. Pro-dubbed on Type II Cobalt. Art by Rob.
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