CHOICE MUSIC FROM THE LAST MONTH

THE INAUGURAL MONTHLY PLAYLIST FOR 2024: Tracks chosen by the Monolith Cocktail team of Dominic Valvona, Matt Oliver, Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea and Graham Domain that represent the eclectic and international tastes of the blog, the Monthly is our chance to remind our followers and readers of the last 31 days (we may have added in a few late entries from December too) in aural delights on the site, with music from review sections and posts, plus the odd track we might not have had room to feature, all compiled into one epic playlist.

TRACKLIST:….

Brion Gysin ‘Sham Pain’
George Demure ‘Wishful Thinking’
Donita Sparks ‘Sliding Through Life On Charm’
MIZU ‘Pavane’
Hesky ‘Dandelion’
The Bordellos ‘Running Back To You’
Bound By Endogamy ‘Nothing’
Rhys Bloodjoy ‘Vividsection’
Lynx 196.9, Arturo Banbini & Kool Keith ‘Wild Cowboys’
Shottie, Farmabeats & Skam2? ‘Organizized Confusion’
Black Josh, Sly Moon & Lee Scott ‘Council Pop’
K. Board & The Skreens ‘Mystery Magoo’
Vilmmer ‘Mauerkipp’
Kreidler Ft. Khan Of Finland ‘Loisaida Sisters’
Nehan ‘Ocean Side – Edit’
Park Jiha ‘Pink Lakes’
Neuro… No Neuro ‘A Day With Focus’
Cumsleg Borenail ‘Tsdtenhyilnm Sdhco Kiiwya U-‘
Sad Man ‘Go Egg’
King Kashmere, Cuth ‘Door Of Truth’
Essa, Yungun, Devise ‘What Eye See Pt. 2’
Oldboy Rhymes, Sage Francis, Rituals Of Mine, ALXNDRBRWN ‘Master Cleanse’
Tammy Faye Starlite, Barry Reynolds ‘The Ballad of Lucy Jordan’
divr ‘Tea High’
Charles Lloyd ‘Defiant, Tender Warrior’
Corduroy Institute ‘Say Something Gentle’
FANALI, Vera Di Lecce ‘I’ll Be Your Mirror’
Kiledjian, Sako Wana ‘Shaadu’
Lina ‘Cancao’
Che Noir, Your Old Droog, Evidence ‘Junior High’
Eda Diaz ‘Sabana y Banano’
Matthew “Doc” Dunn ‘My Love’
Letters From Mouse ‘Habitual Joy’
Nino Gvilia ‘Raspberry Hands’
Elea Calvet ‘Sinuous Ways’
Anni Kiviniemi Trio ‘Tiu Dropar’
C’mon Tigre ‘Nomad At Home’
Walter Kemp 3 ‘Defacto (Live)’

SINGLE REVEAL – DOMINIC VALVONA

Elea Calvet ‘Sinuous Ways’
(Hyssop & Victoria Records)

With an intelligence and subtlety sadly lacking in much music these days, the Bristol-based (born in Canada and brought up for a time in India) worldly artist Elea Calvet reflects the sinuous of her latest single with a winding, pondered and almost sighed adroit wistfulness. A still piano, bowed and softly thumping bass with tremolo quivers and delightful wisp of melodious beauty, the duality of the human soul is laid bare to a most accentuated backing and feely atmosphere. There’s a real clever alchemy of lyricism, and a balance struck between the sorrowful and beautifully drifting, the bluesy and folksy, classical and wispy. Torment reigns all right, but the near haunting float-y but always present voice and music is as alluring as it is clever and deep: and again, that duality, somehow wafting along almost effortlessly.

A burgeoning star until a hiatus, Elea Calvet has been constantly compared to such idiosyncratic stars as Anna Calvi – and for good reason. But she reminded me of Raf Mantelli, a touch of our very own one-time collaborator and fellow Canadian, Gillian Stone, Amanda Acevado, and a more disarming Diamanda Galas. Songwriting and orchestration wise, I swear I’m hearing a touch of Bowie too!

This is vulnerability and strength heading in an intriguing, interesting and artful direction. I look forward to hearing more, with a full EP in March.

THE MONTHLY DIGEST OF ACCUMULATED NEW MUSIC, THE SOCIAL INTER-GENERATIONAL/ECLECTIC AND ANNIVERSRAY ALBUMS CELEBRATING PLAYLIST, AND ARCHIVE MATERIAL CHOSEN BY DOMINIC VALVONA

Continuing a series that started in 2023, the Digest is my one-stop column of the new and the old; a secondary home to all those releases I missed out on or didn’t get room to feature in either my Perusal reviews features or singular Our Daily Bread posts, plus a chance to celebrate timely anniversary albums and dip into my own record collection with the a special anything goes playlist, and to, finally, dip into the Monolith Cocktail Archives.

The New: this will be a briefing of a sort, with a short outline, thoughts and reactions to a number of recent albums from my inbox – currently a 1000+ releases a month on average!

The Social Playlist: choice music collected from across the ages, borders and genres, with a smattering of tracks from choice anniversary celebrating albums of worth and cult status. Consider it my unofficial radio show.

The Archives: self-explanatory, but each month I chose past pieces from the extensive Monolith Cocktail back pages that have a timely ring to them.  

_((THE NEW))_

LINA_ ‘Fado Camões’
(Galileo Music)

Fado dramatist with the spellbinding voice, LINA_ follows up her impressive collaboration with Raul Refree with another unique reading of the famous Portuguese form of sullenness, sorrow and plaint. On that previous project, the diaphanous and emotionally sonorous pulling songstress and composer transformed the music of the Fado legend and actress Amália Rodrigues; filtering that icon’s songbook through a modern production of minimalistic gauze and sonic atmospheric effects.

Back this time with the British producer and musician Justin Adams (credits include projects with Robert Plant, Tinariwen, Eno and Sinead O’Conner to name but a few) and a small ensemble, LINA_ takes on the classical 16th century poetics of Portugal’s most famous literary son, Luís Vaz de Camões. So titan a figure in that country’s rich history, his medieval period language of lyrical romantic aches, mortality and nature is said to be the basis of Portuguese itself: often called the “language of Camões”. Integral to the very soul of Portugal then, it’s fitting that such a talent as LINA_ is behind this interpretation of his work; transcribing it’s prescient and near timeless reach to the music of Fado. Examples of which include, when translated into English from the original lyrical language, “They hear the tale of my misfortunes, and cure their ordeals with my hell”. Tortured but also overwhelmingly beautiful and romantic throughout, it suits the musical form very well across twelve near magical songs of air-y mysticism, the venerable, yearning and dreamy. Musically tender, accentuated and like a fog, mist at times, even vapour of the mere essence of a score, there’s echoes of old Spain, the Balearics, North Africa, the Middle East but also Turkey and the Hellenic. You can also add the supernatural to that list too: a passing over into the ether. At times other times there is an almost semi-classical feel, merged with Iberian and Galician new wave, with some songs standing out as radio-friendly floated diaphanous pop visions of the Fado spirit.

Incredible throughout, LINA_ once more proves herself the most striking if not talented artist in this field of exploration and music; bring together beautifully and evocatively time honoured traditions and the legacy of literary Portugal with the country’s most prized and famous export to magic up another essential album. LINA_ is a leading light, pushing the boundaries without losing the soul, truth and appeal of the music she adopts and transforms. Fado Camões is another artistic triumph.    

 

Andy Haas/David Grollman ‘Act Of Love’

The experimental NYC percussionist-assemblage artist and knight of the Ghosts Of The Holy Ghost Spermic Brotherhood (alongside saxophonist Andy Haas and the late multi-tasking Michael Evans) David Grollman knows more than most about the cruelties of the Alzheimer’s Disease; losing his wife, the poet Rita Stein-Grollman to Early Onset Alzheimer’s in early 2023.

Funneled and channeled into this most recent album with Haas, Grollman and his sonic partner of avant-garde arts and evocations reflect the very essence of loss through an apparatus of Dadaist and Fluxus apparatus: namely in Grollman’s case the balloon, with the textured tactile touches and stretches of its latex surface wrinkling as it expels its air; in a manner, like the life force slowly leaving the deflated body and personality of what someone once was as they lose themselves to this incurable disease. Meanwhile on sax, Haas deals in exaggerated long, slowly drawn-out breathes and blows; sometimes appearing to lift the weight that sits on his lungs, and at other times making noises that resemble steam and the pressure of valves being released and squeezed. Together it sounds like La Monte Young, John Zorn, Anthony Braxton and Marshall Allen in remembrance.

But then there’s another dimension, the brilliant, often acerbic poetry of Rita (written before she succumbed to the disease), which is read out in both almost laconic and grumpy confrontational style by David. Another piece of text, ‘Message From ME’, which the title makes obvious, is a voicemail left by the already mentioned and late Michael Evans (who passed away back in 2021), another knock-about figure on the scene and much missed member of the Ghosts Of The Holy Ghost Spermic Brotherhood.  Act Of Love is a challenging and strained but obviously emotional well of remembrance, with the harsh and more attentive abstractions of the performances somehow managing to convey that which can’t always be said or represented.

Variát & Merzbow ‘Unintended Intentions’
(I Shall Sing Until My Land Is Free) – Released the end of last year

Unsurprisingly concentrating the mind, the brutal barbaric dystopian-scarred landscapes of war-torn Ukraine have been transmogrified into the abrasive, concrete debris soundscapes of nightmares by the trick noisemaker of dissonance and pulverizing noise, and co-instigator of the Prostir label, Dmyto Fedorenko (aka Variát). As his homeland continues to be bombarded and churned up by the invading forces of the despot Putin, Fedorenko teams up with fellow noise sculptor of some standing, Masami Akita – the harsh and confrontational Japanese artist behind the 500 plus back catalogue Merzbow project – to reshape the needled, scowled, squalled, overbearing, sinister, menacing and static coarse ruins: the only hope of which, is in the “resilience” of the Ukrainian people holding back the tide of destruction and evil.

Crushing morbid forces merge with the air raids of drone attacks, decay, coded signals, charged force fields, transistors, the Fortean radio set and the alien. Occasionally a keyboard chord materializes, along with the recognizable sounds of toms and breaks – the drums sounding like at times like they’re being beaten with boxing gloved pummeling hands. At one point it could be the set of a roofless cathedral, another, from the charred remains of a devastating fire: I could of course be projecting all this.

Throbbing Gristle, Gunther Wüsthoff, Jóhann Jóhannsson, Sunn O))) (if they cashed in their guitars for synths and a laptop), Oberman Knocks, Boris and Scott Walker are all brought to mind. And yet this is a unique collaborative pneumatic and caustic vision from the two artists, one that can’t help but evoke the devastating, mindless and distressing scenes unfolding. And if you needed any prompting or a reminder, profits for this release all go to supporting ‘Ukraine resistance against Russia’ with donations made to self-defense and humanitarian foundations. PS: Thanks by the way to the label, I Shall Sing Until My Land Is Free, for the CD and stickers; always appreciated to receive something physical in an increasingly soulless, downloaded or streaming, non-committal world.   

Various ‘Hyperboloid 2024’
(Hyperboloid Music)

I had to try and shoehorn this end-of-year compilation from the Latvian label in to the Digest this month. Twenty-five visionary trance-y and techno tracks from the roster’s myriad of artists – a sort of Balkans and beyond Warp label Artificial Intelligence series for the new age and new century -, there’s variations of the electronic genre spread out across a generous showcase that marks yet another creatively successful year for the imprint. Old skool rave breaks sit next to entrancing vista soundscapes; d’n’b with hardcore; and near Grimes-like pop electronica with thoughtful rumination. Get stuck in.    

Roma Zuckerman ‘Phenomenon of Provincial Mentality’
(Gost Zvuk)

Filaments, electric currents, crispy buzzes and granular fizzles combine to form the most redacted and evocative of minimal techno, deep house and EBM-esque dance music on the Siberian producer’s archival showcase for the Gost Zvuk label. Charged, pulsing and rhythmic at all times, Roma Zuckerman’s spheres of influences run through glimpses and throbs of Basic Channel, Kreidler, Rob Hood and Dave Clarke, twinned and merged with an alternative cosmonaut Soviet era vision of Sky Records. And most surprising of all, on the collection’s finale, ‘Compañeros’, there’s a move toward windy-fluted Latin American with the use of a Spanish pastoral rhythm guitar. Voices, the echoes and morphed ravings, communications and alien warped effects of which, play their part too; at times sounding like Richard H. Kirk, and at others, like some two-way radio cosmic interface between ground control and Soyuz shuttle. A highly recommended slice of deep bass, futuristic and simultaneously retro-futuristic minimalist techno that will almost definitely make the end of year lists.

