V/A What Pleasing The Lord Looks Like-Marriage: Extreme, Noise...And Terror From Japan And Israel (Heart & Crossbone) cd 11.98
Killer intercontinental compilation from Israeli label Heart & Crossbone, who in the past have brought us equally killer releases from black thrash duo Barbara, weird noise metal combo Cadaver Eyes, ultra noisemakers Lietterschpich, blown out avant noise rockers Grave In The Sky, one-man experimental grind band Mildew, and most recently, the mysterious field recording-ed skitter and clang of Lagan Tapes. Not a bad track record at all! For this comp, curiously called What Pleasing The Lord Looks Like Marriage, they've gathered up 8 of their favorite extreme noise and metal bands, 4 from Israel, 4 from Japan, some mentioned above, all pretty kick ass. First up is Ryokuchi, a bass and drums doom duo from Japan, who start out with some shakuhachi and tribal drumming, before launching into a crushing, lurching sludge, dense downtuned heaviness, tons of shrieking feedback, chugging crunch, and bellowed vox. Cadaver Eyes are up next, their track begins with a thick caustic slab of undulating drone, all buzzing overtones, and layered rumbles, eventually the drums kick in, and a Khanate-like pace, the vocals tortured and harsh, the backdrop a low end slow motion doom, definitely for the ultramegadoomlords out there. Back to Japan for Zenocide, who also offer up their own sludge-y slowness, with some incredible, monstrous vocals, WAY up in the mix, the music a stripped down sort of stonery doom, think Church Of Misery crossed with Corrupted, but those vocals, holy shit, SCARY. Not sure why Lietterschpich appended 'diet' to their name, this doesn't sound any lighter or less heavy than past outings, instead, more super abstract percussive freakouts, shimmery soft noise and dubbed out doom, a swirling skree or chopped and processed sounds, all layered over a wall of buzzing crumbling sound, and those chaotic drums. MONEYISGOD from Japan are another band new to us, but again, we have to say HOLY SHIT, these guys are fucked up and heavy and awesome! Buzzing glitchy layers of noise, super blown out heavy percussion, and the occasional vocal blurt, like a way more ominous angry Boredoms, quickly giving way to a cloud of caustic white noise, all the while those drums keep pounding away. Poochlatz are another longtime aQ fave from Israel, and here they get their Whitehouse on big time, although it's like a muddy, murky, muted Whitehouse, another squall of swirling noisiness, of fuzz and buzz and hiss, peppered with strangled super processed vox, the whole thing stuttering and skittering and constantly pulsing and throbbing, almost like a Buttholes Surfer noise mix! The comp finishes off with two more new-to-us combos, first up Remesh, from Israel, who are also plenty noise, there noise expelled in great big blown out gouts, industrial, heaving, hissing, effects drenched vocals bellowing beneath that undulating sea of harsh sound, but not so harsh that it isn't listenable, although certainly harsh enough to keep away all but the very iron eared. And finally, Japan's Nerveless, mistakenly credited as Neverless, who close things out with a massive 20 minute noisedoom freakout. There is a riff, a massive crumbling super distorted bassy one, that lurches glacially, while all around it swirls dense sheets of low end throb, and a symphony of what sounds like that wind-on-microphone crackle and crunch. It's like Corrupted and Boris filtered through a blown Merzbow subwoofer. Noisy, but strangely hypnotic and heavy. Like all good comps, this will definitely leave you wanting more from most, if not all of these outfits, another noisy heavy winner from Heart & Crossbone!
MPEG Stream: RYOKUCHI "Miezarumon No Kage"
MPEG Stream: CADAVER EYES "BaHoref Karrr"
MPEG Stream: LIETTERSCHPICHDIET "Par Avion Ramblin"
V/A What Remains Of Eden: Anatolian & Levantine Music 1928-1952 (Mississippi / Canary / Change) lp 14.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY. **MISSISSIPPI RECORDS ALERT** **MISSISSIPPI RECORDS ALERT** **MISSISSIPPI RECORDS ALERT** It's practically raining Mississippi Records around here these days, no complaints, though sometimes it can be difficult for us to focus on which ones we want to review first! Not too difficult in this case though, as What Remains Of Eden, released in conjunction with Mississippi's Canary imprint and the Change label, focuses on Middle Eastern recordings made in the late 1920s all the way up to the early 1950s, which we are always curious to hear more of, as these sounds are still so incomprehensibly beautiful and exotic to our ears. This album is a great companion piece to Tompkins Square's massive To What Strange Place: The Music Of The Ottoman-American Diaspora 3cd set, though unlike those recordings which were made by immigrants living in New York, the records represented here were imported to America by labels who in the midst of the Great Depression found this method more profitable than having to actually pay musicians working in America. The notes bring up this unique aspect of the compilation, as these songs weren't culled from records found in the Middle East but instead from records sold mainly to Christian and Jewish minorities in the U.S., thereby representing specific market tastes. The music within came from the regions making up present-day Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, and Egypt, and the Ottoman roots are unmistakable. The deep spiritual nature of this region, home of the historical Garden of Eden, is reflected in each song, and anyone who has enjoyed previous Mississippi / Canary outings like the String Of Pearls compilation, Marika Papagika's The Further The Flame, The Worse It Burns and recent ROTW honoree Ustad Abdul Karim Khan, will find much to love. As always, highly recommended.
V/A What Would Jason Do? Go and Do Likewise! (!ooT,eviLnaCskcuD) 2cd 14.98
Not sure about the whole story, something about ceramic pigs and blowdryers. But basically, a bunch of found sounds recorded on a minidisc were sent out to numerous underground electronic/experimental musicians (some well-known, some not-so), and traded and swapped and turned into music and songs and different sounds. The results of this interesting project vary from grating to challenging to lovely to silly. Features Kid 606, Ashtray Navigations, Alejandro and Underwood, DJ Speedranch, Venetian Snares, Persona, V/Vm, Atom Heart and tons more. Self-released by the comp's conceptualizer, and probably quite limited.
V/A What's The Rush, Time Machine Man? (Rev-Ola) cd 17.98
V/A What's Up Matador (Matador) 2cd 8.98
Twenty previously-unreleased songs from ALL your favorite Matador artists such as Pavement (doing "Killing Moon"), Jon Spencer Blues Atrocity, Silkworm, Yo La Tengo, Barbara Manning, Cat Power, Pizzicato 5, Bardo Pond, and GBV. CD version (only) comes with bonus disc with twenty tracks comprising someone's (very tasteful) idea of Matador's greatest hits. Priced to move!
V/A What's Up Matador (Matador) 2lp 10.98
Twenty previously-unreleased songs from ALL your favorite Matador artists such as Pavement (doing "Killing Moon"), Jon Spencer Blues Atrocity, Silkworm, Yo La Tengo, Barbara Manning, Cat Power, Pizzicato 5, Bardo Pond, and GBV. CD version (only) comes with bonus disc with twenty tracks comprising someone's (very tasteful) idea of Matador's greatest hits. Priced to move!
V/A What's Your Function? A Tribute To Franco Battiato (Sillyboy) cd 16.98
Even if this wasn't a Battiato tribute, it'd have a lot to recommend it in the line-up department, featuring as it does songs by Circle, Acid Mothers Temple, Hrvatski, Cul De Sac, Volcano the Bear, Kinski, Los Natas, Oneida and others! In fact, since most people probably haven't ever heard of the Italian songwriter Franco Battiato, the formidable array of modern-day psychedelic and avant-garde artists found here is the probably the main selling point. But if you don't know Battiato (but do know all those acts) presumably you're wondering about him. Basically, in the early '70s at the outset of his career, the Sicilian-born Battiato made experimental psych/prog records that some would consider as way-out and wonderful as anything achieved by a lot of the krautrock bands, like Faust, who are so much better known over here. From sound collage to repetitive minimalism, his albums were crammed with weirdness but also quite pleasant and melodic. Later on he apparently got a lot more commerical sounding and his popularity increased, so much so that many Italians might not really be aware of his early experiments. Our friend Loren Chasse, a Battiato fan, tells of how when he was in Italy this past summer playing some solo shows, he asked several Italians he met about Battiato and to his surprise was told that no-one much liked him, he wasn't considered cool at all, to them he was just a cheesy '80s pop star. However, as if to prove that there are Italians who appreciate Battiato (at least, his early works) comes this comp, put together by an Italian label and featuring both Jennifer Gentle and Zu from Italy alongside the aforementioned international cast of fans. And it of course features only songs from his prime, '70s period, with two or three tracks covered from each of his first four classic albums: Fetus, Pollution, Sulle Corde Di Aries and Clic. Weird, hard-to-grok stuff, but mellow and pretty nonetheless, plenty of good material for each of the bands here to take off from and make their own (some even pick the same songs, which is kind of interesting). So, no need to already be a Battiato fan to enjoy this, though you might become one as a result...
