The Monthly Playlist For November 2024
November 29, 2024
CHOICE/LOVED/ENJOYED MUSIC FROM THE LAST MONTH ON THE MONOLITH COCKTAIL: TEAM EFFORT

The Monthly Revue for November 2024: All the choice, loved and most enjoyed tracks from the last month, chosen by Dominic Valvona, Matt ‘Rap Control’ Oliver and Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea. As always our selection features a real shake up and mix of tracks that we’ve both covered in our review columns and articles over the last month, plus those tracks we didn’t have room to feature at the time.
Covering many bases, expect to hear and discover new sounds, new artists. Consider this playlist the blog’s very own ideal radio show: no chatter, no gaps, no cosy nepotism.
___/TRACKLIST_____
Les Amazones d’Afrique ‘Wa Jo’
Mulatu Astatke & Hoodna Orchestra ‘Major’
Orchestre Tout Puissant Marcel Duchamp ‘Speak by the E’
Marcelo D2 & SambaDrive ‘Samba de Primeira/Encontro com Nogueira’
Les Sons Du Cosmos ‘LAUNDRY’
Ric Branson Ft. Relense ‘Judas and the Black Messiah’
Juga-Naut Ft. Mr. Brown ‘Camel Coat’
Nowaah The Flood ‘On Location’
Blockhead ‘Orgy At The Port Authority’
Berke Can Ozcan & Jonah Parzen-Johnson ‘The Saint’
Elea Calvet ‘Landslide’
Roedelius ‘217 09’
Lolomis ‘Kristallen den Fina’
The South Hill Experiment ‘Silver Bullet’
Sparkz & Pitch 92 ‘Genius’
Jack Jetson & Illinformed ‘Pray’
Spectacular Diagnostics & Kipp Stone ‘BUCKET LIST’
Cavalier & Child Actor ‘Knight Of The East’
Walking The Dead ‘Fun Facts’
Humdrum ‘See Through You’
The Conspiracy ‘Tick Tok’
The Awkward Silences ‘Mother I’m on TV’
Trupa Trupa ‘Sister Ray’
Neon Kittens ‘Demons’
Bloom de Wilde ‘Dwindi’
Bell Monks ‘Before Dawn’
Spaces Unfolding & Pierre Alexandre Tremblay ‘In Praise of Shadows Pt. 2’
Gasper Ghostly ‘Floor Thirteen’
Son Of Sam & Masta Ace ‘Come A Long Way (Jehst Remix)’
Hegz & Dirty Hairy ‘Ruby Murray’
Glowry Boyz ‘FREE FALL’
Django Mankub ‘BEATSEVEN’
Sly & The Family Drone ‘Joyless Austere Post-war Biscuits’
Lolomis ‘Sieluni tanssimaan’
Cumsleg Borenail ‘Parade You ‘round Town’
Sam Gendel, Benny Bock & Hans P. Kjorstad ‘Charango’
Yazz Ahmed ‘A Paradise In The Hold’
Maalem Houssam Guinia ‘Matinba’
Baldruin ‘Hinein, hinaus, hinuber’
hackedepicciotto ‘Aichach – Live in Napoli’
Hornorkesteret ‘Krekling’
The Muldoons ‘Hours And Hours’
Juanita Stein ‘Motionless’
Sassyhiya ‘Take You Somewhere’
John Howard ‘If There’s a Star’
The Tulips ‘Haven’t Seen Her’
Jamison Field Murphy ‘Ermine Cloak’
Graham Reynolds ‘Long Island Sound’
Mauricio Moquillaza ‘___’
Kotra ‘Trials Of Discernment’
THE DIGEST FOR NOVEMBER 2024: New Music/The Social Playlist/And Archives
November 22, 2024
THE MONTHLY DIGEST INCLUDES A CLUTCH OF ACCUMULATED NEW MUSIC REVIEWS; THE SOCIAL INTER-GENERATIONAL/ECLECTIC AND ANNIVERSARY ALBUMS CELEBRATING PLAYLIST; AND CHOICE PIECES FROM THE ARCHIVES.

Photo Credit:: Giovanna Ferin
____/THE NEW
Juanita Stein ‘The Weightless Hour’
ALBUM (Agricultural Audio) 29th November 2024
And perhaps it all comes to this, that after twenty-five years in the music business as both the frontwoman of the Howling Bells and as an established solo artist Juanita Stein has finally found the strength of her own voice and creative force. Stepping out from behind the safeguards of noisy rock to find that silence resonates deeper and further, Juanita erases everything but the most vital, emotionally receptive and connective elements from her music to produce a sagacious, confident (despite the fragility and vulnerability in places) songbook of personal memories.
Stripped back then, but even more powerful, Juanita faces up to her family’s past and her own, and faces up to the more troubled, traumatic experiences in the most diaphanous of ways. There’s a real clarity lyrically and musically, despite the coos, the often near ethereal airs and veils, and the reverberated echoes. And the minimal accompaniment, which changes between the acoustic and note struck electric guitar, and features a subtle gravitas of strings at times, chimed elements and the odd bass drum, either weaves or rings out evocations of Southern Gothic and Lee Hazelwood country, magical carousal and Laurel Canyon 60s influences, the music of 90s Drugstore and Juliana Hatfield, and a hint of Radiohead.
I’ve always loved Juanita’s voice, which is pretty unique in the best possible way: soothing, beautiful yet full of emotional turmoil, and verging on the apparitional on occasion. Here she sounds at times like a mix of Kristin Hersh, Tanya Donelly, Lana Del Rey and June McDoom at its most breathlessly gossamer. And considering the themes, that voice is never projected with anger, resentment or resignation at any time during the ten songs on this near perfect album. Put it this way, there’s neither a flood of emotions nor a moment in which the whole experience threatens to engulf Juanita.
Rather than write for characters, every lyric can be identified as a feeling, an experience that Juanita has personally been troubled by, gone through and lived. Growing up in a talented Australian family of artists (her late father Peter Stein, the renowned songwriter/musician, her mother Linda a former stage and TV actress, and her brother Joel the lead guitarist in the Howling Bells), but brought up in the Orthodox Jewish faith with its strict adherence to the Torah and just as strict schooling methods, Juanita claws, or takes, back what was lost during her childhood with a lyrical passion that borders at times on the poetic wise honesty of Leonard Cohen.
The accompanying PR notes use the word “imposed” when outlining Juanita’s Jewish roots. But that would suggest an abandonment or uneasy relationship with her identity, which you are born into. Juanita seems to me to be more objectional to the dominate patriarchal and masculine aspects of Judaism; the restrictive nature of old lore and laws and rules. For she stands up against antisemitism, especially recently with record numbers of incidents and violence meted out against the Jewish community around the whole Western world after the horrifying, barbaric murders and kidnaps perpetrated by Hamas on October the 7th last year. ‘Old World’ is a reminder of the evils of antisemitism, but also a reckoning with that ancestry. Unfolding over an acoustic country and Laurel Canyon-like trial of striking imagery that most beautifully haunting song finds Juanita revisiting her grandmother’s Prague home, now, even eighty years later, emptied of its once thriving Jewish communities – communities that can be traced back a thousand years or more, as mentioned in the Sephardi-Arabic Jewish merchant and traveller Ibrahim ibn Yaqub’s famous travelogues in 965 AD, and which numbered 92,000 before the Bohemia/Moravia partition of 1938/39, when Nazi Germany attempted to wipe them from the face of the earth; nearly succeeding, it’s believed at least two thirds of that figure perished in the Holocaust. Using a beautiful language of descriptive geography, the way the light falls upon that absence and legacy of destruction, the piles of ash, Juanita observes the eradication of the faith, the synagogues, and the way they were brutally changed into Christian places of worship: the recurring crucifix for example. Juanita’s grandmother was forced to leave at the age of fourteen, escaping the fate that awaited: namely transportation to the Theresienstadt camp built outside Prague, and eventual death in Auschwitz in Poland or the killing sites of the Baltic states.
Making some references to that Orthodox schooling again, but also written whilst waiting out the Covid lockdowns in Italy, the picturesque ‘Carry Me’ finds solace and sanctuary in a most charming, idyllic Tuscany surroundings. As the world grinds to an uneasy halt, Juanita, accompanied by subtle birdlife and the even softer sound of crickets and the environment, coos whilst playing a resounding, sounding out electric guitar turned up loud: but vulnerable and fragile. Again, I’m hearing Leonard Cohen. And there’s a nice, real softened plink-plonk of piano that’s just about there, which comes in at the end.
Moving on, the near aimless evoked ‘Driving Nowhere’ recollects a relationship going…well, nowhere. Featuring the duet partner of North Ireland artist Pat Dam Smyth, there seems to be a channelling of Hazelwood via Nick Cave and Roland S. Howard. The drifting apart of once entwinned partners is played out on the Australian country highway of heartache and emotional breakdowns, with Smyth, who supported Juanita in on her first London solo performance, adding a very congruous if deeper voiced sense of lived-in, resigned sadness.