(((THE SOCIAL/VOLUME 82)))

Continuing with the decade-long Social – originally a DJ club night I’d pick up at different times over the past 20 plus years, and also a café residency from 2012 to 2014 – playlist, each month I literally chose the records that celebrate anniversary albums; those that I’d love to hear on the radio waves or DJs play once and while; and those records that pay a homage and pay respects to those artists who we’ve lost on the way.

January starts with one such sad but celebratory nod to the late Marlena Shaw, who passed away last weekend (I’m incidentally writing this at the start of the third week of the month). The California Soul(stress) had some real sass and attitude, as proven by the provocative, taking-no-shit, title of her 1974 LP, Who Is This Bitch, Anyway?; from which I’ve included the short gospel-light ‘The Lord Giveth And The Lord Taketh Away’. Also 50 this year, there’s tracks from Pekka Pohjola’s Harakka Bialoipokku, Harmonia’s ‘Musik Von Harmonia’ and (sticking with a kosmische/krautrock theme) something from the quartet of albums made under the auspices of The Cosmic Jokers nom de plume – a supergroup that never really was, the main participants of which included such lauded icons as Manuel Göttsching, Klaus Schulze, Jürgen Dollase and Harald Grosskopf fucking around in Dieter Dierks’ studio; the results of which, unknowingly recorded by Rolf-Ulrich Kaiser and Gille Lettman at the time were put out during 1974 – Schulze was incandescent enough to sue over the whole affair.

40th anniversary nods go to Finnis Africae’s incredible fourth world self-titled peregrination, Bob Dylan’s Planet Waves and Harold Budd & Eno’s prized and influential The Pearl LP. A decade later and there’s also tracks from The Wake’s Tidal Wave Of Hope and Air Liquide’s Nephology (see my archive essay style piece further down the column).

I usually leave the most current and newest of tracks to the Monolith Cocktail’s Monthly Playlist (next edition due next week), but have included recent(ish) tracks from Igor Osypov, Bagaski, Nicole Mitchell and, not really new but reissued late last year, a track from the originally 1984 released Ein Bundel Faulnis in der Grube album by Holger Hiller (of Palais Schaumburg German new wave fame) – reissued that is by krautrock/kosmische specialists Bureau B.

The rest is for you to discover; a smattering of eclectic delights, wonders and nuggets from across time and from across the globe. Actually, if you are reading this, and if you have time, I’d really like some feedback on the length of these playlists. I’ve gradually tightened the running order down to around the 30 mark and the length under 3 hours – down from 33 last year, and before that anything from 40 to 100!!! Let me know if this is a ridiculous number, or just right. 

___TRACK LISTING AS FOLLOWS: 

Marlena Shaw The Lord Giveth And The Lord Taketh Away’
Bob Dylan ‘Tough Mama’
Ethel-Ann-Powell ‘The Jaybird Song’
Acayouman ‘Si Ou Ladje Moin’
The Wake ‘Britain’
A Passing Fancy ‘Your Trip’
The New Tweedy Brothers ‘I Can See It’
Americo Brito ‘Sabe Na Panama’
J.O. Araba ‘Kelegbe Megbe’
Finnis Africae ‘Zoo Zula’
The Cosmic Jokers ‘Power Drive’
Ike Yard ‘Beyondersay’
Air Liquide ‘Semwave’
Holger Hiller ‘Chemische und physikalische Entdeckungen’
Harmonia ‘Sonnenschein’
Fireballet ‘Carrollon’
Pekka Pohjola ‘Hereillakin uni jatkuu’
Dhidalah ‘Adamski’
Son Of Bazerk ‘The Band Got Swivey On The Wheels’
Bagaski ‘Hawkish Torso’
Joe Mubare ‘Number 8’
Nicole Mitchell ‘You Know What’s In There’
Igor Osypov ‘Vango’
Lard Free ‘Warinbaril’
Teengenerate ‘Something You Got’
Tasavallan Presidentti ‘Weather Brightly’
Second Hand ‘I Am Nearly There’
Duffy Power ‘Glimpses Of God’
Grothbros ‘Tollah Tra Flex’

((((ARCHIVES))))

Air Liqude ‘Nephology – The New Religion’ Is 30 Years Old This Month

Selective electronic musicians often come out with the line that they’ve been influenced on a particular album by the Krautrock greats, citing such luminaries as Roedelius, Michael Rothar, Klaus Schulze, Irmin Schmidt etc. – as though they were in some way picking up the baton and running with it.

Of course most of this is a whole crock of shit, as hardly anyone essentially understood that those innovators from the 70s were always moving forward and re-inventing their sound, never usually dwelling on the past; just copying it or reprising it totally misses the point.

OK, so I’m sort of meandering off on a tangent, but basically you can take a look at the likes of Neu!, Cluster, Kraftwerk and CAN and see they were making something fresh and new; to really take on their train of thought means to push those delineated boundaries even further.

Heir apparent to the synthesizer and analogue re-wiring school of exploration, were, and still are, the Cologne duo of Air Liquide. They took up their forefathers brave new world mantle, and built an ambitious and inspiring variation based around the technological leaps in music production; concentrating on the styles of Techno and Acid House.

Their seminal opus of 1994, Nephology, adopts vestiges of cinematic, industrial, ambient and dub; producing an impressive soundtrack that stands up well even by today’s standards, and adheres to the German desires of progress.

The duo comprised of the exceptionally talented Cem Oral and Ingmar Koch, better known as Jamin Unit and Dr. Walker, both entrenched in technical know-how – Koch was the lucky recipient of a Roland JX3P synthesizer on his 14th birthday, a gift that led to him being hired by Korg to program sounds for a number of their iconic models.

Koch began recording in the late 80s, composing, as he puts it, assembly line House and Hip Hop tracks for the German labels Hype! and Technoline. The latter label went bankrupt, prompting him to join a course on electronic composition at a University in Cologne. He would soon meet fellow student and synth enthusiast Oral, and find that he also shared a common interest for groups like Tangerine Dream, CAN, Heaven 17, early New York Hip Hop and Chicago acid: working together seemed almost inevitable.

By the end of 1991 Air Liquide was born, with their first EP release following in a matter of months, and a self-titled debut at the end of 1992. Their second album, the 1994 released Nephology opus, really upped the ante with its mostly innovative themes and layered tracks modeled around the more sophisticated tones of intelligent Techno and dance music – future projects saw the duo experimenting with Gabba hardcore and ethereal fashioned traversing styles of trance.

Singing from the same hymn sheet as The Orb, and many similar ambient acts, they immersed themselves in a haze of new-age touchy-feely rhetoric, using both celestial horizons and the skies above as the central theme to hang their music to: That Nephology title is itself taken from the, originally Greek, word for clouds; adopted as the terminology for the study of their formations – interestingly over the last century it has remained a rather marginalised and forgotten art…well, that was until the recent interest in global warming.

The 14-track album is split into various sections, with the main tracks interspersed amongst the otherworldly type segue ways and vignettes.

A central atmospheric resonance runs throughout, evoking a cosmological and space-age mood, one that has an often ominous or threatening feel to it; charged with rippling static effects.

Mainly we are treated to some indolently and cleverly multi-layering techniques, produced from an impressive display of iconic analogue/electronic equipment, including the Roland Tr 808, Jupiter 8, ARP 2600 and a pair of Moogs.

Side one of this double album entirely consists of acid drenched grooves and bouncing taut techno. The grand opening of ‘The Cloud’ emerges refined and full of empyrean quality from the ether, its tightened rolling drums and throbbing bass cascade over an electrified wild jungle rich sound collage; sounding like a Germanic 808 State. As though in tribune to Klaus Schulze and his cohorts, the duo interweave startling ambient sequences, dousing the beats in swathes of metallic walled corridor sounds and whispering missed conversations.

This swirling tome is followed by the more Chicago house style of ‘Semiwave’; a sauntering announced rhythmic workout, full of ever-tightened repetitive percussion, moody dramatic bass and lethargic plonking notes. Ethereal strains of some distant cooing float in and out of the track, setting the look-to-the-skies above scene perfectly, sending us hurtling ever further into the stratosphere.

Caustic meatier bass lines and squelchy 909 bleeps flourish on the bonus track ‘Auroral Wave’ – seems this and one other tune, are not included on all versions.

Hardened ticking away drums and pre-set handclaps encounter Mo Wax space-esque sustains, whilst moving along at a Mannuel Göttsching pronounced building pace.

Air Liquide manage to absorb many different styles of music including dub; the strong use of dark moody bass can be found on tracks like ‘THX is on’, where Sly and Robbie meet Carl Graig’s Plastic People period flow. There’s also room for Hip Hop, with the duo re-working Cypress Hill’s ‘Insane In The Brain’ for their own beguiling electro track ‘Stratus Static’. They manage to meld both the stoner-induced sample of the Hill’s track with what sounds like a dub-esque clattering Art of Noise, to produce something quite original and sublimely dizzying.

Scattered throughout are more light-hearted moments, including ‘If There Was No Gravity’, where they take on the ambient workshops of both The Orb and Orbital. Wispy willowy female vocals poetically describe a sort of dipsy journey through the clouds, the lyrics leaning towards cliché almost:

“How you’d love to live up there,

Kiss the sun and walk on air.

If there was no gravity,

You’d be in nephology”.

Dubtastic bass lines bumble along to fill the sweeping calm and dreamy melodics, in a display of evanescent pulchritude. The looming presence of Kubrick, or rather the meticulous chosen soundtracks that go hand-in-hand with his films, add dramatic passages of tension and suspense. ‘Die Reisse Im Teekeesel’ (loosely translated as ‘Those travels in the tea boiler’) uses 2001 A Space Odyssey harrowing soundscapes, with the chanting evocative mantras from ‘So Spoke Zarathustra’ to add intrepid doom. Both ‘Kymnea’ and ‘Im Grlenmeyerkolben I and II’ echo and groan with menacing moments plucked straight from A Clockwork OrangeWalter (Wendy) Carlos’s switched on treatment of Henry Purcell’s ‘Music For The Funeral Of Queen Mary’, and the tormented ‘Timesteps’ are brought to mind.

Eerily the duo can’t help but intersperse a sober and haunting array of imbued cinematics, dropping in hints of Dune, Star Trek and The Thing to create an often emotive or imaginative atmospherics, which lends the album a certain gravitas.

On the closing track, ‘The Clouds Have Eyes’, they end on a chaotic hypnotic flourish. Helicopter chopping Jeff Mills style beats rapidly rotate, as an operatic style haunted choral sweep swirls around in the tumultuous cyclonic blades. That almost disturbing voice-like loop, calls out from the melee as though an apparition from some distant planet or dimension: a perfect finish.

Nephology does undoubtedly sound of its time to some extent; tied in some respects to a particular epoch, yet though it’s over thirty-years old it somehow rises above sounding dated. In fact recent revivals of the late 80s and early 90s electronic scenes – where labels such as R & S, Harthouse, Structure and Rising High fed the deep thinking dance music appetite – have encouraged a mini-renaissance and re-valuation. In 2024 you could easily slip a bit of the old Nephology into the club, and no one would blink.

Hi, my name is Dominic Valvona and I’m the Founder of the music/culture blog monolithcocktail.com For the last ten years I’ve featured and supported music, musicians and labels we love across genres from around the world that we think you’ll want to know about. No content on the site is paid for or sponsored and we only feature artists we have genuine respect for /love. If you enjoy our reviews (and we often write long, thoughtful ones), found a new artist you admire or if we have featured you or artists you represent and would like to buy us a coffee at https://ko-fi.com/monolithcocktail to say cheers for spreading the word, then that would be much appreciated.

A ROUNDUP OF REVIEWS FROM BRIAN ‘BORDELLO’ SHEA

__/SINGLES\__

Heskey ‘Crack In The Mirror’

Do you like Teenage Fanclub and bands of tuneful guitar strum? If so you are going to enjoy this blissful pop song of tunesmithery; it has all the ingredients one would want for such a release; if it was fish and chips it would just have the right amount of salt and vinegar.

John Howard ‘Safety In Numbers/In The Light Of Fires Burning’
(Kool Kat Music)

The brand new single from John Howard is upon us and it is a double A-sided thing of nostalgic beauty, two brief glimpses of how songs where written and performed, with a pop eloquence that sadly seems mostly a thing of the past. To kick things off we have “Safety In Numbers”, a sublime pop ballad that brings to mind The Beach Boys in their Pet Sounds days; wonderful harmonies drift upon a sea of piano tranquility. The second little pop gem is “In The Light Of Fires Burning”, which again is another nostalgic gem a song that captures the magic and sadness of growing old whilst celebrating your youth and memories through the joys of pop song: A song worthy of Sedaka at his finest.

