Crudites Tapes

Space Blue s/t 
First solo album from this former member of Electric Bunnies from Florida (a particularly versatile band with an album on Florida’s Dying and singles on Sacred Bones, Columbus Discount and Die Stasi). Based in Los Angeles, Space Blue (possible nod to a Suicide song) is mainly electronic but keeps on with the twisted and intriguing psychedelics of Electric Bunnies. Nine tracks and as many galaxies or tropical gardens to discover, with acid moods subtly invading your brain. It’s an home-made album with carefully constructed textures, voices and tracklisting. Space Blue takes the time to surprise you and the sensations this album induce are not those that vanishe as quickly as they appeared.

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Accidental Guest

Clean Girls – ‘Despite You’ LP
Guitarist Chris Tracy, bassist Stephanie Monohan, and drummer Stephen Reader play in a band called Clean Girls. They work 40+ hours a week in New York City, then come home to cramped apartments in the outer boroughs. Any show they play or studio time they book involves car rentals two ways, and due to the competition for space and resources by every other piece of shit jobber band in town, they can only find time to practice once a week. Despite You was recorded in 10 hours because that’s what they could afford. Then they had to get on the subway the next morning with hundreds of assholes and push their way back to the desk. What you’re hearing on this record is commuter rage, bile ducts welling up, and frustration breaking apart. Maybe it’s transferring onto you, the listener. People do what they gotta do to get it out. Some folks go to the gym, some do yoga, some go online and troll strangers. Some drink or drug themselves into a stupor. Chris, Stephanie and Stephen play in Clean Girls instead. They are their own safety net, trafficking in a brand of heavy, noisome music that was discarded long in the Lower East Side’s rapidly-gentrifying past. These three met at the radio station at the College of William and Mary. Years later, they traded Williamsburg, Virginia for Williamsburg, Brooklyn. The jokes stop there. Following two self-released 12” EPs (2012’s American Mothers and 2013’s Last House), their debut full-length Despite You loads up nothing but skull splitters, eight swings of lumber directed at your teeth, eight reasons to be on your knees, frantically picking through your blood on the floor. Too flailing and wild for hardcore, too focused on a frontal attack to qualify as black metal, the band finds themselves at the same crossroads as did so many outfits at the turn of the ‘90s, too gauche for the past and unable to cram themselves into any labeled box. One arm is stuck in swampy, Southern-inflected doom riffage and the other arm and both feet are flailing in a barrage of blast beats, kinetic feedback, rusty torrents of noise and pained screams trying to break free before that tornado touches down. Oftentimes, they are too late, riffs disintegrating in a greasy cloud of energy and rage as soon as they ring out. On more than one occasion, you can imagine them chewing through that arm and stumbling away into even greater danger. Red-eyed and delirious from the deprivation of the niceties of the Western world, Clean Girls are here to upset you. Despite You blots out the sun in a congested, congealed 31 minutes of unanswered protest. The stress never breaks. The new day must begin, ready or not, until we are all ground into the dirt.

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Temporary Residence

ENVY – ‘Atheist’s Cornea’ LP
Despite its relative brevity (at 43 minuntes it is Envy’s shortest album since their early 90s thrash days), Atheist’s Cornea is easily the band’s most progressive work. Beginning with a punishing pummel, holes of light are gradually punched open to reveal an uncanny series of dynamic, emotionally charged epics. Not only does Atheist’s Cornea showcase some wholly unexpected new turns for Envy, it also often reaches transcendent heights that could overwhelm a major blockbuster film — all while vocalist Tetsuya Fukagawa sings, screams, and speaks like his life depended on it. Atheist’s Cornea is the purest, most distilled example of Envy’s brand of brilliance. It is also their bravest album, taking new risks with a much welcomed, broader vocal palette and an instrumental experimentation that navigates blistering shifts from impenetrable noise to poetic, pin-drop introspection with astounding grace. Envy have finally mastered the art of being effective and efficient without sacrificing an ounce of either – a truly inspired evolution from a band whose mastery of both remains unparalleled.

