Video Premiere: Eternal Tapestry - “Apocalypse Troll”.

23 Oct 2012 — Henning Lahmann

Massive piece of raw, backbreaking psychedelia taken off Eternal Tapestry's forthcoming full-length A World Out of Time, due next month. "Apocalypse Troll" is a brief yet forceful reminder that Portland's underground veterans have a pretty unmatched knack for the unceremonious jam, in this case starting with some aimless radio interference noise that makes way for an overwhelming surge of sound, executed with straightforward chord progressions and yowling guitars that build up tension until the whole wall suddenly collapses into an unexpectedly emerging sonic abyss. A World Out of Time is out November 13 on Thrill Jockey. Pre-order now over here. All pre-orders include Prometheus Rising, a 42-minute CDr of previously unheard material hand-picked by the group.

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Massive piece of raw, backbreaking psychedelia taken off Eternal Tapestry's forthcoming full-length A World Out of Time, due next month. "Apocalypse Troll" is a brief yet forceful reminder that Portland's underground veterans have a pretty unmatched knack for the unceremonious jam, in this case starting with some aimless radio interference noise that makes way for an overwhelming surge of sound, executed with straightforward chord progressions and yowling guitars that build up tension until the whole wall suddenly collapses into an unexpectedly emerging sonic abyss. A World Out of Time is out November 13 on Thrill Jockey. Pre-order now over here. All pre-orders include Prometheus Rising, a 42-minute CDr of previously unheard material hand-picked by the group.

Video: Ital - “Boi”.

22 Oct 2012 — Henning Lahmann

Watch the video for Ital's "Boi", taken from Daniel Martin-McCormick's excellent new LP Dream On, out now on Planet Mu. The stunning video was (once again) made by the great Aurora Halal, who was also responsible for the live visuals at Ital's recent show in Berlin. Read an interview with the visual artist over at Electronic Beats.

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Watch the video for Ital's "Boi", taken from Daniel Martin-McCormick's excellent new LP Dream On, out now on Planet Mu. The stunning video was (once again) made by the great Aurora Halal, who was also responsible for the live visuals at Ital's recent show in Berlin. Read an interview with the visual artist over at Electronic Beats.

Video Premiere/Interview: The Garment District - “Miraculous Metal”.

17 Oct 2012 — Henning Lahmann

After releasing her excellent Melody Elder tape via Night-People late last year, Pittsburgh-based musician Jennifer Baron (formerly of seminal group The Ladybug Transistor), recording under her moniker The Garment District, returns with a new 7 inch, dropped this week by French imprint La Station Radar. Of the three tracks on the single, premiered last week over at Tiny Mix Tapes, one is the Sonic Boom remix of the Melody Elder song "Nature-Nurture". The b-side is comprised of two new instrumentals, "Miraculous Metal" and the sample-driven "Vigor". We're happy to exclusively host the video for "Miraculous Metal", created by Ryan Emmett, and to have had the opportunity to speak with Jennifer about her work and the thriving music scene of her home Pittsburgh. Read the interview and watch the aptly psychedelic video below.

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You're from New Jersey originally right, studied in Massachusetts, and spent quite some time in Brooklyn - so what brought you to Pittsburgh, and how would you describe the scene over there?

