The Perusal #56: Staple Jr. Singers, A Journey Of Giraffes, L’ Étrangleuse, Head Shoppe, Pastense…
June 4, 2024
A WORLD OF SONIC/MUSICAL DISCOVERIES REVIEWED BY DOMINIC VALVONA
(Unless stated otherwise, all releases are available now)

(R.C. Brown, Edward Brown and Annie Brown Caldwell by Adam Wissing)
The Staple Jr. Singers ‘Searching’
(Luka Bop) 14th June 2024
Revived five decades after its original localized release in 1975, the folk at Luka Bop made good on their incredible, enlightening compilation of obscured gospel and soul, The Time For Peace Is Now, with a dedicated reissue of The Staple Jr. Singers rarity When Do We Get Paid.
Pressed by that extremely young family unit themselves and sold at shows and on their neighbors front lawns, that rarefied showcase finally received an international release a couple of years ago, prompting a number of live dates for the trio: their first in forty years! Now, and with an extended cast of second and third generation family members, and with the producing talents of Ahmed Gallab (probably better known under his Sinkone artist name), they’ve recorded their first album proper, Searching – a revived title and re-recorded song that previously opened When Do We Get Paid, given a more echoed, stripped and intimate accompaniment the second time around.
Recorded live over two nights in the reverent and supportive surroundings of The Message Center church in West Point, Mississippi, this family affair picks up from where they left off: as if it were yesterday rather than fifty years ago. Those afflatus voices are not so young now of course, but remain still soulfully enriching and youthful in spirit.
Originally from the banks of the Tombigbee River, the family’s sound was, and continues to be, honed in their hometown of Aberdeen, Monroe County. A salvation searching, baptismal liturgy of Southern gospel is injected with a congruous merger of conscious political soul, R&B, funk and delta blues: the very epitome of the Southern crossroads.
From the name you may have assumed that this trio were scions, the offspring perhaps of the divine stylers themselves: The Staple Singers. But, although without doubt a chip off the old block, the group’s moniker is purely used as homage to their idols. Far younger than Mavis and her siblings and pop when they started out in the mid 70s, the Brown family of beautified and expressive soulful vocalists Annie (appearing here as Annie Brown Caldwell) and R.C., and guitarist Edward were in their teens when they made their first recordings. Yet despite being so young, the travails of the civil rights movement and social issues of the day ran throughout the trio’s equally earthy and heavenly soul music. This was a sound in honor to the Lord yet grounded in the wake of Southern desegregation, unrest, the Vietnam War…the list goes on. So whilst Annie soared in full baby Staples mode, and with a vibe of Eula Cooper and Shirley Ann Lee about her, there was plenty of attitude and sass to go around.
Gospel music remained, and still remains central, with plenty of standard Bible belt exultations, paeans and passionate plaints. Some of which, no matter how familiar, seem to have some pretty unique and idiosyncratic rearrangements going on. Bolstered on those formative recordings by bassist Ronnel Brown and drummer Corl Walker, we were treated to a Stax-like revue of beatitude, the venerable and just down-country soulful funk. Echoes of Sam Cooke, Lulu Collins, Crusade Records, Chairman Of The Board and Nolan Porter followed humbled sermons on the soul train to Galilee. An electrifying songbook, When Do We Get Paid proved that this family trio possessed a raw talent, and could hold their own in a field packed with such incredible voices.
Fifty years later, backed this time by R.C.’s son Gary and grandson Jaylin, and Edward’s son Troy, and with the modern sensitive and magical production of the Sudanese-American musician polymath Gallab, it’s now a much more mature version on show.
Shining through at every turn with rarefied authenticity, the Brown familytakes time to softly preach a bluesy soulful gospel of intimate travails and personalized soul-searching. On the redemptive trail whilst also facing the afterlife, and yet comforting with a praised message of deliverance, the lyrics confirms the family’s dedication to walking that righteous path. And yet, amongst the Muscle Shoals bathed organs and relaxed and soothed B.B. King and Otis Rush twanged and sustained bluesy guitar evocations there’s also echoes of a magical realms hovering Dr. John on both the opening backbeat shuffled ‘Living In The World Alone’ and on the Orleans twilight dreamy juju invocation ‘Don’t Need No Doctor’. For the most part the Brown family lets the studio environment of laughter and encouragement seep out amongst the pews, as they slip between visions of a Pastor Champion fronted bluesy-country The Rolling Stones, Percy Sledge and James Carr.
Fifty years is a lifetime to wait for such talented voices to awaken, when it seems that even amongst such gifted peers and icons The Staple Jr. Singers could have still stood out. It’s been well worth it though, with a most wizened and truthful unfiltered timeless bluesy-gospel sound of communal worship and support.
A Journey Of Giraffes ‘Retro Porter’
(Somewherecold Records) 7th June 2024
The sound of John Lane’s most prolific and artistically successful alias, A Journey Of Giraffes, is given more time (almost unlimited time) and space than ever to unfurl on the ambitious opus-spanning Retro Porter album of ambient empirical suites.
An expansion upon Lane’s previous work – especially last year’s choice album entry, Empress Nouveau – each evolving sensory piece allows all the Baltimore composer’s signatures, motifs and serialism-like enquires to recollect memories of places and scenes, of the abstract, over the course of what sounds like a whole day.
Once more akin to Hiroshi Yoshimura, Susumu Yokoto or Harold Budd absorbing the holiday reminisces of Iberia, Retro Porter picks up on the arts and crafts decorative tracery sketches of Empress Nouveau, taking inspiration this time around from the artistry of Gaudí with references to the cemented-together broken tile shards mosaic method of “Trencadis” and his most ambitious, unfinished cathedral of beatific indulgences, the proposed eighteen spires of The Basílica i Temple Expiatori de la Sagrada Família in Barcelona – the largest unfinished Catholic church in the world. Gaudí originally envisioned crowning this behemoth of a church with his monumental depictions of the Apostles, the four Evangelists, the Virgin Mary and Jesus, but only eight of the eighteen statues were completed – the near century-running project was brought a halt during the Spanish Civil War for obvious reasons, but much later, suffered setbacks due to Covid and remains at this present time a building site still.
And so, the influential Spanish architect’s legacy is picked up, his use of folk art and idiosyncratic framing of the Catalan jewel used as a methodology and inspiration for Lane’s own soundscaping craft and mosaic building ambient compositions. The album title however, I believe, is a reference to Lane’s second inspiration, Walter Benjamin’s The Arcade Project preoccupation; the work, a montage-style critique on the “commodification of things” in the age of La Belle Époque. Reflecting the growth of the “bourgeois” class, framed against the glass-roofed arcades of consumerism in late 19th century France, Benjamin writes of change as the new century beckons: and modernism with it. Originally conceived in 1927, it would take thirteen years to finish; completed just as Nazi Germany occupied Benjamin’s homeland, forcing the thinker-writer to flee. Much like Retro Porter, there’s a recurring semblance of the passing of time, of feelings that can’t easily be expressed and said, formed or quantified but an essence of which conjures up emotional pulls and a sense of environment.
Stained-glass passages, bulb-like notes of inspiration, resonated and tubular metallic rings, linger and drift and float in the vapours and obscured fogs of Lane’s creation. In a constant ebb and flow of iterations, reversals, each track is like the chapter of an extensive soundtrack; a balance between a removed channeling of real tangible geography, architecture and masked. And although all these sounds and inspirations draw upon Europe, and both composition wise and sonically hint at Andrew Heath and Matthew David’s corridors of voices, environment and movement, it all still somehow sounds vaguely Japanese: with just the merest hint of Java too.
Like a dialogue with the past, history and the detritus of previous generations that inhabited Lane’s spaces seem to be constantly present: visitations from unidentified vessels like layers of geology. At times we’re subtly pulled towards the shadows, the alien and otherworldliness. But then some passages are edging more towards Laraaji, to cathedral anointed Popol Vuh and the cloudy bellowed Orb. I’d suggest shades too of Andrew Wasylyk, a trumpet-less Jon Hassell, a Mogadon Panda Bear (especially on the extended opening suite, ‘Happy Every Holiday’), Phew and His Name Is Alive.
Mirages, imaging’s, the sound of birds in the iron lattice gardens of an ostentatious arcade percent as described in late 19th century novella’s, sonorous pitches, the softened sound of a taiko drum at the Kabuki theatre, various hinges, dulcimer-like strokes all evaporate then solidify to create an ambient opus; a lifetimes work coalesced into one expansive, layered work of soundscape art and abstraction. Lane has allowed his mind to wander and explore organic and cerebral long form ideas like never before to produce, perhaps, his most accomplished unrestricted work yet.
Pastense Ft. Uncommon Nasa ‘Sidewalk Chalk, Parade Day Rain’
(Uncommon Records)
Continuing to attract and surround himself with like-minded curious, inventive artisans of prose from the underground leftfield hip-hop scene, the Long and Staten Islands’ rapper and producer/beatmaker Uncommon Nasa now facilitates Pastense’s return with a post-pandemic opus of metaphysical, cosmological unraveled consciousness alchemy.
Joining the Uncommon fold and orbit, the eloquently descriptive and connective rapper Pastense emerges from the dystopia of COVID; navigating the current social, divisive and polarizing ills of the modern world by taking sanctuary amongst the city’s sometimes innocuous, passed over and by, patches of life-affirming “beauty”. In a world of urban chaos, destruction and impending war our main protagonist finds solace and inspiration, but also embarks on a whole universal journey of connections prompted by the smallest of curiosities. Inspired by his father’s own ever-inquisitive fascination with the world around him – describing his dad as “the kind of person that will pull over the car just to look at a interesting stone” – and his artistry – providing the artwork for this album’s cover and CD inlay -, he attempts to find the rays of hope in a shadowy miasma of volatility.
With a Your Old Droog crossed with Beans-like delivery, those lyrical links reference both high and low art, culture, basketball gods, the pulling down of statues – at one point connecting the recent destruction wrought and fueled by the BLM movement with the famously, quite literally, armless Venus de Milo – and death: or rather its unavoidable approach.
Creatively opening up the mind and memory banks to contemplate life’s travails and inevitabilities, Pastense cleverly runs free with his highly descriptive and omnivorous evocations. These deliveries are prompted by such original influences as the Portrait of Whistler’s Mother to the unframed beauty of graffiti on the side of a subway train and the way the rain droplets form like “pearls” on the metal debris and rusted machines of industry and transit, left to degrade in every corner of the city. The latter resonates later with the venerated NBA legend Erol Monroe, known as “The Pearl”. It’s as if everything is linked, and comes full circle, with the recurring words, phrases and name-checks popping up across the album’s twelve tracks of astral-planeing, dream realism and sci-fi expansive universal mining: What can’t be solved on Earth, is looked for in the cosmology and future.
With Uncommon as his foil, offering his own lucid candid lines but also building a both menacing and unique sound and sampled world of fluty prog-jazz, video nasties and 80s sci-fi like soundtracks, cult Samurai flicks, mystique and krautrock, Pastense’s visions come to vivid psychedelic life. It’s as if we’d been pulled into The Matrix, or the retrograde arcade where Tron still sits tucked away in the shadows, as those heavy synths invoke dystopian Vangelis, Schulze, later Tangerine Dream, Bernard Szajner, Zeus B. Held and others.
There’s some really cool productions nods, some I just can’t place, including a thriller-type brooding rolling piano (Lalo Schifrin perhaps?) on ‘The Ills’, and a sort of post-krautrock loosened faux-reggae beat that sounds like either the Phantom Band or Dunkelziffer on ‘Broken Statues’. Hopefully Uncommon and Pretense will take this as a compliment, but the whole thing has that Madlib vibe and quality; a touch of the moodier parts from BDP’s final album, Sex and Violence too – especially the atmospherics of ‘The Real Holy Place’ speech. There’s certainly no wastage, nothing out of place; which isn’t to suggest it is lean, but just perfectly aligned, layered and mixed. I especially like the go-go meets Tonto slow roll of ‘Journey Back To Reality’, which also reminded me of the UK’s very own King Kashmere.
From the extended pool of Uncommon Records there’s signature lyrical contributions from Shortrock, Guilty Simpson (highly recommended if you are in the mood for digging), Guillotine Crowns (the Hills To Die On comes highly recommended by me and our resident hip-hop aficionado Matt Oliver), Shortfuze and Junclassic. None of these guest spots seem like opportune showboating, nor are they incongruous to the flow and direction of travel, and the themes. It is yet another example of the rich tapestry of talent that is out there and being missed in favour of vacuous grudge theatrics and tiktok trends.
The fruity shogun beat-provider, Banana Samurai remixes the bonus version of the oasis picturesque urban-building ‘Beautiful’; the beats more staggered and now featuring a ringing glassy resonance and echo.
With no let up in the quality of the expansive lyrical metaverse, tech comes in conflict with the forest’s birds and nature’s fight for survival amongst the concrete and chemically poisoned wells of so-called progression on an artistically simulated and stimulating canvas of thoughts and connectivity.
Pastense, in partnership with Nasa, creates a most excellent mind-expanding universe, and in doing so, one of the year’s best hip-hop albums: this is an artist and record worth championing.
L’ Étrangleuse ‘Ambiance Argile’
(La Curieuse) 7th June 2024
Drawing once more upon his ngoni training and visits to Mali’s capital and centre of musical influence, Bamako, Maël Salètes continues to entwine the sound of his feted African lute instructor Abdoulaye ‘Kandiafa’ Koné and reverberations of Lobi Touré, Bassekou Kouyate and Ali Farka Touré into the Lyon-based L’ Étrangleuse partnership. With his vocalist and harp-playing foil Mélanie Virot, West Africa travels to the dream-reality rural imaging’s of Eastern France’s Swiss border on the duo’s first album since before the Covid crisis.
Whilst setbacks hampered their progress in lockdown limbo, and with years of anxiety building a less certain future for live performance and recording, they decided a rebirth was in order; a revitalized reboot of the signature cross-pollinated sound they’d honed and explored. Already bringing in the drummer Léo Dumont straight after the duo’s last album, 2019’s Dans Le Lieu du Non-Où, but on hold whilst the pandemic crippled the world, a fourth member, the bassist Anne Godefert (also appearing under the electronic guise of Noon) completed the refashioned quartet in 2022. Both obviously double-up the live like sound (billed in the PR notes for the most part as “the sound of four musicians playing live in a room”) but also expand the possibilities and direction of travel. In this setting, in this case, that translates into both nimble tactile plucked and turned over Tuareg desert contoured blues, Bamako fuzz rock, and riffs that could have easily made Maël’s contributions to the Somaliland freedom fighter activist and siren, Sahra Halgan, mixed with rustic folky, psychedelic and post-punk.
Lyrically and vocally, whether whispered or sung or in choral-like harmony and spoken, the quartet channel (in part) the writing processes and dream-realism of Toni Morrison and Russell Banks, and the poetry of Dadaist modernist progenitor and international socialist Srecko Kosovel – leaving an incredibly influential legacy behind despite dying at the age of 22, the poet remains one of Slovenia’s most noted icons and literary figures of the 20th century.
Fantasy is transcribed across a French/Swiss landscape in the age of great anxiety and uncertainty, as the gnarled and scuzzed is balanced with the pastoral and African. At times it comes across like Ben Zabo meets the Incredible String Band and The Raincoats, and at other times, like Hugo Race crossing the arid Malian outlier with Peter Kernal, Crispy ambulance and the Holydrug Couple. The title-track conjured up Faust, but with R.E.M.’s Mike mills on harmony duties. Meanwhile, Mélanie’s delightful harp, falling at times like bucolic snowflakes, reminded me of Catrin Finch’s collaboration with Seckou Keita.
With constant rhythmic and motion changes, the entire album feels quite naturalistic: “organic” as the PR notes say. Nothing feels pushed, artificial, augmented or forced anyway. Although older than Merril Wubslin and Ester Poly it’s those Mitteleuropa dimension hovering groups that L’ Étrangleuse evoke the most as they hoof it, gallop, meander and navigate the clay beneath their feet.
In a dream world of their own reinvention the newly formed quartet expand the worldliness and dreaminess for a both fantastical and recognized fuzz tone album of experimentation.
Head Shoppe ‘S-T’
(Meadows Heavy Recorders)
Mellowed hermetic dimensions are crossed as California’s pine coves and Idyllwild meadows, and the famous city park lungs of Mexico City are given magical-like properties. Yes, the 1960s West coast imbued Head Shoppe, with vague influences of progressive folk and rock, the psychedelic, krautrock and more modern fare as the Unknown Mortal Orchestra, reference their own escapist pastures and an iconic psychogeography held sacred by the Toltecs and then the Aztecs on a self-titled debut LP.
Away from the mania and chaos of the metropolis sprawl, the Eric Von Harding led troupe, which includes Blake Jordon and the album’s producer Kenneth James Gibson sharing keyboard duties, plus Joe De Flore on flute, Eric and Rhea Harding on apparitional coos and dreamy voices and Charlie Woodburn on drums, finds sanctuary in more bucolic retreats. The Chapultepec Park of the opening magically wistful hauntology instrumental name-checks one such hideaway. One of the largest parks in Mexico City, a place of safety held sacred by the ancients, its most defining typography is a hill. Named by the Toltec’s, it translates as “grasshopper hill”, and it’s the sound of those insects that can be heard later on in a humid heat on the album. And although the musical direction of softly turning guitar, enchanted and meandrous airs is closer to Eroc, Sproatly Smith and Belbury Poly there’s a supernatural atmosphere application of otherworldly Latin America in evidence on both the bone rattled, looking glass transformed cover of Violeta Parra’s iconic “prayers of gratitude” ‘Gracis A La Vida’, and on the out-of-body ‘Drive Back From Idyllwild’. The former, with its slow released burnished cymbal reversals and mirage-like dreaminess, channels Alice Coltrane (at the start anyway), Raul Refree, Society Of The Silver Cross and Barrio Lindo on a rattlesnake Blood Meridian reimaging of the classic Peruvian yearn. The latter of the two hovers over a Tex-Mex border version of Twin Peaks, as scored by Broadcast.
Another of the backyard locations, ‘Saunders Meadow’ features some more of that hermetic, pagan naturalistic alchemy; a heavy pollen gauze lingers to a spell of twine and harmonic picked acoustic folksy guitar, felt-ripping flutters, bulb shaped notes, quivery wobbled Moog and Arp and evocations of Mythos, Walter Wegmuller and The Focus Group.
‘Séance’ is every bit as apparitional ether dwelling as it implies. Crossing into the spirit world with Fortean passages of visitation and supernatural elementals, it reminded me in part of Alex Harvey’s more bewitching excursions.
A final ‘Candlelight Vigil’ however, features Faust’s seagulls’ effects, the oceanic lapping tides, country-tone acoustic wanes, pagan-hippie enchantment and touches of Jacco Gardner and the UMO. With a diaphanous mystique of portal-hopping Head Shoppe balance the supernatural with inviting pastoral psych on an occult LP of organic, spiritual simplified escapism; a most spellbinding transported and naturalistically unfurled debut that takes the familiar and makes it sound somehow freshly hallucinating and languidly traversing.
Charlie Kohlhase ‘A Second Life’
(Mandorla Music) 7th June 2024
Maybe it’s with the passing of time, forty years give or take, since the AIDS epidemic, or that despite the initial stigma, ignorance, the lack of compassion and worse, lack of treatment that the autoimmune condition is now, in the space of just one generation (even less) now relatively treatable, understood and certainly far freer from discrimination – there will always be pockets of prejudice and misunderstanding of course, but sufferers no longer face the discrimination, ostracizing they once did; and importantly, it is no longer the death sentence it was neither. Defining the 80s, with gloomy predictions and health campaigns of monolithic doom, AIDS swept through creative society with a scythe; a whole lost generation remembered, amongst its ranks some of the most gifted and accomplished artists/writers/musicians of the age, but still missing. And yet in the last two decades, perhaps even longer, it has been all but forgotten, or at least cosigned to the history books.
Well, that was until now, with concurrent public enquires on the scandal of infected blood both in the UK and USA – as of writing, the UK chair’s damning verdict is both enraging and scary, laying out how governmental ministers and doctors, experts in the NHS acted complicity in covering up infected blood supplies tainted with not only HIV but Hepatitis A, B and C given to hemophiliacs: 30,000 of which were infected between 1971 and 1991, resulting in at least 3000 deaths over time. That scandal aside, HIV and the illness it causes, AIDS is still considered more or less parked: that is unless you are a sufferer.
Contracting HIV in more recent times, a decade ago, the “multi-reedist” and composer Charlie Kohlhase gained the courage to “come out” to his jazz circle, encouraged to tell his story, express his journey by a younger queer jazz musician. The Boston jazz scene stalwart and instigator gives thanks to the Massachusetts health board for his treatment, whilst marking the personal loss of those near to him and the “40 million” people who died from the disease at a time when medical advancements were still a long way off.
A “second life” then, Kohlhase is equally thankful for contracting HIV in more enlightened times, finding empathy in a scene that’s embraced his free-floating and free-jazz triple saxophone explorations since the 80s. Already leading his own Quartet by the end of that decade, Kohlhase also played with the Saxophone Support Group and collaborated long term with the noted John Tchicai, who’s own ‘Berlin Ballad’ composition is sympathetically translated on this new album – still with a certain romantic reflective air of the city, but now with colliery-like brass, a touch of Louis Armstrong and trinket percussive dangles and a shake of Afro-spiritual jazz.
A member of Boston’s Either/Orchestra from ’87 to 2001, rejoining for a second phase in 2008, the baritone-tenor-alto swapping composer also widened his craft collaborating with the Ethiopian icons Mahmoud Ahmed and Mulatu Astatke.
But it’s the lasting relationship with his Explorers Club troupe that is called upon for this latest mix of original material and re-purposed, reconfigured compositions by a host of progenitors and deities of the form. Undergoing various changes over the years, the Explorers Club is now expanded to a Octet, the lineup of which features tenor saxophonist Seth Meicht, trombonist Jeb Bishop, trumpeter Dan Rosenthal, tubist Josiah Reibstein, guitarist Eric Hofbauer, bassist Tony Leve and drummer Curt Newton. In various combinations, with a change in dynamics between all the brass and variations of accompaniment, there’s space enough for each participant to maneuver, diverge and then come together to blend a host of jazz and bluesy styles.
Homages are paid, dues given, to the titans of the free-form and experimental, but also to less championed influences like the jazz pianist, composer and arranger Elm Hope, who recorded with such luminaries as Coltrane and Rollins, working for a large part in the be-bop and hard-bop styles. Hooked on heroin, convicted and encumbered by the authorities in NYC, Hope briefly moved out West, working with Harold Land for a short spell of time (another influence I would suggest is in evidence on this album). Taken far too soon to tragic circumstances, it’s Hope’s noirish plaintive reminisce, ‘Eyes So Beautiful As Yours’ that finds its way on to the album. An empathic version with the evocations of city dockyard blues and Gershwin musical solace, the romantic sympathies remain on what is the most congruous of adaptations.
A moiety of Don Cherry and the science fiction titan Ornette Coleman, ‘Man On The Moon’ borrows liberally and riffs on both icons whilst also channeling Sun Ra, Marshall Allen and Knoel Scott on a celestial wind. The action, part cosmic wild birds, part snuggled elephant trunk rises and part lunar bound.
The album’s more soulful curtain call, ‘Tetractys’, riffs on the American trombonist and composer Roswell Budd’s catchy “four-bar line”. After a serenade and subtle swing, a little echo of Freddie Hubbard, each band member drops out, one-by-one, to mimic the melodious lullaby lull until a harmonious company of voices replaces all the instruments.
Back tot the very start, the personalized ‘Character-Building Blues’ opener is an almost relaxed, a little playful, loose arrangement of New Orleans brass, light jazz guitar hummed meanders and hops, a baritone soliloquy and rustled buzzing trumpet. There are obvious bluesy expressions of doubt, some more woeful uncertain times, but overall it’s a great melodious and yet explorative free-from performance to kick things off with.
The sphere of influence widens on the next arrangement, ‘No Such Explorers’. Inspired in part by the spirited “inganga” music of Burundi, and more dance beat orientated, there’s a bounce and Savoy label skyline sound that also conjures up evocations of Hugh Masekela and Paul Chamber. There are swells of drama, a pecking geese-like wildness and woody harmonic prowling and pulled double bass intro that’s rather cool.
‘Lennette’ – a “portmanteau” of Ornette and the jazz pianist, composer, arranger and teacher Lennie Tristano – has a swing to it, but also features bouts of Roscoe Mitchell heightened stage crescendos, NYC fire escape moon gazing and bleats.
Overall, the Explorers Club lives up to their name across a cross-pollination of moods and descriptive free form languages. Timeless influences seamlessly come together with more heralded, squealed brassy resonance and burnished untethered expressions, and the abstract with the more melodic and tuneful. The sound of many struggles, diagnosis is transduced into an incredible testimony; a “second life”, rebirth that’s sprouted a first rate intelligent and free-spirited leap into the light.
The Nausea ‘Requiem’
(Absurd Exposition/Buried In Slag And Debris)
Anju Singh’s dark materials have developed over time; the breadth and depth expanding from black death metal to chamber and classical heavy meta(l) and dissonance. Under The Nausea inducing guise Singh coalesces the embryonic sound ideas of her 2017 album Requiem Aeternam, and even older catalyst explorations that stretch right back to 2005, for a transmogrified vision of the Latin liturgical and ceremonial.
As any Catholic will know, they can’t half send converts off in morose gilded drama; the funeral services can be lengthy, arcane and solemn. Singh’s own experiences as a young child attending such affairs has struck a chord (or two); the impact, “confusion” and “tears” of which have inspired a strong fascination, leading to such works as this latest repurposed Requiem. With everything that title holds, the history and connotations, Singh processes the various levels of the Latin and Orthodox Greek churches’ writings and etymology on death and fate.
A member of such blood-curdling and morbidly curious bedfellows as Grave Infestation and Ceremonial Bloodbath, the unnerving caustic Fortean-tuned industrial distress that consumes each suite and vignette on this new album is about as close as it gets to those extreme dark invocations. For the multi-instrumentalist stirs up an atmosphere of chthonian Hellenic myth and harrowing distress from Klezmer Galicia, the Balkans and the Middle East through the tonal and psychical experiments of the violin and viola. Already coined as “doom chamber”, this often heightened, sawed, scratched, frayed, attack and stressed style of eliciting and sometimes torturing forebode, trauma and apocalyptic grief summons up vague invocations of Tony Conrad and The Theatre Of Eternal Music, Phillip Glass, Xaos, Scott Walker’s scores for film, Fran & Flora and Luce Mawdsley. And caught between “ascension” and purgatory, reciting Kyrie Eleison and considering the “end”, centuries of melancholic liturgy and dread are stoked up for monumentally disturbing and serious elegies, death marches and Dante spirals into the abyss.
The coarse-charged frazzled override of bestial manifestations, scored marble floors, metal tank reverberations, claw-marked pews, afterlife TV sets, factory noise and apparitions threaten to engulf the classical instrumentation, but the malady, pastoral rustic and fairytale style attuned strings seem to make it out the other side alive.
The album’s enflamed violin artwork is partially right in visioning some funeral pyre; a fiery cleanse of one of the album’s central vessels. But despite the ominous chills, harrowing psychogeography and feel the use of the classical and chamber can sound quite ascendant and sadly yearning in all its dark beauty. Singh’s artistry culminates in a remarkable Requiem for our end times.
QOA ‘Sauco’
(Leaving Records) 21st June 2024
Collaborating with Argentina’s biosphere of fauna, flora, bird and insect life Nino Corti, under the QOA nom de plume, creates a blossoming, growing synthesis of organic and synthesized meta and matter; absorbing the healing, thoughtful and curiosity of a native wilds rich in biodiversity and cleansing balms.
Corti is both replenished by the surroundings and simultaneously plaintive at those elements that have been lost from the atavistic oasis; nature’s medicine cabinet and haberdashery, as referenced in the track-titles, offering up “Senna” – the plant’s leaves and fruit providing a natural laxative amongst other properties – and “Sauco” – used as a dye for basketry by the Coahuilla Indians of Northern Mexico. There are also references to the flowering plant “Lippia Alba”, and the “Anartia” and ‘Zafiro del Talas” butterfly families. From outside the Americas, there is a strange excursion to Japan in the shape of the “Yatai”, or “food cart” that typically sells ramen and other foods. And to further expand the horizons of influence and inspiration, there’s also a reference to the “swamp deer”, the “Barasingha”, found in subcontinent India.
Sonically unfolding and refractive like an engineered life form amongst the glass insect chatter and itches, the crystalized bulbs and filaments, the recurring flow and splash of running water, the jug-like marimba bobs and pebble kinetics envelop transportive airs of Sakamoto and Sylvian Orientalism and soft malleted instruments. And, unsurprisingly considering one of the musician and multimedia artist’s many projects includes a “committed” role as a member of a Gamelan collective, you can hear vague suggestions of Balinese music in the amorphous blending’s of musical and field-recording geography.
Corti pulls you in gently to a both recognizable and almost alien lush, piped, filtered and gladded green world. Ale Hop, the Elusive Geometry of The Reverse Engineer, Autchre, Moebius and Schulze were all brought to mind(fullness) when listening to these absorbed light-bringing tracks, which at times take on a rhythmic quality with mechanized dances of exotic electronica and psytrance.
Alive and in growth at every turn, this is a fecund of meandered and directed chiming, chromatics, searing, sonorous nature, a paradise in the midst of an ever crushingly dull oppressive world of harm and destruction.
___/+ THESE RECOMMENDATIONS IN BRIEF
Regular readers will know that I pride myself in writing more in-depth purview-style reviews with a wider context. This means I naturally take more time and effort. Unfortunately this also means that I can only ever scratch the surface of the 2000+ releases both the blog and I get sent each month. As a compromise of sorts, I’ve chosen to now include a really briefly written roundup of releases, all of which really do deserve far more space and context. But these are recommendations, a little extra to check out of you are in the mood or inclined to discover more.
The Lazy Jesus ‘UA Tribal Vol. 2’
(Shouka) 21st June 2024
A collaborative cross-continental union of the Ukrainian producer The Lazy Jesus, the Peruvian duo Dengue Dengue Dengue and the Argentinian producer JaiJiu, the second volume in this experiment transform’s the former’s heritage of traditional pipe music with bass culture, cumbia and the tribal.
A mizmar-like mystery of faraway places is woven together, through remixes and augmentation, with the stick clattering dance rhythms of South America and Ammar 808-like stumbling and reverberating bass, transporting the source Ukrainian instrumentation beyond its borders into hypnotising realms. A very successful merging of cultures (creating a lost continent of sounds) that makes for some interesting and entrancing club-like imaginings.
Various Artists ‘Turkish Back Porch Scene EP: Vol. 1’
(Bone Union Records) Available Right Now
Hovering Delta slide, bluegrass and heat melting dirt music from the imagined back porches of various (of all places) venues in Turkey, by a clutch of blues-imbibed players, the inaugural EP from the Bone Union label is authentically rich with the genre’s history and legacy, and yet freshly inviting and worth the entrance fee. A mix of standards (Sarp Keskiner’s faithful version of Mississippi Fred McDowell’s quivered sliding ‘Big Stars Falling’) and originals (Bora Çeliker’s ambled old-timer wistful ‘Pine Hill Blues’), each performance is as close as you can get to its source: homage but also the act of passing down to a new generation some of the most authentic of roots sounds. The geography and destination will of course surprise many; a different angle for sure, and reminder that the Blues is universal: think a Turkish Sun Records meets Alan Lomax.
Cumsleg Borenail ‘Another Acid Spew’
Available Right Now
I’ve been meaning to and trying to get a few words up on the site about the prolific discombobulating, A.I. hallucinogenic phantasmagoric maverick that is Cumsleg Borenail for bloody ages. Every time I’m about to, and I think I’ve got a hold on the latest broadcast from that electronic-transmogrifying artist’s over-stimulated mind, another release drops and I’m once more playing catchup. Anyway, I’ve managed to catch this latest squelchy frenzy of high tweaks, acid burbled bubble-baths, bell-tolls and playful twitchy protestations. Think Autechre rewire Lenny Dee’s circuits whilst the Sad Man throws a few spanners into the acid spewing works. Mad, dangerous but good to know, the inner madness and fuckery of Borenail is unveiled in fits and more chemical farting magnificence.
Grotesque Misalignment ‘S-T’
(Syrup Moose Records) 28th June 2024
Prowling amid the gothic, hermetic, post-punk, noisy and bestial the electrifying Grotesque Misalignment sacrifice the Daevid Allen, Killing Joke, Vampire Rodents and other such references on the altar of doom skulking menace. The mysteriously shrouded group, though intensely loaded on the “heavy”, can surprise with their more subtle passages, and even have a swing at times to their rhythm that could almost be interrupted as jazzy! But in the main, this is doom, chthonian metal crawling through a primal abyss.
Saccata Quartet ‘Septendecim’
(We Jazz) 28th June 2024
Avant-hard jazz from the impressive attacking foils Nels Cline, Chris Corsano, Darin Gray and Glenn Kotche, otherwise known as the Saccata Quartet. Stretching, squalling, tearing, drawing wild intensity and ariel droning and alien broadcasts from their apparatus, the free-jazz foursome sound like a harrowing and galloping, scattering merger of Faust, Roscoe Mitchell, Sam Rivers, Zappa and AEOC in a dense experimental world of scares and uncertainty. What’s not to love about that.
E.L. Heath ‘Cambrian’
(Wayside & Woodland) 7th June 2024
Perfectly congruous bedfellows of such scenic cartographers as Junkboy, and for that matter, the entire Wayside & Woodland roster, E.L. Heath’s rolling versent ambles and hazy countryside meanders evoke a pastoral picture of misty recollection, history and daydreams. Trainspotting has seldom sounded so diaphanous as Heath makes personalized, emotively drawn stops along the Cambrian Coast Railway; passing through the loveliest of scenic locations whilst wistfully sighing at the “decommissioned” stations, and unsympathetic, politically motivated and hardened discissions that have left scars across this humbling countryside vista. Totally captivating, a most wispy train ride down memory lane (or should that be memory tracks?).
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.
The Monthly Playlist For May 2024
May 31, 2024
CHOICE TRACKS FROM THE LAST MONTH, CHOSEN BY DOMINIC VALVONA/MATT OLIVER/BRIAN ‘BORDELLO’ SHEA

