Video Premiere: Jean Piché - “Rouge”/“Ange”.

24 May 2012 — Henning Lahmann
Thanks to RVNG Intl and others, last year saw a widespread recollection and reappraisal of the German pioneers and founding fathers of synthesized music, whose massive influence still echoes through countless works of the contemporary electronic vanguard all across the globe. So much has been said about the Berlin and Düsseldorf schools, but who would've guessed that across the pond in Canada, one man named Jean Piché almost simultaneously accomplished groundbreaking work in this field as well. Between 1977 and 1980, while being at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, BC, Piché recorded music that subsequently became Heliograms, a four-track piece spread across 45 minutes, remarkably one of the first albums to feature music produced almost entirely with digital synthesizers. The record was originally released in 1982 by a small Canadian imprint that unfortunately went into bankruptcy after it was put out, so the work sadly never really got off the ground. Until today, that is. Seminal Oklahoma-based label Digitalis Recordings, which last year sent waves of excitement through the left-field music community after "rediscovering" Science of the Sea, the blissful synth explorations by an previously unknown German oceanographer named Jürgen Müller, is re-issuing Heliograms to give it "the place that it deserves in electronic music history". The album has been remastered from the original tapes by James Plotkin and put on vinyl at the prestigious D+M in Berlin. Today, we're happy and proud to host the internet debut of a brand new video work of Piché himself, an epic 18-minute piece that visualizes two tracks from Heliograms, "Rouge" and "Ange", and that premiered earlier this month at Montréal's Elektra Festival. Heliograms is out today on Digitalis. Get it via the label or on Boomkat (order links should be up soon). Stream excerpts from all four tracks below. You may also listen to "La Mer à l'Aube", the first of the four to be recorded and thus one of the first digital synthesis pieces ever produced in Canada, in its entirety here. Read more → Thanks to RVNG Intl and others, last year saw a widespread recollection and reappraisal of the German pioneers and founding fathers of synthesized music, whose massive influence still echoes through countless works of the contemporary electronic vanguard all across the globe. So much has been said about the Berlin and Düsseldorf schools, but who would've guessed that across the pond in Canada, one man named Jean Piché almost simultaneously accomplished groundbreaking work in this field as well. Between 1977 and 1980, while being at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, BC, Piché recorded music that subsequently became Heliograms, a four-track piece spread across 45 minutes, remarkably one of the first albums to feature music produced almost entirely with digital synthesizers. The record was originally released in 1982 by a small Canadian imprint that unfortunately went into bankruptcy after it was put out, so the work sadly never really got off the ground. Until today, that is. Seminal Oklahoma-based label Digitalis Recordings, which last year sent waves of excitement through the left-field music community after "rediscovering" Science of the Sea, the blissful synth explorations by an previously unknown German oceanographer named Jürgen Müller, is re-issuing Heliograms to give it "the place that it deserves in electronic music history". The album has been remastered from the original tapes by James Plotkin and put on vinyl at the prestigious D+M in Berlin. Today, we're happy and proud to host the internet debut of a brand new video work of Piché himself, an epic 18-minute piece that visualizes two tracks from Heliograms, "Rouge" and "Ange", and that premiered earlier this month at Montréal's Elektra Festival. Heliograms is out today on Digitalis. Get it via the label or on Boomkat (order links should be up soon). Stream excerpts from all four tracks below. You may also listen to "La Mer à l'Aube", the first of the four to be recorded and thus one of the first digital synthesis pieces ever produced in Canada, in its entirety here.

Dynoman: “Megaflip”.

23 May 2012 — Tonje Thilesen
Haamid Rahim might actually be one of the strongest electronic producers Pakistan has to offer when it comes to its so-called "evolving DIY scene" these days, just as Islamabad's Asfandyar Khan introduced you to here at NFOP earlier this year. Under the moniker Dynoman, this Karachi-based beat butcher plays around with glitchy, hip-hop influenced productions of the finest sort, but obviously with some major inspiration from American beat producers during his long-term stay in Pennsylvania. A few weeks ago he also teamed up with the fellow Karachi locals and electronic experimentalists 6LA8, of which album Stereotypes Of Tomorrow (2011) you by all means should have in your possession. For free, of course. Read more → Haamid Rahim might actually be one of the strongest electronic producers Pakistan has to offer when it comes to its so-called "evolving DIY scene" these days, just as Islamabad's Asfandyar Khan introduced you to here at NFOP earlier this year. Under the moniker Dynoman, this Karachi-based beat butcher plays around with glitchy, hip-hop influenced productions of the finest sort, but obviously with some major inspiration from American beat producers during his long-term stay in Pennsylvania. A few weeks ago he also teamed up with the fellow Karachi locals and electronic experimentalists 6LA8, of which album Stereotypes Of Tomorrow (2011) you by all means should have in your possession. For free, of course.