Reflections there are many, especially when facing the “heady days” of the early noughties as the frontwoman of the highly successful (and a damn good band) Howling Bells on ‘The Game’, which sounds like Lana Del Rey backed by R.E.M. Not so much regrettable, as sadly conveyed recollections of fame and being at the centre of a whirlwind, a storm that left no room to breathe or process, it seems she both suffered and yet misses it. ‘Motionless’ has a heavy strum and chug to it that reflects the open-hearted revelations of another broken relationship; the stage set for honest reflection and for saying what needs to be exorcised before moving on.
The Weightless Hour is the perfect album from a great voice and songwriter, who’s now able to find that distance from the events of the past and a new sense of reflected candidness and honesty in motherhood. Juanita’s true self and strength opens-up, the noise diminished for something far more powerful. Not so much defiant as confident. A definite album of the year.
Spaces Unfolding + Pierre Alexandre Tremblay ‘Shadow Figures’
ALBUM (Bead Records)
Coinciding with the 50th anniversary of the revitalized Bead label, a special challenging site-specific work of non-musical experimentation and evocation from both the Spaces Unfolding trio of flutist improvisor Neil Metcalfe, avant-garde violinist Philip Wachsmann and drummer improvisor Emil Karlsen, and the electronic explorer Pierre Alexandre Tremblay.
In merging their own specialist forms – the acoustic and electronic – both partners on this improvised serialism of avant-garde, textural, atonal and more recognisable sound and instrument sources, expand the sonic palette further towards the abstract, mysterious and near paranormal. “In Praise Of…” and making concrete the otherworldly “Figures” from the “Shadows” this collaboration seems to channel the ominous and a sense of disturbance. The electronic effects, beds and signals set off an uneasy sense of technologies creeping encroachment, its power sources and unseen, near subverted presence.
But the triplet of atmospheric “In Praise Of Shadows” suites is dedicated to and takes its name from the celebrated Japanese titan of provocative literature Jun’ichirō Tanizaki and his notable essay on Japanese aesthetics. Noted for both his shocking depictions of sexuality, of kinks, of the submissive, and obsessions, and subtler portrayals of family life in his native country during a time of upheaval, as modernism took hold, as Imperialism rose and then was crushed and replaced by Westernized consumerism and progress, Tanizaki’s usual schtick was to place characters, affairs against a backdrop of cultural anguish. However, published in the 1930s, In Praise Of Shadows is a little different; made-up of 16 sections (a sample of titles: “The toilet aesthetic”, “A novelist’s daydreams”, “An uncanny silence”), the central theme uses analogies and abstract ideas of light and darkness to depict the comparisons between Western progress and its search for light and clarity with the subtilties and appreciation of the subdued and shadows in East Asian art and literature – or more specifically an appreciation of the Japanese concept of “Sabi”, or “world view”, which is centred around transience and imperfection. There’s far more to it all of course, including, which is very important in this context and as an influence on this recording, a piece on the layered tones of various kinds of shadows and their power to reflect low sheen materials: see the various “Refraction” entitled pieces of textual shadowy play.
I’m not sure if it is intentional or not, but some of the both harder and dulcimer-like plucks on the violin, the whistly aspects and higher pitched flutters of the flute and some of the near-taiko-like thunders of the drums evoke the music of Japan: somewhere between the traditional and the work of Yamash’ta & The Horizon and Farabi Tushiyuki Suzuki. It builds a sort of Oriental mysticism at times, a mysterious atmosphere of shadows, or an estranged Kubuki theatre, and of deeper meanings channelled by the tactile and textured.
At times I’m picking up echoes of Anthony Braxton, the work of Larry Austin, the Giuseppi Logan Quartet, some Sandro Gorli, Alan Sondheim and Fernando Grillo amongst the electrical fields, the sparks of freeform jazz, the scurries, the spidery finger work, restless crescendos, dry fluted chuffs and rasps, and solid thick-stringed pinches and strains. Untamed with moments of reflection, uncertainty, Shadow Figures pitches an environment and its sounds, its unseen wound-up, ratcheted and twisted objects with more skeletal, shaved, sieved and high-pitched avant-garde expressions.
Maalam Houssam Guinia ‘Dead of Night’
ALBUM (Hive Mind Records)
Accomplished student and innovator of the traditional Islamic dance, music and poetry exaltation of ‘Gnawa’ and the three-stringed lute-like instrument that goes together with that ancient practice, the ‘Guimbri’, Houssam Maalam Gania pays a certain homageto his upbringing and his roots as the scion of the late Gnawa master Maalam Mahmoud Gania. A catalyst for the label, a repackaged special reissue of Maalam Mahmoud’s sublime venerable Colours Of The Night performances kick-started the whole Hive Mind platform label back in 2017 – a label, I might add, with a considered taste in some of the more understated, lesser known recordings of world-class artisans and genres. This was soon followed by the label’s fourth release, Mosawi Swiri LP, which featured Houssam Maalam and a troupe of lively young musicians from the country’s fishing port town of Essaouira.
The youngest son of the virtuoso has obviously inherited all the right creative and musical attributes, performing as he does a remarkable adroit and earthy vocalised songbook of affectionate and devotional Gnawa-style pieces; pieces that his father would play and sing in the family home to his children. The title is both a riff on his father’s iconic LP and a reference to the nighttime hours in which this album was recorded, stripped down with no accompaniment, live on the 3rd of June 2022 in Casablanca using only a Tascam field recorder and two microphones.
Uncloyed (as the field-recordist producer Ian Brennan would say) and as intimate and atmospheric as you can get, with the tape left running to pick up any clearing of the throat and the breaths between singing, each performance is a one-man demonstration of the Gnawa artform and a hybrid of influences from Westernized blues to the music of the Tuareg and the influences of a wider West and North African geography. For that Moroccan heritage bleeds over borders, chiming even with certain traditional forms from as far as Southeast Asia: whether intentional or not. In solo form, Houssam Maalam manages to play polyrhythmically; using, what sounds like, the flat of his hand on occasion to simulate either a bass part or a hand drum. Plucked elasticity is combined with paddled hand movements, whilst a constant buzzy and wobbled rhythm is kept going. Sometimes it sounds more like a banjo, and at others like a makeshift guitar, but is always played with either a delicate, intricate hand or a more physical, bassy one. Expressively conveying the Godly, moments of joy and comfort, and the questioning, the voice resonates from the very soil. But it sounds like that voice has matured somewhat since Mosawi Swiri, grown perhaps as it resonates with those songs of childhood. Dead of Night achieves two things. Firstly, Houssam Maalam grows closer to his father’s legacy, and secondly, forges his own pathway and identity honing a unique Gnawa legacy. Be quick, as this is yet again a limited release – though I’m sure of there is enough demand, there might be a second repress.
Baldruin ‘Mosaike der Imagination’
ALBUM (Quindi Records)
Mosaike der Imagination, or “mosaics of the imagination”, is the latest mirage fantasy of vague worldly evocations, hallucinations, magical folk music and gossamer traverses from the German electronic artist Johannes Schebler, under the guises of Baldruin.
Regular readers may recall my review of last year’s Relikte aus der Zukunfti album, which I described as “lying somewhere between the Reformation, hermetic, supernatural and mysterious Far East”. I also pointed out the air of religious bellowed organ, the church atmospherics, and the toll of bells on that release. For just as Roedelius, Moebuis and Schnitzler’s first recorded experiments, under the Kluster title, found a home on the synonymous German church organ music label Schwann, so congruous were those early kosmische innovators “hymnal qualities” and, if removed, links to the country’s rich venerated history of religious music, Schebler’s own small Bavarian village rectory upbringing can be heard permeating this latest album too.
You can pick up passages of Tangerine Dream cathedral vibes and a glass-stained organ on, what is, a kaleidoscopic tapestry of fourth world music, occult folk and the amorphous international traditional sounds of (from what I can make out) Japan, India, Southeast Asia, Tibet and an imaginary vision of ritualistic, tribal paganist Europe.
From Orthodox monastery moans to the whispered spells, invocations of Baroque and folk-styled esotericism, and from the ceremonial to mysticism and the burning coals of martyrdom, spindled and softy but quickly malleted instrumentation, hand drums, the fluted and bone-like vibraphones merge with electronic algorithms, various forms of crystalized and tubular light and recurring chiming of timepieces.
This a strange coalesce of Laraaji, aboycalledcrow, David Casper, Xqui, Jon Hassell, Caravan of Anti-Matter, Belbury Poly and Benjamin Law on a diaphanous and hallucinatory alternative plane of light and shadows. Baldruin conjures up the dreamy, the haunted, and the magical on yet another transmogrified and reconfigured album of folk, worldly and religious imbued recondite sources.