Liam Gallagher & John Squire ‘Just Another Rainbow’

I was expecting nonsense I will be honest, but was taken aback by just what an explosion of nonsense it was. We have John “I have all the Led Zep albums on vinyl, cd and cassette” Squire showing he knows all the chords, and he has six strings, and he is going to play everyone of them with as little subtlety as possible. He has seen rock school. He knows how it goes. Is it original? No, we have heard it all before. Is it good? No. Did I want the monstrosity to stop? Yes! Not to be outdone by John “I have all the Led Zep albums on vinyl cassette, cd and 8 track” Squire, we have Liam ‘I have done poo poo’s in my pants” Gallagher once again demonstrating his vocal prowess; the singing like he has just been told off by his mum vocal emoting. And to show that he is not going to be outdone by John “I have every Led Zep album on vinyl, cassette, cd, 8 track and download” Squire he decides to demonstrate how he knows the names of all the colours in the laugh out loud badness of the lyrics. I once wrote that the Oasis song “Little James” could be the worst song ever written by a grown up. Well, maybe not any longer. It is a close run thing. So for that, Squire and Gallagher should be proud.

___[ALBUMS]___

James P M Philips ‘Spite, Bile & Beauty’
(Turquoise Coal)

Punk, folk, rock and a medieval becoming strangeness all collide to bring us another album of psychedelic whimsy from the head and heart of James P M Phillips: an album of joy, sadness, humour and pain. Whether it be the quite wonderfully disturbingly jagged “My Head Is Full Of Rats” or the quite beautiful folk strum of “My New Friend”, James has his own unique way of making music and writing songs; dipping his own original thought patterns into a hybrid of musical genre hopping eccentricity. And it is pleasure to listen to an album of short snippets of musical madness and joy.

The Incurables ‘Inside Out & Backwards’
(Big Stir Records)

It does make me smile when middle-aged men sing about growing up, as The Incurables do on the first track ‘When I Grow Up’. As I well know, middle-aged men who play in bands never grow up; that is the power and magic of music and long may it continue.

The Incurables are a punk pop band that performs punk pop well, and at times they remind me of Green Day but without the annoying singer and with a more bubblegum sometimes New York Dolls feel, and some quite wonderful Batman bass riffs: in fact, some just wonderful bass riffs. This music is no longer going to change the world but sadly I cannot see any music anymore doing that, but The Incurables have their place and that place is in any pop punkers record collection.

Corduroy Institute ‘Take A Train To Manchester’

I have taken a train journey to Manchester many times in my life and none have been as enjoyable or as interesting as this, or indeed, as experimental – is it possible to take an experimental train journey I wonder? Anyway, the title track is a wonder: imagine Funkadelic being sucked into a video game whilst Delia Derbyshire juggled fruit. And from there we are taken on a long and dreamlike journey, calling at stops that are both rewarding and disturbing in a good way.

“[A] Girl Named Philosophy” is a bass heavy vacuum of Scott Walker like lust and mystery – just how much I miss that man and his artistry. And I could be wrong, but Scott could be a big influence on the excellently named Corduroy Institute: at least they are reading from the same book or singing from the same hymn sheet.

I love how the Corduroy Institute take jazz, pop, classical and funk and mold it into a warm expression of artistic splendicity; from at times sounding like Japan tuning up – not the band I might add, but the whole country -, and you opening your eyes and seeing life for the first time for what it is: full of love, hate, sadness and joy. An album of supreme aural wonder, and next time you take a train to Manchester soundtrack it with this.

Orchard Til You Fall Down
(Cruel Nature Records)

Punk rock is alive and well and living in Cruel Nature Records. Another ltd edition cassette delight of lo-fishness from the label that offers you all kinds of alternative delights; this time supplying us with ram jam bag of indie punk experimental joy. With mostly just guitar and drums, and occasional bass, and some fine vocals it reminds me at times of early Siouxsie and The Banshees. And, with all its beautiful post punk starkness, takes you back to an old dive of a small venue that was full of cheap booze, cig smoke and battered leather jackets and dreams of your youth when the world offered the chance to make a difference and the future was coloured in the shade of weekly music papers and John Peel on the radio and local bands blowing your minds on a weekly basis. Til You Fall Down is an album of old hopes remembered: a beauty of a release.

Charlie Butler ‘Wild Fictions’
(Cruel Nature Records) 1st February 2024

Are you all fuzzed up and ready to take that trip to the local magic carpet store and fly your purchase home, but not first deciding to stop by the local fields to pick a few magic mushrooms to pop into your grannies soup and watch her explode into a explosion of rainbow colours, which Liam Gallagher will then tell you the names of as he is good like that – he knows all the names, he is a clever boy, it won’t be long before he’s been toilet trained. You then decide to soundtrack this event by popping the brand new cassette into your hi-fi that the postman has delivered riding on his old 70s vintage chopper bike; the cassette has been posted by some kind wizard who works at Cruel Nature Records, and you are more than delighted by the magic the tape emits; the sound of all your yesterday’s rolled into four slices of psychedelic keyboard frenzy that slow dances with some augmented guitar. Oh how the soup is warm and refreshing; like how your granny is warm and refreshing, her skin surfing with delight at every organ chime; a lovely of ladybirds sit outside your window marvelling at the aural majesty not heard since the golden days of the Spacemen 3 and those long summer days daisy hopping. The music is all that you hoped it would be, for music without hope is hopeless and this is anything but that; it is the cream cake among lesser mortals.

Fran Ashcroft ‘Songs That Never Were’
(Think Like A Key)

There is magic afoot, a warm kind of musical magic; a treasure trove of forgotten emotions that are plucked and streamed from the past 50 years and gathered together in the form of the greatest of artforms; songs that explode with a cheeky nod and a wink to our musical past, our musical heritage. Yes indeed, Fran Ashcroft has given us a strange and warm sounding album.

All the music that I’ve heard Fran has had a hand in producing is always steeped in a loving glow: From the excellent “Waiting For A Britpop Revival” – a song Luke Haines would sell his left arm to have written – to the McCartney like “I Believe In You” – a song worthy of the Pete Ham album “7 Park Avenue”.

There is a uniqueness about this album; a trueness and soul you do not come across often much in these days of music to be played on phones. These are songs that could have been written anytime over the last 50 or so years, with some quite beautiful melodies and great lyrics; songs made for and by a music lover…already one on my end of the year best list.

Cumsleg Borenail ‘…Plays The Beatles’

I am a huge Beatles fan and this album captures all the magic and experimental forward thinking music the Beatles recorded. These are some of the finest and well thought out and performed covers of well known classics; songs you can hear everyday by turning on the radio can eventually sound stale, but these have been reworked and reimagined to such a degree that they would have the avant-garde young 60s Macca waving his thumbs in delight. This is an album to be heard and cherished by all Beatles fanatics.

THE LONG REVIEW/Dominic Valvona

Various ‘Ulyap Songs: Beyond Circassian Tradition’
(FLEE) 19th January 2024

In spite of its natural imposing mountainous defenses, high altitudes and isolation, the Northern Caucasus region couldn’t help but be swept up into the ever-imposing empire grabs of Imperial Russia during the early 19th century. Although the blueprint was laid down much earlier by Peter The Great, and enacted two generations later by Catherine The Great, it would take Russia time to bring this warrior region to heel. Through conquest and treaty, Tsarist Russia saw the end of Islamic Persian influence in this part of the greater transcontinental Caucasus, which stretches out to the Black Sea in one direction, the Caspian in the other: bridging Asia and Europe.

In that expansionist drive Russia perpetrated untold horrors, genocide in fact, as they unleashed an invading campaign of terror on the local Circassian population. In scenes that would be repeated less than a century later on another Caucasus population, the Armenians, by Ottoman Turkey, those that weren’t massacred were deported on mass to the Middle East, and ironically, Turkey – even before that, many unfortunate souls were enslaved and decamped to Egypt to fill the ranks of the non-Arabian mercenary group, the Mamluks; eventually over generations growing into the ruling class itself and ruling huge swathes of North Africa and further abroad.

The once proud twelve historical provinces of the Circassian, represented on their green field and crossed arrows charged gold star flag, were divided up at first by Tsarist Russia, and later by the post-revolutionary Soviet camarilla into a number of ethnic republics: Adygea, Kabardino-Balkaria, Karachay-Cherkessia, Krasnodar Krai and Stavropal Krai. Despite emptying much of this ancient land already, a majority of the Muslim population from these areas was deported to dreaded Siberia and Central Asia. This was on the cusp of WWII.

It should be noted at this point that the history is both far more convoluted than this, and often confusing as it entails a host of ethnicities and cultures, and unfortunately, atrocities – these lands already devastated by Mongol hoards and disease before the Russians turned up. Rather helpfully, the guys behind this expanded project, that is, the FLEE publishing house/record label/curatorial platform and their extended cast of musical ethnologists, experts, writers and artists, have traced the history a lot better and in more depth than I have. But roughly, and for the sake of context and a better understanding of this project, we’re talking about one of the most contested regions in the world; fought over since the Soviet experiment collapsed in 1991. Out of the oppressive tyranny emerged the old realms once more: Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia, but also Dagestan, Chechnya, Abkhazia and Ossetia. Barely a year has passed without war or conflict in these regions; especially with the emboldened empire-building policies of Putin – an adept pupil of Soviet rather than Tsarist Russia, his ambition is to once more claim and conquer those Eastern European satellite states that came under Soviet control in the aftermath of WWII, and to build a corridor towards the Med, where he aims to keep a military naval presence.

Even recently, only a couple of Winter Olympics ago, the old Circassian capital of Sochi was used as grandstand aggrandizement of the Putin regime. Much to the locals anger; the graves of that earlier genocide literally paved over and erased just like that for a sporting event. Flashpoints extend beyond into the Ukraine and the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh (internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, yet its population is largely Arminian). The former conflict probably had the greatest impact on this project; pushing back the release to this year, three years after FLEE met with the Nalchik-based music journalist/researcher and Ored Recordings co-founder Bulat Khalilov, who raved about the heavily-lubricated “petit criminal” and “gulag returnees ‘chanson’ music” of the Northern Caucasus.

Knowing a thing or two about such traditions, a citizen of the Kabardino-Balkaria region in the foothills of the Caucasus Mountains, Khalilov opened the door on an often wildly whooping raucous and hardy culture. The FLEE collective travelled across this rugged terrain, taking in the sometimes (so it sounds) impromptu performances of knowing, winking rogues and bawdry women, breaking out into song at weddings and in the ‘kunakskaya’ guest rooms of this hospitable folk. One village stands out in this task. The remote Ulyap hamlet of only 1200 souls is a bastion of the bellowed chanson-like accordion sound that accompanies all the unfiltered original recordings on this collection.

A purview if you like, with not only the recent traditional performances but also a number of transformed, inspired Caucasus visions by a diverse range of experimental artists, there’s also the inclusion of essays, previously unpublished photographs and artwork.

It all begins, however, with the ‘Women of Cherkessk’ (the capital city of the Karachay-Cherkessia republic), who show stoic form and strength in the middle of a wild washboard scrubbing and cutlery slapping percussive party of almost Francophone and Creole concertinaed accordion pumps and fairground dervish. Translated titles help of course, but the sentiment is often either lighthearted, heady or longing; sounding a lot like a drinking game or prompted outburst from a hooping bar room audience. When the ‘men’ of Ulyap surface, the rhythm is more like a seasick shanty; the voices like a couple of old boys propping up the bar, lending each other on, their ears pulled by the missus over their enthusiasm for vodka – “a little water”. Later on, the vocal tones and sorrow on Damir Guagov’s ‘Aminat’ seems to evoke not only the Slavic by Arabic; the accompaniment more like a cathedral piped organ. By the same artist, ‘Circassian Dancing Tones’ is a slow roller-coaster of accordion dips and scales; a lifting dance of beauty.   

Smitten expressions, old country yearns, serenades and the knock-about convene on those no nonsense recordings from the post-Soviet underworld.

As if to reinforce the current tumult of oppression, a number of artists, commissioned to transform this tradition, have either left their Russian homelands or made a conscious decision to support Ukraine. Featured on this very blog (and making our choice albums list a couple of years back with his Roots album), Misha Sultan left the Siberian industrial city of Novosibirsh (the ‘Chicago’ of Siberia) behind some time ago. Sultan’s take (‘Siii Babe’) is a fantasy that transports the Northern Caucuses to a dreamy dub-y cartography of The Orb, Mulatu Astatke and Kutiman – an amorphous mirage of chuffed fluted blows, melodica and picky guitar.