Jennifer: I was born in New Jersey in a beach town called Neptune. We lived in various beach towns when I was little: Asbury Park, Bradley Beach, Ocean Grove. I think that is why I am so drawn to the ocean. While most children here play in playgrounds or parks, our playpen was the sand and sea. I grew up in Pittsburgh, where we moved because my dad was transferred by Sears. I went to Mount Holyoke College in western Massachusetts, where I studied Art History & English Literature and was a DJ at WMHC South Hadley 91.5 FM, and where there was a terrific music and art scene. After that I lived in New York City, mainly in Brooklyn, for ten years, and decided to make a change when I moved back to Pittsburgh and had the opportunity to work at the Mattress Factory, a renowned museum of contemporary art and residency program. I make music in something of a cocoon. I completed this new 7 inch and Melody Elder basically in a vacuum of my own mind, blocking out some of the hazards that can sometimes be associated with any scene. Some of my close friends I feel most connected to personally and creatively actually live in places all over the world. That said, I am a social creature, and can be quite communal by nature; everyone is impacted by and thinks about their surroundings—whether they admit it or not. A sense of place weighs heavily on my mind, and I feel deeply that people should feel like they have multiple homes. My first true love affair with a city occurred when I lived in NYC. Now I am very compelled by Pittsburgh’s amazing topography, art scene, architecture, authentic neighborhoods, thrift shops, and record stores. One of my favorite things about Pittsburgh is its remarkable role in America’s music history, in terms of jazz, soul and funk (Kenny Clarke, Billy Strayhorn, Gene Ludwig, Henry Mancini, Beaver Harris, Roger Humphries), rock and roll (Fantastic Dee-Jays, Swamp Rats, Bo Didley's guitarist The Duchess, Todd Tamanend Clark, The Cynics) and 1950s/1960s pioneering DJs, teen dance clubs and pop hits. This is where tastemaking DJs such as Terry Lee, Mad Mike and Porky Chedwick created hits for many obscure groups and where songs like Tommy James's "Hanky Panky" were literally revived and made into hits—so music is in this city's fabric. The mix of grittiness and green here fuels my desire to make music. Pittsburgh’s architecture inspires me, with the Alcoa Building—our country’s first aluminum skyscraper—H.H. Richardson’s jail and church, and modern and Brutalist buildings by Mies van der Rohe and Paul Schweikher, plus Frank Lloyd Wright masterpieces, and signature row houses built for steelworkers. People are surprised to learn that Pittsburgh is home to amazing sprawling parks, dramatic funiculars and vistas that are actually quite European, and you can get lost in the wilderness in state parks one hour from the city. Cities need these characteristics and so do I. In the past few years, I have seen inspiring shows here by Demdike Stare, KWJAZ, Spencer Clark, Dolphins Into the Future, Wet Hair, Khaira Arby, Hamiet Bluiett, Onra, Ducktails, Jandek, Bert Jansch (RIP), Van Dyke Parks, Spectrum, Eddy Current Suppression Ring, Moodymann, Zombi. Thanks to an industrious arts collective, Pittsburgh is now home to VIA, an annual new media and music festival, that hosted the world premiere of RVNG Intl's FREAKWYS Ensemble (James Ferraro, Laurel Halo, Daniel Lopatin, David Borden, Samuel Godin) in 2011. I feel extremely honored to have been invited to perform at the third annual VIA Festival, which culminated with shows by Gatekeeper and Moodymann and an after-party hosted by 100% Silk.

Compared to Melody Elder, what has changed musically for you on the two original tracks for the new 7 inch?

Jennifer: I will leave much of that up to the perceptions and imaginations of listeners, and to you, to create your own experience out of my music. When I write music, I don’t concretely or consciously think about what might be changing or about a message or influences. I try to focus on listening to what is in my head and interpreting and giving it form via sound, instrumentation, melodies, and texture. My hope is that it takes on a new life that is out of my control cerebrally. I genuinely hope that meaningful relationships and visceral connections are formed between listeners and my music. When writing, I listen closely to a composition to figure out what is the most authentic way for it to be given a permanent record in sound and try to shape the melodies and structure I hear as they develop naturally. Sometimes there is improvisation involved, and at other times my process is highly calculated.

Why only instrumentals?

Jennifer: I have always been very interested in relationships between sound, instrumentation, melodies, and texture, as made by a wide variety of instruments--from my own experience in previous bands to '60s and '70s horror films to BBC Radiophonic Workshop pioneers to contemporary installation art, and an overall hyper appreciation of found sounds around me in daily life. Much of Melody Elder, which is a 40-minute tape, is instrumental music, so to me "Miraculous Metal" and "Vigor" are natural extensions of that album, with new elements of course, and they reflect my personal sensibilities in terms of writing and recording music. I wrote "Miraculous Metal" soon after I released my tape on Night-People, and am thrilled that is has found a home on vinyl, alongside a remix by one of musical heroes. I think the three songs work together almost like a mini-album, and that they explore a variety of my interests as far as making music. I love film scores and incidental music, and the idea of stretching what the traditional definition or perception of a composer is in pop culture.

Where are the samples on "Vigor" taken from?

