Our Monthly Playlist selection of choice music and Choice Releases list from the last month.

We decided at the start of the year to change things a little with a reminder of not only our favourite tracks from the last month, but also a list of choice albums too. This list includes both those releases we managed to feature and review on the site and those we just didn’t get the time or room for – time restraints and the sheer volume of submissions each month mean there are always those releases that miss out on receiving a full review, and so we have added a number to both our playlist and list.

All entries in the Choice Releases list are displayed alphabetically. Meanwhile, our Monthly Playlist continues as normal with all the choice tracks from July taken either from reviews and pieces written by me – that’s Dominic Valvona – , Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea, and this month, Kalporz writer Samuel Conficoni. Our resident Hip-Hop expert Matt Oliver has also put forward a smattering of crucial and highlighted tracks from the rap arena.

CHOICE RELEASES FROM THE LAST MONTH OR SO:

Blanco Teta ‘‘La Debacle las Divas’
(Bongo Joe) Review

Lukas Cresswell-Rost ‘Weight Away’
(Wayside & Woodland Recordings) Review

Theon Cross ‘Affirmations: Live at Blue Note New York’
(New Soil) Review

Cumsleg Borenail ‘10mg Citalopram’
(Cruel Nature Recordings) Review

Exploding Star Orchestra ‘Holy Mountains’

Fortunato Durutti Marinetti ‘Bitter Sweet, Sweet Bitter’
(Quindi Records/We Are Time) Review

Tony Jay ‘Faithless’
Review

Freh Khodja ‘Ken Andi Habib’
(WEWANTSOUNDS) Review

The Lancashire Hustlers ‘Here But Not Here’
(Steep Hill) Review

Kevin Robertson ‘Yellow Painted Moon’
Review

Maria Elena Silva ‘Wise Men Never Try’
Review

Sol Messiah ‘War of the Gods’

THE PLAYLIST::

Blanco Teta ‘Subiduki’
Scotch Funeral ‘Weak at the Knees’
Freh Khodja ‘Aich Sar Bina Koulili’
Brickwork Lizards ‘All the We Are – Reworked by Sebastian Reynolds’
Natural Information Society ‘Sound Talisman’
Sol Messiah Ft. Sa-Roc ‘Auset’
Raekwon Ft. Ghostface Killah & Method Man ‘600 School’
Mr. Muthafuckin’ eXquire ‘Y.O.Utopia’
Open Mike Eagle ‘ok but I’m the phone screen’
Nicholas Craven & Boldy James Ft. C Dell & Nick Bruno ‘At&T’
Clipse, Pusha T & Malice Ft. Ab Liva ‘Inglorious Bastards’
Estee Nack & V Don Ft. Al-Doe ‘EZBRED’
Rachel Eckroth ‘Yin Yang’
Theon Cross Ft. Isaiah Collier, Nikos Ziarkas & James Russel Sims ‘We Go Again – Live at the Blue Note, NYC’
Peter Evans (Being & Becoming) ‘Malibu’
Homeboy Sandman & Sonnyjim ‘Can’t Stop Me’
Apollo Brown & Bronze Nazareth ‘Wheel Of Misfortune’
Ramson Badbonez & Leaf Dog ‘Celestial Bodies’
Max Schreiber ‘Layla Mistakel’
The Conspiracy ‘Salisbury Road’
SUO ‘Big Star’
Fortunato Durutti Marinetti ‘Beware’
Jeff Tweedy ‘Out in the Dark’
Kevin Robertson ‘Yellow Painted Moon’
Soft Hearted Scientists ‘Hello Hello’
Whitney ‘Dandelions’
The Lancashire Hustlers ‘Perhaps’
Ali Murray ‘ Toby’
Alex G ‘June Guitar’
Spotless Souls ‘In the Heart’
The Noisy ‘Twos’
Wolfgang Perez ‘So Ouco’
Eve Goodman & SERA ‘Blodyn Gwylly’
Joe Harvey-Whyte & Paul Cousins ‘lift’
Sirom ‘For You, This Eve, the Wolves Will Be Enchantingly Forsaken’
Austistici & Jacek Doroszenko ‘After Water Formed A Shape’
Cumsleg Borenail ‘You Mean Something To Me’
Cecil Taylor & Tony Oxley ‘Encore 1’
Exploding Star Orchestra ‘Afterburn (Parable 400)’.

If you’ve enjoyed this selection, the writing, or been led down a rabbit hole into new musical terrains of aural pleasure, and if you can, then you can now show your appreciation by keeping the Monolith Cocktail afloat by donating via Ko-Fi.

For the last 15 years both me and the MC team have featured and supported music, musicians and labels we love across genres from around the world: ones 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 or interest in. 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 say thanks or show support, than you can now buy us a coffee or donate via https://ko-fi.com/monolithcocktail 

A world of sonic/musical discoveries reviewed by Dominic Valvona

(photo by Ian Hippolyte of Theon Cross)

Lukas Cresswell-Rost ‘Weight Away’
(Wayside & Woodland Recordings) 4th July 2025

A welcome return home and a welcome return to the fold musically speaking, Lukas Cresswell-Rost is back in Yorkshire after spending the best part of the last 15 years ‘living and getting slightly lost in Berlin.’  Engaging once more with the world around and bringing back a collection of songs and pieces of music he created over the years whilst eking out a creative career in the German capital, Lukas proposes a touching reconnection, a sense of loss, of remembrance and reflection on his new songbook, Weight Away.

A tale of two cities, or two locations, a majority of the newly released material was written back in Berlin, tested at gigs there, but was completed in England with the aid of friendly musical companions James Yates (who goes under the Majetona nom de plume, and also plays with epic45, the duo formed by the co-founders of the label that not facilitates this album) on drums, Danny Laycock on both standard and fretless bass guitars, and his wife Emaline Delapaix on backing vocals.

But before we concentrate on the new album, let’s rewind to Lukas’ previous releases – or the ones I reviewed and featured on the site.

If you’ve followed the Monolith Cocktail over the years, you may well have caught my reviews of both his underappreciated Go Dream and Gone Dreamin’ releases. I praised both highly at the time, saying this about the former: ‘Travelling a well-worn highway; tuned into a radio station straight from in-between the 1970s covers of Rolling Stone, Creem and The Village Voice; accompanied by a cast of “misanthropic” characters, the former Leeds troubadour of deconstructed pop Lukas Creswell-Rost dreams up a most sophisticated songwriting opus. His relocation, five years ago, to the creative hive of Berlin has done the artist a world of good, this solid contextual collection of earnest dramas and lamentable episodes from the rock of ages, slowly but surely, unfurling its quality.’ And about the latter, Gone Dreamin’, ‘a reimagined transformation, taken off into more experimental realms, with ideas, scraps of dialogue, riffs and melodies ‘flying around’, merged with various effects and breaks, these original beautifully vaporous soft rock ballads and cruising songs are given a new lease of life.’

But now back on English soil, Lukas takes stock whilst opening up his sound. And whilst there are hints, especially on the instrumental vignettes, of his past work, the sound is a little less Fairlight 70s/80s troubadour pop, and more like a mix of soft dreamy psychedelic indie, folktronica, the classical, and a mirage-like waned version of Americana. Don’t get me wrong, there’s still the odd hint of Steely Dan, of Wings, but now also hints of a subtle The Flaming Lips, a touch of Galaxie 500 and Mike Gale on the tropical blue Hawaiian dreamt ‘Spiral Island’, which features the soft beachcomber lulls of Delapaix and may or may not be hiding far more philosophical quandaries of death and shaking one’s self out of a stupor, the blues, beneath its fantasy islet vibes. Gale popped up a lot when listening through this generous fourteen-track songbook of vocalised and instrumental pieces, lead-ins to fuller songs and momentary breaks – these short pieces range between the incipient plucks of elastic band strings to near plaintive plinks that induce a real sadness; most of them linking or bringing in the next song like the more minimal or ambient and felt congruous stirs of an intro track.

But then I also heard an inkling of the SFA and even The Beach Boys. But shifting those evocations a little, ‘More Jam Than Band’ made me think of the drifted and near dreamy country bluegrass and Americana music and scores of Myles Cochran: that and Blue Rose Code on a song of harmonic pinged atmospherics, DJ lyric analogies, the semi-classical and reflective.

Personal travails, a battle to escape a state of mentally sapping stasis, and the deaths of those close, including the suicide of a friend, breach comfort zones at every turn – good God, the bass, when not in fretless slides, on ‘The Bird Of Prey’ finale reminded me of Climate of Hunter era Scott Walker. And yet, this is a lush at times, often dreamy (as I’ve already mentioned) listen of the picturesque and emotively drawn-out. With a new set-up, an embrace of musical friends Lukas Cresswell-Rost produces a complicated album of feelings and quandaries made melodious and rich in lucidity.

Theon Cross ‘Affirmations: Live at Blue Note New York’
(New Soil) 11th July 2025

Hot footing across the Atlantic on a wave of critical acclaim tubist son of Kemet Theon Cross lands down in one of the most auspicious of jazz crucibles, the Blue Note in New York City. Off the back of a number of long and short players, and a reputation for working with some of the key trailblazers in the contemporary UK jazz movement (most notably Mosses Boyd and Nubya Garcia), Cross has ventured out on his own in recent years to much fanfare, transporting and transforming the sound of his chosen instrument to probe into ever evolving territories, but also once more putting that brassy instrument at the centre.

Although one of the most durable instruments in the jazz cannon, with a history that dates back to that style’s birth in New Orleans, the tuba has often gone in and out of fashion; disappearing from the frontlines during the electrified era or replaced by the bass (whether that’s the double or electric). Hanging on in there, the tuba was ideal for outdoor performances, its natural resonated amplified bassy notes and rumbles carrying far enough without the need for amplifiers. Through such pioneers and luminaries as Bill Barber, who lent his tuba to various Miles Davis albums, and Raymond Drapper, who was said to have beaten Miles to forming the first jazz-fusion’ ensemble in the 1960s, the tuba has been pulled back into focus, the mix and limelight. Drapper for his part was able to bridge jazz with the burgeoning psychedelic and rock scenes of that decade and take it further – a kind of Sly & The Family Stone of jazz-fusion if you like -, but also laid down markers during a previous decade with such luminaries and anointed saints of jazz as Coltrane. Interestingly, Coltrane and his highly influential Live at the Village Gate LP are mentioned in the notes for Cross’ live debut album – ‘honoured’ alongside Sonny Rollins’ Live at the Village Vanguard LP. And although it isn’t obvious, Affirmations: Live at Blue Note New York has echoes of his spirit, channelled through the saxophone of Cross’ saxophone foil, the celebrated and already established all-rounder, Chosen Few band leader and solo talent Isaiah Collier.

As a side note of a sort, early on in this performance there’s a track named ‘Transition’, which I thought might be a reference to Coltrane’s own track of the same name, recorded in 1965 but only released posthumously five years later. It is in fact just that, a ‘transition’ between pieces, a continual bridge on a performance that never really lets up, dynamically fluctuating between the tampered, incipient and full-on. The whole thing runs continuously for 80 minutes, with the odd shoutout, and simmering down and stripped interaction with the whistling and whooping but respective audience to take the action down a notch or two. In fact, Cross’ intention was to structure this live gig like a DJ set. And it does indeed sound like that, albeit on real instrumentation, with lots of grooves, breaks and plenty of bass lines played either on the tuba or the electric bass guitar.

You could say a journey is mapped out, riffing on both tracks that feature on Cross’ 2019 album Fyah, his 2021 album Intra-I (which translates as “within self”) and his single doublet of Wings/Back To Africa (the former gets a serious airing here) and improvisations that predominately featuring the versatility of the tuba – some of the most experimental pieces in the set, they feature Cross either unaccompanied holding the attention or with minimal interaction from his chosen troupe of talented foils. Solo efforts, introductions to the next group effort, they do occasionally star or put in the spotlight his highly in-demand guitarist Nikos Ziarkas. The Greek guitar virtuoso, who moved to London more than a decade ago, and co-leader of Valia Calda, settles in an evolving experimental and descriptive space between that of mirage, phaser lunar bends, the melted, looped and cosmic; evoking echoes of fusion-jazz, Afro-rock and the work of Bill Frisell and Nels Cline – although Hendrix is mentioned in his own bio, and his guitar parts here do verge on the psychedelic at times, but nothing truly bluesy and heavy. There are whole passages for Ziarkas to navigate and enrich, or to wrangle and describe, accentuate or cast off into space.

Completing this gifted assembled quartet is the brilliant Chicago drummer James Russel Sims, who splashes around, gives groove and a percussive lift to the performances. There’s a real feel of the African and even Latin in some of the tapping, bottle-like and jar hitting. Plus, what sounds like recurring shake or rattle of dried beans, rice or grass. Sims keeps momentum with bass drum kicking bounce, breaks, rolls and punctuations. 