Representing the last 31 days’ worth of reviews and recommendations on the Monolith Cocktail, the Monthly Playlist is our chance to take stock and pause as we remind our readers and flowers of all the great music we’ve shared – with some choice tracks we didn’t get room or time to feature but added anyway.
Virgin Vacation ‘RED’
The Johnny Halifax Invocation ‘Thank You’
Chris Corsano ‘The Full-Measure Wash Down’
Essa/Pitch 92 Ft. Kyza, Klashnekoff, Tony D., Reveal, Doc Brown, Perisa, Devise, Nay Loco ‘Heavyweight$’
Hus KingPin ‘Tical’
Nana Budjei ‘Asobrachie’
Amy Rigby ‘Dylan In Dubuque’
The Garrys ‘Cakewalk’
La Luz ‘Always In Love’
Bloom De Wilde ‘Ride With The Fishes’
El Khat ‘Tislami Tislami’
Gabriel Abedi ‘Bra Fie’
Ibelisse Guardia Ferragutti & Frank Rosaly ‘TURBULENCIA’
Red Hot Org, Laraaji, Kronos Quartet, Sun Ra ‘Daddy’s Gonna Tell You No Lie’ (THIS MONTH’S COVER ART)
King Kashmere, Alecs DeLarge, HPBLK, Booda French, Ash The Author ‘Astro Children (Remix)’
Oddisee ‘Live From The DMV’
Amy Aileen Wood ‘Time For Everything’
Low Leaf ‘Innersound Oddity’
Jake Long ‘Celestial Soup’
Jonathan Backstrom Quartet ‘Street Dog’
Gordan ‘Sara’
Cuntroaches ‘III’
Morgan Garrett ‘Alive’
Cadillac Face ‘I Am The Monster’
Tucker Zimmerman ‘Advertisement For Amerika’
Poppycock ‘Magic Mothers’
Little Miss Echo ‘Hit Parade’
Olivier Rocabois ‘Stained Glass Lena’
Ward White ‘Slow Sickness’
Lightheaded ‘Always Sideways’
The Tearless Life w/ Band Of Joy ‘The Leaving-Light’
Michal Gutman ‘I’m The Walker’
Malini Sridharan ‘Beam’
Micha Volders & Miet Warlop ‘Hey There Turn’
Copywrite, Swab ‘Vibe Injection’
Napoleon Da Legend, DJ Rhettmatic ‘The King Walk’
Dabbla, JaySun, DJ Kermit ‘No Plan’
Gyedu-Blay Ambolly ‘Apple’
Brother Ali, unJUST ‘Cadillac’
Hometown Heros, DJ Yoda, Edo. G, Brad Baloo ‘What You Wanna Do’
Cities Aviv ‘Style Council’
Illangelo ‘The Escape’
Mofongo ‘Manglillo’
Aquaserge ‘Sommets’
Xqui, David Ness ‘The Confessions Of Isobel Gowdie’
Conrad Schnitzler ‘Slow Motion 2’
Noemi Buchi ‘Window Display Of The Year’
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.
BRIAN ‘BORDELLO’ SHEA’S REVIEW SECOND REVIEWS ROUNDUP OF MAY – INSTANT REACTIONS.