MPEG Stream: CUL DE SAC "Fenomenologia/Energia"
MPEG Stream: CIRCLE "No U Turn"
MPEG Stream: HRVATSKI "Plancton"
V/A Whaur The Pig Gaed On The Spree: Scottish Recordings By Alan Lomax 1951-57 (Twos & Fews / Drag City) lp 17.98
V/A Wheedle's Groove (Light In The Attic) 2lp 30.00
V/A When I'm Hungry I Eat (Gourmandizer) cd 13.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY. A tasty pop collection. The menu features 31 entrees, such as Land of the Loops, Wrong, the Coctails, Low, Wham-O and other fine flavors.
V/A Where In The World Is Wendy Broccoli? - A Collection Of Out Of Print Flying Nun Singles 1981-1996 (Flying Nun) cd 23.00
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY. For a while, back in the nineties, AQ was THE place to get your underground New Zealand rock fix. Maybe one of the only stores in the US consistently singing the praises and slinging discs by the Tall Dwarves, the Cakekitchen, the Terminals, Wreck Small Speakers On Expensive Stereos, The Dead C, Bailter Space, Nigel Bunn, David Kilgour, The Clean, King Loser, The Great Unwashed, The Bats, Roy Montgomery, The Chills... and actually come to think of it, AQ is still that place, it's just that the landscape of the NZ underground has changed a bit, folks like Birchville Cat Motel, Omit, Pumice, The Dead C (still!), Peter Wright, Antony Milton, Brothers Of The Occult Sisterhood, Armpit, Black Boned Angel, Dean Roberts, The Futurians and loads more are now the ones making waves all over the world. The names may be different, and the sounds too, but the current crop owe a huge debt to those that came before, and the sound and energy of those legendary NZ bands most definitely live on through this new blood. Every time we'd get a new disc from one of those modern NZ outfits, some part of us would begin hankering to hear some of the old shit, but it's been practically impossible to track any of it down, Flying Nun, THE New Zealand label, was still around and releasing records, but seemed to only exist within the confines of NZ itself. But finally after months and months of emailing we managed to find someone who would and could sell us Flying Nun stuff. Our box of NZ goodies finally showed up and we were transported right back to that NZ indie rock heyday, we've been blasting the Chills and Bailter Space, Chris Knox and Toy Love, The Gordons and David Kilgour... but most exciting of all, we were able to get two compilations we'd been hearing about but had been unable to get until now. One is the 25th anniversary Flying Nun 4cd box set, super expensive, but well worth it, we'll try to list it some day, although we do have a few (at the time of writing this review) if you're interested, the other is Where In The World Is Wendy Broccoli, a completely kick ass and mind blowing collection of long out of print 7" singles, released between 1981 and 1996, when Flying Nun were releasing all sorts of crazy cool weirdness on vinyl... Not sure who Wendy Broccoli is, judging from the liner notes, it seems like maybe she was a Flying Nun A+R person, but it hardly matters, the important thing is, this collection is a knockout. A great overview of the label and the scene, from indie pop jangle to murky grungy free rock and pretty much every stop in between. Like most scenes, there were a handful of key players, NZ was no different, lots of names you would probably recognize: Roy Montgomery, Peter Stapleton, Robert Scott, David Mitchell, Peter Jefferies, David Kilgour, Denise Roughan, Chris Knox, Shayne Carter, Chris Heazlewood and a handful of others, who beyond recording in their own bands and under their own names, would often pair up or group together for one off recordings, single albums or even just a 7" single, that sort of freedom, and the ability to record a track or two and see it actually released, resulted in one of the most vibrant and varied scenes EVER. And the proof is right here... The mopey, slowcore jangle of Rik Starrr, the cinematic countrified twang of the Renderers, the bass heavy new wave-y gloom of Pin Group, the murky Spacemen 3 like jams of Sssf, the glimmering indie K Records style soft indie pop of The Magick Heads, the minor key melodic pop dirge of Queen Meanie Puss, the gothy dreamy downer murk of The Children's Hour (sounding quite a bit like Joy Division or Interpol), the tripped out space rock of Celia Mancini, the fuzzed out female surf rock of 25 Cents (covering a Sonics classic), that unmistakable Chris Knox lo-fi perfect pop, and that's just a handful of the twenty tracks here. Definitely one of our favorite 'new' comps of the last little while (it actually came out in 2005), and it's done exactly what great compilations are meant to, acting not only as the perfect mix, but also getting us all riled up to hear some of our old NZ faves (most of which sound just as good today as they did back in the day!!). SO RECOMMENDED!
MPEG Stream: PIN GROUP "Ambivalence"
MPEG Stream: SSSF "Catface"
MPEG Stream: DIMMER "Dawn's Coming In"
MPEG Stream: CHRIS KNOX "Under The Influence"
V/A Where Will You Be Christmas Day? (Dust-To-Digital) cd 16.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY. Seems like most Christmas records are, justifiably, albums you want to run screaming from. Very few have weighed anchor at our port, Low's Christmas album being a notable exception, and I think we're probably one of the only stores that doesn't drag out the hideous Christmas/Holiday section every year. So it was interesting to see this new collection come in from the same label that brought us the wonderful (and gorgeous) Goodbye, Babylon box set. You'd think they've got a theme going here -- though the collection's producer Dick Spottswood states in the accompanying booklet: "in the spirit of fairness, we've tried to designate equal time for sacred and secular, for Christ and Santa Claus, and for respectable and rowdy". It don't matter though really. We're convinced these Dust To Digital fellas could come up with any theme and put out a kick ass collection, as this is just that -- x-mas or no x-mas. Some of the greats we all know and love are here: banjo player / singer Buell Kazee, Lead Belly, Lightnin' Hopkins, Maddox Bros. & Rose, and Bessie Smith. Along with all the great blues, country, gospel, and early jazz tracks you can expect, DTD has expanded their library beyond American roots music and have included some great tracks from Puerto Rico (a great guitar trio), Trinidad (a couple calypsos from Lord Executor and Lord Beginner), Italy (a bizarre instrumental belted out on a pair of strange bagpipe like instruments, the zampogna and the ciaramella), and The Ukraine (a hauntingly sultry violin, cymbaly, bass and sleigh bell tune). One of the highlights though, is a tune by the ever wonderful Alabama Sacred Harp Singers that'll stand your hair on end. I don't think there's another religious choir that sounds more possessed. Singing, nay practically yelling, in a sort of round fashion, this tune will have you shouting "Fuck Yeah!" The disc comes packaged in a fold out wallet and comes with a "Christmas In Jail" postcard (that you can actually use) and a cute little booklet.
MPEG Stream: LORD EXECUTOR "Christmas Is A Joyful Day"
MPEG Stream: ALABAMA SACRED HARP SINGERS "Sherburne"
MPEG Stream: PASQUALE FEIS "Tu Scendi Dalle Stelle"
V/A White Cock 1-4 (Cock Rock Disco) cd 14.98
MPEG Stream: DURAN DURAN DURAN "Only The Emperor Can Drink Your Essence"
MPEG Stream: JASON FORREST "Respect The Cock"
MPEG Stream: BONG-RA "Skeletor"
V/A White Lace & Strange: It's All Gone Heavy Over There (Psychic Circle) cd 16.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY. Damn. Bevis Frond fan or not, you've gotta be impressed with Bevis's Nick Saloman's new career as the curator of kick-ass comps for the Psychic Circle label. We've already highlighted one of 'em recently, the On The Brink collection of instrumental swingin' psych groovers. Also reviewed this list: the fine British popsike comp Fairytales Can Come True. But this one might just be our favorite so far, seeing as how we're all into the early proto-metal HEAVINESS thing. "Heavy Psych And Power Fuzz From The USA 68-72" is the mouth-watering subtitle here. Sounds right up our alley, and it is. Saloman must have a heckuva record collection. Taking a look at this disc's track list, we only recognized a few of the twenty bands/songs: Thunder & Roses, The Power Of Zeus, Banchee, Road, Fields... that's about it. And we figured if the unknown others were half as good as we knew those to be, we were in for a treat. Well such is the case, for the most part!! Saloman has dug up some beauts, plenty of ultra-rare, fuzzed-out examples of greasy garage muscle, freaky hairy funk, and Purple Hazey proto-metal riff rockin' from all over the US of A that are making our day in a big way. It starts off strong (and stays that way) with the wailing acid rock guitar and equally wailing vocals of "Penetration" by Detroit outfit Third Power. Next up, this comp takes its name from the contribution by Philly's Thunder & Roses, a very Cream-y track that was later covered by Nirvana (whose punked-out version was a worthy tribute). We also hear from Detroit's The Power Of Zeus, with their stone classic "It Couldn't Be Me" that hiphop headz might recognize as having been sampled on an Obie Trice track. LA's Road, featuring former Hendrix bassist Noel Redding, sound very Captain Beyond on their "Spaceship Earth". And then there's the Zeppish "Steel Dog Man" by a Boston outfit saddled with the unfortunate name Brother Fox And The Tar Baby (can't see 'em hitting the stadiums with that handle). In fact, names might be what held a bunch of these bands back, like The Lemonade Charade and The Yellow Payges, ferinstance. Hardly indicative of the long haired biker badassitude and Hendrix/Steppenwolf/Yardbirds worship found here in abundance. This comp also proves that said badassitude can coexist with some groovy horns on occasion, no problem. For the record, here's the names of the other bands appearing here that we don't have room to discuss individually: The Hook, Blue Mountain Eagle, Genesis, The Illinois Speed Press, Eden's Children, T.I.M.E., Underbeat, The Uniques, and The Fort Mudge Memorial Dump! And yes, the cd booklet includes notes from NS on each track. Oh and for those heavy psych devotees keeping up / keeping score, you might want to know, is this as good as that excellent Psychedelic Minds Vol. 1 comp from last year on World In Sound? Yes, yes indeed.