Mauricio Moquillaza ‘S-T’
ALBUM (Buh Records)
Exotic, alien and near supernatural organisms and life emerge from machines on the new four-suite release from the Peruvian musician, sound artist and cultural manager of various projects and platforms Mauricio Moquillaza. Working across a diverse range of mediums, from theatre to dance, and part of the experimental Lima scene of recent times, Moquillaza has cultivated a process of organic and improvised electronica from an apparatus of electronic tools – specifically a Eurorack modular of hardware.
On this untitled experiment of “generated possibilities”, the sounds, repetitions and changing patterns are untethered; recorded as they are in one take and without any overdubs. Allowed to develop almost naturally, each piece sounds like a balancing act between stimulated machine learning and free improvisation; the results, a continuous hybrid of cosmic, cerebral and mystical languages, calculus, exotic birdlife simulated pitches and warbles, moist cave-like atmospheres and the rhythms of life.
As a bassist too, you’ll hear singular notes that are both deep and low, but fluctuating, as each movement of the cylindrical, the tubular and more openly expansive create a magical and sometimes ominous shadowy world. At times it sounds like transduced or transformed echoes of bobbled, chimed gamelan from an alternative plane, or a fourth world take on early techno music. And as is the artist’s raison d’etre, there is a constant looming edge of dissonance, some near crushing and crashing haywire noises (like some galactic space battle on the album’s third suite) ready to develop out of the various patterned process, the inter-dimensional free-exchanges and dancing arpeggiator-like notes that bob around in the lusher, more fun sections.
Like A.R. And The Machines rewired via a portal into a futuristic vision of South America, or Tangerine Dream fusing with the Eyot Tapes, Tomat, Richie Hawtin, and Autechre, Kosmische influences, cult pioneering library music, more stripped techno and contemporary experimental electronica combine to form both a cascading and ever-changing layered album of quality freeform electronica. If you follow or are aware of the quality Buh label, then you know that every release is intriguing and interesting, introducing us to great new innovators from the South American scene. And Moquillaza self-titled debut is no exception. A highly recommended release.
____/THE SOCIAL PLAYLIST VOL.92

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 92 is the latest eclectic and generational spanning playlist come radio show from me – the perfect radio show in fact, devoid of chatter, interruptions and inane self-promotion.
Each month I chose a select number of anniversary-celebrating albums, and in November that means a cheeky 60th throwback to The Beatles’ For Sale (which actually was released in December of ‘64, but I’m not doing a social playlist next month and have instead stuck it here), 50th nods to CAN’s Soon Over Babaluma (see my updated piece from the archives below), Kraftwerk’s Autobahn and Bernie Maupin’s The Jewel In The Lotus, 30th salutations to Autechre’s Amber, and a 20th salute to MF Doom’s MM..Food.
I like to include a smattering of newish or 2024 releases that I missed on release, or that failed for one reason or another to make the blog’s Monthly Playlist selection – usually down to a lack of room. That means inclusions for Paten Locke, itsokaylove & Black Wick, Jagu-Naut, Rosaceae, joe evil, Dad Doxxer – the last two transmogrifying The Beach Boys songs as part of the surreal dairy Sad Milk Collective’s recent compilation It’s Three O’ Clock, Go To Your Sink, Pour Some Milk, And Start To Think.
That leaves the rest of the playlist to my eclectic imagination, and pick of records I own, once owned or wished I’d owned. In that list, you will hear Suzanne Langille and Neel Murgai, Five Day Week Straw People, Ventre de Biche, Def IV, Creative Arts Ensemble, Principle Edwards Magic Theatre, Laercio De Freitas, Lightshine, Armando Trovajoli, Black Mist, Scribble, Dow Jones And The Industrials, Tiny Yong, International Harvester, UV Race, Claudya and Ken McIntyre.
TRACKLIST
Secret Oyster ‘Black Mist’
Dad Doxxxer ‘409’
Dow Jones And The Industrials ‘Let’s Go Steady’
Claudya ‘Jesus Cristo’
Ken McIntyre ‘Cosmos’
MF Doom Ft. Count Bass D ‘Potholderz’
Juga-Naut Ft. Mr. Brown ‘Same Planet’
Def IV ‘Do It E-Z’
Paten Locke ‘Widdit’
Creative Arts Ensemble ‘Unity’
Armando Trovajoli Ft. Monica Vitti ‘Suor Kathleen’
Laercio De Freitas ‘Pirambera’
Bernie Maupin ‘Mappo’ Lightshine ‘Lory’
International Harvester ‘There Is No Other Place’
CAN ‘Splash’
Autechre ‘Silverside’
Rosaceae ‘Rue Norvins’
Scribble ‘River’
Kraftwerk ‘Morgenspaziergang’
Suzanne Langille & Neel Murgai ‘Bury Myself Where I Stand’
itsokaylove & Black Wick ‘Real Dangerous Louis V Gold for the Cosmic Stoner’
UV Race ‘Nuclear Family’
Ventre De Biche ‘Les murs de brique’
MF Doom ‘Poo-Putt Platter’
Principle Edwards Magic Theatre ‘McAlpine’s Dream’
joe evil ‘All I Wanna Do’
Five Day Week Straw People ‘I’m going out Tonight’
Tiny Yong ‘Le Sauvage’
The Beatles ‘No Reply – Anthology 1 Version/Demo’
____/ARCHIVE

Retrieved and reshared from the Monolith Cocktail archives this month, a 50th anniversary special on CAN’s 1974 LP Soon Over Babaluma.
CAN ‘Soon Over Babaluma’
(United Artists) November 1974
Hawkwind once sang enthusiastically that, indeed, “Space Is Deep” on their 1972 progressive nebula traveling album Doremi Fasol Latido. Unfortunately for all the postulations and far out oscillating effects they failed to launch us further than our own stratosphere.
Interstellar overdrive and the promise of a journey beyond the stars never quite managed to leave behind the familiar sounding musical structures and instruments of Earthly genres, such as rock or jazz. Even Sun-Ra for all his visitor/emissary from another world talk, was still to a point chained to classicism; those outbursts of improvisation never quite soared to the dizzying celestial heights that we were promised.
Which leads me to CAN and their sixth studio album Soon Over Babaluma, a genuine bold attempt to lavish the cosmos with a fitting soundtrack; delivered by Cologne’s very own branch of NASA.
Previously on the 1973 heavenly diaphanous hymn Future Days, CAN had scaled new empyrean heights of excellence. Now they sat in the very lap of the Gods themselves, the only logical next step being outer space.
It helped of course that the injection of funds, acquired by Hildegard Schmidt, now paid for some new equipment; namely the futuristic sounding Alpha 77, a serious piece of kit that interrupts the sounds emanating from a keyboard to produce some startling effects and soundscapes. Looking like some kind of radioactive scanner and housed in a bog-standard clunky metal box, the Alpha 77 could have fallen off the back of truck bound for some nuclear science facility. The flight deck controls and rather old-fashioned register dials don’t quite reflect the abundance of sounds that can be created and fooled around with; Irmin Schmidt teases a vast array of ethereal sweeping sound collages from this box of tricks, that coats every part of this album.
Irmin wasn’t the only one to receive some new equipment, the band, as a whole, upgraded their sound desk: for the first time being able to record straight onto stereo. Also editing and overdubbing became a lot easier, benefiting the overall quality of sound and mixing. Technology always played its part but now it would direct the proceedings in 1974, as they began to lay down what would be the forthcoming Soon Over Babaluma album.
December 1973 saw the departure of Japanese troubadour and mushroom haiku mantra singer Damo Suzuki. A heated confrontation during a session for a TV soundtrack resulted in Damo snatching up his mike and a pre-amp, exclaiming, “That’s mine!” before skulking off in a strop.
The gear was returned in due course, but Damo remained aloof, never to return, the recent marriage into and conversion over to the Jehovah’s Witness religion playing a major part in his decision making. He may as well joined the Quakers, as hanging out with avant-garde rock stars was now frowned upon and discouraged to the point where life must have become quite square. Although the late experimental, improvising icon would later return to music full-time; going on to collaborate with some of the most inventive heirs of krautrock and a whole new generation of experimental artists and groups: the list is endless.
An empty vacuum emerged at first, the rest of the band feeling left in the lurch, the upcoming album deadline and tour commitments placing intense pressure on the group to find a replacement.
Unfortunately finding a new singer/front man wasn’t easy, either due to unsuitability or previous prior engagements that role remained aloof and unfilled. In the end it was their own transcendental guitar genius Michael Karoli who stepped up to take on the vocal duties, with Irmin lending his support and backing.
For the record Karoli does a pretty good job of it, sounding like a Germanic Syd Barrett and even at times evoking the dreamy quality of Suzuki himself. Irmin on the other hand comes across all creepy and crazed.
