Premiere (Track): John Duncan & Stefano Pilia ‘Fare Forward’
April 26, 2021

John Duncan & Stefano Pilia ‘Fare Forward’
Taken from the forthcoming Try Again album, released via Maple Death Records on 7th May 2021
An explorative match made in the depths of expansive space, out on the very edge of human understanding, L.A. polymath artist John Duncan and Bologna guitarist-extraordinaire, composer Stefano Pilia set out on a cerebral electroacoustic voyage together.
Both artists draw on their enviable years of experience for the new ‘human-machine interface’ collaborative album, Try Again (released via Maple Death Records on the 7th May). Duncan’s background is at the cutting edge of performance, video and installation art and experimental music (collaborating with such luminaries as Jim O’ Rourke, Z’EV and Masami Akito), whilst Pilia’s equally impressive CV includes playing lead guitar for the Malian legend Rokia Traoré and as a member of Il Sogno Del Marinaio, 3/4HadBeenEliminated and In Zaire (to name just a few).
In essence this is all channeled into a perfect counterbalance of the two’s craft and art forms, with Duncan poetically, lyrically yearning and languidly expressing himself over Pilia’s sculpted immersive soundbed of synthesized layers and processed guitar. As the notes suggest, ‘Duncan’s lyrics offer a counterpointing liberation to the machine processes in action here’; a sort of troubled soul in the machine, offering some escape from technology’s encroachment through shamanic like vocals.
The partnership creates a future that edges towards both the ominous and cosmic hymnal; an atmosphere in which time seems to stand still, whilst the duo drift untethered out into inner and outer space.

Adding their own interpretation, linear notes author and provider of the album’s photographs Matilde Piazzi propounds that the album suite is a ‘metaphor for contemporary efforts to reach the limits of knowledge and discovery, their heroic nature and their inevitable failure.’
For a project constructed in isolation, locations apart (one in the centre of an industrial complex in Bologna, the other, several KMs outside an urban sprawl in the wilderness), Try Again is a seamless, magnetic and resonant experience. From that album, the Monolith Cocktail is delighted to premiere the deep space peregrination odyssey ‘Fare Forward’. Duncan in almost hallowed, monastic form, at first sings sonorous lulls before strung-out in the depths of an enveloping, drifted space, echoes the mournful mantra: “Direction disappeared, Companions disappeared. Fare forward anyway.” Pilia manifests an orbital seeping patter and slow scattered moody bed of metallic reverberations and gravitas.
You can order the album via the label’s bandcamp page here…
John Duncan has operated for decades at the cutting edge of performance, video, experimental music, installation, pirate radio and television. He has played a pivotal role in the development of performance art in Los Angeles, of experimental music as a member of LAFMS, of Japanese noise and pirate radio in Tokyo. Duncan’s work in experimental music continues to have a lasting influence as his art overall continues to be honed, refined, sharpened. His audio work has been released by Allquestions, iDEAL, Vinyl-On-Demand, Fragment Factory, Tourette, Sub Rosa, Touch, Die Stadt, Trente Oiseaux and Ash International. He has collaborated on music with a wide range of musicians including Jim O’Rourke, Oren Ambarchi, Joe Talia, Masami Akita, Z’EV, Carl Michael Von Hausswolff, Elliot Sharp, Mika Vainio & Ilpo Väisänen.
Stefano Pilia is a guitar player and electro-acoustic composer based in Bologna. His work has become progressively concerned with researching the sculptural properties of sound as well as its relationship with space, memory and the suspension of time. His sound can aptly be defined ‘ecstatic’, in the purest sense of the term. His output has been released by Sedimental, Die Schachtel, Blue Chopsticks, Time-Lag, Last Visible Dog, Presto!?, Soave, Improved Sequence. Pilia is one of the founding members (alongside Valerio Tricoli and Claudio Rocchetti) of 3/4HadBeenEliminated, he has played in duo with Massimo Pupillo and with ZU, he’s a member of psychedelic quartet In Zaire and has been a focal contributor to the BGP trio, alongside David Grubbs and Andrea Belfi. Since 2009, he has been a member of Il Sogno del Marinaio, a trio made up of legendary Minutemen bassist Mike Watt and the drummer Paolo Mongardi. As well as these projects, he is lead guitarist for celebrated Malian singer Rokia Traorè and for the band Afterhours.
Our Daily Bread 441: The Polyphonic Spree ‘Afflatus’
April 23, 2021
ALBUM REVIEW/Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea

The Polyphonic Spree ‘Afflatus’
16th April 2021
The sun is currently out and shining as I type this, and it gives you that inner glow that Summer is on the way, and what an ideal way to soundtrack that inner glow but with the brand-new album by The Polyphonic Spree.
It’s an album of covers in fact; an album where they attempt to cover the likes of The Rolling Stones, Abba, Daniel Johnston, even, Barry Manilow and others in their joyous life affirming magic. And in most parts they manage it.
The Stones’ ‘She’s A Rainbow’ adds nothing to the original but takes nothing away either from it, but their version of the Bee Gees ‘Run to Me’ is beautiful and gives one the Goosebumps with its heartfelt smoothed magnificence, and their version of The Monkees ‘Porpoise Song’ although not touching the original masterpiece does still do a good job of supplying us the listener with a piece of fine pop psych. Their version of Manilow’s ‘Could It Be Magic’ is again not quite matching the heights of the schmaltz of the original but still better than Take That’s’ version; having a more laid back approach than the lads from Manchester, giving it a melancholic edge. The highlight for me is their version of Abba’s ‘The Visitors’, which they cover in a wonderful harmony filled prog pop way. And on the whole this collection of ten covers is a lovely way to spend a relaxed sunny afternoon.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
The cult leader of the infamous lo fi gods, The Bordellos, Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea has released countless recordings over the decades with his family band of hapless unfortunates, and is the owner of a most self-deprecating sound-off style blog. His most recent releases include the King Of No-Fi album, a collaborative derangement with the Texas miscreant Occult Character, Heart To Heart, and a series of double-A side singles (released so far, ‘Shattered Pop Kiss/Sky Writing’ and ‘Daisy Master Race/Cultural Euthanasia’). He has also released, under the Idiot Blur Fanboy moniker, a stripped-down classic album of resignation and Gallagher brothers’ polemics.
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 Daily Bread 440: Vukovar ‘The Great Immurement’
April 21, 2021
ALBUM REVIEW/Dominic Valvona