MPEG Stream: THE POWER OF ZEUS "It Couldn't Be Me"
MPEG Stream: GENESIS "Angeline"
MPEG Stream: LINCOLN STREET EXIT "Time Has Come, Gonna Die"
V/A Who Is Dr. Who (RPM) cd 16.98
V/A Who Needs Tomorrow? (Psychic Circle) cd 16.98
Psychic Circle is rapidly becoming our favorite compilations label for '60s psych (and related genres). Can't go too wrong with any of the discs we've stocked so far -- On The Brink, White Lace And Strange, A Visit To The Space Ship Factory, Fairytales Can Come True -- and this one's a winner too. Compiled by Nick Saloman of Bevis Frond fame, a bloke whose record collection is probably more impressive than yours (certainly beats any of us!) as far as '60s rarities goes, there's 20 "nuggets" here from almost no one we'd ever heard of before. The theme this time is American (and Canadian) sixties garage bands and that covers a broad scope of song stylin's -- flowery psych to folky pop to frat house stompers -- so it's a varied comp as regards the music, but not in terms of quality, which is uniformly right on. We'd say what really ties all this together, is that when you hear these tracks, you'll wonder why you'd never heard 'em before, 'cause many should be minor classics. And we guess they are, forgotten classics we can thank Mr. Saloman for turning us all on to. And you really probably have never heard them, 'cause when Saloman sez they're "previously uncomped" we're pretty sure he knows what he's talking about. Our favorite among these would have to be the stark drama of Simon T. Stokes' "Truth Is Stranger Than Fiction" but that's not the only gem to be found here, from The Love Society's fairly heavy version of "Tobacco Road" to Kinetic Energy's moody "Margaret Ann" to the groovy "Cloud 76" by Peck's Bad Boys, among selections from other artists including: Randy Johnson, The Love Society, The Liberty Bells, The Great Train Robbery, The Will-O-Bees, The Yankee Dollar, The Lords Of T.O.N.K., Merrell Fankhauser & HMS Bounty, The 13th Precinct, The Countdown Five, The British Walkers, The Moanin' Glories, Cast Of Thousands, Kin Vassy, The Good Feeling, and The Blue Things. Oh and of course, the cd booklet is full of text, graphics, and photos to help these tracks to be a little bit less obscure than they otherwise would...
MPEG Stream: SIMON T. STOKES "Truth Is Stranger Than Fiction"
MPEG Stream: THE SILVER BYKE "Who Needs Tomorrow"
MPEG Stream: THE YANKEE DOLLAR "City Sidewalks"
V/A Who Will Buy (These Wonderful Evils) (Dolores / Virgin Sweden) 2cd 28.00
One disc old Swedish bands (like Charlie and Esdor), one disc new (like Dungen). Cool!!
V/A Who Will Buy (These Wonderful Evils) Vol. III (Dolores / Virgin Sweden) cd 24.00
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY. Psychedelic Swedish obscurity n' awesomeness from the late '60s and early-to-mid '70s, yeah!! 18 rare tracks from 18 long-forgotten (but oh-so-good) bands are compiled on this, the third volume in a series that has yet to peak. Basically if you like fuzz groovers and wild freakbeat rockers, you've come to the right place. Likewise, from bluesy stomp to folky harmonies, vol. III has it covered. Melancholic psych-pop too -- check out the underground 1969 sounds of "Love Love Love" by a band appropriately named Drugs! Some of the '70s tracks verge on proto-metal, especially Bjorn Famne's "Vampire" (1975) which the liner notes rightly suggest sound like "the missing link between Led Zeppelin and the Jesus And Mary Chain", and Zane's garage-punk Sabbathy "Step Aside" (1976). Others tend towards manic progginess (the Ga Runt Show's big production "Bara Skrot" from '67 for instance). And all are pretty great! Here's the full list of bands, besides the ones mentioned above, for what it's worth: Scorpion, Uppat Vaggarna, Match, Red White & Blues, Fruit, Candle, Harambee, East-West, New Creation, Atlantic Ocean, The Junk's And the Angels, After Life, and Contact. With interesting liner notes on each track, and cool, old-school collage-style psychedelic graphics incorporating original 45 sleeve artwork, we can only applaud the packaging job that the Dolores label has done on this comp (and previous volumes). Likewise we applaud the selection of music, it's like having an insane Swedish '60s record collector DJ'ing his most valued, mind-blowing, impossible-to-find psych treasures for you for a full hour...which is basically what this is, actually!
MPEG Stream: SCORPION "Sagitarius"
MPEG Stream: BJORN FAMNE "Vampire"
MPEG Stream: DRUGS "Love Love Love"
V/A Who Will Buy (These Wonderful Evils)? Vol II (Dolores / Virgin Sweden) cd 24.00
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY. Great title, great comp! 21 tracks from 18 Swedish (and some invading British) '60s garage/beat/psych acts you've probably never heard of before, but who all pretty much ruled... Volume I of this (a double disc set featuring both '60s bands and their modern day emulators) was so expensive we never listed it, but Volume II is maybe cheap enough for us to stock a few...even though it really ain't cheap. Then again, try trying to track down the original 7" vinyl versions of all this tuneage! Anyway, this is one of those rare comps without a duff track really, for those into those '60s sounds. If you've got a Nuggets box set ('specially the second, internationally-oriented one) then you are a likely candidate to enjoy this. Bands include: Cheers, The Stringtones, Evil Eyes, Kings, Mascots, Iveys (not the pre-Badfinger Iveys), Vat 66, Les Fleurs, The Best, Bella And Me, The Mixers, Attractions, 14, Darling, Zoom, Ackes, Members Blues Band, and the Flying Dutchmen. Groovily graphically presented, with liner notes by expert Stefan Kery of the Subliminal Sounds label, whose own retro garage band in the '80s -- The Stomachmouths -- were certainly influenced by the some of the bands found here. If this sells, maybe we'll see about getting Vol. I back in stock... Warning for iPod'ers, cd burners and filesharers: this cd is supposedly equipped with some kind of sucky copy control technology thanks to the corporate powers that be at Virgin Sweden. That better mean all these bands are getting paid for this, eh?!
MPEG Stream: THE STRINGTONES "Don't Run And Hide"
MPEG Stream: 14 "Drizzle"
V/A Wide Angles (Blindside) cd 15.98
Fifteen exclusive tracks from the hip hop underground from Mos Def & Talib Kweli, Truth Enola & De La Soul, L Swift, Pharaohe Monch, Mr. Complex, J Live, Big Kwam, Invisible Mics, and more!
V/A Wierd Compilation Volume Two (Wierd Records) 4lp 39.00
Two NYC labels - Minimal Wave and Wierd Records - have been at the forefront in energizing a resurgence in minimally sculpted synth pop that harkens back to the late '70s and early '80s of synthpunk, darkwave, and industrial sensibilities. Where Minimal Wave's focus has been on digging up the lost gems from that seminal time period, Wierd actively supports those working in the field today, with a weekly club in New York and with well-curated albums including recent releases from Xeno & Oaklander and Led Er Est. Back in 2006, Wierd released a massive 3lp set, showcasing some of the best and brightest who had passed through their doors. That first set was a magnificent find, filled with misanthropes in black leather making dirge-crusted ambience, grinding dark-disco anthems, and sexy goth electronics sporting uncanny melodies. Unfortunately that set is currently out of print, although we're hoping to secure some copies anyway. This, the second set, was completed at the end of 2008 and took a slightly different approach than the first, as the curatorial direction was clearly to dovetail Wierd's tastemaking aesthetic of coldwave synth pop with the perpetually moving US underground of noise-induced powerdroning. In many ways, what Wierd was doing in this compilation parallels what Carlos Giffoni has been doing with his No Fun Festivals, but from the other end of the spectrum. So what you get here is a beautifully packaged collection that brackets a darkly propulsive synth-pop number with an abrasive noise-drone piece, with the linking factor being that all of the sounds have been made on analogue synths. Xeno & Oaklander, Martial Canterel, Three To Forgotten, Tobias Bernstrup, and Epee Du Bois belong to the former camp; and Demons (featuring Nate Young of Wolf Eyes fame), Envenomist, Cadaver In Drag, and even the aforementioned Mr. Giffoni represent the latter. Sleep Museum, Charlie Draheim, and Wave Tank seem to be the artists that do their part to marry the two, especially Draheim's piercing synth Leather Nun-ish anti-tune "Guts On The Dancefloor." Oh yeah, all the tracks here are exclusive to the compilation. Great. Great. Great.
