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six finger satellite - severe exposure


.:: Severe Exposure integrates the designs of the all-synth outing with the previous brash scissor rock, flashing a guitar band confident enough to delve heavily into disco beats and dramatic vocals. With the mood so established, plenty of panicky songs about animals, gaming and translocation are gathered in the album's full-bodied silvery mercurial radiance. "Rabies (Baby's Got The)" and "Simian Fever" are animal aggressive and messy, while sharing the synthetic digitone lusts of new wave.

.:: Like peanut butter combined with chocolate, the Rhode Island quartet Six Finger Satellite bring hard-to-laugh-at, ironic humor to the violence of their musical mission. The recipe for their new record, Paranormalized, combines equal dollops of nihilism, hate of all that is comfortable in music, and a multitude of synthetic bleeps and burps. With these tools, the band forges a sound and image that revel in the ironic rock star-isms and self-defeatism of indie rock at the same time as it waves around the flayed corpse of a scene built on sarcastic good will.

Whereas most indie rockers ironically wink at the fact that they'll probably forever have to keep their day jobs or deal with living with their parents, Six Finger Satellite put forth a joking posture of rock excess that somehow laughs at you instead of with you.


download: rsix finger satellite - severe exposure

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2

red sparowes - every red heart shines towards the red sun



||| GIGASIZE RE-POST |||

.:: There just might be a certain warped truth to the phrase "guilt by association." As in the case of Red Sparowes, its formal associations with such heavy, propulsive bands as Neurosis, Angel Hair and Pleasure Forever would lead you to expect that the Los Angeles quintet's debut would be a masterfully crafted epic of primal urgency.

It is.

However, Red Sparowes is epic without bombast, heavy without a single barre-chord riff and eviscerating without any clearly audible vocals. The chiming, spindly layers of effect-laden guitars and the swinging, entrancing drums on its Neurot Recordings debut At the Soundless Dawn create textures reminiscent of Goblin, Tones on Tail, Godspeed You Black Emperor and early Sonic Youth. Its attack is syrupy and serpentine; subtle but frighteningly deliberate.

Red Sparowes is comprised of Bryant Clifford Meyer on guitar (Isis), Josh Graham on guitar (Neurosis visuals and acclaimed video director), Greg Burns on bass and pedal steel (also of Temporary Residence dark chamber folk sextet Halifax Pier), Andy Arahood on bass/guitar (Angel Hair) and David Clifford on drums (The VSS, Pleasure Forever). The album was recorded with founding drummer Dana Berkowitz (The Cignal) and Isis bassist Jeff Caxide, both of whom relocated at the end of 2004. The sum total of its sound, however, stems more so from esoteric melodic guitar-surrealists of the mid-80's Blast First and Too Pure hive than the fierce realism of the aforementioned cabal of heavy-psych rock.

Although the band members are indeed tied to many other projects, Red Sparowes is not just a side-project. The band has toured the US with the Dillinger Escape Plan and label-mates Made Out of Babies, as well as a very successful headlining European/UK tour in Spring 2005. In August-September, the band embarks on a full national tour with Pelican, Big Business and Breather Resist.

While At the Soundless Dawn uses vocals as subtle instrumentation, the group plans to incorporate voices further into its sound. This stunning introduction to Red Sparowes, recorded in San Francisco by engineer Desmond Shea (who also did additional engineering on the recent Neurosis album, The Eye of Every Storm) is just the beginning for a band that promises to change the way we think about heavy music. Its family of related artists is certainly good company. But, where their common goals to experiment with epic, cathartic music meet, Red Sparowes branches far outside of the expected boundaries.

download: red sparowes - every red heart shines towards the red sun

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5

sleepytime gorilla museum - grand opening and closing



||| One of my favorite bands of all time |||

.:: S.G.M. are Kihlstedt on electric violin, percussion guitar, autoharp, pump organ and voice; Nils Frykdahl on guitars, Tibetan bells, autoharp and voice; Moe! Staiano on percussion, metal, pressure-cap marimba, spring, spring-nail guitar, popping turtle, food containers and tympani; Dan Rathbun on bass, slide-piano log, pedal-action wiggler, thing, autoharp, and voice; and David Shamrock on drums and piano (he has since left the band).

Frank Grau, the band's new drummer, guests here on "The Stain." Quite an assortment of instruments, many non-traditional for progressive rock, and even those that are conventional aren't conventionally played or used to make conventional sounds. Yes, I guess you could say, SGM are unconventional -- erm, isn't that what progressive rock is supposed to be? Bucking convention?

The Sleepytime Gorilla Museum was, it appears, a real thing, though not really a museum. The liner notes detail the history, and this album's title refers to the fact that the museum's grand opening on June 22, 1916 was also their closing -- a fire, staged or otherwise, cut short what was billed to be a "Free Salamander Exhibit." Because the folks behind the museum have been shrowded in mystery, and because of my own cynical nature, I can't say whether the whole "backstory concept" isn't instead just pure invention, making this a concept album within a concept album... and would we really ever know?