The Nablus Project.

23 May 2012 — Henning Lahmann
Last night, our dear friends over in Brooklyn, Coco Zaobi and Luke Carrell (International Tapes, Coco's OCD, Zinenblogen, Ad Hoc, Impose, you name it) unveiled the truly astonishing Nablus Project, a collaborative effort and compilation of twelve artists, among them NFOP favorites such as Lee Noble, David Kanaga, Arc Light, MEGAFORTRESS, and Meadowlands, based on and built around this: During a stay in Nablus, Palestine (or, depending on your political affiliation and/or degree of inherent political correctness: West Bank, Occupied Palestinian Territory, "the Area", Samaria, every single one of those a very telling denomination, but this is not the place to discuss the entailing issues), Paris-based sound recordist Pierre Gauthier captured the old city mosque's Muezzin. And, as the initiators explain, the "shape of the valley in which Nablus rests creates a massive composite reverb effect that gives his recitation an otherworldly feel as it booms out from the mosque in the city's center". After finding themselves spellbound by the sheer dignity and sublimity of the recording, Coco and Luke asked a couple of musicians to create musical pieces that are centered around segments of the Muezzin's call to prayer (read about it in more detail over here), and the overall result is nothing short of breathtaking, wildly diverse and unanimously original, yet always deferential to the religious deed - like the whole project, as the curators point out (though we believe and hope that an actual disclaimer is far from necessary): Rather than aiming to be sacrilegious and demeaning, we hope this project will help spread awareness of an amazing piece of global culture that often goes unheard or is brutally caricatured. It is the only thing that's been left intact in a town scarred by bombings and occupation. Stream the whole compilation below and purchase a digital copy over at bandcamp. All proceeds from the compilation will go to charity. Read more → Last night, our dear friends over in Brooklyn, Coco Zaobi and Luke Carrell (International Tapes, Coco's OCD, Zinenblogen, Ad Hoc, Impose, you name it) unveiled the truly astonishing Nablus Project, a collaborative effort and compilation of twelve artists, among them NFOP favorites such as Lee Noble, David Kanaga, Arc Light, MEGAFORTRESS, and Meadowlands, based on and built around this: During a stay in Nablus, Palestine (or, depending on your political affiliation and/or degree of inherent political correctness: West Bank, Occupied Palestinian Territory, "the Area", Samaria, every single one of those a very telling denomination, but this is not the place to discuss the entailing issues), Paris-based sound recordist Pierre Gauthier captured the old city mosque's Muezzin. And, as the initiators explain, the "shape of the valley in which Nablus rests creates a massive composite reverb effect that gives his recitation an otherworldly feel as it booms out from the mosque in the city's center". After finding themselves spellbound by the sheer dignity and sublimity of the recording, Coco and Luke asked a couple of musicians to create musical pieces that are centered around segments of the Muezzin's call to prayer (read about it in more detail over here), and the overall result is nothing short of breathtaking, wildly diverse and unanimously original, yet always deferential to the religious deed - like the whole project, as the curators point out (though we believe and hope that an actual disclaimer is far from necessary): Rather than aiming to be sacrilegious and demeaning, we hope this project will help spread awareness of an amazing piece of global culture that often goes unheard or is brutally caricatured. It is the only thing that's been left intact in a town scarred by bombings and occupation. Stream the whole compilation below and purchase a digital copy over at bandcamp. All proceeds from the compilation will go to charity.

DJ/PURPLE/IMAGE: 04.

23 May 2012 — Henning Lahmann
DJ/PURPLE/IMAGE is the convenient if a little cumbersome new moniker of our much beloved LA resident Alex Gray, formerly known as Heat Wave, and judging from his new album Head Tear of the Drunken Sun, it appears to be not only a simple name change but also an artistic reconfiguration, turning towards a sonic mess that is even darker, murkier, heavier, and more exciting than before. See for yourself and get lost in the nine-minute monster that is track 04 below. Head Tear of the Drunken Sun is out this Friday via Heat Rave. Order now over here. Get this one, highly recommended. Also - here's the super-official video for track 09: Read more → DJ/PURPLE/IMAGE is the convenient if a little cumbersome new moniker of our much beloved LA resident Alex Gray, formerly known as Heat Wave, and judging from his new album Head Tear of the Drunken Sun, it appears to be not only a simple name change but also an artistic reconfiguration, turning towards a sonic mess that is even darker, murkier, heavier, and more exciting than before. See for yourself and get lost in the nine-minute monster that is track 04 below. Head Tear of the Drunken Sun is out this Friday via Heat Rave. Order now over here. Get this one, highly recommended. Also - here's the super-official video for track 09:

Fear Of Men: “Born”.