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Sacred Phrases

Dino Spiluttini – ‘All I Want is to Be a Happy Man’ CS
Following a number of self-reflective and tonal meanderings issued via Umor Rex, J&C Tapes, and Home Normal, Dino Spiluttini still just wants to find a little happiness. With the release of his latest cassette, though, the Vienna-based dronesmith finally fills that hole in not only his own heart but in our collective heart as well. Diving headfirst and headlong into eight suites of transcendent, droning beauty, Spiluttini reveals himself as the unknown underdog of sweeping, orchestral ambiance and a master of modern classical. Tracks like “Resurrender” and “Reminiscing” revel in a symphonic blur of melancholic bliss, wallowing in a listless epiphany of sustained strings. “Ice / Age” and “Amidst The Veil” drift in cavernous piano chords for movements that are both gloriously stagnant and disarmingly poignant while “Body Issues” and “Emerge” retreat into darkness, shrouding themselves in a cloak of processed notes. “The Safest Place” restrains its virtues into open, negative space, leaving only “Father” to close the set in a slow motion glide of resolve and completion. Limited edition of 100 copies. Comes with free download code.

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Fragment Factory

ICE YACHT – ‘Pole of Cold’ C40
ICEYACHTpsiTucked away on Snatch 3 (the last of the Snatch Tapes compilations) released in 1981 is a track by Ice Yacht called ‘0 Degrees North’. An austere piece of drum loop and drone music, there was talk of a full tape having been recorded by the band (?) but no documentation of any further releases can be found. Rumour had it that Ice Yacht had embarked on an ill-fated trip to the North Pole attempting to retrace a journey made by the Norwegian explorer Fridtjof Nansen in 1888. This story was given credence when last year a research group uncovered a cassette tape in a vacuum-sealed case in the permafrost. The tape was marked simply Ice Yacht – Pole of Cold. After letting the tape thaw out it was then baked in an oven allowing the transfer of the recordings. Pole of Cold contains six tracks of analogue electronics seemingly mapping an arctic exploration to the coldest place on the planet though exactly when and where they were recorded is unknown. High bias C40 chrome cassette, numbered edition of 100 copies.

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Invisible Cities

ICR10: Philipp Bückle – ‘Drawings’ £4.5
Drawings is a slow drift through an eerie landscape filled with small, delicate nuances. Calming atmospheres and subtle textures meander through this strange and intricate place as distant memories fade in and out of consciousness. Familiar sounds which you can’t quite recall become removed as you’re absorbed by the dark, illusory atmosphere. Philipp Bückle is a musician and filmmaker from Dortmund, Germany. As Teamforest he released on international acclaimed labels like Morr Music, Aesthetics and Eglantine Records. Together with Nils Quak he recorded three albums under the Beth Kleist moniker. The Paintings trilogy consists of three separate albums: Sketches, Drawings and finally Paintings. This marks the first time his real name has been used. Hand dubbed C50 cassette. Full colour double sided artwork by Caro Mikalef. Limited to 50 copies.

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Folktale

Simon Joyner/L. Eugene Methe 7″
1Simon Joyner has been releasing music since the early nineties, with thirteen albums under his belt, as well as various singles and cassettes. He’s considered the forefather of the Omaha music scene, treading similar ground as the likes of Leonard Cohen, Will Oldham and Bob Dylan, he is easily one of todays most gifted songwriters. L. Eugene Methe is an equally talented songwriter, also from Omaha, who keeps somewhat of a low profile. He has played on many of Joyner’s albums but has only released one proper album. His songs are breathtakingly poetic and starkly beautiful. Released in an edition of 300 7-Inch records (200 on black vinyl and 100 on black and gray vinyl). Housed inside a pro-printed record jacket with artwork by Luigi Falagario. Includes an insert and digital download code.

Night Auditor – ‘Drugzdilla’ CS
2Night Auditor is the new musical outing of Hilal Omar Al Jamal, formerly known as Brother Mitya. Through his own warped interpretations of doo-wop, experimental funk, gospel and psychedelic pop music – Drugzdilla explores the life of a drug dealer in the American Southwest. Released in an edition of 50 pro-dubbed and imprinted cassette’s housed inside of full-color O-Cards with artwork by Otto Splotch. Includes a digital download card.