The Kyiv-born, classically trained violinist Valentina Goncharova – stalwart of the Soviet avant-garde scene – fashions a near soundtrack fourth world ambient voyage out of the material that assails Tibet and the Steppes. Ariel Kalma meets Tony Conrad as broadcasts from the Soviet past magically materialize from the archives on this stretching of the ‘Evergrowing Tree’ roots.

Almost invasive by contrast, the combined Jrpjej and Ben Wheeler collaboration (the former, a post-traditional Circassian music group from Nalchik, and the latter, an experimental composer, ethnomusicologist using Caucasus influences, Soviet era electronics and modular synths) is like a near-distorted electric shock of rambunctious buzzy Gnawa or electric oud meets stunning voiced Persia.

The multi-disciplinary artist and composer (currently in at least four different bands) Simone Aubert creates a ethereal and moody windswept enveloped hallucination out of traditional elements and voices, and both the pairing of Emmanuelle Parrenin and Colin John seem to magic up dusky and hazy evocations of Natasha Atlas from the region’s links to Islam.   

Minami Deutsch – a vehicle for the Tokyo-based motorik and ashram Amon Düül II imbued musician Kyotaro Miula – go the most way out, making a hypnotic crunching march out of a chorus of hand-clappers.

Broadening the scope, the guest list of collaborators stretches the imagination; often completely uncoupled from the source material. All together in one bumper package of ethnomusicology, it makes perfect sense, futuristic alternative planes and visions of a forgotten – mostly passed down orally – tradition. This is a document and testament to the hardiness, perseverance and survival of a culture massacred, exiled and incarcerated, the remnants of a culture almost lost in time, but proving to be very much alive and intriguing to our ears. FLEE and their collaborators, aiders have put together a brilliant, thorough piece of musical research that bristles and wafts with a bounty of possibilities.  

Hi, my name is Dominic Valvona and I’m the Founder of the music/culture blog monolithcocktail.com For the last ten years I’ve featured and supported music, musicians and labels we love across genres from around the world that we think you’ll want to know about. No content on the site is paid for or sponsored and we only feature artists we have genuine respect for /love. If you enjoy our reviews (and we often write long, thoughtful ones), found a new artist you admire or if we have featured you or artists you represent and would like to buy us a coffee at https://ko-fi.com/monolithcocktail to say cheers for spreading the word, then that would be much appreciated.

VIDEO/DOMINIC VALVONA

Violet Nox ‘Loki’
Video created by Del Siervo of a track taken from the group’s Vortex And Voices album, released in 2023 by Somewherecold Records.

Enjoying a certain renaissance, thanks to a certain superhero franchise and self-standing series on one of the many streaming service sites, the Nordic mythological figure of Loki is used as both a mirror and symbol for whichever group, generation adopts him/her/them. Because although principally depicted as male, Loki is a fluid entity that changes gender at will. With all that entails, in the sense of analogy and metaphor, Loki is obviously a most useful, congruous – if you forget about all the chaos that ensues with his presence, the tricks and cunning; although in the mythological lexicon, this god is neither good or evil – symbol of the LGBT+ community. Which leads me to the Boston, Massachusetts electronic group Violet Nox, who use Loki as a signifier, andan embodiment of metamorphosis and synergy, for their oboe trippy hallucination of a new age trance-electronic track of the same name – although this wafted and drifted mirage could be mistaken more for something form the new age realms of reincarnated Egyptology.

Taken from last year’s futuristic Vortex And Voices album of psy-trance, cerebral techno and acid ethereal-voiced self-realization/self-discovery – which also made our choice albums lists of that year – ‘Loki’ has inspired a suitably transformative, symbolic video from Del Siervo, a Venezuelan artist and ambient/new age musician living in Argentina, who’s art evolves around myths from different ancient traditions, especially from the Amazon. Siervo works with new technologies to create images that evoke the mysteries of life, the creation and the unseen. And in this capacity, he’s provided a cosmic and exotic earthly visual feast for the eyes of suspended menagerie, unfurled butterflies, flamed exotic fauna, aura pulsation chakras and spirit animals. So cosmic in fact that the group have decided to release the video to coincide with the new moon.

Identifying with myth, Violet Nox are however very much wired into the “now”, with messages of self-love and inclusiveness wafting and drifting to a rhythmic, wavy vision of EDM, crossover rave music and soulful electronica. For this newest venture – their first for the highly prolific and quality North American label Somewherecold Records – features, more than ever, the experimental, often effected, vocals of group member Noell Dorsey: a mix of hippie cooed yearn, Tracey Thorn, Claudia Brücken and Esbe if you will. A siren-in-the-machine, Dorsey expresses dreaminess, sadness and on this near mystical, wispy and lightly dub-y vision.

Often expanding the set-up, apparatus and lineup, this time around the Gaia attuned ensemble consists of core members Dez DeCarlo (on synth/effects pedals), foil Andrew Abrahamson (“synthesis”, sampler and clocked machines) and the already mentioned Dorsey. Musically, sonically both ‘Loki’ and the Vortex And Voices on which it appears keeps up the trance and minimal techno, melodic and kinetic rhythmic signatures, whilst erring towards club-like sung vocals and electronic pop. But it’s a real mix of synthesized influences, cybernetics and cosmic voyages into the internal and external mind.

You can read my previous review in full here…

Linktree can be found here to all the various links...

RELEASES ON THE RADAR FROM THE LAST FEW MONTHS & A METAL POSTCARDS LABEL SPECIAL/REVIEWED BY WRITER-MUSICIAN GRAHAM DOMAIN

Letters from Mouse ‘Clota’
(Subexotic Records) – Vinyl LP and Digital DL

Steven Anderson (Letters from Mouse) returns with a beautiful album of ambient dreamscapes played with a lightness of touch using modular synthesisers.

In Celtic mythology, the Goddess Clota was patron of the River Clyde and brought purity to the natural landscape. The album pieces reflect the beauty of nature and how nature evolves and changes, both with the day and with the changing of the seasons.

The album begins with ‘Frogspawn’, which sounds like new life emerging. A red sun high in the sky, watercolours smudged by the brightness of the day.

‘Juniper’ sounds like beautiful winter landscapes illuminated by a low winter sun. Wonderful.

‘Bowling Greens and Tennis Courts’ sounds like the sun coming out as the last remnants of a summer storm fade. It’s late in the evening but still light, as the sun has one last boastful appearance before the end of the day.

‘Piglet’ employs electronic harp and sounds very playful. It puts me in mind of summer, very early morning as the sun rises, rabbits and small animals appear, foraging for food, the dawn chorus of birds mixes with the hum of insects in flight, busy for the day ahead.

‘Cosm’ sounds like swimming under water, the sunlight getting stronger, shining through the water as you approach the surface.

‘Habitual Joy’ sounds like the warm morning sun, life affirming, awakening to the joy of a brand-new day.

Altogether it’s a beautiful album that deserves to be heard by many. It is also a great ambient album for meditation or creative work such as painting. Wonderful.

Various ‘The Faithful: A Tribute to Marianne Faithfull’
(In the Q Records / Bandbox) – Vinyl and Digital Download

As the name suggests, this is a tribute album to Marianne Faithfull with all benefits going to assist her in her recovery from long Covid.

Marianne has had a checkered career with numerous labels and her voice changed and became more ‘lived in’ as she struggled with severe bouts of laryngitis and addiction. This has not given her body of work a consistent identity. However, her struggles with addiction, illness and health problems have never stopped her working. After losing her voice, her last album was spoken word poetry backed by Warren Ellis (of the Bad Seeds). Marianne is an intuitive survivor!

Most of the songs on this tribute album were not written by Marianne. Her forte being in the way she sang and interpreted the songs of others. While not having great commercial success after the 1960s, she was always appreciated by other singers, musicians and music critics. Her most well known album Broken English often being name checked by other artists. Thus, we get 19 appreciative artists covering the songs of MF. The standout tracks are ‘Working Class Hero’ by Iggy Pop and Cat Power, ‘Why’d Ya Do It’ by Shirley Manson and Peaches, ‘Broken English’ by Joan As Police Woman and ‘Love, Life and Money’ by Lydia Lunch. Hopefully, it will make enough money to help MF in her darkest hour whilst also creating interest and investigation of her colourful back catalogue, with maybe some reissues. Get better soon you husky voiced inspiration.

C’mon Tigre ‘Habitat’
(Intersuoni) – Vinyl and Digital DL

This is the fourth album by international music collective C’mon Tigre featuring, amongst others, Seun Kuti, Arto Lindsay, Xenia Franca and Giovanni Truppi.

It’s a beautiful menagerie; a wondrous sound fusion underpinned by Brazilian and African rhythms. The essence is always danceable and the album becomes more and more fascinating with each play, incorporating elements of jazz, electronic, funk and a subtle blend of influences from all around the world. Both Tricky and Sly Stone are in the mix.

Standout tracks include ‘The Botanist’, ‘Teenage Kingdom’, ‘Nomad at Home’, ‘Na Danca Das Flores’ and ‘Sixty-four Seasons’, but to be honest all the tracks are excellent.

If you are open to innovative music or want to insert something different and exciting in your DJ set, then this is a great album to check out.

A METAL POSTCARDS LABEL SPECIAL::

The BordellosNobody’s Listening’
ALBUM – Digital DL

As Bill Fay said ‘life is people’ and here we have thirteen songs about the ups and downs that make up peoples’ lives. The themes are universal, the culture – survival in a world where the outgoings are more than the income. The highlights are many.

‘Running Back to You’ is a ‘standard-in-waiting’, ready-made for covering. Indeed, it may be that time of the year, but with a few Christmas bells added and a video with white snow parkas (a la East 17) it could be a Christmas smash!

‘Brief Taste’ has all the warped charm of an Eels track, with the refrain ‘Seduction ain’t that much of a hobby when you ain’t got that much of a body.’ Brilliant!

‘Soundtrack to getting your end away’ sounds like New Order jamming with Bob Dylan. Great lyrics and supernatural melodicism. Poetry for the soul!

‘Marianne’ is part Pixies, part The Fall, part Ted Hughes. Wonderful!

‘Tom Waits Blues’ has the melancholy atmosphere of a rainy day spent scouring shops looking for your favourite bands’ new album only to find no one has it in stock! Soaking wet and missed your bus, but there’s always tomorrow!

‘Soft Get Smile’ is a true anthem. A sing-a-long for the disenchanted. Hope among the ruins.

This is another perfect ‘slice of life’ album from The Bordellos. If all they had was a pair of spoons and a cassette-recorder, they would still be driven to record these hazy snapshots of life, in the same way that L S Lowry splashed his canvas with the daily drudgery and drama of the northern working-class. Was anyone paying attention to Mr Lowry at the time? No! But today there are hotels, theatres and tree-lined streets named after him. (Even Bowie was one to acknowledge the match-stalk painters genius titling his best album Low)!

No one (sic) may be listening to The Bordellos today but one day… recognition will be theirs! (Bordellos Night on the X Factor anyone)?

Tim. M ‘Turn This Thing Around’
Single – Digital Down Load

This is the second solo single from Tim. M (the Aliens singer). A piano based ballad, it falls into the space somewhere between James Blunt, Harry Nilsson, Crowded House (Neil Finn), Karl Wallinger (World Party) and the New Radicals.

The song grows on you with each play and after a few plays I knew all the words. Orchestrally it reminds me of Bowies ‘Life on Mars’, leading me to sing Bowie-voiced backing vocals on the chorus of ‘Listen to me now…yeah yeah’. If he stays with the piano and keyboard sound, I want to hear more.

Andi Roti (featuring Oti Soe) ‘Shazam Me At the Beach Bar’
Sing
le – Digital Down Load

This is a great chilled dance record destined to be played in many air-conditioned beach bars around the globe. The bass line sounds very Chic-like, while the funky guitar is underpinned by warm keyboards and bongos. When it starts it reminds me of a Thom Bell production from the 70s. Topping it off are soulful Indonesian vocals from Oti Soe. Already an underground classic – make sure you ask for it on your next night out! Stone Cold Electric! #Shake that Leg Thang!

K. Board and the Skreens ‘Beauty Lies Everywhere’ and ‘Mythical Creature’ Singles – Digital Down Loads

Two singles released in rapid succession.

‘Beauty Lies Everywhere’ sounds like Sultana by Titanic deconstructed by robots and beamed live to Roswell Roxy Cinema in 1968 to soundtrack a Clint Eastwood Spaghetti Western. Not the usual pop hit – aliens, robots and time travel meet Ennio Morricone! Fantastic!

