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Monthly Archive for January, 2010

Duncan Cameron’s Excellent Adventure

philexperiment Duncan Camerons Excellent Adventure

Duncan Cameron is an alias of Lieven Martens, the Dutch dude behind Dolphins Into The Future. His A Horseback Ride to the Sanctum of Montu, a reissue of Martens’ out of print tape, Tansprocesz, has just been released and it’s supposedly an audio diary of Duncan Cameron’s trip to the Temple of Montu in Egypt. For those unfamiliar with the name Duncan Cameron, he’s a man who claims he and his half brother jumped off the USS Eldridge, the ship supposedly involved in the notorious “Philadelphia Experiment,” in 1943, and time traveled twenty years into the future to Montauk, Long Island, where the government was doing top secret work on psychic warfare.

duncancameron Duncan Camerons Excellent Adventure

Basically, A Horseback Ride… is supposed to be the sound of a government trained time traveler/psychic warrior journeying on horseback to an ancient Egyptian temple to read hieroglyphics (!). If you keep this in mind when you listen to the tape, its seemingly strange mixture of bird noises, bubbling brook samples, gamelans, howling dogs, and old school Radiophonic Workshop synths actually makes sense. Compared to Dolphins Into The Future’s masterpiece ….On Seafaring Isolation, A Horseback Ride… is a difficult listen, but the concept behind it is such a perfect storm of underground culture obsessions (time travel, psychics, government conspiracies, Egyptology) that it’s hard not to be won over, not to mention the fact that Martens drops perfect little synth mini-suites at the end of each side of the tape.

A Horseback Ride to the Sanctum of Montu can be purchased here.

MP3 :::
Duncan Cameron – Glyphs [edit]

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Slumberland to Release Black Tambourine Anthology

bt

For a band that only put out a modest handful of singles twenty years ago, Black Tambourine’s unadulterated noise pop jams turned out to be one hell of a crystal ball. Circa 1989, I was in utero and members of twee gaze start ups Whorl and Velocity Girl had just recruited singer Pam Berry (whom I for some reason remember being much more attractive than in the above picture) to form a new project. It was an outlet to fuse together their obsessions with The Jesus & Mary Chain, the Ronettes, and efficient garage rock. Previously available as 1999’s Complete Recordings, this new anthology on their original label Slumberland contains six previously unreleased jams, including four new ones that the reunited band recorded for this specific occasion. There’s even a cover of my favorite Suicide song “Dream Baby Dream” and Buddy Holly’s “Heart Beat”. This is no carrot in the face of recession-weary completionists, it’s the perfect introduction for newcomers, and some long needed closure for fans. Also, Black Tambourine will now be available for the first time on vinyl.

bt

Black Tambourine will be available in all it’s overdue glory March 30th on Slumberland Records.

MP3 :::
Black Tambourine – Black Car
Black Tambourine – Throw Aggi Off the Bridge

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Dead Leaf Echo’s Ominous Dreamscape

l_5e76951a935647d6b2b6f77009741ba8 Dead Leaf Echos Ominous Dreamscape

Really like what I’m hearing from New York City’s Dead Leaf Echo. While you could toss them in the newgaze camp, I would argue that Dead Leaf Echo is only tangentially reminiscent of the scene that celebrates itself (which is what was immediately appealing to me in the first place). The vocals (coming from a gentleman simply known as LG, like my phone) have an odd, clear croon, brought up high in the mix rather than washed out (as is apropos to most shoegaze), bolstered more by moody and light synth flourishes and melted, chorus-heavy guitar rather than pure “wall of sound” or fuzz distortion. Lush as fuck, easy on the ears, yet keeps a visceral ominous tone throughout that reminds me of the finer portion of Medicine’s repertoire and, actually, older Blonde Redhead. Creation addicts should also take notice of these dream pop mensch, in the event you’ve not already. Hear more at Dead Leaf Echo’s website.