The album starts with the dry bones shake and stirred synthesized waves of the mystical and sci-fi like spiritual maelstrom ‘Greetings’, which at any one point evokes the work of Donny MacCaslin, Afrikan Sciences, The Comet Is Coming and Pharoah Sanders. From then on in, we are moved between impressive tuba performances that sound like a digeridoo or bass guitar, or chuff and sonorously register and the lowest of frequencies or quicken and pump without taking any breaths. Soulful, funky and R&B like on the finale ‘Confidence of Your Ability’ but raising the tuba like an elephant’s trunk and puffing away like a New Orleans brass band on the Afro-Futurist’s Egyptology ‘Play To Win’, the scope of influences at play is wide and deep, and yet always connective to Cross’ themes and sound: the whole group unifying their ranges and own CVs worth of past and present projects to help create the perfect ensemble piece. I’m hearing Jon Sass, Lester Bowie’s Brass Fantasy, the Soft Machine, Oren Marshall, Karl Hector & The Malcouns, Coltrane’s Ole, funk-jazz, spiritual, and Afro-futurism vibes that almost roll into hip-hop and breakbeat territories: akin to Roots jamming with Archie Shepp and Idris Ackamoor.

From ascending to transcending, the spiritual to otherworldly, the concentrated to parred down, the vibes vary on a live recording that stays consistently inter-dimensional and cosmic yet tethered to the Blue Note legacy and the iconic live showcases that shone even more anointed light upon such luminaries as Rollins and Coltrane. Above all a showcase for Cross’ inventiveness, energy and command of adroit musicianship, this recorded performance will stand as a testament to his brand of tuba fusions and contemporary jazz journeys of futurism and the universal. A lasting legacy at that, and one of the best live performances I’ve heard in a long time. 

Cumsleg Borenail ‘10mg Citalopram’
(Cruel Nature Recordings) 27th June 2025

Nightmare or escapism from mental illness and desperation? AI fever dreams or hyperbolic morphing accelerators to total hallucinational evolution? The collider general of all these elements, the anonymous Cumsleg Borenail, seems to exist in-between various consciousnesses, wired in to an intravenous of 21st century tech overload, distractions, glitches in the matrix and the daily dosage of citalopram – for those who would like to know these things, citalopram is an antidepressant that belongs to the ‘selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor class’. It is used to treat major depressive disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder, panic disorder, and social phobia, but just as likely to be induced by those seeking drug comas of a less medicinal kind.

Like hits of dopamine the discombobulations on Borenail’s latest album – one arrives so quickly these days, that by the time you’ve read this it will have been followed up by at least two more releases – is constantly in a manic shift of growing, evolving industrial electronic music, breakbeat, techno, fucked-up hip-hop beats, no wave, glitch and 80s style sound clash transformations: even the “ambient” breather track is a humorous bastardisation of its own purpose, shooting off 12-gauage gunshots like beats, whilst gazing into the flames. But imagine throughout, a broken up phantasmagoric version of Merzbow, Authchere and Nocturnal Emissions – the latter of which I’m picking up a lot during the course of this thrash-electronic mind-warp that takes more cues from Coil, Populaire Mechanik, The Gruesome Twosome, Conformist and Ramuntcho Matta than it does the EDM or tech experiments of our modern age.

From the kink fattening grossness of the accompanying album artwork to snatches and riffs of dialogue and samples off the telly and from the cult film worlds, life’s general dystopian, vacuous and ridiculous noise and ambience is fed into hadron; spewing out nonsense that makes a mockery of society and its mania, its dependency on gratification and manufactured drug hits. I say that: it could just as easily be a celebration of that very nightmarish shopping list of anxiety-inducing bilge. Broken glass, various dialects and soundbites, both the stringy and pained, the supernatural and daemonic get flicked through like a cluttery rolodex of havoc and silliness.

Fabrication could be the order of the day: fabricated artist, fabricated imagery and fabricated prompted noise installations. It’s impossible to tell how and if there is indeed even a real Cumsleg Borenail behind the machine. Whatever the truth, CB makes the most insane and experimental electric-metal-break-techno-no-wave-thrash on the Internet. And you should care about that, and indeed support it.

Fortunato Durutti Marinetti ‘Bitter Sweet, Sweet Bitter’
(Quindi Records/We Are Time) 25th July 2025

With an alias borrowed from a saint, a Spanish anarchist and an infamous Italian futurist poet, disruptor, Daniele Colussi suavely carouses between the emotional quandaries and atavistic dualities of the bittersweet on his upcoming, and fourth, album. And despite those moniker references his music is anything but confrontational and revolutionary. Instead, he creates a familiar but repurposed musical songbook world that takes its inspirations from those disconsolate French singer-songwriters that would forlornly gaze across the Seine and light up a Gitane or Gauloise in philosophical reflection, and from those arch, arty broads and dames that dared to tread their own idiosyncratic musical pathways. For this is a smooth, sophisticated songbook with both Mediterranean resort and French-Canadian vibes that’s easy on the ear; effortlessly and loosely moving between the jazzy (the album’s two instrumental Theme tune vignettes bordering on both classic Blue Note and Affirmation Coltrane, but played by a cool European lounge band), soft funk, troubadour, those French and Italian mavericks of the 70s and 80s, the soulful, the Baroque, and both art-pop and Franco-pop.

Colussi perfectly counters the weary with romantic illusions, metaphors and forlorn absurdity; simultaneously pulling on the heart strings, need consolation, and yet dethatched and self-deprecating. Colussi delivers some great lines throughout. On ‘Do You Ever Think’, and in the manner of Gainsbourg, he comes out with this near sardonic: “And tell me, is that dog that’s drowning in your new painting supposed to look like me?” In the same song he changes that voice to sound almost like Lay Lady Lay era Dylan when in a more poetic mode he comes out with this, “When the hawks rush the morning doves, does that make you think of me.” The dog returns, in a different capacity, on the autobiographic allegorical Baroque-Eno ‘Call Me The Author’: “I started out as a dog/A kind of dog that refused to bark”.

Vocally and lyrically, there’s more than a resemblance to the craft of Llyod Cole, Dr Robert and Leonard Cohen. The latter isn’t so surprising to me, because even if it wasn’t intentional, Colussi recorded this album with a full band and brass section in his adopted Toronto home. And though he also has Turin roots, there is a deep Frenchified sound to this record; and of course, a French-Canadian one. So, Cohen seems a good call to make, even though he isn’t mentioned in the notes and bio. Moving away from that, and with the vocal addition of Victoria Cheong on the Chateau-pop-Rhodes-Wonder soulful and string accompanied walk through ‘Beware’, this could be a reunion between Brigitte Fontaine and Areski Belkacem, or a match-up of Gainsbourg and Little Annie: there’s also a hint of Joanne Grauer about it too.

The title and themes of this album are in part inspired by the Canadian author, poet, essayist, translator and classics professor Anne Carson and her debut book of criticism, Eros: The Bittersweet. At its heart, there is an analysis of that ancient Greek deity’s duality, the simultaneous concepts and experiences within its lore of both pleasure and pain. One of the main thread or sources for this book is Sappho, who is said to have coined the phrase, encapsulation of this duality, “glukupikron”: later translated into the “bittersweet”. Carson sees Eros as “deferred, defied, obstructed, hungry, organised around a radiant absence – eros as lack.” Make what you will of that. Colussi for his part, transfers it to a contemporary setting, and yet feels attached to nostalgia and the past.

Despite the melody, the harmony and smooth musicianship, Colussi pushes himself like never before with “chorus-less compositions swirling in 6/8 time”, and a musical accompaniment that includes the attentive airs and sweep of strings and the soft pipes of brass. The meandering palette expands to evoke signs of Sebastien Tellier, Susana Estrada, Loic Lanteine, Annette Peacock, Ricki Lee Jones, The Blow Monkeys, Bernardo Devlin, and I know this will sound odd, but a touch of Jarvis Cocker. All meet in this drama, this setting of cigarette smoking angels, wistful malady and shrugged romantic surrealism. 

Things are wrapped up with the detached state of melancholic dark humour curtain call, ‘My Funeral’, with Colussi observant of his own bluesy-jazzy-Franco Jacques Brel and Brecht accompanied passing. Balancing his own scales with reminders of all those good deeds (“But remember, I held the door open for a little old lady.”), this semi-dirge of the barely trumpeted and sulking is a perfect ending to a bittersweet life of despondency and grace. What an album; the perfect one at that. A great songbook that just gets better with every single play. Colussi has produced his best work yet.    

Freh Khodja ‘Ken Andi Habib’
(WEWANTSOUNDS) 4th July 2025

After various international stopovers, the vinyl reissue specialists return to North Africa, and the former French colony of Algeria with one of the most desired LPs from its diaspora, Freh Khodja’s 1975 released Ken Andi Habib showcase.

Reissued for the first ever, after fifty years that French studio recording has finally been accorded a long overture reprise – remastered and with a package that includes liner notes and context by Rabah Mezouane. Given the tip-off, as it were, by DJ Cheb Gero – the Paris-based DJ and curator is responsible for recently curating the Sweet Rebel Rai set, and for working with WEWANTSOUNDS on their Abranis LP revival a while back – Khodja’s seminal album is rightfully given its dues; a highly influential bridge between Alegria and its diaspora’s adopted European homes, the resulting fusion of cultures and influences culminating in a truly international sound that spans various continents, from North And South America to the Caribbean Islands, Arabian North Africa and Cape Verde.

But first, a little background to this story. Khodja was born in 1949 in Sidi Bel Abbès, an Algerian city famous for its markets, agriculture and industry; named after the noted Muslim noble who is buried there. It’s also a centre, of a sort, for Algeria’s highly popular Rai form of folk music. Translating as ‘opinion’, Rai originated in the Algerian city of Oran sometime in the 1920s and developed into a spirited form of protest and nationalistic pride: falling foul of the French overlords as a rallying cry against colonialism. 

Although his family pushed him towards sport, the young aspiring musician quickly took to the saxophone whilst studying musical theory and composition. His obvious talents led him to France in the 1960s. Although, as Mezouane shares in his linear notes and interview with the still thriving and passionate Khodja, his move was saddled by the ‘immigrant experiences’ of working “twelve jobs, thirteen miseries”. Reuniting with his brother in Lyon, Khodja was worked as a lab technician for a period, before later returning to Paris where he enrolled at the Ecole Normale de Musique to study saxophone under the tutelage of the classical saxophonist Marcel Josse.

His first furores into the music world included membership of Les Flammes, a group of immigrant musicians mostly drawn from North Africa – actually, a number of them came from the West African island of Cape Verde. But his career went on to span arranging and composing for film, TV and theatre. He even had a few turns on screen as an ‘occasional actor’.

In 1975, backed by Les Flammes, and with the addition of the vocal harmonizing group El Salem, Khodja went into a Parisian studio to record Ken Andi Habib, a versatile set of numbers that featured horns and an electric mix of instruments, mixed vocal choruses and longed, sometimes feminine yearned harmonies and responses. 

A ‘commanding performer’ with obvious stage presence and a way of not only singing but acting the lyrics and their emotional draws, Khodja swings the saxophone round to sound out caresses, the pining and soulful – not so much jazzy as Arabian-soul and R&B style. Trumpets join the brass section, and rather than evoke the North African landscapes seem to suggest both Latin America and the Tex-Mex borders as they blaze and herald like a mariachi band crossed with a Sicilian funeral procession, and a removed version of romantically alluding Stax.

There’s funk, there’s R&B, soul, moments of an electrified Rai and allusions to the homeland across a brilliant performance of reminiscing, heartache, lament and various emotional pulls. But though those Arabian roots are all present and correct, the music often spills over seamlessly into the Med, to African Brazil and into America’s deep South – the often simmered and sustained Hammond or organ that’s present on nearly every track, has more than an air of Southern gospel and soul to it. Some of it sounds like a lost soundtrack to some cult Italian or French detective movie. And there’s more than a passing resemblance to the Cape Verde sound of Funaná – an infectious quick-step of driving percussive rhythms that is played with a kitchen knife scrapping over an iron rod, christened the ‘ferro’ or ‘ferrinho’ by the islanders, and the bellowed dizzying sway and short concertinaed melodies and lead of the diatonal accordion.

A standard bearer if you like, this revitalised LP is an incredible, fun at times, and funky showcase of North African diaspora fusions. Surprises galore on an album that is just as comfortable hot-stepping soul with Rai as it is bare-footing across Caribbean sands and merging Latin America with the Med. A great album from start to finish, and worthy of not only attention but your quickly eroded cash supply. I have a feeling this one will fly.

Wolfgang Pérez ‘Só Ouço’
(Hive Mind Records) 18th July 2025

Making a return to the site after last April’s ‘Memorias Fantasmas’ short, Wolfgang Pérez is back with a brand-new album of mirage/hallucination and dreamy-realism, imbued and led by a penchant for all things Música Popular Brasileira – that post-bossa, urban pop music phenomenon that fused Brazil’s various traditional and Portuguese flavours, its poetry and fantasy with Western modern pop, jazz and rock.

As the name might indicate, with the most German of German names and most Spanish of Spanish names, Pérez’s heritage, his “casta”, is a mix of the two nationalities. Based in Essen, the industrial hub of the Ruhr, the songwriter, arranger, guitarist and artist has previously released albums that draw upon this linage: especially 2024’s Spanish language AHORA album, the follow-up to the debut Who Cares Who Cares from 2021. Within that scope of influences there’s a musical embrace of everything from pop to chamber music and jazz.