‘Mythical Creature’ is a brooding synth fare that sounds like the soundtrack to John Carpenters Assault on Precinct 13 crossed with a possessed cat on heat and dwarfs dancing round a maypole. All recorded during an alien-visit-power-cut-surge! Stup-id-end-ous! Play it when doing Cat -Yoga!

A WORLD OF DISCOVERIES REVIEWED BY DOMINIC VALVONA
(Unless stated otherwise, all releases are available now)

Ëda Diaz ‘Suave Bruta’
(Airfono) 2nd February 2024

A rarefied artist who manages to merge dream-realism with both the traditional and contemporary, Ëda Diaz occupies multiple realms of geography to produce sublime and club-lite Latin-European R&B pop music. 

Between spheres of influence, her French-Colombian heritage is bonded across an exotic soundboard of effects, precise cut electronica, and transformed repurposed old dances and song; the latter of which includes an electrified form of currulao, ‘wonky’ Colombian salsa, bolero, bullerengue, vallenato and ‘dembow’. Most of these styles can be found in Caribbean-Colombia, the roots traced back to Africa and Europe. Currulao, for example, is a fusion of both continents, played by a quartet of musicians to the 6/8 rhythms of the narrow and tall cununo drum, shakers and marimba. By comparison, dembow is a curious one, originating, or rather traced back to the dancehall offshoot of ‘riddim’ it has become synonymous as a Dominican Island phenomenon. Specifically, the opening ‘Nenita’ (“little girl”) is a modern transformation of bullerengue, which is usually the preserved-sung song of elderly women, accompanied by the drum. In this time, Diaz finds a unique angle, viewpoint, across a piano wire dance and bobbing-to-quickening gabbled drum beat of handclaps, clean production and dreamy future pop R&B –reminding me of M.I.A., but also Xenia Rubinos’ Una Rosa album.

As you will hear, the multitalented artist can not only sing beautifully but also play an accentuated, bounding and walking double-bass perfectly, and tinkle the ivories too – a deft, subtle permutation of bulb-like notes, Afro-Latin vibes and more atonal sound effects textures can be heard adding a little extra something to the mood and feel. Diaz started out with classical leanings before moving to the double bass, entwining that instrument with her forgiving, placeable but captivating vocals. But soon enough she married the two with an embrace of the Colombian and South American sounds she heard at her relatives back in Medellin. The title of this, her debut, album is borrowed from one such star of the Colombian salsa and tropical music scene, Joe Arroyo’s popular ‘Suave Bruta’, or “super brute”. Feeding even further into that past scene and heritage, concertinaed accordion samples from Rafael Escalona’s vallenato-styled (Colombian “born in the valley” translated folk music with Caribbean roots) ‘La Casa En El Aire’ can be heard melding effortlessly with a modern production on the Creole flavoured, tin-scrappy shuffled and Amazonian danced ‘Tiemblas’ (“you tremble”). And the sauntered sound of the Colombian legend Lucho Bermudezi’s ‘Fiesta Negritos’ can be felt on the wistful, tight woody-sounding percussive and bandy Cuban-like ‘Sábana y Banano’ (“savanna and banana”).     

Back and forth across generations and cities, influences gel seamlessly. Yet invigorate, enrich and entice with something fresh and alluring. For example, hallucinatory dream-realism-lit inspirations influence the Francophone plonked and chamber-esque oasis found on ‘Déjà-Vu’, which includes an exotic wilderness of mirages and non-musical sounds from the lush environment – there’s a lot of these non-musical elements on the album, from sounds record in a hair salon to the buzzing interference of a fly.

Diaz’s production foil since 2017, Anthony Winzenrieth, needs congratulating on a first rate job; lean and sophisticated, but exciting and colourful, he’s managed to compliment all of her talents with an impressive host of effects and programming highlights – imagine CONTENTO meets Diplo and Coco Marie; from dancefloor to exotic magic pop and serenade. Already one of the best albums of 2024, I absolutely love this spellbinding, vulnerable and playful Latin-Euro vision.   

Ariel Kalma, Jeremiah Chiu & Marta Sofia Honer ‘The Closest Thing To Silence’
(International Anthem) 2nd February 2024

The Parisian-born electronic composer and saxophonist Ariel Kalma is once more bathing in the light, enjoying attention in recent years, and rejuvenating with a contemporary source of collaborative partners and facilitators of his six-decades legacy of sonic, textural, atonal and musical exploration.

And what a varied legacy it is too; starting out with the recorder and sax before going on to study computer science, which is when he crossed paths with the crooner-balladeer Salvatore Adamo, joining his touring band on the brass instrument that would become part of his signature sound. From there, expanding horizons further, he met and played with the bossa nova guitarist Baden Powell, in the late 1960s and early 70s. More leftfield recordings followed, with innovative experimental tape pieces that featured musical instruments (including a church organ alongside poetry and found sounds. By ’74 the increasingly worldly curious Kalma was bound for India on a one-way ticket. That field trip, in every meaning of the word, involved a full absorption of the country’s culture, music (especially those brassy resonances and drones), spiritualism and meditative practices. On his eventual return home to Europe, he merged these influences and finds with his own compositions and interest in the American minimalist movement of such luminaries as Reich, La Monte Young, Cage and Riley – particularly, I’d suggest, the New York Hypnotic School.

Kalma released his first album, Les Temps des Moissons, a little later whilst working at the famous French Musique concrete composer Pierre Henry’s GRM studio in Paris. Fifty years later and snippets of recording ideas and audio notes from that same period can be heard swimming around and interlaced like mirages with the new improvisations of his collaborative foils, ‘synthesist’ Jeremiah Chiu and violist Marta Sofia Honer. Between those two points there’s at least thirty-six plus albums logged in the Kalma archive; some extremely limited and obscure; released on cassette tape alone in some cases, and covering the new age, avant-garde, collage-edited, non-musical, electro-acoustic, environmental, cosmic and fourth world (possible musics) amorphous border crossings of Jon Hassell.

With a breadth as deep as that catalogue it’s no wonder he was invited to partake in a cooperative session for BBC Radio 3’s Late Junction show. Kalma himself (quickly we’re told) suggested his partners in this performance opportunity; never personally meeting them but perhaps finding common sonic ground with Chiu and Honer’s Åland Islands archipelago inspired/imbued recordings for this same label (International Anthem) – the title of which, The Closet Thing To Silence, is borrowed from a Kalma quote that appeared on a documentary that was packaged with the 2014 An Evolutionary Music compendium-style retrospective, released by RVNG Intl. It’s hardly surprising to find that Chiu has cited Kalam as an influence on his own work, and that of his partnership with Honer (that duo project birthed on IA as well), and so the response was just as quick, to accept working with such an icon of the form.

In communal synchronicity that initial experimental performance session expanded into an album; both spheres converging in a work of light and shadows; the ushering in of rich sound waves, modular rippled oscillations and the equinox. Extended to encompass suffused, sometimes diaphanous and wispy essences of place, time and mood, the eleven passages, suites and collages are as organic sounding as they are synthesized. Across the ages, with no clear boundaries as such, there’s a trace of Schulze, later period Tangerine Dream, Haruomi Hosone, Moebius (especially on the more bubbled, playful ‘Dizzy Ditty’), the minimalist school, Bex Burch, Emerald Webb and Sarah Davachi in the air and on the wind. Kalma’s saxophone, through pursed and more open-mouthed breathes, adds another dimension to the pastoral and neo-folk and classical attuned and held lines of Honer’s empirical viola bows. It sounds like a cyclonic mixture of John Zorn, the Pharoah, Peter Brotzmann and Andy Haas – actually, on the near Afro-jazz light new ager ‘A Treasure Chest’ there’s a hint of a more subdued Peter King.

In signature form, we can also hear hints, traces of mystical Tibet, Arabia and India, but the cosmos as well; an orbiting of heavenly objects and the arppegiator language of retro-futurist visitations. Within those vibrations, contours and drones, harmony is sought and a balance between evocation and the meditative found: an attempt to reach the title’s analogy no less. Coming full circle, those old recycled instructions and prompts now appear more like hallucinatory connections to a burgeoning, freshly investigated period in musical sonic theory. Played alongside the contemporary improvised vision of his two foils, Kalma’s ideas reinvigorate and conjure up new horizons. Proving complimentary bedfellows, Chiu and Honer bring much to this partnership of equals; transcending with a subtle fizziness and subscribing to a sagacious yet fresh sounding soundscape.

Nino Gvilia ‘EP Number 1: Nicole’ (Released 12th January 2024)
‘EP Number 2: Overwhelmed By The Unexplained’ (8th March 2024)
(Hive Mind Records)

An inspired part of the world, both in antiquity and the now, the roots of Poti in Georgia go back twenty-six centuries; connecting right back to the ancient Greek colony of Phasis – featured in the tales of The Argonauts and the quest for the golden fleece. The city sits as a trading and strategic ‘outlet’, or ‘mouth’, to the Black Sea. It’s also home to the imaginative diaphanous figurehead of Nino Gvilia, the latest worldly wondrous edition to the Hive Mind Records roster. I say imaginary, or rather the label itself does, as Nino appears to be the translucent creation of one Giulia Deval; a character who woos, lulls and beautifully reflects on the themes of ecology and the place of the songwriter in such trying times of geopolitical tumult and crisis.

The songwriter, vocalist, toy guitar/harmonium player and field-recordings composer is joined in this worthy artful cause by a choir of beatific voices, the multitasking foils of Zevi Bordovach and Pietro Caramelli, and by the chamber pop and tapestry renaissance strings of Giulia Pecora (violin) and Clarissa Marino (cello). Across a moiety of EPs, released in a staggered fashion, this ensemble gravitate towards the waters in an entrancing manner; beginning with the seraph-like ethereal biosphere of ‘Nicole’ – it must be pointed out that both EPs seem to be divided, title wise, into the female and male, with Overwhelmed By The Unexplained headed with the popular Scandinavian boy’s name, ‘Anders’. Bathed in the veiled refracted light of aquatic harmonium, subdued percussion, and melodious accentuate piano, the tender choral-voiced opener sounds like an underwater Joanna Newsome or Judee Sill sprite in moving, if leftfield, poetry. The subject of this song seems a most mysterious, wanton presence.

Later, on that second EP, the first directly referenced song title to Deval’s home is made on the strangely plucked, like raindrops on a wooden jetty, ‘Rain On Pallastomi’. Named after a lake outside the city – an archeologically important site that’s given up evidence of the ancient Georgians (known as the Colchis) – this obvious beauty spot of inspiration proves beguiling and dreamily stirring; recalling June McDoom or Natalie Ross Lebracht in a bellowed, concertinaed scenic trance.  

Both atmospheric songbook EPs feature a cleverly arranged mixed chorus of venerable, timeless and round voices; at one point, performed in the poetic form of the atavistic ‘quatrain’, a complete encapsulated stanza poem, consisting of four lines and often featuring alternate rhymes – made famous by not only Nostradamus in prophetic form, but also by such seers as Blake, Burns and Thomas Grey. And within the subtle breathing and gauzy spells there are more empirical captured field recordings of nature’s song, of children at play and the environment, alongside talking head experts on ecological sciences – the inter-connective world of bacteria. on the repeated ‘Dirty Is Just What Has Boundaries’ mantra, shown to be integral to humanities survival on Earth. Sounding like a cross between the Celtic, Medieval and folk communal, this interlayered choral circle frees up the subject matter (meta) with a mystical atonal and wire-y stroked vision of arcadia.  

Creating a musical, lyrical eco system of their own, soundtracked by folk, minimalism, the hallucinatory and pastoral – with only the final vaporous misty esoteric second EP’s titular track changing from cuckoo-like voiced loops and sympathetic strings to disturbing futuristic daemonic augur –, the Nino Gvilia encompassed guise ebbs and flows with the movement of the replenishing waters, the lakeside and mill turning scenes of the surroundings, to produce a disarming hymn. Idiosyncratic in beauty, I’d recommend this diaphanous (there’s that word again, which even appears as track title in its own congruous right) accomplished mini-opus to those with a penchant for Hatis Noit, Seaming To, Tia Blake and Roberto Musci. Hive Mind Records have unassumingly set the bar high with this latest edition to their stable; a more placeable and visceral release you’d be hard to find in 2024.

A WE JAZZ DOUBLE-BILL

Anni Kiviniemi Trio ‘Eir’ 12th January 2024

Divr ‘Is This Water’ 2nd February 2024

The We Jazz label starts off the year, not with a loud fanfare, but with an assured and intimate double-bill of debut releases; one from the US-based Finnish pianist Anni Kiviniemi and her trio of double-bassist Eero Tikkanen and drummer Hans Hulbaekomo, and the other, from the Swiss Divr trio (more from them later). 