At any rate, the album itself is real, I have it here. The band is real, I just saw them play live... no, won't go speculating there. Yes, it is sometimes ugly, but it is also sometimes beautiful. It is the kind of album that will engender strong reactions – either you like it or you hate it. Well, that's not entirely true, as the third reaction is a mix of like/hate depending on the particular track. Where do I fall? Well, actually, I'm in the like it camp.

download: sleepytime gorilla museum - grand opening and closing


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khoma - tsunami


.:: Khoma is yet another bastard child of Umeå's raging music scene. Founded in 2002, the members have known each other for years- sharing dreams, rehearsal rooms, vans and a musical kindship that has survived the birth and death of a thousand bands.
Anything but a conventional band, Khoma is a few friends sharing a musical and political vision. Khoma is what won't fit the frame. A crashing wave of angst, desperation, anger and beautiful love.

Despite starting as a side project originally, a few months in things were beginning to take off for the band. A limited 1000-disc run of debut album Tsunami was released and quickly sold out. It was reprinted and quickly sold out again.

Without having signed a record deal, Khoma started to work on the follow-up to Tsunami. In creating their most recent music, the band have broadened their perspective and introduced new elements; most notably cello and piano.

It seems like an incompatible alliance. Members of musically divided bands such as Cult of Luna, The Perishers, Scared, Refused and Plastic Pride merge togheter in a reheasal room. Solid darkness meets melodious sadness, musical precision and the creative forces of anarchist politics.

Brutality and tender frailty surrounded by four walls – but there is a theme: Koma is a breathing space where the different styles fuse, says the band´s singer Jan Jämte. We have a vision of creating heavy music that reflects more feelings than sheer aggression. Sometimes whispering can be more powerful than screaming. The debut album from the band now known as Khoma, this is as big and brilliant as the Roadrunner follow up “Second Wave”.

download: khoma - tsunami

*** thanx mr.a ***

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robi draco rosa - el teatro de lo absurdo


.:: "Teatro del Absurdo" reminds us how wide open the playing field of sound, expression, music, and art really is. We've grown so accustomed to the same 2-dimensional, contrived, formulaic approach to songwriting and record making that we've forgotten how inspirational and life-altering a true work of art can be.

It is bold enough to scoff at the big corporate monster that the business of music has become, yet sensual and relevant enough to take us on a journey from "un beso de vino tinto" to the horrors of war and back. I dare to compare it to some of the other great albums of the last 50 years that changed the perception and consciousness of a culture.

From 'Revolver', 'Pet Sounds', 'Are You Experienced', 'What's Going On' and 'London Calling' to 'Nevermind' and now 'Teatro del absurdo'... Yes I dare, and I dare you to listen to it 5 times and disagree with me. If you're looking for fast food, I'm sure there's one around every corner. If you're looking for a 7-course meal with a fine vintage, try some 'Teatro del absurdo'.


download: robi draco rosa - el teatro de lo absurdo


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3sacchetti - bora! bora! mr. motto


.:: "3Sacchetti" comes from the will of 3 musicians to create a new concept of music, through a blend of different kinds of music: jazz, klezmer, post hc and noise.

The band was born in winter 2004, the members began with a standard jazz order, then they made an effort to change... it resulted in a strange balcanic music with wild and bizarre melodies.

The music is influenced by the different musical preferences of the three guys: it's a journey which leaves from the musical traditions of nomads people and finishes, annihilated and distorted by the grey environment in which the band is grown.

download: 3sacchetti - bora! bora! mr. motto


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elizabeth anka vajagic - stand with the stillness of this day


.:: With this debut recording, Elizabeth Anka Vajagic sets her vocals against a backdrop led by ragged guitars, moving from harrowing, dry-as-a-bone intimacy ("With Hopes Lost", "Iceland") to reverb-soaked torch-song balladry ("Around Here", "Sleep With Dried Up Tears"), and the odd explosive noise freak-out along the way ("Where You Wonder"). Vajagic's voice and lyrics are uniquely powerful, able to move across a considerable range while remaining guttural, unflinching and honest as hell.

Through much cross-pollination with the local noise/improv scene, Elizabeth has assembled a fine cast of players to add textures and arrangements to the seven tracks on this debut record, making for an intense cycle of songs peppered with skittering drums, contrebasse, cello, harmonium, piano, bowed cymbals, and oud.