Memorias Fantasmas – facilitated by those keen folk at Hive Mind Records, who now release this latest anticipated album – drew from Pérez’s Spanish genes with a transmogrification of the beautified coos and voices, and the melodious traditional accompanied music of his family singing in church. Part memories placed in new sonic surroundings, part mirage/hallucination and “phantom” inhabited, recordings taken by his grandfather Fernando on a cheap piece of “shitty” recording equipment in a church in the historically famous Spanish city of Segoiva are rendered otherworldly and near supernatural.

Hanging onto those roots, and the phantom parts, the dreaminess, Só Ouço (“Just Listen”) brings together an extensive cast of musicians from Brazil (mainly Rio de Janeiro) to reimagine the country’s poetic, fantastical, environmental symmetry of chaos and beauty. Using the elementals of Música Popular Brasileira and its concomitant trends of Tropicália and Samba Rock and Psych, Pérez and his band of foils take a snapshot of their surroundings and moods and weave a magical, often meandering and languid, journey full of sound and sampled collage.

The results of an extended stay in Rio a few years ago (part of an 18-month residency and student exchange programme) the album and band that was assembled to deliver this dance, saunter and off-kilter dream was put together off the back of Pérez’s full-on absorption of the city and its life: So absorbed that Pérez went as far as to learn the idiosyncratic slang and the cultural nuances. There would be introductions to the city’s musical luminaries, including the former Lounge Lizard and no wave pioneer Arto Lindsay and Thiago Nassif – who the former feted, and worked with -, and study with the guidance of the celebrated Josimar Carneiro, Marcello Gonçalves and Almir Cortes masters at UFRJ/UNIRIO.

But through happenstance and chance encounter, and through various jam sessions, a band of a kind took shape with the trio of Luis Magalhães (bass), Pedro Fonte (drums) and Paulo Emmery (electric guitar). This alignment began to thrash out arrangements and ideas, leading to a gig at Audio Rebel, where they met Angelo Wolf, the owner of Wolf Estúdio and engineer for artists such as Bala Desejo, Dora Morelenbaum, Zé Ibarra, Marcos Valle, Antonio Neves and Ana Frango Elétrico. Keen on what he heard, Wolf offered them both a residency and studio time. The band was extended further to incorporate a brass and woodwind section, led by the drummer and saxophonist and arranger Antonio Neves, son of the notable and celebrated saxophonist Eduardo. Also joining this fantastical ensemble was the Rio guitarist, singer-songwriter and artist Carol Maia, who brings a reminiscent beautiful soothed voiced evocation of the 60s and 70s to the vocals. 

Altogether, this troupe that assembles around the loose direction and giddy at times imagination of its instigator, maps out a spellbound, fantastical tapestry and languorous cross-traffic prism of Brazil. There’s so much to hear and unpack, from what is a highly sophisticated but organic sounding record. From picking up radio waves and signal codes from overhead choppers, as the contemporary pairing of our host and Maia invoke Joyce Moreno and Naná Vasconcelos on the opening dreamy-realist Brazilian oscillation to the near untethered, psychedelic and cosmic influences of the great Caetano Veloso on the trip-y Latin-jazz tinged, sorrowed beachcomber mirage ‘Tristeza’, there is a both vibrant and yet softly hallucinated filter to this songbook. Songs don’t just play and recall the art and beauty of such noted Brazilian pioneers and icons as Hermeto Pascoal, Som Tres, Flora Purim, Jorge Ben Sor, Tom Zé and Gal Costa, but go further in gently pushing the boundaries of the song format, reaching into pure atmospheres and a collage of passing, fleeting sounds and those emanating from memory to conjure up a sense of place, time and emotion. Church bells peal to evoke something of the country’s Catholic culture, daily saintly worship, but also something far more mysterious. But there’s the sounds of the city, the environment, all reimagined and brought in as a sort of meta layer. Instruments too, with the fluted and pan piped essence of the Amazon floating into the mix.

Some songs really go far out, especially Pérez’s venture with the already briefly mentioned Thiago Nassif, who once made my choice albums of the year list with his experimentally cool, liquid tropical no and new wave album Mente – which I described at the time as ‘A leopard skin upholstered, neon-lit sumptuous groove of the fuzzy and sauntering.’ I’m not sure exactly who’s playing or doing what, but their ‘O Mundo É Um Moinho’ collaboration is a strange pairing of Seu Jorge acoustic guitar and the reverb flapping of beating, thudded wings. Ideas, musical threads seem to almost fly off into the imagery, with dreamt vistas and city life forming a backdrop to a lightened mix of brassy, woodwind fluting, whistling accompaniment and the beautifully conveyed poetic emotional states captured moments of the artist’s absorption of Rio and Brazil. It all comes to a curtain call, with a perfect chorus finale of shimmery organ and horns-serenaded and smoked fun and dancing; the perfect bow to a most lovely and inventive album that reimagines a wealth of Brazilian influences, and yet feels refreshingly dreamy and softly adventurous. 

Sebastian Reynolds ‘New Beginnings’
(PinDrop) 4th July 2025

After what seemed like an age, and after an enviable prolific string of projects, collaborations and EP releases behind him, Sebastian Reynolds finally managed to release his debut solo album, Canary, a couple of years back. The Oxford polymath -his juggled roles including that of musician, artist, producer, remixer, PR, label boss and damn fine amateur track athlete – has never really taken a pause since he first began making, remodelling, reworking and transforming both his own and a host of collaborators’ various eclectic projects over a decade ago.

But if we take, say, just for an example his work since 2017, Sebastian has helped shape two impressive volumes of electronic-chamber music with the Anglo-German Solo Collective (a trio that included the virtuoso cellist Anne Müller alongside Reynolds’ longtime foil, the violinist, electronic music star Alex Stolze, who makes several appearances on this album); crafted the multimedia Jataka texts inspired Maṇīmekhalā dance and musical scored drama with a host of collaborators, including the Neon Dance company, chorographer Pichet Klunchun and The Jongkraben Ensemble; released The Universe RemembersNihilism Is Pointless, Crows and the long distance running inspired Athletics EPs (a sporting passion for Reynolds, who’s a pretty decent amateur runner and contender in his own right). That’s without considering all his production and remixing duties, or his various stints in other groups; a mere smattering of which is represented on his latest collaborative project showcase, New Beginnings.

A sonic imaginative oeuvre of the dreamy, the cosmic and new age unfolds across previously unheard selected reworks and remixes; the central signatures being, the way Sebastian can transform the material, taking the listener beyond into new spaces, environments and dreamt-up visions of Southeast Asia, Arabia, and India.

From his own backyard of Oxfordshire, there’s treatments and transformations of work by the synth-indie quintet Flights of Helios (named after the Titan harbinger of the sun), the Americana-indie band The Epstein, roots, reggae and dub group Dubwiser, and the idiosyncratic Egyptian-English troupe Brickwork Lizards. The first of these actually included Sebastian within its ranks at one time. Now opening this collection, with a sound of metaphysical imbued space hymns, paeans and bliss, their own “beginnings” act as an introduction to an entrancing and danceable house-style experience that evokes traces of a softened LCD Soundsystem and Der Plan, whilst looking to cerebral fields of the celestial. Fast forward to the centre of this album, and you find a remix of Dubwiser’s Renegade Soundwave via On-U-Sound radio Clash ‘The Jackal’. Empathising not only the reverberated dub and echo chambers but its underlying menace, Sebastian goes full on Sabres of Paradise. Formed from a bond and passion for the music of The Ink Spots, the Brickwork Lizards fusion of Ottoman yore and 1920s English dancehalls joyfully bounds between shellac scratched tea dance music, the Sublime Porte and fantastical diva song of Cairo. Here though, ‘All That We Are’ (a track from their 2018 album Haneen) is converted into an essence, a wisp of mystical Istanbul as reimagined by an electro-dub DJ. A voice straight from the minaret sounds out to an hallucination of dry bean shaken percussion and continuous vibrato string. Finally, from the Oxford scene, the earnest parched yearned alt-country band The Epstein are remoulded by Sebastian into another dreamy astral vision. Their anthemic turn of emotional reassurance, ‘Make This Our Home’ (taken from their expansive Burn The Branches album of 2020; the title now playfully changed to reflect Sebastian’s involvement and touch to “drone”) maintains some of the original vocals, the echoes of a sound that absorbs early Radiohead, Fleet Foxes and the Magnetic Fields, but is given a new gravity and beauty of healing balm astral trance.

From beyond Oxford city and the county – although some of these artists have orbited it or been based there – there’s a solid representation of Irish artists working in the UK. There’s the evergreen songstress and ephemeral harpist Bróna McVittie, who’s‘Broken Like The Morning’ (taken from her 2018 album We Are Wildlife), is given an EDM thump, electro pulses and futuristic folky mystical vibrations. The London and Spain-based Donegal troubadour Michael Gallagher, aka The Mining Co., releases his take on the Christmas hit each year. His previous ‘One Year To Go’ pinecone scented yuletide number now resembles a trip-hop treated semi-psychedelic trip into environmental-trance. The duo of Colm O’Connell and Rory McDaid, otherwise known as Rezo, have released a few decent albums now. Sebastian takes ‘Molotov’ from the former Mitcheners bandmates eclectic songbook The Age of Self Help (released last year) and sculpts a menacing dubby version that has more than a touch of Meatraffle, Adrian Sherwood and the trumpeted reverberation of Horace Andy about it. 

As examples of the range in scope, the various musical backgrounds and sounds the final trio of artists featured on this selection includes a Balearic drifted vision of the Kentucky-roots guitarist, composer, songwriter and producer Myles Cochran’s (with additional dreamy vocal hums, airs and yearning from the Oxford singer-songwriter and guitarist Kelly Michaeli) placeable, relented ‘If You Could See Me’; a dream-electro and metal textured percussive dance pulsated rework of the Kritters’ ‘New York’ malady to a city they no longer recognise (I’m hearing both Leftfield and The Juan Maclean); and buoyant if wafted Indian geographical mirage rework of the eclectic Will Lawton & The Alchemists’Fossils of the Mind’ (the title-track from their 2018 album). With just these three examples you have a fusion of electronic dance duo and poetry, a musician who is able to reimagine and score new vistas from bluesgrass, the Baroque, folk and the influence of John Fahey, and a group that seamlessly merges classical music, electronica, jazz, prog and folk. With sophistication and respect for the artists involved, Sebastian manages to expand horizons further, craft new directions and amplify those parts and sounds and moods he finds most interesting or creatively evocative. New Beginnings in fact are born from old material.

A welcome pause or catch-up style showcase, this collection is a great reminder of Sebastian Reynolds’ versatility and depth. He is able to transport the listener without totally losing the original’s intentions and direction, and to create a cerebral atmosphere of that you can dance to. I don’t think it will be long before we get another volume, such is the demand on his services and his prolific working methods.

Cecil Taylor/Tony Oxley ‘Flashing Spirits’
(Burning Ambulance Music) 11th July 2025

Picture a cross-Atlantic meeting of freeform avant-garde jazz luminaries, with the extemporized pairing up of the renowned American pianist Cecil Taylor and British drummer Tony Oxley, who performed a synergy of the energetically chaotic and serial on a stage in Crawley, West Sussex on the 3rd of September 1988.

As part of the adventurous Outside In Festival programme that year, these two foils entered into a barely controlled but studied, steeped with a rich experience, improvisation that slashed, thrashed, splashed, ran back and forth, up and down and across an imaginary abstract canvas. Sizzled with brassy and metallic resonance, the drum kit’s entire makeup, its apparatus, its stands entered into a dynamic off-kilter union with Taylor’s extraordinary atonal and more sporadic phrases, runs and near untethered crashes and near melodic crossings of chords and notes. For nearly forty minutes the duo’s momentum kept at a pace, never really letting up, and with most of the performance a full-on actionist concentration of pure unleashed non-musical adventure. And yet, there’s a semblance of jazz, of the classical, and above all a history of the avant-garde with a performance that rolls and pounds between the theatrical and jazz at the boundaries of experiment. There are also the tracings of a dance; those flashed spirits of the title like lightning bolts or flickered bodies on an abstract staging, jabbed at and falling, but often placed like a strike.

What led to this partnership of constantly moving and metamorphosizing piano and heightened, galloping and percussive descriptive and tumultuous drums? Well, if we take this moment, expand out and incorporate the decade, Taylor’s radical trailblazing career was hit by the loss of his longtime sideman, the alto saxophonist Jimmy Lyons, who passed away in 1986. Lyons had of course been an integral and gifted member of Taylor’s famous 60s quartet. It’s said to have come as a real blow. But Taylor, who had previously turned to teaching during furrow periods a decade earlier in the 70s, proved more prolific in the 80s, releasing a number of LPs for such labels as hatART, Soul Note, FMP and Leo Records – the latter’s founder Leo Feigin is a collaborative partner in releasing this previously ‘unknown archival’ live performance.