Featuring heavily in our end of year lists the Helsinki label, magazine, store and festival hub is among the best jazz labels in the world right now; showcasing, as it does, an enviable roster of Scandinavian talent – its only rival on the continent being the ACT Music stable of world-leading jazz maestros.

Launching the new year schedule, they’ve chosen to open with the adroit original musicianship of Kiviniemi and her bassist/drummer foils, who tiptoe, meander and playfully walk a less travelled road; artfully, moodily, and on occasion, introspectively counterpointing the classical with a freer, looser style of jazz performance.

Although the original compositions were written under certain pre-conditional limitations, once they emerged from the pen, anything goes. A free rein is given in the spirit of improvised democracy – the bandleader-pianist measures this at 95% in the studio, 99% when on stage. This methodology throws up some surprising intense and off-kilter results; a transformed and transcribed form of harpsichord or celeste vision of Schubert at a Georgian dinner party on the textured, descriptive ‘Choral’, and a touch of Marty Isenberg’s Wes Anderson inspired leftfield interpretations on the kooky ‘Judy’. The latter name part of a personal inquiry, love for and ruminations of those held dear and close; the most personal of which, is the album’s Eir title, the name of Kiviniemi’s daughter: born after the recordings but before the album’s release.   

Imbued with that closeness, bond, the music is certainly felt. And yet the mood can be transporting; away from Europe to French North Africa ala Tangiers Duke Ellington, and South Africa, ala Abdullah Ibrahim. The art however, is in the way each musician reads the others, and how they respond; creating tumults, fairytales, the blues, mystery and the serenaded from the merest prompt. Kiviniemi’s piano is as classically-tuned as it is able to flourish within the free-form, spiritual and old time idioms of jazz; an incredible constant movement that’s simultaneously capable of catching the listener off-guard with a sharpened, near off-key note or two and alternative scales whilst staying playful and melodious throughout.  The in-demand bassist Tikkanen reminded me in part of Thomas Bramerie, his double-bass perception of timing and movement almost impeccable, but freed up and loosening. Meanwhile, Hulbaekmo (a member of fellow We Jazz label mate Gard Nilssen’s Supersonic Orchestra, whose Family album made our choice albums of the year in 2023) can nearly explode like Elvin Jones in between deft tumbles; roll snaps and more percussive bouts of artistry. Encompassing many styles, dalliances and fandangos the trio repurposes classical and jazz influences to write a unique account of personalized feelings, expressions, themes and musicianship. More importantly, this is a trio that gels and sounds telepathic in their interactions. A great way to kick-off the 2024 calendar.  

The second album in this We Jazz label double-bill is the Swiss trio Divr’s first release on the Helsinki platform. It also features, just like Anni Kiviniemi’s set-up, the piano in a prominent if unburdened and freely moving role. Based between Zurich and Basel, keys player Philipp Eden, drummer Jonas Ruther and (double) bassist Raphael Walser pool their talents for a reshaping of water in its many forms; from splashes of resonating cymbals to a piano tumult of disturbed choppy waves and the ebbing tides of calmer meditative waters.

Although this is indeed a jazz record, the original compositions and choices of covers extends beyond into trip-hop and the downbeat breaks territory of artists like Ju$ufa and J Dilla – the latter not so surprising as I referenced the late icon on label mate Otis Sandsjo’s two Y-OTIS albums, which featured Dan Nicholls the post-producer of this trio’s debut. You can add touches of Jesse Futerman and the Protico Quartet to that sound too, albeit mostly kept simmered and attuned to the very movements in the air and from off the myriad of watery inspirations. The difference here though is in choosing to, and proving a most congruous to the overall sound and feel of Is This Water, cover music from both Radiohead and Broadcast; the former, translating the In Rainbows low, moody and slowly stirring ‘All I Need’ into a languid and dreamy turn dramatic tighter rolling crescendo, and the latter, a beautifully articulated, dreamt and longed contemplative version of the cinematic but understated beautiful ‘Echo’s Answer’. Both originals are themselves complimentary in the first place, but retuned by the Divr trio they became part of a deeper if often translucent almost gauzy fabric.

It’s a style of musical performance played in, what the trio call, a ‘multi-directional time’; a flow that is based on largely acoustic improvisation and loops. Yet they emphasis that doesn’t mean their music is repetitive, those waves and loops instead subtly changing each time round, the cyclonic aspect so subtle and reverberating as to go almost unnoticed. Instead at times it all sounds near formless: in a good way. The vibrations and quivers evoking atmospheres and presence; especially the finale, ‘A Glass Is No Glass Is A Glass’, which like its name suggests is glassy in substance, but also near spooked and esoteric; certainly mysterious with its constant crispy white noise background, odd jarred glass bulb notes and brushy drag of sticks across drum skins. There’s also the sound of European voices in the background, filtering in from the park or the woods.

There’s a soft but nice span of moods and music, with touches of Francis Bebey and the Ethnic Heritage Ensemble on the tine plucked-like ‘42’, and a feel of Mingus and McCoy Tyner on the slightly skipped, darting and choppy ‘Supreme Sweetness’ – Divr riff on the highly influential American songbook trio of Gus Arnheim, Charles N. Daniels and Harry Tobias’ gold standard from another age.

In a meditative, thoughtful mood throughout, the Pali language ‘Upeksha’ – a spiritual virtue of equanimity, even-mindedness and non-attachment to the fluctuations of worldly fortune – takes things that little further; the drums almost whispered and tinkled, the watery piano notes hypnotic, as if materializing from out of thin air.  As fortunes and temperaments change with the ebbing tides, the trio dance and explore in an amorphous fashion across unburdened soundscapes and movements with an improvised musical dialect and flow. Is The Water is an idiosyncratic debut from a leftfield jazz troupe; an ideal signing for the leading Northern European We Jazz label: fast becoming a stamp of authority in that field of music.   

Walter Kemp 3 ‘Black Whole Live’
26th January 2024

The highly acclaimed bandleader-pianist and teacher Walter Kemp lays down a near perfect set with his new Black Whole Live album. Taking melody and recognized tunes on a ride, Kemp and his foils turn earthly and city-hive incubated compositions and autumnal romantic serenades into the cosmic stratosphere and beyond. Freeform, conscious jazz is effortlessly entwined with the classical, the avant-garde, funky, the blues and sci-fi as Kemp and his dynamic quartet stretch themselves to the limits.

It sounds like a lifetime of experience and influences are drawn upon, with Kemp’s formative years of studying classical and gospel (inspired by his father’s own career as a composer-performer in those fields), and the pull towards jazz, used as the jump-off points.

From the atonal to sharply jarring, and the tuneful to experimental, his piano, Rhodes and Viscount organ (named after the UK maker, this instrument is voiced to sound like an English pipe organ) skills are both stirring and tumultuous in equal measures: a touch of Monk here, Ahmed Jamal and Jimmy McGriff there. Held suffusions of gospel can be found alongside La Monte Young experimentation, and both dramatic and accentuate flourishes. But it’s Allan Mednard’s Billy Cobham-like tight incipient tumbles, rolls and percussive soloing that gets the whole live performance in motion; carrying over into the first mini opus, ‘Novum’ (the Latin for “new thing”, and brought into the lexicon by the sci-fi scholar Darko Suvin and his peers to describe the ‘scientifically’ plausible innovations used in that genre’s narratives). In nine or so minutes the ensemble cover a multitude of bases, from jazz-fusion to the wild violin off-the-scale elbow frantic’s of Tony Conrad, Michael Urbaniak and Jason Kao Hwang (courtesy of the Grammy Award-winning violinist Scott Tixier).

Another band member, Brent Birckhead, offers whistled and bird-like floating exhales and squeezes of woodwind to that simultaneously concentrated and free workout. Rishan Odel meanwhile, is switching between thick-stringed taut and more loosened double-bass runs and a little slap electric bass funk – Odel and the rest of the group going as far as to evoke a grooving Herbie Hancock and Weather Report jamming with The Time, on the soul-jazz flexed ‘Don’t Step In It’.

There’s certainly a lot going on at any one time, and yet you can hear every note, every phrase, chord, triplet and riff: even in the more chaotic maelstroms. From melodious parts of Duke Ellington, Count Bassie and Blue Note to the flare-ups of ECM, the Pharoah, Marius Neset and Devin Gray and the more out-there echoes of Steve Swell & Andrew Cyrille’s partnership, the Art Ensemble of Chicago and Walter Semtek, the musicality, feel and direction of travel is deep and wide-ranging. Kemp and his ensemble are nothing short of accomplished, performing not only a highly recommended live but essential jazz album. Already, in my humble opinion, one of the year’s standard bearers and highlights: it will take some beating. Expect to see this album in my end of year’s list.

Nehan ‘An Evening With Nehan’
(Drag City) 26th January 2024

Something unique, process and methodology wise, from the Japanese improvisational underground with the Nehan quintet’s ‘brain waves’ initiated performance. Literally powered, or directed, by a willing “testee” and their emitted 9hz brain waves, extemporized vibes are set in motion for a set of serialism peregrinations performed by an ensemble that includes members of wound-down and still active projects: from the band leader’s own Ghost and Batoh groups to Acid Mothers Temple acolytes and members of The Silence and Espvall.

Instigated by Masaki Batoh, an acupuncturist (of all things), musician and designer of the machine apparatus behind this experiment, the Nehan guise is an amorphous vehicle brought into existence from a relaxed but alert state of consciousness. Tapping into the new age, the scientific and meditative, the generated sonic data channeled results are simultaneously far out, avant-garde and progressive.

This particular release was originally recorded from a live evening performance at Tokyo’s Guk Sound in August of 2022; divided here into Nehan and Ocean sides. The volunteer brain pulse oscillator subject isn’t named, but the set-up on this chosen night included the willing Futoshi Okano, Haruo Kondo and Junzo Tateiwa; between them, navigating an instrumental apparatus of gongs, timpani, tablas, drums, percussion, crumhorn (a Renaissance-period double-reed instrument from Swabia), bagpipes, mellotron and sound effects.

From pulsations emerges two undefined events; with vague references to Shinto, India, Tibet and the ether, yet far from ceremonial or religious. A chthonian mysticism of guirro-like stretches, ratcheted bows, burnished resonated struck gongs, spoke rattled percussion, piercing reeds, bounded timpani rolls and a mix of Fortean and Zodiak Club Berlin radio dial craziness. Side one draws us into an otherworldly realm of Toshiro Mayuzumi & Makoto Moroi, Popol Vuh amd Walter Smetak invocations. But then, almost out of nowhere, a rhythm, synchronization is found and explosion of Embryo and Acid Mothers freakouts kick in. This all simmers down into a stripped down Sergius Golowin like traversing.

The flip side, ‘Ocean’, reminded me of Yamash’ta & The Horizon; a little too of Terry Riley & Don Cherry’s Koln partnership, His Name Is Alive and, when the generators start to mimic a steam-like train chugged and speaker rotating movements, Bowie’s Station To Station meets Fripp & Eno’s No Pussyfooting. The elements of thunderous rumbles and warped board shakes of a leviathan looming above are contrasted with a virtual South Seas oasis of birds-of-paradise. Intermittent scribbled and wiry broadcasts and discordant white noise tune into some esoteric visitation from the cerebral hypnotic state; brain waves that leap between the picturesque to near jarring. An interesting process provokes open-ended sonic results on this new age curious project. Lovers of the Japanese underground will be queuing around the block.  

Brion Gysin ‘Junk’
(WEWANTSOUNDS) 26th January 2024

The late outstanding contributor to the arts may have his name on the album but Junk is the second album taken from the Ramuntcho Matta vaults by the reissue vinyl specialists WEWANTSOUNDS.  Following on from last year’s self-titled Ramuntcho Matta LP, the Brion Gysin headed habit-kicking Junk is another feather in the cap of this well-connected creative nomad, who produced it and helped shape this collaborative work of avant-garde funk, no wave and refashioned beat poetry. And so once more the label hones in on one of his most esteemed collaborations.

The younger sibling to and scion of the Matta artist brood – his father, the Chilean-born Roberto, a key if not always congruous member of the Surrealist movement with his ‘psychological morphologies’ or alien ‘inscapes’ coined subconscious manifestations, and brother, Gordon Matta-Clark, the ‘anarchitecture’ pioneer of such concepts as the ‘split’ house and various art performances – Ramuntcho quickly made a name for himself in the same creative fields of influence; in part by his formative years as an aide to the celebrated polymath Gysin: poet, writer, calligraphic abstract artist, excommunicated Surrealist, Tangier restaurateur, inventor of the ‘dream machine’ and progenitor of the famous cut-up writing techniques favoured by such luminaries and acolytes as Bowie. In a world of crossovers, inter-connectivity, Gysin also famously knocked about with William Burroughs, sharing his discovery of that same cut-up technique with the Naked Lunch author during their time at the infamous Beat Hotel in Paris.