With an emphasis on the pursuit of other worldly experiments and space exploration, Soon Over Babaluma sports a suitable cover. Graphics artist Ulli Eichberger delivers a shining reflective moonscape cartography, with the song titles and personal etched over the lunar terrain as though they were the names of craters and the barren land features: though it also resembles some Alps type snowbound mountain scape.
The album title itself is claimed to be a parody type anagram of the old Weimar Republic era showtune ‘Moon Over Alabama’, made famous in renditions by Nina Simone and even David Bowie. Originally written by Bertolt Brecht, the genius German poet and playwright, and put to music by fellow countryman Kurt Weill for the 1930 satirical opera Rise and Fall of the City of Mahogany, the song was made even more iconic when the Nazis banned it three years later. Maybe it reeked too much of Cabaret and the savage biting social depictions of George Grosz, who painted grotesque images of the obscene decadence taking part in German society. The surge of the far-right encroaching on what they saw as bedlam with their even worse replacement ideology, turning on the social commentary of Brecht and Weill with vengeance.
Whether or not this is indeed the reason behind the moniker, there is no real reference to historical context; rather the mood is entirely directed towards space. Track titles such as ‘Come Sta, La Luna’, closest translation being “as it is, the moon”, and the scientific-in-nature ‘Chain Reaction’ and ‘Quantum Physics’, CAN certainly laid down enough signs of their newfound commitment to the course.
A move towards the more technological progressive and experimental ethos mixed with the jazz boundary defining pronunciations made by Ornette Coleman, Miles Davis and the already mentioned ex-resident of Saturn, Sun-Ra, CAN’s sound managed to surpass the previous journeyman as they now set out to tip toe across Orion and penetrate deep space.
But this wasn’t the only album released by CAN in the 1974, oh no! They also released a collection of studio offcuts and even further out there avant-garde sound collages entitled Limited Edition; so called as it was limited to only 15,000 copies, though only two years later it was released as a double album with 5 extra tracks.
Both versions include the Ethnological Forgery Series and the scraps and fragments of sound pieces and obscure cluttered impromptu jams that littered their back catalogue. The standout track is the ambient moving viscerally inspired ‘Gomorrha’, one of the most ethereal quality pieces they ever recorded and possibly the track that Damo walked out on. Its science fiction searching, and hearts of darkness espionage drama evoking atmosphere perfectly encapsulates the sea change taking place, having been recorded only months before work started on Soon Over Babaluma.
——A Deeper Reading—–
The sound of a small leap across the surface of the Moon, whose gravity has been swallowed by the Alpha 77 and re-directed into one illuminating bended note, this is how ‘Dizzy Dizzy’ begins.
Karoli floats in on a passing solar wind, floating above the rim shots and deeply reverberated bass like a lurking rock astronaut ready to pounce with his introduction gambit “rat-a-tat-a-tat-a-tat” vocal scat.
A sultry Afrobeat enriched beat bounces along as twangs of guitar mark the way, all the while Schmidt strokes his alluring array of space organs, fermenting some lofty aspiring effects with which the groove can walk on.
Soon the violin strikes up a haunting weeping melody that cuts through the expansive air, exquisite emotive strains from the stringed solo stir up a certain amount of pulchritude.
Soft brush strokes and heavily comatose cymbals contact Holger Czukay’s one note comfort blanket warm bass, rich in rebounded echo.
Karoli breathlessly sings such wise pronunciations as,
“I know, I don’t smoke with the angels, I know
Don’t throw ashtrays at me”
I think we know what kind of brand of choice he’s more than hinting at!
He goes onto lay his soul bear with the romantic gestured lines,
“I’m not made out of mature,
But I’m something out of the heart.
Throwing on you a kiss, kiss”
Almost jumbled around or miss-translated, these lyrics read like a cut and paste experiment.
Dizzy in love or dizzy due to the air being so thin up here in the upper echelons of space, Karoli seems to levitate on his whispered sonnet to some higher beings.
Schmidt eventually takes over, draining the vocals to a mere trace, that Alpha 77 synth manipulator now warming up and taking on a life of its own, becoming like a fifth member of the group. But it will be those felicities violins that have the last word, ending on a majestic duelling climax.
‘Come Sat, La Luna’ opens with a field trip recording of some stroll alongside the canal, the occasional croaking from some walk on part crow, interrupts the serene ambience. Karoli then rumbles in with a pleading dramatic rendition of the title off the back of some heavy duty compressed reverb, that makes it sound like the band are playing in a diving bell chamber.
The sense of entrapment and struggle to breathe in this now thick atmosphere, a morphine induced state is evoked in this dense sounding eulogy to some far-off planetary dimension.
Schmidt recites rather than sings his lines, which are deep in creepy effects and delivered through some unsettling eerie cadenced nonsense.
These vocals are more like riddles or cryptic announcements of foresight, such as the lines,
“I am not fighting, but I’m the night,
I am not dying, and I’m not hurt.
I am the right or the wrong, your hope,
I am the dancer on the tender road”
He goes on to express,
“I am the water and how I can flow”
Schmidt seems to be angling at some descriptive analogy, continuing with more caustic questioning,
“And why don’t you call me Sta?
Flowing over Babaluma,
It ain’t your friend.
You can do it alone,
And you don’t have to pay”
The song picks up some pace, almost swinging along in a jaunty motion, Liebezeit taps his way through, giving a special decompressed bass drum and kick drum solo, losing himself in a sudden joyful upturn.
From out of the mire approaches a grand piano and squalling guitar, both lost in a mini battling concerto, which grows towards an almost full on avant-garde free for all before calm is restored with the last warbling chorus from Karoli. Almost sorrowful in manner, the finale words almost trapped as though Karoli is zapped of his strength.
Side one ends with the all-out galactic jazz ensemble instrumental ‘Splash’.
Sun-Ra, Miles Davis, Ornette Coleman bump into each other on the set of Mission Impossible, all vying for elbowroom and paranoid up to the eyeballs.
Squawking, hooting sousaphone and grumbling thunder striking bass are met with fret board scrapping and incessant scratching, Liebezeit rattling off a series of rolling drums and double kicks, booting his kit round the room.
Just as a certain rhythm is broken in, cowbells and trinket percussion enter the alarming fray, bringing with them the black box recorder omnipresence of Schmidt’s 77, a glorious soundtrack to the stars is eminent.
Karoli begins a dystopian guitar solo from on top of some desolate mountainous range or Olympus Mons itself, melancholy wines and strains of harrowing pleads echo round the empty immense affinity of space.
An excitement of sorts starts to boil over as a barracking charge from the drums now piles in to the accompaniment of strangled brass and eastern harem sounding oboes, which pursue a deconstructed noisy voyage of discovery, wrestling control of these nine headed monster jams.
Once you’ve had time to calm down from the audio assault of ‘Splash’, side two awaits your attention with the doubled up ambient suites of ‘Chain Reaction’ and ‘Quantum Physics’, the energy and matter evoking scientific epic.
Beginning with the now familiar sound of the 77 revving up like some organic spacecraft dreamed up by Frank Herbert – in fact reminding me of the special effects from Dune the movie -, drums and bass slowly fade in with a soul shaking tambourine, shimmering and arousing r’n’b, before Karoli slides and rides all over his guitar, the celestial conductor.
The brewing accompaniment runs riot until fitting into an assured stride, the low plains pan out in front of us as the beat remains steady and ambitious in outlook.
Schmidt unveils grand gestures of melody from his very own inter-galactic flight deck, painting multiple soaring swathes of astrological envy for Karoli to now glide over with his best Damo evoking vocals.
Surreal imagery is conjured up and uttered with breathless enthusiasm; analogies of a Soviet flavour are transcribed thus,
“Elephant dominating Russian,
Don’t be running hurt.
Elephant running,
Dominating the deep”
The attitudes change with the take it or leave it gay abandon of the chorus,
“Chain reaction incoming when you get so small,
I said chain reaction incoming when you get so rushed”
Probing, encroaching guitar searches roam the moonscape, taking part in a call and response with Schmidt’s now crescendo illuminating collage of sound.
Liebezeit and Czukay both slump off into solo frenzies, traveling their very own particular rhythmic paths before a giant thunder clap strikes and sends the track towards free-fall.
Tribal beats clatter and clash, whilst haunting encircling brooding organs and ascending synths swoop, then the beats are reigned back in, as Karoli recalls the chorus.
Cyclonic chuggering grooves are interrupted with some unworldly seething effects, that wouldn’t sound out of place in 2001: A Space Odyssey, as the ghosts of Mars and the trembling spooky reaches of the far-off universe now hang heavily over the space flight.
Rim shots and interplanetary musings seep into the final outro of the track before bleeding over to the second act of ‘Quantum Physics’.
Gentle ramblings and distressing noises unearthed from the science lab, emanate throughout, all the while Liebezeit attempts to keep a groove going, constantly banging away in the background.