For fans of:  Soundpool, Medicine, Blonde Redhead

MP3 :::
Dead Leaf Echo – Half Truth

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Serena Maneesh – “I Just Want To See Your Face”

serena-maneesh-photo-212 Serena Maneesh - I Just Want To See Your Face

The guitars are so laterally evil and the vocals are so syrupy sweet. Praise be to Allah. I just want to see the new Serena Maneesh album in my hands a.s.a.p. I mean, I’m going to go grip it on vinyl, but it would be way fucking rad if 4AD wants to send me an advance promo. March 23rd, otherwise.

MP3 :::
Serena Maneesh – I Just Want To See Your Face

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Add Another Wolf to the Wolves

l_6806639e3c85906ecd1ba50fb2a0fad3 Add Another Wolf to the Wolves

Dude, what’s with the fucking wolves? Wolf Eyes, Wolfmother, Patrick Wolf, Guitar Wolf (who is awesome), Wolf Parade (who is not awesome), Sea Wolf, Peanut Butter Wolf, Howlin’ Wolf, AIDS Wolf, and lest we forget Peter Wolf and my personal favorites…

Wolf Blitzer (of The Situation Room fame, when not hosted by Mike “The Situation” Sorrentino, not to mention can double as an excellent metal band name)

 Add Another Wolf to the Wolves

Law & Order executive producer Dick Wolf (not to be confused with wolf dick, which is entirely different). DOINK DOINK:

dickwolf Add Another Wolf to the Wolves

and, of course, three wolves havin’ a howl, coming to a state fair or dance party near you…

wolfshirt-moon Add Another Wolf to the Wolves

Wolf is the old and new Bear, I suppose.

So yep, the Wolf is everywhere, and this shit’s beginning to confuse me. Add Wolf People to the fray. However, it’s worth mentioning and perhaps self-evident that Wolf People is a rather amazing band – amazing enough to make me (almost) completely forget about my aversion to wolves, both in project names and in real life encounters.

Two things you need to know about Wolf People. First, flutes. Second, Wolf People are completely out of the loop of what’s en vogue right now. This is good classic psychedelia, and some of the best interpretations of the genre since Dungen. No glo-fi, no beats, no poorly realized garage slop, no hype – just complex, ornate, soaring acid rock and electric folk – respectfully retro, yet with a contemporary sheen that shines brightly. Nothing complicated to read into with Wolf People, this is just how rock and roll is supposed to sound.

I’ve had a shit morning thus far, but discovering and listening to Wolf People put me in the right headspace. Despite having yet to set foot in the states (they come to us from  merry ole England), they just scored a distribution deal with the practically flawless Jagjaguwar label. Their debut full-length, Tidings, hit selves February 23.  Hit up the sample below, and hear more at the group’s Soundcloud.

For fans of:  Dungen, Fairport Convention, Kurt Vile, The Pretty Things

MP3 :::
Wolf People – Tidings

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Harlem – Hippies

harlem-hippies-aa Harlem - Hippies

Harlem are the newest hot button garage rock export from Austin,TX who have caught a lot of media buzz as of late for their fiery, angular revivalism. Their new up-coming full length Hippies is a collection of primitive drum spasms and jerky, elastic strumming that mangles classic rock into a child’s play thing. Scratchy sing along vocals tear across forty minutes of wire-y guitar play, with occasional slight adornments of bells and pedal steel guitar.

It’s really not bad, but then again that’s their main problem, it’s not particularly memorable, it actually feels like a step back, or at least an ill-advised consolidation of their last album Free Drugs. There are highlights, like the swagger of “Gay Human Bones” or the perfect vocal melody on “Be Your Baby”, but at 16 songs that all sound pretty similar, I had to check to see if the disc had started over already or not. It’s really just a bunch of honest, three-minute freakouts running on bravado alone, aiming to be the soundtrack to your next house party. They’ve got the spirit, and sometimes they nail the scuzzy post-grunge slacker anthem right on the head, but they could stand to stray from their comfort zone a bit more, or risk slipping through the cracks. I bet they put on a fun live act, though, and maybe that’s all these guys are trying for.