Vukovar ‘The Great Immurement’
(Other Voices Records) 23rd April 2021
In the metaphorical (and actually quite literal) wake of last year’s chthonian mini-opus The Colossalist, Vukovar now bring us the second chapter of their most recent incarnation and equally as consumed with vague auguries of fallen empire and gothic yearned romanticism, The Great Immurement.
In an atmospheric sonic vision of Bosch’s triptychs, this latest (the 9th album proper) work marks the second in a triumvirate of albums under the ‘Eternity Ends Here’ series (The Colossalist being the opening account in this saga). As with the previous industrial, post-punk and spiritual hungered epic, The Great Immurement pays homage to the dearly departed; featuring as it does the final song that the group’s co-conspirator of recent years and inspiring guide Simon Morris recorded with them. As a codex, nee mini-requiem, that last impassioned-esoteric-pop-song-hidden-in-a-mire, ‘Cement & Cerement‘, is a brutalist romantic anthem from the crypt of mental fatigue: pitched somewhere between Joy Division and Alan Vega catching a lift on Death In June’s vapour. Morris committed suicide in 2019 but his spirit continues to affect the band; looming large over both this and the last album. If you ever need to know just how influential but also how personal his death was for Vukovar, who’d managed to corral the much-venerated underground figure (notably for his instigation of The Ceramic Hobs) into their ranks, please take time out to read, one of the founding members of this pyre of a band, Dan Shea’s stark but intimate account of their friendship (an account the Monolith Cocktail published back in 2020; coincidently just a week before lockdown in the UK).
Morris may very well have been part of Vukovar’s constantly imperiled lineup if he hadn’t decided to vanish and leave this mortal realm as he did. His involvement was part of one of many changes in the band’s fortunes. Pressing forward though, constant warden and co-founder Rick Clarke is not only joined by another Hob and oft collaborator, Jane Appleby, but once more embraces his foil Dan Shea, who for various reasons in a fraught dynamic left to pursue other projects, notably, with fellow Vukovar stalwart (though missing from this lineup) Buddy Preston, forming the low-rent, lo fi bedsit synth Beauty Stab duo. In what is a convoluted historiography and rock family tree nightmare, and in what maybe seen as a case of ‘pop eating itself’ Meta, the neu- Vukovar inception actually cover one of Beauty Stab’s anthems, ‘O Eden’. Adding a certain gravitas and making a last supper out of the original, it now kind of makes sense as a Vukovar song that never was. Both versions are great it must be said, though the Stab’s was more Soft Cell, whilst this appropriation is more OMD misty march of yearned reverence; swaddled by a shapeless noise and opportune stabbed high piano notes: still bloody magnificent.
Followers of the blog may recognize the name of this latest waltz-at-the-end-of-time, The Great Immurement being also the title of Clarke’s voyeuristic supernatural peephole entombed book, which we serialized during the pandemic nightmare that was 2020. Though separate from the album’s themes and concepts, an illustration (etched by the celebrated Andrzej Klimowski; a great coup for Clarke and the band that was) from that sordid travail dons the cover – as it also did The Colossalist.
The Great Immurement, as the title suggests, denotesa certain sense, anxiety of confinement from which to break free. And so most of the album’s music seems to smoother, even overpower with an echo chamber of reverberated voices, malingering traces of spirits, competing opinions and fallen angels. There’s even a fallen ‘Icarus’ figure, trapped in multiple veils of sorrow, industrial fizz and vapours; with a searching, decried vocal attempting to escape the ether.
In the feted mode of spiritualism, Vukovar turn to the Psalms; another cry of freedom soundtracked by pleaded despair, communal deliverance and a brilliant stark but intimate voice that channels Ian Curtis, Ian McCulloch and Charlie Megira. An estranged linger of religion permeates the entire album in that kind of post-punk battle between haunted Catholic gilded guilt and alternative pathways of spiritual guidance, bordering on the occult. The sort of practice that Coil, Fritch and Current 93 had a kink for. It won’t come as a surprise to find out that Vukovar recorded a collaborative album with the Current’s Michael Cashmore (2018’s Monument), or that Coil, and the affiliated Tibet and Balance all prove an obvious inspiration. They even re-purpose Current 93’s ‘Rome For Douglas P’; turning the source into a vortex vision of Suicide on a quickened sordid rock ‘n’ roll charge with the renamed ‘When Rome Falls’: A real crushed but energetic industrial soul boy vocal is echoed in a backbeat tunnel, as the funeral pyre flames rise over a new Rome.
In the middle of this vacuum you might well hear the lingers and outright borrowing of a Siouxsie’s Banshees, early Cure, Christian Death, Talk Talk and even a less pompous Sisters Of Mercy. Yet Vukovar don’t do things the easy way; contorting, obscuring and vaporising the melodies, riffs and the niceties, even vocals as much as possible without losing the intrinsic value of their message and new romantic lament. True confessionals, aspirations and pained release caught up in a venerable maelstrom, Vukovar’s middle passage of ambitious anguished caustic industrial soul, experimentation and empire crumbling Cassandra oracles continue to impress; ringing even more inspiration from the macabre and mentally gruelling. We can only await the final piece of this fated triptych with baited breath.
The Vukovar Cannon As Featured On The Monolith Cocktail:
2020: Cement & Cerement (here)
2020: The Colossalist’ (here)
2019: Cremator (here)
2018: Monument (here)
2018: Infinitum (here)
2017: Puritan (here)
2017: The Clockwork Dance (here)
2017: Fornication (here)
2015: Emperor (here)
Also…
Rick Clarke’s The Great Immurement
Opening Chapters (here)
Parts 4-6 (here)
Parts 7-9 (here)
Parts 10-12 (here)
Parts 13-15 (here)
Parts 16-18 (here)
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 Daily Bread 439: BMX Bandits, Lark, Occult Character, The Forty Nineteens, Salem Trials, Special Interest…
April 19, 2021
Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea’s Special Review Roundup

The cult leader of the infamous lo fi gods, The Bordellos, Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea has released countless recordings over the decades with his family band of hapless unfortunates, and is the owner of a most self-deprecating sound-off style blog. His most recent releases include the King Of No-Fi album, a collaborative derangement with the Texas miscreant Occult Character, Heart To Heart, and a double-A side single, ‘Shattered Pop Kiss/Sky Writing’. He has also released, under the Idiot Blur Fanboy moniker, a stripped down classic album of resignation and Gallagher brothers’ polemics.
Each week we send a mountain of new releases to the self-depreciating maverick to see what sticks. In his own idiosyncratic style and turn-of-phrase, pontificating aloud and reviewing with scrutiny an eclectic deluge of releases, here Brian’s latest batch of recommendations.
Singles/Tracks.
Occult Character ‘The Song Remains The Stain’
11th April 2021
The first new track from Occult Character in four months, which I think is the longest he has gone without releasing anything, and what a gem it is. To break his silence a song that lasts just over one and a half minutes and a song that asks the question what is the best lyric you have ever heard, and in the one and half minutes all the magic and genius of The Occult Character is put on show; the devil be damned nonchalance of tossed away brilliance that has not been witnessed sing Errol Flynn wore a feather in his cap and rocked a pair of green tights: pure swashbuckling excellence.
Albums/EPs..
BMX Bandits ‘Star Wars (30th Anniversary Edition)
30th April/ Vinyl 4th May 2021

Is it really 30 years since this lovely album first entered into the musical planet? This being the 30th year Anniversary edition I assume it must be. I have always liked this album; it takes me back 30 years to 1991 the year I met my long-suffering wife. So this album has all the magic of the first kiss, the first time you held hands got drunk together and much more first times, but this being a family musical publication I will not proceed any further. But this LP has the advantage of the magic of nostalgia on its side. Not that it needs nostalgia to make this a magic album the opening track itself, ‘Come Clean’, more than enough covers that with the guitar jangle and the pure pop poetry lyrics, “What’s so wrong with loving your body when I love you so much inside”:true poetry.
There is a warmness and charm about this album that can only be described by listening to it, but if you need any encouragement to do so it has ‘Disguise’ on it, a song that demonstrates the hidden art of call and response on record, and not just has that it also has handclaps and has a rock n roll twin guitar solo on it that is not by Thin Lizzy and so not shit: how rare is that? It also has ‘Students of Life’, a song that Jonathan Richman should have written but somehow did not, and the pure pop splendor of ‘Do You Love Me’, and if it was a drink of pop it would be fizzy and make you giddy for drinking too much of it. Yes throwaway pop writing at its finest. And that is what so special about this album the true magic of throwaway pop. It is an art form that many try and many fail to do, but the BMX Bandits had it mastered and down to a fine art and if you want further encouragement the title track would have not been out of place on The Beach Boys finest album The Beach Boys Love You.
Salem Trials ‘Refuse To Die’
2nd April 2021

When an album kicks off with a ‘Kool Thing’ like guitar riff you know you are going to have an enjoyable half an hour or so of enjoyable alt rock hip swaying ahead of you. And when that album is by the masters of alt rock guitar weirdness the Salem Trials, you defiantly know what is ahead: angular riffs and angular singing. Russ the singer really is the missing link between Mark E Smith and a head full of stinging bees, the man is truly a one off and is part of what makes the Salem Trials so special, the other part is the incredible musicality of Andy, a man who can combine the influence of his huge record collection into six strings of wonder.
This album of course is there lord knows how manyath album of the last 18 months: a band that makes Guided By Voices look like lazy bastards. And like Guided By Voices they manage to keep it interesting by making every album bloody good, the only difference being that Salem Trials are much better.
Refuse To Die is available to download from the Salem Trials Bandcamp and can be downloaded for free so why not do it and then investigate their many other albums: be warned they have another one on the way released through Metal Postcard Records so get this. You will not be disappointed at all.
Toxic Chicken ‘Gamelan[d] 2’
7th April 2021

Gamelan[d]2 is an ice cream van ride of magical adventure taking in psychedelia, whimsy, electronica and experimental wonder. A fairground amusement arcade of beats and pure nostalgia flood the heart and beats down the door to your inner senses, which reveals nothing but the crazy workings of a tender soul. Toxic Chicken is back, and back with vengeance; a true musical maverick in a musical world full of weight watcher Beatles and second hand Goths betraying the tick it sentimental darkness of a rehashed Coil box set. If the Aphex Twin was as good as people say he might sound like this.
Toxic Chicken never lets me down; he takes me to a world I truly wish existed. And for that I will be forever grateful.
Various ‘Big Stir Singles: The Ninth Wave’
(Big Stir Records) 10th April 2021

This album is a comp of all the A and B sides from the Big Stir Records download single series, released from the end of August to the beginning of October 2020, and as you can imagine the comp is full of all the power poptastic joy that Big Stir are renowned for releasing. From the opening track by Dolph Chaney, ‘Be My Old Fart’, which I’m pleased to say is a fragrant smelling piece of guitar poppery, to the final track by Athanor, ‘Approximately Eternity’, which is a Smithereens like voyage to the planet 60’s influenced psych pop, you are treated by melodies galore. In between you will find finely crafted songs of skill, style and panache from the likes of Rosie Abbot, with the La laid back 70’s seduction of ‘Hold on’, to a rather splendid cover of Gilbert O Sullivan‘s ‘Alone Again Naturally’, which may be one of the most heartbreakingly true to life brilliant songs ever written, and covered with some style by Nick Frater.
This is a comp that is so listenable; one of the few that you are tempted not to skip tracks on. It’s like a bag of audible Jelly Babies all being different colours of sweet tasty chewing goodness that once you have started you have to finish, but unlike a bag of jelly babies you will not feel violently sick after consuming them all. In fact you want to put the album on again, and how many times can you say you have come across a compilation CD that is better than a bag of Jelly Babies? I will tell you…not often.
The Forty Nineteens ‘The New Roaring Twenties’
(Big Stir) 24th April 2021