MPEG Stream: ENVENOMIST "A Vague Disquiet"
MPEG Stream: DEMONS "Sick By Water"
MPEG Stream: VENDOME "Lightwave Emissions"
MPEG Stream: MARTIAL CANTEREL "Pathway Splits Apart"
MPEG Stream: TOBIAS BERNSTRUP "Enemies Of The Earth"
V/A Wig In A Box (Off Records) cd 14.98
Gonna just quote the press-sheet here: "Off Records and the two creators of Hedwig and the Angry Inch rounded up an ... all-star cast including Yoko Ono with Yo La Tengo, Sleater-Kinney with Fred Schneider, Jonathan Richman, Robyn Hitchcock, Rufus Wainwright, The Breeders and many others, to participate in a Hedwig-themed charity album for the Harvey Milk School in NYC."
V/A Wigwam, Cowboys, Roter Kreis (All Score Media) cd 16.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY. The third and final (?) installment of soundtrack music from East Germany's notorious Indianerfilmen. The film genre was popular in the sixties through the seventies and consisted of the basic American Western film turned upside down -- with the Native Americans as the heroes battling the evil colonial Europeans. Great concept, albeit surreal execution since all the actors in these films were German (in dark makeup) and the terrain is all Germany, Czechoslovakia and Poland. **As an aside, local AQ customers can now rent these films on video (with subtitles) across the street from us at Lost Weekend Video. Everyone else should bug their local video store to pick them up, if just for kicks.** Musically, "Wigwam, Cowboys, Roter Kreis" is the most successful collection in the series. The bulk of the tracks here are taken from four films, the scores for which are all equally off kilter in their influences. The score for the film Tecumseh sounds akin to Isaac Hayes' Shaft but augmented by faux-native flutes and motifs. Then there's the bizarre Apachen which boldly attempts a "Latin" feel with it's marimba, flute, trumpet trios backed by orchestra, percussion and even wah-wah guitar. The odd jaw-harp percussion duet "Todesrennen" from the film Blutsbruder is without compare. And, of course, no Indianerfilmen collection would be complete without at least one Morricone homage, and included on this disc are a few tracks from the film Severino which lifts the theme to Once Upon A Time In The West with only the slightest in melodic adjustments. As a bonus there are a few vocal songs including an alternate version of "Love Your Brother" (which was featured on the first Wigwam collection) and a couple other Gram Parsons-on-the-Eastern-bloc cuts. Liner notes covering the composers and the film genre in general are included in both German and English.
RealAudio clip: FISCHER, GUNTHER "Reiter-Duell (from Tecumseh)"
RealAudio clip: HOSALLA, DIETER "Die Plaza (from Apachen)"
RealAudio clip: SASSE, ERNST "Todesrennen (from Blutsbruder)"
V/A Wigwam, Weste(r)n, Weisse Wolfe (Cinesoundz) cd 16.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY. Wigwam, Weste(r)n, Weisse Wolfe is the second volume of "Indianerfilmen" music from Germany. Those who missed out on the first volume (now out of print?), "Indianerfilmen" is a genre of films that were popular in the East German Republic in the sixties and seventies. This new volume has the added benefit of an English translation of the liner notes inserted inside the booklet, so we were able to get a bit more information about the genre this time. The films, many based on the stories of author Karl May, are an inverse of the classic American western in which the Indians are the heroes battling the evil colonial white man. Now that sounds like my kind of western. Why these haven't had subtitles slapped on them and been distributed in the rep circuit I don't know, but I really want to see them now (we've seen the DVD's available in PAL format floating around the web, but it doesn't look like they've got subtitles alas.) Where the first volume featured mostly lyrical songs (in English and German) this volume focuses on the instrumental orchestral film scores. Most of the tracks date from 1968 to 1974, but there's also one film score from 1983 and a TV score from 1988. The tracks are mostly quite derivitive of the classic American western scores, particularly the sound track to the 1968 film "Spur Des Falken", which borrows freely from the Magnificent Seven. There are a few silly vocal tracks tagged on at the end of the disc as bonus tracks, most notable is the baudy "Die Playgirls in der Yankee-Bar". Like the last volume, there's some great photos of East German stars -- notably Gojko Mitic -- dressed up in Native American drag on the cover, plus some nice stills from the films inside the booklet.
RealAudio clip: SASSE, KARL-ERNST "Spur des Falken (Intro & Main Title)"
RealAudio clip: NEEF, WILHELM "Osceola (Main Title)"
RealAudio clip: SASSE, KARL-ERNST "Klondyke"
V/A Wild Dub (Select Cuts) cd 16.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY. Subtitled "Dread Meets Punk Rocker Downtown" this is a brilliant collection of dubbed out and reggaefied punk and new wave b-sides circa '77-'81, demonstrating the Jamaican dub influence on the youth culture of music and rebellion in England and elsewhere, back in the day. The underground dancefloor avantgardists of today can cop these styles, but this is the real deal, with tracks from well-known acts like The Pop Group, Killing Joke, The Slits, PIL, The Clash, Grace Jones and Stiff Little Fingers, plus some more obscure bands as well, like Red Beat, 4 Be 2, and Basement 5. Some cuts are actual echoey dubs, others are more about the Jamaican influence, and the dub concept of studio as instrument. All are pretty cool. The Ruts' "Jah War" starts things off in deceptively ordinary fashion, pretty much straight up reggae (not a dub), though it does succesfully demonstrate this comp's thesis regarding the influence of reggae on punk (with The Ruts eventually becoming Ruts DC, subject of an anthology on Select Cuts we recommended a while back)... That's followed by Mikey Dread's dub version of The Clash's "Bank Robber" which of course sounds pretty much like The Clash, but dubbier. It's with track three, "Wild Dub" from Generation X, purportedly the first punk dub ever cut, that the punk-dub collision starts to get really interesting. And if Billy Idol's old band's dub attempt is cool, you can only imagine what more some of the more out-there groups came up with. For instance, dig the bizarre sounds of The Slits, whose disjointed dub of "Typical Girls" comes off like Italian 'rock concrete' deconstructionists Starfuckers by way of Jamaica, all cut-up and sparse and loopy. Definitely a highlight. Meanwhile, you've got The Pop Group setting an example for current acts like Out Hud/!!! to emulate, 4 Be 2's weird Irish hoedown skank, the throbbing "Turn To Red" by Killing Joke (from a super-rare 9" record), and Grace Jones' 1980 Chrissie Hynde penned dance classic "Private Life" with bass and drums from Sly & Robbie. And more... Former Sex Pistol Johnny Rotten is a ubiquitous presence, in addition to PIL's quintessential "Death Disco", there's a bunch of other John Lydon productions on here, including a great track from Vivien Goldman ("Private Armies") dubbed up by Lydon and Adrian Sherwood. Goldman, former singer with the Flying Lizards and reggae writer for the punk weekly Sounds, contributes the disc's liner notes, with an enthusiastic, informed, she-was-there-then-and-cares-deeply-about-it-now perspective. So, totally, recommended -- everyone who loved those great Disco Not Disco and/or In The Beginning There Was Rhythm compilations will want to check this out for sure!
MPEG Stream: KILLING JOKE "Turn to Red"
MPEG Stream: THE SLITS "Typical Girls (Brink Style Dub)"
MPEG Stream: VIVIEN GOLDMAN "Private Agents (dub)"
MPEG Stream: GRACE JONES "Private Life (Dub)"
V/A Wild Dub (Select Cuts) 2lp 22.00
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY. Subtitled "Dread Meets Punk Rocker Downtown" this is a brilliant collection of dubbed out and reggaefied punk and new wave b-sides circa '77-'81, demonstrating the Jamaican dub influence on the youth culture of music and rebellion in England and elsewhere, back in the day. The underground dancefloor avantgardists of today can cop these styles, but this is the real deal, with tracks from well-known acts like The Pop Group, Killing Joke, The Slits, PIL, The Clash, Grace Jones and Stiff Little Fingers, plus some more obscure bands as well, like Red Beat, 4 Be 2, and Basement 5. Some cuts are actual echoey dubs, others are more about the Jamaican influence, and the dub concept of studio as instrument. All are pretty cool. The Ruts' "Jah War" starts things off in deceptively ordinary fashion, pretty much straight up reggae (not a dub), though it does succesfully demonstrate this comp's thesis about the regarding the influence of reggae on punk (with The Ruts eventually becoming Ruts DC, subject of an anthology on Select Cuts we recommended a while back)... That's followed by Mikey Dread's dub version of The Clash's "Bank Robber" which of course sounds pretty much like The Clash, but dubbier. It's with track three, "Wild Dub" from Generation X, purportedly the first punk dub ever cut, that the punk-dub collision starts to get really interesting. And if Billy Idol's old band's dub attempt is cool, you can only imagine what more some of the more out-there groups came up with. For instance, dig the bizarre sounds of The Slits, whose disjointed dub of "Typical Girls" comes off like Italian 'rock concrete' deconstructionists Starfuckers by way of Jamaica, all cut-up and sparse and loopy. Definitely a highlight. Meanwhile, you've got The Pop Group setting an example for current acts like Out Hud/!!! to emulate, 4 Be 2's weird Irish hoedown skank, the throbbing "Turn To Red" by Killing Joke (from a super-rare 9" record), and Grace Jones' 1980 Chrissie Hynde penned dance classic "Private Life" with bass and drums from Sly & Robbie. And more... Former Sex Pistol Johnny Rotten is a ubiquitous presence, in addition to PIL's "Death Disco", there's a bunch of other John Lydon productions on here, including a great track from Vivien Goldman ("Private Armies") dubbed up by Lydon and Adrian Sherwood. Goldman, former singer with the Flying Lizards and reggae writer for the punk weekly Sounds, contributes the disc's liner notes, with an enthusiastic, informed, she-was-there-then-and-cares-deeply-about-it-now perspective. So, totally, recommended -- everyone who loved those great Disco Not Disco and/or In The Beginning There Was Rhythm compilations will want to check this out for sure!