An improvised jazz stalwart of the British scene for decades, Oxley was in-between groups, having taken the SOH trio with saxophonist Alan Skidmore and bassist Ali Haurand to its conclusion in 1984, and just about to join Taylor in the intermittent (as it has been described elsewhere) Feel Trio with bassist William Parker (who joined in 1989) – a project that lasted until 1990. Before all that though and stretching right back to the beginning of the 1960s, Oxley was already a notable founding figure in this Island’s improvisational jazz scene; so notable that he got the gig as the in-house drummer at the UK’s foremost jazz mecca Ronnie Scot’s during one of the best periods to have been alive in London. His debut album as a bandleader, The Baptised Traveler, arrived at the end of that decade. The 70s beckoned, bringing with it new challenges and the founding of a new label imprint, Incus Records, with renowned saxophonist Evan Parker and guitarist Derek Bailey. 

Taylor and Oxley only crossed paths three months before the performance on this specially retrieved recording – limited on CD to a run of 500, packaged in a heavy-duty gatefold mini-LP sleeve and printed on textural artwork by Burning Ambulance’s Founder I.A. Freeman. Which seems extraordinary and speaks volumes about their reputations and readiness to enter the moment together in front of a live audience filled with expectations. That crowd is to be fair, willing the duo on; they show not only the more respectable obligatory hand claps of bravo, but whistle too and nearly roar, caught up in the experience of witnessing such a dynamic full-on performance.

Full of experience, but hardly weathered or worn, both virtuosos adapted and responded in a split second to each other’s art. Taylor leads, if you can call it that. But only because it seems he lights the torch paper first with incipient pushes and dabs and slashes. But really there’s no telling in who leads what, as the action picks up and runs, leaps, dives, falls, tumbles and flushes through a pummelled, sieving, hoof-like gallop and wild non-rhythmic spirited traffic of drums and elbowed as well as cross handed piano. Despite all this avant-gardism and energy, neither of the percipients ever lose the thread, get lost in the excitement and uncoupled freedoms of spontaneity.  There’s a real weight involved with streaks of the 1920, the 30s and 60s alongside a very removed vision of the most experimental aspects of both turn of the century classical music and Latin music. How two players can keep this up is beyond me. But there is a couple of ‘encore’ extras that seem to simmer down the action, offering up attentive and expressive bluesy and stirring conclusions. Pretty unique, being sharply focussed yet layered with so much sound and noise, and being near dissonant, this performance is somehow congruous and complete. Two performers at the height of maturity, abandoning convention and free-wiled, Flashing Spirits is an incredible document of disciplined chaos and play. I’m sure there are many comparisons to be found, but off the top of my head, it recalled Chick Corea and the A.R.C. album.

If you’ve enjoyed this selection, the writing, or been led down a rabbit hole into new musical terrains of aural pleasure, and if you can, then you can now show your appreciation by keeping the Monolith Cocktail afloat by donating via Ko-Fi.

For the last 15 years both me and the MC team have featured and supported music, musicians and labels we love across genres from around the world: ones 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 or interest in. 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 say thanks or show support, than you can now buy us a coffee or donate via https://ko-fi.com/monolithcocktail 

The Monthly Playlist selection of choice music, plus our Choice Albums list from the last month.

We decided at the start of the year to change things a little with a reminder of not only our favourite tracks from the last month, but also a list of choice albums too. This list includes both those releases we managed to feature and review on the site and those we just didn’t get the time or room for.

All entries are displayed alphabetically.

Meanwhile, our Monthly Playlist continues as normal, with all the choice tracks from May selected by Dominic ValvonaMatt Oliver and Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea.

CHOICE RELEASES FROM THE LAST MONTH OR SO:

A Single Ocean ‘S-T’
Review

The Balloonist ‘Dreamland’
(Wayside & Woodland) Review/Piece

Black Liq & Dub Sonata ‘Much Given, Much Tested’

The Bordellos ‘Liam Gallagher’
(Metal Postcard)

Cumsleg Borenail ‘It’s Your Collagen Not Your Conversation I Desire, My Pretty’

Famo Mountain ‘For Those Left Behind’ – This month’s cover art

Fir Cone Children ‘Gearshifting’
(Blackjack Illuminist Records) Review

LIUN + The Science Fiction Band ‘Does It Make You Love Your Life?’
(Heartcore Records) Review

Neon Crabs ‘Make Things Better’
(Half Edge Records) Review

SAD MAN ‘Art’
(Cruel Nature Records) Review

Staraya Derevyna ‘Garden Window Escape’
(Ramble Records/Avris Media) Review

Tomo-Nakaguchi ‘Out Of The Blue’
(Audiobulb Records) Review

Zavoloka ‘ISTYNA’

AND NOW, THE MONTHLY PLAYLIST::

LIUN + The Science Fiction Band ‘SPEAK TO ME’
SISTER WIVES ‘YnCanu’
Neon Crabs ‘J Spaceman’s Blues’
Fir Cone Children ‘Madness!’
A Single Ocean ‘White Bright Light’
Your 33 Black Angels ‘Your Sickness Solution’
Dabbla, Ghosttown, Dubbledge ‘Karate Good’
Black Liq & Dub Sonata ’10 Black Commandments’
Homeboy Sandman & Brand The Builder ‘Infinite Pockets’
Milena Casado ‘Yet I Can See’
Wildchild ‘Change For 2 Cents’
The Strange Neighbour & L One ‘625’
Pan Amsterdam & Leron Thomas ‘Evening Drive’
Famo Mountain ‘My Struggle To Survive’
Orain ‘Tangerine’
Smashing Red ‘Dark Eyed Girl’
Meggie Lennon ‘Running Away’
Dyr Faser ‘Sinister Dialogue’
Battle Elf ‘Stops Pretty Places’
Violet Nox ‘Strange Remix by Jonathan Santarelli’
Tomo-Nakaguchi ‘Indigo Line’
Tom O C Wilson ‘Better Off’
The Mining Co. ‘Treasure in Spain’
Oliver Earnest ‘Directionless’
The Bordellos ‘Cabbage Patch Doll Kiss’
Mama Oh No ‘Samba De Janeiro’
Zavoloka ‘Vesnianka’
Cumsleg Borenail ‘Signus Vectors’
OvO ‘Scavo’
Fatboi Sharif & Driveby ‘Swim Team Audible Function’
Cosmic Ear ‘Father and Son’
Staraya Derevnya ‘Tight-Lipped Thief’

Operation Keep The monolith Cocktail Afloat:

Hi, my name is Dominic Valvona and I’m the Founder of the music/culture blog monolithcocktail.com For the last 15 years both me and the MC team have featured and supported music, musicians and labels we love across genres from around the world: ones 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 or interest in. 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 say thanks or show support, than you can now buy us a coffee or donate via https://ko-fi.com/monolithcocktail 

The Monthly Playlist selection of choice music, plus our Choice Albums list from the last month.

So last month we decided to change things a little with a reminder (if you like) of not only our favourite tracks from the last month, but also a list of choice albums too. This includes both those release we managed to feature on the site and those we just didn’t get the time or room for.

February’s tracks and albums were chosen by me, Dominic Valvona, Matt Oliver and Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea.

In Alphabetical Order, those Recommended Discoveries and Choice Albums from February:

Cumsleg Borenail ‘Alone Again’

The Bordellos (with Dee Claw)/Neon Kittens ‘Half Man Half Kitten’
(Cruel Nature Records) Review

Brother Ali ‘Satisfied Soul’
(Mello Music Group)

Noémi Büchi ‘Liquid Bones’

Christopher Dammann Sextet ‘If I Could Time Travel I Would Mend Your Broken Heart aka Why Did The Protests Stop’ (Out of Your Head Records) Review

Helen GanyaShare Your Care’
(Bella Union) Review

John Howard ‘For Those that Wander By’
(Think Like A Key) Review

Oksana Linde ‘Travesías’
(Buh Records) Review

Marshall Allen ‘New Dawn’
(Week-End Records) Review

Mirrored Daughters ‘S/T’
(Fike Recordings) Review

Phill Most Chill & Djar One ‘Deal With It’
(Beats House Records)

Sophia Djebel Rose ‘S​​​é​​​cheresse’
(Ramble Records/WV Sorcerer Productions/Oracle Records) Review

Salem Trials ‘Heavenly Bodies Under The Ground’
(Metal Postcard Records) Review

Various ‘Wagadu Grooves Vol. 2: The Hypnotic Sound Of Camera 1991 – 2014’
(Hot Mule) Review

Kaito Winse ‘Reele Bumbou’

Witch ‘N’ Fox ‘Outfox’
Review

Yellow Belly ‘Ghostwriter’
(Cruel Nature Records) Review

The Monthly Playlist of Choice Music::

Jupiter & Okwess ‘Selele’
Snapped Ankles ‘Pay The Rent’
Phill Most Chill & Djar One ‘Born To Rock’
Ramson Badbonez ‘The Great’
Cthree & Sa-Roc ‘Gold Tablets’
Brother Ali ‘The Counts’
Pacific Walker ‘Induction Ceremony (White Women in White Robes, Clapping)’
Marshall Allen ‘Angels And Demons At Play’
Helen Ganya ‘Share Your Care’
The Men ‘PO Box 96’
The Model Workers ‘Sorry Again’
Salem Trials ‘500 Knives’
The Awkward Silences ‘The Eugenicist is Calling’
AIMING ‘Brianiac’
The Conspiracy ‘White Winter Coats’
Yellow Belly ‘Other Half’
SUO ‘Arms of an Angel’
3 South & Banana ‘Temperance’
John Howard ‘The Man Who Was America’
Mirrored Daughters ‘Unreturning Sun’
Panda Bear ‘Ends Meet’
Extradition Order ‘Consider the Oyster’
Kaito Winse ‘Waabo’
DJ Design & Vermin the Villain ‘Un Chien Perdu’
Confucious MC & Bastien Keb ‘Eyes To See’
Roedelius, Onnen Bock & Yuko Matsuzaki ‘Moon Garden’
Mabe Fratti & Lucrecia Dalt ‘cosa rara – en la playa’
dis.tant, Boundary, Reptiles Reptiles ‘Pasaje Por La Montana (Pt.3)’
Karriem Riggins Ft. Westside Gunn & Busta Rhymes ‘Long Live J Dilla’
Black Milk & Fat Ray ‘ELDERBERRY’
Kungfoolish ‘Recognize The Real’
Forest Swords ‘Lines Gone Cold – Deconstructed’
Oksana Linde ‘Luciernagas en los manglares’
Christopher Dammann Sextet ‘No Hope At All Other Than I Don’t Want To Die Today Pt. 3’

Hi, my name is Dominic Valvona and I’m the Founder of the music/culture blog monolithcocktail.com For the last 15 years me and my various site collaborators have featured and supported music, musicians and labels from across the genres, and from around the world that we think you’ll want to know about. No content on the site is paid for or sponsored and we only feature artists we have genuine respect for /love. If you enjoy our reviews (and we often write long, thoughtful ones), found a new artist you admire or if we have featured you or artists you represent and would like to buy us a coffee at https://ko-fi.com/monolithcocktail  to say cheers for spreading the word, then that would be much appreciated.

THE MONTHLY PLAYLIST SELECTION PLUS A NEW FEATURE IN WHICH WE CHOOSE OUR CHOICE ALBUMS FROM THE LAST MONTH.

Something a little different for 2025: a monthly review of all the best music plus a selection of the Monolith Cocktail team’s choice albums. Chosen this month by Dominic Valvona and Matt Oliver from January’s post.

The 32 tunes for January 2025:

Noémi Büchi ‘Gesticulate Elastically’
Cumsleg Borenail ‘Topological Hausdorff Emotional Open Sets’ 
Psychedelic Porn Crumpets ‘March on for Pax Ramona’
Hifiklub & Brianna Tong ‘Angelfood’
Divorce ‘Pill’
Trinka ‘Navega’
Gnonnas Pedro and His Dadjes Band ‘Tu Es Tout Seul’
Rezo ‘Molotov – The Sebastian Reynolds Remix’
The Winter Journey ‘Words First’
Saba Alizadeh ‘Plain of the Free’
Miles Cooke & Defcee ‘zugzwang’
Eric the Red & Leaf Dog ‘Duck and Dive’
Harry Shotta ‘It Wasn’t Easy’
Kid Acne, Spectacular Diagnostics & King Kashmere ‘AHEAD OF THE CURVE’
Damon Locks ‘Holding the Dawn in Place (Beyond Part 2)’
Talib Kweli & J. Rawls ‘Native Sons’
Emily Mikesell & Kate Campbell Strauss ‘Recipes’
Ghazi Faisal Al-Mulaifi & Boom.Diwan ‘Utviklingssang – Live’
Nyron Higor ‘Me Vestir De Voce’
Ike Goldman ‘Bowling Green’
Elea Calvet ‘Filthy Lucre’
Expose ‘Glue’
Neon Kittens ‘Enough of You’
Occult Character ‘Tech Hype’
Dyr Faser ‘Physical Saver’
Russ Spence ‘Phase Myself’
The Penrose Web ‘Hexapod Scene’
Park Jiha ‘Water Moon’
Robert Farrugia ‘Ballottra’
Memory Scale ‘Afternoon’s Echoes’
Joona Toivanen Trio ‘Horizons’
Timo Lassy Trio ‘Moves – Live’

Choice Albums, thus far in 2025

So, for an age I’ve been uneasy with the site’s end of year lists: our choice albums of the entire year posts, which usually take up two or three posts worth, such is the abundance of releases we cover in a year. I’ve decided to pretty much scrape them going forward. Instead, each month I will pick out several albums we’ve raved about, plus those we didn’t get time to review but think you should take as granted approved by the Monolith Cocktail team. Some of these will not be included in the above playlist. Each album is listed alphabetically as I hate those numerical voting validation lists that our rivals put out.

