Number 627

ALAN LICHT & AKI ONDA – EVERYDAYS (CD by Family Vineyard) *
AIDAN BAKER/LEAH BUCKAREFF/NADJA – TRINITY (CD by Die Stadt)
{{{SUNSET}}} – BRIGHT BLUE DREAM (CD by Autobus Records) *
DIE SCHRAUBER – LIVE IN MEXICO CITY (CD by Acheulian Handaxe) *
GOLDEN SERENADES / SEWER ELECTION & TRERIKSRÖSET (CD by Roggbif Records)
MACHINEFABRIEK & JAN KLEEFSTRA – PIIPTSJILLING (CD by Onomatopee) *
SIMON WICKHAM-SMITH – LOVE & LAMENTATION (CD by Pogus Productions) *
ARTURAS BUMSTEINAS – BLUR (CD by Galerie Antjewachs) *
CIRCLE X – PREHISTORY (CD by Blue Chopsticks) *
HE CAN JOG – MIDDLEMARCH (CD by Audiobulb) *
SKIF++ – SK++[01, 02, 03, 04, 00] (CD by Fridgesound) *
ALEPH-1 – X1 (CD by Ideal Recordings)
V. SJÖBERG NEW JAZZ ENSEMBLE – DO NOTHING ‘TIL YOU HEAR FROM ME (CD by Ideal Recordings) *
MATTIAS PETERSSON – FLOODLIGHT (CD by Ideal Recordings)
O.S.T. – WAETKA (CD by Ideal Recordings)
PALE MAN MADE – OH, MY TREASURED THINGS (CD by Pinch)
FEU FOLLET – PARADIS PAYSAN (CDR by Gruenrekorder) *
VINEX – NEDERWIJK (CDR, private)
HOMETOWN FEILDING – SIMULATIONS (CDR by Free Software Series) *
MIGUEL PRADO – DIOS ABORRECE UNA SINGULARIDAD DESNUDA (CDR by Free Software Series)
(VXPXC) – SELF-STORAGE (CDR by Gold Sounds)
TEXTURED BIRD TRANSMISSION – PANDA READS ON STAGGERED CRYSTAL SEAS (CDR by Gold Sounds) *
CRITICAL MESS #1 (CDR by Gold Sounds)
BIRTH CERTIFICATE (CDR by I, Absentee)
KATE CARR – FIRST DAY BACK (CDR by Retinascan) *
EVERY KID ON SPEED – TRAKTOR (2×3″CDR by Retinascan)
BEEQUEEN – LONG STONES AND CIRCLES (3″ CDR by Moll)

ALAN LICHT & AKI ONDA – EVERYDAYS (CD by Family Vineyard)
At first sight I thought this was an odd pairing. Alan Licht’s guitar work is not always the most subtle around, but then Onda’s cassettes and electronics isn’t the loudest around. But then on the other hand both love tape techniques to alter sound and both love to improvise, so that’s perhaps already common ground enough to work together. Onda’s cassettes with field recordings acting as a diary offers a wealth of material to use and Licht’s looped guitar plays both the minimalist patterns and the most thunderous storms, such as in ‘Ship Shape’. This album was recorded in the studio, which is something that can be heard: in the process of mixing the album (which they, curious enough, didn’t do themselves) a fine balance is made between all the sounds. The horns in ‘Tiptoe’ and the guitar pattern and bird twitter make a fine dense textured piece until the guitar remains solo. It’s the best out of five, along with the opening ‘Tick Tock’, as one of the best, with stuttering sounds over a bed of drones. The other pieces are nice as well, with two ‘loud’ pieces and three more subdued pieces, the latter of course pieces that did more to me than the louder ones. A good solid work this work, rich of ideas, perfect in execution. (FdW)
Address: http://www.familyvineyard.com