_____UNLESS STATED OTHERWISE, ALL RELEASES CAN BE PURCHASED RIGHT NOW
___/THE SINGLES\___
Bloom De Wilde ‘Ride With The Fishes’
Bloom De Wilde is back with this lovely taster single “Ride With The Fishes”, taken from her forthcoming album, which is due out later in the year. “Ride with The Fishes” is a jaunty pop gem that has a faint jazzy charm that will seduce and then abandon you only to then return without warning many times during the day and night, and each time will seduce you and then abandon you each time, once more leaving you in the height of tenterhooks awaiting the magical all too brief tuneful seduction.
Schizo Fun Addict ‘Elevation Versus Sabotage’
As any regular reader of my Monolith Cocktail new releases round ups will already know, I adore Schizo Fun Addict: a band that never disappoints and one I would hold up in comparison to any of the greats from the musical past.
They have a rare quality, a soulful heavenly innocence and belief in the healing power of music that really cannot be faked. And with this, their brand new single, they once again do not disappoint.
The A-side “Elevation Versus Sabotage” is a sublime jumble of post-punk guitar jangle – imagine The Byrds replacing Gene Clark and David Crosby with the girls from The B52’s and stumbling upon Delia Derbyshire high on E and trying to invent Acid-house. And the B –side, which really should be Double A-Side, is equally bewitching. “Coming To You” is a blissful reawakening of hope, melancholy and peace that once again draws you into what was all to briefly special from the Manchester music scene of the late 80’s before it became Madchester – if only the second Stone Roses album was as beautiful as this.
Johnny Halifax Invocation ‘Thank You’
This is rather wonderful in all its stompin glory. There is something quite Jimi Hendrix Experience-like about it. It both rocks and rolls in equal measure, and is darn sexy (darn sexy is a much underused review phrase). Have I tripped (in the falling sense) and banged my head and gone back to the splendour of 1968, I wonder… Darn Sexy.
___/THE ALBUMS-EPS\___
Eamon The Destroyer ‘Alternate Piranhas EP’
(Bearsuit Records) 31st May 2024
If entertaining electro psychedelica is your apple tree then this bunch of grapes is just what you want to enlighten your garden of delight. Imagine Dr Frankenstein as a mad music creator instead of the twisted misguided do gooder with a god complex, this EP could well be his creation, with parts taken from various musical genres and stitched together to make this a monster of a release.
Psych, indie, electro, folk, rock and shoegaze are all dabbled and twisted with, creating tracks with a healthy dose of originality and darkness and fortitude, with a underlying healthy dose of anger. Alternate Piranhas is a fine EP.
Little Miss Echo ‘S-T’
7th June 2024
Little Miss Echo are no fools. They have decided to self release their self-titled debut at the beginning of the summer, as this wonderful pop album is the perfect summer album. And so those in the know will be able to soundtrack their summer with this album of supreme popitude.
The late sixties and early 70s Beach Boys and Jellyfish collide with Stereolab and Saint Etienne and Air to create an album of wonky pure pop bliss. This is music you want playing from your car radio as you drive around town, or to soundtrack your night out. This is music with beauty and melody, written with great style and songwriting ability. It really needs and deserves to reach a large audience.
Al Hotchkiss ‘The Best & Bratwurst Of W.A. Hotchkiss – Volume None’
(Howling Moon Records)
Is Al Hotchkiss the Scottish Billy Childish, a man who over the last twenty years or so released music constantly under various guises. Here we have a fourteen-track compilation of some of those songs and guises: and an excellent compilation it is too. Psychedelic 60s influenced Garage rock mingles with blues and country influenced songs of wonder.
Al really deserves to be better known and is crying out to be discovered by a wider audience. It’s quite a mystery why he has not as he is head and shoulders above 99 percent of the artists who release music influenced by 60s rock ‘n’ roll and Garage Psych.
This album is a must have for all Garage rock enthusiasts, and really Al Hotchkiss should have a copy of Shindig magazine dedicated to the great man and his music.
Michal Gutman ‘Never Coming Home’
(Cruel Nature Records)
“Never Coming Home” is a darkly beautiful album; an album of twisted musical discovery, with songs worthy to fall from the lips and the pen of the great Dory Previn; songs that pull you into a strange and beguiling solitude place, where you only have memories and fears and regrets for company. Musically stark and bewitching like an unused broken fairground ride: a bass guitar has never sounded so much like the faded remnants of an old lover’s final kiss. “Never Coming Home” is quite simply stunning.
Pork Tapeworm ‘Taenia Solium EP’
This EP is made up of seven songs in less than six minutes and really does not give you chance to get bored. Six minutes of spiky guitar punk rock with short and sweet melodies. Imagine early Nirvana with the post punk artiness of Elastic. A really enjoyable listen.
Lightheaded ‘Combustible Gems’
(Slumberland)
“Combustible Gems” by the Lightheaded actually lives up to its name, as the album is indeed full of gems. Whether they are combustible or not is open to question – has anyone ever tried setting fire to twee indie-pop songs? I know lots of people who would love to, but me, well I’m rather fond of the jangly guitar and odes of love gone both wrong or right, and the Lightheaded have perfected the magic of the jangly guitar cheap keyboard and tuneful melody down to the tee (or should that be twee). This is an album for all those aficionados of C86 to lap up enjoy and add to their collection.
Hungrytown ‘Circus For Sale’
(Big Stir Records) 21st June 2024

This is the fourth album from Hungrytown, but the first I have had the pleasure of hearing, and indeed it is a pleasure as psych folk with more than a hint of baroque pop is right up my street. There is a beauty and calmness to it that one can lose themself in and ignore and forget briefly the day-to-day turmoil that surrounds them. Vocalist Rebbecca Hall is blessed with a magically sweet innocent voice that floats and weaves its way through the musical sea of melodious tranquility that wraps itself around the listener: pure bliss.
THE MONTHLY DIGEST OF ACCUMULATED NEW MUSIC; THE SOCIAL INTER-GENERATIONAL/ECLECTIC AND ANNIVERSARY ALBUMS CELEBRATING PLAYLIST; AND ANNIVERSARY PIECES FROM THE ARCHIVES.

THE NEW\___
boycalledcrow ‘Kullau
(Mortality Tables)
A musical atmospheric hallucination and psychedelic dream-realism of a roadmap, the latest transduced-style album from Carl M Knott (aka a boycalledcrow) takes his recollections, memory card filled photo albums, samples and experiences of travelling through Northern India between 2005 and 2006 and turns them into near avant-garde transported passages of outsider art music.
Escaping himself and the stresses and anxieties that had been plaguing him since adolescence, Knott chose to pick up the road less travail(ed) after graduating; making new friends along the way, including the artist (known as James) who provided the album’s image.
If you are aware of the Chester-based composer’s work under numerous labels, and his experiments with weird folk music and signature revolving, splayed, dulcimer and zither-like guitar transformations then Kullu will – albeit more psychedelic and mirage-like – fit in nicely with expectations.
Place names (that album title refers to the village, an ancient kingdom, of ‘Kullu’, which sits in the ‘snow-laden mountain’ province of Himachel Pradesh in the Western Himalayas), Buddhist self-transformation methods (the extremely tough self-observation process of “non-reaction” for the body and mind known as “Vipassana”), Hindu and Jainism yogis (the “Sadhu”, a religious ascetic, mendicant or any kind of holy person who has renounced the worldly life, choosing instead to dedicate themselves to achieving “moksha” – liberation – through meditation and the contemplation of God) and language (the localized distinctive Kullu dialect and syntax of “Kanashi”, currently under threat) are all used as vague reference points, markers in this hallucinatory grand tour.
These captured moments and memories are often masked. It’s the sound of Laaraji stepping across such dizzying spiritually beautiful high altitudes and descending into the valley below; the brief sound of tablas and an essence of reverberating Indian stringed instruments suddenly taking on abstracted forms or reversed and melted into a hazy dream cycle. Nothing is quite what it seems; the imagination reminiscing freely and taking source recordings off on curious tangent. And yet it all makes sense, and somehow quantifies, soundtracks a landscape and period we can identify and experience. You can even work out that much of that plucked, cylindrical, pitch and speed-shifted string sound is coming from the £27 guitar that Knott bought whilst on those same travels (picked up in Dehradun to be specific).
But as with all of Knott’s peregrinations, queries, unrestricted gazes, the sound is very much his own. If you would like some idea of what we are dealing with, maybe Walter Smetak, Land Observation in colour, Fabbrica Vuota, Gunn-Truscinski Nace, and with the playfully strange psychedelic ‘Tuktuk’ ride, a merger of Tortoise, Yanton Gat and Animal Collective. Mind you, the vague echoes of piped church music on ‘Bear River’ (which “bisects” the valley region in which Kullu sits) are closer to the spiritual new age and kosmische – perhaps a hint of David Gasper. If Knott’s soundboard is anything to go by he did indeed find that much needed replenishment of the senses and escape from the mental and health pressures of stress that handicapped his progress. He’s created dreamy encapsulation of a time without burden and restriction; an experience totally free of worry and the strains of the material world out near the roof of the Earth. The results of which can be heard to have clearly been beneficial artistically. Kullu is another magical, strange and explorative soundscape/soundtrack from an independent artist quietly getting on with harnessing a unique sound and way of capturing the impossible.
Amy Aileen Wood ‘The Heartening’
(Colorfield Records)
Not in the literal sense, but the award-winning drummer, multi-instrumentalist, composer and engineer Amy Aileen Wood takes centre stage on her new album for the Colorfield Records label.
The supporting foil on a range of albums and performances with such notable names as Fiona Apple (more from her later), St. Vincent, Tired Pony and Shirley Manson, Wood was initially approached by Colorfield instigator Pete Min (the imprint that’s run out of Min’s Lucy’s Meat Market studios in L.A.) to lead her own solo outing. And although Wood’s stand-out tactile feels and descriptive drumming skills maybe on show and at the forefront, the L.A. based polymath, whilst also playing a wide worldly range of instruments, invites a number of in-demand session players and artists to collaborate, including Apple. An unsurprising choice seeing as Wood’s was not only a member of the recording band on Apple’s Fetch The Bolt Cutters album but also its co-producer. From that same circle, the “veteran” bassist Sebastian Steinberg provides pliable and subtly effective upright bass parts to a majority of the tracks on The Heartening. Apple, for her part, offers cooing “dadodahs” and assonant light dreaminess on the album’s opener, the womb-breached submersed turn Can Unlimited Klezmer ‘Rolling Stops’, and both sighs and giggles of ‘self-love’ on the gamelan cascaded self-help indie-wonk ‘Time For Everything’. Another one of the various guests’ spots goes to Kelsey Wood (relation?), who coos and ahs on the kinetic Alfa Mist-esque ‘Slow Light’.
The Heartening is essentially, if removed and discombobulated or enhanced by a palette of different styles and influences, a jazz album; especially with the addition of the L.A. based saxophonist (amongst other talents) Nicole McCabe, who pushes those personalized thematic exploratory performances and freeform expressions towards flashes of Ivor Pearlman, Alex Roth, Donny McCaslin (I’m thinking especially of his cosmic dissipations), Dave Harrington (funny enough, referenced in the PR notes) and Savoy label era Yusef Lateef.
But the musicality is far reaching, hopping around and landing at one point in Java, the next, in Eastern Europe (those stirring closed-eyes arches, sighs and solace style strings of the renowned Daphne Chen reminding me of Fran & Flora and Alex Stolze’s Galicia classical sympathies). You could also throw in breakbeats, the downtempo, the no wave and various fun fusions into the mix; everything from J Dilla to NAH, TV On The Radio, Arto Lindsay, John Zorn and Lucrecia Dalt.
Wood’s own style of drumming (though as I mentioned, the multi-instrumentalist, true to that title, plays everything from nostalgic iconic midi synths and drum pads to the West African balafon and twines flicked kalimba) is halfway busy and halfway intuitive: a mix of Valentina Mageletti and Emre Ramazanoglo.
Wood is certainly a talented player and full of ideas, as the action moves constantly between the natural and improvised. With a mix of trepidation and “intrigue” Wood’s proves an able leader and catalyst. I’d say this solo venture was the successful start to a new pathway and adventures.
Virgin Vacations ‘Dapple Patterns’
From a multitude of sources, across a number of mediums, the concentrated sonic force that is Virgin Vacations ramp up the queasy quasars and the heavy-set slab wall of no wave-punk-jazz-maths-krautrock sounds on their debut long player. With room to expand horizons the Hong Kong (tough gig in recent years, what with China’s crackdowns on the free press and student activists; installing authoritarian control over the Island) ensemble lay out a both hustled, bustled and more cosmic psychedelic journey, from the prowling to the near filmic and quasi-operatic -from darkened forebode to Shinto temple bell-ringing comedowns that fade out into affinity.
Operating in a liminal realm between the ominous and more mysteriously idyllic; changing mood, sense of place and the sound on every other track; the ensemble channel everything from the Hifiklub, Angels Die Hard and The Pop Group in a wail of bugle horns post-punk jazz (ala Blurt and a vocal-less Biting Tongues) to ‘Gomorrha’ CAN, the Dead Kennedys, film-score Sakamoto, Hawkwind and the Holy Family. That’s of course when they’re not orbiting the celestial jazz of Sun Ra merged with Herbie Hancock on the heavenly spheres and alien evoked ‘Jupiter’: even this track grows into a manic nightmare of broken distorted radio sets.
The trip is a cosmic range of ideas, some driven others far more dreamy, psychedelic and even erring towards the orchestral – there’s plenty of bulb-like note-twinkled glockenspiel to go around too. It begins with a krautrock expulsion of dark materials and ends on a Tomat-like – in union with the Acid Mothers – dissipation of enveloped interplanetary temple vibrations. This only touches the surface however, and Virgin Vacations take flights of fantasy regularly whilst maintaining a heavy-pulsation of uncertainty. Energy is channeled in the right direction, with a force that manages to tap into the anxious and radical whilst finding air to breathe and dappled patterns spread of the title.
he didnt ‘nothingness manifested’
(Drone Alone Records) 24th May 2024
Granular gradients, frazzled fissures and currents appear in the thick set wall of drones emitted by the Oxfordshire-based electronic musician, guitarist and producer’s new numerically demarcated album.
Reading into the monolithic slab sided scale and ambitions of he didnt’s manifestations, these, mostly, long walls of whined, bended, looped, abrasive and sustained guitar and electronic waveforms elicit the feelings of landscape: one that can feel simultaneously overbearing, grand but in motion. Metallic filaments or the pitter-patter of acrid rain, ‘nothingness manifestations III-V’ builds a sonic picture over its duration of some almost alien atmospheric enveloped weather front – reminding me of Hans Zimmer’s bits on Blade Runner 2049, His Name Is Alive, Fiocz and a venerated Tangerine Dream. ‘nothingness manifestations II’ is similar with its alien evocations yet near bestial and slithery too – I’m hearing vague signs of Faust, Sunn O))) and even Spaceman 3 for some reason. Perhaps picking up inspiration from one previous support slot, he didnt channels The Telescopes, minus Stephen Lawrie’s drudgery vocals, and a touch of the J&MC on that heavy meta hewed opener.
But there’s holes too in what is more like a mesh block of wielding drones, with a glimmer, a movement of light audible in the grainy textured fabric around the self-described “void”. In short, something from nothing, materialisations from patterns in the sonic concrete that may just evoke something much bigger.
Ziad Rahbani ‘Amrak Seedna & Abtal Wa Harameyah’
(WEWANTSOUNDS)
Vinyl reprisal specialists WEWANTSOUNDS, in-between reviving and offering remastered runs of cult music from Japan, Egypt and elsewhere, have been picking their way through the back catalogue of the Lebanese polymath Ziad Rahbani (musician, composer, producer, playwright, satirist and activist).
Following on from the crate diggers’ choice 80s Middle Eastern disco-funk-balladry-soul-jazz-Franco-Arabian classic Houdou Nisbi (released by the label in 2022), the Amrak Seedna & Abtal Wa Harameyah combined moiety of congruous theatre play soundtracks offers a generous helping of performance choruses, instrumental theme tunes, ad spots and variations of the main signatures.
Whilst the ongoing sectarian driven civil war (between 1975 and 1990) raged, there was a surreal duel existence of stoicism, the Lebanese people carrying on with life in the face of religious rivalry, unprecedented violence, and infamous acts of massacre (a 150,000 fatalities, maybe more). Importantly Lebanese artists, musicians continued to create – some from abroad as part of a mass exodus (estimates are that a million citizens left the country to escape the horror during that period). Disarming as the musical motifs, dancing rhythms and messages was, cultural idols like Ziad (famously the scion of the feted musician and national star Assi Rahbani and the legendary celebrated siren Fairuz) were fervently political. And among his many talents, Ziad would collaborate with the most vocal of them, including the pioneer singer-songwriter of Arabian political song, Sami Hawat, who appears alongside a whole cast of other notable vocalists on this double helping of stage performances.
Written by fellow Lebanese playwright and actor Antoine Kerbaji, the main acts and catalysts for Ziad’s inspired fusion of the Occidental and Middle East, speak of the times in which they were created. Originally released on the Beirut-based cult label Relaxin in 1987, the emotions run high as the streets outside were paved in bloody retribution along the lines of not only religion (the Christian minority’s rule of decades, and elitist nepotism finally coming to a crashing head as the country’s demographic shifted to a Muslim majority, inflated by two migrations and expulsions from Israel of sizable Palestinians populations in the late 1940s and 60s) but also Cold War divisions. The passion is evident in the various cast or male/female led choruses of yearning expression and more swooning allurement – sometimes almost reminding me of Bollywood, and the dance or romance, courtship between a male and female lead.
Musically however, this is a mixed assortment of near classical piano motifs, Arabian stringed instrumental segments, the new wave, disco and funk fusion and movie soundtrack influences. Glaringly an obvious steal, there’s the recurring use of John Barry’s 007 signature score across a large slice of these tracks. Adopting that most famous iconic mnemonic and its variations, Ziad seems to pinch it back from its own Western takes on the music from his country and the wider region. Marvin Hamlisch dabbled in this area for The Spy Who Loved Me – although his take was on Egyptian disco -, as to did Bill Conti – a mix of Med sounds for For Your Eyes Only. So much of this reminds me of both those top rate composers, especially the near thriller style production and clavichord MOR funky fusion sounds of ‘Al Muqademah 1 (Introduction 1)’. Later on it sounds like Ziad riffs on Hamlisch’s score for The Sting on the relaxed jazzy vaudeville saloon barrel organ reminisce ‘Kabbaret Dancing’.
Away from the 007 themes there’s hints of John Addison and Michael Legrand on the Franco-Arabian boogie musical number ‘Al Piano’, and Richard Clayderman on the beautiful romantic-esque flourish of piano scales, runs and lucidity ‘Slow’. The music slips into the Tango at will, or transports the listener back to the noir 1930s. Although, ‘Mashhad Al Serk’ is a strange one, resembling funky calypso transmogrified with reggae and the new wave. I’m at a loss on occasion to describe what it is I’m hearing, as the palette is so wide and diverse. But in summary, both albums offer a cabaret and theater conjecture of fluidity that takes in the Middle East and fuses it with Western classicism, movie and TV themes, funk and 80s production signatures. Previously only ever released in the Lebanon, WWS have done the decent thing and revived these stage play soundtracks, offering us all a chance to own these expressive and enlightening recordings.
THE SOCIAL PLAYLIST VOLUME 86\____