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Hel Audio

hel016_100HEL014_100hel015_100
HEL014 – Metatag – ‘Surrender’

Dark, dystopian, sequence-driven ambient synthesis.

HEL015 – Braeyden Jae – ‘Culture Complicit’
Melodic drone explorations on bass guitar

HEL016 – UTA Trax/Burnin’
Split release of techno/house. One side classic acid, one side minimal modern.

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NNA Tapes

NNA079: Drainolith – ‘Hysteria’ LP
NNA is very proud to present our second release from Canadian hero Alexander Moskos’ Drainolith project. Following up 2012’s “Fighting!” full length LP, “Hysteria” reaches new levels in the Draino sound world, resulting in his most fully realized record to date. Moskos has spent years marinating solo in the cold Northern underground, cutting his chops as lead axegrinder with Montreal-based noise punks AIDS Wolf, and most recently rolling with North American all-star clan Dan’l Boone. “Hysteria” is the result of nearly two years spent in various studios with producers and fellow ‘Boone brothers Nate Young (Wolf Eyes) and Neil Hagerty (Royal Trux), working diligently together to take a few steps beyond Trip Metal and extract the skeleton out of “rock”, inserting it into a newer, much weirder, humanoid skin. The epicenter of this sound rests humbly on the foundation of guitar and voice, two facets of sound that Moskos has carefully cultivated through years of experimentation and digestion from a wide array of musical influences. The relaxed, loose, and energetically electric technique of guitar playing is reinforced by Drainolith’s unrivaled tone, which has morphed throughout the years but now stands alone atop a mountain of shredders. It is ripe with Bluesy fuzziness and the humanity of Americana, while punctuated by the gritty stab of 80’s death metal, and further rounded out with a sprinkling of EVH-esque chorus zones and free jazz adventurousness. The result is a sound that pre-dates the internet in a fabulous way. Each note seems to leave behind a glistening impression like a spot of grease on a pizza box. A tone as unique as this is only bolstered by the vocal delivery, the literal voice of the Mind of Moskos. This beautifully cold, dripping baritone is unmistakable, it’s fried-yet-poetic articulation recalling a halfway point between a melting Dylan and a blazed Robert Ashley. Over-tired, over-wired, and over it. Moskos lets every word kerplunk into a mesmerizing puddle of observation, giving something as mundane as staring out the window or a Vancouver hotel foyer the poignancy of a published work. With guitar and voice at the core, the additional instrumentation on “Hysteria” is the bizarre glue that binds it all together, using the palette of electronics, keys, and haphazardly triggered beats and percussion in an intensely layered fashion to ensure maximum disorientation. The compositions are fully stacked, allowing little room for sparseness or tender moments. Tracks like “Qix” stagger forward in a deranged manner, it’s elastic percussion hearkening back to purple Nike foot-pounding of 2011’s “Where Are Ye Col. Leslie Groves?” cassette and the “one man band” era, for those of us fortunate enough to witness Drainolith’s live experience. Other tracks like “Joy Road” burn on patiently, disintegrating piece by piece into the ether of time amid a bed of Fender Rhodes eeriness… almost like a rare Canadian B-side to the Lizard King’s “An American Prayer”. Blues notions are confronted by Beastie-esque guitar stabs, smeared together with repetitive, angular riff rotations and flailing synth filigree, creating a densely-layered intensity that feels like the anxiety of standing in a rat’s nest of instrument cables and leaky pipe water in a moist basement. Pleasant melody is of little interest here, instead thriving on dissonance and reminding us of the OGs of post-punk, when rock met experimentation and abstraction head on, shoving a properly-greased square peg into a circular hole. While thematically cryptic, “Hysteria” drops rough clues to the heart of it’s content, filled with tales of Quebec biker wars, sinking into couches, Detroit street hassles, sneaker worship, sidewalk slush, sexual desire and seasonal affect disorder. At it’s heart, “Hysteria” is the product of a musician who has much love for the past, but also little interest in recreating it. It is a song cycle that reflects the complexities of our day to day world through the psyche of the modern jammer, fueled by the quintessentially Moskosian diet of caffeine and nicotine. Someone who isn’t content sitting stagnant in a crowd of tradition, and who acknowledges that radical ideas are necessary to propel things into the future.