V/A Wildflowers: The New York Jazz Loft Sessions, Complete (Knit Classics) 3cd 28.00
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
V/A Willow Songs (Finders Keepers) cd 17.98
The original Wicker Man movie has got to be one of our all time favorite films as well as pretty much one of our all time favorite soundtracks. The movie falls into an elusive subgenre of psych-folk films like The Ballad of Tam-Lin, or Herzog's Heart of Glass, that mix pre-Christian folkloric musical elements and themes with a modern or counter-cultural revivalism often with darkly beautiful and sometimes terrifying results. There is no doubt that the Wicker Man as both a film and soundtrack was a key touchstone in the recent freak-folk movement. That the songs featured on that soundtrack with all their barely concealed bawdyness and lyrical waxing of the cycles of nature, sexuality and death were actually based on traditional British folk music is at this point no surprise either. Finder's Keepers does a lovely job here collecting much of the traditional material that formed the basis for the songs performed in the Wicker Man movie. Although the most remembered song from that movie, "Willow's Song" was not traditionally based, it's the song that let us into the perverse mysticism of the movie's characters and made us pay attention to the duplicitous meanings found in the traditional material. Here, that song is represented by a beautiful instrumental version taken from the original soundtrack recordings but not featured on the actual soundtrack release. The cd also features traditional versions of "Corn Rigs", based on a Robert Burns poem, "Gently, Johnny", the Maypole song "Rattlin' Bog", and "Highland Lament", as well as children's songs and instrumental jigs.
MPEG Stream: "Highland Lament"
MPEG Stream: "Gently Johnny, My Jingalo"
MPEG Stream: "Willow's Song (Instrumental)"
MPEG Stream: "Willy O'Winsbury"
V/A Willow Songs (Finders Keepers) 2lp 27.00
NOW ON (IMPORT) VINYL! The original Wicker Man movie has got to be one of our all time favorite films as well as pretty much one of our all time favorite soundtracks. The movie falls into an elusive subgenre of psych-folk films like The Ballad of Tam-Lin, or Herzog's Heart of Glass, that mix pre-Christian folkloric musical elements and themes with a modern or counter-cultural revivalism often with darkly beautiful and sometimes terrifying results. There is no doubt that the Wicker Man as both a film and soundtrack was a key touchstone in the recent freak-folk movement. That the songs featured on that soundtrack with all their barely concealed bawdyness and lyrical waxing of the cycles of nature, sexuality and death were actually based on traditional British folk music is at this point no surprise either. Finder's Keepers does a lovely job here collecting much of the traditional material that formed the basis for the songs performed in the Wicker Man movie. Although the most remembered song from that movie, "Willow's Song" was not traditionally based, it's the song that let us into the perverse mysticism of the movie's characters and made us pay attention to the duplicitous meanings found in the traditional material. Here, that song is represented by a beautiful instrumental version taken from the original soundtrack recordings but not featured on the actual soundtrack release. The cd also features traditional versions of "Corn Rigs", based on a Robert Burns poem, "Gently, Johnny", the Maypole song "Rattlin' Bog", and "Highland Lament", as well as children's songs and instrumental jigs.
MPEG Stream: "Highland Lament"
MPEG Stream: "Gently Johnny, My Jingalo"
MPEG Stream: "Willow's Song (Instrumental)"
MPEG Stream: "Willy O'Winsbury"
V/A Windswept Trees And Houses (Jewelled Antler) cd-r 9.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY. Essentially, "Windswept Trees And Houses" is a Jewelled Antler Collective primer. The Jewelled Antler Collective (Loren Chasse, Glenn Donaldson, Jason Honea, Steven R. Smith and Rob Reger) rotate through a number of wholly unique manifestations of psychedelic improv in Thuja, Blithe Sons, Child Readers, Knit Separates, and The Skygreen Leopards. With all of those outfits present, this album encapsulates the Jewelled Antler ethos in parallel with a handful of like minded artists who share their host's metaphysical glee and earnest investigations into the mysterious. Amongst the guests on "Windswept Trees And Houses" include the amazing film / installation collaboration Silt who has recently been awarded with a showcase at the 2002 Whitney Biennial, offering a very nice piece of ephemeral vocal incantations swathed in Zoviet France delay tricks. There's also New Zealand's Entlang (featuring members of Dress and Garbage From The Flowers) presenting a disjointed track of avant-hillbilly strum. But the highlight of the compilation is The Billy Crosby's whose stunning cover of Current 93's "The Signs Of Emptiness" sublimely matches a warbling Appalachian finger picking with a rough-hewn male / female vocal duet. While most compilations suffer from poor throw-away tracks, "Windswept Trees And Houses" is a great listen throughout, and certainly gets a strong recommendation as with the rest of the Jewelled Antler releases.
RealAudio clip: THUJA "Pity Drain The Sea"
RealAudio clip: ROB EUGENE REGER "Intruder"
RealAudio clip: THE BILLY CROSBY'S "The Signs Of Emptiness"
RealAudio clip: SILT "Sail Reticulum"
V/A Wiretap Music Presents: Covers (Wiretap) 2cd 12.98
San Francisco comp featuring lots of cool melodic indie rock. One disc is bands doing originals while the other disc has them all covering each other. Features folks like French Miama, The Lovely Public, 60 Watt Kid, Tartufi, Little Teeth, Pidgeon, Excuses For Skipping, and lots more.
MPEG Stream: FRENCH MIAMI "Mr. Moment"
MPEG Stream: THE LOVELY PUBLIC "Delicious Surprise Kisses"
MPEG Stream: 60 WATT KID "Mr. Moment"
V/A With The Sun In My Eyes: 20 Psychedelic Spins (Psychic Circle) cd 16.98
V/A Wizzz! (Musiques Hybrides) cd 18.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY. This peppy French compilation is so good. So stylistic and classy, people in the store took notice immediatley when I put it on. The songs are fast and a bit psychedelic. There're silly backup vocals and sexy girl voices throughout. The years span 1966-1971, which were rumoured to be musically uninspired years in France. This is a handful of the the best France had to offer, which I find lovely. Total cocktail party music, but in a good way, not all lounge nation.
RealAudio clip: CHARLOTTE LESLIE "Les Filles C'est Fait"
RealAudio clip: LES FLEURS DE PAVOT "A Degager"
V/A Wolf's At The Door: Lost Recordings From The Spirit Of The South (Sutro Park) lp 17.98
When seeing this record, most people will assume it's a killer new comp from Mississippi. In fact, it is a killer new comp, only from the Sutro Park label, which gave us those amazing Sandy Bull lp reissues a while back. Wolf's At The Door features 12 field recordings from the late '60s and early '70s, when a 19 year old Swede named Bengt Olsson decided to travel through the depths of the American South in search of the authentic sounds presented here. All of the artists on this record are unknown to us, and as the liner notes point out, Olsson's odyssey was marked by his introduction to many of Memphis' older, more obscure bluesmen, and many of the performers' stories remain unknown. As far as we can tell these recordings were unreleased before this, and the material offers a stark, powerful glimpse into the lives of these performers. The edges are rough and raw, but the fidelity is surprisingly clear. The songs here are even more interesting when you take into account the time in which they were recorded, as they seem completely oblivious to the innovations that had been rapidly shaping the music industry for better and/or worse. What you have here are some real sounds representative of a culture that managed to avoid all that, and the results are quite powerful. Recommended stuff which will no doubt appeal to fans of labels like the aforementioned Mississippi, Monk, and the like.