The Social Playlist is an accumulation of music I love and want to share, tracks from my various DJ sets and residencies over the years, and both selected cuts from those artists, luminaries we’ve lost and those albums celebrating anniversaries each month.
Running for over a decade or more, Volume 86 is as eclectic and generational-spanning as ever. Look upon it as the perfect radio show, devoid of chatter, interruptions and inane self-promotion.
In this edition I’ve chosen to mark the 50th anniversaries of Sparks Kimono In My House, Bowie’s Diamond Dogs, Slapp Happy’s Self-Titled – but referred to as Casablanca Moon, after the opening track -, and Popol Vuh’s Einsjager & Siebenjager albums. A decade closer, and into the 80s, I’ve included tracks from my favourite French new wave spark and cool chanteuse Lizzy Mercier Descloux and her Zulu Rock LP of ’84, plus a slightly different performance of Echo & The Bunnymen’s ‘The Killing Moon’ (the original single also included on the Liverpool’s band’s Ocean Rain of course). Another leap closer, and its 30th anniversary nods to the Beastie Boys ambitious double-album spread Ill Communication, Jeru The Damaja’s The Sun Rises In The East, and The Fall’s Middle Class Revolt. The final anniversary spot this month goes to our very own Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea, or rather the whole Shea brood and their might lo fi cult vehicle The Bordellos. The group’s summary of the world and music industry, Will.I.Am, You’re Really Nothing, is ten years old this month.
We lost even more iconic mavericks and leaders of the form this last month or so. Grabbing, quite rightly, the most attention is the loss of Steve Albini. The legacy is ridiculous, and to be honest, far too many people have already dedicated the space for me to now chip in – I will be frank, where do you start? And so I have chosen to give him a mention but not to pay the homage due. We also lost the last remaining member of the motor city five, Dennis “Machine Gun” Thompson, who pummeled and, quite literally, kicked out the fucking jams. I’ve already made note and selected tracks from their catalogue when poor old Wayne Kramer passed just a few months back, and also their manager – for a time between drug busts – John Sinclair. The Detroit misfits are no more. What a sad state of affairs.
I have however chosen to mark the passing of UK rap icon MC Duke and king of twang, and one of the most important, influential guitarists of all time, Duane Eddy.
There’s a couple of “newish” selections – tracks that I either missed or didn’t get room to include in the Monolith Cocktail team’s Monthly Playlists (next edition due in a week’s time) – from Masei Bey and Martina Berther which I hope will prove intriguing. The rest of the playlist is made up of a smattering of tracks from Tucky Buzzard, Prime Minister Pete Nice, The Bernhardts, Nino Rota, It It, Clive’s Original Band, The Four King Cousins and more.
TRACK LIST________
Sparks ‘Barbecutie’
Tucky Buzzard ‘Time Will Be Your Doctor’
Haystacks Balboa ‘Bruce’s Twist’
David Bowie ‘1984’
Masei Bey ‘Beat Root’
Beastie Boys Ft. Q-Tip ‘Get It Together’
Jeru The Damaja ‘You Can’t Stop The Prophet’
Prime Minister Pete Nice Ft. Daddy Rich ‘Rat Bastard’
MC Duke ‘I’m Riffin 1990 Remix’
Helene Smith ‘Willing And Able’
The Bernhardts ‘Send Your Heart To Me’
Tala Andre Marie ‘Wamse’
Lizzy Mercier Descloux ‘Dolby Sisters Saliva Brothers’
Orchestre regional de Segou ‘Sabu Man Dogo’
Slapp Happy ‘Casablanca Moon’
Nino Rota ‘L’Uccello Magico’
Duane Eddy ‘Stalkin”
Dreams So Real ‘History’
Echo & The Bunnymen ‘The Killing Moon – Life at Brian’s Version’
The Bordellos ‘The Gospel According To Julian Cope’
The Fall ‘Middle Class Revolt’
It It ‘Dream Joel Dream’
David Bowie ‘Rock ‘n’ Roll With Me’
The Bordellos ‘Straight Outta Southport’
Clive’s Original Band ‘Oh Bright Eyed One’
Jodie Lowther ‘Cold Spell’
Martina Berther ‘Arrow’
Fursaxa ‘Poppy Opera’
Popol Vuh ‘Wo Bist Du?’
The Four King Cousins ‘God Only Knows’
ARCHIVES\_____

When gracing the Monolith Cocktail with his very own column of reviews was still years away, Brian “Bordello” Shea was featured for his own music as part of the mighty lo-fi malcontents The Bordellos – Brian one of the co-founding Shea sibling forces behind that celebrated cult outfit. Still for my money one of their finest moments on record, the group’s Will.I.Am, You’re Really Nothing (released at a time when that annoying, talentless opportunist was all over the telly and in the charts in the UK) diatribe is ten years old this month. To celebrate, reprise that essential songbook, I’m once more sharing my original review from 2014. Every word of it still, unfortunately, still holds today.
The Bordellos ‘Will.I.Am, You’re Really Nothing’
(Small Bear Records) Released 31st May 2014
It was Blur, in one of their only true flashes of inspiration, who came closest to summing up the times with their dejected conclusion that, “modern life is rubbish”. That was the early 90s, but depending on how long in the tooth, worn-down and jaded you are, every age can be viewed with the same disappointing sigh of resignation.
Yet, surely the present times take some beating, at least to us, the self-appointed custodians of the past, who remember an age when the culture seemed…. well, at least exciting, linear and comprehendible, instead of appropriated without thought or context, screwed-over and manipulated for largely commercial results, and slotted in to a handy off-the-peg lifestyle choice. Pop has eaten itself, with the lifecycles of trends and music becoming ever shorter.
It is with all this in mind that The Bordellos set out their manifesto. Leveling their criticism at commercial radio and TV especially, they aim their guided missile attacks at the harbingers of the Ed Sheeran topped Urban/Black music power lists, and what seems more and more like the UK publicity wing of conservatism, the BBC. The St. Helens, via a disjointed Merseybeat imbued lineage, family affair replace the “happy-go-lucky” lightweight and deciding suspect womens rights champion, totem of Pharrell Williams, Will.I.Am and all his partners in floppy platitude pop, rock and folk with the arch druid of counter-cultural esotericism and miscreant obscure musical sub-genres (Kraut to Jap via Detroit rebellious and experimental rock) Julian Cope. Grinding out a dedicated epistle to Cope, the trio’s sermon ‘The Gospel According To Julian Cope’ prompts a road to Damascus conversion to the spirit of rock’n’roll, in all its most dangerous guises.
De facto idol, Mr.Cope, pops up again on ‘My Dream Festival’, which as the title suggests is a list of the ideal, once in a lifetime, free festival lineups of lineups; read out in a quasi-Daft Punk ‘teachers’ style bastardized litany to an accompanying Casio pre-set drum track and watery effects. The Casio rhythm pre-sets and occasional sound bites come in handy again on the jaunty, deadpan disco jolly, ‘Elastic Band Man’ – a transmogrified Human League meets John Foxx – and on the broken-up, Robert Wyatt emotional drudge, ‘Between Forget And Neglect’.
Despite going at it hammer and tongs on their anvil-beating Cope Gospel, The Bordellos latest long-player protestation is a forlorn and intimate downbeat record. They can still be relied upon to rattle off a list of grievances and opprobrious pun harangued song titles: from the LP’s play-on-words adopted The Smiths song, reworked to accommodate a big fuck-you to that irritable twat, Will.I.Am, to name-checking another hyperbole anomaly of our Youtube, Google, Facebook, Twitter masters’ bidding, the no less frustratingly lame ‘Gangnam style’ viral – joining the call from last year’s Bring Me The Head Of Justin Bieber EP, for another public execution.
But it’s with a certain lamentable introspection that they also tone the vitriol down to attend to matters of the heart: The kiss-me-quick, misty-eyed ballad to love on a northern coast seaside town, ‘Straight Outta Southport’, and the Hawaiian slide guitar country rock ode, ‘The Sweetest Hangover’, both, despite their tongue-in-cheek titles, bellow a fondness for lovelorn adventures and plaintive break-up regret; proving that despite the bellicose calls for the corporal punishment of the foppish elite and its commercial pop music stars, there is a tender side to the group.
Sounding like it was recorded on an unhealthy dose of Mogadon, Will.I.Am, You’re Really Nothing is a composed grumble from the fringes of a battered musical wilderness. A last cry if you will from the pit-face of rock’n’roll.
Also this month, Bowie’s repurposed Orwellian theatre production Diamond Dogs reaches its 50th anniversary.

David Bowie ‘Diamond Dogs’
(RCA) 1974
“As they pulled you out of the oxygen tent, you asked for the latest party…” And with that the future dystopian, biota canine, leapt from its slumber “onto the streets below”: howling for more.
Bowie never really wanted to be a musician as such: or at least not wholly a musical act. His destiny lied with the grease paint of theatre and allure of cinema. Diamond Dogs of course allowed him to create a spectacle, melding the two disciplines together.
Fate would force the original concept to morph into the achingly morbid and glam-pop genius we’ve now come to love: a planned avant-garde, ‘moonage’, treatment of Orwell’s revered novel 1984 was rebuked by the author’s estate.
Still those augural references to state control and totalitarianism are adhered to throughout – both lyrically and in the song titles –, but attached to visions of a new poetic hell!
The loose, all-encompassing, metaphysical language may promise melancholy and despair, yet it also knows when to anthemically sound the rock’n’roll clarion call too.
Decreed as the leading highlight’s of the album by the majority –
Diamond Dogs (single), Rebel Rebel (single), 1984
Pay attention to these often overlooked beauties –
Rock’n’Roll With Me (single), Sweet Thing
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.
OUR FRIENDS AT Kalporz BRING OUR ATTENTION TO A NEW BAND
AUTHORED BY Nicola Guerra TRANSLATED BY Dominic Valvona

Continuing our successful collaboration with the leading Italian music publication Kalporz , the Monolith Cocktail shares and translates reviews, interviews and other bits from our respective sites each month. Keep an eye out for future ‘synergy’ between our two great houses as we exchange posts during 2024 and beyond. This month regular Kalporz Nicola Guerra introduces us to the noise of cacophony Berlin trio Cuntroaches, who released their debut album back in February.
Cuntroaches ‘S-T’
(Skin Graft)
The name would be enough to include them among the groups that make chaos a reason for living.
Then you listen to these 30 minutes at full volume while life goes on normally around you, and you’ve already fallen in love with it.
Because how can you not love those who commit terrorism without killing anyone? How can you not love those who, in a world of people who are set and all the same, decide to set up a refuge of noise to isolate themselves from it?
Still me and my clique of (music) junkies ask ourselves why we are increasingly attracted to this.
It’s not music. The melody is practically non-existent. Cacophony under the pitch black blanket of noise.
A German trio making their debut that is intimidating to watch.
No, it’s not the attraction towards something ever more extreme, it’s the ability to deal with discomfort by doing something.
Here, it is the action of these groups that makes everything more true.
And taking action is always better than living passively.
SCORE: 77/100
A ROUNDUP OF NEW MUSIC REVIEWS BY CULT INSTIGATOR OF THE NO-FI, AND SIBLING BAND MEMBER OF THE MIGHTY BORDELLOS, BRIAN SHEA.

La Luz Photo by Ginger Fierstein
____/SINGLES\____
La Luz ‘I’ll Go With You’
(Sub Pop)
I like this. It has a feel of 1968 psychedelica without sounding like it was recorded in the 60s; a song that captures a hazy lazy summers day of yearning and going in and out of dream like states with the silent wish of eccentricity transferred onto the watching eyes of the passing expectant teenage wish monger who has just discovered the magic of Odyssey and Oracle. A woozy gem of a single.
The Tearless Life ‘The Leaving Light’
The Tearless Life’s second single “The Leaving Light” is a rather fetching blissful experimental pop song that reminds one of both early Mercury Rev and a Psychic TV. In a rare playful pop mode it features Johnny Brown from Band Of Holy Joy on vocals, who offers up the first sprouts of sunshine on the dismal horizon that has been 2024 so far. It’s a one that could well end up blasting from your local alternative radio station if there is any justice in this land of ours.
Amy Rigby ‘Dylan In Dubuque’
(Tapete Records)
I like this single even if it is basically Elvis Costello’s ‘Tokyo Storm Warning’ with different lyrics. But if you are going to rip off someone why not rip off the best. It’s better than ripping off Oasis or some other overrated non-entity. And the new lyrics are very good even if they are not as good as Elvis Costello’s ‘Tokyo Storm Warning’.
The Garrys ‘Cakewalk’
(Grey Records)
I like this single. A smooth sultry drift into twangy guitar psych; the kind of beauty that you would find on the one and only album Livin’ Love by the Feminine Complex way back in 1969 – high praise indeed. Hopefully The Garrys will not be too long in delivering an album.
____/ALBUMS\____
Poppycock ‘Magic Mothers’
24th May 2024
I remember playing on the same bill as Poppycock a number of years ago in Oldham. I didn’t realise they where still going, but I am very pleased they still are as I enjoyed their set that night. And it is always nice to share a bill with a post punk legend, as Poppycock includes Ex Fall/Blue Orchids member Una Baines.
Magic Mothers is their debut album, and a rather nice album it is as well. It’s a slightly jazzy psych folk affair reminiscent at times of the all girl lost Sixties psych band The Feminine Complex – especially the album opener ‘Let It out’, which is rather beautiful indeed. And my favourite track on the album, ‘Lizardman’ is full on psychedelic (another gem of a track): one I can imagine her former band The Blue Orchids performing. The whole album is joy. I love the mix of jazz, folk and psychedelic pop: alas, if only the last Zombies album was as enjoyable as this.
Neon Kittens ‘It’s A NO Thing’
(Metal Postcard Records)
I am pleased to say that the Neon Kittens are back with a new album, another album of post-punk no wave sexiness. I do love the Kittens. They’re a band I think are only a BBC 6 music play away from crossing over to the mainstream. And I’m sure that one-day will be claimed to have been discovered by John Robb as he was brushing his kitchen floor.
The Kittens have a magic and their own sound: The guitar wizardry of Andy G (In a ideal world David Bowie would not be dead and Andy would be his guitarist songwriter partner) and the spoken, I am going to shove my stiletto shoe heel into your yearning heart, vocal coolness of Nina K. The Neon Kittens are one of those rare bands; we need them more than they need us.
Nicolette And The Nobodies ‘The Long Way’
(Arthaus Music)
It’s very rare, that I get country music sent to me to review. Which is both a good and bad thing, as on the whole I really don’t like modern country music. But I do love country music from the 50s, 60s and 70s, and I’m pleased to say that Nicolette and The Nobodies have taken their influences from those decades.
I grew up in a house that was soundtracked by country music, as my late father was obsessed with it. And at an early age and I could sing the back catalogue of Johnny Cash, Dolly Parton and George Jones and many others off by heart. The greatest compliment I can give this album is that it would not have sounded out of place soundtracking my childhood, in that old terrace house in St Helens. An album that lovers of old-fashioned country music should add to their collection.
Tibshelf ‘In The Ellington Conception’
(Cruel Nature Records)
Can you imagine if the mighty Krautrock legends Faust had decided they wanted to jump the disco and dance bandwagon of 1976 (what do you mean you haven’t …what on earth do you do to pass the time?!), for that is what the opening track “Threshold” on this fine cassette reminds me off, all funky get down and get with it strangeness noise boogie.
The rest of the album is equally entertaining with the sound of Stings mate Shaggy getting locked in an amusement arcade with only video games for company on the track “All Mega” and the sublime “Faders” – my favourite of the quite excellent five tracks. It is always a pleasurable way to spend half an hour or so lost in the instrumental artform (with the occasional sampled vocal/voice), especially when it combines quirkiness, experimentation, melody and danceability in such a natural rewarding way.
Ward White ‘Here Come The Dowsers’
(Think Like A Key) 17th May 2024
I get sent lots of albums of this type to review; the power pop-tinged guitar-based singer-songwriter variety all of varying quality. After a while it can all get very samey, and if you listen to a few in a row you can actually get confused about what artist you are trying to write about, trying to find something a little different to cling onto. But I’m happy to report with Ward White there is no such problem. White is a guitar based singer songwriter with power pop leanings, but has a slightly artier feel; a man with a more upper class quality to his voice with a touch of the 70s Scott Walker, John Howard and lyrically painting pictures/vignettes with a precise detail that at times remind me of the wonderful Ami Mann.
So if anyone is currently drowning in the mass of power pop guitar based albums being released and wondering which to go for next, I would plump for this excellent album of songs tinged with a much superior air than your common everyday power pop offerings.
Cadillac Face ‘Songs For The Trees’
(Weltschmerzen)
This is a beautiful album; an album of lo-fi singer-songwriting bewitchery. An album full of heart and soul, broken hearts and tortured soul: the best kind of heart and soul. This is the best kind of lo-fi album, one that demonstrates that beautiful songs of fragility are best recorded in a way that sounds like it is going to fall into little pieces at anytime, as brittle as the heart that is writing and singing and performing the magic; proving that sometimes all you need is an acoustic guitar and songwriting talent with something to sing about.
The Perusal #55: Liraz, Ibelisse Guardia Ferragutti & Frank Rosaly, Ghana Special 2, Bab L’ Bluz…
May 7, 2024
A WORLD OF SONIC/MUSICAL DISCOVERIES REVIEWED BY DOMINIC VALVONA
(Unless stated otherwise, all releases are available now)