23 May 2012 — Henning Lahmann
Earlier this month, we wrote about "Green Sea", the wonderful A-side of the upcoming single of Brighton and London-based band Fear Of Men. Now, you can also listen to the single's flip side "Born", another picture-perfect pop song with subtle hints of darkness and despair. The 7 inch is out June 18 via Sexbeat and will be limited to 300 copies. Pre-order now here. "> Read more → Earlier this month, we wrote about "Green Sea", the wonderful A-side of the upcoming single of Brighton and London-based band Fear Of Men. Now, you can also listen to the single's flip side "Born", another picture-perfect pop song with subtle hints of darkness and despair. The 7 inch is out June 18 via Sexbeat and will be limited to 300 copies. Pre-order now here. ">

Palmer Eldritch: “Supersaturated Vapor”.

23 May 2012 — Henning Lahmann
Stunning abstract, minimal electronica by Portuguese duo Palmer Eldritch, who create crystalline and subtle ambient textures on their sophomore EP Glaser, tracks that unfold an intriguingly ephemeral quality, with hints of noise and interspersed cracks that steadily disrupt the stream of transparent, glass-like synthesized patterns. Quite a rewarding listen. Glaser is out May 28 via PAD. Get it over here. Palmer Eldritch - Supersaturated Vapor Read more → Stunning abstract, minimal electronica by Portuguese duo Palmer Eldritch, who create crystalline and subtle ambient textures on their sophomore EP Glaser, tracks that unfold an intriguingly ephemeral quality, with hints of noise and interspersed cracks that steadily disrupt the stream of transparent, glass-like synthesized patterns. Quite a rewarding listen. Glaser is out May 28 via PAD. Get it over here. Palmer Eldritch - Supersaturated Vapor

Ill Winds & Moon Wheel: Split Cassette.

23 May 2012 — Henning Lahmann
As reported last month, Berlin's finest organizer of live performances covering all things experimental, Noisekölln, has recently expanded its business activity by launching Noisekölln Tapes, a label set out to explore the hidden musical realms of the Berlin underground and (possibly) beyond. The initial release is a split between Ill Winds and the previously featured Moon Wheel aka Olle Holmberg, whose solo side consists of a single, thirteen-minute introspection of very slowly meandering soundwaves. Ill Winds' part is distinctly more upbeat if not any more optimistic, with four tracks of rustling and lo-fi, minimalistic guitar pop somewhere between post-punk and goth. Get the Ill Winds & Moon Wheel split cassette over here. Limited edition of 50. Read more → As reported last month, Berlin's finest organizer of live performances covering all things experimental, Noisekölln, has recently expanded its business activity by launching Noisekölln Tapes, a label set out to explore the hidden musical realms of the Berlin underground and (possibly) beyond. The initial release is a split between Ill Winds and the previously featured Moon Wheel aka Olle Holmberg, whose solo side consists of a single, thirteen-minute introspection of very slowly meandering soundwaves. Ill Winds' part is distinctly more upbeat if not any more optimistic, with four tracks of rustling and lo-fi, minimalistic guitar pop somewhere between post-punk and goth. Get the Ill Winds & Moon Wheel split cassette over here. Limited edition of 50.

Video Premiere: Hush War Cry - “Apparitions”.

23 May 2012 — Tonje Thilesen
All though our European readers are likely to sleep safe and sound as I write these very words, the rest of you guys may be lucky enough to enjoy this stunning new video from our friends at Feel Good Lost for your fine afternoon meals. I cannot recall to have heard much fuzz about the Irish quartet Hush War Cry before, but a little research show us that they were already picked up 8 months ago by our impeccable mate Nialler9, whom also co-premiered the video earlier today. As the aching atmosphere of "Apparitions" approach us, a story is carefully being carefully told through vocals and compositions that might remind us a bit of Wild Beasts or Autumn Chorus. Let me quote NFOP's Henning: "this is so, so you". Sigh. Their upcoming EP Voices will be all yours to snatch this Friday via Delphi Label. Read more → All though our European readers are likely to sleep safe and sound as I write these very words, the rest of you guys may be lucky enough to enjoy this stunning new video from our friends at Feel Good Lost for your fine afternoon meals. I cannot recall to have heard much fuzz about the Irish quartet Hush War Cry before, but a little research show us that they were already picked up 8 months ago by our impeccable mate Nialler9, whom also co-premiered the video earlier today. As the aching atmosphere of "Apparitions" approach us, a story is carefully being carefully told through vocals and compositions that might remind us a bit of Wild Beasts or Autumn Chorus. Let me quote NFOP's Henning: "this is so, so you". Sigh. Their upcoming EP Voices will be all yours to snatch this Friday via Delphi Label.