AIDAN BAKER/LEAH BUCKAREFF/NADJA – TRINITY (CD by Die Stadt)
Die Stadt always takes great care of their artists. Once you belong to the label, the label will carry all your releases, and when in Bremen, Stadt of Die Stadt, the artists will play and there is a CD for the occasion. This trinity of a matter of one plus one is three. Nadja is the duo of Leah Buckareff and Aidan Baker, so they can do three things on the same night. On April 20th (a day with historic significance… Bebe Barron died that day this year for instance) they visited Bremen and on ‘Trinity’ there are two solo pieces and one duo piece. It’s interesting to see how things add up, or perhaps don’t. Nadja is in full form here, with a loud rocking piece: the drum machine hammers time away, while guitar and bass play distorted, meanwhile looping their sound. A strong ‘hole’ in the sound adds an odd angle to the piece. A far cry away from Baker’s solo piece, made of carefully strummed guitars which are looped around. Drones are faded in over the course of ten minutes and things remain subtle. In the middle, literally, is Buckareff solo for bass. Also starting out quiet things are unmistakably but the distortion pedal is already lurking underneath and adds a more noisy tone to the music. If these names don’t mean anything to you, but see their music all around, then this is absolutely a fine place to start. Trademark pieces everywhere. (FdW)
Address: http://www.diestadtmusik.de

{{{SUNSET}}} – BRIGHT BLUE DREAM (CD by Autobus Records)
Some singer/song writer stuff this week, and perhaps its time to make clear, once again, that Vital Weekly may have a wide taste in music, there are limits. If things are too ‘normal’ then it will be hard to make proper judgments, since we are not experts in the field of normal music. {{{Sunset}}} is the project of Bill Baird, who was once a member of Sound Team and this is first real CD, following three CDR releases. He writes his tunes on a piano or keyboards and sings along. A band backs him up on bass, drums and guitars, but they are there to accompany him. Much what I write elsewhere (which I wrote before these lines) applies here, but I must say that Baird’s music is something I like better. His voice is better, his lyrics are in english (obviously) and the music is recorded much better – not a home demo quality, but good quality music that is vaguely (post-) rock, pop and a bit of experimentalism. Nice enough to be entertaining for how long it lasts, but beyond that not something I’d play very often. (FdW)
Address: http://www.autobusrecs.com

DIE SCHRAUBER – LIVE IN MEXICO CITY (CD by Acheulian Handaxe)
On all accounts something I never heard of before. Die Schrauber is a trio of Hans Tammen (from New York), Joker Nies (from Cologne) and Mario de Vega (Mexico). They all play electronics, be it in combination with the guitar (like Tammen), circuit bending (Nies) or through self built audio software (de Vega). Tammen released a recording they made in Mexico on his own, new label Acheulian Handaxe. Each of the players has a solo piece, and there is a lengthy trio piece at the beginning. Thirty minutes of improvised electronic music. Music which is not always easy to follow, and which may have been edited in stead of the full set, as it would have made a stronger piece. The solo pieces are nice, especially the more quiet Joker Nies, with more empty spaces in between the sounds and Tammen’s guitar piece, which also deals with some quieter sounds. A lengthy release of difficult music. Maybe the blaring sun melted my mind while hearing and trying to concentrate on this. (FdW)
Address: http://www.tammen.org/cds.html

GOLDEN SERENADES / SEWER ELECTION & TRERIKSRÖSET (CD by Roggbif Records)
This is classical noise- can I use the term? – then I will define it – is essentially a (binary) dualism (of two sounds – though infinite via rhizomic mitosisc bifurcation) which is fundamental to any ontology, at its most univocal a deleuzian difference, of two, yoni, ass, hole, holy of holy’s, the creative vacuum of expansion(big bang), procreation, oedipal desire of capitalism – and its alternative – the lingam, phallocentric, narcissistic masturbatory, ouroboros, cyclicality, unity, infinity of the möbius (feedback!), which unlike the multifaceted tonality of *music* is in classical noise TWO – the deep bass of processed expansive white noise – (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wvWHnK2FiCk) and the (prick! of) high pitched feedback loop. This is why noise unlike music is non-colonial non territorializing and non metaphorical – it is the actuality of immanence. It does not explain the cosmos of being but it is its actuality and is present here in this CD of two remarkable pieces of noise. It therefore lies beyond the horizon of criticism – actually enfolds criticism, I was depressed on Tuesday, today is Wednesday and I’ve listened to this masterwork, the world is changed, there is a new reality- this reality. A brilliant, brilliant work – a thousand suns. Now I suppose to help anyone not yet convinced I should mention that there are two live tracks – long structures of feedback and noise *and nothing else* (and so everything else) – no compromise from John Hegre (Jazzkammer/Jazkamer) Jørgen Træen (are Golden Serenades), Dan Johansson (is Sewer Election) and Tommy Carlsson (is Treriksröset) “kalo’smi.” (jliat)
Address: http://www.roggbif.com