Guest players include Chris Burns and Simon Fazakerly (Crackpot) on guitars, Beckie Foon (Silver Mt. Zion, Esmerine) on cello, Michel Langevin (Voivod) on drums, Fluffy Erskine (Molasses, Hrsta) on musical saw, Sam Shalabi (The Shalabi Effect, solo) on oud and Efrim (GY!BE, Silver Mt. Zion) on piano, harmonium, guitar and backing vocals. The album was recorded by Howard Bilerman at the Hotel2Tango in Montreal.

download: elizabeth anka vajagic - stand with the stillness of this day


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new host service

hey guys !!!

i'm trying a new host service (divshare) starting with minus the bear - this is what i know about being gigantic.

so, please let me know which of these host services: gigasize or divshare work better for you, ok
in the meantime, i'm gonna upload my files on these host, just for awhile.

drop me a line, tell what do you think.
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minus the bear - this is what i know about being gigantic



||| RESPOSTED BY REQUEST |||


.:: Formed in Seattle, Washington in 2001, Minus the Bear was initially formed by guitarist David Knudson, bassist Cory Murchy, and drummer Erin Tate who eventually recruited keyboardist/sequencer, Matt Bayles and vocalist/guitarist Jake Snider. Once in the same room they realized they were on to something special - and the band quickly earned a rabid and rapidly growing fan base ranging from teenagers to middle-aged parents. "I know every band says they can't explain their music, but I really can't say that we sound like one specific thing," Murchy explains. "We don't follow a particular scene or genre and hopefully that shows."

Members of Northwest all-stars KILL SADIE, BOTCH and SHARKS KEEP MOVING deliver five songs with their new collaborative project MINUS THE BEAR. The perfect mix of catchy melodies, angular textures placed just right and a hearty dose of spaced out atmosphere come together with stellar arrangements to raise the bar for debut EPs. This is essential rock and roll with a twist for the now and a focus on time-honored themes of drinking and girls that smoke. And check out those song titles!

.:: Minus the Bear is singer/guitarist Jake Snider, who also does the singer/guitarist thing in his other band, Sharks Keep Moving; guitarist Dave Knudsen, who also blazes frets in metal-core heroes Botch; drummer Erin Tate, who mans the traps in Kill Sadie; Matt Bayles on keyboards and electronics (who, to the best of my knowledge, isn't in any other bands, but happens to be one of Seattle's best known recording engineers); and bassist Cory Murchy (who, at this point, doesn't appear to have membership in any other bands either. Give him time, though).

If you've heard any of the aforementioned bands, you know that, for the most part, they're really, really good. Sharks Keep Moving play mellow, jazzy, complex emo-pop. Botch plays frenetic, mathy, metal-tinged hardcore. Kill Sadie plays complicated, art-damaged indie punk. So, whaddya get when you put members of these excellent (if very diverse) bands in a new, different band? A really, really stinkin' good side-project that may just be better than any of the members' full-time projects. Due to Snider's presence on vocals and guitar, Minus the Bear sounds a lot more like Sharks Keep Moving than they resemble any of the other aforementioned bands -- but that's only because they sound nothing like Botch or Kill Sadie.

So what do they sound like? Well, kind of like your favorite emo band that doesn't suck, mixed with The Cure, with some fun electronic undercurrents running through, minus the angst that both emo bands and the Cure tend to exude in spades. The song structures are complicated, but unfailingly melodic and catchy. The lyrical concerns seem to deal more with things like the aesthetics of pretty girls rolling cigarettes ("Her hands gorgeous, rolling a cigarette, thumbs and forefingers, rolling tobacco and the paper/she licks the paper slow twice, putting it all together") and drinking with said girls ("these girls are beautiful, and they're with us/these girls can drink well") than the typical emo fare of getting one's heart broken by the aforementioned ladies. The lyrics, delivered in Snider's pleasant croon, are plain-spoken and unpretentious.

The songs are anchored by Snider's eloquent, jazzy guitar playing, Murchy's solid basslines and Tate's nimble yet rock solid drumming. On top of this, Knudsen lays down convoluted, complex, often fingertapped guitar lines, while Bayles lays back in the background, distributing ambient keyboard wash and programmed beats over the proceedings. On some songs, the live drums cut out, and are replaced by a frantic electronica beat for a few bars -- but the live drums take over again before you know what happened.

One of the most refreshing things about Minus the Bear is the fact that the band doesn't seem to take themselves terribly seriously. Considering that they are operating within contexts that could potentially be horribly pretentious (I mean, think about it -- an emo/electronica/indie hybrid supergroup?), these guys just seem to want to get together and make cool music. The song titles themselves, which are completely ridiculous ("Hey, Wanna Throw Up? Get Me Naked!", "Lemurs, Man, Lemurs" and "Pantsuit...Uggghhh", just to name a few) seem to be poking fun at the post-rock convention of making song titles as long and convoluted as possible. Unlike many post-rock ditties with silly names, however, the songs on What I Know About Being Gigantic are real songs, with catchy-as-hell choruses, interesting, unexpected breaks and very high quality writing.

One slightly annoying thing about the album is that while there are only five songs listed on the back of the CD, there are actually seven tracks. My theory is that tracks three and four, which are both relatively brief instrumentals, are the songs that didn't warrant titles. I suppose that the only time this will really be an issue is if you're putting one of these songs on a mix tape, and you really need to know whether it's "Just Kickin' It Like a Wild Donkey" or "Potato Juice and Liquid Bread". In the end, I guess you can just pick whichever title you like best, and use that for the song you like the best. The thing is, these songs will find their way onto your mix tapes, as sure as you will not be able to get this CD out of your player. With their collective talents, Minus the Bear have created a big, happy genre-fuck that, if you're anything at all like me, will push all the right buttons to make you a very happy camper. -- Jeremy Schneyer

download: minus the bear - this is what i know about being gigantic


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morphine - good


.:: The low chords sweep so deeply, the music twists around the wrists, and Morpheus, The God Of Dreams, has a gift for you....he calls it Morphine. And Morphine calls it GOOD, the debut album that was originally released on Boston's small Accurate-Distortion label, and rejected by every major label in the book. Little did they know that the following year's CURE FOR PAIN would set Morphine up as one of the more unique things to happen to indie rock in recent years.