From out of nowhere, an unseemly black hole maybe, Schmidt unleashes a brave new world of sublime washes and choral ethereal charm. The sky at night has never sounded so angelic and worth investigating.
No description quite explains the climactic finale that signs off Soon Over Babaluma, invigorating escapism and traveling through the cosmos, in scenes reminiscent of Solaris.
Breathtaking in vision, the perfect emotional drama set in space takes some beating. Perhaps they should include this in any future first contact package shot into the universe; then again, any alien life form may just think we’re showing off.
If you enjoyed, felt informed, or marvel at my words and those of the Monolith Cocktail, please take a second or two to read the following message of alms pleading. Whilst I’m fully aware of the austerity, the lack of money, and an industry set on reducing all its creators, its critics and writers and motivators to a life of poverty, it is becoming near impossible to continue without support. And so with that in mind:
For the last ten years I’ve featured and supported music, musicians and labels I and the blog’s other collaborators 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 or love for. 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: June 2023: Valia Calda, Killer Mike, Sparks, Kool Keith, Luzmila Carpio…
June 29, 2023

THE JUNE SELECTION: 50 plus tracks from the artists/bands we championed, rated and loved during the last thirty days. This is the eclectic, global and influential Monolith Cocktail Monthly Playlist, with music chosen from all the releases we covered in June plus those we didn’t have room for at that time. Selectors include Dominic Valvona (who curated this expansive playlist), Matt Oliver, Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea, Andrew C. Kidd and Graham Domain.
___TRACKLIST___
Valia Calda ‘Stalker’
La Jungle ‘La Compagnie de la Chanson’
Ramuntcho Matta ‘Hukai’
Pan Afrikan Peoples Arkestra ‘Nation Rising’
Killer Mike Ft. Jagged Edge ‘SUMMER’
Royalz Ft. THE HIDDEN CHARACTER ‘God In Da Ghetto’
Professor Elemental ‘Ready Or Not’
DJ Mk & Sonnyjim ‘WORTH THE RISK’
Revival Season ‘Chop’
Vieira and The Silvers ‘The Judge’
Trees Speak ‘Radiation’
Cat Box Room Bois ‘California Stars’
ANGHARAD ‘Postpartum’
Outer Limit Lotus ‘Let The Night Ride You’
The Kingfishers ‘Lapwings’
Sedona ‘Domino’
Katie Von Schleicher Ft. Lady Lamb ‘Elixir’
Mari Kalkun ‘Munamae Loomine (The Creation Of Munamagi|)’
Sparks ‘Not That Well Defined’
Bob Dylan ‘Queen Jane Approximately’
Maija Sofia ‘Four Winters’
Mike Cooper Ft. Viv Corringham ‘A Lemon Fell’
Dirty Dike Ft. Jam Baxter ‘The Places We’ve Been In’
The Chives ‘Your Mom’s A Bitch’
Lunch Money Life ‘The God Phone II’
Martha Skye Murphy ‘Dogs’
Sacrobosco ‘Pearl’
CODED ‘Binary Beautiful (Sunshine Variation)’
Baldruin ‘Zuruckgelassen’
Lauren Bousfield Ft. Ada Rock ‘Hazer’
Ital Tek ‘The Mirror’
Joe Woodham ‘Spring Tides’
WITCH ‘Streets Of Lusaka’
Celestial North ‘Otherworld’
Psyche ‘Kuma’
Omar Ahmad ‘Cygnet Song’
Luzmila Carpio ‘Inti Watana – El Retorno del Sol’
Ricardo Dias Gomes ‘Invernao Astral’
Andrew Heath ‘Fold’
Granny Smith ‘Egypt’
Spindle Ensemble & Evergreen Club Contemporary Gamelan ‘Lucid Living – Live’
Pawz One & Preed One ‘Revenge Of Silky Johnson’
ILL BILL, Non Phixion, La Coka Nostra, Kool G. Rap, Vinnie Paz ‘Root For The Villain’
Syrup Ft. Twit One, C. Tappin & Turt ‘Timing Perfect’
John Coltrane Ft. Eric Dolphy ‘Impressions – Live’
Vermin the Villain & ELAM ZULA ‘POWER OF TWO’
King Kashmere & Alecs Delarge Ft. HPBLK, Ash The Author & Booda French ‘Astro Children’
Lukah ‘First Copy’
Kool Keith ‘First Copy’
Stik Figa & The Expert ‘Slo Pokes’
S. Kalibre Ft. Scoob Rock, Slap Up Mill, Jabba The Kut ‘Murda Sound Bwoy’
Verbz, Nelson Dialect & Mr. Slipz ‘Beside Me’
Dillion & Diamond D ‘Uncut Gems’
The Perusal #44: Pan Afrikan Peoples Arkesta, Matt Donovan, Baldruin, Spindle Ensemble, Marty Isenberg…
June 13, 2023
Dominic Valvona’s Eclectic Reviews Spot (Unless stated otherwise, all releases are available to buy now)

Photo Credit: Mark Weber
Pan Afrikan Peoples Arkestra ‘60’
(The Village) 14th June 2023
Serving the South Central L.A. Black community from within for six decades (and counting), the late Horace Tapscott and his preservation Arkestra ensemble captured and reflected the social and racial injustices of that oppressed community with a righteous politically conscious and radical jazz style blueprint; a documentation, but also self-reliant stand against the state’s brutality and economic suppression.
Two decades on from his passing and Tapscott’s vision has been handed down to a new generation; led in the new century by Mekala Session, scion of Arkestra stalwart alto Michael Session. More or less each incarnation, from a sixty year timeframe (hence that album title) is represented on this new celebratory collection; released by the ensemble’s own label imprint, The Village.
For a platform that continuously swelled its ranks with untold talent from the American West Coast and beyond (oft member, the trombonist and Tribe hub co-founder, Phil Ranelin is synonymous as a mainstay of the Detroit scene for example), and fermented connections culturally throughout the country, inspiring many, the Pan African Arkestra’s recordings on wax are few and far between. Most of the performances on this compilation journey through the years were collated from home-recordings; many of which have previously never been aired before. And the majority of those come from taped concerts in the L.A. arena, the exception being a summer of ’95 performance at the Moers Festival in Germany, during a period of “regrouping”. Some, believed missing, have been literally unearthed from the Ark’s archive; with even the lineup roll call having to be cross-referenced at times: and still not a 100% sure even then.

The Pan African Arkestra exists as a live entity; whether that was playing each weekend in the formative years at the South Park bandstand or, in the line of hostile LAPD fire as they played on a flatbed truck parked right in the middle of the street during the ’65 Watts riots (or “revolt” as its framed from the frustrated, put-upon Black community suffering inequality, little or no representation). In chronological order, the 60 album encapsulates each transformation of the troupe, beginning with the fifteen-minute long tribute to the ‘heart of the Tapscott family’ Pearline Fisher, or Gram Pearl “to those who loved her”. A grand matriarch, at the very centre of the family home, watching all the goings ons, including the band members arriving up the drive for rehearsals in the garage, Gram Pearl’s name was immortalised on the 1961 home recorded ‘The Golden Pearl’. Reverence shines through this early performance that seems to bridge the late 50s jazz of Gillespie, Ellington, Coltrane and the Savoy label with the coming age of the 60s Black consciousness and spiritual enlightenment. A “likely configuration” of Tapscott on a loose Oscar Peterson flow of barrel and saloon piano, Arthur Blythe and either Jimmy Woods or Guido Sinclair doubling up on saxophone, Lester Robertson on fluttered trombone, David Bryant on spoke-like and brushed double-bass and Bill Madison on swing-time and brushed drums mark one of the first lineups of the burgeoning Arkestra. As it turned out, pianist and conductor Tapscott was right to jump off Lionel Hampton’s Big Band tour bus that year; walking all the way back home, pissed but motivated to grow something new.
In the “pressure cooker” tumult of South Central L.A. a close-knit handful of artists gravitated to the beacon; at first going under the UGMA (Underground Musicians Association) abbreviation, this initial lineup included (amongst many others) the vocalist Linda Hill, drummer Donald Dean and the already noted bassist Bryant (who’ll crop up quite a lot during the course of this ensemble’s history) and saxophonist Woods. Many would appear on that compilation opener.
Although not until much later, the obvious influence/inspiration of Saturn’s cultural ambassador in Earth, Sun Ra, most be noted. Tapscott himself, easily an acolyte of that cosmic spirit, pointed out the differences between the two Arkestras; the original envisioned as an ark travelling through space, the other, a “cultural safe house for music” down here on terra firma. Whilst Sun Ra looked to the stars for an escape to some colour-blind society on a distant world, Tapscott’s troupe wanted to be amongst the people: screw the space race.