If a quiet night in with some gentle music, fine wine and a book were what you after then I would give this LP of fun garage rock a miss. But if you are in the mood to party and dance the marimba with the partner of your choice, then this is could be the album for you.
Songs with clashing guitars and “na na na” choruses really never grow old; songs about radio’s, fast cars and fast women abound. There is even a slightly camp Elvis Presley impression on ‘We-re Going To Vegas’ that Freddie Starr would have been proud of. This is not an album that the Quietus would write about: in fact this album is an anti-Quietus record. An album highbrow serious scholar might dismiss as throwaway frivolous rock ‘n’ roll fun, not quite grasping that rock ‘n’ roll should be frivolous throwaway fun and that in dismissing this album of great rock ‘n’ roll they’ve missed one of the best old time pop songs I have heard this year, ‘Time Marches On’, which is all Motown bass riffs and Partridge Family melodies and chiming guitars.
The New Roaring Twenties is an album of very well written garage rock/pop with a touch of the early Elvis Costello’s about it, and is another album that should be clutched to the bosom of rock ‘n’ rollers of all ages everywhere.
Special Interest ‘Trust No Wave’
(Disciples) 14th May 2021

This is a reissue of Special Interest‘s 2016 demo tape, and very good it is as well. The sound of sifting through the charred remains of the after taste of punk rock, screeching guitars feedback drenched noise ridden ramblings of the forbidden poet, the sound of shoegazers wearing pit boots, sonic monologues bathed in bathos pathos apathy and the bewitched meanderings of the furloughed pitchfork killer. Yes, it is all here all, everything one can ask for from short slabs of heart-breaking agro. A ripped party dress of an album and on ‘Ill Never Do Ketamine Again’ you know they are lying.
Mark E Moon ‘Old Blood’
2nd April 2021

If camp bombastic Goth is your thing I could well be writing about your new favourite album. Sisters like guitar merge with synths not heard since Ultravox was singing about Rigsby’s cat, but this album by Mark E Moon has so much more going for it. It has a rather wonderful euro disco beat running throughout tracks like ‘Animals’ and is worthy of Dead or Alive “at their “Youthquake” best, and ‘I Robot’ is a track that easily could slip onto BBC 6 MUSIC playlists – all Robert Smith guitar lines and the early noughties American alt rock that Interpol so excelled at.
Obviously, any Goth music at some point has to betray a slight influence of Sisters of Mercy and Mark E Moon does not disappoint with the entirely enjoyable ‘The Falling’ and the title track ‘Old Blood’, which has a drum machine that sounds like it is nailing a solidified nail of vitriol into the remains of your once caring soul.
Old Blood is one of the most enjoyable albums I’ve heard this year. It’s an album that beautifully merges pop alt rock and Goth into a wonderful collection of radio friendly alt pop.
Lark ‘The Last Woman’
(Wormhole World) 30th April 2021

The drunken drawl of a velvet voiced lounge lizard immediately drew me to this album; distorted fuzzy guitars and the sound of a man’s heart breaking into many pieces always manages to somehow draw me in.
Lark have that wonderful ‘I have lived what I am singing about’ atmosphere to their tracks, whether it is the wonderful Fall like ‘John Berger’s Wild Shirt’, with lyrics being spat out with wild abandon (“the gift horse has no mouth” line is pure Mark E Smith), or the slow down gothic trawl of ‘Night Club’, which paints images of dark nights in the sordid part of town (all neon lights and tomorrow’s hangover), or my personal favourite track, the honey voiced almost Orange Juice like ballad ‘Nothing’. This is an album that will appeal to many and is available as a very ltd cd release, so alternative music fans who like their music in a solid format you will have to get a move on if you want this album of tossed away down at heel sleazy glamour.
Flowertown ‘Flowertown’
23rd April 2021

This is a beautiful album; it has all that is good about recording on a 4-track tape recorder: the tape hiss, the warmth, the soul and believe that recording on tape provides; it has no fakery all that glitters is gold. And this is indeed gold; a treasure trove of Mazzy Star like seduction and Mary Chain ballad tenderness. Slightly distorted guitars and the rattle of the tambourine have never sounded so sweet: this is true lo-fi.
There is just something so romantically perfect about this album. I admit I’m a sucker for male/female duets, especially when they are so charmingly and shyly performed and on ‘RCP’ they have the great taste to rip off ‘Can’t Seem To Make You Mine’ by The Seeds, which is one of the greatest songs ever written. But Flowertown can get away with it, as they are just so bloody perfect. This really is a lovely album of lo-fi perfection, the sound of two lost hearts finding a soul mate.
You Can Support The Monolith Cocktail Through The Micro-Donation Site Ko-Fi:
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.
ALBUM REVIEW/Dominic Valvona

Various ‘Futur Antérieur’
(Bongo Joe) 16th April 2021
A polygenesis swap shop the Swiss-based label and record store hub of repute Bongo Joe (in association with various label partners, curators and the like) have chosen to celebrate their 5th anniversary by asking the label’s current roster to cover songs from the imprint’s reissue back catalogue. The results of which are as eclectic as anything they’ve ever released in the past, with the music of Indian Ocean Islets, the Algerian ex-pat community in Lyon, 50s Bahamas and Azerbaijan rubbing up congruously against the ‘possible musics’ spirit of New Wave and Post-Punk Spain and, closer-to-home, the electronic Swiss underground in the 80s.
If you’re a fan of the Geneva lakeside label-store then you’ll recognize some of the compilation material that’s covered on this nineteen-track collection. And if you’re a regular follower/reader of the Monolith Cocktail then you’ll know we’ve featured a number of those same releases over the last couple of years. But for those unfamiliar with Bongo Joe’s unsaid ‘raison d’être’, this is a label with a penchant for unearthing forgotten, waylaid and less trumpeted international scenes from across a seventy-year plus period.
Of the entire back catalogue, Spain’s post-Franco Synth-Wave and Post-Punk La Contra Ola compilation from 2018 is among the most represented on this anniversary special. The Amsterdam oddities The Mauskovic Dance Band turn Esplendor Geométrico’s original lo fi ‘Moscú Está Helado’ into a wafted No Wave saxophone lingered dance of Can, Populäre Mechanik and early Mute Records: a Post-punk dance if you will. The maverick innovators of Cumbia, Bogota’s infamous Meridian Brothers, take the Zombies ‘Extranos Juegos’ on a customary South American ride; keeping it lo fi but with stop-offs on Bitori’s Cape Verde and a Psychedelic Colombia. Drinking liberally from the Cabaret Voltaire bar, the eccentric, Dadaist Swiss Orchestre Tout Puissant Marcel Duchamp really do a job on Tres’ ‘I Doubt’; transforming the original into an Avant-Garde suite of plucked, pizzicato diy art-school Pop-Punk and Trip-Hop breakbeat.
Staying in the Swiss cantons, last year’s survey of the country’s experimental electronic movement, INTENTA, furnishes this compilation with a trio of inspired choice tunes. Carole Rich, who appeared as one of the only women in a heavily male-dominated track list, has two very different bands vying for her attention; both covering her vaporous hushed and airy Pop turn ‘Computered Love’. First up, Malawi’s Madalitso Band literally brings that song home, with a most sweetly natured African lullaby treatment. Later on in the running order, Brussels’s Mameen 3 have a go at the same song, amping up the 80s atmosphere and incorporating transmogrified visions of ‘Radio GaGa’ Queen, Miami Vice and the Outrun arcade game music.
Heading west from the Alpine landscape, and towards Lyon, there are a couple of choice covers from the Maghreb K7 Club collection of ‘Synth Raï, Chaoui & Staifi’ musical styling’s: essentially the Casio and rudimental synth apparatus infectious music of Algerian émigrés in the city’s café scene. One of the stars of that tape cassette culture, Nordine Staifi, is transported, transformed by both Hyperculte and Pixvae’s covers; the former, which opens this album, turns the source material into a Moroccan version of Beloved, with hints of PiL and Acid Arab, the latter, bobs along to a South Seas vibe of marimba, male and female lead choral lushness and an on/off staccato break: the drums slipping and the atmosphere poured and sauntering.
Worthy mentions at this point go to the Turkish Derya Yildirim & Grup Simsek romantic and spiritual translations of the late Azerbaijan guitar legend Rüstem Quliyev’s already well-travelled and traversed ‘Ay Duli Dili’ (cross-hatches of both Bab L’ Bluz and Baba ZuLa), the esoteric Lausanne folk weavers Meril Wubslin’s rustic Medieval nylon-strung vibrated version of Michel Legris ‘soul sgea’ offering ‘Elida’ (GOAT meets Fever Ray), and for sheer audacity, Baby’sBerserk’s NRG Chicago Housed-up jumping transformation of Charlie Adamson’s 50s Bahamas serenade ‘Bangalee’.
A echo of Karen ‘O’ here; some reggae there; even a touch of Arabian Marvin Gaye, there’s no let up in the diverse array of cultures, musical tangents and influences on this cross-pollination of transportive (and highly danceable a lot of the time) cover versions. It proves to have been an inspired concept that offers up a host of fresh, dynamic, playful and revitalised performances of old stock. Here’s to the next five years of such global sonic enterprise and invention. Raise a glass, clear the living room floor and celebrate in style.
You can find previous reviews of the Bongo Joe label roster here:
Various ‘La Ola Interior: Spanish Ambient & Acid Exoticism 1983-1990’
Meril Wubslin ‘Alors Quoi’
Rüstəm Quliyev ‘Azerbaijani Gitara’
Pedro Lima ‘Maguidala’
Damily ‘Early Years: Madagascar Cassette Archives’
Various ‘Maghreb K7 Club: Synth Raï, Chaoui & Staifi 1985-1997’
Various ‘INTENTA: Experimental & Electronic Music From Switzerland 1981 – 1993’
Chouk Bwa & The Ångströmers ‘Vodou Alé’
Our Daily Bread 437: Khalab & M’ Berra Ensemble ‘M’ Berra’
April 13, 2021
ALBUM REVIEW/Dominic Valvona