Morphine features the unique instrumentation of Mark Sandman's voice and one-string bass (on later albums he'd get bold and add a second string), which he plays with a glass slide. The music's warm edge is provided by Dana Colley on baritone sax and the commanding drums of Jerome Deupree, Billy Conway's predecessor. The sound of Morphine is low and sensuous, joining a powerful groove with spare penetrating lyrics. A tad bluesier and more atmospheric than their followup albums, GOOD features such tunes as "You Speak My Language" that remain a high point of their live shows.

GOOD was co-produced by Paul Q. Kolderie (Buffalo Tom, Uncle Tupelo, fIREHOSE, Throwing Muses, Pixies, many more) and additional tracks were done with Tom Dube (Tin Machine, Walkers).


.:: With no guitars and a half a set of bass strings, Morphine managed to rock harder than most of their fret-bound competition while retaining the slippery nocturnal undercurrent that would become their signature sound. On this 1992 debut album, the Boston trio strips down the minor-key blues of frontman Mark Sandman's former group, Treat Her Right, and adds a host of off-kilter elements.

Sandman's slide bass and narcoleptic vocals are perfectly complemented by Dana Colley's frenetic baritone sax, which he plays like a cross between Rahsaan Roland Kirk and Van Der Graaf Generator's David Jackson. Sandman reportedly played one-string bass for this album (he'd later expand to two), and the sound quality here is murkier than on subsequent efforts. But tracks such as the infectious "You Speak My Language" and the prophetic "Do Not Go Quietly unto Your Grave" (Sandman would die onstage in 1999) are powerful indicators of Morphine's dark musical glories to come. --Bill Forman

download: morphine - good


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le ggril - avec jean derome & les poules


.:: Le GGRIL is the home big bande from Tour de Bras. It feature a dozen of Bas-Saint-Laurent musicians and worked with various guest directors. Tour de Bras is a broadcast, creation and production structure in the actual musics domain. performative arts and new intrumental and sound pratices.

Through its activities, it search to support cultural devellopement in the region, to sensitize the public to the actual art forms, to make the local creators participate in some innovating projets into meeting with provincial and international scene artits.

.:: Jean Derome: One of the most active and eclectic musicians on the Canadian creative music scene, Jean Derome has managed to earn the recognition of a larger public, a rare feat in that field. Thanks to his large-scale musique actuelle projects, his compositions, his work as an improviser, his jazz groups and his music for the screen and the stage, Derome ranks as a major creative force, in Quebec and abroad.

He is experienced and innovative on both saxophone and flute, and his unique writing style cannot be mistaken for anyone else’s. Sensitive and powerful, his music often features a funny strike that makes its complex nature more inviting.

.:: Les Poules is a trio made up of Joane Hétu, Diane Labrosse, and Danielle P. Roger. Three instrumentalist-composer-improvisers who have been working together since 1980. Their collaboration is legendary, their musical explorations always avant-garde.

They mix up synthetic and acoustic sounds, the crackling and humming of samplers, the churning and chafing of percussion, vocalization, and the mouth play and hissing of saxophones. The effect of these mixtures and soundscapes is extraordinary: they weave a fabric of sound whose instrumental threads the listener will sometimes find difficult to distinguish.

download: le ggril - avec jean derome & les poules


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ramona córdova - the boy who floated freely


.:: Ramona Córdova (Ramón Vicente Alarcón) and "The Boy Who Floated Freely" tells a story about a boy named Giver who washes ashore on an island. When Giver regains consciousness, he starts to hear music coming from a nearby village. He immediately runs after the sound with the little energy left in his body, hoping to find people.

As the music grows louder and closer he realizes that it is coming from inside a small bar within the village. Upon entering the bar, Giver is welcomed with a song played for him by a band of Gypsies. They welcome Giver, and offer him a place to stay for the night so that he may regain strength. Giver is led to his room by a very pretty young girl named Marcía who has been ordered to offer Giver a small dose of potion to help him better sleep. He accepts, only, the young girl adds a potion that makes Giver fall in love with her as well.