MACHINEFABRIEK & JAN KLEEFSTRA – PIIPTSJILLING (CD by Onomatopee)
One part of the Netherlands is Friesland and there they don’t have their own dialect, but their own language. A language that I can’t understand. Jan Kleefstra writes his poetry in this language, and here he teams up with the omnipresent Rutger Zuydervelt, also known as Machinefabriek. Translation in dutch and english are provided, so we know that the poetry of Kleefstra is not a very bright one – loneliness, emptiness, autumn and death are some of his topics. Zuydervelt seemingly plays only guitar. A few sparse notes, repeated over and over and waving around in a bath of reverb and echo, this is quite desolate music. Kleefstra’s sombre recitation, which are short and Zuydervelt’s tinkling guitar and whatever else is running (violin?) that continues until it has changed a bit (or more) and then Kleefstra recites another poem. Again there is a slight connection to be made to the music of Oren Ambarchi, but Zuydervelt plays more notes, I guess. Not exactly the sort of music for sun burning spring day, but more for grey clouds and autumn rain. One set apart for short days to come. Very delicate shades of grey. (FdW)
Address: http://www.onomatopee.net

SIMON WICKHAM-SMITH – LOVE & LAMENTATION (CD by Pogus Productions)
It must have been quite some years since I last heard music by Simon Wickham-Smith, but there was a time when I played it a lot, especially the various albums he recorded with Richard Youngs. But I guess that’s how things go. Interest shifts I assume. To be honest, again, I have no idea when I left off, or why. But its good, as well as strange perhaps to see him back on Pogus Productions. On the cover I read that ‘not satisfied with making music, he has also been a Buddhist monk in the Tibetan tradition, and is also a translator and scholar of Mongolian and Tibetan literature. Maybe that’s why there hasn’t been much of his music in recent years. Its not easy to describe the music of Wickham-Smith, both from how it was made and how it sounds. Perhaps he uses a computer to alter his sounds, but I tend to believe that’s only in the final stage of the process. I envisage his music as generated with lo-fi means: worn out cassettes, cheap samplers, reel-to-reel tape loops. There are three pieces on this album, all of which seem to be dealing with voices, altered and otherwise. Wickham-Smith takes these, makes loops out of them and crafts a minimalist changing pattern with them. Through the various techniques, which I hope to be lo-fi as outlined before, the sounds are a bit hissy, static, crumbled, warped, folded and of a lower resolution. Chanting like in ‘Sandokai’ or the three parts of the title piece, or more poetry spoken word in ‘The Kin-Kindness Of Beforehand’, this is all excellent stuff, bringing back the good memories of his older work (which, if Vital Weekly wouldn’t consume so much of my ear-time, I would grab out and play again). Wickham-Smith’s music is like an anthropologic quest for voices connected of rituals, all over the world, from Tibet to Egypt, but he manages to give things a twist of his own, while maintaining a zen-like character to them. Great one. (FdW)
Address: http://www.pogus.com