NNA080: Kid Millions – ‘The Sanguine Cadaver’ C54
“The Sanguine Cadaver” is a new expedition through the percussion-centric world of drummer John Colpitts, better known as Kid Millions. Known for his driving force as the drummer of experimental rock outfit Oneida, as well as his personal conceptual percussion project Man Forever, Kid Millions is also a key player in a long list of amazing collaborations with artists such as William Basinski, Laurie Anderson, the Boredoms, Akron Family, Jim Sauter (of Borbetomagus), and many more. Throughout both sides of “The Sanguine Cadaver,” Colpitts expresses his complete devotion to the act of percussion, embodying and luxuriating in the physical and spiritual connection between human and drum kit. The first piece, “Begging Attire,” creates a cavernous sound world with the assistance of additional musicians on guitar, keyboard, and added percussion. A dense, dynamic wall of droning resonance is constructed, powerfully covering all corners of the frequency spectrum. Each musician’s respective sound flows in and out of focus, creating subtle shifts that alter the mood of the piece. Every instrument plays a specific role, never overpowering one another but instead working in a ritual unison, lending to the billowing, impenetrable qualities of the resulting sonic environment. Although rooted in static minimalism, “Begging Attire” is a far cry from peaceful ambiance. Instead, it sprawls forth in a menacing, ominous storm of deep tones and percussive metallic textures, eventually locking into a howling, almost Industrial ceremony of buzzing, churning squalls and slow, plodding rhythms. On the second piece, “For Jerry,” we find Kid Millions in a personal, exploratory space. This is the sound of one man and his drums, a complete physical immersion in rhythm through a catharsis of primal energy. Colpitts blazes forward relentlessly, never resting on one pattern or tempo but instead seemingly playing multiple ones simultaneously. “For Jerry” is, however, more than just an impressive display of chops. It is a document of a human reaching elevated levels of consciousness through intense, sustained interaction with his instrument. Wordless vocal chanting and tonal incantations make their way through the maelstrom, suggesting altered states of spiritual transcendence. The extended technique of the piece is not only a feat of strength and a challenge to the performer, but the listener as well. When Kid Millions plays, it’s clear that he puts his entire being into it, a quality that translates magnificently throughout all moments of this cassette.

NNA081: Wei Zhongle – ‘Nu Trance’ C32
Nu Trance by Wei Zhongle is an exciting moment in music. It explodes oppositions of globalism and hermeticism, male and female, precision and feeling. Sounding like a broadcast from the future, This Heat and 80′s Downtown New York lay somewhere in its world mutant genetic imprint.
The members of Wei Zhongle are nomads. The intuitive vocals by Rob Jacobs are sometimes in English but mostly in a language of his own, inventive but perhaps also channeling ancient vocal traditions, while laying down hypnotizing guitar. Sam Klickner’s forceful but intentional drums are a free ticket to Bonkersville. The effects-enhanced clarinet by John McCowen floats over and weaves through it all, pulling everything out in four dimensions. Minds are blown when these three elements merge.

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Hello LA

Hell#012: V8Vampire Eater’
#hell012 - vampire-eaterFree Album from emcee V8, with appearances by Radioinactive, Vyle, Ira Atari, Skech 185 and productions by Brenmar, Morbidly-O-Beats , K-The-I??? and more… “Vampire Eater is a collection of stories that began in the Summer of 2000. Unmixed and unmastered cold and dark dirt. Recorded either in a shower or a moist basement, and always rightfully affected by intoxicants and mood choices; perhaps when I thought depression wasn’t this horrid and lethal disease. Since some of these paintings range as recent as last Fall, I can begin to feel all of the scars on my tongue being freshly ripped open into new wounds. I do know that however indifferent two people may be, I can still shit into both of my hands. I am made to be a slave to my own lack of shame. I wanna cry into your mouth. I wrote all of these noises for you. ‘You’ being not ‘me’ we invite each other into another room. We can lay on velvet garbage and listen to one another move. I can introduce you to all of the werewolves I know that eat with silver spoons. This is the 6th and first product-audio-installation of the Vampire Boombox Series. Love Yourself. Worship Yourself. Slave for yourself.”

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