Hippies is available April 6th on Matador.

For Fans Of: Meth Teeth, Black Lips, Jay Reatard

MP3 :::
Harlem – Be Your Baby
Harlem – Gay Human Bones

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Four Tet – There Is Love In You

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Here we go, one of the most anticipated electronica releases of the past year from veteran knob tweaker and mood sculptor Four Tet. With various stints like releasing a techno record, touring with Steve Reid, and a few months sabbatical spent DJing in London, we had no real idea where he would land next. Turns out our best indicator was the kinetic Moth/Wolf Cub split with former schoolmate Burial. The new full-length There Is Love In You, returns to the glory of that twitchy dub jam, but with all of the perennial elements of Hebdan’s work from 1999’s Dialogue to present. The pulse beat of a heart, a motif of his since early albums, is recreated by the hum of organic sounds carefully cut and expanded, orbiting around an invisible core like a mobile of samples. Voices curl and multiply, even the most obviously synthesized sounds are kneaded into an uncannily human vibe that only Four Tet can diffuse from the circuitboard. Tracks like “Circling” blend warm, blinking arpeggios into a late-night cocktail that could have sat happily next to Squarepusher’s ambient cuts used on the Lost in Translation soundtrack.

Indeed, nostalgia runs all throughout the album, for both his own body of work and in general. Love’s finale “She Just Likes to Fight”, with it’s contemplative guitar riff and toy percussion recalls the closing number “Slow Jam” off of his magnum opus Rounds. But even more than being an articulate reflection of past work, this new album has proven to be a clever predictor of what the scene would sound like upon it’s completion. With the emergence of new-school dub steppers like Joy Orbison stealing the spotlight with their organic, staccato spin on a flat-lined genre, Four Tet re-emerges with a complete vision that anticipates this trend, and expands on it in ways only a seasoned producer could. The results are lucid, immersive, and unless Boards of Canada emerge from the fog, will undoubtedly remain the crowning achievement of popular electronica this year. I’ll eat those words if necessary, but I doubt it.

There Is Love In You is available this Monday through Domino Records and comes highly recommended.

MP3 :::
Four Tet – Plastic People
Four Tet – She Just Likes to Fight

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A Mix for Quitting Cigarettes

mix

Yup, we missed the boat for New Years Resolutions (which are bullshit anyway), but regardless, fellow TDT writer Norwood Derr and myself are attempting to give up the tobacco tubes. Disaster, frustration, and replacement vices loom in the near future, but at least you guys get a sweet mix out of it. We have no interest in persuading you to quit too, mostly because A.) smoking really does make you look cooler and B.) we are doing this for shallow reasons including money, smelling better, and wanting to play with our new Bowflex. Needless to say, it will be an uphill battle for two bastards like us.

To make things worse, I consulted my spiritual advisor/occasional Columbia student Robert about the matter and instead of helping, he made me a list of reasons why I should not quit smoking. Here are some of his better points:

-”You’ll never be famous.”

-”You’ll never have the joy of realizing that you ‘accidently’ stole someone’s lighter again.”

-”If 2012 happens, it would be pretty gay if you didn’t have a cig in your mouth that gets lit by an explosion (like in the end of Heathers).”

-”New Hampshire will mean nothing to you.”

Thanks a lot, Bob. I think we’re still gonna give it a shot, though. To supplement this self-indulgent post, here is a mix of songs we believe provide an accurate soundtrack to the thought process of anyone else whose in the same position. Best of luck, you walking ashtrays.