ARTURAS BUMSTEINAS – BLUR (CD by Galerie Antjewachs)
Recently Dutch TV showed ‘Silence Of The Lambs’, ‘Hannibal’ and ‘Red Dragon’ in three nights and especially the first one is an absolute master piece which I love and can watch over and over again. The first time I show it, I taped on my video but due to a wrong setting, I missed out the very last bit (‘miss sterling, there is a phone call for you’ was the last thing) and I had to phone a friend and ask him what happened next. Why this petite histoire? I also missed out the end sequence music. Something that I wouldn’t care about, but Arturas Bumsteinas took the end sequences of all five Hannibal Lecter movies to create this CD. Damn it, I wish I paid more attention so I would know more what exactly Bumsteinas did on his CD. A short CD, lasting under thirty minutes, he plays some creepy music. As creepy as some of the film sequences I imagine. Long sustaining violin like tones that above all shout ‘suspense, suspense’. Carefully he has processed these sounds into perfect horror movie music. It’s paid by gallery, but it almost sound a like letter to solicit as soundtrack musician in Hollywood. Graeme Revell did make it there, so why not Bumsteinas? With this at his hand he could hardly miss the opportunity. More likely this is one of his conceptual approaches to music, and where others fail at the job, Bumsteinas succeeds in playing some nice ambient related glitch music. (FdW)
Address: http://www.antjewachs.de

CIRCLE X – PREHISTORY (CD by Blue Chopsticks)
One of the last few labels of which I wanted to buy everything they released is Dexter’s Cigar, a label run by Jim O’Rourke and David Grubbs. They were together as Gastr Del Sol and a great taste in music, re-releasing old and forgetting music of all kind, including Derek Bailey, Voice Crack and Circle X. I remember the latter from the 80s, just as a name, but never hearing their music. But ten years ago, Dexter’s Cigar re-released their self titled EP and I got acquainted with their unconventional rock music. I didn’t realize (or perhaps didn’t think of it) that there would be more music, but ‘Prehistory’ is their first album (they released also some 7″s and in 1994 an album before splitting up in 1995 when guitarist Bruce Witsiepe died). Usually when a label says ‘sounds like nothing else’ then you bet that’s untrue, except when the labelboss is David Grubbs – now on his own with Blue Chopsticks – you can only know he’s right. The six pieces carved on this CD come from punk rock (volume!, aggression!!), but at the same time also from no wave and improvisation. Maybe the Swans come close, maybe Sonic Youth, all of whom started a little bit later than this album, which was recorded in 1981. Sometimes Tony Pinotti’s voice is like a cry, a howl, a scratch, feeding through echo, lyrics rendered beyond recognition, while the rhythm section hammers away and the guitar has a free role. Strange elements leak through in the mix – did I mention that psychedelic music is certainly an influence too? I did, now. Above all this is angry music from an angry generation in a totally different time frame – well, perhaps that’s why it fits so fine in these scary times too. Essential re-issue! (FdW)
Address: http://www.bluechopsticks.org

HE CAN JOG – MIDDLEMARCH (CD by Audiobulb)
A bit euh… silly. He Can Jog is an anagram of John Cage. It’s the name chosen by Erik Schoster from Madison, Wisconsin. He studied composition and improvisation and plays with Cedar AV. His music is entirely made on the computer, and if you know what this label released before then you may already have an idea what he Can Jog is about. Bouncy beats, here even more than elsewhere, samples of guitars, voices, a bit of ambient. If I honest I say that I was reading this mornings newspaper when I put this on and I thought it was quite alright background music, but when I started writing, replaying, and listening more carefully, I thought it was a bit less than what I first anticipated. It sounds all a bit worn out. The Oval approaches, the Fennesz bendings, the IDM broken beats, the funny weirdness. Maybe I am getting too old for this line of musical business, but however nice this is, it just didn’t do too much for me. (FdW)
Address: http://www.audiobulb.com

SKIF++ – SK++[01, 02, 03, 04, 00] (CD by Fridgesound)
Some weeks ago I reviewed the very first solo CD by Robert van Heumen, and wrote that he’s, among the many other things he does, a member of Skif++. There is now a CD available by this group, which is Van Heumen on a laptop playing LiSa, Jeff Carey (whom you may know as 87 Central, who plays with Super Collidor on his laptop)) and Bas van Koolwijk who plays with Jitter and is responsible for the groups’ visual side. The recordings were already made in 2006, but it took some cross-atlantic mixing as Van Heumen lives in Amsterdam and Carey in Washington. This is a typical work of the improvising computer laptoposse. Things beep, scratch, hiss and meow about in a brittle, fast manner, but Skif++ is all to aware of the trap of unlistenable noise music generated with too many ones and zeroes. Hence the extensive editing process applied to this music makes this so much stronger than your average laptop doodling. Skif++ knows how to pull back gear and play a piece that is softer, with even a hint of melody such as in ’02’. On other occassions things seem to explode and large, extensive clouds fly over, like over the flat Dutch ground. But here too things never become boring or long. Skif++ knows when to pull back, make a move, a new gesture and offer new insights. Also on the CD is a film by Bas van Koolwijk, which gives us the exact representation, I think, of what Skif++’s music looks like: academic and in a odd, fresh way, also old fashioned, but then entirely updated to these times. Get my drift? (FdW)
Address: http://hardhatarea.com/fridgesound/