That blossoming unit found itself under FBI surveillance as a new decade beckoned; much of that paranoia down to the ensemble’s support for the Black Panthers. From the cusp of that decade, the 70s, there’s a recording of the Ark at Widney High School. With a far wider, expanded lineup and the Sarah Vaughan like commanding, but also dreamy, freely moving vocals of Hill and, so it seems, only a recurring Tapscott and Robertson, a lot of new faces appear on the fluctuating ‘Little A’s Chant’. A loose intoxication, a tamed wilderness permeates a mixture of The Lightman Plus One’s Cold Bair, Tyrone Washington’s Roots and the influence of Philip Cohran.

Photo Credit: Mark Weber
With the war paint on, entering the over-commodified decade of the 80s, the Ark, once more changing the roll call, fashion a piano heavy kaftan wearing fire out of Somaya “Peaches” Hasson’s ‘Nation Rising’. Turning in a Last Poets and Leon Thomas vocal performance, Juan Grey (aka Jujigwa) is a man in a hurry: he’s got “work to do”, “rising a nation”. Whistling and swinging down a boardwalk paved Nile on a Yusef Lateef and Pharaoh Sanders vibe, we got a double-front of both willowy flutes (Adele Sebastian and Dadisi Komolafa to thank for that) and altoists (Sabir Mateen delivering a honked and dynamic solo, with Gary Biar as foil), and the rattled congas of Moises Obligacion alongside the mini crescendo spiraling drums of Billy Hinton. Phew!
Forward again, and to the backdrop of an L.A. in flames, sparked by the Rodney King miscarriage of justice, the Ark are to be found on one of their rare trips to Europe; playing a concert at the Moers Festival in the summer of ’95. Regrouping with the help of a returning Jesses Sharps on soprano sax, Tapscott shares piano duties with Nate Morgan and a whole lot of brass on ‘The Ballad Of Deadwood Dick’. I will however name check Arthur Blythe on alto sax and recent converts Michael Session (on tenor), Charles Owens (also on tenor), Fundi Legohn (French horn), William Roper (tuba), Steve Smith (trumpet) and Thorman Green (trombone). An integral founding brother of the Ark, the already mentioned David Bryant is back on double bass, but sharing his duties with fellow bassist Roberto Miranda, whilst doubling up on the drums is the shared union of Fritz Wise and Sonship Theus. All together they conjure up another Egyptian tapestry whilst huffing and in bird-like illusion build up a brass heavy swing and sway. A galloping percussive rhythm (coconuts denoting a hoof-like fast trot) creates a travelling caravan vibe, as the melody, swells and punctuations evoke Skies Of America Ornate and touch of Bernstein.
The new century, a decade on from the death of their mentor and founder Tapscott, and the troupe is under a new steward and embracing another in-take of rightful minded jazz players. From a 2009 recording at the Jazz Bakery (pastries and bread with jazz, what’s not to like), with only a familiar Wise on drums (joined by Bill Madison), Sharp on soprano, Legohn on French horn and Smith on trumpet, we hear a Philip Cohran type spiritual and political fanfare for “justice”. L.A. notable Dwight Trible (recently giving divine voice to Kahil El’Zabar’s Ethnic Heritage Ensemble) is on expressive conscious-unloaded and right-on vocal duties, and the already mentioned Detroit icon Phil Ranelin can be heard on characteristic trombone. A riled and ached, seething indignation with shades of Sun Ra and the Pharaoh, ‘Justice’ is as free as it is fueled by rightful grievances.
The most recent performance, a decade later, is the Zebulon (in L.A. again) convert vision of ‘Dem Folks’. It’s conducted this time by another convert, the Egyptian-American-Muslim trombonist Zehkeraya El-Magharbel, who turns out to be a sound fit. The cast is further expanded with a quartet of spiritual rousing and more Gyrgory Ligeti otherworldly choral vocalists (Aankah Neel, Tamina Johnson-Lawson, Qur’an Shaheed and Maia, who’s also on flute), oboes, bass clarinets, a good showing of horns, and this time out, the keyboard skills of Brian Hargrove. A real fusion of dynamic parts, it begins with a virtuoso drilled, pummeled, slow to fast, percussive and drum introduction of rolls and cymbal hissing shimmers (ala Billy Cobham), before, at first, hitting a dissonance of wild drum mimicked voices. A soul-jazz groove finally lands after going through various changes, from fluted Lateef to echoes of Prince Lasha’s Search For Tomorrow communion with Herbie Hancock and a tumult of incantation and oscillated vocals. An untethered swell of orchestral jazz in the anointed light of Sun Ra and the wisdom of the ancients, ‘Dem Folks’ is the earthly community taken to anthemic highs. What a fitting, electrifying performance to mark the Pan Afrikan Arkestra’s newest incarnation; twenty years on from its pioneer’s death, the baton passed on and, as it obviously proves, is still in safe hands. The future is indeed bright for this long-running ensemble.
The 60 album proves an important preservation of a self-reliant social activist institution, integral to the community in which it serves, teaches and rises up. A great encapsulation of that story, musical journey and the changes it has gone through, this will both excite the Ark’s fans and newcomers to the cause.
Spindle Ensemble & Evergreen Club Contemporary Gamelan ‘Live In Toronto’
(Hidden Notes)

A congruous union of modern classical music and gamelan, Bristol’s Spindle Ensemble quartet and the Toronto Evergreen Club Contemporary Gamelan octet transport the listener to a blossomed, lush and evocative West Java landscape on their EP of both live and recorded studio performances.
In what proves to be an intuitive collaboration – the results of a chance meeting between the Spindle’s Harriet Riley and Evergreen’s Christopher Hull whilst both studying gamelan in Bali -, both partners respect and accentuate the qualities of their chosen forms and inspirations as they meld and weave together instruments from the West and Indonesian East. A balance is struck between contemporary explorations, probes and the timeless across three tracks. The gamelan ‘degung’ family of metallophones and bamboo instruments dance and bob along to and twinkle alongside the Spindle’s harp brushes, bulb-like note dripping marimba and vibraphone, sympathetic-bowed cello and violins, and deft subtle spells and waves of piano.
Written by the Spindle’s composer-pianist and harpist Daniel Inzani, the opening patter cascade of mallet notes and tinkles ‘Lucid Living’, was recorded at the Evergreen’s rehearsal space in downtown Toronto. A light enchanted dance of plucked and picked strings across lily pads, with an air of the willowed fluted pastoral, there’s an almost romantic but simultaneous closed-eyes, deep in thought moodiness to this first performance of adroit musicianship.
Also penned by a Spindle member, Harriet Riley’s mythological-loaded ‘Orpheus’ is part of the two group’s live performance at the city’s 918 Bathurst Street Centre For Culture, Arts, Media And Education – it must be noted at this point that the Bristol quartet travelled to the Evergreen’s backyard to foster this project, spending weeks rehearsing the repertoire before that inaugural live date. Barefoot in jungle temples, the Hellenic bard-poet (an Argonaut and famed survivor of Hade’s underworld) is planted down in the Indonesian exotic; wandering across an uninterrupted proscenium score of various Southeast Asian flavours. All the while accompanied by a soundtrack of pressing repeated chords, metallic chimes and drones, the arched and bowed. At times it’s a rasped mizzle, at others, a slow-paced rhythmic joy or flight that feels almost improvised if not free to fellow its natural path.
The final performance, ‘Open Fifths Gardens’, was composed by the Evergreen’s Andrew Timar and is another exotic allurement of the East. It suggested the dusk hour to me, and evoked the strings of Simon McCorry and Anne Müller: that push of classical instruments made to sound more contemporary and alive if abstract; not just read off the classical cannon score sheet but swelling up with a less guided, personal feel for the time, space and direction of travel in that moment.
In short: the gamelan sound is opened up further and spread wider into the arena of contemporary chamber and symphonic classical music, to conjure up an atmospheric kind of melodious and stirring theatre.
Matt Donovan ‘Sleep Until The Storm Ends’

Marking three in a row of annual Spring-time delivered albums, the drummer-percussionist turn multi-instrumentalist solo artist Matt Donovan opens up his personal universe to the world. In the face of political, social discourse and ruin, lawlessness, loss and anxiety Donovan captures the evocative moments and scenes we all often take for granted; turning nighttime walks, the memories of loved ones into something musically and sonically lasting. A time is saved for posterity even if its just for Donovan and no one else; a kind of musical photo album that represents the sentiments, therapeutic stages of a period in his life.
And yet, with such universal tragedy and dislocation, there’s always hope; the music, even when the subject matter chimes with the God awful state of affairs currently destroying the country, remain loving and kind. Those of you who seeked out the (hopefully through my recommendations) previous Habit Formation (’22) and Underwater Swimming (’21) albums will find that Sleep Until The Storm Ends shares a familiar palette of kosmische/krautrock, alt 80s and 90s and post-punk influences. And yet it feels somehow different; mature and comfortable in its skin but exploring all the while.