V/A Women Take Back The Noise (Ubi Ubi) 3cd+pouch 30.00
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY. Curated and published by Ninah Pixie of the Bay Area neo-Dada ensemble Big City Orchestra, Women Take Back The Noise is a triple cd compilation that's long overdue, standing as an almanac for the ladies out there wandering through the nether regions of experimental music. It should be noted that the 'noise' which the title refers to is more of a convenient placeholder for glitchey-droned-electroacoustic-field-recordings-and-a-smattering-of-volcanic-noise, as the compilation has a pretty wide assortment of aesthetics and strategies. The big names include Cosey Fanni Tutti, Fe-Mail, Blevin Blectum, Jessica Rylan, and Maggi Payne; and there are some lesser known women who we here at Aquarius have long been fans of such as Kadet and Cheryl E. Leonard. The three discs revolve around distinct themes, whose orbits often cross and mingle. The first disc leans toward the drone based electronics, highlights including Aedria Hughes' spectral guitar drones and long-stringed scrapes, Kadet's fizzing granular synthesis dappled with viola squiggle, and Maggi Payne's recontextualized household appliances transformed into oblique soundsmears with haunted aspirations. The second disc sports a bit more of a post-industrial agenda, with bouts of looping syncopation, malcontent electronics, and shadowy atmospheres. The highlights on this disc include Analog Tara's droned chorus for vibrating organs, the grey phase pattern shifts of Choronzon, and Cosey's mechanical rhythms and divebomb guitar riffs that harken back more to Throbbing Gristle circa 1978. If any of the three discs on Women Take Back The Noise embody the noise of the title than it's the third disc, with Jessica Rylan's 8-bit tirade of squiggle and bleep, further circuit-bending assaults from CJ Reaven Borosque, and the unholy cacophony of Fe-Mail that obliterates most everything in its path. The three discs come packaged in an oversized plastic pouch and sports a circuit-bending flower through which anybody -- woman, man, girl, boy, dog, cat -- can make their own damn noise record! There's only a handful of these in stock, and it's hard to say if we'll be able to keep this around for long. So act fast!
MPEG Stream: COSEY FANNI TUTTI "Wired"
MPEG Stream: FE-MAIL "They Look As Innocent As Newborn Lambs..."
MPEG Stream: CHORONZON "Current"
MPEG Stream: MAGGI PAYNE "ReCycle"
V/A Wooden Guitar (Locust Music) cd 14.98
This is a nice one. The Locust label has gathered together a quartet of today's notable, underground guitar experimentalists, all of whom are quite fond of the classic Takoma label solo guitar sound -- the "deltadelica" (their word) explored thirty years or more ago by guys like John Fahey, Robbie Basho, and Leo Kottke. Paying tribute to that Eastern-tinged, American-folky tradition, there's Virginia's Jack Rose, whom you might know from drone-psych outfit Pelt and Appalachian folk twangers the Black Twig Pickers; obvious choice Steffen Basho-Junghans of Germany; Japanese "onkyo" guitarist Tetuzi Akiyama; and Sun City Girl Rick Bishop, excuse me, Sir Richard Bishop. During the 70 minutes of "Wooden Guitar" each one of 'em provides a lengthy, hypnotic acoustic guitar performance, totally unaccompanied. Actually Basho-Junghans appears twice, everyone else just once. Let's take a look-see... Rose's "Red Horse II" is a sad and lovely 14+ minutes of vaguely raga-like 12 string strumming n' picking, densely textured yet light and exactingly pretty. That's followed by the first of Mr. Basho-Junghan's two contributions to this compilation, which continues in much the same vein as Rose's -- it's even called "A North Thuringian Raga". The Berliner is a virtuoso and this is a fantastic, meditative track indeed. Next up, Tetuzi Akiyama's piece is a lot sparser and more "abstract" sounding than what's come before, less in the Takoma style (yet still in its spirit, and latter-day Fahey would certainly approve). Appropriately, it's called "Time Between" and is the longest cut on here, at over twenty minutes. It slowly, stumblingly, somberly unfolds. Haunting, raw, and quite beautiful, it's a masterful centerpiece to this collection. Basho-Junghans checks in again with a shorter piece, the five-minute "Smiling Penguins". Repetitive and bright, it sounds like some sort of thumb-piano minimalism. Then, we're into the home stretch with the final piece on "Wooden Guitar" -- Sir Richard Bishop's quarter-hour "Corpuscle" which encompasses dusty spagetti western Morricone, acoustic Jimmy Page, and flamenco flourishes. It's a grand finale for this disc for sure, and this disc itself is grand. Essential to anyone into sheer impassioned, inventive, gosh-darn gorgeous solo acoustic guitar playin'. And it's packaged with an eye to the old Takoma LPs -- this cd comes in a embossed, silkscreened cardboard sleeve [not any more, actually, now it's in jewel case, but looks nice all the same], very nicely done.
MPEG Stream: JACK ROSE "Red Horse II"
MPEG Stream: TETUZI AKIYAMA "Time Between"
MPEG Stream: SIR RICHARD BISHOP "Corpuscle"
V/A Work Hard, Play Hard, Pray Hard: Hard Time, Good Time, & End Time Music, 1923-1936 (Tompkins Square) 3cd 34.00
Also on cd!! Another fantastic collection of old timey music from local label Tompkins Square, this one chronicling the life cycle of rural America, in the twenties and thirties, split up over three disc, the first, songs of labor, "John Henry, The Steel Drivin' Man", "The Farmer Is The Man Who Feeds Them All", "When The Roses Bloom Again For The Bootlegger", the second songs of leisure, "Work Don't Bother Me", "The Beer Party", "Corn Shucking Party In Georgia", "Home Brew Rag", an finally, the ultimate reckoning in the form of songs of prayer and worship, "Climbing The Golden Stairs", "I'm S-A-V-E-D", "The Gambler's Dying Words", "When The Moon Drips Away Into The Blood" (!). Almost as fantastic as the music is the provenance of the records themselves, most of which belonged to a single hillbilly 78 collector named Don Whale, from Louisville Kentucky, who died leaving a hoarder's haul worth of trash and junk and receipts and everything else you'd expect to find, but in addition to the usual detritus of life, was an INCREDIBLE collection of rare 78's most of which had been tossed in the dumpster, and were rescued mere hours before being hauled away to the dump and destroyed! Most of the tracks here are previously un-reissued, and while a few of the names will be familiar to old timey / blues / bluegrass aficionados, many won't, and the songs themselves are gorgeous, the aforementioned "When The Moon Drips Away Into The Blood", is a surprising jaunty jam, considering the title, while the two part "Flat Wheel Train Blues", is beautifully melodic, with some fantastically melancholic fiddle, intricate finger picking, sans the sung/spoken vocals, it's a stunning slab of dreamy Appalachia, the song replete with simulated trains sounds which only make it that much more evocative. "The Beer Party" begins with a playful conversation/intro before the song launches into a stomping fiddle driven hoedown, "The Preacher Got Drunk And Laid Down His Bible" almost sounds like proto Mountain Goats, urgently strummed guitar, and keening rapid fire vox, and "Beyond The Starry Plane" is a wistful lament, wreathed in tons of hiss and crackle, which only makes it seem that much more ethereal and ephemeral. We could probably go though the whole collection song by song, but you get the drift, all of this stuff is amazing, and as with all Tompkins Square releases, beautifully packaged, here each of the three discs is housed in its own full color sleeve, there's a huge perfect bound booklet, with liner notes and essays, rare photos and more, all housed in a nice heavy box, with full color paste on artwork.
MPEG Stream: FIDDLIN' JOHN CARSON "The Farmer Is the Man Who Feeds Them All"
MPEG Stream: EARL JOHNSON "When the Roses Bloom Again for the Bootlegger"
MPEG Stream: NORTH CAROLINA HAWAIIANS "Soldier's Joy"
MPEG Stream: HERSCHEL BROWN AND HIS BOYS "Corn-Shucking Party In Georgia"
MPEG Stream: GID TANNER "You've Got To Stop Drinking Shine"
MPEG Stream: TAYLOR-GRIGGS LOUISIANA MELODY MAKERS "When The Moon Drips Away Into The Blood"
V/A Work Hard, Play Hard, Pray Hard: Hard Time, Good Time, & End Time Music, 1923-1936 (Tompkins Square) 3lp 40.00
Another fantastic collection of old timey music from local label Tompkins Square, this one chronicling the life cycle of rural America, in the twenties and thirties, split up over three disc, the first, songs of labor, "John Henry, The Steel Drivin' Man", "The Farmer Is The Man Who Feeds Them All", "When The Roses Bloom Again For The Bootlegger", the second songs of leisure, "Work Don't Bother Me", "The Beer Party", "Corn Shucking Party In Georgia", "Home Brew Rag", an finally, the ultimate reckoning in the form of songs of prayer and worship, "Climbing The Golden Stairs", "I'm S-A-V-E-D", "The Gambler's Dying Words", "When The Moon Drips Away Into The Blood" (!). Almost as fantastic as the music is the provenance of the records themselves, most of which belonged to a single hillbilly 78 collector named Don Whale, from Louisville Kentucky, who died leaving a hoarder's haul worth of trash and junk and receipts and everything else you'd expect to find, but in addition to the usual detritus of life, was an INCREDIBLE collection of rare 78's most of which had been tossed in the dumpster, and were rescued mere hours before being hauled away to the dump and destroyed! Most of the tracks here are previously un-reissued, and while a few of the names will be familiar to old timey / blues / bluegrass aficionados, many won't, and the songs themselves are gorgeous, the aforementioned "When The Moon Drips Away Into The Blood", is a surprising jaunty jam, considering the title, while the two part "Flat Wheel Train Blues", is beautifully melodic, with some fantastically melancholic fiddle, intricate finger picking, sans the sung/spoken vocals, it's a stunning slab of dreamy Appalachia, the song replete with simulated trains sounds which only make it that much more evocative. "The Beer Party" begins with a playful conversation/intro before the song launches into a stomping fiddle driven hoedown, "The Preacher Got Drunk And Laid Down His Bible" almost sounds like proto Mountain Goats, urgently strummed guitar, and keening rapid fire vox, and "Beyond The Starry Plane" is a wistful lament, wreathed in tons of hiss and crackle, which only makes it seem that much more ethereal and ephemeral. We could probably go though the whole collection song by song, but you get the drift, all of this stuff is amazing, and as with all Tompkins Square releases, beautifully packaged, here each of the three discs is housed in its own full color sleeve, there's a huge perfect bound booklet, with liner notes and essays, rare photos and more, all housed in a nice heavy box, with full color paste on artwork.