Various ‘Ghana Special 2: Electronic Highlife & Afro Sounds In The Diaspora 1980-93’ (Soundway Records) 10th May 2024
The first decade of the new millennium proved a fruitful period for (re) discovering Africa’s rich dynamic and explosive music heritage, with both (through their various Afro-funk and Afro-psych compilations) Soundway Records and Analog Africa (in particular their influential African Scream Contests) spoiling connoisseurs and those with just a curiosity alike to sounds rarely heard outside the continent. The former’s original five album Ghana Special spread was one such indispensable collection from that time; a perfectly encased box set survey of one of Africa’s most important musical junctions.
Now, unbelievably, a full twenty years later Soundway have followed up that “highlife” triumph with a second volume; moving the action on into a new decade. Crossing over, just, from the inaugural edition’s 1968 to 1981 span, Ghana Special 2: Electronic Highlife & Afro Sounds In The Diaspora picks up in the 80s as Ghana’s signature highlife phenomenon went through yet another evolution, incorporating the tech of the time: from drum machines to synths. From marching big bands and tea dances in colonial times to the explosive embrace of wailing R&B and funk, highlife kept on moving through the decades. And as that helpful title makes clear, this eighteen-track survey hones in on the electronic enhanced, augmented phase of that genre’s development during a period in which many of Ghana’s most promising music stars had been forced to leave for Europe and further afield.
The diaspora in this case a result of a particular authoritarian period in Ghana’s post-colonial history. Following Ghana’s promising independence from Britain in the late 50s the political landscape tossed around between the rule of military coups and civil governments: the only constant, Ghana’s impressive musical pedigree and its influence across the continent. In light of particularly damaging and disastrous economic policies in the late 70s, and with the quelling and censorship of musicians – previously so popular that their support or protestations could prove vital in a political leader’s survival – there was a mass exodus of talent.
As the new decade beckoned Ghana became a hostile environment for its artists, many of whom would join the migratory caravan of workers leaving to find jobs in an increasingly welcoming West Germany (a booming economy and desperate need for workers resulted in a relaxation of the immigration laws and work permits). The cities of Berlin, Hamburg and Dusseldorf were havens for this influx of Ghanaians; proving a fruitful network for a new musical fusion between the locals and their new arrivals called “Bürger life”, named after the German word for “citizen”. A hybrid of German new wave, post krautrock loosened dance sounds and modern tech, Bürger life transformed the original Afro-musical trends through such progenitors of the scene as George Darko and Charles Amoah. Both artists feature here, Darko with his sun-hazed fusion of Masekela, Sunny Adé, the Phantom Band and Lounge Lizards ‘Kaakyrie Nva’, and Amoah with the 80s modern R&B pop steal and whistled and tingled starry ‘Fre Me (Call Me)’. Of a similar ilk, Starlife’s cosmic suffused ‘Amoma Koro’ sounds like a tropical soca infused Flow Motion (and Out Of Reach) era CAN at times.
Speaking of soca (the “soul of calypso” shorthand), that Afro-Caribbean style can be found on the funky disco sauntering, “wahoo”, opener ‘Ebe Ye Yie Ni’ by The Godfathers, and on Pat Thomas’s swayed plea ‘Gye Wani’ – the highlife horns all still in attendance, blazed but subdued and more relaxed. The Gold Coast vocalist and songwriter (Ebo Taylor foil to boot) Thomas had previously worked with the iconic Marijata trio back in Ghana, but emigrated to Berlin in 1979, like so many artists on this compilation.
A standout tune (of many) and extensive workout (like many tracks on this compilation, more like a 12” dance mix in duration), the Pepper, Onion, Ginger & Salt ingredients named obscurities turn out a smooth crossover of downtown NYC (think Don Cherry produced by Ramuntcho Matta), Osibisa and the Lijado Sisters – there’s even a sort of quasi-loose rap vocal at one point. Another standout name (as it were), the revitalized in recent years Ghanian icon Gyedu Blay Ambolley is famous for his breakout hit ‘Simigwa-Do’ and early adoption of hip-hop – fusing it with highlife to form the highly influential and inventive “hiplife” genre. Ambolley appeared on the original Ghana Special by the way. But on this occasion, in a new decade and phase, he picks up hints of Grace Jones and Herbie Hancock on the Island life funky ‘Apple’.
At this point I can’t not mention Dadadi’s fun ‘Jigi Jigi’ track, a soca-light flight from Accra to Havana in the mode of a carnival celebrating Kid Creole.
Synthesized and programmed, the old highlife rhythms/percussion is just about audible as the smother 80s technology rounds out much of the rougher signatures, replacing some traditional instruments and sounds with keys and keytar, slap bass and wobbly effects. But the sleekness can’t hide those vibrant roots, even when embracing reggae, boogie and the new wave. Ghana Special part two is a refreshing map of the diaspora fusions and hybrids that spread across Europe during a time of movement and turmoil from Ghana’s hotbed of influential stars and musicians. In highlighting the stories and journeys of Ghana’s émigrés, and in introducing us to those sounds, movements that remain either forgotten or just not as celebrated, Volume 2 will become as indispensable as the first. If you were fortunate enough (and without rubbing it in, I was lucky enough to purchase the original on its release) in acquiring that first box set then this latest compilation will sit beside it very nicely. And that is my way of saying that you should buy a copy.
Bab L’ Bluz ‘Swaken’
(Real World)
An embodiment of the Moroccan “Nayda” (“up”) youth movement for change in the Arab World, the fuzz-toned electrified Bab L’ Bluz launched their debut album in a tumultuous political climate; just as COVID gripped the global newsfeeds and moved the focus away from the fallout from the Arab Spring.
Fronted and built around the playing energy and voice of Yousra Mansour, this female-led troupe embraces the influences of rock-blues gods Led Zeppelin and Morocco’s very own version of The Rolling Stones, Nass El Ghiwane, matching it with a myriad of Arabian sounds and traditions from North and Western Africa; all of which are transformed from their conservative and male dominating roots into a feminist-strong message of empowerment.
Mansour’s protestations for equality – in everything from inheritance laws to the gender wage gap and roles in society – rung out in the wake of civil unrest, governmental crackdowns and censorship to the buzz and clattering/rustled rhythms of acid-garage-blues-psych-rock and Morocco’s age-old Gnawa tradition of spiritualist invocation and trance. Previously the sole (more or less) preserve of the patriarch, and against the odds, Mansour learnt to play many native Moroccan styles: standing out especially for studying the “guembri”, a three-stringed bass-like lute that is then electrified.
That debut album set a blaze, evoking Arabia’s own experiments in the 1970s with rock music fusions, the psychedelic and prog-rock whilst, like a tornado or whirling dervish, spinning through the region and absorbing everything on offer, from Mauritania Griot and Hassani to Chabbi and the Islamic dances, poetry and exalted music of Morocco itself. This same hybrid of sounds continues on the group’s newest album, Swaken, a title that when translated from the region’s Darija dialect (the main language of the Nayda movement) encompasses the transcendent rituals of Morocco’s spiritual possession ceremonies.
Invoking visitations and a dialogue with the past, Bab L’ Bluz (made up of Mansour and band mates Brice Bottin, Ibrahim Terkemani and Jérôme Bartolome) open up their signature edge and buzz to even more influences than usual. After honing their performances on an extensive tour schedule, they’ve taken on a far rockier, even heavier sound. Led Zeppelin at both their loudest and also most acoustic permeate this album’s eleven tracks spread – that and early 70s The Who, especially on the closing roused and riled ‘Mouja’. And with the whistled and airy peul flute making an appearance, there’s even a hint of progressive folk too.
The scope then is wide, taking in echoes of Liraz-style pop, the Sahara and North African desert song of Aziz Brahim, the blowing piped Sufi music of Bargou 08, the evolved Gnawa music of Houssam Gania, trills of Griot, Modern R&B and evocations of Nahawa Doumbia, Dimi Mint Abba, Baba Zulu and Noura Mint Seymali. The lyrical messages sung across the Berber trails, in the cities and in the shadow of the sand dunes are just as varied: anger at inaction and lament for the growing number of suicides and cases of depression in Morocco being just two such subjects.
Bab L’ Bluz scale new heights whilst also reflecting with passages of more acoustic downtime as they once again amplify and kick into touch conformity and restraint. New vices twist and transport Arab traditions and the spiritual communions for a both rock-heavy and electrifying new wave album of polemic, the mystical, cosmic and the blues. Nothing less than an essential album from an essential band built for our times.
Liraz ‘Enerjy’
(Batov Records) 17th May 2024
It’s hardly surprising that with the ongoing conflict between the nefarious Iranian regime and its neighbours, and with the continued oppression of its own population, that attempting to show the Middle Eastern titan in a good light is frustratingly difficult (an understatement in itself). Especially when you’re Jewish and part of that atavistic empire’s age-old Jewish community that stretches right back to Persia’s Biblical entry in the Old Testament: A community originally bound in chains, the spoils of conquest marched into slavery in 727BC, but eventually granted citizenship and even given the right of return to build a new temple in Jerusalem by the more enlightened Cyrus in the 6th century BC. Or that one of your most famous roles on screen is playing a clandestine Mossad agent on a mission to infiltrate the Iranian air defenses so that Israel can disable a nuclear reactor (the Apple+ series Tehran). But the actress, dancer, and electronic pop siren Liraz Charhi was willing to give it a good go, covertly recording several cinematic lensed Middle Eastern fantasies with a myriad of Iranian musicians under the radar of the ayatollah hardliners, over the internet.
In a climate in-which tolerance is scarce, and with most creative forms and freedoms of expression attracting, at the very least, suspicion, and at the worse, imprisonment, even death, trying to make a record with a strong feminine message seems an almost impossibly dangerous task: Liraz’s collaborators on the album’s Zan and Roya remain anonymous indefinitely for their own safety.
Liraz’s family were forced to escape during the tumultuous upheavals of Iran’s revolution in the 70s; setting up home in Israel’s capital, Tel Aviv, a safe haven for those escaping an ever-authoritarian Islamic regime. That city has grown to become an artistic community of foreigners, living cheek-in-jowl with both an older Israeli population and diaspora of Jews from around the globe. Liraz however, still feels bound to that Iranian heritage. And it seems when listening to her evocative soothed and lush bright vocals, she is the latest in a long line of strong outspoken women from that community. A baton has been handed down you could say.
Feeling adrift, Liraz upped sticks to become an actress in L.A. Little did she know that the city would open her eyes to another concentration of Iranian émigrés, including many from the Iranian-Jewish community. Whilst starring in major productions such as Fair Game and A Late Quartet, Liraz would find comfort and a sense of belonging in that diaspora. She’d learn much absorbing both the ancient musical traditions and the pop and disco that filled the clubs in a pre-revolutionary, pro-miniskirt Tehran, including such famed Iranian acts as Googoosh and Mahasty.
It was much in part down to the courage of the women in this astoundingly large community (so large that L.A. is nicknamed “Tehrangeles”) that emboldened Liraz to take up singing. She would record her debut Persian imbued album Naz in 2018, inspired by those whose only outlet and determination of self-identity and freedom was through music. Two years later and once more ingrained in that atavistic land’s richly woven musical history, she enacted a clandestine connectivity between cultures on the “second chapter”, Zan.
Prompted by the death of Mahsa Jina Amini in the custody of the authorities in 2022, an ensuing battle of ideals and freedoms from the women and a new generation in Iran threatened to topple the tyranny. However, the regime has pushed back harder than ever and with an almost unprecedented violence started executing (mainly men so far, with the rapper Toomaj Salehi only just in the last week or so sentenced to death for criticising the regime) supporters and activists on trumped up, tortured confessional charges of treason. Women are routinely taken off the streets by the so-called morality police and raped, whilst only in the last year school age girls from all over the country were poisoned. But even in the face of this bloody repression history is on the side of Iran’s younger more liberal generations. However, with the barbaric, evil attack on Israel by Hamas on October 7th 2023, Iran has weighed in with various proxy attacks. In the last month – after Israel attacked their consulate in Syria – Iran has escalated its campaign, launching, in one night, a 300-plus missile/drone attack on Israel itself. In a less dramatic tit-for-tat, Israel launched a retaliatory missile at the Isfahan region inside Iran.
The unfolding horror in the wake of Hamas’s emboldened sickening attack last year, has seen the IDF level Gaza to near rubble and dust; the casualty and deaths, whether you believe Hamas’s figures or not, are impossible to justify. Battle lines have been drawn across the world; protest marches have now become part of the daily routine.
One of the most scary and depressing consequences of this conflict has been with the record-breaking growth of anti-Semitism across Europe and North America. Division has been sown down political lines of grievance: you either stand with Palestine or Israel it seems, with no room for nuance, the complexities let alone balance. The sheer mindlessness and oblivious lack of decency by many is staggering; with opinions cast, placards held, and slogans shouted by people without the faintest clue or knowledge of what they pontificate. You can quite rightly rile against or denounce both parties in this escalating conflict, but to only take one side is disingenuous at best, at worst, deplorable. Yes, the catalyst argument is trotted out every time, but if we want history lessons and context, we should go back not just 70-odd years but a thousand, two thousand.
It’s with this in mind that Liraz has become just one of the voices behind the #MeTooUnlessYouAreAJew campaign that grew in the face of complete silence and inaction from the world community when Hamas murdered and eviscerated and raped its Israeli victims on that fateful day – they continue to use sexual violence as a weapon against the female hostages that were taken on that same day, a number of which remain in and around Gaza, yet to be handed back. Those hostages that have been freed, made it out alive and been rescued by the IDF, testify to such heinous crimes. Feeling betrayed and abandoned at the lack of any outcry or even a recognition of these events at the UN, in international circles, and on International Women’s Day, a movement was born. Liraz was recently invited to represent that movement at the UK’s House Of Lords, where she read out a poignant, personal (as with so many citizens of Israel, Liraz lost members of her own extended family and friends that day) statement.
“I suffer terribly from all the human pain in this war on both sides. I wish for the abducted to return to their families in Israel. I want the suffering of the innocent Palestinian people to end. I am praying for peace and justice for all.”
And so, her latest EP of dazzling Middle Eastern and Arabian disco and fuzz toned psychedelia arrives with a message of hope, reconciliation. The message: “Now is the time to change the energy (or “Enerjy”) frequency”.
After releasing a couple of albums for Glitterbeat Records, the Persian-Israeli star takes up residence at the Middle Eastern grooves promoting Batov label – perhaps Liraz’s natural home. Working with the highly prolific Israeli singer-songwriter, guitarist & musical producer, Uri Brauner Kinrot, who’s groups include Ouzo Bazooka and Boom Pam – both of which can be picked up across all four tracks on this fantastical dynamic empowered EP – Liraz probably reaches her zenith as a feminist siren of The Levant, balancing pure Egyptian-Moroccan-Lebanese-Israeli glitterball zappy nostalgic exotic disco and pop with Anatolian psych and feminine strength.
Once more in the Farsi language, she sings equally from a position of power and yearning; like an Iranian chanteuse swooning and swirling, mystical and soulful. Liraz bangs the tambourine to Arabian-futuristic grooves, cosmic rays, vapour swirls, wisps of mirages and some of the most danceable music to have left the region in years. Within that framework I’m hearing shades of Altın Gün, Elektro Hafiz, and a host of equally charismatic singers from the Arab world.
You really can’t fault the quality and production, the songs and delivery. The emotional charge, the anguish and lament are unmistakable, even at its most lush and upbeat. Liraz disarms a powerful statement with elan and skill to produce an incredible lively and danceable record of pop excellence.
Ibelisse Guardia Ferragutti & Frank Rosaly ‘MESTIZX’
(International Anthem X Nonesuch)
Transformed and remoulded for a more progressive age the “MESTIZX” title of this partnership’s debut album takes the Spanish term for “mixed person” (namely, a union between those indigenous people in the Latin conquered territories of South America and the Spanish) away from its colonial roots and repurposes it on an album of dream realism duality.
With the multimedia performer and singer Ibelisse Guardia Ferragutti’s Bolivian and the jazz drummer Frank Rosaly’s Puerto Rican heritages, the pre-colonial history of South America is woven into a contemporary revision of magic, organic forms and ritual rhythms mixed with elements and a suffusion of Chicago post-rock, post-jazz and alternative Latin leftfield pop.
Without repeating the storytelling liner notes and various quotes, the duo explore their “outsider”, “other”, status as the ancestors of that mixed ethnicity: neither wholly a part of the atavistic nor Spanish (and to a point, as they crossover into Brazil, Portuguese) lineages they both feel detached, and to some degrees, uprooted from their legacy, and yet take advantage of it to weave such worldly creative perspectives. In a state of certain flux, between worlds, the music and song on this imaginative and explorative album balances the mystical with invocations and the calls of nature. They do this, enabled by an extended cast of friends from both within and outside the International Anthem label community; merging congruously the skills and voices of Matt Lux, Ben LaMar Guy and Bitchin Bajas’ Rob Frye (to name just a few of the many contributors) to expand the remit beyond the Amazon, the Bolivian tin-mined mountains and landscapes to take in mirage evocations of the alien, the sci-fi and naturalistic.
This is music that draws you in; unfurls its depths over time. The vocals are simultaneously beautiful yet split on occasions into a spirit shadow form; a near apparitional invocation that’s separated from its sister, a guide that takes us back to the old phantasmagoria of pre-colonial conquest, when Bolivia was yet to be demarcated, owned and named after its European conquistador’s ancestor and was still separated between the Incas and various independent tribes in the country’s northern and southern lowlands. That voice carries and yet seems at times almost lulled and translucent beside the water carrier percussion, the attentive and descriptive drums (only occasionally breaking out into, well…a sort of jazz breakbeat of a kind) and rainforest canopy of either mimicked or real bird life and exotica. This is a world in which the Afro-rhythms of Höröya, the psychedelic nature of Caetano Veloso and Paebiru find room next to the Sao Paulo Underground, Ale Hop, Cucina Povera, Jaimie Branch, Art Ensemble Of Chicago, Don Cherry’s Organic Music Society and Tortoise. And from that reference pool, you can tell that the lineage goes back far: all the way to the original rituals and folk music of the people that first trod on those sacred grounds.
There’s much to admire in this world of the untamed and wild, with new perspectives, mixed histories and the largely melodious reverberations of the lost exercising a new language of ownership. Ibelisse Guardia Ferragutti and Frank Rosaly perfect and expand their organic explorations, bewitching messages and oracles on an intriguing, moving and dreamily trippy debut album.
Goran Kajfeš Tropiques ‘Tell Us’
(We Jazz)
Through various developments drawn together over the last decade and more, the Croatian heritage Swede trumpeter, composer, producer and bandleader Goran Kajfeš once more sets in motion another “hypno-jazz” opus under his Tropiques exotic moniker.
Those who know, who might recall, the name will have perhaps already heard this branch of his expanded guided ensemble: going since 2011. But there’s also his equally praiseworthy absorption of jazz ideas troupe, the Subtropic Arkestra, and a myriad of other set-ups, including both the Fire! Orchestra and Angles 9.
Goran has an impressive CV as a session player to boot, playing with such luminaries of the form as Lester Bowie, who’s influence rings out on the latest Tropiques’ odyssey.
The first of those groups (and indeed the second) acts as a crossover, a recruiting ground for the Swedish-based make up of Goran’s ensemble; his pianist and keys foil Alexander Zethson, acoustic bassist Johan Berthling and violinist Josefin Runsten all served in the Fire! Orchestra. Runsten was brought in with fellow adroit strings maestro and cellist Leo Svensson Sander to expand the sound and bring a feel of uplift to the dynamics, in so doing, expanding the ranks from a core quartet to a sextet. Each band mate brings with them a convoluted family tree of intersected and separate gigs in other groups, from Trondheim Jazz to Dungen, Oddjob and Sven Wunder. And between them, this sextet covers everything from award-winning jazz recordings to composing for film and the stage.
With a sense of movement and openness that seems to organically unfold, and to unfurl and grow like winter buds opening in the first weeks of spring, the Tropiques’ latest album together is a thing of synthesis and nature balanced with the messages, hopes and celebration of conscious spiritual jazz from another age.
It all begins with the incipient classical feels of Riley and Nyman and an air of sympathetic bowed and “possible musics” Širom-esque Galicia and the Balkans before flowering into those spiritual Alice Coltrane vibes. Goran’s almost drowsy trumpet awakens on this deep dived scene of Afro-spiritualism; it’s sound evoking hints of the already mentioned Lester but early Don Cherry and Jaimie Branch. Meanwhile, Zethson’s tinkled sensations, runs and liquid scales flow reminded me of Nduduzo Makhathini and the keys found on Bobby Jackson recordings. Runsteen and Sander’s violin/cello partnership slowly grows and blloms into a lush light orchestral spell.
But it’s the influence, as stated in the accompanying PR notes, of John Coltrane’s Crescent LP – the incredible luminary’s quartet on that iconic recording including such notable icons as McCoy Tyner, Jimmy Garrison and Elvin Jones – that stands out; a spot-on absorption of that mid 60s record vital, the building blocks of which can be heard being riffed on and off of.
The middle movement, ‘Magmatique’, seems to perhaps take its inspiration from the kosmische instead, starting as it does with the piano ambience of Popol Vuh’s Florian Fricke. The trumpet sounds almost cupped as the bass quietly stretches and mumbles away. That is until the drums take on a more breakbeat style that stirs up the influence of hip-hop. The strings, however, go from muted Skies Of America Ornette to the more drawn and flighty influence of Michael Ubriank. There’s also a certain progressive or sort of post-rock feel; like Radiohead making a jazz album under the tutorage of Ill Considered and the Chicago Underground duo.
On a slow boat to China, or perhaps sailing across the east China seas to land somewhere on blossom canopy Japanese shores, ‘Prije I Posle’ (translated from the Croatian, “before and after”) dreamily embraces Far Eastern signatures; at times, on the wind, replicating near zither-like strokes and brushes, and the bulb-shaped notes of some kind of Oriental glockenspiel. The drums though take on an almost d’n’b rhythm, whilst the kabuki theatre unfolds, and Goran’s trumpet exhales Chat’s woes and sad romantic illusions of yielding yearns. As summer takes hold, this odyssey fades out with the vague caresses of Alice Coltrane and Dorothy Ashby; and a cycle is completed.
Amorphously travelling on an eclectic pathway that includes all kinds of jazz styles, the transcendental, kosmische, lush, classical and the ensemble’s own Swedish homeland’s adoption of prog and pysch, the Goran-led Tropiques prove their mettle with a deep “slow music” rich journey in three movements. Environment counterbalanced by open-ended developments and the inner cerebral make for an impressive opus that proves so easy to take in and enjoy.
Jake Long ‘City Swamp’
(New Soil) 17th May 2024
Stepping out on his own but once more backed by the same who’s who of contemporary UK jazz musicians that formed the eclectic lineup on previous recordings under the Maisha title, the drummer, composer and producer Jake Long conjures up a Bitches Brew of funk, soul, spiritual, Afro and fusion jazz on his debut as a solo artist.
From a pool of talent that includes Nubya Garcia, Binker Golding, Tamar Osborn, Shirley Tetteh, Artie Zaite, Amané Suganami, Al Macsween, Twm Dylan and Tim Doyle – many of whom have crossed paths with each other on projects outside the sphere of the Long led Maisha ensemble – a both cosmic and despairing suffused odyssey of the intuitive and electrifying is formed. In the ruins of societal decay and riled-up division, looking out across an increasingly soulless gentrified London (where all these artists and musicians reside) lost to corporate greed and a breakdown in community relations, Long and his troupe tread the uncertain pathways of the primal city swamp and sift through the “ideological rubble” of dystopian collapse – a term absorbed and borrowed from the political theorist and lecturer in digital media and society Alex Williams, echoed in Mark Fisher’s Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative.
Reassembled at a later date from a series of extended recordings at the Lightship 95 studios in the capital, made during 2019, that landscape and decay has only got worse with the further loss of public spaces and supportive networks, arts spaces and music venues. And yet this album is not so much a raging polemic nor untamed and unruly cry from the soul – well, it has its moments of course but nothing so abstract and tortured as to sound angry. In fact, for most of the time golden percussive threads, floated bulb-like organ notes, a mantra trickle and shimmer of Alice Coltrane and spiritual jazz vibrations indicate escapism for the lunar and astral: the spiritual balance much needed in such dire times of avarice, social media validation and the pursuit of fame. But then, as the action picks up, we’re into the territory of Maggot Brain phase Funkadelic, Owen Marshall, Herbie Hancock, Bernie Worrell and Miles Davis’ Lost Septet. An extra thread, or layer, arrives in the form of King Tubby, African Head Charge and the On-U Sound label reverberated and echoed dub; often taking the jazz elements into the hallucinatory and dreamy.
Within those spheres of influence you can also pick up hints of Byard Lancaster, Joe Henderson, Marion Brown, Last Exit, (very specific) Slow Foot era Norman Conners, the Pharoah, and Bobby Hutcherson and Harold Land’s simmered down partnership as the music moves between the strange JuJu vodun Orleans spell of ‘Swamp’ to the more melodious, almost romantically, played horns evoked soul-jazz-on-the-streets-of-70s-NYC vibes ‘Silhouette’ – I’m also hearing signs of The John Betsch Society on this one. With time on their side, movements, passages and direction of travel is performed and assembled without distraction and limits; with some tracks breaking the ten-minute barrier to move through various fluctuations of light and shade, squalling and smashing crescendo and more near ambient vapours and mists of mysticism and reflective soul-bearing.
It’s impossible to pick out any one contribution, any one performer, as the entire ensemble interweave and act as parts in a much greater expansive world of metaphorical expressions, descriptions and atmospheres; all feeding into a haunted magical entwined statement on the symptoms of urban decay and the nightmare of a post-capitalist society with little to offer, little to give and little in the way of answers to all our ills. A Bitches Brew for our end times.
Morgan Garrett ‘Purity’
(Orange Milk Records) 17th May 2024
Daemonic wrenches, caustic slabs of derangement and Fortean paranormal invocations grind against chemically poisoned alternative grunge-country indolence and the unraveling clusterfuck morose mind of Morgan Garrett on his latest collection of both menacing and playfully disturbing experiments.
A “culmination of over a decade’s worth of collaborative and relentless” discombobulations and harrowed heavy-set-to-lo-fi-and-no-fi resignations, torn dispersions and traumatic-drawn cries for help, the Purity album is a troubled trip across a morbidly hallucinated inner and outer landscape, with the age of anxiety, COVID, war, record level cancers, environmental catastrophe, cost of living crisis, societal and generational division, governmental incompetence, lawlessness, drug dependency and technological/AI capitulation being just some of the topics, grievances and stresses to unpick.
Garrett’s status in the American experimental scene is in no doubt as he mines a lifetime of pain and transmogrifies both his own work and that of Scott Walker’s, the Sun City Girls, Swans, Daevid Allen, the Boredoms, Dean Blunt, Fugazi, the Putan Club and others. Within that scope of references expect to hear Garrett speaking in slithery tongues, transmitting from Mina Crandon’s spiritualist parlour whilst twanging away like some scarred deeply troubled and vicious figure from Blood Meridian on LSD, and somehow twinning a fucked-up Pavement with a paranormal screamed Skip Spence. Hell’s fires lap away as nu-metal, the industrial and heavy mental/heavy meta crush all resistance and resolve and those country/American leanings. There’s sure enough a soul in that there slumbered and more beaten-up hallucination; a pained maverick clawing their way out of a opioid languish, stripped of dignity and resilience, across a battlefield they once called home. Then again, I could be reading too much into it all.
Malini Sridharan ‘Tombuex’
(Birdwatcher Records) 10th May 2024
Death is a fairytale, a fantasy, a mythological poetry that’s navigated with almost diaphanous and playful devotional curiosity by the Brooklyn-based composer and multi-instrumentalist Malini Sridharan on her new album Tombeux.
With a title that derives from the French plural for “tomb” or “tombstone” but also refers to a musical commemoration style of composition that was all the vogue back in the 16th century – originally in poet form but later musically transposed with the accompaniment of lute and plucked instruments -, Sridharan assails Ursula K Le Guin’s Earthsea cycle of fantasy novels, the Greek-Roman ideas of Hades, the venerated devotions of the celebrated Indian Hindu mystic poet Mirabai, and the loss of those nearer to home. For this chamber/classical set of vocalized suites deals with that unavoidable fate: death. But with such a lucidity and magic, and candidness that it never seem too elegiac of morbid. Only skirting the chthonian, the suites and song on this album turn more towards yearns of the pastoral, bucolic and courtly: Closer to the fairy-like tapestry weaved folk of Joanna Newsome and the brass-y more sweetened trunk-like low bass-y tones of the euphonium and woodland and bird-like flutiness of Prokofiev, of Elgier and Vaughn Williams.
The mini stories that make up Tombuex are almost shorn of melancholy and mournful dirge. This is both down to Sridharan’s shared entwined influences of both India and Michigan roots, and her diverse range of literary, historical sources – the Indian classical strains that you hear are in some part from her father, and the curiosity for history, archeology and Medieval music that permeates this album, from her mother. And so the brassy resonance of the sitar, twinkles of vibraphone, duck-billed sound of the bassoon and shake of bells (all played by Sridharan) merge perfectly with a full Western-sounding classical woodwind and brass ensemble to elicit the tearful and dramatic, the fantastical and regal, whilst weaving a tale of bereavement in its many forms.
The lasting resting places of both Greek-Roman myth (Hades) and the speculative-fiction writer Le Guin’s Earthsea afterworld (The Dry Land) are invoked by a filmic-like score and Sridharan’s modern day Bhajans and Medieval-style rounds. And through it all, she creates a soft wellspring of personal connections, longings and a sense of loss: A remembrance that exudes lovely dreaminess and certain majesty in the face of pain.
Tombeux is an ambitious work of the classical that bridges both time and worlds to address in its literary, literal and poetic forms the spectre and history of death and how to face it without spiralling into the void. Nothing less than a very impressive work that expands Sridharan’s ambitions further.
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 or love. If you enjoy our reviews (and we often write long, researched and 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.
CHOICE TRACKS FORM THE LAST MONTH
CHOSEN BY DOMINIC VALVONA/MATT OLIVER/BRIAN ‘BORDELLO’ SHEA