With propulsive-motored stints in Eat Lights Become Lights, and as a foil to Nigel Bryant in the psych-krautrock-progressive-industrial Untied Knot duo, it’s hardly surprising to hear those Germanic influences permeating this newest album: A spot of the Dingers (Klaus and Thomas) here and a bit of Michael Rother and Manuel Göttsching guitar there. On some of the more reflective tracks like ‘A Sky Full Of Hope’ and ‘Night Walking’ its Tangerine Dream and company, albeit the latter has more than a touch of soundtrack Vangelis about it too, merged with pop, jazz and 80s indie influences. Although not German, just mere cousins on the astral plane, a few of these tracks reminded me of both Syrinx and Ariel Kalma’s new age, spiritual panoramic awakenings.
This is only half the story, as Donovan also effortlessly seems to weave The Field Mice’s ‘…letting go’ with Karl Hyde, Mick Harvey (especially on the few occasions he sings), the Durruti Column, Spaceman 3 and Eno (Another Green World era on the light-effected environmental plaint ‘The Crying Earth’). In practice this results in a sort of bell-tinkled and recalled leitmotif signature unfolding of Donovan’s moods and ruminations: goodbyes too. Sometimes its dreamy and other times near cosmic with climbing scales and Fripp-like sustain and flange-fanned guitar work, synth waves and heartfelt vibrations.
Barefoot Contessa daydreams sit well with clavichord buzz splintered boogies on yet another enriching and rewarding album that slowly unfurls its understated balm of warmth and also protestation gradually over repeated plays. On the fringes certainly, a true independent diy artist, Matt Donovan is far too good to stay under the radar. Do yourselves a favour, grab a copy on bandcamp now.
Baldruin ‘Relikte aus der Zukunfti’
(Buh Records) 19th June 2023

Lying somewhere between the Reformation, hermetic, supernatural and mysterious Far East, the German electronic musician-producer Johannes Schebler simultaneously occupies a liminal past and as yet unsure future on his latest journey, Relikte aus der Zukunfti.
Just as Roedelius, Moebuis and Schnitzler’s first recorded experiments, under the Kluster title, found a home on the synonymous German church organ music label Schwann, so congruous were those early kosmische innovators “hymnal qualities” and, if removed, links to the country’s rich venerated history of religious music, Schebler’s own small Bavarian village rectory upbringing can be heard permeating this fourteen-track traverse and score.
The chime and ring of Lutheran, but also Oldfield’s tubular, bells can be heard across a both holy and unholy atmosphere of cult Italian horror, prog-rock, krautrock, new age and vague Ethnographic absorptions. The paranormal and monastic; the chthonian and Oriental are constantly drawn upon to manifest a fog of uncertainty and intrigue; occasionally delivering heightened dramatics and the chills as the music evokes hints of Goblin, Fabio Frizzi and the presence of some ungodly force.
It begins however, with the blown, sax fluted and veiled ‘Under The Counter’ soundscape, which sounds more like a gauzy apparition of Sam Rivers or Colin Stetson in a Frederic D. Oberland expanse. ‘Ride On The Silver Lizard’ meanwhile, sounds like a brassy sitar transcendental mythology of Steve Hackett, Eroc and Srgius Golowin, and the airy ebbed ‘Predestined’ captures Finis Africae and Vangelis in a cloud vapour loop. The timpani-rumbled ‘Confused’ on the other hand could be a lost Sakamoto score; the late Japanese icon entering the underworld.
Stretching the imagination whilst hinting at various mystical lands, you can detect the more experimental, serial and less musical adventurous work of Širom and Walter Smetek existing in the same space as Popol Vuh, Alejandro Jodorowsky and the melodically afflatus. You’re never quite sure where you are exactly though: nor in what time period. The ground beneath your feet is translucent, or, like an ever-changing shimmer and shiver of evaporated atmospheres. This is a knowing album that taps into its influences and church music groundings to offer a balance between the spiritual and disturbing.
Ramuntcho Matta ‘S/T’
(WEWANTSOUNDS) 16th June 2023

A sound production of contrasts; a collage of time spent in both New York City and Paris, where the graffiti’d downtown meets fourth world music explorations, Ramuntcho Matta’s absorption of those two cultural hives is a no wave and exotic theatre of diverse influences.
The younger sibling to and scion of the Matta arts brood – his father, the Chilean-born Roberto, a key if not always congruous member of the Surrealist movement with his ‘psychological morphologies’ or alien ‘inscapes’ coined subconscious manifestations, and brother, Gordon Matta-Clark, the ‘anarchitecture’ pioneer of such concepts as the ‘split’ house and various art performances -, Ramuntcho was a well-connected creative nomad who chose to plow his own furrow in the field of experimental music. He started out in this regard, in the company of such polymath avant-garde luminaries as Brion Gysin, Don Cherry and Laurie Anderson. The latter opened doors to everything New York had to offer in the late 70s and early 80s. Ramuntcho also shared a flat with scenesters Nana Vasconcelos and Arto Lindsay: living in the same building as the Talking Heads’ Chris Frantz and Tina Weymouth no less. Although tragedy would strike with the death of his brother and conceptual art icon Gordon in the late 70s, the burgeoning producer would stay on, falling in with the Mudd Club, CBGB and Danceteria in-crowd; taking note of the evolving polygenesis movements of early hip-hop, post-punk, electronica, no wave funk and more worldly sounds (from Soweto to the outback, Caribbean and Hispaniola).
But it all came together, or rather this particular project did – dusted off, remastered and given a deserving vinyl reissue by WEWANTSOUNDS – in Paris. With the CV –notably recording Don Cherry’s 1983 ‘Kick’ single for the boutique French label Mosquito, the original imprint for this self-titled album – and network expanding ever further, there would be performances with the Senegalese group Xalam and the Arabic rock group Carte de Séjour, with Rachid Taha. A residency in Lyon led to a meeting with the Algerian-born French avant-garde choreographer Régine Chopinot, who had taught dance at the city’s Croix-Rousse before forming her own experimental multimedia company. Chopinot invited Ramuntcho to compose the soundtrack to her upcoming Via show – the costume designer of which was a young aspiring Jean-Paul Gaultier.
Without seeing the actual production it’s difficult to gauge if the music was successful, complimentary or not. However, removed from that dance theatre setting the album works as a window in on a particular rich cultural exchange of ideas, sonics, sketches and soundscapes.
This ’85 released production was produced between Ramuntcho’s home and the Studio d’Auteuil in Paris; the former, a more solitary space for the album’s soundscapes and more ambient-minded pieces, the latter, a more rambunctious shared environment where all the album’s bandy and shunted no wave funk and Island life Grace Jones-esque tracks were recorded with the Stinky Toys and Elli & Jacno duo’s Elli Medeiros (on vocals), the Uruguayan percussionist Negrito Trasante, Suicide Romeo’s Frederic Cousseau (better known as Fred Goddard) on drums and Polo Lambardo on konks. That list may be extended depending on what information you read, although the WWS label and linear notes writer Jacques Denis have managed to pull together the fullest picture yet of a record hampered by misspelled band members and even a missing track listing. According to those same notes, Ramuntcho didn’t feel that the label had pushed the project or even promote it very well; hence why it disappeared: a find for crate diggers decades later.
A dance fusion of influences and ideas, this counterpoint of diverse elements opens on a gentler, almost mulling day dreamy guitar amble with the light-jazz touched ‘Gesti’. Like Marc Ribot on Iberian shores, there are a couple of these soloist moodscape pieces (see the more classical-tinged and loosened ‘Irimi Nage’). A second strand to this record’s sphere of influence is the didgeridoo sounding passages of Jon Hassell inspired sound cartography; as found on the outback resonated, barked fretboard experimental, water carrier poured ‘Avatar’, and mbira tine, funnel blowing, freight train honked primitive dance music spot ‘Zoique 3’.
The action sprawls across both the NYC and Paris underground on tracks like the shunting cut-up and counterbalance of discombobulated Art Of Noise and a repeated sweeter voiced spell of African or French-Polynesian Island song, on the ‘Sassam Kitaki’ switch. Most surprising is the fluid, bandy amalgamated hip 80s shining ‘Hukai’, which merges Casino Music with Orange Juice, Grace Jones, Lounge Lizards, Talking Heads and the sunny township polyrhythms of South Africa. ‘All Those Years’ in contrast, sounds like Saw Delight era Can rubbing shoulders with a reflectively blue XTC.
Also, in addition to shades of Dunkelziffer, Populaire Mechanik, Don Cherry (of course), Annie Anxiety and the Pop Group, there’s an exotic fauna and animalistic soundscape of French-Arabia, Africa and the Americas, to be found suffused amongst the electrified disjointed and vibrated no wave funky free-play.
