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Tag Archive for 'library music'

Oh, and Broadcast Has a Tour EP Called Mother is the Milky Way

milkyway Oh, and Broadcast Has a Tour EP Called Mother is the Milky Way

Shiver me timbers. Reader Benjamin in Atlanta shot me a message letting me know that Broadcast has a tour EP available called Mothers of the Milky Way (as you might’ve inferred from, ya know, the title of this entry). Anyway, I did not see this EP at the Columbus show, as the band had no merch presence, so I’m a little bummed I wasn’t able to grip a physical copy there. It totally rules, as is expected. Mother is the Milky Way is, in some ways, a continuation of Witch Cults, though I’m not sure if The Focus Group was involved in its recording.

Turns out the second song they played in the show’s second half Sunday night was “In Here the World Begins” from this EP.

MP3 :::
Broadcast – In Here the World Begins

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Broadcast and The Focus Group Investigate Witch Cults of the Radio Age

WARPLP189-Packshot-480 Broadcast and The Focus Group Investigate Witch Cults of the Radio Age

Broadcast, in some ways, seem to have followed rather stridently along a solid trajectory. The group started as a quartet firmly planted in haunting ’60s vocal pop and garage ballads, augmented by lightly arranged vintage atomic age samples and Trish Keenan’s silky and distant vocals. The latter was, of course, the only thing that ever remained consistent, as Broadcast became more divergent through the years, ending with 2005’s glitchy, noisy, electronics-heavy and cosmically surreal Tender Buttons.

Perhaps it is simply a new direction or the influence of Julian House from The Focus Group on this latest effort, but Witch Cults of the Radio Age acts as the bridge between the organic retro-futuristic pop of Work and Non-Work and the more chaotic latter repertoire, with extra ornate instrumentation courtesy of House. This is a spooky, gorgeous record, and probably the most accessible effort from the “library music” camp (i.e. the Ghost Box/Mute/Warp family that both samples and draws inspiration from the classic BBC Radiophonic Workshop – see Barry 7’s Connectors and the Ghost Box site for additional reference).

With the exception of Keenan’s contributions that channel Margo Guryan and The United States of America, it’s hard to distinguish where Broadcast ends and The Focus Group begins, other than the weirdo samples that House is wont to incorporate into his instrumentals (including a slew of Conet Project snippets, which is major thumbs up). The collaboration is seamless and refreshing, and has added to an extremely strong addition to the nearly flawless curriculum vitae for both Broadcast and The Focus Group. I’m not sure if I feel this way because I’ve been listening to the same Broadcast catalog for four years and this disc is new, but Witch Cults of the Radio Age might just be my favorite Broadcast release thus far. Hence, I’m getting very excited for the full length due out on Warp some time next year.

No need to give Broadcast and The Focus Group Investigate Witch Cults of the Radio Age our normal rating or any of that jive. This is absolutely essential listening that earns its one billion smiling Donald Fagens. It’s total insanity.

You can purchase the digital release right now at Bleep, and/or grip the physical release on October 26. Get on it!

POSSIBLY RELATED :::
Praise Ye Jehova… Broadcast is Back in Action

MP3 :::
Files removed per request

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Oh, Hello! Broadcast “Mini Album” Now Online

l_dac8e7008fe04ade8cbddd938480c76a Oh, Hello! Broadcast Mini Album Now Online

Without any fanfare, Broadcast just released their first new material since 2005’s Tender Buttons, um, today. I was correct about the title, it’s called Witch Cults of the Radio Age. That’s the cover up there. And… it’s a collaboration with Julian House! House is, as you may know, not only the graphic designer for all of Broadcast’s album and poster imagery, but is also a member of Ghost Box “library music” powerhouse The Focus Group.

Though it’s a “mini album,” or EP, or “primer for proper forthcoming full length,” or whatever they’re categorizing it as, Witch Cults spans 23 tracks (though I’m sure some of them are segues and analog tomfoolery). Here’s a preview. Shit is space age!

This is going to be so good. I haven’t heard it in full, but I’m currently downloading it RIGHT NOW from Bleep. You should do the same.

Majorly stoked on the Columbus gig October 25. Perhaps the press pass fairy will pay ol’ Bloggins a visit for that one. Pretty please?