MPEG Stream: FIDDLIN' JOHN CARSON "The Farmer Is the Man Who Feeds Them All"
MPEG Stream: EARL JOHNSON "When the Roses Bloom Again for the Bootlegger"
MPEG Stream: NORTH CAROLINA HAWAIIANS "Soldier's Joy"
MPEG Stream: HERSCHEL BROWN AND HIS BOYS "Corn-Shucking Party In Georgia"
MPEG Stream: GID TANNER "You've Got To Stop Drinking Shine"
MPEG Stream: TAYLOR-GRIGGS LOUISIANA MELODY MAKERS "When The Moon Drips Away Into The Blood"
V/A World Of The Zombies, The (Popllama) cd 13.98
A fabulous tribute compilation to one of the all-time great pop bands! Released back in '94, it features some of the Pacific Northwest's finest (yet many sadly now disbanded) popsters in prime form: Young Fresh Fellows, Zumpano, Fastbacks, Sneetches, Flop, Model Rockets, and Posies. Sooo gooood!
V/A World Psychedelic Classics 3: Love's A Real Thing (Luaka Bop) cd 14.98
About time this AQ Record Of The Week from about four or five years ago got repressed, it's been absent for much too long, considering all the recent interest in Afro-funk reissues! And this collection has got some ESSENTIAL jams on it for sure, so we're glad it's back, and you will be too if you didn't already get one. Here's what we wrote about this when we originally listed it: It's hard to argue with this one. Indeed, we're gonna do quite the opposite and make it a Record Of The Week! This collection, the third in the World Psychedelic Classics series on Luaka Bop (David Byrne's "world music" label), after an Os Mutantes collection and that incredible Shuggie Otis album, is further subtitled: "The Funky, Fuzzy Sounds Of West Africa". Stress on the funk we thinks. Yup, authentic '70s West African funk with a 'delic bent. Really really hard stuff not to like. The dozen tracks here have got it all: Afro-centric chants, polyrhythmic percussion, James Brown style raspy yelps, wicked organ workouts, and even hard wah-wah acid fuzz jams (Ofo & The Black Company's bad-ass "Allah Wakbarr" is about the last word in that department, though we'd like to hear more). Though some come closer to the compilers' stated concept than others, all the tracks are winners, from the moody, marimba-based soundtrack theme of Manu Dibango's "Ceddo End Title" to the Cuban stylings of No. 1 de No. 1's "Guajira Van" to the percolating political space-funk of William Onyeabor's "Better Change Your Mind". And Alison simply says that "Ifa" by Tunji Oyelana and the Benders is her favorite. Probably because it sets itself apart from the other tracks by utilizing a more scrappy electronic sound to back its stripped-down politically-bent Afro-pop-style lyricism. All the tracks come from the decade of the '70s, and the bands that recorded them hail from the West African countries of Ghana, Guinea, Senegal, Mali, Gambia, Benin, and Nigeria (but only two tracks overlap with the now-out-of-print 3cd Nigeria 70 compilation). And we think the compliers did a damn fine job, though it seems any survey of West African psych shoulda included a track by Blo, the closest thing to Cream the continent produced as far as we know. Ah well... we can hope for a second volume someday perhaps. Meanwhile, anyone who digs James Brown, Fela, Funkadelic, Orchestra Baobab, or more recent AQ reviewees Konono No. 1 and Black Merda, for instance, will certainly find that love IS a real thing when it comes to how you're gonna feel about this compilation!! The liner notes go on about the psychedelic aspect of these bands, and while this stuff is definitely far out and groovy it's way more James Brown than brown acid. Mention of Haight-Ashbury seems a stretch, and the music of these bands has got as much or more to do with their motherland than, say, the generally more Western-derived psych we've heard from Thailand, Cambodia, or Turkey on various other comps we've carried. Then again, when you look at rock music influencing African music, you've got a full-circle phenomenon to examine. And when we reviewed the (currently unavailable) Love Peace & Poetry: African Psychedelic Music compiliation some months back, the stuff on this new comp is exactly what we felt was missing and should have been included. In any case, proper psych or not, and with or without much fuzz, this is definitely FUNKY. The attractive cd booklet includes notes on each track/artist, complete with color album sleeve art where available. Nicely done. Furthermore, this is an "enhanced cd", allowing those with the appropriate computer technology to witness a video of Orchestre Poly-Rythmo de Cotonou Dahomey's track "Minsato Le, Mi Dayhome".
MPEG Stream: SUPER EAGLES "Love's A Real Thing"
MPEG Stream: MANU DIBANGO "Ceddo End Title"
MPEG Stream: OFO & THE BLACK COMPANY "Allah Wakbarr"
V/A World Psychedelic Classics 3: Love's A Real Thing - The Sounds Of West Africa (Stones Throw / Luaka Bop) lp 16.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY. Now available on vinyl!! Minus two of the 12 tracks on the cd (they didn't have space for Manu Dibango and Gasper Lawai, unfortunately)... What we said about the cd, a recent Record Of The Week: It's hard to argue with this one. Indeed, we're gonna do quite the opposite and make it a Record Of The Week! This collection, the third in the World Psychedelic Classics series on Luaka Bop (David Byrne's "world music" label), after an Os Mutantes collection and that incredible Shuggie Otis album, is further subtitled: "The Funky, Fuzzy Sounds Of West Africa". Stress on the funk we thinks. Yup, authentic '70s West African funk with a 'delic bent. Really really hard stuff not to like. The dozen tracks here have got it all: Afro-centric chants, polyrhythmic percussion, James Brown style raspy yelps, wicked organ workouts, and even hard wah-wah acid fuzz jams (Ofo & The Black Company's bad-ass "Allah Wakbarr" is about the last word in that department, though we'd like to hear more). Though some come closer to the compilers' stated concept than others, all the tracks are winners, from the moody, marimba-based soundtrack theme of Manu Dibango's "Ceddo End Title" to the Cuban stylings of No. 1 de No. 1's "Guajira Van" to the percolating political space-funk of William Onyeabor's "Better Change Your Mind". And Alison simply says that "Ifa" by Tunji Oyelana and the Benders is her favorite. Probably because it sets itself apart from the other tracks by utilizing a more scrappy electronic sound to back its stripped-down politically-bent Afro-pop-style lyricism. All the tracks come from the decade of the '70s, and the bands that recorded them hail from the West African countries of Ghana, Guinea, Senegal, Mali, Gambia, Benin, and Nigeria (but only two tracks overlap with the now-out-of-print 3cd Nigeria 70 compilation). And we think the compliers did a damn fine job, though it seems any survey of West African psych shoulda included a track by Blo, the closest thing to Cream the continent produced as far as we know. Ah well... we can hope for a second volume someday perhaps. Meanwhile, anyone who digs James Brown, Fela, Funkadelic, Orchestra Baobab, or more recent AQ reviewees Konono No. 1 and Black Merda, for instance, will certainly find that love IS a real thing when it comes to how you're gonna feel about this compilation!! The liner notes go on about the psychedelic aspect of these bands, and while this stuff is definitely far out and groovy it's way more James Brown than brown acid. Mention of Haight-Ashbury seems a stretch, and the music of these bands has got as much or more to do with their motherland than, say, the generally more Western-derived psych we've heard from Thailand, Cambodia, or Turkey on various other comps we've carried. Then again, when you look at rock music influencing African music, you've got a full-circle phenomenon to examine. And when we reviewed the (currently unavailable) Love Peace & Poetry: African Psychedelic Music compiliation some months back, the stuff on this new comp is exactly what we felt was missing and should have been included. In any case, proper psych or not, and with or without much fuzz, this is definitely FUNKY.
MPEG Stream: SUPER EAGLES "Love's A Real Thing"
MPEG Stream: OFO & THE BLACK COMPANY "Allah Wakbarr"
MPEG Stream: ""
V/A Woronzow: Like It? It's Yours (Woronzow) cd 9.98
Budget-priced full length comp from the Bevis Frond's label, with contributions from Bevis, Green Pajamas, TOm Rapp, Country Joe McDonald and more.