A titan of the alternative arts world, it’s no wonder that the British-born, but of Canadian heritage, Gysin opened doors for his aide; living at this time in the mid 1970s and working with Ramuntcho in New York – talking of those wild links, Ramuntcho shared a flat with scenesters Nana Vasconcelos and Arto Lindsay, in the same building as the Talking Heads’ Chris Frantz and Tina Weymouth. Although tragedy would strike with the death of Ramuntcho’s brother and conceptual art icon Gordon in the late 70s, the burgeoning producer would stay on in New York, falling in with the Mudd Club, CBGB and Danceteria in-crowd; taking note of the evolving polygenesis movements of early hip-hop, post-punk, electronica, no wave funk and more worldly sounds (from Soweto to the outback, Caribbean and Hispaniola). But it all came together, or rather this particular project did – dusted off, remastered and given a deserving vinyl reissue by WEWANTSOUNDS – in the French capital.

With the CV –notably recording Don Cherry’s 1983 ‘Kick’, the opening track on Junk, as asingle for the boutique French label Mosquito – and network expanding ever further with a move to Paris, there would be performances with the Senegalese group Xalam and the Arabic rock group Carte de Séjour, with Rachid Taha. A residency in Lyon led to a meeting with the Algerian-born French avant-garde choreographer Régine Chopinot, who had taught dance at the city’s Croix-Rousse before forming her own experimental multimedia company. Chopinot invited Ramuntcho to compose the soundtrack to her upcoming Via show – the costume designer of which was a young aspiring Jean-Paul Gaultier. Resulting in the, already mentioned, self-titled 1985 released production, which was produced between Ramuntcho’s home and the Studio d’Auteuil in Paris, tracks were recorded with a couple of the same musicians that appeared on Junk: most notably, the Stinky Toys and Elli & Jacno duo’s Elli Medeiros on guest vocals, and Suicide Romeo’s Frederic Cousseau (better known as Fred Goddard) on drums. They were joined on the Gysin trip by Xalam’s Abdoulaye Prosper Niang on hand drums, the Modern Guy group’s Yann Le Ker on bass, and guests Caroline Loeb (the French actress, radio host, singer and director), Lizzy Mercier (hot property French new wave pop star) and of course, leading the way and literally kicking off the LP, Don Cherry.

Essentially putting cool-as-fuck, happening music to Gysin’s late 1950s famous habit-kicking beat poetics, the Junk LP is a both grizzled and bouncing street level and discothèque mantra on addictions. Hardly surprising with the track records of Gysin and Cherry: two better foils you couldn’t meet in that regard. Preempting, or prophesying, his own death just a couple of years later after setting up in the studio to make this LP (the notes say that Ramuntcha put this together over a time period between 1980 and ‘84, with the LP’s release in ‘85), the hacking coughed skull and crossbones warning of ‘Stop Smoking’ makes a real Ludus, Altered Images and Bush Tetras post-punk jangle funk out of Gysin’s fateful nicotine addiction. Already surviving the trauma of colon cancer in the 70s – the surgery and treatment so savage that he nearly committed suicide -, Gysin would tragically contract lung cancer in the 80s, succumbing to the disease in ‘86. With the featured French chic chorus of Elli Medeiros – “Isn’t the cough that carries you off, it’s the coffin they carry you off in” -, cigarette brands enter the lucid chat like alluring sponsors of death to a new wave saunter and rolled hand drums loose funeral dance.

For his part, Cherry, sounding not too dissimilar to 80s period Miles, tickles and cycles languid cornet riffs and swirls to a mix of Afro-jazz, downtown funk and go-go: like Gil Scott-Heron on a Keith Herring scribbled walled skid row, strutting in a bandy fashion to a boom box of Maximum Joy, Talking Heads, Liquid Liquid, early Hip-Hop and Parisian aloofness. Many will probably know this one off-by-heart, may even have spotted the much-sampled licks. As part of this new package – only ever re-released I think on CD in 1991 -, there’s two previously unreleased 7” vinyl versions of the opener; an ‘alternative’ more contained beat rolled and buoyant version and an ‘instrumental’.  

The tile-track is unsurprising another one of those rough repeated vocal prompts to, well…kick the habit. The music has a very Afro-Caribbean bent to it; Island life, with the subtle sounds of glasses chinking; perhaps a beachside getaway, only you’ve pitched up in Jamaica with all its own enticing addictions. Old style ringing alarm clocks, used as a sort of percussion, sound alerts as a near polyrhythm Postcard Records era guitar riff plucks away.    

A voice of a generation, Gysin’s part in the beat movement is given an energetic, bandy and bendy, funky and world musical sound; a collage of all those various NYC and Paris influences, art and attitude. Liner notes author Jason Weiss had a lovely, and brilliant expression for that voice and poetry style: “Permutation poems […] like etudes for expressivity”. On the R&B bent funky-disco street jive ‘Sham Pain’, he sounds almost in a lucid despondent stupor, but like he’s having some bawdry playful fun on the later CAN period, maybe a touch of Dunkelziffer, swinging on the concrete jungle vines hooted and whistled ‘Baboon’. Gysin is later flanked by the French chanteuses of cool – Lizzy Descloux and Caroline Loeb – on the new wave sassy victory, “fun, fun, fun”, bravado ‘V.V.V’. This reminded me of both 80s period Marianne Faithful, coquettish Jane Birkin of the same period, and Annie Anxiety.

As a crossover with Ramuntcha’s own self-titled LP, as an additional bonus of a kind, there’s a previously unreleased version of the Congo-esque twine twirled and turning overruminated ‘All Those Years’. This version is more tines turning, more acoustic and intimate, and a nice way to bring closure to an ill-fated artist’s song.  

Continuing to draw the spotlight on the work and productions of Ramuntcha Matta, WEWANTSOUNDS have revived a cult encapsulation of that early, polygenesis 80s music scene in Paris; bringing attention to two truly funky, cool and worldly cats in the process. Junk sounds as fresh now as it must have done back in ’85; uncannily, fitting in with the contemporary music scene. Which is why I’m perplexed that Ramuntcha is a name that seems to be missing from the current lexicon of influences, as integral as Art Lindsey and his crowd to the development and widening of the musical language. This LP package, just like the previous Ramuntcha Matta S-T LP, should right that.

Hi, my name is Dominic Valvona and I’m the Founder of the music/culture blog monolithcocktail.com For the last ten years I’ve featured and supported music, musicians and labels we love across genres from around the world that we think you’ll want to know about. No content on the site is paid for or sponsored and we only feature artists we have genuine respect for /love. If you enjoy our reviews (and we often write long, thoughtful ones), found a new artist you admire or if we have featured you or artists you represent and would like to buy us a coffee at https://ko-fi.com/monolithcocktail to say cheers for spreading the word, then that would be much appreciated.

MATT OLIVER’S HIP-HOP REVUE OF 2023: A RUN-THROUGH IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER OF ALL THE CHOICE RAP ALBUMS FROM LAST YEAR

Apollo Brown & Planet Asia
‘Sardines’ (Mello Music Group)

You can always vouch for the richness and warmth of an Apollo Brown production across countless albums and collaborations. But whether it’s the re-pairing with a seasoned loaded gun like the permanently grizzled Planet Asia, a foremost argument starter in an empty room daring you to ignore his recommendation that you should “make your next move your best move” – or just the changing of the seasons out in Michigan, Sardines contains a palpable trace of trepidation. The autumn soul standards remain, now up there with the ability to rip the comfort blanket from your grasp, whether through kick-less means or cutting through tracks with a semi-supernatural synth line slash haunted choir – and this is before the decidedly unambiguous lyrics. Of course it remains an absolutely classy follow-up to the pair’s Anchovies LP from 2017 – “the greatest invention since the Air Fryer” – with ‘Peas & Onions’ doing the classic rhyme-around-a-sample a la ‘Oh Boy’ and ‘Hold You Down’.

BlackLiq x Mopes
‘Choice is a Chance’ (Strange Famous)

BlackLiq
‘The Lie’ (Man Bites Dog)

A sneering, old skool gangster rap flow out of Virginia with the revs of a getaway car, two sides of the BlackLiq coin bear teeth and soul. Examining familial relationships and anecdotes, fronted by the surprisingly poignant ‘The Tooth’, Choice is a Chance follows BlackLiq & MopesTime is the Price from 2021. The emcee’s emotions run high, but respect the beats rolling under mostly sunny skies by telling relatable, cogent tales; there’s a threat of a danger as he works on himself (‘Therapy’) but he’s never anything but himself, and doesn’t deflect when love calls (‘In The Beginning’). That sneer shows its fangs on the DEJECT-produced ‘The Lie’, listing industry machinations that don’t sit right but kind of needs must, with a cult leader persuasion concluding that modern life is rubbish, and people are the worst. Perfect for the trap tempos, metal riffs and low end ruptures, the nihilist comes to the fore – “being this successful really isn’t healthy” is countered with “I just figured out that not being rich is not broke” – and the shock value is the internal monologue burrowing out from the brain and blasting through a megaphone from the top floor.

Black Star
‘No Fear of Time’ (self-released)

What with the age of ‘dad rap’ reaching the broadsheets – the temerity of having something worthwhile to say with your 50s approaching – the timing of Black Star’s Yasiin Bey (Mos Def) and Talib Kweli to reconvene is ideal when testing upstarts’ deaf ears. With Madlib on production, No Fear of Time would once have sent message boards foaming at the mouth as seen as a protection of the art, but appears to have slipped under 2023’s radar. Only nine tracks long, it’s a time and space odyssey with Bey and Kweli as weathered, Brooklyn-to the-fullest gods with a crumple to their brow – “life is beautiful, even when the world is wack” says Bey not entirely convincingly – and Madlib taking interplanetary routes with added adventures in chopped up soul and whodunnits. Not quite the once-in-a-lifetime event it might have been, but Black Star are still superheroes of the cipher.

Blockhead
‘The Aux’ (Backwoodz Studioz)

Housing a superlative list of underground misfits, misunderstoods and masters of their own destiny – Quelle Chris, Koreatown Oddity, Open Mike Eagle, Armand Hammer, Fatboi Sharif – NYC producer and consistent album stacker Blockhead pushes the dark through a prism. The mood of bespoke craftsmanship rarely repeats the jovial wordery of Aesop Rock on ‘Mississippi’, and the hot-tin-roof flows of Bruiser Wolf and RXK Nephew are notable exceptions. The creeping ‘Lighthouse’ sets in motion dusky, twitchy, dirges in the deep – music by cavelight if you will, causing the ultimate appreciation of hooded heads nodding solemnly. Overall The Aux defies what you’re perhaps expecting from a Blockhead album – maybe because here the Midas touch of billy woodsBackwoodz Studioz is involved. Such is the classic blueprint for a single producer-multiple emcee album that it closes with a track called ‘Now That’s What I Call A Posse Cut Vol 56’.

Cappo
‘Canon’ (Noel & Poland)

At his most introspective, a wounded Cappo is an impossibly potent proposition as he invites you to his therapy circle. Off the back of a PHD study into hip-hop’s methods of pain management, you know this isn’t gonna be chest-beating, fuck the world discourse – “spraying syllables to aid me with my self esteem” is both the psychiatrist and case study adjusting the focus of his previous abstracts. These recalibrated rhymes of Nottingham’s finest, filing personal problems and goals with stunning intimacy and detail alongside stock cultural references – ‘Anger’ wonderfully phrases how life “ain’t no bed of roses when it’s filled with cobras”, ‘Firstborn’ readies the torch – creates a tome to learn and live by, crowing over the competition (“I dot and dash the track like a pointillist”) when old habits die hard. Kong The Artisan reads the room with solemn piano pieces, beats to attempt breakthroughs by and warnings on-the-low, on a genuinely fascinating listen.

Chino XL & Stu Bangas
‘God’s Carpenter’ (Brutal Music)

Veteran punch line supplier Chino XL, an underrated NYC-NJ exponent of barging in, hitting the target at a lick, respawning and repeating, links with Brutal Music’s boom-bap swashbuckler – Stu Bangas has been as Stu Bangas does for years now. Running off the page from the off, XL’s indignant flow is ripe for rewinds, both for its humour and composition (“your prayers are like emails to God, but He’s sending them straight to spam”) and namedrops (Pete Davidson, Alec Baldwin, Travis Scott alone all snared on ‘Who Told You’). Bangas oils up the muscle, red mist descending on ‘Murder Rhyme Kill’ (inevitably featuring Vinnie Paz), and with the right amount of hammer horror schlock that’ll deck you if Chino somehow doesn’t. There’s room for ‘Remind You’ expressing human compassion, without interruption to the all-encompassing carnage.