When Giver falls asleep, he dreams of his brother and of other things that are heavy on his mind. When he awakes though- he feels light at heart, and he and Marcía sing a song together. Giver begins to realize he's in love, but does not feel he is old enough or wise enough to be suitable for Marcía. Although the love is there, by the time Giver truly allows himself to be fully taken over by his feelings, Marcía's love has grown dull. Giver is then left alone again, light and free as a paper airplane flying high above the sea. Ramona Córdova

download: ramona córdova - the boy who floated freely


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sonic youth - syr4: goodbye 20th century



||| RESPOTED |||

.:: The fourth release on the SYR label was not designated to new material or studio improvisations, but instead a double-disc set of Sonic Youth's interpretations of various works by other composers. A truly ambitious project, it's one of their most diverse releases yet, featuring a selection of guest performers and some extremely interesting recordings -- from the seemingly random yet very calculated half-hour Cage piece "Four6" to Coco's shrill delivery of Yoko Ono's "Voice Piece For Soprano", from the torturous yet compelling "Pendulum Music" to the perplexing yet amusing 88-key destruction of "Piano Piece #13", the album offers a vast sample of Sonic Youth chasing us down musical paths we might not otherwise have ever visited.

.:: For information on the history and evolution of the record itself, look no further than head project co-ordinator William Winant's extensive notes reproduced below, originally published in Bananafish #13. To discuss the live history a bit, we need to go back to April 1st, 1999. It was a special show at the Bowery Ballroom in NYC, Sonic Youth's first attempt to perform the SYR4 material live.

To make this possible, SY brought Jim O'Rourke, William Winant, Takehisa Kosugi, and Wharton Tiers onstage to assist in the performance. The show was opened by three sonic solo events: the Thurston Moore/William Winant/Tom Surgal trio, the Kim Gordon/Ikue Mori/DJ Olive trio (who would go on to release SYR5), the Lee Ranaldo/Leah Singer duo, and UK noise terrorists Prick Decay. The set consisted of 5 pieces from the SYR4 record, including "Six For New Time" "+-" "Having Never Written a Note For Percussion" "Four6" & "Voice Piece For Soprano", the latter of which was sung by Kim (rather than Coco) in 3 parts, one scream between each piece.

A program with scores for the pieces performed that night was handed out before the show. Following this gig, only "Having Never Written a Note For Percussion" would reappear in a set list that year, at the June 13th NYC show. Less than a month later, all of the band's gear was stolen on a brief west coast tour -- but that incident is covered in the write-ups for "A Thousand Leaves" and "NYC Ghosts & Flowers".

Following the "NYC Ghosts" tours in 2000, Sonic Youth decided to take the SYR4 material on an exclusive tour in Europe in June 2001, finally getting a chance to premiere the pieces they had not yet performed live, including "Burdocks" "Six" "Treatise" and even "Piano Piece #13", which was performed 4 times and yes, that means 4 innocent pianos had to die.

The band also debuted some non-SYR4 material in the same vein as those compositions -- "Clapping Music" (another Steve Reich piece, comprised entirely of Steve and William Winant clapping their hands) and a one-time-only rendition of Konrad Boehmer's "Echelon", written specifically for Sonic Youth, and conducted live onstage by Konrad himself in Amsterdam. In addition to SYR4 material, "She Is Not Alone" "NYC Ghosts & Flowers" and "Side2Side" were performed at every show.

Two shows on the 10-date tour were "rock gigs" -- ie, standard SY set lists. They did one festival set in Barcelona, opening with a lengthy improvised version of "She is Not Alone", centering around the full half-hour performance of "Four6", and finishing with "Side2Side". At this point, Jim O'Rourke was already an official member of the band, and he performed at every show -- also along for the ride was William Winant, and the sextet was joined by various guests in every city along the way.

It was a truly unique, remarkable tour that unfortunately didn't extend to North America -- reportedly, some of the European crowds were less than enthused by what they were witnessing. Oh well... sonic youth

download: sonic youth - syr4: goodbye 20th century
rapidspread mirror


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1

zloty dawai - dada work chant


.:: The five person improvisation group Zloty Dawai likes to live on the edge. Their albums are recorded in one take with no editing and no overdubbing. Their previous album on WM recordings received raves from Free Album Galore and from just about everyone who listened to it. Their new album Dada Work Chant is another amazing sound experience.

As with the last album, Zloty Dawai intermingles ambient soundscapes with long doses of avant-garde jazz and noise. Their effortless ability to go from dreamscapes to chaos is fascinating. There is a special empathy between the musicians. This type of music always runs the risk of sounding indulgent and meaningless.

Yet there is a clear communication of structure and meaning in this improvisatory feast. This is an experimental music album that begs for repeated listenings. There is so much going on that each listen will reveal new layers.

.:: Take your seat and have another journey into the weird accoustic world of Zloty Dawai. Is it Free Jazz? Is it Noise? The Zloties don’t give a damn.

The five guys from Cologne just recorded this one in 4 different takes directly on CD. Totally improvised - no overdubs – no censorship.


download: zloty dawai - dada work chant


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dredg - leitmotif


.:: With this major-label reissue of their independent release, Dredg presents an imposing, large-form sound, influenced equally by classic concept albums and contemporary hardcore elements. Washes of distorted guitar course through long, drone-based passages interspersed with low-key instrumental segues, as singer Gavin Hayes outlines a story of a wanderer's search for and attainment of redemption.