Cindy ‘Saw It All Demos’ (Paisley Shirt Records)
Reviewed by Brian ‘Bordello’
Shea here

Cumsleg Borenail ‘A Divorced 46 Year old DJ From Scunthorpe’
Picked by Dominic Valvona

Dyr Faser ‘Falling Stereos’
Picked by Dominic Valvona

Expose ‘ETC’ (Qunidi)
Reviewed by BBS here

Farrugia, Robert ‘Natura Maltija’ (Phantom Limb/Kewn Records)
Reviewed by DV here

Kweli, Talib & J Rawls ‘The Confidence Of Knowing’
Picked by Matt Oliver & DV

Locks, Damon ‘List Of Demands’ (International Anthem)
Reviewed by DV
here

Mikesell, Emily & Kate Campbell Strauss ‘Give Way’ (Ears & Eyes Records)
Reviewed by DV here

Occult Character ‘Next Year’s Model’ (Metal Postcard Records)
Picked by DV

Philips Arts Foundation, Lucy ‘I’m Not A Fucking Metronome’
Reviewed by BBS
here

Toivanen Trio, Joona ‘Gravity’ (We Jazz)
Reviewed by DV here

Winter Journey, The ‘Graceful Consolations’ (Turning Circle)
Reviewed by DV here

ZD Grafters ‘Three Little Birds’
Reviewed by DV here – technically released digitally the end of last year, but vinyl arriving sometime in February

For those that can or wish to, the Monolith Cocktail has a Ko-fi account: the micro-donation site. I hate to ask, but if you do appreciate what the Monolith Cocktail does then you can shout us a coffee or two through this platform.

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’

A WORLD OF SONIC/MUSICAL DISCOVERIES AND POSSIBILITIES REVIEWED BY DOMINIC VALVONA
(Unless stated otherwise, all releases are available now)

Credit: Hanne Kaunicnik

Poeji ‘Nant’
(Squama)

In shrouded chambers polygenesis cultures and roots cross paths and open up an amorphous portal to a unique world of redolent Asian percussion and Mongolian “urtyn duu” vocal soundings.

Making good on their cryptically coordinate-like coded 031921 5.24 5.53 EP from 2022, German drummer extraordinaire Simon Popp and the Ulaanbaatar born vocalist Enkhjargal Erkhembayar (shortened to Enji) have combined their individual disciplines and scope of influences to venture even further into uncharted territory.

For his part, the Bavarian Popp uses an extensive apparatus of hand drums and worldly sourced percussion to conjure up an atmosphere of both atonal and rhythmic (sometimes verging on a break or two) West Africa, Tibet, gamelan Indonesia and Japan. This in turn evokes a transmogrified vague sense of the avant-garde, of Kabuki theatre, of Shinto and Buddhist mysticism and mystery.   

Popp’s collaborative foil Enji is a scion of the old Mongolian tradition of the Long song, a form of singing that emphasis and extends each syllable of text for long stretches of time. It’s said that a song with only ten actual words can last hours. Strong on the symbolism of the Mongolians much dependable horse, the long song form can be philosophical, religious, romantic or celebratory. Now, in a different century, Enji channels this heritage to voice, utter, accent, assonant, woo, and like breathing onto a cold glassy surface, exhales the diaphanous, gauzy, ached and comforting – the truly mysterious hummed ‘Buuwein Duu’ sounds like a lullaby.  

Although much of the wording is linked to those roots, there’s an ambiguity to much of the carrying style vocals. For instance, the duo’s appellation of Poeji was chosen because it can be translated into various languages: meaning “sing” in Slovenian and roughly “poetry” in Japanese. The album title, Nant, is itself old Welsh in derivation, and can be translated as both “stream” and “valley”.

A fourth world dialect is achieved; a communication that needs no prior knowledge or understanding as the meaning is all in the delivery, emotion the cadence and largely extemporized feels and mood of the moment.  

Described as working in the vernacular of post-dub and the downtemp, Nant reminded me in parts of the “tropical concrete” of the Commando Vanessa label pairing of Valentina Mag aletti and Marlene Riberio, Hatis Noit, Steve Reich and Werner “Zappi” Diermaier’s various drumming experiments as part of the faUSt duo with fellow original Faustian Jean Harve-Pèron. It is a unique conjuring of tones, textures, atmospheres, the avant-garde, the spontaneous (wherever the mood takes them) and the esoteric that won’t scare the horses. Instead, it sets a wispy, shrouded course to ventures into new realms of improvised communication; a bridging of cultures that reaches into new spheres of worldliness and the realms of new dimensions.         

Raymond Antrobus & Evelyn Glennie ‘Another Noise’
30th August 2024

So tangible and effective is the clever – if taking a leap into the unknown and by chance – union between the two accomplished deaf artisans of their artistic forms that each pin-like sharp spike, each metallic shave, rattle and atmospheric undulation that builds around the unflinching candid delivery really hits hard and marks: leaves an audible impression.   

The musicality, the rhythm is all in the poet Raymond Antrobus’ voice and often put-upon and sometimes self-doubting, cadence. It can’t all be put down to his deafness, but it offers something unique – although the William Blake professor of the album’s final bittersweet sign-off was both condescending and embittered-sounding in his succinct dismissal of Antrobus. I guess what I’m trying to say, is that sure the deafness is crucial, and that it opens up new or different ways of creating and circumnavigating the loss of this sense, but there is so very much more to both partners in this venture’s art form and genius that transcends the deaf condition.

Framed as it is, this inaugural collaboration between the poet and the virtuoso percussionist/composer Evelyn Glennie pushes the boundaries of poetry and sound; causing us to reevaluate our own perceptions. And with the equally acclaimed – and no stranger to this blog, as probably its most prolific featured artist/producer – in-situ producer Ian Brennan on board there’s an authenticity to what develops from the readings and mostly improvised percussive soundscapes.

Both partners on this evocative project can hardly be said to have a condition, a disability, or suffer for it. Glennie especially, through her old teacher Ron Forbes during her formative years, learnt to hear sound through different parts of her body: a physical response and channeling of sound that has helped and shaped the star percussionist to become one of the world’s greatest living musicians.

Unencumbered, the poetic language conveys, describes that unique relationship with sound, music and noise. The opening tubular shaken and spindled ‘The Noise’, which features the wooing, near ethereal sweet hummed undulations of guest artist Precious Perez, is the most obvious example of this. Rather importantly, the classically trained but eclectic Latin singer/songwriter/educator Perez, who is herself blind, is the president of the RAMPD.org charity fighting for disabled performers in the arts and more access. But it is her evocative voice that is called upon to offer something approaching a subtle wooing-like hum.

Giving each poetry performance a shiver of avant-garde, concrete and abstract sound art (even near Dadaist and Fluxus), Glennie (who had no prior knowledge of the material she was contextualizing or sounding) uses an apparatus of spokes, chains, tubes, bells and metallic-sounding brushes to articulate but also dramatically jolt and jar the alien, the unknown, but also the disturbing. She can also emphasis a state of isolation very well too; her foil’s themes often touching on a feeling of dislocation, not only because of his own deafness but because of his mixed ethnic roots: a feeling of the other you could say; of feeling adrift of both his English and Caribbean heritage.

Antrobus is unflinching on the topic of ancestral Black trauma and legacy. ‘Horror Scene As Black English Royal’ is a vivid example of slavery and that heritage that the Black community feels it can never leave behind or unshackle; prompted, I take it, by the whole Meghan Markle debacle and her fleeting acceptance into English royalty before the deluge of perceived outsider, and skin colour muddied the calm waters of stiff upper lipped etiquette in the White establishment. Glennie scores this poem with an atmosphere of horror and hurt; the sound of what could be an animalistic growl and pain striking out from the torture of slavery. ‘Ode To My Hair’ meanwhile, deals with the kinks and prejudice of a said Black “throw”, with Antrobus underlying dislocation once more emphasized as Black enough to be the victim of racism, but not Black enough for some in the Black community itself. There’s also a secondary theme of reconnection, using a haircut to talk about his relationship with his father. There are a few poems like this, where the touching relationship to a loved one, a child and even a cat is poignantly open and candid without resorting to the saccharine or to platitudes.

Talking of animals, birds, with all their various connotations, feature at various points on the album; cleverly linked to the learning of signing and to the very rhythm of city life on the visceral and incredible ‘Resonance’. I love some of the descriptions on this reading, especially the lyrically language used to describe their movement, like an “uncharted astronomy”, and the way Antrobus describes city birds as a whole different species to their country cousins.

Affectionate, personal as much as near dystopian, unnerving and hurting, Another noise is unlike anything you may have heard or felt in some time. For both artists sound and speech is near tangible; something you can almost touch. A sensory experiment, this collaboration does much to push, probe and explore perceptions of language, timbre, performance and delivery. This album is nothing less than a genuine work of artistic achievement from two of the UK’s most important artists.       

The Mining Co. ‘Classic Monsters’
(PinDrop Records) 9th August 2024

Continuing to mine his childhood the London-based singer-songwriter Michael Gallagher once again produces a songbook of throwbacks to his formative adventures as a kid growing up in Donegal in Ireland.

His previous album almanac, Gum Card, touched upon a silly fleeting dabble with the occult, but this latest record (his sixth so far) is filled with childhood memories of hammy and more video nasty style supernatural characters, alongside a whole host of “weirdos”, “freaks” and “stoners”. 

Once more back in his childhood home, frightened to turn the lights off, checking for Christopher Lee’s Dracula and the Wolfman under his bed, yet daring himself to keep watching those Hammer house of horror b-movies, Salem’s Lot and more bloody shockers, Gallagher links an almost lost innocence with a lifetime of travails, cathartic obsessions and searching desires.

A recurring metaphor, analogy and theme of blood runs throughout Classic Monsters, whether it’s the Top Trumps ghoulish kind of youth, or the more mature, adult-themed kind found on the taking-stock, trying not to run away, ‘Rabbit Blood’. The life force is both a reminder of immortality and the source of adolescent frights.

As always Gallagher’s lyrics are layered with references and meaning, and stretch the loose concept to open-up about anxieties, growing up and both the bliss and pains of love; the alum finale, ‘Planetarium’, sets a near ethereal astrological scene from the said title’s stargazer observatory, as two star-crossed in stoned awe and wonder look up to the celestial heavens to a retro-lunar, Theremin-like voiced and ballad style piano soundtrack. Songs like that evoke Gallagher’s sci-fi passions, and alternative Dark Star songbook score fixations (see the brilliant Phenomenology album). But even though there’s a smattering of space dust, and no matter what, a musical signature that runs throughout all his work – enervated cosmic cowboy troubadour, soft rock and evocations of the Eels, The Thrills, Josh T Pearson, Rezo and The Flaming Lips – Gallagher has changed his set-up a little.

Recording back in the Spanish studio environment that has served him so well, and once again working with the musician and producer Paco Loco (credits and highlights include working with the outstanding Josephine Foster, the Jayhawks’ Gary Louris and The Sadies), Gallagher is now also backed by the Los Jaguares de la Bahía band, who bring subtle psychedelic country and alternative rock influences to the sound.  The cover art, especially the lettering style, signals The Flying Burrito Brothers or The Byrds – both of which you may detect – but there’s an almost distinct CAN-style drum on the opening sparse and wisped ‘Failure’, and a touch of Bonnie Prince Billy, Phosphorescent and Fleet Foxes.

Step forward Pablo Erra on bass, Patri Espejo on piano, Esteban Perler on drums and Loco on synths and ambient effects, for they manage to seamlessly evoke Bill Callahan one minute and Lou Reed the next. And yet also sound like Joe Jackson teaming up with Nick Lowe and the Boomtown Rats – to be honest, that last reference is largely down to the piano sound. They make the vampiric and howling themed ‘Blood Suckers’ sound disarmingly like a Scarlet’s Well fairytale of sweet dreams, soothed from beneath a baby’s calming mobile hanging over the cot. Weirdly (or not) both the band and Gallagher reminded me of Elbow and David Gray on the very 90s upbeat tempo’d ‘Killer Sun’.    

It’s a winning combination that expands Gallagher’s musical scope without altering his signature style and voice, feel and intimacy. I’ve said it before about Phenomenology, but I really do think this is now his best album to date. And I’m still astounded by the lack of support for his music or exposure, as Gallagher’s The Mining Co. vehicle is worthy of praise, airplay and attention. Hopefully it will be sixth album lucky for the Irishman.    