ALEPH-1 – X1 (CD by Ideal Recordings)
V. SJÖBERG NEW JAZZ ENSEMBLE – DO NOTHING ‘TIL YOU HEAR FROM ME (CD by Ideal Recordings)
MATTIAS PETERSSON – FLOODLIGHT (CD by Ideal Recordings)
O.S.T. – WAETKA (CD by Ideal Recordings)
One of the busiest men around is of course Carsten Nicolai, who travels the seven seas to do his music, his art installations and his label. Normally as Carsten Nicolai or as Alva Noto, he shows up here as Aleph-1, in which he plays with “electronic music acoustic sound aesthetics that was especially developed for the IDEAL Recordings label”, inspired by the theories of mathematician Georg Cantor. Here Nicolai samples acoustic material, and plays around them in an electronically treated way. Music that has no dramatic change, or structure, they simply fade in and out. Once it is there, the material bounces around in a highly minimalist manner. Slow pulse music that certainly has a groove, but it’s too slow to move your feet to. Feet tapping music or head nod music. The difference with the material recorded as Alva Noto is minor but essential. As Alva Noto things are entirely electronic, and here the source is acoustic, even when it’s hard if impossible to figure out what the hell those acoustic sources are. Nice mellow pulse music that is not super great, but quite pleasant to hear.
Let’s have a quick listen to V. Sjöberg New Jazz Ensemble, as I bet it’s something for our more Jazz inspired man Dolf Mulder, is what I thought. But I realized I heard music by Sjöberg before: ‘On A Winter’s Day’ was reviewed in Vital Weekly 525. Here he teams up with indeed an ensemble, including musicians on guitar, drums, vibraphone, kalimba, laptops and more. He calls it new jazz because ‘It is just a humble comment on the sad fact that a lot of the time the word jazz is very limiting, both in the mind of the consumer and from the point of view of the musician/producer’, but to my ears it has very little to do with jazz. Even the fact that this is a larger group at work is something that can be heard on the album. Whatever was recorded with the ensemble, this all sounds like Sjöberg took matters a bit further. Very lush ambient sound (Ideal sells it as ‘ambient acoustic jazz’, which in fact sounds like a good description). The band plays long sustaining sounds, with ‘free’ elements mixed in quite softly, but throughout computer processing in good microsound fashion plays an important role. Very relaxing music that owes much more to good ol’ laptop music, just like his previous release and one should take the word ‘jazz’ with a pinch of salt.
Along similar lines of these two albums on Ideal Recordings we can also place the album of one Mattias Petersson, but his music goes into a different direction than Sjöberg or Nicolai, although working principles may be the same. Taking acoustic sounds, treating them in an electronic way and creating music with that. Like Nicolai we can’t know (perhaps not allowed to know) what the sound sources are as the level of processing is quite high, until we hear a piano note, well into the album. Petersson likes things noisy and gritty which sets him apart from the two previous albums, but there is something about the digital sounding album that I don’t like very well. It sounds all a bit too much computer processing with rough edged sounds, and not softly shaped ones, which adds too many graininess to the sounds certainly in the first two and the last track. It’s all too regular playing of noise meeting acoustic sounds, looped around in an easy fashion. Not bad, not great. 5 our of 10 rating.
Its been years and years since I last heard O.S.T., also known as Chris Douglas, who was last reviewed in Vital Weekly 304. That album was quite nice compared to the other one, back in Vital Weekly 221. I have no idea what he did in the years in between, but his music certainly progressed. He holds the middle position in these four Ideal releases. Much alike the others he processes all sorts of sound material (acoustic, perhaps), loops it around, adding sound effects (through plug ins or outboard) and the outcome is softer than Petersson and louder than Sjöberg, with a nod towards ambient industrial music: the moody, dark atmospheric textures fly about here and make a great soundtrack (nodding to the band name) for road movies along the industrial wasteland of a post nuclear attack. Nice dark atmospheres, isolationist music. (FdW)
Address: http://www.idealrecordings.com