Daniel Son & Wino Willy
‘Gris-Gris’ (FXCK RXP)

“No interruptions when the cash speak” is an opening statement declaring that Gris-Gris does business with no rehearsals and no do-overs. Toronto’s Daniel Son is unequivocal, a superhero-sized avenger hiding in plain sight, probably wearing a brick-thick link round its neck. Personally affronted by the mic he steps to, his words hold heat throughout, of vivid imagery out of conventional set pieces, and a compelling presence treating Wino Willy’s production like a punchbag. Viz-style name aside, Willy, who also released 2023’s Wino From Another Planet and Today’s The Day with Black Josh, does dejection as a blues and funk soundtrack catching moments in the wrong place at the wrong time, psychedelically tinged so that chalk outlines form like crop circles (‘CAMH’ speculates that “Wino made this shit out in Roswell”). Gris-Gris enjoys nothing more than unsheathing when faced with tension.

Danny Brown
‘Quaranta’ (Warp)

Danny Brown begins Quaranta with the unexpectedly muted title track, ruing missed opportunities, asking if there’s too much of a good thing and confirming that when artists dip behind the mask (especially certified Detroit livewires), the spectacle has every chance of becoming not’s what’s advertised, especially when in the throes of 40dom. Within one track that ner-nicky-ner-ner flow is alight and salacious on the car chase of ‘Tantor’, beats start getting flung around like they’re in a wrestling ring, and so the rest of the show goes. These dominant moments of introspection (relationship breakdowns on ‘Down Wit It’, the need to keep moving on ‘Hanami’) really make you understand the man and where he’s been/at/going in the aftershock of his back catalogue. Maybe there’s an inevitability that Brown got to this point, but it’ll be talked about as much as the classic madman persona overpowering ‘Dark Sword Angel’.

Elzhi & Oh No
‘Heavy Vibrato’ (Nature Sounds)

“Welcome to my mental torture chamber” announces Elzhi, confirming the weight of Heavy Vibrato – while this is not an invitation to an underground lair of ill repute, the thickness of this heckle-raising album is perhaps surprising given past associations with drowsier endeavours. Oh No is funky throughout with a chip resolutely strapped to his shoulder, keen to push into the red: on another day ‘In Your Feelings’ is your average neo-soul twizzle but for the bass blowing the house down. Elzhi issues sizeable, unrepentant lumps on ‘Radio International Programming’ and gives off vibes that you wouldn’t wanna feel his dark side in spite of the street reportage of ‘Bishop’ and ‘Last Nerve’ airing grievances. Heavy Vibrato doesn’t need to ramble – it’s a concerted 12-track brick shithouse that goes in, administers its terms, and leaves long-lingering smoke once it exits.

Fliptrix
‘Mantra No.9’ (High Focus)

Verb T & Vic Grimes
‘The Tower Where The Phantom Lives’ (High Focus)

No surprise that these two are on the list given their amazing consistency. Fliptrix still gives the impression of a hopeful taking road trips at the back of the night bus, headphones blazing and perfecting every word until its tattooed onto his brain, continuing to manifest smoke-infused enlightenment with pushing against everyday perils. It’s possible to both chill to ‘Mantra’ and let it wash over you, and get knee deep into it on a badboy’s quest for fire (“I say no to the new normal, cos done know that my soul be immortal”) – plus its 18-track length is almost quaint. Verb T’s successful means of negotiating the dangers of turning 40 (with Romesh Ranganathan adding his two penneth worth on the ‘Four Oh!’ remix), meant forgoing the mid-life crisis of a sports car and releasing both this and Found in the Fog with Illinformed. Spinning his yarns where as always, the smallest wins are the most significant, that easiness of flow hunkering down in the corner of the pub, enhances everyday characters as a mild-mannered superhero slash agony uncle until everything’s folklore. Still the king of his castle.

Forest DLG
‘Echo of the Hidden Spruce’ (High Focus)

Koralle
‘Insomnia’ (Melting Pot Music)

SadhuGold
‘Golden Joe Season 3’ (Nature Sounds)

Three contrasting instrumental LPs, starting with Forest DLG’s version of tiptoeing through the tulips. The storied Telemachus/Chemo collects and connects lightness of melody with a heavy gait (‘Teeth Marks’ getting caught in the trap) and seepage of psychedelia, creating autumnal reflections worth winding the windows down for. Insomnia by the Italian Koralle is the sort of, jazz-perfect, pinpoint instrumentalism that to the wrong ears can sound too wispy for its own good, but at the right temperature does after hours drifts to a tee, a handful of vocal contributions in tune with transporting you to the land of (head) nod. On vinyl for the first time, SadhuGold’s third Golden Joe installment plays the MPC like a Whack-A-Mole, offering 11 chokers for the neck (alien ray-gun always present and correct). With mob-affiliated sounds awash with colour, loops as sticky as summer in the city and ‘Fear Of A Black Yeti’ rolling malevolently, sagas and drama are guaranteed from SG’s finger-on-the-button intuition.

Kurious & Cut Beetlez
‘Monkeyman’ (Weaponize Records)

Some of the choicest neck snapping beats of the year come from Finnish deck mashers the Cut Beetlez – the drum breaks shaking with crate dust, the melodies street corner-certified and the jazz grooves jumbled up and reassembled into absolute ear wormery. With Kurious of NYC collective Constipated Monkeys riding the beats with enough stress in his voice to let you know he’s a threat, there’s a tangible appreciation for the spectacle unfolding, giving the drummer some while playing narrator to what can only be described as capers reincarnating the thrill of tagging the subway before the fuzz intervene. Always backing himself to steal the show with a DOOM-like cadence – the likes of the slow rolling hullabaloo of ‘Monkeyman Theme’ -, and with the Beetlez taking centre stage with two ‘Monkey Scratch’ intervals, if PG Tips did hip-hop albums…

Lukah
‘Raw Extractions’ (FXCK RXP)

Given a 2023 bump a year after its initial release, Raw Extractions is exactly like a rough ride in the dentist’s chair. Memphis emcee Lukah, whose profile on ‘Flying Low’ forensically details what’s in store, absolutely smokes every beat (druggy synths, Mafioso quiet storms, jazz flutters, cipher slaps), whose attitude is to knock down the door – ‘Thoughts Made Divine’ is his ‘here’s Johnny!’ moment – and then keep on pushing until the ink runs dry. Though he’s ready to fly off the handle, the way his words link lifts his presence to send suckers scrambling – ‘Dead Horses’ speaks a whole bunch of inspirational sense, and ‘Black Belt Jones’ reaches peak Canibus-levels of technical agility. No need for anaesthesia when “ain’t no telling what’s in my brainbox/so if you can’t grasp what I’m kickin’, let me brainwash” becomes your mantra, doing exactly the same on the autumn LP Permanently Blackface.

Masai Bey & BMS
‘C87’ (Uncommon Records)

A fifteenth anniversary reissue, C87 is the classic sound of the concrete jungle converging and pushing its protagonists closer to the edge, helmed by Masai Bey, responsible for one of Definitive Jux’s most savage, overlooked back cat moments from the 00s indie/alt-rap heyday, and BMS, another warrior from an earlier scene embryo. Claustrophobic, where the only solution is to fight fire with fire via Herculean lyrical pushbacks, Bey & BMS are always within touching distance of a dystopia no longer thought improbable. The highly flammable ‘IAA’ asks for a moment of silence without irony, while the fanfares of ‘Bring My Shit’ are charred with inevitability, its orators plowing on with flows pulling grenade pins with their teeth. The drums-first intensity of C87 clamps headphones over ears while the world slips down a sinkhole, and is far too volatile for your average backpack.

Odd Holiday
‘LISA’ (ÕFFKILTR)

Funky, fresh and fun, Odd Holiday‘s melting pot of sounds reflects the come ups of Trugoy-ish emcee Mattic and producer Daylight Robbery!, both members of the Monolith Cocktail-rated Clouds In A Headlock crew. Take Odd to mean offbeat and interesting – wide eyed, wide eared and quietly wired, LISA is packed with ideas and samples (bygone radio jingles, chopped and screwed Sheldon Cooper, cartoon sci-fi. drug PSAs); smooth penmanship whose musing always makes ends meet and probably fills notepads while hanging onto a daydream; and jazzy boom bap mosaics reaching the utmost luxury on ‘Free Folk’ and steadily pulling rabbits from hats. They’re also a confident bunch, given that ‘Adam West High School’ appears twice within its half hour running time. Get the object of their affection on your next getaway playlist.

Raw Poetic feat. Damu the Fudgemunk
‘Away Back In’ (Def Pressé)

Lovely live vibes from the reliable connect making the hip-hop underground a nicer, safer place, Away Back In is here for you whether you’ve got urges to pop the top, get some late night liquor in your system or shake off some New Year’s blues. Damu The Fudgemunk’s patient drums, P-Fritz’ bluesy guitar licks ungloving occasional scuzz and feedback, and the breezy Jason Moore still knowing MC means move the crowd – a figurehead to follow (‘Sometime After Midnight’) and a fan you feel you can rub shoulders with – relieve the pressure from the first bar, even when ‘Rehab’ stars running red lights. Once the tone is set and the tempos start going back and forth, Away Back In essentially becomes a 37-minute gig inviting everyone from the front to the back to join in. Put this up with there with the elite of your favourite hip-hoppers converting the stage experience onto wax.

Tha God Fahim
‘Iron Bull’ (Nature Sounds)

On the opening track ‘Man of Steel’, Tha God Fahim, the man with the “championship rap addiction”, picks up his bindle, begins his latest route head-first into the maddening crowd and unpicks the gangster/survivor’s mindset with arguably one of the purest, most unadorned flows going. Without needing hooks to hang tracks on, Iron Bull – “play to win or don’t play at all” – is less a rampage through the streets from the Cormega-esque Atlanta emcee, more an assertive strut knowing he’ll catch the coattails of his foes in his own time. With Your Old Droog guesting and beats from Camouflage Monk, Nicholas Craven and TGF himself mining a buried sensitivity beyond being engrossed in the can’t-stop-won’t-stop bubble, it’s all over and done with in 23 minutes – as per his relentless, onto-the-next-one workload – but still leaves an indelible footprint.

The Difference Machine
‘Alien Nation and The Black Adolescent’ (Full Plate)

After the excellent Unmasking the Spirit Fakers, messages to the madness, pen-sword balancing (“I’m a pacifist, ‘til I pass a fist”) and mastering of the (un)reality are again in sharp supply from Atlanta’s psychedelic braves. As per their predecessor, emcee Day Tripper quantum leaps from film set to film set framed by produced Dr Conspiracy – fever dreams, Wu sagas, last stands – with an intricacy of verse that should be cited in textbooks, educative and dismissive at once and sometimes not even owning all the answers (“we lack prophetic vision/so I just close my eyes and try and make the best decision”), Geared up as an epic of marathon proportions worthy of a DVD commentary and director’s cut, the short listening time adds rewind value as well as advancing their enigma, upon realising the history lessons offered are being played out in real time.

Uber Magnetic
‘Uber Magnetic’ (Plague)

The contrasting baritones of underground dissidents Roughneck Jihad (“endothermic with pterodactyl feathers”) and Junior Disprol (“still the best British emcee, no exaggeration”) is selling point enough for Uber Magnetic, their Cali-to-Wales tones blurring the relationship of ragtag tag-team duo and colleagues keeping matters strictly business. A funky, bullish clutter of music from Cool Edit Chud, stuffing the sampler and getting cut up by Krash Slaughta, Jaffa and Sir Beans on the ones, is just the canvas for beats and rhymes to tease, flirt with and challenge one another. Kooky maybe, but in fact Uber Magnetic give the impression of knowing too much (“reputation built upon cadavers that I left about”) – gatekeepers whose starting points don’t have to be clear, pulling bars together from a particularly haphazard word cloud; but unstoppable once their theories start scatting, scattering and splitting atoms.

Hi, my name is Dominic Valvona and I’m the Founder of the music/culture blog monolithcocktail.com For the last ten years I’ve featured and supported music, musicians and labels we love across genres from around the world that we think you’ll want to know about. No content on the site is paid for or sponsored and we only feature artists we have genuine respect for /love. If you enjoy our reviews (and we often write long, thoughtful ones), found a new artist you admire or if we have featured you or artists you represent and would like to buy us a coffee at https://ko-fi.com/monolithcocktail to say cheers for spreading the word, then that would be much appreciated.