Jessica Ackerley ‘All Of The Colours Are Singing’
(AKP Recordings) 16th August 2024

Gifted guitarist, composer, bandleader and soloist Jessica Ackerley adds even more colour (sometimes vivid and striking, at other times, more pastel or muted) to their pliable sonic/musical palette. Seamlessly crossing over into art – inspired in part by the arid desert outdoor symbolic and metaphorical flowerings and abstracted landscapes of Georgia O’ Keefe – the now Honolulu-based musician turns markings and sketches into both untethered performative compositions that traverse the avant-garde, jazz, blues, experimental rock, R&B and the virtuoso. O’ Keefe’s “to see takes time” wisdom is used almost like a catalyst for the album’s articulation and more energetic ways of seeing.     

Recorded in the unceded territory of the indigenous Kanaka Maoli, in the Mānoa Valley (one of Hawai’i’s venerated mythological creation story landscapes) All Of The Colours Are Singing filters an inspiring geography, sense of time and place whilst also channeling Ackerley’s synesthesia – hence that title.

With a rich CV of performances (from John Zorn’s The Stone to The Metropolitan Museum of Art) and projects behind them (from their extensive catalogue of eclectic work with such notable musicians as Marc Edwards, Tyshwan Sorey and Patrick Shiroshi), it’s no wonder that Ackerley manages to attract a talented pool of collaborators or foils. Step forward Walter Stinson on upright bass, Aaron Edgcomb on drums and Concetta Abbata on alternating violin and viola. Boundaries are crossed and blurred with this ensemble on an album of varying beauty and wilder improvisations; an album in which subtle sensibilities are comfortably followed by challenging free expressions of fusion and freeform progressive jazz. If there was an underlying genre or influence sound wise, then it must be jazz in its many forms, with echoes of the Sonny Sharrock Band and Philip Catherine, but also shades of the noirish, the smooth and more impressively quickly played and bent-out-of-shape kinds. Edgcomb’s drums can add to the jazzy feel, but also sieves, brushes and sweeps across the snare in a more tactile fashion – almost like applying brush strokes at times. It might just be me, but he reminded me of Guru Guru’s Mani Neumeier on the changeable in tempo and style, jazz-fusion ‘The Dots Are The Connection’.

But then there’s the near sweetly hummed and dreamy intro to that O’ Keefe borrowed title quote, and then what sounds like Tuareg desert or Songhoy blues guitar on the first part of the ‘Conclusion: In Four Micro Parts’ finale – this soon develops into a bout of buzzy intense Yonatan Gat experimental physical rock. That use of strings obviously steers the music away from the jazz sound towards the classical and chamber. Abbato, subtly reinforcing or emphasising the moments of grief, mourning and thoughtfulness, can both articulate dew being shaken off fluttered shaken feathers and stretch, strain and fray the violin and viola in a more avant-garde fashion – reminding me of Alison Cotton, Alex Stölze and, although she is a cellist, Anne Müller. Ackerley uses the guitar like an artist’s brush stroke, whether it is in a frenzy or blur of abstract or rapid markings and swishes, or more placed and calming. Invoking such refined and experimental bedfellows as Joe Pass, Marisa Anderson, Bill Orcutt, Chuck Johnson and the Gunn-Truscinski Duo, they walk a unique personalised pathway between medias and art forms to showcase and push at the boundaries of artful guitar-led performance and inner emotional workings.

Drew Mulholland & Garden Gate ‘Night Blooming Flowers’
(Subexotic Records) 23rd August 2024

Serial offenders of occult sounds and more nostalgic early analogue and library music, the transatlantic sonic conjuring sparring partners Drew Mulholland and Timmi Meskers have coalesced their individual disciplines for a suitably atmospheric esoteric soundtrack of retro horror novelties and pastoral chamber folkloric magik.

By candelabra light Meskers’ Garden Gate alter ego is called upon to bring a certain ethereal apparitional siren allure, enchantment and vintage, and bowed classical heightened spine-tingles and spooks to Mulholland’s BBC Radiophonics Workshop and his very own Mount Vernon Arts Lab project style electronics.

The University of Glasgow lecturer and composer-in-residence and his American “Baroque psych/horror savant” foil don’t do things by halves, having written a mini synopsis storyline of a kind for the protagonist of this horticultural paranormal and dream-realism tale. The title more or less tells you all you need to know: that is, a search and waylaid adventure to find the rarest of flowers, the botanist’s precious treasure, that only bloom’s at night. In between the start of a expedition and the final unveiling of this sought-after flower, there’s many a misstep along the pathway, as the dark arts merges with pagan and idyllic folklore to drag our main character into various spellbound jeopardies, fairytales and hallucinations.

Imbibed and inspired by a number of sources, one of Meskers most notable is the late British historian Emma Wilby’s Cunning Folk And Familiar Spirits: Shamanistic Visionary Traditions In Early Modern British Witchcraft And Magic tome; the central propound argument of which is that early modern beliefs and witchcraft were influenced by a substratum of shamanistic beliefs found in pockets of Europe – of which they are many detractors. You can throw in the Tarot and what musically sounds like to me the cult British horror soundtracks of the Amicus and Tigon studios, Dennis Wheatley, Isobel Gowdrie and a whole woodland of sprites, fairies and mythical beasts.

Altogether, with both partners’ range of influences, the soundtrack shivers, creeps and in both a supernatural and merrily manner merges the otherworldly analogue-sounding atmospheres of Belbury Poly, The Focus Group, Pye Corner Audio and Bibio with the pastoral willowy tapestries and bewitching spells of Tristram Cary, Marc Wilkinson, James Bernard, Harry Robinson and Sproatly Smith. 

From dramatic stiletto piano and meanderings amongst the grass snake foliage and Piltdown Man decorated hilltops, to more hallucinatory passages of enticement, each piece of music conjures up a scene or chapter in a larger idiosyncratic tale from the pages of the Fortean Times, King James’s Daemonologie or pulp supernatural fiction. As Hauntology projects go, Night Blooming Flowers is a retro-styled success of subtle but effective storytelling, mystery and cult references; a soundtrack that now needs a film to go with it.             

Asteroide & Fiorella16 ‘Suni A Través Del Espejo’
Downtime ‘Guts’ (Cruel Nature Records)

Through the various sonic peregrinations, noises and protestations of their extensive roster, the Northumberland diy label Cruel Nature travels between the hard bitten dystopias of life in a modern fractured state to more fantastical climes out in the expanses of space. Keeping up a steady prolific schedule each month, the label covers everything from the psychedelic to riled punk and societal angst.

Just dipping into the July haul of releases, I’ve picked out two albums from the mysteriously cosmic and krautrock imbibed camps; the Peruvian pairing of the Asteroide duo and Fiorella16’s Suni A Través Del Espejo and Downtime’s seemingly uninterrupted one-take Guts jam.

The former channels the psychogeography (both atavistic and otherworldly) of the Andean Altiplano, which spans Boliva, Chile and Peru. A natural phenomenon, the Altiplano (from the Colonial Spanish for “high plain”) is the most extensive high plateau on the planet outside of Tibet. It encompasses a whole high altitude giddy biosphere of pristine environments: from the famous Salar de Uyuni salt plains to Lake Titicaca – one of the main hubs along its banks, Puno, is where one half of this collaboration, the indy rock siblings Asteroide, hail from. “Through the looking glass” (as that album title translates), alongside sonic foil José María Málaga, aka Fiorella16, they magic up a highly mysterious communion with the elements and the forms, the ghosts and the extraterrestrial bodies that flicker in and out of the consciousness; that appear like dizzy, lack of oxygen and air, hallucinations and mirages.

A biomorphic score created in-situ, the properties of water, the season of Spring and a hilltop suddenly sound like the cosmic whirrs of UFOs, alien transmissions and caustic stirrings from the belly of volcanic chambers. A mixture of Steve Gunn and The Howard Hughes Suite-like post-rock Americana and harder Sunn O))) and Gunter Schickert guitar and synthesised atmospherics, generators, oscillations, satellites and Throbbing Gristle coarseness build up a near esoteric, primal communication with the plateau’s guardians. The finale, ‘PRIMAvera’, with its ‘Jennifer’ style reverberated throbbing wobbled bass, sulfur waves and data exchanges, finds the collaborative partners finally beamed-up via the tractor beam to some subterranean alien dimension.   

A little bit different, though there are some krautrock-style overlaps, the “power duo” Downtime orbit head music space on their latest just-let-the-tape-record-whatever-emerges-from-an-intense-heavy-jam-like-session. Over forty minutes of edited thrashing, kraut/heavy/acid/doom rock, the participants in this expulsion of energy channel everything from the Boredoms, Acid Mothers Temple, Zeni Geva, Hawkwind, Ash Ra Tempel and Boris.

In a cosmic vacuum, near virtuoso fuzzy and scuzzy soloing and ripping phaser and flange guitar and tempo-changing beaten, crashed, squalling drums and acid galactic effects create a heavy meta(l) space rock behemoth of interstellar proportions.  

A mere whiff of what to expect from this label’s catalogue, both albums are worthy of your credit and spare change. 

Zack Clarke ‘Plunge’
(Orenda)

The critically hailed pianist-composer, New York improvised jazz scene stalwart, and bandleader Zack Clarke finds ever more inventive and omnivorous ways to push both the jazz form and his studied instrument on his latest album for the Orenda label.

“Building” (to paraphrase the album notes) bridges between groups of people, and cleverly merging the intelligent dance music movements with cosmic-funk-jazz, hip-hop breaks, prog and both classical and avant-garde forms, Clarke takes the proverbial “plunge” and resurfaces with a sometimes fun and at other times intense serialism of either spasmodic and stuttering or free-flowing discombobulating performative fusions. 

Using modern production methods and a whole kit of tech, Clarke takes the idea of jazz in its earliest incarnation as dance music and runs with it; aping the minimalist techno and electronic rhythmic off-kilter mayhem of such iconic labels as Warp through an effects transforming removed version of the piano.

Dashed, chopped and cross-handed sophisticated modal runs and the piano’s very guts (its inner wiry stringy workings played at times almost like a splayed mallet(ed) chiming dulcimer) work with varied combinations of breakbeats, clattered, rattled, splashing and electronic padded drums and what sounds like 303 or 808 electro synths across a generous sixteen tracks.

At times all this sounds like Keith Jarrett corrupted by Drukqs era Aphex Twin; or like µ-Ziq fucking around with zappy-futuristic Herbie Hancock; or even Zappa jamming with Chick Corea. But then certain compositions (if that’s the appropriate word) reminded me of The Bad Plus, of Radiohead In Rainbows, of Mantronix, Squarepusher and Andrew Spackman’s Sad Man alter ego. It might only be me, but album finale ‘ANTHEM’ sounds like Abdullah Ibrahim transduced through d’n’b and breakbeat filters.   

There’s a lot to unpick, to absorb, but weirdly enough Clarke’s inventive intentions are successfully accomplished as he bridges the avant-garde and jazz with a spectrum of fusions and experimental technology to produce a unique vision of dance music for a new century.  

___/+ THESE RECOMMENDATIONS IN BRIEF

Any regular readers will know that I pride myself in writing more in depth purview-style reviews with a wider context. This means I naturally take more time and effort. Unfortunately, this also means that I can only ever scratch the surface of the thousands of releases both the blog and I get sent each month. As a compromise of sorts, I’ve chosen to now include a really briefly written roundup of releases, all of which really do deserve far more space and context. But these are recommendations, a little extra to check out of you are in the mood or inclined to discover more.

Poppy H ‘Good Hiding’
ALBUM (Adventurous Music)

In a constant artistic flux, the idiosyncratic trick noise maker and musical statements composer Poppy H always manages to embody a whole new sound with each release and project. The latest is no different for being different in that regard. A Good Hiding (a reference to taking a good beating or kicking, or just literally a “good hiding place”) is both a studied and beautifully evocative chamber haunting of removed folk and traditional ideas, windy funnelled atmospheres, low key padded bobbling and spinning electronics, voices and whispers from the air, ghostly classical piano and suffused ambient drama. To truly articulate the elegance, near Gothic mystery and dreaminess of it all would need far more words and depth: a real long form reading. But hopefully this will be enough to whet the appetite, as this is a very good album indeed.   

Cumsleg Borenail ‘Broadmoor Time’
TRACK/VIDEO

Prolific instigator of phantasmagoria electronica Cumsleg Borenail is at it again with another fucked-up nightmare of sonic disturbance. As you may have rightly guessed from the title, this ominous, scary score channels the abusive, harrowing pained psychogeography of the infamous high-security psychiatric hospital in Berkshire, England. A right rogue’s gallery of inmates has occupied this facility over the decades; some of the UK’s very worst and unhinged offenders and murderers. And you can read much into the reasons behind the subject matter, the mental health care aspects and treatment especially, but it is a very haunted soundtrack of the recognisable made otherworldly, scaly and metallic.

Pauli Lyytinen ‘Lehto/Korpi’
ALBUM (We Jazz) 30th August 2024

Conjuring up a whole eco system of forest canopy menageries and lush greenness, the Finnish saxophonist Pauli Lyytinen sets out a “deep forest grove” biosphere of fertile heavenly auras and bird-like reedy probes on his solo debut for the We Jazz label.

