It’s still only February but I think Harry’s Gym album cover
is one of my favourites already. It’s a fairly simple cover consisting of a
stylised, close up portrait of an owl staring straight at you. But it doesn’t
exactly look like the easiest thing to replicate. A sharp image, with harsh sunlight on one side
it’s an image that stays with you because it looks so intimate. The music from
the album from (What Was Ours Can’t Be Yours) is however little disappointing;
think Wye Oak without the emotional depth. Shame, really.
Sunday, 27 February 2011
Thursday, 24 February 2011
Acid isn't everyone's cup of tea
Posthuman, everyone's favourite acid infused, techno heavy, 'lectric meisters are putting their old records up for sale on bandcamp, remastered and with added bonus material. They might not be everyone's cup tea but they are damn good at what they do.
He's their best track of the last album to give you a taster.
Posthuman - Mobile Mast
He's their best track of the last album to give you a taster.
Posthuman - Mobile Mast
Saturday, 19 February 2011
An Experimental Background
It doesn’t get more experimental than this. Merino, the Columbian
electronic artist, has an alter ego, Reverse Projection – it’s the side of the
artist that’s itching to write 50 minutes of low humming percussions and glass tinkering samples.
I love it, it sounds like background music, but in the best
possible way. There is nothing over wrought about it; the piano, the violins,
the distorted vocals they all have their place and don’t fight with one
another. The crescendo is a gentle one,
with a pulse and a screech, but again, nothing which is too dramatic or out of
place.
This track is available to download here.
His first EP as
Reverse Projection will be out in the middle of 2011.
Reverse Projection – mix special, 002
Labels:
ambient dub,
latin american,
Merino,
music,
Reverse Projection
Tuesday, 15 February 2011
Upswing Music
For me Vessels, post rockers from hailing from the land of
Emmerdale, have always blown a little hot and cold. With some of their
material (Altered Beast) I’m like yeah, yeah, man don’t stop rocking. Other
stuff I’m like, meh. The latest offering, The Trap, falls into both categories –
I fall in and out love with the song. But at this particular time when I feel
like posting, they’ve caught me in an upswing. So here it is.
The album, entitled Helioscope, is out in March, and as I
write this I can’t wait for its release.
Vessels - The Trap
With thanks to James for the tip off.
Monday, 14 February 2011
Problems with the big society #8129
It’s too optimistic, and not in a good way. Cameron wants us all to be more involved on
the frontline of our community. This sense of widespread altruism is fairly
hard to come by on the wrong side of the tracks, a place which is populated by what
you would call the ‘aspirational middle class’, intent on bettering themselves
and their families and with little time
to spend helping a community from which they are trying to escape.
Those that don’t fall into that stereotype fall into the
other one of being reliant on the state, a state which has failed to provide
jobs, one of if not the most fundamental job of any government, and now fails
to provide basic civic institutions like libraries or schools in areas where
there is high demand. In reaction to all
these failings people are supposed to be grateful for the government giving in
to that old cliché of getting the state of peoples’ back. If it did work, it
would be the equivalent of being grateful to the person who burgled you as now
you can get that new furniture you’ve always wanted.
It won’t work, not because it’s not a good thing to have
people become less reliant on the state but because when security is taken away
from people whose lives are being blighted by ever decreasing living standards
and job opportunities it can only lead to a sense of resentment. The big society
may form its own niche communities, but in places where there is feeling that
people have been abandoned these will run in contrary to mainstream. Weariness of
the state can be a good think, but it can also be a slippery slope to isolation
and ghettoisation .
Sunday, 6 February 2011
Good News
Wye Oak will be renewing our iPod’s in March with a new
album, Cilvilian. Back with their mix of melancholy rhythm and soft vocals I
personally can’t wait. If this, the self titled track, is anything to go by
this release could be the one that sees them step out of the shadows of Bon
Iver, Arcade Fire, et al. Well I think they deserve it anyway.
Wye Oak - Cilvilian
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