Khalab & M’ Berra Ensemble ‘M’ Berra’
(Real World Records) 23rd April 2021
Treating the hypnotizing and often mystical voices and music of the Tuareg with a less intrusive style of congruous trance, loops, re-contextualized captured moments and sophisticated synthesized effects, the Italian polymath (producer, DJ, author, broadcaster on Italy’s national radio station Rai Radioz) Raffaele Costantino, aka Khalab, approaches his collaboration with musicians from the M’ Berra Refugee Camp with a great sensitivity and respect.
On Khalab’s latest African partnership, this time with Arab and Tuareg members of the sprawling tented refuge, he draws attention to yet another sorry tale of forced dispossession; highlighting the plight and limbo status of the 60,000 Malian refugees stuck since 2012 over the border in neighboring Mauritania. In the ongoing, but only the most recent wave of fighting in Mali, many people have abandoned their homes in the desert bordered regions of the country, many caught up in the Tuareg’s near seventy-year fight for an autonomous state within the north-eastern reaches of Mali: known as the Azawad.
A review like this can’t hope to do the subject matter of this struggle justice or devote the space to all the atrocities and convoluted history, but in brief the Tuareg’s heritage is often opaque, with even the name argued over by etymologists: There are many in the community that would rather the term disappeared, preferring instead to use ‘Kel Tamashek’. A loose confederacy in one way of atavistic tribes, with a lineage to the Berber, who can be found throughout north and western Africa, the Tuareg have lived in Mali for a considerable time: centuries. In the last decade their fight against the Mali government over rights, representation and self-determination was hijacked by a boosted insurgency of international Islamic militants affiliated to ISIL. This ill-fated campaign nevertheless gained a lot of ground in its early stages, including the legendary ancient hub of learning and trade, Timbuktu; overwhelming the Mali government forces, who were forced to seek help from former colonial masters France. This intervention was semi-successful in stopping the momentum, and managed to gain much of the ground lost: however unstable that remains. It also didn’t help the cause when those Islamist forces more or less turned on the Tuareg Liberation groups.
Switching to terrorist guerilla tactics (including bombings), but still a major force to be reckoned with, the Islamist fighters have since spread mayhem to Mali’s neighbours in the region. The situation is made worse by an internal crisis in government in Mali (a coup last year brought in a still going, but unstable, interim government that is supposed to step down when elections can be held).
In this tumult of insecurity, is it any wonder Malians have fled?
Being a musician in this volatile environment has proved especially dangerous. Just last month on the blog we featured the Malian artist Anansy Cissé and his new album Anoura, which was put back by a culmination of problems that included a kidnapping and beating on the way to play at a festival in the country. It’s a common, shared experience of nearly everyone you speak to from the music community in Mali, who are trying desperately to eke out a living: many forced to abandon their homes for sanctuary in less dangerous parts of Africa, even the world.
Camped out in the Mauritania land of the lyrical griot storyteller, the many known and also fairly obscure musicians and singers that feature on this project are examples of this forced exodus. Featuring members of the Tamasheq speaking Tartit ensemble alongside others from the Arab and Tuareg communities, stories and harsh realities are voiced on an attuned album of desert song otherworldliness, the dreamy and rustic, earthy. Khalab having worked with an eclectic array of musical partners over the years, including the Malian percussionist maestro Baba Sissoko, takes his collaboration very seriously indeed; taking, we’re told, reverential ‘guidance’ from Tuareg ethnologist Barbara Fiore.
An entwined production of Tuareg roots and subtle (for the most part) electronica, Khalab takes the essence, sometimes just strands or excerpts of the source material and adds a sense of both Afro-Futurism and the cosmically trance-y. In similar sonic territory to Kutiman, Invisible System, Ammar 808 (at his most sub-bass frequency vibrating best) and even last year’s Vodou Alé treatment by Belgian electronic duo The Ångströmers of the Chouk Bwa troupe’s Haiti traditions, this vivid transformation sometimes offers the most translucent of electronic pulses, reverberations and washes to a stringy, spindled, trinket ringing and tinkering cattle trail wandering of and both the spiritual and aching messages of the Tuareg.
Some tracks seem to be just a gauzy atmospheric soundtrack memory of the nomadic life, whilst other performances are beefed-up with slow but punchy drum breaks. Polygon Kosmische synth shapes appear with rhythmic patter Techno on the looped buoyant motion (with a touch of Hailu Mergia keyboards) ‘Curfew’, and there’s a soulful House Music club groove that sits beneath a Modou Moctar like blues mirage on the festival sampled ‘Reste A L’Ombre’. Talking of Moctar, you can hear many similar echoes of the desert rock ‘n’ roll, blues vibe of groups like Tinariwen and Tamikrest; which is unsurprising as the members of Tartit who appear on this record share a similar heritage, roamed the same Timbuktu, Kidal and Gao trails.
Khalab knows when to let his partners breath, and even perform more or less without any additional synthesized effects or production; leaving the final say to a most beautiful hypnotizing, wandering desert yearned outro from the camp’s gifted primal blues players. Despite the crisis this project was born out of, Khalab and M’Berra Ensemble prove a transportive combination of imaginative, emotive and authentic Tuareg music and contemporary electronic sonic techniques. The music of displacement and anguish has seldom sounded so spellbinding and cosmic.
Of Interest…
Tamikrest ‘Tidal’
Kel Assouf ‘Black Tenere’
Invisible System ‘Dance To The Full Moon’
You can now help the Monolith Cocktail to continue and grow in this harsh climate through the mini-donation site Ko-Fi:
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.
Monolith Cocktail Social Playlist #54: Erkin Koray, The Orb, Gary Tucker, The Weirdos…
April 8, 2021
PLAYLIST/Dominic Valvona

An intergenerational, eclectic playlist vision, the Monolith Cocktail Social is the blog’s imaginary radio show; a smattering of music from my personal collection, my DJ sets and a lot of music I just wished I owned. Devoid of themes, restraints, or trends, expect to hear anything and everything; including some tributes to album that celebrate their 50th, 30th and 10th anniversaries: The Rolling Stones Sticky Fingers (represented by The 5th Dimension’s diaphanous honed chorus take on ‘Moonlight Mile’), The Doors L.A. Woman (represented by the under-the-counterculture Gary Tucker and his version of ‘Hyacinth House’), Panda Bear’s Tomboy (the man himself in this instance) and The Orb’s Adventures Beyond The Ultraworld (again, the men themselves).
Tracks:
Erkin Koray ‘Öksürük’
Lotti Golden ‘Motor-Cycle Michael’
Jode ‘When I Was A Younger Man’
The Croissants ‘It’s A Day As Real As Today’
The Weirdos ‘Happy People’
Steel Mill ‘Zang Will’
Gary Tucker ‘Hyacinth House’
The Makers ‘Don’t Challenge Me’
Demon Boyz ‘With a Z’
Showbiz & A.G. ‘Fat Pockets’
Blahzay Blahzay ‘Style And Grace’
Wilma Vritra ‘Shallow Grave (Radio Edit)’
Would-Be-Goods ‘Fruit Paradise’
Spike & Debbie ‘Rushing Nowhere’
Panda Bear ‘Surfer’s Hymn’
B Boys ‘Sound Frequency’
The Wake ‘Joke Shop’
Shark? ‘Let’s Roll’
Dogfeet ‘Armageddon’
Daevid Allen ‘Boperactico’
Locomotive GT ‘Képzeit Ripot: Arra Születtem’
Bread, Love And Dreams ‘Masquerade’
The 5th Dimension ‘Moonlight Mile’
Francis Lai ‘Main Titles (The Games)’
Etron Fou Leloublan ‘Face À L’Extravagante Montée Des Ascenseurs, Nous Resterons Fidèles À Notre Calme Détermination’
Nello Ciangherotti ‘Metallo E Cemento’
Neel Murgai Ensemble ‘Ngong’
Anjo Gabriel ‘Mantra II’
Calvin Keys ‘B. E.’
Trio Madjesi ‘Moussa Photo Na Yo’
Ill Wind ‘High Flying Birds’
Chupame El Dedo ‘Me Duele’
Fawda Trio & SwamiMillion ‘Money Beat’
The Orb ‘Little Fluffy Clouds’ Air Liquide ‘Seamwave’
Samla Mammas Manna ‘Manna Jamma’
We Need Your Help:
Hi, my name is Dominic Valvona and I’m the Founder of the music/culture blog monolithcocktail.com For the last ten years the blog has 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.
REVIEWS/Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea

The cult leader of the infamous lo fi gods, The Bordellos, Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea has released countless recordings over the decades with his family band of hapless unfortunates, and is the owner of a most self-deprecating sound-off style blog. His most recent releases include the diatribe ‘Boris Johnson Massacre’ and just in the last couple of months the King Of No-Fi album, a collaborative derangement with the Texas miscreant Occult Character, Heart To Heart, and just recently a double-A side single, ‘Shattered Pop Kiss/Sky Writing’. He has also released, under the Idiot Blur Fanboy moniker, a stripped down classic album of resignation and Gallagher brothers’ polemics.
Each week we send a mountain of new releases to the self-depreciating maverick to see what sticks. In his own idiosyncratic style and turn-of-phrase, pontificating aloud and reviewing with scrutiny an eclectic deluge of releases, here Brian’s latest batch of recommendations.
Singles/Tracks.
The Flying Chaucers ‘Down With The Creeps’
(Blang Records) 2nd April 2021
How can you not like a band when they are named The Flying Chaucers? Especially when the track is full of lyrical wit and melodeon flair. It jangles and flirts with a charm peeled straight out of the how to make music with charm and joy book, the kind of song you will be humming before you go to bed and when you get up in the morning and all the time in-between. Yes indeedy this is a dream of a single, one to put a smile on the face of the sternest motherfucker.
Joy Formidable ‘Into The Blue’

This is actually quite a lovely song, shame that it is produced in such a polished and unoriginal way that sucks all the soul and heart out of the song – no doubt in the hope of getting on the BBC 6 MUSIC playlists. The blogs will love it as they wallop down any above average generic indie guitar music especially when the bombast is turned up to 11. Joy Formidable are a decent band and this is a decent enough track if you like this kind of thing. But it lacks a certain spirit: the spirit of Adventure.
Albums/EPs..
Vicky Gray ‘Atlaness’
(Stitch Records) 26th March 2021

If instrumental folk is your thing, you should check this four-track EP out, especially if you love the fiddle, as this is three fine fiddle instrumentals tracks that will have you and the person of your choice arm in arm reeling around your living room spinning like a mad thing: a mad thing that spins, not one that sits and rocks like a man out of your worst nightmares.
The fourth track is the only one with vocals and is a quite beautiful thing indeed, and one of those rare tracks that is not quite long enough; another few minutes of ‘Teif on da Lum’ would have gone down very well indeed: imagine in the movie the Wicker Man, if there was a night club scene this would be the track that was playing a quite lovely strange and beguiling folk ditty in the background.
James PM Phillips ‘Bones’
(Link2Wales) 26th March 2021

To steal a line from the opening track ‘Blanketfort’: “Here is another form of mental entertainment”. And that is the perfect description of this quite beautifully strange touching album; an album that obviously had been made with great love, paying no attention to any musical genres but drawing on many, being folk, psych, dance or poetry.
This is an album that has been made to entertain the maker himself I feel, and I assume James would love it, if others also find something of value something to draw a smile on one’s face something to make ones heart skip a beat something to make one tap their feet or just to make one think. Well, it has made me do all of the aforementioned, I think it especially in fact slapped me around the face reminding me that music is an expressive art form and not a product to be wrapped up and sold to the uncaring masses but something to lose oneself in.
Bones is not an album that will garner much daytime radio airplay I expect sadly, but underneath the gentle madness are undercurrents of a gifted melodicist at work and I hope this will attract the attention it and James deserve. If anyone is looking for a modern-day equivalent of Skip Spence’s Oar LP I would suggest they take some time and give Bones a listen.
Temple Garden ‘Red Shift’
30th April 2021

This is the debut album by Temple Garden, a psych rock band from Austin, Texas, and it’s a sci-fi concept album inspired by golden era radio shows, and actually it is indeed pretty good. The words concept album normally have me running for the hills but this is very well done and at times reminds me more of Prefab Sprout than psych rock, which believe me is a point in its favour: I can quite imagine Paddy McAloon releasing this, him being a fan of the odd concept release himself.
The sound is very warm and smooth almost late-night FM radio listening and has moments of Steely Dan/ Weather Report/Rush type abandon (if abandon is the right word), and certainly strays into the prog territory at times.
So anyone out there wanting to relive the golden days of FM radio with an album awash with smoothly played smoothly performed and well written concept album this is indeed for you: The kind of release that Punk rock was supposed to get rid of, but thankfully didn’t.
Jason Crest ‘A Place In The Sun’
(Guerssen) 15th April 2021

Jason Crest were a 60s band from Kent who released five unsuccessful, commercially speaking singles. Artistically speaking they are a huge success and have in spades what was so magical about British 60s psych; the wonderful sublime mystically enhancing lyrics, all of course taken and written no doubt with a pinch of salt: the opening track ‘Turquoise Tandem Cycle’ is a complete gem of nonsensical imagery wrapped in a pure warmth of velvet 60s pop delight, part Procol Harum, part Keith West; if you close your eyes you can imagine being back in the late 60s soaking up the atmosphere of the Middle Earth club.
I cannot believe that Noel Gallagher had not heard and decided to rip off ‘Two By the Sea’ for the Oasis hit ‘Whatever’. So much so that I hope Jason Crest got their lawyers involved or are in the process of doing so for it is plagiarism undiluted. But where the Oasis track is a dull plodder of a song ‘Two by the Sea’ is a charming piece of 60s pop confectionary, as is the beautiful ‘Teagarden Lane’; both songs that the Bee Gees would no doubt have loved to add to their cannon of fine pop tracks.
How Jason Crest never managed to bother the hit parade is a bit of a mystery as ‘King Of The Castle’ had a certain The Move like charm about it, and the ba ba ba fade out is pure 60s pop magic, and also there is in fact a rather splendid cover of The Moves ‘Here We Go Round The Lemon Tree’ and also a rather great Baroque prog pop version of Smokey Robinsons ‘You Really Got A Hold On Me’ that has a lovely wig out at the end.
But all was not charming light and psych towards the end of their career, has they moved into Deep Purple territory with the organ drenched heavy metal like ‘Black Mass’. Maybe if they had stayed together into the 70s they may have found their niche and audience with the early years of the metal scene.
This is a fine comp gathering together of a wonderful talented sixties band that certainly deserved more success than they achieved.
The Armories ‘Incognito’
(Big Stir Records) 1st April 2021

Is this the best album yet released on Big Stir Records? Well it is my favourite anyway. It’s an album where originals and covers are dispatched with equal aplomb, from the quite wonderful 12-string ringing poptastic version of John Cales ‘Paris 1919’ and the nostalgia churning cover of Christies ‘Yellow River’, and a version of XTC‘s ‘Senses Working Overtime’, which neither takes anything away from the original but adds a thin layer of sadness like a settling of dust on a once well-loved framed photograph of someone you once loved and secretly still do.
Melancholia is the texture of this album, and that is not saying it is an album of sadness and regret it is quite the opposite. It’s an album of life, in its many complexities; it has the magic quality that the Beatles oozed taking many influences and weaving them together so they always sounded like the Beatles and the Armoires have mastered that art taking new wave, folk, pop, country, power pop and pure guitar jangle and merging them into beautifully arranged heartfelt moments of pop life. It even has a rather wonderful tribute to the late great Mark E Smith with The Fall meets The B52’s like ‘Ghost Of Fall Singer In Depopulated Griefscape’, which had me thinking now, here is an idea would it not be great if Big Stir got Brix Smith to get the Adult Net back together and release an album through Big Stir that would be a match made in heaven. But until that dream comes true The Armoires “incognito” album will suffice with its songs that sting, ring, chime and pulls on the strings of your radio inflicted heart.
Nick Waterhouse ‘Promenade Blue’
(Innovative Leisure) 9th April 2021

Twenty seconds in and I knew I was going to love this album. All Drifters strings and Phil Spector dreams, the kind of album you imagine playing while you wait for your future soul mate to finish her soda pop in the all-night café; an album that takes you to the cartoon American dream of the 50s and early 60s when all the pop stars were called Bobby or Johnny, and Dick Clark would be hosting a twist competition on this week’s American Bandstand.
No this is not an album that sounds like it was made today, but 60 plus years ago and capturing the vibe and feel for those days perfectly if not knowing better, any of these tracks could slip into an oldies radio show without anyone blinking an eye.
Nick is a fine singer and songwriter and has mastered the nuances of early sixties pop and soul subject matters, lyrics, melodies, humour all mastered so much so he must be a little pissed off that when he wakes in the morning that it is 2021 and not 1961 even more than the rest of us! And I bet he has a hell of a good record collection. This is an album I’d more than recommend to you my dear readers to add to your collection. Smoothly frugtastic.
Patto ‘And That’s Jazz: Live 1971-1973’
(Think Like A Key Music) 9th April 2021