PALE MAN MADE – OH, MY TREASURED THINGS (CD by Pinch)
‘When was the last time you were excited by a new album by a band who are ‘truly’ independent?’, the press blurb asks me. Well, read Vital Weekly and you know the answer is: every day. But then these are really, truly (without ”) independent, which in the case of Pale Man Made is something I doubt. They hail from beautiful Newcastle and are a rock band. Oops, alternative rock band. ‘Blending together influences from The Fall and their favorite c86 bands (if you don’t know what those are, never mind, you’re too young and too hooked to Vital Weekly), the band has developed their own unique gritty sound’. Hardly. Quite ordinary rock music with some New Wave/Post punk influences, me thinks. Let’s quickly return to our usual program. (FdW)
Address: <pinchrecordings@hotmail.co.uk>

FEU FOLLET – PARADIS PAYSAN (CDR by Gruenrekorder)
Tobias Fischer’s Feu Follet project has so far a nice bunch of releases – or rather a bunch of nice releases on his own Einzeleinheit label, but also for others. Here, on Gruenrekorder, presented with a great, professional cover, he presents us one piece in five distinctive parts. Fischer belongs to the young and exciting new drone musicians from Germany, next to say Ex Ovo/Mirko Uhlig. The way they handle their material is great. There is lots of space, sometimes in a literal way such as the opening bird sounds here, through carefully constructed drones, probably constructed on the computer, but there is always that bit of extra, like a looped cricket sound, a sorrowing organ, or even Asmus Tietchens’ like sound processing. That gives the music an extra bite which is sometimes missed in some of the other drone musicians. A fine solid work, with fine dynamics, changes in all the right places and throughout a very fine release. (FdW)
Address: http://www.gruenrekorder.de

VINEX – NEDERWIJK (CDR, private)
The Dutch language is not really suitable for singing and Vinex, a solo project by Michiel van de Weerthof, who plays all the instruments, which he builds himself along with the addition of drums, xylofoon, bass and recorder. Vinex is the sub-urban living areas in the Netherlands. ‘Nederwijk’ is his second release and has eight pieces of singer song writer material. The pieces are pretty long, lyrics are in dutch. It’s not your average Vital Weekly material, or actually mine average listening. I like pop music, but when vocals become important, it takes a good voice to sing them, and unfortunately Weerthof doesn’t have a great voice. His music (instruments and vocals) aren’t too well recorded, a bit muffled, so it’s hard to decipher the lyrics (I recognized a campfire somewhere in ‘Gat In De Weg’) and the production could have used more clarity, even when some of pieces could be great instrumental songs, such as the minimalism of ‘Puddingbroodje’. Not exactly my tea, right. Probably it’s not bad, but its too much ‘kleinkunst’ as it is called in The Netherlands and that’s something I have little to no interest in. (FdW)
Address: http://www.michielvandeweerthof.nl