Representing the last 30 days’ worth of reviews and recommendations on the Monolith Cocktail, the Monthly Playlist is our chance to take stock and pause as we remind our readers and flowers of all the great music we’ve shared – with some choice tracks we didn’t get room or time to feature but added anyway.
Without delay, here’s that eclectic track list in full:::
Liraz ‘Haarf’
Lolo et L’Orchestre O.K. Jazz ‘Lolo Soulfire’
Benjamin Samuels ‘Crazy DNA’
Dirty Harry, Nat Lover & Shuteyes ‘Tons Of Drums’
Valentina Magaletti ‘Drum Jump’
The Alchemist, Oh No & Gangrene ‘Watch Out’
Junior Disprol, Roughneck Jihad & Stepchild ‘Doomsday Clock’ – this month’s cover art
Talib Kweli, Madlib, Wildchild, Q-Tip ‘One For Biz’
The Alchemist, Oh No, Gangrene ‘Oxnard Water Torture’
Sebastian Reynolds ‘Final Push (the darqwud remix)’
Distropical ‘Jagauarundi’
Cyril Cyril ‘Chat Gepetto’
HOUSE OF ALL ‘For This Be Glory’
The Bordellos ‘Poet Or Liar’
Picturebox ‘(The World Of) Autumn Feelings’
Nights Templer ‘Perversion’
Legless Trials ‘Huffin’
Leah Callahan ‘No One’
Sarah/Shaun ‘Dust Tears’
NAHreally & The Expert ‘Smarter Than I Am’
Vincent, The Owl, Nick Catchdubs ‘Bruv My Luv’
Midnight Sons, Midaz The Beast, Curly Castro ‘Marathon Man’
Sahra Halgan ‘Lamahuran’
Arab Strap ‘Strawberry Moon’
Nicolas Cueille ‘Grand Finale’
George Demure ‘One More Story’
Blu, Shafiq Husayn, Chuuwee, Born Allah ‘I’m G (OMG)’
DJ D Sharp, St Spittin ‘Profile Pics’
NxWorries, Anderson .Paak, Knowledge ‘86Sentra’
Marv Won, Fatt Father, Elzhi ‘Measuring Stick’
Room Of Wires, Station Zero ‘Sand Eater’
Herandu ‘The Ocher Red’
Violet Nox ‘Varda (J. Bagist Remix)’
Audio Obscura ‘Babyloniacid’
Morriarchi, AJ Sude ‘Rapid Eye Movement’
Apathy ‘Vaction’
Your Old Droog, Method Man, Denzel Curry, Madlib ‘DBZ’
Read Bad Man, Lukah ‘The Facilitator’
A Lily ‘Thallinx’
Micah Pick ‘Chiastic Crux’
Fran & Flora ‘Nudity’
Khora ‘Rigpa’
Rohingya Refugees ‘We Are Stuck Here In The Camps’
Kira McSpice ‘Get You Out’
Esbe ‘Little Echo’
Martha Skye Murphy, Roy Montgomery ‘Need’
Mike Gale ‘Unsteady’
Soop Dread, Morriarchi ‘Silver Surfer’
Sonnyjim, Statik Selektah ‘Chun King’
J-Live ‘Lose No Time’
Bless Picasso, Kool G Rap, Conway The Machine ‘Paper Spiders’
ALBUM/BOOK: DOMINIC VALVONA

PHOTO CREDIT:: Marilena Umuhoza Delli
Introduction:
Despite the multiple Grammy-award nominations and wins, and a reputation for capturing some of the most mesmeric, raw and sublime performances in the most dangerous of locations, Ian Brennan is often self-deprecating about his (obvious) talents as a producer. Ian would have us believe he merely turns up and presses the record button; that his ‘field-recordings’ are entirely serendipitous. And in some ways, this is part of his underlying philosophy: removing himself from each recording so that the emphasis is wholly on the performance. Preferring to travel (when possible) to the source, each of Ian’s recording sessions are unique and truthful.
Loosened and set free from the archetypal studio, Ian’s ad hoc and haphazard mobile stages have included the inside of a Malawi prison, Mali deserts, and the front porches and back rooms of Southeast Asia: one of which was on the direct flight path of the local airport. And yet that is only a tiny amount of a near forty release back-catalogue recorded over just the last two decades.
As if being a renowned producer of serious repute wasn’t already enough, Ian could also be considered a quality author; so far publishing four digestible tomes on a range of music topics and regularly contributing to a myriad of publications. He’s turn of phrase and candid nature brings music, the relationships, and journeys to vivid life, whilst never blanching from describing the harrowing, disturbing and traumatic realities of the geo-political situations, the violence. As a violence prevention expert, advocate, Brennan’s recordings can be said to act as both testament and a healing process.
His partner in all these projects is his wife the Italian-Rwandan photographer, author and filmmaker Marilena Umuhoza Delli, who documents each trip.
The couple’s latest project once more draws attention to a forgotten people in crisis, recording the voices of the persecuted Rohingya: terrorised and ethnically cleansed by the Myanmar government and military. A stateless population forced to flee from their age-old home in the country’s Rakhine state, a million of this ethnic group currently live in the world’s biggest refugee camp over the border in Bangladesh.
Almost simultaneously, Brennan (with Forwards from both Delli – who also provides all the photography – and the widely acclaimed percussionist Dame Evelyn Glennie) has also brought out a new book. Part “impressions”, part exploits, and part ethnography without the cliché and stiff academia, Missing Music: Voices From Where The Dirt Road Ends is a personal semi-autobiography of a lifetime’s recording work and travels; complete with polemics on the state of the world and music industry at large.
Rohingya Refugees ‘Once We Had A Home’