Much of the message is buried within the roaring din that is something of a trademark for this San Jose foursome, but attention is given as well to seductive, Eastern-inflected melodies and more than a few jazz-inflected but heavy-handed jams.

The predominant references, however, are psychedelic: the abstract synthesizer noises and murky guitar abstractions of "Intermission," the somewhat superfluous incorporation of cello on "Movement IV: RR," the haphazard application of the title "Minuet II: Crosswind Minuet" to a piece written in a waltz-like 6/8, the disconnected bits that lead from "Movement III: Lyndon" to the balls-out high point of the album, "Penguins in the Desert," and especially the anarchic doodles at the end of the album, which recall nothing so much as the indulgences of After Bathing at Baxter's.

It's an ambitious vision that drives Leitmotif, one that's better appreciated in its entirety than in its sometimes frayed details. ~ Robert L. Doerschuk, All Music Guide

download: dredg - leitmotif


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slon - jelenka ep



||| Support real indie bands |||

.:: Slon (Russian for elephant) are a new act to the scene. The band consists of Andrei Jafarau (git), Bernhard Baumann (git), David Wukitsevits (dr) and Alexandr Vatagin on bass, cello and electronics.

On a formal level, one can say Slon are a Post Rock-band. So far, so common. But if you zoom a bit closer into the Slon-sound, you will find a million influences, a rhizomatic meshwork of inspirations and an amount of musical ideas other bands could compose whole discographies from.

Curtain fall for “Jelenka”!
The intro called “Stillleben” was written by Tupolev-bassist Alexandr Vatagin. A soulful and gently aching melody, bowed cello and a few percussion sounds. Sparse and touching like a Jewish elegy. Titletrack “Jelenka” at number two introduces the rest of the band. While both guitarists unfold a simple Jazz melody, Vatagin's cello sets interesting harmonic courses.

The whole sound is very intimate and close, nearly chamber musical. Like a mixture between Karate (Jazz), Slint (sparingness) and Gastr Del Sol (experimentalism). “The Negroni Massacre” is rather ambient, a draft of piano and plucked guitar, with delicate feedback and a lot of warming noises in the back. Ominous tune! The tension unleashes with “Chisum” afterwards, the most aggressive song. Jafarau and Baumann let their guitars ring like June of 44 never split up.

Final composition “Um Leere Räume zu Füllen” (to fill-up empty rooms) is the culmination of “Jelenka”. The songs starts with an expanded electronic intro, incorporating bass and piano. The guitars take on a humble melody, drums and piano join and bring the song to a prosperous ending.

download: slon - jelenka ep


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refused - the e.p. compilation (1997)


.:: This 2004 version of The EP Compilation joins Burning Heart/Epitaph's digipack reissues of Shape of Punk to Come and Songs to Fan the Flames of Discontent. Refused sounds better than ever thanks to remastering, which has amplified the recording's overall levels and clarified its elements.

Highlights like "Circle Pit," "Refused Are Fucking Dead," and "New Noise" ring with newfound fury, while the traditionalist hardcore of 1995's Everlasting EP -- including "Sunflower Princess" and "Symbols" -- has lost none of its urgency. While Refused was respected and even revered in its day, the group has gotten a reputation as the go-to influence for a new generation of post-hardcore and emo foot soldiers. Burning Heart/Epitaph's remasters are the official and best representation of that legacy.

.:: As stated on the cover of the enclosed booklet, the disc you are most likely to find on your right when opening this exquisite plastic trey contains historical musical evidence of punkrock band Refused. That is to say, songs published originally in the context of mini-cd's, cd-ep's and various compilations now released as one coherent work of art for purposes unknown to the author of this pretentiously overdone back cover text. There.

download: refused - the e.p. compilation (1997)


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lacrimas profundere - la naissance d'un reve



||| Before the "I want to be a cute metalhead" attitude… |||

.:: 1996 and Lacrimas Profundere release their second official release after their very promising debut album "…And The Wings Embraced Us" (1995), "La Naissance D'Un Reve", "the birth of a dream". The album is indeed a dream, a bitter one, coming to life as its bleak and deeply melancholic melodies start to echo overrunning the listener, penetrating his fragile soul, filling him with hollow grey emotions.

"La Naissance D'Un Reve" is an opus to pure melancholy and every single sound is made of a burning picture from the past. The guitar riffing is slow and doomy, the rhythm section lends groove to the compositions and the emotional piano pieces, the imposing symphonic keyboard melodies and the heart-rending violin pieces evoke a sorrowful bleak atmosphere in the air along with the beautiful female vocals and Christopher Schmid's descriptive deep grunts at times, emotional reciting at others. Generally, everything consisting of this album is at the same time deeply emotional and utterly inspired harmonizing beautifully the sounds of the soul and the colors of the heart into 6 compositions, the 6 parts of the dream…