Jennifer: "Vigor" includes an assemblage of audio snippets I recorded over several months' time in my western Pennsylvania environment. I constantly document sounds that interest me--for whatever reason. Regional dialects, computerized voices--experiences in places ranging from public parking garages to public access television. I love putting these random fleeting and sometimes surreal moments and experiences of sound into new contexts that are permanently recorded. I also like exploring the intersection of the public and the private via sound communication. "Vigor" is special to me because it is a long distance collaboration with Kevin C. Smith (The Artificial Sea), who is a circuit bender/sound artist now living in Oakland, California. I recorded a lot of Melody Elder with Kevin while he was living in Pittsburgh in 2011.

About the video, is Ryan Emmett a friend of yours in Pittsburgh? Did you take part in the creative process?

Jennifer: Ryan Emmett is a Pittsburgh-based artist who is a friend of mine. He runs an experimental tape and limited-edition release label called Dynamo Sound Collective and performs as Hunted Creatures. His creative output includes video, sound, performance, music, DJing, design, illustration and event curating. I asked Ryan to collaborate with me on my video presentation for the VIA Music & New Media Festival, which took place in Pittsburgh, October 1-6, 2012. The Garment District was invited to open for Julia Holter at The Andy Warhol Museum during a VIA audio-visual showcase. Ryan put together our video production using my existing videos, and he also created new videos for two of my new songs, including "Miraculous Metal". I sent him images and video footage to consider, and he created new imagery, and we bounced ideas of of each other over before he created the final video for the song.

And...what's up for you next?

Jennifer: My new 7 inch and video are officially released this week, and I also just submitted a new song to a digital compilation being organized by the great label Moon Glyph. This fall and winter I will be finishing up new recordings that I started over the summer. Some of the songs feature full band arrangements, including drums, guitars and bass. It’s been satisfying to hear the songs take on a new life. I also continue to record new stuff at our totally lo-fi Golden Mountain Frequencies home studio.

What was the idea behind the video?

Ryan Emmett: The song gave me a sense of slow drifting and travel. American road trip films and German Krautrock have a big influence on me to begin with, so I really enjoyed incorporating images of clouds that I shot on a plane trip from Olympia, WA to San Francisco, CA. Formally, I tend to focus on layering, texture and chance happenings with a lot of my work. Natural glitches are embraced and editing takes on an improvisational nature that reflects back into the final images. To create something dream-like can’t be overly planned! The Garment District 7 inch is out now via La Station Radar, with the artwork done by Seattle-based collage artist Jesse Treece, who used pages from Jennifer's vintage magazine collections to hand construct the intricate collages featured on the record's front and back covers, and labels. Order your copy over here. Melody Elder is available digitally via bandcamp.Stream all three tracks of the 7 inch below:

Support Patient Sounds’ Kickstarter Campaign.

16 Oct 2012 — Henning Lahmann
For a long time now, Colorado-based imprint Patient Sounds' tagline has been "small run / large ambition", and as reported last week, Matthew Sage and his crew now intend to expand significantly, starting to pursue their business in a more serious manner by putting out two releases on vinyl for the first time - and for that, they need your help (they already got mine) to successfully finish their Kickstarter campaign. Here's what Tiffanie Collins and Matt have to say about their project: As you can see here, there's still quite a lot of funding to be done, so if you got some spare pennies, please consider contributing to one of this website's favourite labels. One of the two records that Patient Sounds aims to press on vinyl with the Kickstarter revenue is Matthew Sage's own latest work, Lux Collapsing, a gorgeous 40-minute meditation that may be streamed in full below courtesy of Stadiums & Shrines. In Dave Sutton's beautiful words: There’s something almost perpetually undone about Lux Collapsing—as if destined never to fully crystallize, but rather circulate like dust in a room, exposed to motion, coating the surfaces of the subconscious. A sense of curious unease is present throughout; it drags us off the edge of “Prairie Belle”, stalks the fable of “Sweeping Glances”, and climbs the minor strings of delicate closer “Two Exteriors: Daylight”. In Matt’s words, the album is a “40 minute, eight track meditation on light in the west, decay and forgetting…a post-classical ambient piece, focused on the profound nature of light and timelessness.” At its core Lux borrows from old vinyl cuts, which have been stretched and subdued to distant memories. Suspended above them, and intertwined, cello, flute, and guitar work from Sage and a cast of Fort Collins friends complete the movements. It’s a massive if modest collection—one might say just right, depending on the time and space of any given day in flux. Read more → For a long time now, Colorado-based imprint Patient Sounds' tagline has been "small run / large ambition", and as reported last week, Matthew Sage and his crew now intend to expand significantly, starting to pursue their business in a more serious manner by putting out two releases on vinyl for the first time - and for that, they need your help (they already got mine) to successfully finish their Kickstarter campaign. Here's what Tiffanie Collins and Matt have to say about their project: As you can see here, there's still quite a lot of funding to be done, so if you got some spare pennies, please consider contributing to one of this website's favourite labels. One of the two records that Patient Sounds aims to press on vinyl with the Kickstarter revenue is Matthew Sage's own latest work, Lux Collapsing, a gorgeous 40-minute meditation that may be streamed in full below courtesy of Stadiums & Shrines. In Dave Sutton's beautiful words: There’s something almost perpetually undone about Lux Collapsing—as if destined never to fully crystallize, but rather circulate like dust in a room, exposed to motion, coating the surfaces of the subconscious. A sense of curious unease is present throughout; it drags us off the edge of “Prairie Belle”, stalks the fable of “Sweeping Glances”, and climbs the minor strings of delicate closer “Two Exteriors: Daylight”. In Matt’s words, the album is a “40 minute, eight track meditation on light in the west, decay and forgetting…a post-classical ambient piece, focused on the profound nature of light and timelessness.” At its core Lux borrows from old vinyl cuts, which have been stretched and subdued to distant memories. Suspended above them, and intertwined, cello, flute, and guitar work from Sage and a cast of Fort Collins friends complete the movements. It’s a massive if modest collection—one might say just right, depending on the time and space of any given day in flux.