What we have here dear readers is previously unreleased recording from those progressive eccentrics Patto; recorded at the Torrington in London, early 1973. Yes, an album that captures the days of denim flares, long hair and head down lay it on me mama boogie; the days when Whispering Bob Harris would smoothly introduce the likes of Patto with whispering delight.
What Patto did so well was combine The Faces like rock with slightly more prog rock expenditure and a James Brown like funk – especially on the wonderfully funky ‘Singing The Blues On Reds’ – and this fine album captures all the magic of their legendary live performances. They were indeed a band that could, as some would say, cut it loose, and genre hopped with some style, sometimes in the same song – ‘My Days Are Numbered’ take a bow, a beautiful mish mash of jazz rock folk and pure pop suss.
This album really is a time machine that takes you back to the magical 70s when the pubs were always full on a Saturday night and you could go and see a fine band and stagger home to watch Match Of The Day on TV with the sound of the band still buzzing in your ears. Yes indeed, this album manages to conjure up all those feelings of the true magic of music.
Ollie Halsall ‘Lovers Leaping’
(Think Like A Key Music) 9th April 2021

The late great Ollie Halsall was of course a guitar player extraordinaire, not just the guitarist with Patto and session player with the likes of John Cale and Kevin Ayers, and also was under consideration to replace Mick Taylor in the Rolling Stones before Ronnie Wood got the gig, but also a fine vocalist and songwriter – supplying vocals on a number of tracks on the Rutles album no less. So what we have here is an album of previously unreleased demos of songs for an album he planned to record but for whatever reason never got around to. This album shies away from his guitar playing and concentrates instead on his songwriting; and what fine songs they are. From the lead off track the pop boogie of ‘Hey Hey Little Girl’ with the slight glam feel almost Trex like in fact, through to the McCartneyesque ‘Back Against The Wall’ – and McCartney seems to be a huge influence on the album, with a lot of his like touches.
What we are treated to is an album of fine pop rock: ‘Crazy When I Fall In Love’ could easily have slipped onto the first two Big Star albums, and nobody would have blinked an eye. This really is quite fantastic stuff and this album could easily become regarded as a lost classic, and I’d advise anyone with even the slightest interest in 70s pop rock to invest in this mighty fine collection.
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.
REVIEWS/Dominic Valvona

Amanda Whiting ‘After Dark’
(Jazzman) 9th April 2021

Gilded reminisces, meandered trains of thought and turbulent mood fluctuations provide the soundtrack for this harp-led nocturnal album of ‘after dark’ evocations. Bridging both jazz and the classical the adroit Welsh harpist Amanda Whiting,and her lightness-of-touch troupe of John Reynolds on drums and Aidan Thomas on bass, effortlessly seem to glide and skip between eras and moods on a nighttime flit.
First of all let’s get the most obvious reference points and influences out of the way. Yes, there is indeed an air and touch of the lineage of those transcendental, transportive and diaphanous jazz-harpist forbearers Dorothy Ashby and Alice Coltrane about these performances, but you can also detect a touch of Corky Hale and the much more contemporary and sublime Brandee Younger too. Whiting however seems to flow across passages of Savoy, swing, the conscious, the experimental, and the bluesy. There’s even moments of Latin saunters and cocktail hour jazz on happier, feet dancing on the sand tracks like ‘Back To It’.
In Whiting’s hands the harp performs both spells of the angelic and melancholic; the plaintive and translucent. Like water being caressed and charmed, there’s both waterfalls and trickles of the plucked and accentuate. Yet also shorter, sharper more attacking stabs and grating on ‘Just Blue’ and the rumbling, hard-bop swinging ‘The Feist’.
Providing another musical tangent, Glasgow’s tastemaker DJ and burgeoning remixer Rebecca Vasement is given the task of reimaging the album’s title track; which she does by casting the original in a more meditative state of dreamy, vaporous slumber. The lulled soulful coos and airy hummed vocal utterances of Nadya Albertsson can be heard floating and caressing this lifted spiritual treatment. You can hear the moodier, reflective original version later on in the album’s running order.
A quick mention to the articulate, occasionally bursting and splashed drums of Reynolds and mumbling, down-low runs and phrases and punctuation of Thomas’ bass is called for, as they provide a perfect sparse and sophisticated bed for Whiting’s untethered glistening harp music.
The midnight hour proves an inspired choice for Whiting as she freely moves with grace and élan across a cocktail of moods, memories and inventive play, on what is a most experimentally pleasant and heavenly jazz album.
Der Plan ‘Save Your Software’
(Bureau B) 16th April 2021

For a German electronic group that’s made various conceptual returns over the last forty odd years – even making a fleeted comeback as virtual avatars at one point – it seems unsurprising that the Der Plan vehicle would have in its vaults a take on Kraftwerk’s robotic assimilation schlock: the Man-Machine manifesto that saw the ‘showroom dummies’ become increasingly sophisticated in erasing their useless human shells for automated cybernetic ones.
Framed as a ‘long lost album’ from their 80s oeuvre, the Dusseldorf formed doyens of the Neue Deutsche Welle (the New German Wave) movement have decided to release the kooky, playful and often ridiculous Save Your Software conceptual electro and synth-pop LP. More ‘DAFT’ than DAF, this take on Kraftwerk’s computer world and various robotic riffs has a whole backstory of Tomorrow’s World invention. Founding members Moritz Reichelt (known as Moritz R®) and Frank Fenstermacher, joined in the 80s by Kurt ‘The Pyrolator’ Dahlke, are said to have ‘initiated’ the ‘Fanuks’ project to make themselves immortal as ‘Mensch-Machines’. Fanuks, a play on the actual all-too real Japanese robotics producer FANUC, involves all kinds of technological as well as philosophical themes; hardware as well as software talk. A vessel it seems for the possibilities but also concerns, ethics of A.I.: especially its role in the creative process. There’s even mention of a mysterious Bavarian philosopher, Nigelius Senada, brought in to advise on the project: clues to the mischievous nature of this album cover story really start to drop when this character turns up, his so-called ‘Theory Of Obscurity’ pinched from an infamous documentary film on The Residents.
The whole tale is narrated in a twelve-minute audio-documentary; the concept, interviews with band members and their robot forms sound-tracked by passages of music from the album, and to denote international scenery changes, archetypal Japanese mood music. It’s unfortunately, for me, all in German. But you get the gist nevertheless, the drive but failure to fully converge with that robotic host.
Der Plan however, have used the data, calculations, silly android voices to construct a quite enjoyable cyber-pop Techno album that bounces around in a retro arcade of arpeggiator and ascending, descending lit-up fruit machines, or, goes whistling around the bend on a Bullet Train. Zerox copiers dance, legs akimbo to Herbie’s ‘Roket’, Arthur Baker’s electro and the Art Of Noise’s sampled scratch barks. A creature it seems of the times it was supposedly created in (though sounds like it was made last week), there’s all those influences plus Neuclaus banging on the proverbial door of Yello’s studio, the Yellow Magic Orchestra, Sparks and Populäre Mechanik. Oh yeah, Der Plan pull them all in on the retro-futurist computer belter that springs and rolls through the discothèque, art gallery and workshop.
Der Plan merge Kippenberger like deadpan with a prototype Fanuk in crisis – the randy rebellious machine of ‘I Want To Sing Like Ella’, caught in the middle of identity catharsis -, an L.A. disaster movie answer machine message with a transmogrified form of neon new wave Miami boogie; and turn Chris Montez’s ‘Let’s Dance’ twister into a futuristic dummies bop.
A throwback to an era of rudimental robotics, when the utopian view of A.I. connectivity was in its infancy, this Kraftwerkian flip feels just as relevant now in the current climate as tech seems to be fast approaching the holy grail of ‘equivalence’. We’re also seeing the dystopian visions of that same 80s period, when this album was apparently recorded. Clever, sophisticated, arty, on-tech but playfully tongue-in-cheek, Save Your Software is the 80s new wave pop album that never was. And I love it.
IOKOI ‘Tales Of Another Felt Sense Of Self’
(-Ous) 26th March 2021