HOMETOWN FEILDING – SIMULATIONS (CDR by Free Software Series)
MIGUEL PRADO – DIOS ABORRECE UNA SINGULARIDAD DESNUDA (CDR by Free Software Series)
The noise in the Free Software Series, curated by Mattin, are passed on to Jliat, but the series is not about noise only. It’s basically music made with software which can be found online. Hometown Feilding is Mark Sadgrove from New Zealand and he uses ‘csound running on Ubuntu Linux’ and the listener is urged to make copies of the music. Sadgrove lives these days in Tokyo where he runs the super-small label A Binary Datum, and he is one of those younger composers from New Zealand who has turned the country’s lo-fi into the computer. I have no idea what his sound input is here, but maybe it’s all highly processed internal feedback, but Sadgrove is not the man to use some noise blast but creates quite a clever, softer version of it. In each of the pieces he has a few sounds running but he knows how to play around with them and creates an ever changing pattern with them. Loud enough to avoid the traps of microsound, soft enough to keep things interesting, from low rumbling bass sounds to crackling high end sounds. A consistent, intelligent disc.
On Miguel Prado’s (a new name for me) disc ‘Dios Aborrece Una Singularidad Desnuda’ the slide guitar ‘recorded with Ardour by Roberto Mallo, edited with Audacity under Debian’ is used. The liner notes are in Spanish, so a bit hard to read for me. Although Prado doesn’t put up a bunch of noise either, I am less excited about this release. The slide guitar is played – well, perhaps, but its hard to decipher in the crumbed and muffled processings that are used here. A bit chaotic these ‘edits’ with much attention to all the sounds that were dropped in but didn’t seem to have a place of its own, i.e. the unwanted side sounds of recording the slide. Including a piece of what seems silence, this is all a bit too much of a random approach for me. Too much loose improvisation over an undefined set of sounds. (FdW)
Address: http://www.freesoftwareseries.org

(VXPXC) – SELF-STORAGE (CDR by Gold Sounds)
TEXTURED BIRD TRANSMISSION – PANDA READS ON STAGGERED CRYSTAL SEAS (CDR by Gold Sounds)
CRITICAL MESS #1 (CDR by Gold Sounds)
Sindre Bjerga’s Gold Sounds label exists for quite some time now, and his releases are packed in true underground fashion – xeroxed, hand painted. The first one is by (VxPxC), a trio of Justin McInteer, Grant Capes and Tim Goodwillie, of whom we reviewed ‘Chinatown Noise-cut’ in Vital Weekly 577. Whereas that previous involved some percussion like work, that seems to have a minor role on this release (only in two of the five pieces), but the emphasis lies on the lo-fi drone character of the music. Still there are voices to be spotted around, bass note drones and some wavy organ recording. The quality is still that of a shed recording, but no doubt that is a deliberate act of being ‘weird’ (and masquerades the inadequacies of the music). Very ‘New Zealand’ if you catch my drift, but it sounded alright. Three boys with fat joints making music in a shed. Cosy.
Also from the underworld of drones and CDR labels is Textured Bird Transmission, of whom we know, goddamit, nothing. Here too lo-fi runs high in approach. Textured Bird Transmission play cosmic, psychedelic drone music on a bunch of old analogue synths, tape-delay and some low level distortion pedals. Four tracks, spanning thirty some minutes, but they seem to me outtakes from longer parts, jams that lasted hours and hours. Just one candle was lit, some incense burned (yuk), illegal substances at hand and jam along in good spirit. The recording machine was on a low volume until the fourth track (which sounds super loud after the first three) but what an evening they had. Nice one, again.
I have no idea why Gold Sounds wanted to release ‘Critical Mess #1’. Not because it’s bad, but it’s all with Stavanger folks that show the liveliness of the cities underground, but it’s all people that have had their releases on many other labels too. Only Nils Rostad, who opens the proceedings is a new name for me, but otherwise its Bjerga/Iversen, Hoh, Pal Asle Pettersen, Sindre Bjerga, Bjerga/Anders Gjerde and Iversen. Quite a little work of incest if you ask me. Everybody involved in this lot does whatever he/they are best at doing. There is the Bjerga/Iversen electronic improvisation, Hoh’s love of rhythm, Pettersen’s musique concrete, Bjerga’s noise, Iversen with microsound and Bjerga/Gjerde’s super fine drone piece. All quite alright these pieces, but there is a taste of left-overs here. (FdW)
Address: <sindrebjerga@hotmail.com>

