Time I started posting some obscure sh#t :) Erik Enocksson = 1 & 3 (Arpan)
Re: Electronica - what are you listening to?
Posted: Tue Jan 29, 2013 8:01 pm
by cybot
Double vinyl reissue...
Wire:
Stars Of The Lid's The Ballasted Orchestra reissued by Kranky
22|11|2012
Stars Of The Lid's 1997 album The Ballasted Orchestra is being reissued on vinyl by Kranky. The duo play live for the first time in three years next month, at ATP festival on 9 December and at St John's Hackney with Roly Porter on 10 December.
Adam Wiltzie and Brian McBride originally recorded the album on a 4-track, which has now been remastered by Wiltzie. He says: "The remastering process was kind of a bittersweet experience, to come back to a time in my life that I had almost completely forgotten about… There is something about magnetic tape, even in a cheap plastic cassette form, that captures an atmosphere that I do not believe is possible to do anymore with digital recording."
The Ballasted Orchestra will be released on 7 January.
Pitchfork : 8.5
In the 1990s there were a few artists tucked into out-of-the-way corners of the United States making music defined by its vastness. In Richmond, Va., were Labradford, whose slow-moving and cinematic pieces showed how much could be wrung from simplicity and repetition. Up in Dearborn, Mich., Windy Weber and Carl Hultgren were making sensual drone music inspired both by the endless held tones of Lamonte Young and the textural romanticism of 4AD. And down in East Austin, Tex., there were Adam Wiltzie and Brian McBride, who made druggy and internally-focused drone music as Stars of the Lid.
Stars of the Lid's 1995 debut was called Music for Nitrous Oxide and it had a track called "Tape Hiss Makes Me Happy"; those two phrases offer a serviceable definition of what SOTL's early music was all about. Working at home and recording on their Yamaha MT-120 and Tascam Portastudio 424, Wiltzie and McBride were patiently mapping a new terrain for experimental music. Along with groups like the previously mentioned Windy & Carl in the United States and UK groups like Flying Saucer Attack and Amp, they were taking the tools of D.I.Y. culture (recording at home, getting the word out through print zines, releasing music on smaller, specialized labels, demonstrating a fondness for cheap and easy cassettes) and using them to make abstract music for deeply immersive listening. Music For Nitrous Oxide mixed metallic drones and feedback with the sounds of strange voices; the effect was something like tuning into two radio stations at once, hearing strange disembodied phrases mixed with weird music that floated across the plains. For their third album, 1997's The Ballasted Orchestra, which has been out of print for some time and has now been reissued on vinyl by Kranky, they did away with the voices and followed their drones to a place where words have no meaning.
The Ballasted Orchestra is four sides of shifting guitar-based drone, with textures that range from thick and menacing to thin and ethereal. For those more familiar with SOTL's work from the last decade (ambient music classics And Their Refinement of the Decline and The Tired Sounds of...) what's most striking about Ballasted is how raw and ragged it sounds, in the best possible way. As the the SOTL project matured, the music grew more pristine, incorporating strings and horns and drawing inspiration from carefully composed music by artists like Arvo Part. In 1997, when these tracks were recorded, Wiltzie and McBride were firmly committed to seeing how much feeling they could wring from guitars and effects pedals.
Turns out it was quite a lot. Some psychedelic drone music seems like it's designed to soundtrack a trip through the cosmos; Stars of the Lid invites you to close your eyes and explore your own mind. And the range of sensations and moods is surprisingly wide. The disorienting "Sun Drugs" mixes thin tendrils of wavering drone with trebly guitar notes that feel random like wind chimes. "Taphead" is closer to the airy drift of Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois' Apollo while "Fucked Up (3:57 AM)" is tensely cinematic, with overlapping chords that are finally interrupted with a cavernous bass that sounds like a tuba blast echoing through an empty gym.
But the highlight and centerpiece is the side-long "Music for Twin Peaks Episode #30", which is split into two parts. David Lynch's television series ended its two-season run with episode #29, so the clever title (and Stars of the Lid have always had good ones) affirms that they're using their imaginations to soundtrack a fictional world. And while the work of frequent Lynch collaborator Angelo Badalamenti's work has been an inspiration to Wiltzie and McBride (see "Mullholland" on The Tired Sounds of), at this point the connection was more thematic than sonic. If anything, the piece is more likely to bring to mind the industrial soundscaping of Lynch's sound design partner Alan Splet. But SOTL's speculative soundtrack is absolutely masterful, a drawn-out throb of drone that feels vividly alive. At high volume it taps into the oceanic quality of shoegaze, dissolving boundaries between the listener and the listened-to.
The "Twin Peaks" nod helps explain why Stars of the Lid still feel so relevant and why this music, while deeply connected to the wide-open world of 90s tape-based psychedelia, still feels so current. We'll never stop soundtracking our space and creating virtual worlds. It might happen with a YouTube or an installation but in 1997 there were 4-track tapes recorded by friends in dark rooms that somehow found their way to other people who understood the transmission.
Re: Electronica - what are you listening to?
Posted: Tue Jan 29, 2013 11:26 pm
by cybot
Inspired by SOTL, I dug out this double album. Wow! Juv means abyss...Think SUNN O)))) stuck with Svarte Greiner, Deathprod and Thomas Konër in a freezing log cabin in the Norwegian wilderness, and you're almost there......
Re: Electronica - what are you listening to?
Posted: Thu Jan 31, 2013 9:47 pm
by cybot
Vinyl....
Re: Electronica - what are you listening to?
Posted: Thu Jan 31, 2013 10:16 pm
by jadarin
Murcof, Erik Truffaz & Talvin Singh - Montreux Live (2006)
Re: Electronica - what are you listening to?
Posted: Fri Feb 01, 2013 9:33 pm
by cybot
jadarin wrote:Murcof, Erik Truffaz & Talvin Singh - Montreux Live (2006)
Thanks for that John! Will have a good listen later. Actually saw Talvin here in Dundalk one time (with Terry Riley)....he was magnificent and literally blew Riley off the stage with his inventive percussion work.
Re: Electronica - what are you listening to?
Posted: Fri Feb 08, 2013 10:49 am
by Gerry D
A week without Cybot !!! Anybody seen Dermot ? AOK ?
This album is in my top 50 ever.
Re: Electronica - what are you listening to?
Posted: Fri Feb 08, 2013 3:36 pm
by cybot
Gerry D wrote:A week without Cybot !!! Anybody seen Dermot ? AOK ?
Everything's grand Gerry! Just taking a sabbatical.....Take care yourself!
Re: Electronica - what are you listening to?
Posted: Sat Feb 16, 2013 3:53 pm
by cybot
Something I got earlier. Vinyl. Live too...Dare you listen?
Re: Electronica - what are you listening to?
Posted: Sat Feb 16, 2013 3:57 pm
by cybot
Double vinyl. Clears the room in a matter of seconds :) As Jimi himself said, in a reference to his Woodstock's version of TSSB, "I think it's beautiful".....