A moiety of Don Cherry, both 60s hippy idealistic eco-friendly and more divine Biblical MGM sound studios soundtracks, cylindrical Fourth World blasts, and hints of Stetson and Brötzmann, Lyytinen’s saxophone positively sings on the wing whilst opening a blessed environment. Mentioned in the references, and on the nose, our fluttered, feathery saxophonist has Evan Parker’s own bird songs down to a tee. An unassuming charmer and yet full of experiment and organic untethered freedoms, Lehto/Korpi is far too good an album to be missed or overlooked.

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

A WORLD OF SONIC/MUSICAL DISCOVERIES REVIEWED BY DOMINIC VALVONA

(Unless stated otherwise, all releases are available now)

Photo credit: George Rae Teensma

Hannah Mohan ‘Time Is A Walnut’
(Egghunt Records) 12th July 2024

Geographically settling long enough to pen this solo songbook offering, but anything but settled emotionally, the former And The Kids vocalist-songwriter Hannah Mohan attempts to process the break-up of all break-ups.

After leaving home at the age of sixteen, restless and curious, Mohan spent her formative years on the road, crisscrossing North America, busking and honing a creative craft. On returning home, after five years of travel and travail, Mohan formed And The Kids with a school friend. After a trio of albums between 2014 and 2019, and with the global pandemic’s nefarious effects on the music industry and wellbeing, the band unfortunately came to an end. Throw in the heartache, the confusing cross-signals of a fateful relationship, and you’ve suddenly accumulated a whole sorry mess of emotional pain and a lot of questions that need addressing or analyses.

Luckily Mohan is a highly talented musician and songwriter, able to turn sorrow and reflection into gold. For Time Is A Walnut is a rich album full of familiarity and yet melodically and lyrically idiosyncratic, shaped as it is to Mohan’s particular cadence, timbre and way-with-words.

Less moping and more a full gamut of hurt, weariness, despondency, incriminations and plaint, Mohan travels full circle on her break-up journey: from shock to vented indignation, from losing one self in the moment to escaping from reality. All the feelings of resentment, the pulling apart of a fragile soul, and decoupling sound surprisingly melodious and disarmingly anthemic throughout: even during the bitterest exchanges and grievances.

Hand-in-hand with producer and musician Alex Toth (of Rubblebucket and Tōth fame), working away with little sleep in Mohan’s basement, the resulting thematic songbook is filled with great alt-pop songs; some with a country lent, others suddenly mystified and misty with an air of atmospheric Celtic vibes, or, channeling 80s new wave German synth music – Toth, I assume, almost in DAF mode on the darker-lit, hurting ‘Peace Be The Day’.

Almost breezy in parts, there’s tunes galore as Mohan evokes the Cowboy Junkies, Angel Olsen, Tanya Donelly, Madder Rose, Sophie Janna (especially on the vapour-piped Ireland illusion ‘Runaway’) and Feist. But you can also throw in a touch of dry-ice 80s synth-pop and a touch of Bacharach on the whistle-y saddened beauty that is ‘Upside Down’.

In sympathy and often softly lifting, there’s a fair use of trumpet on the album. Less jazzy – although saying that, there’s vague suggestions of Chet Baker – and more Southern, nee Mexican serenade and atmosphere, that instrument’s suffused and occasional enervated brassy blazes is a perfect fit with Mohan’s candid, sanguine delivery.

A congruous choice of guest, working in a similar mode, songwriter-musician Lady Lamb features on the 60s troubadour echoed, vibrato-trilled sing-a-long anthem ‘Hell’. The details and the unforeseen circumstances, the ‘messy eroticism’ and loss, disconnection from someone else’s life are all lay bare in a melodious beauty.

Hannah Mohan rides the roller coaster of a drawn-out break-up with quirkiness and vulnerability, turning tortuous heartache into one of the best and most rewarding songbooks of the year. Mohan may have let her soul sing out, as she comes to accept an emotional turbulent period of stresses and anxieties and pain. But whether she’s finally pulled through the other side or not is up to you the listener.

Black Diamond ‘Furniture Of The Mind Rearranging’
(We Jazz)

Transported back in time, and then propelled forward into the now via Chicago’s musical legacy, its rich heritage of innovators and scope in the world of jazz, Artie Black and Hunter Diamond’s dual saxophone and woodwind focused vehicle can trace a line from the Windy City’s smokestack bluesy outlines of the 50s through the icons Sun Ra, Roscoe Mitchell, Eddie Johnson, Lester Bowie, Art Ensemble Of Chicago, Anthony Braxton and the hothouse of undeniable influence and talent, the Association For The Advancement Of Creative Musicians.

Across an ambitious double-album spread of both quartet and duo mode formations, those Black Diamonds don’t so much shine as smolder and fizzle to a smoky and simmering resonance and metropolis backdrop encroached by wild jungles and fertile growth.

The majority of this moiety evolution is handed over to the quartet ensemble, with Artie and Hunter joined by the softened taut but flexing and always on the move double-bassist Matt Ulery and the constant cymbal splashing and rolling, fills and tight woody rattling drum breaking drummer Neil Hemphill. That set both swells and finds pause to a certain lowness and more weighted pull of the freeform and melodic, the rhythmic.

Saxophones sound willowy as they either entwine, take turns on the climb, exhale drawn-out mizzles or drizzles; all the while the action recalls every formative era from the 1920s onwards, from the blues to the African, the spiritual, bop and the serenaded. All those cats mentioned in the opening paragraph pop up alongside the Pharoah, Ornette, Evan Parker (I’m thinking of the woodwind elements, which both Hunter and Artie switch between throughout), Mingus and on the opener, ‘Carrying The Stick’, Lalo Schfrin of all people.   

From concrete to near pastoral dustings, a menagerie of bird-like brass and woodwind sings and stretches, often letting the steam out of those valves with a bristle and rasp. The drum and bass combo keep it all moving forward, developing, with Ulery’s slackened bass even opening a couple of tracks.

In a more stripped-down and even more experimental mode, Side D (in old money vinyl terms) of the album is given over to the duo format of sax and woodwind.

Leaning towards Braxton, John Zorn and Andy Haas in near-non-musical freedom of expression, they probe new, amorphous spaces without clear signage or reference to environments or moods. The saxophone often sounds reedier, more rasping, and is enveloped with the very sound of its brassy metallic resonance and surface makeup. Every exhaled breath is used to conjure up the mysterious, the onset of some unease, but also a pauses for certain moments of reflection.

Perhaps a mizmar played at dusk, an ominous peace or a meditative haze, these experiments, forms of tonal, timberical evocation are difficult to describe or catalogue. Only that they fit in with the freedoms, the expressions and language of the Chicago school of freeform inventiveness and exploration, deconstruction of an instrument.

Black Diamond run with the ‘stick’ or baton passed on by the Chicago hothouse of jazz notables and luminaries, proving themselves to be a quality, dynamic act ready to push forward. Rearranging the cerebral and musicality furniture as never sounded both so classy and explorative.     

           

Damian Dalla Torre ‘I Can Feel My Dreams’
(Squama Recordings) 12th July 2024

Subtle in approach and process, the cross-fertilization of South American and European cultures, prompts and environments on Damian Dalla Torre’s second album, I Can Feel My Dreams, is a tangible synthesis of abstract feels, moods and an exchange of musical ideas.

Nodes, points in a larger dream-realism canvas reference the Leipzig-based multi-instrumentalist, composer and producer’s footprints across both continents.

Sparked by a residency to teach, write and practice his craft in the Chilean capital of Santiago, Torre absorbed all that city and its surroundings had to offer: the vistas, colours and art. With a certain amorphous guaze that magical landscape of rainforest canopy enveloped menageries, flowing waters, Andean fluted heights and valleys, and exotic lushness is merged effortlessly with complimentary vocal harmonies and assonant arias, dewy and caressed extended dainty picked harp, quivers of guitar, trembles of piano and spells of electronica. The realms of jazz, sparse techno, ambience, voice experiment, nature, futurism, sound art and the new age seamlessly yield and relent.

The haul of notable guests invited to play on the album is staggering, and in no way distracts from the main leitmotifs and direction of drifted, wispy travel. Instead, each guest enhances with a certain gracefulness and calm each musical expedition and piece of mood music. Unsurprisingly given Leipzig’s musical history and legacy (home to an enviable catalogue of classical music giants over the centuries; perhaps one of the biggest most impressive concentrations in that genre’s history of iconic composers and musicians), but also its more modern burgeoning jazz and electronic music scenes, there is a host of musicians and artists from or based in the German city taking part on the album; cue the blossoming ‘genre traversal’ Jan Soutschek, ensemble singer and soprano soloist Viola Blanche, guitarist and composer Bertram Burkert and jazz improviser, pianist and composer Jonas Timm. Add to that the Austrian-Ethiopian harpist Miriam Adefris, the Danish composer and arranger Christian Balvig, pianist Felix Römer and the range and influences probe even further and deeper. Altogether, from the replenishing waters of renewal to the generator and manipulated electronics of modernity, all these contributions prove beneficially harmonious and complete.

This is a biomorphic world in which echoes of Eno, Alice Coltrane, Talk Talk, Oh No Noh, and Lara Alarcon all coalesce and dream. The architect, Torre, manages to keep everything constantly green and lush; showcasing a flair for pulling together a myriad of sources to create something almost familiar by new.   

Society Of The Silver Cross ‘Festival Of Invocations’
(8668 Records)  
    

Stepping from the shadows after abstaining from the material world for the last five years, the matrimonial partnership of Joe Reinke and Karyn Gold-Reinke return with a second rebirth, regeneration of Indian, Byzantium, Egyptian and Gothic imbued pathos and bathos. 

Harnessing the themes of fate, the eventual and unavoidable specter of death and its harbingers, its demons, and even its angels, the Seattle couple walks the path of hermetic cults, atavistic Indian spiritualism and magik to induce cosmic awakenings and transformations. With all of mortality’s connotations and meanings, death is also seen as a renewable force on this couple’s second album under the occultist Society Of The Silver Cross heading.

But there’s no escaping the atmospheric dread and the curiosity of deathly rituals invoked by the Indian-style drones, harmonium-pumped sustains and concertinaed bellows – part ‘Venus In Furs’ Velvets, part Alan Edgar Poe shipwreck hauntology shanty, and part courtly mysticism. And yet Karyn’s siren-esque duets with boa Joe can lift towards the light at times, escaping the Fortean broadcasting waves, the splashed crashed tumultuous sea-like cymbals and gongs, Book of the Dead mantras and distressed Andy Haas-like geese pecked sax (if it is indeed even a saxophone) hauntings.

But for a majority of the time the couple’s counterbalancing act of apparitional, bewitching and more baritone, from the bowels of the deep and human soul, vocals muster spiritualist visitations, a theatre of sorrow, past incarnations and an unbreakable multi-levelled circle of added magic both heavy and foreboding.

I was picking up spells of Death In June, Nick Cave’s duet with Kyle, Mick Harvey’s time with P.J. and Amanda Acevedo, Backworld, David Lynch, Dead Can Dance, Current 93 and Angels of Light. The folksy Gothic-art-music-shanty-motioned ‘When You Know’ (with my imagination) sees Serge Gainsbourg laying flowers on Jim Morrison’s alter in the Cimeti ére du Père-Lachaise. The mystical finale, ‘Rajasthan’, not only features those synonymous Indian tones but also has an air of the Spanish-Baroque guitar and a touch of The Limiñanas about it. Shrouded in rousing tribal dramatics and ether visions, the couple’s lasting nod to the land in which they spent much time absorbing the cultural-musical spiritualist vibes before making their debut singles and album (Verse 1), is steeped in the mists of time; invoking India’s largest state before eventual unification, and its history of early Vedic and Indus civilizations. “Rajasthan” is a portmanteau of words, but can be translated as the “Land of the kings”; its courtly, royal verbose and stately reputation echoes as the final word on this album of rebirth and the coming to terms with death. Making true on their previous chapter, Joe and Karyn once more follow the call of the silver cross-societal allure. Atmospheres, processions and possession that are more than just songs, you don’t so much liberally catch, or, casually listen to each propound and chant-like forewarning as enter a fully constructed world of elementals and alchemist mystique. These are drones, dirges and more opened-up astral projections that will stay with you days after first hearing them. A Festival Of Invocations is a chthonian play of supernatural, spiritualist and funeral parlor riches; a successful follow-up after a five year hiatus.      

Droneroom ‘As Long As The Sun’
(Somewherecold Records) 19th July 2024

Amorphous Western sun-cooked melting mirage panoramas are stoked and drawn from the Droneroom’s long form guitar peregrinations. The sixth (I believe) alt-country drone-cowboy album from Blake Edward Conley’s singular experiment for the Somewherecold label, As Long As The Sun is a filmic soundtrack-like conjuncture of Paris, Texas, Blood Meridian and a myriad of supernatural and alien visions of the ‘big country’.

The Western sounds of the twang, rattle and bends is unmistakable, and the sounds we’ve taken for granted, like the freight train convey that hurtles down the tracks and with it’s velocity and size shakes the passing dinging and ringing rail barrier junction, but Conley’s familiar markers, references make them near hallucinogenic under the sun’s powerful debilitating rays. I can imagine Ry Coder fronting Ash Ra Tempel, or early Popol Vuh relocated to the arid planes of outlier Texas, or a mule-riding Don Quixote tilting at the shadows of cacti.