You start losing yourself into the dream as "A Fairy's Breath" surrounds you; Christopher's voice is utterly descriptive whether he recites or grunts in calmness or in emotional ecstasy interpreting lyrics made of bitterness and of dream harmonizing wonderfully with the slow doomy guitar riffing, the bleak piano melodies and the violin's heart-rending sound enriching the grey soundscape with even darker colors along with some desperate female vocals that make their appearance at times. It seems that after the one great song comes after the other and "Priamus" which follows is one of them, another opus of sadness and of pain. You drown deeper and deeper into the dream with the guitar riffing and the guitar chords' melodies overrunning you as Christopher's heart-rending voice pierces your bleeding soul so deep inside; the song ranges from soft dreamy melancholic parts to emotional outbursts with Christopher grunting in anger and pain escalating the emotional charge of the song. The melancholic piano ending of "Priamus" leads to the heart-rending piano opening of the following "Lilienmeer" making you drown in your very own esoteric thoughts…

…where you keep on suffocating as "The Gesture of the Gist" starts echoing with the keyboard and the violin melodies enchanting in bereavement the listener as the song goes on. For one more time Christopher is utterly expressive giving meaning to every single word he utters, words of the heart echoing from his angry throat in pain as the distressful guitar riffing and the serene guitar chords accompany him harmonizing with the aching piano melodies; the emotional parts drown you in sadness whereas the outbursts make you feel anger while in deep pain escalating the song. The album flows in deep mourning tones with the wailing "An Orchid For My Withering Garden", a composition based on Christopher's reciting and an ethereal female voice harmonizing beautifully with him as the bittersweet guitar chords, the bleak violin pieces and the piano and keyboard melodies accompany them in pure drama leading slowly to the end of the dream with the elegiac "Enchanted In Silent Beauty". Christopher shows the grandeur of his voice as he interprets the poetic lyrics in an exceptional descriptive way as the doomy guitar riffing, the piano, the violin and the keyboard melodies and the imposing rhythm section evoke the ideal musical background and atmosphere for him to paint the soundscape with colors of the heart.

"La Naissance D'Un Reve" is a monumental album moving in lyrical doom/death metal soundscapes balancing between reality and fairytale, dreams and nightmares…
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toru takemitsu - i hear the water dreaming


.:: Takemitsu, who died in 1996, wrote everything from movie music to Beatles arrangements to avant-garde chamber music. In his best works, he draws simultaneously on the traditional idiom of Japan and the most advanced contemporary techniques. All this music was written (or, in one case, arranged) for flute solo, and Patrick Gallois proves a most satisfying interpreter, getting into the composer's skin and playing with a most convincing sense of inner quiet. One misconceived idea mars the disc, though. Takemitsu had good reasons for producing three versions of Toward the Sea, a lovely and imaginative piece. But even when separated by other pieces, they don't make for satisfying listening on one program. (Given the choice, I would have picked the orchestral version for its added color.) Still, with such fine performances and sound, there's enough music on the disc to make it worth picking up if the idiom appeals to you.

.:: Toru Takemitsu was born in Tokyo on 8 October 1930. After the war, resolving to become a composer, he began to study composition with Yasuji Kiyose in 1948, though he remained basically self-taught. His composing debut came at the age of twenty with the piano piece "Lento in due movimenti". Takemitsu showed a very clear interest in many nonmusical art forms, such as modern painting, literature (particularly poetry), theater and film. In 1951, together with other composers and artists from the most divergent disciplines, he founded the "Experimental Workshop", a mixed-media group which soon became known for its avant-garde multi-media activities.

Takemitsu first gained public recognition as a composer in the late fifties, with his Requiem for strings (1957). His interest in different artistic fields and his self-taught status deeply influenced his avant-garde style. He was using tape recorders to create musical collages out of "real" sounds ("musique concrète") as soon as 1950 (Water Music 1960, Kwaidan 1964). In the early sixties two new influences established themselves in Takemitsu’s music: traditional Japanese music (e.g. November Steps, 1967, for biwa, shakuhachi and orchestra) and nature (e.g. ARC I, 1963, for orchestra, A Flock Descends into the Pentagonal Garden, 1977, for orchestra).

On the occasion of the world exhibition EXPO 1970 in Osaka, he was musical director of a theatre project ("Space Theater of Street Pavilion"). Whereas the influence of Schönberg and Berg were noticeable in the works of his early period, the French style of composition, particularly that of Debussy, has remained the basis for his works thereafter. Takemitsu was also very receptive towards other music (jazz, chanson, pop tunes) and, being an ardent film fan, he has also composed film music (e.g. Ran, Dodes’ka-Den). Although at home in the electronic media and film music, his most characteristic works are perhaps for chamber ensemble and large orchestra. Including arrangements of classic pop-melodies, the 12 Songs for Guitar (1977) are evidence of Takemitsu’s liking for so-called light music. Takemitsu is in particular an instrumental composer and being adherent to a "musique concrète", he uses
even in his electronic pieces
solely natural sounds instead of electronic ones.