Creating a total immersive experience for all the senses, sound artist, vocalist and composer Maria Micciché deconstructs what has gone before so she and her collaborators on this latest project can create a set of new ‘sensations’ and experiences in which to address the theme of digital age disembodiment.
Under the IOKOI mantle, Micciché has pulled together the resources and creative skills of the videographer Michele Foti, olfactory (that’s sense of smell) artist Klara Ravat and graphic designer Sarah Parsons to take on a full exploration: part performance, part installation. It’s a cerebral project that taken three years to put together, with its multidisciplinary strands which includes Foti’s video clip studies of structure, movement, nature and the human body; Parson’s 208 page accompanying booklet of condescend video stills and fragments of Micciché’s song lyrics; and Ravat’s specially made room scent – to be applied when listening to the music.
Tales Of Another Felt Sense Of Self is a search, understanding of the differences and multifaceted dimensions of the ‘self’, ‘other’ and ‘same’. But it’s also a highly personal, intimate inward journey for the artist who utters, expels and in hushed tones narrates deeply personal sensations of longing and understanding. Tracks such as ‘SOS’, as it suggests, seem to be a signal, call out for help in the midst of variously voiced repetitions of the albums leitmotif mantra: those layered vocal cycles sound like enticing ad slogans echoing from out of a sort of Blade Runner futuristic soundtrack. Elsewhere the birds sing a sweet song, yet ‘Bloody Life’ is full of sad narrated gestures and a neo-classical like piano that plays on in a tinkled, out-of-time fashion. Micciché in an almost resigned, quiet voice yearns for the sensations of certain reminisced scenic caresses whilst addressing the question of harmonious balance in our lives: finding it, as the lyrics whisper, in our complimentary opposites.
The whole experience of strung-out phonetics, reverberating breathy airy and almost hyperventilated voiced phrases and lyrics that float and manifest in the middle of electronic currents, tubular-like didgeridoo echoed rhythms and the vaporous is akin at times to walking around in a radiophonics rich space, kitted out with surround sound.
Taken separately as an aural experience, Micciché’s soundtrack is evocative and immersive enough. When put together with the aromas and imagery it must be and incredibly full-on perceptive experience.
This is conceptual sound art brought out of the gallery space and into the home; an experience made all the more intimate and personal.
Conrad Schnitzler ‘Paracon (The Paragon Session Outtakes 1978-1979)’
(Bureau B) 26th March 2021

Continuing to reveal, and in some cases rejuvenate, the previously lain dormant archives of the Kosmische and electronic pioneer Conrad Schnitzler, Hamburg label of quality and repute, Bureau B, has released yet another treasure trove of his interstellar space experiments. This time it’s a session collection of outtakes from the late 70s, created at the Paragon named studio of tangerine dreamer and solo innovator Peter Baumann.
For those unaware of Schnitzler’s prestige, the Dusseldorf-born visionary co-founded the infamous Zodiak Free Arts Lab incubator, helped put together the first incarnation of the Kosmische superstars Cluster (or Kluster as it was known back then; his foils Roedelius and Moebius dropping the ‘K’ for a ‘C’ on Schnitzler’s departure) and appeared on the inaugural Tangerine Dream suite, Electronic Meditation, before founding Eruption in late ’71. A solo career with a host of collaborations on the way lasted until his death in 2011.
One such partnership was with Populäre Mechanik stalwart and artist Wolfgang Seidel (appearing under the alias of Wolf Sequenza, and collaborating in recent years with artists as diverse as Lloyd Cole), the co-author of these particular expansions of space and minimalist-techno probes. Seidal became a regular foil for years: especially on the two Consequenz albums. With no track titles, just an ambiguous numerical ordering of recordings, the Paracon tracks sound pretty much like finished works in their own right; all sharing a mysterious cosmic and alien sound that’s both almost ominous and yet playfully evolving. There’s much of that rich Kosmische dancing and searching Tangerine Dream sound in these starry visions; Schnitzler bound for galactic travels aboard a propeller engine craft hovering over lunar vistas and primal soups. Throbbing metallic leviathans and flapping, slithered entities move about in the deep space as sonorous balls of refracted light cascade and twinkle. Yes it’s that sort of trip.
At times Schnitzler creates a calculus of falling data and Library music like chemistry sets activity, and at other times, begins to bring in some base-techno rhythms. It’s a similar palette of synthesized square waves, presets and early midi-electronica that permeates, yet there’s some eerie, spooked uneasy engine pulsing tones of Bernard Szajner and more majestic moon dust kooky waltzing amongst the comets to be found too. It seems bot Schnitzler and Seidel had some vision of the future whilst producing these tracks, bridging as they do both the Kosmische with early signs of Techno music.
Not so much ‘outtakes’ as an extended album of congruous space excursions and metallic machine music, these sessions are a worthy edition to the Schnitzler catalogue of unearthed electronica traverses: A great, expansive cosmic-mining album in its own right.
Kirk Barley/Church Andrews ‘Parallels’
(Takuroko) 5th April 2021

Here’s an idea that you don’t really ever see, an artist appearing both as themselves and under an alias on the same split release. In what is a congruous experiment, and division of labour, Kirk Barley does just that.
Via the prolific in-house Café OTO label, Barley uses, more or less, the same sound palette and set of tools to create two complimentary but different outcomes. As Barley the placable light-of-touch creator of this EP’s first half section (‘Parallels A1 – A5’), tubular-like chimes of metallic marimba (or xylophone, or even something else like it) and detuned, duller sounded bells ring, shimmer, cascade and float across a cosmos of avant-garde classical Japanese scenes, a very removed version of gamelan and sparse kooky 70s electronic Library music. Reverberating with depth and shadowed on some of these parallels by a traceable echo of the main baubles and bobbled rhythms and repeated interplay, these diaphanous chimed experiments also feature a sort of transduced language of globules and retro glassy computerized data. A Kosmische Sakamoto contemplating the blooming blossom, these more tranquil, sparse suites are dreamy and playful.
The Church Andrews alter ego meanwhile transforms that apparatus into something heavier: to a point. It’s a mirage of sorts: a staccato trippy, wavy fashioning of Warp and Ninja Tunes Techno, and even House Music (‘Parallels 8’ could be a drunken groove meeting between Felix Da Housecat and Luke Vibret). Introduced into this section of the split are more quickened rhythms, enveloping and thrusting effects. At times it sounds like a remix, transformation of the first half: you can hear those tubular chimes, undulations when the tight delay and faster iteration loops slacken off.
It’s all about the ‘motion’ and ‘percussive patterns’ on this sophisticated spread of Techno ingenuity, as opposed to the trickled washes and untethered approach of Barley’s first five ‘parallels’. Both however prove dreamy and reflective; creatively springing forth from the same source and musically entwined. Barley and Church, or Barley Church; two experimental visions from the same mind.
Violet Nox ‘Whispering Galaxy’
(Infinity Vine Records) 9th April 2021

Pretty much encapsulated in the title of the Boston-based synth group’s fourth album, Whispering Galaxy is just that; a dreamy, ethereal chorus of hushed, diaphanous whispery voices, emanating from and sending out siren’s waves across an expansive galaxy.
A reverberating apparatus of various synthesizers, machines, a turntable and post-punk flange-guitar manipulate and fashion a vaporous pink ether of various hymnal and more mysterious haunted heavenly vocalists to woo over on a cosmic cruise into the great expanses of space. Wispy, airy but with a lot of depth the album’s space journeys fluctuate between the dry-ice, breathy, cybertronic jacked-up Kosmische and subtle Techno visitations of ‘Shapeshifter’, and the more esoteric Banshee-dreamed ‘Selene’ – which reimagines a sort of synthesized neo-folk vampiric Velvet Underground casting shadows beneath a full moon. On the almost spiritual voiced ‘Haumea’, Violet Nox’s spacecraft hurtles through a trippy, warped sonic vortex towards a dwarf planet, located just beyond Neptune’s orbit. Named after the Hawaiian goddess of childbirth, and only discovered in 2004, Haumea inspires a suitable enough galaxy quest soundscape; one in which the Nox seem to turn off the engines and just drift towards in a suspended state of aria vocalized homage.
With touches, glimpses of mid-90s Bowie, Brian Reitzell and countless dreamy, synth-pop inspirations Violet Nox coo and woo sweet ‘somethings’ to the awe, mystique and trepidation of the galaxy beyond our reach.
Federico Balducci/Fourthousandblackbirds ‘Anta Odeli Uta’
(Somewherecold Records) 9th April 2021