MP3 :::
Red House Painters – Lord Kill the Pain
Gun Club – She’s Like Heroin to Me
Pere Ubu – Nonalignment Pact
Misfits – Attitude
GG Allin – Bored to Death
James Chance & The Contortions – I Can’t Stand Myself
Black Flag – Nervous Breakdown
DNA – Not Moving
Pixies – Debaser
Guided by Voices – Alone, Stinking, on the Conan O’Brien Show, but Unafraid

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Lost in Space: Windy and Carl’s Depths

lostinspace Lost in Space: Windy and Carls Depths

The second album by husband and wife duo Windy and Carl, Depths, is a total immersion in psych-rock’s love of distortion. As waves of feedback cycle past, you hear maybe two or three notes ring out, fighting their way past the overdriven din.  Unlike My Bloody Valentine’s Loveless, which countless critics and listeners got once they heard the melodies underneath, Depths isn’t about using overdriven feedback and loop pedals to transform rock music, it’s about making those things the whole show. And yet there are melodies there, or at least repetitive pleasant tones. If Windy and Carl were trying to make difficult music, they would constantly shift the structure of the music and interject dissonant notes and sounds just to keep the listener off balance; instead they find a few gorgeous notes, then rinse (in layers of feedback and echo and reverb) and repeat.

Because the group uses such simple melodies, interjecting a minor note or chord has a huge impact on the mood of the song. On “Sirens,” a reoccurring minor chord spoils a two note ascending melody line and the whole song becomes tense and scary. And yet, by the end of the song, you’ve adapted to this sound and what sounded tense before now sounds majestic. In a similar way, “Undercurrent” begins as a menacing ballad, with a reverb heavy bass line very similar to the one on Sonic Youth’s “Shadow of a Doubt,” but unlike that song, it never builds into a rocker, content to just be creepy and full of foreboding.

41gFq9pG2lL._SL500_AA240_ Lost in Space: Windy and Carls DepthsOne of the most exciting things about Depths (and space rock in general) is that when it clicks with you (and chances are if you’re reading this site it’s going to click with you), you realize that dynamics in music can be very overrated. Why does a song that starts out slow and calm have to build in intensity? So many musical tricks appear to be utilized for the benefit of someone listening to a song for the first time, and those same tricks can begin to sound stale and unnecessary on the fourth of fifth listen. Claiming music like this “goes nowhere” is to assume that music has some sort of destination and that it will only ever sound fully realized when it gets there.

With song titles like “Aquatica” and “Undercurrent” and “Set Adrift,” Depths is clearly connected to water and thus–horrible, horrible cliche alert–it makes for perfect rainy day music. But don’t read “rainy day” as shorthand for melancholy and sad; what makes Depths such a perfect soundtrack for rainy weather is the way the sound of the rain on your window or the hood of your coat melds so naturally with the music, or the way the music mimics closeness to water without total immersion in it.

On more recent albums like Consciousness and 2008’s Songs for the Broken Hearted, Windy and Carl have begun to clean up their sound a little bit, and as much as I like the way better production has revealed the beauty of their guitar and bass work, I also miss the heavy, frayed at the edges sound of their earlier stuff. There are moments on Depths where you can hear a guitar note bend and break under the weight of distortion, and that for me so perfectly sums up the way space rock fulfills psychedelic rock’s mission of finding beauty in pushing sound to its breaking point.

MP3 :::
Windy and Carl – Set Adrift

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Emily Reo’s Haunted Graffiti

l_1f3e4aa129844002b06d9ec63d926179 Emily Reos Haunted Graffiti

Sunny good-times Orlando doesn’t necessarily seem the type of milieu that begets sequestered and supremely haunting lo-fi. But it did, and Emily Reo is decidedly in a league of her own. Simple synths, swells of tape warmth, junky drum machines, a touch of vibraphone, and distorted, melodic, post doo wop vocals certainly evokes Tickley Feather or a totally fucked version of Beach House. However, Reo adopts a more cathedral-tinged approach, demonstrated on “Metal For Your Skin” – a song too expansive for the bedroom. “Tell Us All” features a masterful incorporation of the evasive “circus waltz” that you no longer hear much in skewed pop music. Her full length Minha Gatinha is available now. (Emily Reo on MySpazz)

For fans of:  Tickley Feather, Grouper, Ariel Pink

MP3 :::
Emily Reo – Metal For Your Skin
Emily Reo – Tell Us All

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