As attention spans seem to contract and the 24-hour newsfeed cycle is forced to update and move on every nanosecond in the battle to retain minds and lock in followers for monetary gain and validation, many geopolitical events – once seen as cataclysmic and about to push the world into climate crisis or war – seem to be quickly forgotten, usurped and replaced by the next teetering-into-the-abyss flashpoint. And so, I say, “remember the Rohingya genocide?” Of course you don’t. That’s old news. We’ve had COVID, the cost-of-living crisis and high inflation, Russia’s barbaric invasion of the Crimea and Ukraine, the continuing incursions of Islamic terrorism in Africa, the ongoing conflict and ethnic-cleansing the Tigray by Ethiopia and Eritrea, and now, since the horrific vile attacks on Israel on October 7th by Hamas, another ongoing escalating conflict in the Middle East: including Israel’s total war strategy of bombardment and eradication, and siege of Gaza. Chuck in AI and China (will they, won’t they soon invade Taiwan) and the spectre of Iran suddenly launching a full-on campaign in the region, and the hyperbolic heavy load of world problems seem too large to quantify and process, let alone solve.
Thankfully Brennan and Delli do their utmost in the face of such ignorance and crisis fatigue to draw attention to one of the world’s worst forced movements of people. Escaping what has been defined in international law as genocide – accusations the Rohingya’s oppressors Myanmar face in the International Court of Justice in The Hague – the Rohingya ethic grouping of people claim their descendance from 15th century Islamic traders. But it’s thought that they probably arrived in what is now Myanmar (formerly Burma) via various historical waves of migration over time: from the ancient to Medieval. The Buddhist majority Myanmar’s history is full of origin stories and diversity. The government has its own list of “national races” no less: a 135 in total. Missing from that list however, the near wholly Muslim practicing Rohingya are referred to as “illegal migrants”; mere squatters on the land they’ve cultivated and shared for at least a millennium.
Dating back to the 1970s, the military juntas – the more recent short flirtation with a less than democratic system, now looking like nothing more than a blip, a footnote in the country’s story – have constantly persecuted this group, which before the genocidal campaign of 2017 numbered 1.4 million or more. Essentially stateless, and hunted down, displaced, a vast majority are confined to the world’s largest refugee camp in Bangladesh: although many have fled much further abroad and throughout more accommodating South-eastern Asian countries. A sick twist to this persecution and removal, the Myanmar military are forcibly conscripting the Rohingya to help fight an ongoing conflict with the Arakan Army in the region of the Rakhine State. Founded in 2009 to win self-determination for themselves, the Arakan are yet another convoluted thread to the story of woe; another ethnic group fighting to achieve their aims. And just to muddy the waters even more, the Arakan Army also features the Rohingya amongst its ranks.
Myanmar’s government would in their defence cry foul, that they were fighting insurgents, illegals, and terrorists. There have been incidents up and down the border, with the murder of police and military by both groups. And the Arakan have embarrassed the military, winning huge swathes of the Rakhine against a far superior and numerical army.
Within the makeshift camps, set up in the aftermath of Myanmar’s most brutal act to date – the full-scale programme of ethnic cleansing from its lands -, gangs roam and prey on the vulnerable eking out an existence in the face of extreme poverty and limbo. The future looks bleak, even with international condemnation, with no hope of return, of justice. In highlighting “hidden voices” and finding the rawest of accounts, their both poetically sung, and achingly voiced testaments are recorded for posterity by Brennan, who’s hands-off approach removes the barriers between recordist and performer. Ernest collected ethnography can take a walk, for this is above all about bringing authenticity and the marvels of the untainted, uncollyed and (cliché as it is, it still stands) the truthful to our ears. Because the remarkable thing about all of Brennan’s work is the way he introduces us all to revelatory sounds and connections.
Within the refugee camp, and despite the severe conditions, most of the recordings are incredibly lyrical and melodic to the ear: even when the musical accompaniment of percussive chings and shakes, entwinned plucks and occasional singular wooden box-like hits are minimal. Musically crossing borders with every caress, strike and either brassy or percolated drone, you’ll hear elements of the Islamic, of India, the Caucuses, Pakistan, Indonesia, Thailand and of course Myanmar. And despite the traumatic subjects, the crimes against humanity, even the harrowing testament can sound like an intimate courtly piece of theatre or a purposeful, softly placed dance. That goes for the yearning, near pleaded declarations of love for both soul mates and home too – although without the context, one echoed aching soul’s declaration, if unrequited or stopped, threatens to “hang” themselves.
The titles of these recordings certainly pull you back into the reality of their desperate plight, with reminders that this campaign against them is fuelled in part by religious nationalism (‘The Soldiers Burned Down Our Mosque’), but that sexual violence is a common weapon in that persecution (‘Let’s Go Fight The Burmese (They Raped Our Women))’.
As with most of these projects the revelation is not only in hearing such original and moving voices but in picking up what could be the very roots of musical forms that we’ve taken for granted or taken as our own. The soulfully lamentably exhaled ‘My Family Prays For Us To Come Home (Here We Have No Life At All)’ I swear has the very seeds of gospel music and the blues within its Rohingya folk traditional soul. And I seriously swear I can detect a Catskills-like banjo on ‘Let’s Go Fight The Burmese (They Raped Our Women)’ . It’s obviously not of course, as I’m sure it’s an instrument more native the climes and geography of Southeast Asia than Americana.
Once more it’s beauty that shines through the distress; the musicality of burning hope in the face of anguish and violence still connecting and making heart’s sing. Brennan’s minimal interference (although that’s not really the right word for it) allows for the most pure, candid, and unforgettable of raw performances. Without overdoing it, or using too many superlatives, these projects are amongst the most important documents of their kind; bringing the harsh realities of the forgotten Rohingya people to public notice in the hope that their story is heard: we can’t pretend we never heard it!
Book: Missing Music – Voices From Where The Dirt Road Ends (PM Press)

Ian Brennan has a real knack for writing; a visceral way of setting the scene, the danger and geo-political circumstances and context without succumbing to boring platitudes or stiff academic dullness. He certainly can’t be accused, unlike so many “worthy” signally publications and sites, of sucking the soul out of the music he writes about; like all the best writers, someone who actually loves music in all its forms. Brennan the celebrates what cannot be quantified or bottled: or for that matter sold! In fact, you could say he was in a continuing, constant, battle against the corporate forces of greed and consumerism, riling at the commodification of art.
Brennan has written several books in support of artists outside the Western sphere of influence, whilst also attacking the onslaught of “muzak”. But. How you open up ears and widen the appeal of independent voices and those musical forms from such far-flung pockets of the world as Cambodia, Malawi or São Tomé is anyone’s guess: I’ve tried for over two decades, finding it a total myth that each new generation, growing up in the age of the Internet and with access to the world’s music catalogue at the swipe of a screen, is somehow more eclectic – the short answer is, no they are not.
The horrible and lazy “world music” term – as Brennan would say, “all music is world music” – fetishizes those it seeks to label. But then again, plenty have tried to celebrate and promote those same voices and artists” WOMAD being the most glaringly obvious example, but literally 1000s of labels, from major to cottage industry independents. And yet, even as certain names fly, take hold, and capture Western audiences and build up sizable numbers online, they’re demoted to playing the “world stage”: demarcated and separated. If anything, we’ve gone backwards, with the main events dominated by the so-called “urban” stars, vacuous tiktok sensations and heritage acts (not wholly “white” I might add). Gone are the days when Kuti could share the same space as some Western rock act; even jazz, no matter the constant bullshit promoted trend to declare its renaissance and popularity, can’t get a main stage slot at any major festival. Don’t get me started on the advancing AI takeover of the arts and music; the future already here as thousands spend a fortune to see avatars of stars still alive and able to perform – namely that God awful ABBA production; the quartet rendered by tech to appear eternally youthful and at their peak. Now every artist is forced to compete with everyone whoever existed, dead or alive, for attention and support. In that climate Brennan champions a far humbler cast of artisans and amateurs alike, from the incarcerated soulful voices of the Mississippi penal system to the late North Ghanian funeral singer Mbabila “Small” Batoh and sagacious atavistic-channelling old folk of Azerbaijan.
Choosing just a smattering from a catalogue of at least forty releases over the last decade or more, Brennan’s latest book, Missing Music – Voices From Where The Dirt Road Ends collects together some of his most personal recording experiences. In fact, it reads in part like a winding autobiography along a road less travelled, with Brennan highlighting his older sister Jane’s struggles with Downs syndrome, whilst panning out to address the lack of social care, the stigma, and disparities at large in the American health care system. You can hear Jane’s voice and pure joy of expression on Who You Calling Slow?, recorded by Brennan and released under the Sheltered Workshop Singer title. Apart from his Rwandan recordings (his half Rwandan half Italian wife and partner on these projects, Marilena Umuhoza Delli’s family was forced to flee the genocide) I believe this project (and book chapter) is the closet and most personal to Brennan’s heart. Having to watch during the hands-off, isolated bleakness of COVID as his sister retreated into her shell, his words are a testament to the (cliché I know, but if it could be used with any real sincerity it’s here) power of music therapy.
“Just for the fuck of it” , the journey Brennan makes is an inter-personal, academic free one, with life-affirming stepovers in Suriname (‘Saramaccan Sound’), Bhutan (‘Bhutan Balladeers – Your Face Is Like The Moon, Your Eyes Are Stars’) and most rural outposts of Africa (‘Fra Fra – The Quiet Death Of A Funeral Singer’). That last chapter deals with death quite literally; marking the passing of Fra Fra’s Mbabila “Small” Batoh, who led the northern Ghanian trio of funeral singers and players. Primal, hypnotic with various sung utterances, callouts, hums and gabbled streams of despondent sorrow they personised the process of grief. But sounded like the missing thread between African roots music, the blues, and New Orleans marching bands. Incredible to hear – which you should if you haven’t already – it’s artists like “small” that Brennan truly rates: holding them up on an equal pedestal with the best the West has to offer in the roots stakes. Unfortunately, the enigmatic Djibouti artist Yanna Momina, star of the Afar Ways album of recordings, also passed away – I made a little tribute in last July’s Digest column. A member of the Afar people, an atavistic ancestry that spreads across the south coast of Eritrea, Northern Ethiopia and of course Djibouti (early followers of the prophet, practicing the Sunni strand of the faith), Momina was a rarity, a woman from a clan-based people who writes her own songs. Once more Brennan summons up the right words, expressions, and scenery in bringing her legacy to life.
More like the best of traveling companions, guides, open to adventure, Brennan’s writing balances joyous connections with the dangerous conditions in which he finds himself. Little details say so much in this regard, with the almost incidental sentence and anecdote about being cautioned to not use his first name of Ian because it sounded Armenian, when crossing the flashpoint and stepping into the continuing conflict between that country and Azerbaijan to record ‘Thank You For Bringing Me Back To The Sky’. But of course, when out of choice, traveling to such danger spots is either lunacy or brave, and along the way there’s plenty of discouragement and warning.
Anything but a thrill seeker, Brennan’s role in violence prevention makes it a vital part of his job; gaining a better understanding and knowledge from the horse’s mouth so to speak. Many of his impromptu sessions are therapeutic in allowing victims to speak about their trauma in the most unsympathetic of climates. The very roots of all Western music no less, Brennan freely comments on the disparity of fortunes between the artists detailed in his book and those in the English-speaking West – a language, statistically that sells more volumes and traction than any other. Arguments and studied polemics are made, politics auspice and solutions put forward against the blandification of the music industry and our environment – for example, why do so-called hip independent signalling businesses, such as cafes play such uniform bland, enervated and commercial music that’s the very opposite of their principles and mantra; Brennan says we shouldn’t take that crap and point it out to the barista the next time this background soundtrack insults our ears.
Of those “timeless voices”, which should be amplified, this little passage is one of the best: “Rather than seeking charity, theirs is the charitable act – truth offered without expecting anything in return. The only desires, connection.”
As a celebration that faces the hard truths, this book is a must read and guide to new and more deserving sounds from around the world; for these artists have more going for them, are closer to the pure soul, motivation and expression of music than the majority of fake acts and vaporous stars that do unfortunately dominate the airwaves and social media.
Ian Brennan on the Monolith Cocktail: Check out just a smattering of his projects I’ve reviewed, plus a very special interview from a while back.
Tanzania Albinism Collective ‘White African Power’
Witch Camp (Ghana): ‘I’ve Forgotten Now Who I Used To Be’
The Good Ones ‘Rwanda…You See Ghosts, I See Sky’
Ustad Saami ‘Pakistan Is For The Peaceful’
Sheltered Workshop Singers ‘Who You Calling Slow?’
Comorian ‘We Are An Island, But We’re Not Alone’
The Oldest Voice In The World (Azerbaijan) ‘Thank You For Bringing Me Back To The Sky’
THE MONTHLY DIGEST OF ACCUMULATED NEW MUSIC; THE SOCIAL INTER-GENERATIONAL/ECLECTIC AND ANNIVERSARY ALBUMS CELEBRATING PLAYLIST; AND ARCHIVE MATERIAL.ALL WRITTEN & CHOSEN BY DOMINIC VALVONA

___/NEW\___
Leah Callahan ‘Curious Tourist’
29th April 2024
Still channeling The Glass Set’s The Sundays and My Bloody Valentine vibes, Bostonian singer-songwriter Leah Callahan continues the musical journey under her own name. The fourth album since leaving behind the group she once fronted in the mid 2000s, Callahan works hand-in-hand with foil Chris Stern of The Sterns fame. A fan of Callahan’s former band, Stern’s congruous contributions including co-writing, arranging, producing and playing a number of instruments on Curious Tourist: a title that more or less sums up both partners on this songbook’s exploration and revival of various music scenes and sounds; like a re-energized flick back through the record collection, picking out and giving a contemporary take on the new wave, power pop, C86, alt-synth-pop, shoegaze and Britpop genres.
Callahan’s voice has already been compared to a female Morrissey, whilst the flange reverberations and chimes of Johnny Marr’s guitar riffs can be heard ringing out across a number of the tracks on the newest album. But I also detect more modern echoes of the Sparrow & The Workshop’s Jill O’ Sullivan and a touch of LoveLikeFire. However, every track seems to take a different turn from the one before; from the cathedral organ intro that soon turns into an indie anthem of languid yearned vocals and strings – evoking both Lush and Echobelly – ‘Nowhere Girl’, to the indie-country espionage merger of Howling Bells, Interpol and Blondie ‘No One’. Those Western twangs are made even more obvious and atmospheric on the next song and title track, with rattle snake tambourine shakes, cinematic vistas and melting heat mirage guitar bends and tremolo – imagine a more subtle Heartless Bastards. Taking yet another turn on the highroad, ‘Ordinary Face’ was written as an answer to the Bronski Beat’s ‘Smalltown Boy’, but I’m picking up Beatles and early Floyd, mixed with 90s Dubstar, light psych-pop vibes.
Often such pick ‘n’ mix attempts can sound incoherent and incongruous, but Callahan and Stern make each excursion their own; keeping a momentum and signature that is all theirs. I hope Callahan stays “curious”.
Sarah/Shaun ‘It’s True What They Say?’
(Hobbes Music)
A sprinkled stardust statement of heartbreak and yearned romanticism from the Edinburgh wife and husband team of Sarah and Shaun McLachlan, making their debut on the Scottish capital’s leftfield electronic (and beyond) label, Hobbes Music. Shaun’s previous highlights with Delta Mainline (a band we have reviewed in the past, comparing them to an angelic Jesus And Mary Chain, OMD, Wilco and Spiritualized) put him in good stead, working arm-in-arm with Sarah on their duo’s first EP, with that band’s expansive epic ambitions and big horizons carried over into this more cosmic alluded project.
The lovelorn voiced pair, who duet together or back each other up harmoniously throughout and play and arrange a multitude of instruments between them, are joined by complimentary friends and foils Jaguar Eyes (a band mate of Shaun’s in Delta Mainline, contributing guitars and synths and arranging strings, programming drums and on engineering duties), Darren Coghill (of Neon Waltz fame, providing some percussion and drums, effects and, rather strangely, credited on “fire extinguisher”), Daniel Land (The Modern Painters’ instigator helps out on guitar), Chris Dixie Darley (the oft Father John Misty guitarist offers touches of slide guitar), Bruce Michie (brass) and Gavin King (the longtime collaborator and pal provides keys, and offers his pre-production and engineering skills). Altogether, this ensemble cast open up the sound: dreamily in a shoegaze fashion, but big.
With an affinity for the ending of the Star Man movie, and its romantic allusions, but in particular the score, Sarah and Shaun paly star-crossed lovers across a constellation of diaphanous synth and dream pop, of waned country music and Sarah Records influences. Imbued with memories, the almost impossible to describe feelings of everything from hope to family and community, the EP changes course from soft electronic pumped reminisces of the 80s to star-gazing from a range in the old West. Lulled, soothed and other times almost lamented, the vocals voice lyrical fancies of love but also heartbreak and concern at veiled loss and breakups.
Musically, sonically, the duo and their contributing partners touch upon Beach House, Ladytron, The Sundays, The Mining Co., The Field Mice, Sparklehorse, Duke Spirit and Cocteau Twins. From moseying across the open plains to following vapour trials; from electronica to starry strings arranged dreamy indie; and from the filmic to the personal; the scale is epic and feels nostalgic. I’m looking forward to more from this duo over the coming year: if only to see how expansive and enveloped in twinkled space dust it can get.
Nicolas Cueille ‘Curiositi’
(Un je-ne-sais-quoi)
As that title – one amongst a number of phonetically broken down prompts and descriptions of the artist’s headspace, direction of travel – translates, the French composer and multi-instrumentalist Nicolas Cueille let’s his curiosity run loose on the first album he’s ever released under his “birth” name.
A magical, and as stated, “discombobulated” realm of field recordings, digital and analogue synths, Cueille’s gentle succinct vocals settle amongst a wonderment of strangely constructed yet organic wildernesses and liquid primordial cup-poured and water-mill turning exotic atmospheres. The voice is almost soulfully indie (like a cross between Douglas Dare and Panda Bear) compared to the synthesized springy and sprung oddities, the textural transmogrified tin and string stretched sounds, rustles in the undergrowth, ambiguous workshop tools and machinery and waves of arpeggiator.
Abstractions of Walter Smetak, Fabbrica Vuota, David Slyvian (his music not voice in this instance), Heiko Maile, Eno, The Books, abstract works era Aphex Twin, µ-Ziq, neo-romantic synth and Library Music inhabit this quirky see-saw balance of softly put questions and emotions. The sounds of a cup-and-ball, knocks, nocturnal wildlife, plops and cheek slapping are transformed across Cueille curious musical terrains, his yins and whims and inquiries, to create something quite unique: the machine integrating with the biosphere.
Alexander Stordiau/The Stordiau Revolution ‘Skin Of Salt’
Breathing in the coastal airs, conversing with the local seagulls, and ruminating about such existential enquires as the circle of life and the still lingering traces of those loved-ones that passed on, the Belgium-based electronic composer, DJ and producer Alexander Stordiau returns with his revolutionary-suffix moniker to provide a new soundtrack to the motions and questions circling around in his consciousness.
Featured on the Monolith Cocktail over the years, through his partnerships with the Edinburgh label Bearsuit Records and Tokyo label Pure Spark, Stordiau has been constantly evolving his sound into various categories, split into the fields of ambience, trance, analogue sounding early electronica, minimal techno and kosmsiche. All of which are now enacted on his newest release, Skin Of Salt; a sophisticated retro soundtrack of fluctuating synthesized, arpeggiator movements and wave forms both shooting through the galaxy and articulating matters closer to home.
Covering millenniums, as humanity left the “salty water” and primordial soup to live on land, and articulating the abstract, almost impossible to describe traces and sounds left behind in the family home after parents pass away – the comforting sound, in this case, of fond memories of mum opening drawers in the corridor cupboards -, Stordiau uses a sound palette of Roedelius, Vangelis, Tangerine Dream, Sky Records, Jarre, Schulze and stripped back techno to build his thematic tracks. Alpha waves and knocked beats pass by the Twilight Zone, as theremin-like kooky waves evoke the lunar and supernatural on what sounds like a soviet era space programme documentary soundtrack on the opener ‘Fear Merges Easily’, whilst the title-track travels back to the dawn of time and back in state of near transcendental mystique of cathedral Tangerine Dream and retro-synth dramas.
Over four tracks the electronic fields vary, with even moments of 303 hi-hats and claps that wouldn’t sound out of place on early Ritchie Hawtin records, and there’s always a touch of Library music to be found in the more quirky parts. Supernatural breathes, lunar spells, the vaporous and visitations are all involved on this sophisticated electronic sound suite, as Stordiau transduces his environment and thoughts into another class retro-synth journey.
Distropical ‘Jaguarundi’
19th April 2024
As diverse and numerous as their globally sourced sounds and field recordings, the new EP from the Milan duo of Govind Singh Khurana and Stefano Greco borrows from nature, the landscape and ethnographical. Taking inspiration from an amorphous map of possible worldly fusions, the electronic partnership warp, effect and morph the sounds and vegetation of India, South America, the Far East and Africa, merging them with sophisticated dance beats, bounced bass, and diamond crystalized synth rays – there’s also an effect that sounds like the slow reassembling of broken glass.
From Asian monkeys (‘Astral Langur’) to the tiny Japanese town that hosts a remarkable small shrine (‘Birds of Toi’) and a famous Venezuelan cacao-producing village that can only be reached by boat (‘Chuao Chuao’), reference points on the compass are brought to sonic life. Traditional sounds and in-situ recordings from these navigated locations are amplified and given a House, Psy-Trance and Techno spin. Rainforest raves meet clattering tribal rhythms in the dense lush undergrowth, whilst futuristic tech is overgrown with the fertile vines. Chuffed blows from Castaneda’s fantastical shaman are pumped along by a combination of Basic Channel, Anteloper, Lion’s Drum, Bonobo, Ammar 808 and Mr. Ozio. Authenticity – from the recordings of Afro-Venezuelan drums to the unforgettable South American sounding acoustic guitar used on the wild ‘cougar-esque’ feline referenced title-track, ‘Jaguarundi’ – is still at the root of these electronic propulsive transformations; two worlds, two histories, coming together in a congruous dance-fueled exotic combination.
Empty House ‘Bluestone’
(Cruel Nature Records) 26th April 2024
The megalithic period “cromlech” (frequently interchanged with and referred to a “dolmen” too) construction of large stone blocks that stands within the borders of the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park, in the village of Pentre Ifan, acts as a gateway to the imagination for the Blackpool-based musician Fred Laird, who goes under the moniker of Empty House.
Theories as to the purpose, significance of these stones vary: A monument perhaps? A communal burial chamber, maybe? Or perhaps an elaborate demonstration of its builders’ skills? Whatever that purpose, in the right light, the right season this atavistic assemblage evokes the mysterious, mystical, and otherworldly. Even the stones’ geological make up, providence is used as a soundboard; the album title of Bluestone even references it – one now long debunked theory suggested that the local bluestone was used and carted all the way to build Stonehenge. That same bluestone is thought to have been hewn and moved from Pembrokeshire’s Preseli Mountains (also often referred to as the less imposing “hills”) region which surrounds the cromlech at the centre of this complimentary partner album to February’s “brighter sounding” The Golden Hour – recorded in a similar fashion, but during the Spring/Summer of 2023. Its “lunar sister” (recorded last November) is a field trip of atmospheric psychogeography; an empirical soundtrack that channels the emanating signals that either exist or remain mere fantasy.
It’s one of Wales’s most impressive and largest structures of that age and kind (we’re talking more than 5000 odd years ago here). If it could talk/communicate, what stories it could tell. Laird gives it a suitable antiquarian, new age and megalithic ambient go anyway; telling or implying and evoking a veiled timeline of Druidic initiations, of magic, of pagan rituals, of long dead spirits invoked, of Medieval pastoral processions, and of the more ominous and near doomed.
Traversing and absorbing various elements, from the supernatural to Wiccan, the ancients to the kosmische music of the 70s, Laird uses sonorous guitar drones, sustained e bow feedback, suitably evocative synthesized melodies, the pastoral spindled movements and folk sounds of the Irish bouzouki (an adopted version of the original Greek long-necked and pear-bottomed shaped plucked instrument, introduced to Irish music in the mid 60s, most notably by the Sweeney’s Men folk group), tinkled piano notes, a crackling fire and subtle bellows to magic up a soundscape illusion. Introduced into that sphere, Nick Raybould and his West African rope-tuned goblet drum, a djembe, make a guest appearance on the fire-lit crackled hybrid ‘Fires At Midnight’ – a scene that merges the relaxed hand drum patters of the djembe with kosmische oscillations, a Fortean transmitter and hints of sci-fi.
Avalon mists descend across a communication with the landscape, whilst shriven archaic reenactments stir-up the hallucinatory and esoteric. Old vacuums of air blow through the spaces in between the stones as a haunted geology shrieks, howls, mourns and swirls. And a wispy passage of monastery choral voices carries on the wind as children giggle and the neolithic generator revs up vibrations and pulses from the afterlife. The Incredible String Band makes merry with Julian Cope; Steve Hillage joins Ash Ra Tempel; and Affenstunde period Popol Vuh invokes ghostly parallel histories with Xqui and Quimper on a tour of Ley lines. Atmospheres and scenes from a long history of settlement, of the spiritual, envelope the listener on a most subtle but rich field recording trip.
___/THE SOCIAL PLAYLIST VOLUME 85\___