A return to the fold for the highly prolific adroit guitar sculptor of ‘dreamscapes for hope & the facilitation of enlightenment’ Federico Balducci, and a label debut for the experimental, abstract artist Albérick (appearing under the avian inspired Fourthousandblackbirds moniker), this drone, ambient and contemporary classical collaboration proves a most congruous fit and balance of the sparring partners musical art forms.
The two mavericks compliment each other on a most atmospheric soundtrack of paranormal like communications and drifts. I say paranormal, the opening ‘Wake’ seems to be tapping into channel ether on an esoteric TV set. FTB for his part produces a sizzle and crackled tuning of fuzz, flits and squiggles, and a sort of quasi-haunted organ as Balducci drops and lingers lightly administered guitar phrases and notes that hang on the edge of slight dislocation and even jilt a little: nearly in dissonance. A chill of the subterranean and the Gothic permeates the renaissance corpus ebb and tide of the next suite, ‘Ligeti And Gira Floating In A Pool Filled With Soy Milk’. A reference I assume to both the Swans’ instigator Michael Gira and the famous avant-garde, contemporary classical doyen György Ligeti, this haunted pool of gauzy mirages could be said to straddle their inventive influences: especially Ligeti’s signature ‘musical hallucination’. ‘Lux’ dwells in a sort of dank cavern, though the guitar parts, harmonically echo, ting and sparkle with a certain lightness of touch. There’s a repeating chorus of bird song on the next passage, ‘Toxoplasmois’, to balance out the title’s reference to a parasitic disease. You can hear the resonance of Balducci’s hand movements, up and down the tingled spine of his guitar; some movements, gestures, brushes of which sound almost harp-like.
Finishing on a communicative broadcast, ‘Queen Of Mars’ pairs FTBB’s Morse-coded dot-dashes and synthesized glassy bobs with Balducci’s woozy spirals and cyclonic whittled notes. That last track, and the album’s title too, are both reference points to the Soviet sci-fi film vision Aelita: Queen Of Mars, directed by Yakov Protazanov and based on Alexi Tolstoy’s 1923 novel of the same name. “Anta Odeli Uta” is the alien message beamed from Mars, which notifies Earth of their presence. A sort of Bolshevik version of John Carter Of Mars, it tells the tale of a Soviet engineer travelling to the red planet in a rocket ship, where he soon leads a popular uprising against the ruling Elders and falls in love with the planet’s queen. Except it all turns out to be a daydream, which in a way is where this visitation soundtrack heads. For this collaboration is an incipient dream state that lurks and drifts across an atmosphere of the spooked, hallucinating and strange to great success. Let’s hope both partners on this journey continue to work together in the future.
Sone Institute ‘New Vermin Replace Old’
(Mystery Bridge Records) 16th April 2021

From the as yet burnt-out ashes of previous ambient excursions, Roman Bezdyk pushes on into ‘uncharted territory’ with a newly fashioned quartet suite of the cerebral. Formerly a stalwart of the Manchester based Front & Follow label, Bezdyk has chosen to release this latest Sone Institute fronted production of ambient imbued, sophisticated simmering Techno on his own Mystery Bridge Records imprint.
Relating to but also casting adrift of past experiments, the opprobrious entitled New Vermin Replaces Old EP probes and ascends the astral with a subtle hand of guidance: not entirely untethered but free to roam and venture both the awe-inspired expanses of space and the more grounded, ominous ruins of our contemporary society.
It all begins with a most astro-nautical climb (nee glide) into the stratosphere and beyond with the opening ambient skying ‘Studded By Stars 1’. A light wind and square wave ease us into a most ‘starry’ atmosphere; yet subtly stirring in the midst of this cloud base is the resonating movements of objects and unseen forces. That’s the most ambient-esque it gets; from then on there’s added tubular metallic percussion, fluttering kinetic beats and threaded gnarled post-punk like traces of guitar.
‘Vulpine Smile’ may allude to something cunning and crafty, but the sonics reverberate and rattle towards the Germanic and echoes of labels such as Harthouse and R&S in the 90s. That same vibe of Teutonic propulsion can be heard on the Kraftwerkian (if they signed to Basic Channel), springy and bobbed cyber ‘Little Nurse’.
Dropping ball bearings in slot machines and spindling the transmogrified sounds of chimed bells, the twisting, almost clandestine ‘Dazzling Darkness’ seems to strangle the guts of a celeste on a near menacing and quite distinct experiment.
The more you listen, the more you hear revealed from the subtle multilayering of descriptive sonics, rhythms and expletory strands. New Vermin Replace Old is a most intelligent, emotive immersion into the visceral: a highly conscious electronic journey into the unknown.
Matt Donovan ‘Underwater Swimming’
24th March 2021

His short succinct bandcamp bio doesn’t do Matt Donovan justice, especially as (even if it’s to some degrees correct) his craft and reputation is foremost as a drummer, he’s branched out much further on previous projects before this latest solo offering. Formerly the motorizing Krautrock beat provider for Eat Lights Become Lights, and one half (alongside Nigel Bryant) of the now sadly defunct Untied Knot (two of their albums made our choice features of the year in the past), Donovan was already apt at extending his musicianship, composing and production chops.
Now venturing it alone, unheralded and just happy to share, he’s released a floatation, trippy wash album of hazed and quasi-nostalgic melody explorations: both instrumental and sung. Always full of surprises, Underwater Swimming is a dreamy recollection of C86, post-punk, Madchester, the rave era, spacy and industrial indie influences; refracted and molded to reflect Donovan’s search for melodious release in a time of great anxiety, tumult and uncertainty.
Songs and traverses (both utterly cosmic and more bruising, gnarled) seem to evoke various chapters, scenes and cathartic concerns: even studies. Many of which seem to be imbued by his formative years, growing up loving music in the 80s and early 90s. There’s furors into the baggy on the dreamed edge of the second summer of love ‘Mountain Missed’; an acid wash of The Charlatans, House Of Love, Stone Roses and The Essence. There’s a vibe, trace of the Hacienda years, and hints of Factory Records on the more pumped, bass rumbled ‘Wakhan Thanka’, and halcyon melodica-like plaintive Joy(ous) Division meets Spacemen 3 and The Church on ‘Lap Creature’. Donovan somehow manages to merge elements of The Tubeway Army, Brian Jonestown Massacre, Telescope and Popol Vuh on the motored, broody ‘Watch The Pressure’. It’s an album that takes in A.I. lamentable electro-blues, horizon gazing Kosmische, and a strange, magical Beach Boys (via John Lane) vision of oceanic ruminating. Under the light of celestial phenomenons, or around an Ibiza campfire with acoustic guitar, serenading, Donovan extends his portfolio and tastes and most importantly musicianship (going as far as to introduce subtle passages of piano and even prog rock into his oeuvre) on an exploration of ideas that all prove melodious. I’d say that was a success then.
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.
Monthly Playlist Revue: March 2021
March 31, 2021
PLAYLIST SPECIAL/Dominic Valvona/Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea/Matt Oliver

The Monthly Playlist Revue is partly our imaginary radio show, partly a chance to catch up and showcase the last month’s worth of features, recommendations and reviews on the Monolith Cocktail. An eclectic spread, journey as ever March’s edition includes an emphatic cosmological birthed release from Andrew Hung; a mugging off flow over the theme music of 80s favourite Minder by a rum lot of UK hip-hop talent (Satrumentalz/Big Toast/The Stranger Neighbour/Gee Bag/OliverSudden/Downstroke); a suite from the unheralded surprise diaphanous flotation opus from the congruous and glorious partnership of Floating Points & Pharoah Sanders; another dream partnership, Olivier Rocabois & John Howard; and the unusual usual mix of post-punk, ambient, industrial, avant-garde, pop, hip-hop and whatever genre you can think off.
Osayomore Joseph & The Creative Seven ‘Africa Is My Root’
Sakili ‘La Ri Latine’
Electric Jalaba ‘Briando’
Blak-Ram ‘Trauma Waters’
BROCKHAMPTON (Ft. Danny Brown) ‘BUZZCUT’
Xiu Xiu & Liars ‘Rumpus Room’
Andrew Hung ‘Space’
U.S. Girls ‘junkyard’
Chinese American Bear ‘Dumpling’
Camino Al Desvan ‘La Contorsion De Pollo’
Alewya & Moses Boyd ‘The Code’
Floating Points & Pharoah Sanders ‘Movement 5’
Masayoshi Fujita ‘Thunder’
Mecanica Clasica ‘Ak Deniz’
Mosquitoes ‘Strobeluck’
A Certain Ratio ‘Wonderland’
Timo Lassy & Teppo Makynen ‘Calling James (Live)’
U68 ‘Uncommon Nasa’
L’Orange & Namir Blade ‘Corner Store Scandel’
M-Dot/DZ The Unknown/Mayhem Of EMS ‘Schizoid’
Satrumentalz/Big Toast/The stranger Neighbour/Gee Bag/Oliver Sudden/Downstroke ‘Fuck Off London’
Tom Caruna (Ft. Scorzayzee, Jabbathakut) ‘You Look Nice’
Gloria ‘Global Warning’
Jane Inc. ‘Dirt And The Earth’
A Minor Place ‘When Silvia Leaves’
Opus Kink ‘Wild Bill’
Chris Church ‘Praise’
Ex Norwegian & Rhys Marsh ‘Half Baked’
Shaun McLachlan ‘When We Dance’
Olivier Rocabois & John Howard ‘Tonight I Need’
The Bordellos ‘Shattered Pop Kiss’
Witch Camp (Ghana) ‘When I Was Ill, You Didn’t Come Visit’
Fernando Anuang’a & Maasai Vocals ‘Enkisesei’
Rafiki Jazz ‘Omkoth Ma’ai’
Daughters Of The Desert ‘Whispering Dunes’
Vukovar ‘When Rome Falls (7” Brutalist Edit)’
Provincials ‘Terms & Conditions’
Petrolio ‘Y Nadie Queria Saber’
Abacaxi ‘Catfish’ Cementation Anxiety ‘The Locks Are Not Enough’
Alder Ego ‘I Saw It In A Dream’