I must confess, this album totally passed me by. I wasn’t even aware of it. Although only briefly, I even studied both Roberto and Gordon Matta when I was an art student, but had no idea there was another equally talented member of the clan. Hearing it now makes sense, so much of its makeup integral and over-used in the last two decades as the 80s becomes this generations’ 60s. There are some great eclectic hybrids and even no wave dance tunes to be found. Everything gels perfectly on this evolving, changing production; from the bendy to frazzled; atmospheric to off-kiltered. Ramuntcho’s theatre dance soundtrack is a complimentary bedfellow to Sakamoto’s computer disc experiments of the same(ish) period, released a while back on the WWS label. A great revived lost fusion from the avant-garde funk and no wave cannon.
Marty Isenberg ‘The Way I Feel Inside’
7th July 2023

It’s a name synonymous with whimsy poignancy, a signature frame and colour palette, but what the American filmmaker Wes Anderson and his perfectly constructed diorama movies are equally famous for is their carefully curated soundtracks. The scores of which have led to, in some cases, a revival of fortune for the said artists and bands that pepper such iconic films as Rushmore, The Royal Tenenbaums, The Life Aquatic, Fantastic Mr. Fox, Moonrise Kingdom and so on.
The unassuming Anderson has become such a cult figure himself that, in kind, a number of artists have penned homages or name checked his films or idiosyncratic view of the world. Arguably there is a certain hip, generation X selective and knowing calculation to those mixtape-like soundtracks that get used as prompts for poignancy, emotional states and the almost impossible to quantify with just actions or dialogue.
Not quite the homage in itself, the debut album from the NYC bassist and composer Marty Isenberg (stepping out under his own name for the first time) entwines the feelings of his own formative years with Anderson’s filmography: or rather, the music from those beautifully crafted stories of outsider isolation and pain. You could call it a covers album of a sort; an eight-song selection of reinterpretations would be better though. And yet, despite keeping some of the signature melodies, all of the original lyrics, Isenberg extends, menders and sets familiar emoted pulls in a different environment with a rich jazz transformation.
You’ll have to excuse my ignorance and a lack of info on who is joining Isenberg on this album: there’s electric guitar, drums, some sax and cornet, and a beautifully voiced singer with shades of Norah Jones and Esperanza Spalding. I’m going to suggest that members of Isenberg’s Like Minds Trio with Alicyn Yaffee and Eric Reeves could be involved. It would make perfect sense; the music does at least sound congruous.
Proving the most popular choices, The Royal Tenenbaums and The Life Aquatic dominant. From the former there’s a faithful harpsichord spindled version of the Velvet Underground’s ‘Stephanie Says’ that subtly transforms that Stones-like psychedelic old England vibe into a smooth 70s jazz light theme tune, with sections of swing and simmered feels. Velvet third wheel and oft collaborative partner, Nico has her pleasant of Lutheran melancholic song of regret and remembrance. ‘These Days’, lightened and taken back to Jackson Browne’s more lifted, sweetened origins. A Muscle Shoals electric piano (or Hammond) hovers as the vocals acquire more of a lilting and near scat-jazzy vocal arrangement that sounds almost Bacharach(ian).
Another Tenenbaums favourite, Eliot Smith’s ‘Needle In The Hay’ is given a jazzy touch. Isenberg opens with incipient bass bends, scales and nimble introspective picks as a less adolescent moody, despondent vocal points towards both Spalding and Tori Amos. The feels all there: the indie singer-songwriter dourness. Yet it’s given an off-script treatment of drama counterbalanced by the meandered.
Nick Drake’s achingly beautiful ‘Cello Song’, with all its connotations and personal tragedy, is a journey in itself of the wept and sympathetic. Sailing close to Beggars Banquet Stones, and the jazz of Mingus and Bobby Jackson at other times, a “cruel world” of sensitivity is softly expanded upon. That vocal is almost airy, if still carrying a beguiled plaintive tone.
My personal favourite (alongside Rushmore), The Life Aquatic offers up a double helping of Bowie covers and a Lennon/McCartney-like Zombies hymn. In what is a kind of meta exercise, the film’s Belafonte crew member and famous Brazilian musician Seu Jorge originally played around with a songbook of acoustic Bowie numbers; all of which are smattered throughout the Cousteau parody come homage. One of them, ‘Rebel Rebel’, is covered here; attuned more to Jorge’s Latin-sauntered origins than the glam-stomp actionist anthem of Diamond Dogs. In this version the song is played in the background of Peter Sellers’ The Party, or winding out of an early 60s jazz lounge. It’s both very twinkly and Tropicana light. ‘Life On Mars’ however, is faithful in part (tune wise anyway), yet takes the original crooner-vibe towards a mix of colliery band style horns and Stevie Wonder soul-jazz. The drama, edges are rounded but the overriding lament and emotional draw remain in tact. The pleasing ‘The Way I Feel Inside’ from a ‘65 Zombies is handled with a sweetness and enchantment that wouldn’t sound out of place on an Anderson film itself.
I’m totally unfamiliar with the band Steady Holiday, whose ‘So Long’ is playfully sent back to a dancehall era that weaves together echoes of WWII, the 50s and Dixie Jazz for a wistful, cornet nestled smooch.
Isenberg with subtlety and charm offers some surprising renditions. But what’s most surprising is that the bassist doesn’t grandstand, hog the spotlight with his double-bass instrument of choice; nor is this especially a bass-heavy showcase, but an adroit, attentive but ready to leap at a moment’s notice into action playing style that bends and lends itself to a variety of styles. There’s heartfelt connections balanced with a certain magic and even playfulness, a sharing of the artist’s tastes, record collection and personal aspirations; the main one being the loss of his father at a young age: old enough however to have been inspired by his dad’s own musical tastes, loves and collection of instruments. Finding a special affinity perhaps with Anderson’s many protagonists (there is a leitmotif of characters with only one parent in his films), that early loss led to Isenberg’s journey in musical study: from initially learning by feel and intuition, to majoring at the New School for Jazz And Contemporary Music in jazz performance. A beautiful and off-kilter, sometimes whimsical, songbook is transformed with a jazzy touch of personality.
Joe Woodham ‘Worldwide Weather’
(None More Records) 16th June 2023

Noting the changing tides and climate on warm suffused currents of looping guitar, field recordings and kosmische, post-rock and dream progressive styled languorous inspirations, Jouis band member Joe Woodham sonically and melodically charts various lunar-cycle driven weather fronts and metrological phenomena on his first solo album for the None More Records label.
Unburdened by climate change Cassandras’ and apocalyptic predictions, Woodham almost finds a certain comfort – even when yearning – in tracing and capturing the ebb and flow, the awe and beauty of the oceans as they are pulled by the moon’s cyclonic forces.
As an aside, and for trivia fans, album track ‘Neap Gloom’ (anything but as, well, gloomy as that title suggests; rather it’s a more airy and wafted proposition, with rain patters that sound rather nice) is a reference to the tide just after the first or third quarters of the moon: when there is the least difference between high and low waters.
The process of making this album itself comes from enjoyment, not dark clouds of angst or anxiety. The initial experiments were produced in fact on Woodham’s daughter’s Casio keyboard, which in turn was linked to a loop pedal. There’s more to it than that of course, but the intention was one of play and improvisation; later manipulated and layered with the clipped hiss, gates and crackled atmospherics of Matthew David, the suffused bird songs and whistles of Ernest Hood, and crashing surf and spray of the waves crashing against the shoreline.
The enormity is certainly present, but most of the peregrinations and moods slip and wash between the swimmingly and warmly drifting. It could be what sounds like a melodica on tracks like the gamelan malleted bells and concertinaed Parisian wafted ‘Gameplan B’ (no idea about that title, other than this could be a riff on the climate emergency brigades, “there is no planet B”, mantra), and squeezed mellowed, nicely wavy and dreamy (anything but) ‘Overcast’ that makes me think of Alex Paterson’s brand of mirage-dub. And, as referenced by Woodham himself in his accompanying quotes as the listening material when making this record, there’s an enervated whiff of Frances Bebey about the latter track, alongside hints of Jah Wobble and Odd Nosedam.
Amongst the variations of Manuel Göttsching, Michael Rother, Land Observation and Orange Crate Art guitar accents, lines, curves and cycles and sweeping weather fronts, the magical ‘Spring Tides’ builds from a Laraaji-like heavenly introduction into a slow forward momentum of beautiful slowcore and shoegaze (reminding me actually a little of The Besnard Lakes). Woodham actually sings on the psychedelic English folk-pastoral ‘Longshore Drift’ observation; sounding a little like James Yorkston in hymnal echoed benevolence.
Woodham effectively layers the counterflows and melodies of nature and the directions of tidal travel. There are some lovely moments on this album, some spots of reflection, as Woodham makes a case for just letting the music take you in its lunar drawn grasp. A really effective debut for the label.
Hi, my name is Dominic Valvona and I’m the Founder of the music/culture blog monolithcocktail.com For the last ten years this blog has featured and supported music, musicians and labels both I and my team of collaborators 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 and love for. 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.