Premiere: Mind Over Mirrors - “Second Nature”.

16 Oct 2012 — Henning Lahmann

Chicago's Jaime Fennelly, the man behind harmonium drone project Mind Over Mirrors, has prepped his third full-length under this moniker, after last year's excellent The Voice Rolling (Digitalis) and High & Upon (Gift Tapes). On Check Your Swing, Fennelly continues to explore the infinite potential of his rather unfamiliar principal instrument, creating massive sound spaces that seek to overwhelm the unprepared listener with their sheer impenetrability. The heavily processed harmonium compositions land somewhere between spaced-out drone and organic, psychedelia-leaning ambient, taking their time to build up until they evolve into slow-burning, warm and comforting arrangements that generate incredible mind journeys through uncharted sonic territories. Stream album track "Second Nature" now exclusively below. Check Your Swing is out November 13 via Hands In The Dark. 300 copies of vinyl, pre-order now over here.

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Chicago's Jaime Fennelly, the man behind harmonium drone project Mind Over Mirrors, has prepped his third full-length under this moniker, after last year's excellent The Voice Rolling (Digitalis) and High & Upon (Gift Tapes). On Check Your Swing, Fennelly continues to explore the infinite potential of his rather unfamiliar principal instrument, creating massive sound spaces that seek to overwhelm the unprepared listener with their sheer impenetrability. The heavily processed harmonium compositions land somewhere between spaced-out drone and organic, psychedelia-leaning ambient, taking their time to build up until they evolve into slow-burning, warm and comforting arrangements that generate incredible mind journeys through uncharted sonic territories. Stream album track "Second Nature" now exclusively below. Check Your Swing is out November 13 via Hands In The Dark. 300 copies of vinyl, pre-order now over here.

Itasca: “Marcy Rain/Milk Tea”.