Broadcast & The Focus Group Investigate Witch Cults of the Radio Age:
1. Intro/Magnetic Tales
2. The Be Colony
3. How Do You Get Along Sir?
4. Will You Read Me.
5. Reception/Group Therapy
6. A Quiet Moment
7. I See, So I See So
8. You Must Wake
9. One Million Years Ago
10. A Seancing Song
11. Mr Beard, You Chatterbox
12. Drug Party
13. Libra, The Mirror’s Minor Self
14. Love’s Long Listen-In
15. We Are After All Here
16. A Medium’s High
17. Ritual / Looking In
18. Make My Sleep His Song
19. Royal Chant
20. What I Saw
21. Let It Begin/Oh Joy
22. Round and Round and Round
23. The Be Colony/Dashing Home/What on Earth Took You?

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Adventures in YouTubin’

s8projector Adventures in YouTubin

I’m really good at the Internet. I find awesome videos. I share some of my favorites with you. It’s a nice change from posting MP3s and waxin’ on why they’re awesome/not awesome. Continue reading ‘Adventures in YouTubin’’

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Happy Birthday, Sputnik!

ssm4 Happy Birthday, Sputnik!

Our favorite round, beachball-sized, constantly beeping friend turns 51 today. Or would’ve turned 51 today had he not burned up a bit in the Earth’s atmosphere. I like to spend my Tuesday evenings with PBS’ science program Nova, and this week’s installment covered all that you probably didn’t know about the Sputnik program and the advent of the Space Race… Continue reading ‘Happy Birthday, Sputnik!’

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The Focus Group and The Advisory Circle – An Evening with Ghost Box

As you know, I’m super obsessed with Ghost Box, and just this week the collective dropped three delicious new tracks for their subscribers (it’s free, so you should sign up). I can’t stop, won’t stop talking about the mighty Ghost Box – who, as I’ve mentioned before, are more or less the most prolific collectors and composers “library music.” That is, all the Ghost Box artists sample, reconstruct, and rebuild the sounds of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop and turn it into the springboard for their deep, spacious, glacial psychedelic electronic glitch movements. I absolutely love how each artist on Ghost Box creates a cohesive musical ambiance, and it’s always paradoxically retro and futuristic. The Focus Group in particular sounds like how the Atomic Age envisioned the future.

Ghost Box brings it heavy on the zone out times. If you love Silver Apples, Raymond Scott, or Broadcast, you need at least one Ghost Box release in your collection.

ghostbox1 The Focus Group and The Advisory Circle - An Evening with Ghost Box

The Focus Group’s new release “We are Coming Back to Dance with You” is dense while creating a huge sonic headspace to take in each sound with profound consideration. As with most of The Focus Group’s catalogue, “We are Coming Back…” treads this weird, thin line between being tranquil and being spooky, sorta in the same vein as Music Has the Right to Children. And as prevalent on that aforementioned album, The Focus Group lays it thick on the bucolic imagery. This is pretty much the same with The Advisory Circle. “Energy in the Home” builds itself around analoge synths and what is, presumably, some public television program. Once again, futuristic in the most nostalgic sense. Some of my favorite songs feature random field recordings over vocals. It’s a good way to go, and you get plenty of that with both The Focus Group and The Advisory Circle.

MP3 :::
The Focus Group – We are Coming Back to Dance with You
The Advisory Circle – Energy in the Home

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Ghost Box on Resonance

I missed the live broadcast of this, unfortunately, but The Wire will have the podcast up later tonight. Ghost Box, the holy purveyors of library music and host to Belbury Poly, The Focus Group, Mount Vernon Arts Lab, and more, did a special mix for Adventures in Modern Music on Resonance FM. You know it was siiick.

Just look at their playlist from last week! If you wanna know what’s up, but you don’t know what’s up, that playlist is what’s up.

Not hip to Ghost Box? No problem. Get your education here. This is your basic reference point for Broadcast and Boards of Canada glitch trips.

Also, want. That’s doppler good!

 Ghost Box on Resonance

From the mighty Ghost Box collection
MP3 :::
Belbury Poly – Tangled Beams

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