He lectured on composition at the Yale University and was also invited by universities in the USA, Canada and Australia as a lecturer or composer-in-residence. He was awarded many honours and prizes, for example the UNESCO-IMC Music Prize in 1991 and the University of Louisville Grawemeyer Award for Music Composition in 1994 for Fantasma/Cantos.


Takemitsu died in Tokyo on 20 February 1996.

download: toru takemitsu - i hear the water dreaming


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dredg - live at the fillmore


.:: The Fillmore in San Francisco is a legendary venue. The CBGB’s of psychedelic, the Fillmore Auditorium housed the Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, and many other classics as they got their start. Later, after the psychedelic music of the 60s and 70s died away, the wave of California punk bands began seeing their days in The Fillmore, although it renamed itself as The Elite Club. Among others, The Dead Kennedys brought themselves up in The Elite Club.

In 1991, the venue changed its name back to the original and became a popular venue in San Francisco. It’s no huge arena and only seats just over 1,000 people. In that essence, it suits dredg perfectly. While the band certainly has the ability to produce enough energy to make a crowd of tens of thousands go crazy, their music suits a more secluded venue.

This live album takes the listener through a rollercoaster ride of intensity. Dredg obviously prepared for this concert extensively, putting together a perfect setlist, grouping their most energetic songs together along with the mellowest together. What’s more, dredg worked out transitions from song to song to make gigantic sections of the concert flow like one. The band knows where their strengths lie and they put it all together with an extremely smart setlist.

Aside from The Warbler, which serves as an orchestrated sound check more than a song, the band opens with their two most popular songs, Bug Eyes and Ode to the Sun. Both of which produce great energy and pull the crowd in immediately. The crowd goes wild when they hear Gavin push out the memorable ascending slide guitar line and the band shows that their studio quality translates directly into their live quality.

The instrumental balance of the band comes across almost as well as it does on the studio recordings. A listener hears everything come through and certain aspects stand out when needed. The band plays pretty much directly from the recording on the opening songs simply because they can. Dredg composed Catch Without Arms in such a way that the band could perform everything live.

El Cielo falls on the opposite end of the spectrum. Each song on El Cielo took extreme studio precision to work with multiple tracks of instruments and layers upon layers of melodies. After the opening sequence, dredg plays through the first five tracks of El Cielo in succession (besides the ambient intro under a minute).

The band manages to create the dense sound, relying much on delay effects from guitarist Mark Engles. However, drummer Dino Campanella often changes the feel of the songs throughout, if only for a split second. He adds great variety to the tracks and leads the band through many dynamic changes. Meanwhile, vocalist Gavin Hayes and bassist Drew Roulette play directly from the studio recordings. It seems to take a while for Gavin to step into his aura and really get into his concert, giving a pretty emotionless performance throughout Same Ol’ Road. In Sanzen, he picks up the slack a bit but he doesn’t reach his full potential until Triangle, where the entire band enters a whole new echelon of live performance. Using various vocal samples not heard on El Cielo and stepping into a trance-like feel.

They play with the crowd for a bit, pausing before jumping into the second movement and disregarding the crowd’s beckoning. However, from where the band comes back in, Triangle stands out as one of the best tracks on the album.

After a slight rise in energy from The Tanbark Is Hot Lava, easily the most energetic song ever from the band, the most consistent section of the concert arrives. Dredg enters another section of El Cielo songs, the more mellow ones. Whoa Is Me features a guest saxophonist to solo throughout the song and it grooves much like a secluded jazz club. Even Of The Room, one of the most dynamic songs from the band, finds a toned down interpretation. Even through the recording, the laid-back feel that dredg attempts to create comes through nicely.

The laid-back style capitulates in a fantastic rendition of the more electronic-based Sang Real and The Ornament. After a short melodic interlude, Sang Real jumps into full beautiful form. It features some slightly different piano chord voicings from Dino throughout, but the main drum beat and piano sample remain the same from the recording. The Ornament builds upon the use of piano for a sparse, beautiful song. The song is an expansion off of the closing of Matroshka at the end of Catch Without Arms. The Ornament stands out as the ultimate low on the album in intensity but one of the highs in excellence.

But that is really nothing to leave fans with at a concert. Luckily, dredg possesses one song that transfers from that sparseness to extreme intensity, The Canyon Behind Her. The live rendition of one of dredg’s fullest songs lacks the wall of sound produced by the studio chorus, but in a way, it works.

Dredg executes the uptempo verses perfectly, with Dino creating excellent fills throughout. The climax where the song switches into 6/8 serves its purpose of raising the intensity and nothing more. As the recording of the choir ending plays over the PA, the band transfers into Yatahaze, a little taste of Leitmotif to send fans off. Easily the heaviest song played in the concert, Yatahaze along with 90 Hour Sleep, the outro for the song which capitulates in an accelerando which Dino leads through an energizing rock beat. Live at the Fillmore showcases songs from every album dredg recorded as well as a few B-sides from Catch Without Arms.

They composed a setlist of excellence that rises and falls in intensity with a masterful presence. It is an excellent representation of the live dredg, showing the band playing together with excellence and their experience together shines.

download: dredg - live at the fillmore


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