12 Oct 2012 — Henning Lahmann
Ages ago, when the world was still young, we wrote about the enigmatic, Brooklyn-based one-woman drone folk project Sultan, which had just released a marvellous tape via Chocolate Bobka's Curatorial Club. We'd never heard anything else ever since, but last night we suddenly got hit up by Kayla Cohen, the artist behind Sultan, who's moved to Los Angeles and is now recording as Itasca, a project that she herself calls "a bit more focused and polished than Sultan". This self-assessment that generally seems correct, however though the tape hiss, the salient drones, and the compositionally open structures that signified The Moon may not be as prominent as before, and Cohen's remarkably strong and clear voice has been put to the forefront, her folk is still haunting and immersive like a foggy October morning, and comes just in time for the most magical, most melancholic days of fall. Itasca's first full-length work Grace Riders on the Road is out today, and it's a little, unexpected masterpiece that we cannot recommend enough. You may listen to two songs below and order a cassette or a CD directly via the artist. The necessary details to do so are available over here. Read more → Ages ago, when the world was still young, we wrote about the enigmatic, Brooklyn-based one-woman drone folk project Sultan, which had just released a marvellous tape via Chocolate Bobka's Curatorial Club. We'd never heard anything else ever since, but last night we suddenly got hit up by Kayla Cohen, the artist behind Sultan, who's moved to Los Angeles and is now recording as Itasca, a project that she herself calls "a bit more focused and polished than Sultan". This self-assessment that generally seems correct, however though the tape hiss, the salient drones, and the compositionally open structures that signified The Moon may not be as prominent as before, and Cohen's remarkably strong and clear voice has been put to the forefront, her folk is still haunting and immersive like a foggy October morning, and comes just in time for the most magical, most melancholic days of fall. Itasca's first full-length work Grace Riders on the Road is out today, and it's a little, unexpected masterpiece that we cannot recommend enough. You may listen to two songs below and order a cassette or a CD directly via the artist. The necessary details to do so are available over here.

Born Gold: “Ferocious Body/Against Silence”.

12 Oct 2012 — Henning Lahmann
As already observed previously and by others, Born Gold's forthcoming work Little Sleepwalker is a step away from the menacing, literally mind-boggling sonic thunderstorm of the project's previous debut effort Bodysounds, embracing more accessible pop vibes to a degree hitherto unknown - without, however, in any way abandoning the signature weirdness that makes Cecil Frena's post-Gobble Gobble venture so convincing and singular. The single “Ferocious Body/Against Silence” is a striking instance of that revamped approach, still emphatically mysterious and intricately textured yet showcasing a considerably more dancefloor-ready overall structure. Little Sleepwalker is out October 23 via Audraglint. Pre-order now over here. Read more → As already observed previously and by others, Born Gold's forthcoming work Little Sleepwalker is a step away from the menacing, literally mind-boggling sonic thunderstorm of the project's previous debut effort Bodysounds, embracing more accessible pop vibes to a degree hitherto unknown - without, however, in any way abandoning the signature weirdness that makes Cecil Frena's post-Gobble Gobble venture so convincing and singular. The single “Ferocious Body/Against Silence” is a striking instance of that revamped approach, still emphatically mysterious and intricately textured yet showcasing a considerably more dancefloor-ready overall structure. Little Sleepwalker is out October 23 via Audraglint. Pre-order now over here.

Premiere: Bloksberg - “Tækno”.

12 Oct 2012 — Henning Lahmann

As already mentioned, the lovely folks at Hype Machine have graciously invited us to curate a little showcase at next week's CMJ together with Yvynyl, a night full of musical extravaganza that will also include the first-ever US appearance of Norway's hottest current music export, now Berlin-based duo Bloksberg, who were aptly described by Tonje as sporting "space dipped, slow-building compositions". A while back you already had the chance to listen to "Goma", and today we're delighted to unveil another unpublished track, "Tækno", that could legitimately be dubbed the outfit's signature tune, a piece of almost seven minutes of relentlessly addictive, highly sophisticated and restlessly throbbing techno, with an amount of playfulness and subtle variation that can only be called staggering. With "Tækno", Bloksberg once again underline their status of the hidden bombshell in contemporary Norwegian underground electronics. For the Hype Machine Handpicked official CMJ showcase on October 18, please RSVP over here. Photo by Tonje Thilesen.

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As already mentioned, the lovely folks at Hype Machine have graciously invited us to curate a little showcase at next week's CMJ together with Yvynyl, a night full of musical extravaganza that will also include the first-ever US appearance of Norway's hottest current music export, now Berlin-based duo Bloksberg, who were aptly described by Tonje as sporting "space dipped, slow-building compositions". A while back you already had the chance to listen to "Goma", and today we're delighted to unveil another unpublished track, "Tækno", that could legitimately be dubbed the outfit's signature tune, a piece of almost seven minutes of relentlessly addictive, highly sophisticated and restlessly throbbing techno, with an amount of playfulness and subtle variation that can only be called staggering. With "Tækno", Bloksberg once again underline their status of the hidden bombshell in contemporary Norwegian underground electronics. For the Hype Machine Handpicked official CMJ showcase on October 18, please RSVP over here. Photo by Tonje Thilesen.