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 respect to those artists we’ve lost in the last month.
Anniversary picks this month include a big 60th shoutout to The Rolling Stones debut (see a little piece on my thoughts further down the page), 50th call outs to jazz-funk-soul greats Calvin Keys (Proceed With Caution!) and Weldon Irvine (Cosmic Vortex (Justice Divine)), Funkadelic (Standing On The Verge Of Getting It On). Moving into the 80s, REM’s Reckoning is unbelievably now 40 years.
Pulp’s His ‘N’ Hers LP, and Britpop’s near zenith with it, reaches the 30th milestone. An album that couldn’t be more different from the same year, Nas’ decade defining Illmatic is also 30 this month.
We now reach the unfortunate part of the playlist selection: the deaths or death in this case of the one of the last mavericks, John Sinclair. Synonymous for steering and kicking out the jams in his short role as manager of Detroit’s renowned rebel rousing motherfuckers The MC5, renegade poet, scholar, activist and establishment rattler John Sinclair is also remembered for his free radical zeal and dalliances with the law.
Even too hardcore for the MC5, Sinclair’s foundation of the anti-racist socialist White Panthers, and his countless associations with equally revolutionary counterculture players and shakers, marked him out; leading as it did to the now infamous drug bust for marijuana possession in 1969. Whilst his love for the herb and gesticulations, whether through poetry or diatribes, is in no doubt, the way this particular bust was set-up (for what was a very insignificant amount of drugs) is considered heavy-handed and unjustifiable. Handed an initial ten-year sentence, Sinclair’s status in the “heads” and political agitators’ communities had singled him out as a poster child for deterring the like-minded boomer generation from stepping out of line. Fortunately (to a degree) this sentence and media furor galvanized support and sympathy and reduced that ten-year stretch to two, with Sinclair emerging from jail in 1971.
Keeping his hand in so to speak but taking up residency in Amsterdam – a much safer bet -, the beatnik jazz sage continued to perform, write, and record. I’ve chosen a mere smattering of his recordings.
I always sprinkle a few newish tracks into the cross-generational mix. This month it’s the turn of the Neon Kittens, Mick Harvey, Nduduzo Makhathini and Forest Swords.
The rest of the playlist, well, it’s just tunes I played out, own or just rate. In that vein, there’s Mary Wells, Nefertiti, The 3, The Mad’s, Okay Temiz, Danny Arakaki, Ilous and more….
Calvin Keys ‘Aunt Lovey’
Weldon Irvine ‘Love Jones’
Jean Wells ‘Somebody’s Been Loving You (But It Ain’t Me)’
Funkadelic ‘Sexy Ways’
Nefertiti ‘Miss Amutha Nature’
3 Melancholy Gypsys ‘The 3’
Nas ‘It Ain’t Hard To Tell’
John Sinclair ‘When Will The Blues Leave’
The Mad’s ‘Feels Like Love’
The Rolling Stones ‘Little By Little’
Eulenspygel ‘Menschenmacher’
Okay Temiz ‘Galaxy Nine’
The Monkees ‘Time And Time Again’
Donnie Fritts ‘Prone To Lean’
Danny Arakaki ‘All Thanks’
Samadi ‘La Luna Llena’
Coumba Sidibe ‘Djagolla’
Ilous ‘Chanson Chagrin’
John Sinclair ‘Ain’t Nobody’s Business’
R.E.M. ‘Little America’
Neon kittens ‘Schrodinger’s Party Animal’
Virna Lindt ‘Shiver’
Pulp ‘Joyriders’
The Twilights ‘Sorry, She’s Mine’
Mick Harvey ‘When We Were Beautiful & Young’
Clancy Eccles ‘I Need You’
Gerardo Manuel & El Humo ‘Where Did You Go’
Nduduzo Makhathini ‘Libations: Omnyama’
Forest Swords ‘Torch’
John Sinclair ‘Sitarrtha’
__//ARCHIVES\\__

50th Anniversary to Guru Guru’s Dance Of The Flames and a staggering 60th to The Rolling Stones’ Debut.
Guru Guru ‘Dance of The Flames’
(Atlantic Records)
Trawling around Europe – and wherever they found a door that was laid open to them – like a ragtag gypsy caravan convoy, Guru Guru took their 1973 album, Don’t Call Us (We Call You), out on the road. With most of their monies funneled into purchasing a solid and heavy monolithic ballsy sound-system, they bled dry the ears of many a ‘head’.
The trios imbued in sonic genius and omnivorous lynch-pin guitar gunslinger, Ax Genrich, somehow managed to disappear from this mad procession, leaving the group and heading into nigh obscurity. His difference of opinion on which direction the ennui band of lunatics should progress resulted in a split, with Mani Neumaier hell bent on creating improvisational material against Genrich’s more delineate structured compositions – though it must be made clear that Genrich always threw himself unwieldy into every track, regardless of who wrote it or what form it took. For a scene that produced an abundance of over-qualified, sickeningly gifted, innovative, and erudite guitarists – West Germany spewed them out like an ever-efficient Volkswagen production line – it was, you could say, a job to stand out from the mighty throngs of erudite axe welders. Yet Genrich with his re-wired Hendrix and deconstructed rock’n’roll space licks, managed to leave an indelible footprint in the Krautrock canon, and hall of fame.
To plug this gaping chasm, and before embarking on the next LP, the one-time member of the progressive jazz outfit Eliff and exotically named Houchäng Nejadepour – half German, half Persian – joined the one-album veteran Hans Hartmann and founding father Neumaier to become part of Guru Guru mark III. Talented in many disciplines including guitar and sitar, alongside both compositional and technical production skills, Nejadepour added a more Popol Vuh-esque flavour to the band’s sound, lending Guru Guru a Balearic and far eastern quality. Such was his contribution – though this could also be partially down to Neumaier’s lack of new material – that the well-talented troubadour composed half of all the tracks on their next album, Dance Of The Flames. Unfortunately, that listless and cold-footed obligation to move on, led to Nejadepour’s departure soon after the LP’s recording in the Spring of 1974 – his replacement was Gila axe man Conny Veit, who himself only managed a short sojourn of a few months.
Dance Of The Flames, the second release on Atlantic, not only saw a wider and more cosmopolitan influence and catchment, but it also grew fat on a robust hard rock sound, which at times plunged into the dark recesses of Gothic heavy metal. Andalusian vistas and South American themed Sambas cut the collection of eight-songs into two camps. Neumaier, as chief patriarch, tends to either brood on or veer towards folly. Take the opening grandstanding ‘Dagobert Duck’s 100th Birthday’, a paean ode to Donald Ducks tight-beaked Uncle Scrooge, that could also be a reference to the last Merovingian king of the Franks, but then maybe not. The track features a display of fatuous duck-call kazoos and outlandish gestures of both The Edgar Winter Bands ‘Frankenstein’ and King Crimson, on showboating duties. But then there are also ethereal opuses, such as the romanticized ‘The Girl From Hirschhorn’ – a lament to the mysterious figure of affection, who resides in the nearby German town of the title – to balance it all out.
Production values are high, and slickly executed with every note, no matter how drenched in echo, reverb, or fuzz, all audible and separated apart. Those erratic rolling time signatures and unruly voracious drum solos of Neumaier are all still in evidence, as usual, as are the dependable assiduous bass runs and jazz riffs, favored by Hans Hartmann who’d joined the Guru Guru family the previous year. The high-plain astral traveler, preparing us for a meeting with visitors from beyond the stars, is almost erased from the groups original founding musical manifesto, replaced by a sturdier rock and, world music, agenda.
From the start:
Kazoo twitching gonzo trumpets announce the extravagant goof-off rock opus that is ‘Dagobert Duck’s 100th Birthday’ party anthem. This flitting Alice Cooper muscling rocker features a jovial, if under the surface portentous, ode to Donald Duck’s disparaging money grabbing capitalist Uncle Scrooge – known in Germany as Dagobert. Macho feats of savage and squalling guitar solos brand scorch marks across the stonking, stalking monster backing track; Nejadepour hurtling through the scales at a rabid rate of knots, hoping to erase the hovering presence of Ax Genrich, with his own blistering blurry-eyed fret work. Gratuitous and highly ridiculous in equal measure, this slab of over-cooked mega prog, is used as some kind of showcase, just to prove their mettle.
An inexorable ethereal and lightly laid-back gallop of a groove rolls into view over a harmonic pinpoint sweeping introduction. The diaphanous love pinning tryst, ‘The Girl From Hirschhorn’ – placed highly in my all-time top 100 Krautrock tunes, just in case you were wondering – floats in on the dreamy breezy melody. Hans Hartmann builds up a repetitive pounding bass line, as a gliding quivering lead guitar preens and majestically swoons along to the rousing pleasing and drifting backing. After seven-minutes of proto-Amon Düül II Wolf City era bliss, and dashes of love-in Acid Mother Temple – you can see why Neumaier went on to work with them – a vocal relief sublimely transcends the soundtrack, as Neumaier exhales joyfully –
“I can’t stop thinking of you.
Where could you be, little babe,
Why I am gently playing this song for you?”.
With his querying display of lament finally let out, the band hyper-drive towards a lunar wah-wah stop/starting outré; shimmering in reverb and slipping into a jazz-rock sporadic free-for-all, that spills over and onto side one’s closing track, a bombastic spasmodic odyssey.
‘The Day Of Time Stop’ is Sun Ra, Beefheart and Santana all sharing a pleasure voyage to the 5th Dimension. Staccato timings create a jump and off-kilter raging loop, that acts as a cyclonic spiraling blast for Nejadepour to launch another blast of light-speed attacking pomp, searing from his bewildered guitar. Stumbling drums and octave hurling bass brew up a right shitstorm before the trio use the Arthur. C. Clarke galactic elevator to the stars, disappearing into some distant cosmological whirlpool of depravity. Like Edger Winter, our maddened guitar alchemist, runs wild, flipping through key changes and reeling off utterly fanciful and one-fingered licks – total filth.
Side two begins with the album’s title track. Neumaier promptly rattles off a smashing cymbals introduction, as Hartmann slaps his bass around some bending rhythms. Everything is coated in a strange reverberated and, reversed effect, flipping backwards and forwards, stretching out the instrumental and whipping it into a twisted carcass of a song, with the very air itself sucked out into some kind of vacuum.
A taste of the Samba is up next, albeit an Hieldberg etymological version of the sun-kissed exotic dance. Nejadepour’s sprightly jazz-tinged composition sounds like a happy-go-lucky Yes, twinned with the be-bop indulgences of Herb Albert. Hartmann twangs and bounces along on the contra bass, as a cheerful Neumaier taps away on the congas, each of them enjoying the succinct distraction that is ‘Samba Dos Rosas’ – just one of Hejadepour’s Balearic enthused joints that make up most of side two’s track list.
‘Rallulli’ is cast from the same mold, but steers closer to home, as the musical accompaniment melds together fits of acoustic jamming and hidden-in-the-attic sound effects. Tablas, congas, and a trapped jar of hornets produce a strange old avant-garde miss-mash, the final word going to a flushed toilet – perhaps a critique of the track, or more of that Neumaier humor.
Those Andalusian plains and mountains come a calling, as pranged delicate harmonies add to a pained melancholic mood-piece entitled ‘At The Juncture Of Light And Dark’. Hemmingway-esque Death In The Afternoon allusions are cast, with resplendent flamingo flourishes and a suspense filled air of Spanish mystery – file under evocative musical narrative.
Bringing the album to a dramatic close is the doom lit curtain call of ‘God’s Endless Love For Man’, a Gothic heavy metal droning and throbbing prowling instrumental that stabs a fork in the eye of the creator. More like an attempt to soundtrack the works of Bosch then a hymn to the divine, this bubbling cauldron of a stonker takes over from Amon Düül II’s Phallus Dei quest and drags Black Sabbath through the killing fields. This is indeed some scary shit: Guru Guru on a fuck-rock satanical crusade, summoning up some kind of end-plan Armageddon. Interspersed in the mire, bursts of rapid-fire jazz rich breaks and tangled glorious guitar solos add a glimpse of hope to this one-way helter skelter ride into the abyss.
The Rolling Stones ‘S-T’
(Decca) 1964

Those sulky near petulant straight-faced punks stare out from their dark shadowed album with a look that means business. Made-up almost entirely of cover versions, grabbed from the patron black blues and r’n’b characters of Chicago, The Mississippi and Tennessee, the debut LP is almost an exalted tribute to their heroes.
Rambunctious and loud, the pure rawness and bleed over of the instruments (something that no-one seemed concerned about in the studio at the time; encouraged by their manager Oldham) as they filled each other’s space, was a mixture of giddy adulation and blue-eyed indecorous rebellion. From the frayed, proto-punk amateurish sound of ‘Route 66’ to the gospel ye-ye of ‘Can I Get A Witness’, this album shambles along and offers up some convincing attempts to sound like Jimmy Reed, Willie Dixon and Slim Harpo. Of course, they fail but the results are better than the intention in many ways; the vital kick start to a whole scene and call for a generation. Can it really be sixty years old this month?!