V/A Worried Now, Won't Be Worried Long (Mississippi) lp 16.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY. **MISSISSIPPI RECORDS ALERT** **MISSISSIPPI RECORDS ALERT** **MISSISSIPPI RECORDS ALERT** Okay Mississippi Records obsessives, get ready to blow your tops. Besides the amazing Been Here All My Days comp reviewed on the last list (grab one if you haven't yet, it's fantastic!), there are five, count 'em FIVE other new Mississippi titles this time around: I'll Meet You On That Other Shore, I'm Gonna Live Anyhow Until I Die, I'll Be So Glad When The Sun Goes Down, Worried Now, Won't Be Worried Long and Wave The Ocean, Wave The Sea, all culled from a legendary set of Alan Lomax field recordings, collected during his "Southern Journey, a trip he took through the American South, between the years 1959 and 1960, accompanied by British folk singer Shirley Collins, during which he made the first ever stereo recordings of American Traditional music in the field, capturing in stereo for the first time, music from Southern prison farms, the traditional gospel choral folksong of the Sacred Harp, the Southern Fife And Drum Corps, the debut recordings of blues legend Fred McDowell, not to mention an incredibly varied selection of musics from blues to bluegrass to country to gospel, captured on porches, at dairy farms, in churches, at picnics, state fairs, in prisons, in living rooms and in bars, many of the musicians, many of the folks Lomax had recorded before, and was visiting again, years later, while many were new discoveries. According to the extensive liner notes, Lomax upon returning to the US, after a decade long recording trip in Europe and the UK, was hailed as a hero, responsible for the revival of interest in American folk music, but was quite disappointed by all the young people playing the folk music and traditional American music he helped discover, record and expose to this new audience, an audience that seemed to believe not only were they preserving the music, but also in some strange way "improving" on the originals, which horrified Lomax and spurred him to make the trip that would be later known as his "Southern Journey", not only to capture stereo recordings of all this amazing, still thriving American music, but to also prove those young folks wrong. The results speak for themselves, 5 lps of gorgeous, unique, heartfelt American music, instrumental and vocal, celebratory and sorrowful, ballads and bluegrass hoedowns, gospel spirituals and military marches, call and response prison songs and back porch blues, and so much more. This is classic, timeless music, sounds imbued with the sweat and blood, the lives and deaths, the loves and losses of the American people, past and present, moving and emotional, and totally fantastic... As for which one of the five to buy, it's a tough call, they're all fantastic, and the music is varied on each, they're not divided by theme or style, instead, it's more like a sprawling 5 part compilation, each as good as the next, so yeah, obviously if you can, you should buy all 5, but if that's too much, heck, just pick one, maybe with a title that appeals to you, and dig in. Odds are you'll be back for more. Packed in super heavy jackets, with printed liner notes on the back, each volume containing a big booklet, with photos and more notes on each of the different tracks and all of the various performers.
V/A Worth The Weight: Bristol Dubstep Classics (Punch Drunk) 2cd 16.98
Yet another killer dubstep comp, this one focusing on the Bristol scene, which may not mean anything to you, until you get a gander of the folks on this comp: Pinch, Peverelist, Appleblim, Joker, Guido, RSD, Headhunter, Gatekeeper, names anyone into dubstep is familiar with, but a whole bunch of lesser knowns like Hyetal, Dubkasm, Gemmy, Jakes, Forsaken, Shortstuff, Wedge, Shadz, Dubboy, Komonazmuk, Atki2 and more. There are extensive liner notes about the scene, and one of our favorite quotes, courtesy of Pinch,which pretty much sums up what's so awesome about dubstep, the Bristol strain specifically: "I knew straight away that this was a sound that would fit perfectly in Bristol. There is a lot of tension in the music that carries a satisfactory darkness with it but it's also lazy music. You don't have to dance hard to move with it. It was born with a reefer in its gob." No need to dance, just sit back, bliss out, and let the music wash over you. And this comp is full of the perfect sounds. Dark and minimal, skeletal and skittery, for dubstep obsessive, you probably already have a handful of these, but there are probably plenty you don't. Moody and mysterious, dark and haunting, some of the tracks are hushed and muted and murky, others are fully dubbed out and drenched in reverb and echo, while still others, our favorites, and thick, and buzzy, with huge warbly bass, and minimal stuttery beats, Headhunter's "7th Curse" is a killer, a sort of grim sci-fi slow motion groove, RSD gets all jungle-y with his "Pretty Bright Light", Smith And Mighty unleash some serious ragga dubstep on "B Line Fi Blo", Joker lays down some synthy buzz and big ass bass warble on "Holly Brook Park" and Hyetal gets all videogame electro, weaving 8bit melodies and swirling synths into a seriously cinematic sprawl of futuristic stutter and pulse, throb and buzz. So good. Pretty much every track here slays, another unanimous AQ fave for sure, getting crazy play in the store...
MPEG Stream: PEVERELIST "Roll With The Punches"
MPEG Stream: HEADHUNTER "7th Curse"
MPEG Stream: RSD "Pretty Bright Light"
MPEG Stream: PINCH "Lazarus"
V/A Wreck This Mess (Noise Museum) cd 17.98
Noise Museum presents the second "Wreck This Mess" compilation of illbient / digidub grooves from Twilight Circus, Spectre, Systemwide, The Dub Factory, Extremadura, Botom Botom, Holon, Silk Saw, DJ Spooky, Egon Zo vs Digidub, Audio Active, Starfish Pool, and Andrew Lagowski.
V/A Wrong Application (Tigerbeat6) cd 12.98
Holy crap, another compilation from everybody's favorite electronic superstar Kid 606 and friends. Compiled by Andrew Nosnitsky, the concept behind "Wrong Application" was to create audio tracks resulting from non-audio, pure data information origination. Hexadecimalica anyone? "Wrong Application" furthers the aesthetic of the Matmos/Lesser/Kid 606/etc. co-op project Disc in a rather ultraexcessive fashion (imagine that!), resulting in pure digital errata and sonic terrorism akin to the Susan Lawly camp of extreme music, but in an 'electronica' context. Featured artists: Blitter, Lesser, Farmers Manual, Phthalocyanine, Kid 606, Pimmon, Electric Company, Underwood, Suetsu, Viratone Ballad and No Human Intervention. Tracks are sewn together with interludes and segues by a shy Keith Fullerton Whitman (aka Hrvatski) under the guise of 'Anonymous'. Not for anyone looking for a pleasurable ass moving experience. Brutal.
RealAudio clip: BLITTER "That Perceptrons"
RealAudio clip: LESSER "192041 DAE Error Encountered"
RealAudio clip: KID 606 "so.nk.izz.obtuse.and.unneccessary"
V/A Wu-Chronicles: Chapter II (Wu-Tang ) cd 16.98
Their second compilation of rare tracks, remixes, b-sides and collaborative efforts and it's actually pretty great. Lots of tracks let some lower tier Wu Tang-ers get to show their stuff as well as a bunch of strange pairings with folks like Jon Spencer, DJ Spooky, and Gang Starr, Redman, D'Angelo.
V/A Xart Hybrid : Documentation (Xart / Mego) cd 16.98
The Xart Hybrid documents a series of electronic sound events which took place in an old soybean-oil factory outside of Copenhagen from November 1998 - June 30, 1999. While the compilation moves through the spectrum of contemporary vangarde of electronica, the greatest percentage of the tracks (Pole, Vanqueur and Substance) revolve around the Chain Reaction sound of granular synthesis dub. Others include Mego's Ramon Bauer, Chicks on Speed, Opiate, Goodiepal (V/VM co-chucklers), and more!!!
V/A Xen Cuts (Ninja Tune) 3cd 21.00
This is pretty Cool. To celebrate its ten year anniversary the respected label Ninja Tune releases a 3 disc boxset -- 44 of the best tracks from its catalog, and that includes fully 17 overlooked or previously-unreleased pieces, too, so it should be of interest even to those who're familiar with the label. One look at the breadth of the artists represented here and you get an idea of how incredibly influential and important this label has been (and what a sense of humor!) over its career of 85 full lengths and 136 singles: Amon Tobin, Funki Porcini, Coldcut, Luke Vibert, Neotropic, T Love, Kid Koala (his best track ever, Emperor's Main Course), Blackalicious, Infesticons, Quannum MCs, DJ Food, DJ Vadim, Squarepusher, etc. Totally impressive. There's MC-driven hip hop, sampler tricknology, good old drum'n'bass, turntablism, jazzy wailings, and soundtracky electronica. The one-minute cut that starts off the set is a cute intro from Steinski, and contains so many split second samples of stuff from the Ninja Tune catalog that we can't even count'em. See what I mean -- Cool. Please note that this set also comes on vinyl as a 4-lp set ($29) with all the previously-released tracks, but not the unreleased stuff (yes, there was a 6-lp version with everything on the cd box, but it's already sold out forever.)
RealAudio clip: SAUL WILLIAMS "Twice the First Time"
RealAudio clip: STEINSKI "The Xen to One Ratio"
RealAudio clip: LUKE VIBERT "I Hear the Drummer"
RealAudio clip: KID KOALA "Emperors Main Course"
V/A Xing-Wu (Xing-Wu) cd 12.98