BIRTH CERTIFICATE (CDR by I, Absentee)
Only recently we reviewed the first three releases on the new US label I, Absentee and here is a new one, this time putting their first real release and more officially announcing the label through ‘Birth Certificate’. I explained last week that I don’t like to review compilations but this one is actually one I liked. The label has gathered a fine bunch of musicians here who all play electronic music, but there are loads of small differences to be spotted. To the uninitiated this might be all rhythm based music, but there is straight forward techno like music, electro-pop (Slap [Unmodified], Goudron, Mothercrotch), ambient inspired, cosmic music by D.D. NewMole and even straight experimental and noise music, although the latter aren’t really great. All in all a very fine collection, of which I liked the electro-pop pieces a lot, whereas the others are pretty o.k. Great music to have playing while relaxing and reading and less for dancing. Included are: 21 Jumpsuit, Neon Tetra, Slap, The Red Falcons, D.D. NewMole, Goudron, Mothercroth, Black Moth Super Rainbow, Milieu, Ambidextrous, Power Pill Fist, Boozhownd Doggonit, Lunar Testing Lab, Tobacco, Baloo, Mall Security and Audience Of One. (FdW)
Address: http://www.i-absentee.com

KATE CARR – FIRST DAY BACK (CDR by Retinascan)
EVERY KID ON SPEED – TRAKTOR (2×3″CDR by Retinascan)
Kate Carr’s name sound like famous rock singer, but she hails from New South Wales in Australia and ‘First Day Back’ is her first release. According to the label her music is to be compared to Oval and Microstoria, and yes that seems to be true. There is no information as to the input of her sources, but they seem acoustic, perhaps from classical music. These are sampled, looped, stretched, shrunk, warped and mixed. I can see why one would think this sounds like either Oval or Microstoria, but I must admit that her approach didn’t fulfill me with much excitement. It seems rather hastily put together, sounds mixed together that simply don’t find and at other times it sounds like she’s trying her sampler for the first time, such as in ‘Afterwards’, with it’s moving back and forth of sounds. In principle some of the ideas are nice enough and towards the end there were a couple of nice tracks, but it needs definitely more work.
Behind Every Kid On Speed there is Toni Dimitrov, who briefly was on Vital’s board to review things, but not since some time. In fact things have been all around quite for his various projects, such as Every Kid On Speed or Sound-00. Here he offers two pieces by the name of Traktor and four of his friends do the remix honor. ‘There is more happening in 20 minutes of music here than in 70 elsewhere’, the labels says, and surely that is true. But has Dimitrov made up his mind as to what he wants? It seems not. His music moves into various places, with beeps, record scratching, minimal rhythms, and some noise stuff. Some of these sounds are surely engaging enough to make a piece out of, but glued together it doesn’t work very well. Too much random sounds thrown about. But the remixes show the possibilities. Pablo Reche, usually a man of noise, makes a very soft remix, pushing all the sounds away and making a minimalist rhythm. Dr Nojoke goes into dance land and shows that is possible too, whereas Andrew Duke has short, uninspired piece of scratching. TB closes and blends all of this together, in quite a nice piece. The remixes save the release. (FdW)
Address: http://www.retinascan.de

BEEQUEEN – LONG STONES AND CIRCLES (3″ CDR by Moll)
It seems that Frans de Waard kind of follows the footsteps of Machinefabriek, when it comes to releasing a 3″ CDR almost every week. Well, that’s a bit silly to say I guess, but it’s true that lately he’s been releasing quite a few excellent releases on his own imprint “My Own Little Label” and there’s a link, since Rutger Zuydervelt designs all the artwork for the covers. The latest release is a Beequeen and not a new one, in fact a re-release of 1995’s “Long Stones and Circles” and what a welcome one that is! It was one of their first compositions in which they started to work with vocals (at present a renown workethic for Beequeen, e.g. “Sandancing”), by adapting an original text of Landscape artist Richard Long. The piece starts off with a hard dry metronome, setting the pace for the piece. Slowly more elements are added: bells, wind and more fieldrecordings. All in a peacefull and delicate manner, while a distant voice starts to recite the poem-like texts. You might call it a sonification of land-art, in the way that it builds an environment in your mind while listening to this piece. You can almost smell the mountain dew. (SDT)

Address: http://www.kormplastics.nl/moll.html