A contemplation of all life’s spiritual quandaries and fate no less, all elicited from the magnified and amplified reverberations, quivers, strokes, gestures, brushes and more driven rhythmic passages of the guitar. Fuzzed-up with flange and sustain, these descriptive lines, resonated waves and vibrations are like drawn-out echoes of Michael Rother, Gunn-Truscinski, Jason Pierce (in his Spaceman 3 days) and Yonatan Gat. On the searing, razored and heated coil moody ‘Last Train To Soda Spring’ (the small Idaho city which gets its name from the 100s of carbonated water springs that dot the landscape) there’s a build-up of layering and rhythms that breaches the hazy space rock barriers – Hawkwind crosses fully into Motorhead. Whilst the shamanic marooned, railroad vision, ‘East Facing Window’ has a kind of krautrock generator field around it that hums and pulsates, invoking both alien and paranormal activity – I’m thinking a little of Roedelius’s experimentation on Sky Records.

As Long As The Sun beats down upon Conley’s cowboy hatted noodle, its gravitas, life force and heat inspiring serious abstract empirical vistas, atmospheres and the soundtrack to a movie yet to be made. 

Luke Elliott ‘Every Somewhere’
(AKP Recordings) 12th July 2024

Composing a more inclusive biosphere and exchange of cultures, influences and sounds, the Amsterdam-based, Leeds born, sound artist Luke Elliott transforms his source material of field recordings (from what could be acts of making in a workshop to tramples through the undergrowth of Moat Farm in Somerset and the windy tubular sea organ of Zadar in Croatia) into a fully working lunar off-world vision.

A new world no less, Every Somewhere’s vague, recognizable, or by happenstance, playful tastes of gamelan and Southeast Asia, early analogue modulations and patterns, tape music experiments and sonic land art (that already mentioned Zadar organ, which was built as a large scale land art instrument to bring some sort of random melodious colour to the Dalmatian coastal town’s monotonous concrete wall scape, rebuilt with haste after the devastations of WWII) are sampled then re-sampled, fed through effects and an apparatus to build a more sympathetic, attentive environment.  

At least influenced in part by a fascination with Alfred W. Crosby’s ‘Colombian Exchange’ theory, as outlined in his 1972 propound book, which gave a now fashionable name to the legacy of colonialism and the destructive and loaded exchanges between the Western hemisphere and the then ‘New World’, Elliott’s imaginative world is more nurtured towards a beneficial exchange of cultures.

In a liminal zone between the earthly, otherworldly, near cosmic, dreamy and liquid, the kinetic, algorithmic, arpeggiator and magnetic atoms and transparent notes bobble and squiggle about over atmospheric ambience and to the rounded rhythms of paddled tubular obscured instruments. And then, once the guitar is introduced to tracks like the glassy delicate ‘Objects Of Virtue’, the mood changes towards a bluesy post-rock vibe.

Magical escapes, stargazing from the observatory, solar winds, near operatic cloudscaping and various gleams, glints and globules recall Goo Ages’s Open Zone album, Tomat, Raymond Scott, Edgar Froese and Zemertz.

Elliott’s debut for the astute AKP Recordings label maps tactile environments both intriguing and melodically mindful. It paves the way for new visions of a more equal future.            

Passepartout Duo & Inoyama Land ‘Radio Yugawara’
(Tonal Union) 26th July 2024

The freely geographical traversing Passepartout Duo find congruous partners with collaborative foils Inoyama Land – those fine purveyors of Japanese Kankyō Ongaku, or environmental ambient new age music – on their latest balance of the tactile, organic and synthesized.

A free association of cultures and musical processes, despite laying down loose perimeters, the Italian/US duo of Nicoletta Favari and Christopher Salvito combine explorative forces with the Japanese musical partnership of Yasushi Yamashita and Makoto Inoue for a remarkable interaction with their surroundings, a mix of children’s instruments and percussive and wind apparatus. 

Favari and Salvito have already appeared on the Monolith Cocktail, with reviews of both the Chinese art platform-backed Vis-à-Vis and Daylighting albums. Those experiments in the timbrical, rhythmic and melodic, imbued by the Meili Mountains, Lijiang and fabled imaging’s of Shangri-La, were created during and in-between the restrictions of the Covid pandemic. A year before news broke of that global crisis the duo travelled to Japan. Connecting with the Inoyama Band, a duo that had transformed the abstract feelings, magnetism, sublime transcendence and peace of the landscape since the 1980s, they were invited in to their host’s shared space sanctum – an auditorium inside Inoue’s family-run kindergarten in Yugawasa that doubles-up on Sundays as a studio.

Set out on tables for all participants, a myriad of playful and more studied instruments and a set of “game rules”. The quartet could only use the mix of electronic and acoustic instruments separately or altogether for ‘revolving duets’, with each taking turns to play through a cycle of ‘four duos’. But then ‘anything’ was permitted in that session, which lasted three hours. In this complete state, that long improvisation and set of prompts has been distilled into eleven more digestible parts. Within the sonic, contextual and languid peaceable realms of the Kankyō Ongaku genre and greater scope of Japanese acoustic-electronic music, there’s an air of Satoshi Ashikawa, Yasuaki Shimizu, Yoshio Ojima and Tomo-Nakaguchi about this album. You could add hints of Slow Attack Ensemble, Eno, the Hidden Notes label and Bagaski to a subtle layering environment that takes in all points of the compass, with chimed bulb-like notes and the ringing, searing and chimed bamboo music of Java, Tibet, Vietnam and the dreamy.

The recognizable sound of soft-mallet patterned and paddled glockenspiel and xylophone merge fluidly with hand bells, higher-pitch whistled recorders, concertinaed wafted melodica and harmonicas, and racks of wind chimes. Whilst atmospheric elements and the use of electronic devices create mysterious vapours, oscillated wisps, knocked rhythms and floppy disc sampled voices.

Gazing at diaphanous beamed and lit cloud formations from a comfortable snug in the landscape, or, submerged below Mexican waters inhabited by the strange aquatic Axolotl salamander, each part of this performance is somehow similar and yet variably different. Between the illusionary, dreamy, sonorous, see-through and swimmingly, two sets of adroit partnerships create organic meta and a sublime near-nothingness of slow musical peacefulness and environmental absorbed transience.    

    

Myles Cochran ‘You Are Here’
(9Ball Records) 26th July 2024

Unhurried and once more placable, the all-round embracing American composer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and producer Myles Cochran follows up his 2021 debut album (Unsung) with another carefully spun canvas of subtle emotive pulls, TV and filmic-like soundtrack scores, ruminations and mirages.

Traversing an amorphous palette of Americana, the blues, classical, folk, experimental, Baroque and traditional, Cochran integrates his Kentucky roots with spells in New York City and the UK (where he’s lived for some time) whilst letting his unprompted imagination travel to more exotic climes and cerebral dreamscapes.

Although an adroit player of many instruments, Cochran’s work is mostly led, directed, informed and suffused by both the acoustic and electric guitar. Understated but keen and expressive, his choice of guitar is once again left to stir up visions of a celluloid panoramic and more mystifying melting Western America, the Appalachians, Ozarks and home. Only this time around he’s also invited in the accomplished cellist Michelle Packman and bassist Reggie Jones to add a transported subtle semblance of chamber music, period drama and jazz. Jones, playing a stand-up (or upright) bass throughout, emphasizes rhythm, a pace and sense of travel – especially so on the shaky rhythmic travelogue ‘Making Something Out Of Nothing’, which, by its title, indicates a conjuring of a composition, performance out of just playing or fiddling around, but evokes (for me) the imagined title sequences of some wintery Northern American drama, out on the road with the harsh, snowy landscape passing by the window of our protagonist’s truck. Meanwhile, the following countrified-meets-the-pastoral-and-renaissance crafted ‘Signs And Symbols’ has an air of Fran & Flora about it with the sounds of a breathy and fiddle-like cello.  

Widening the vistas, the quiet inner battles of turmoil and conflict, sympathetic bowing and pining cello enhances the mood and subtle expressions of Cochran’s compositional style, which both ebbs and flows between the echoes of Chuck Johnson, Ry Cooder, Bill Frisell, John Fahey, Martin Renbourn and Jeff Bird.

There’s a pick up in the pace with dusty brushed drums, but for the most part it’s a quivery horizon gaze of sophisticated slow to mid-tempo observations and introspection. None more so then on the mature vocalized jazzy-bluesy and dusty ‘The Deepest Sea’, which sounds like Hugo Race or Chris Eckman in questioning Leonard Cohen mode backed by Chris Rea.  

A culmination of travels, thoughts, hopes and fears, You Are Here further expands Cochran’s musicianship and influence. Those Americana roots are being pushed further into new pastures, helped by his cellist and bassist foils and freshly attuned ear. Eroded, waned, giving and dreamily melting in the heat, his guitar parts overlap and transmute into piano, strings and the ambient. Each track is like a short score, the qualities of which offer sensibilities and a way of following or telling a story, a moment in time or scene. In all: a very sensitive work of maturity and unrushed reflection. 

         

___/+ THESE RECOMMENDATIONS IN BRIEF

Any regular readers will know that I pride myself in writing more in depth purview-style reviews with a wider context. This means I naturally take more time and effort. Unfortunately this also means that I can only ever scratch the surface of the 4000+ releases both the blog and I get sent each month. As a compromise of sorts, I’ve chosen to now include a really briefly written roundup of releases, all of which really do deserve far more space and context. But these are recommendations, a little extra to check out of you are in the mood or inclined to discover more.

Pocket Dimension ‘S-T’
(Cruel Nature Records)

Exploratory voyages into the kosmische and sci-fi, straight from the illustrated pages of Stewart Cowley’s Spacecraft 2000 – 2100 AD, the Lanarkshire-based artist Charlie Butler doesn’t so much launch as fire the languid thrusters into the mesmerizing, enticing and dream like voids of a soundtracked cosmos. On many levels, through four continuous stages, the drifted and wonder of space is balanced with fizzled raspy electronica and eventual IDM, siren wailing bends, shoots, and a rotating centrifugal force that seems to envelope the whole trip in both mystery and the presence of unknown forces hovering in the galactic ether.

Various ‘TRÁNSITOS SÓNICOS – Música electrónica y para cinta de compositores peruanos (1964-1984)’ (Buh Records)

Filling in the blanks in the story of South America’s experimental and avant-garde scenes, Buh Records throws the spotlight on Peru and a host of experimental boffins working to cross indigenous sounds with the new and yet to be discovered.

Off-world, futuristic, UFOs, tape manipulation, the shrills of something magnetic, steely industrial tools, reel to reel melting, mind bending and rattling old atavistic bones, assonant female voices, and shamen augers, this compilation includes examples from the likes of Arturo Ruiz del Pozo, Luis David Aguilar, and Corina Bartra; a wealth of cult composers struggling to explore new sonic boundaries in a country devoid of the apparatus, foresight and laboratory conditions. And so most of the atmospheric – sometimes heading towards chilling alien – and transmogrified Peruvian environmental peregrinations were recorded in private studios. The story and scope needs way more room than this piffy, glib little piece. Suffice to say, I highly recommend it. 

Rehman Memmedli ‘Azerbaijan Guitara Vol. 2’
(Bongo Joe)

The history and travails of the fecund oil rich country of Azerbaijan are atavistic. This is a nation that has striven to gain independence from a string of empires: both Tsarist and Soviet Russia, Iran, Albania, and much further back, the great Mongol Khan Timur. Desired not only for its abundance in fossil fuels but for its geographical corridor to its fellow Transcaucasia neighbours of Georgia and Armenia in the west, to the south, Iran, in the north, Russia, and to the west, the vast inland lake, the Caspian Sea. And although at various times at war with its direct neighbour Armenia (recent flare ups have led to a startup in violence, and accusations of ethnic removal), the country’s close proximity to a mix of cross-cultural and geographical influences has led to an absorption of all kinds of musical styles.

Bongo Joe‘s second volume of ‘guitara’ music showcases is fronted by another Azerbaijan legend, Rehman Memmedli (the first volume was handed over to the equally iconic Rüstəm Quliyev), who first learnt the accordion and harmonica before picking up a relative’s guitar – but also the region’s synonymous traditional tar instrument too (an ornate curvy looking waisted long-necked lute). Suitably eclectic in styles, from belly dancing Turkey and Arabia to shimmy Bessarabia and local wedding music, Memmedli scores and scorches up and down the fretboard at speed. Spindling, bending, skirting and wobbling, and even sounding at times like an erratic stylophone, vistas and ruminating sonnets are conjured up from a nibble-fingered maverick: Persia, the Caucasus, and beyond are summoned forth from electrified scuzz and fuzz and drama.

Cumsleg Borenail ‘Fragile And Adaptive’
Video – Taken from the new album Time Is A pˈætɚn Of Shifting d͡ʒiˈɑːmətɹiz

Proving incredibly impossible to pin down, whilst impossible to fully keep a track of, such is the prolific output, the artist formerly known as Cumsleg Borenail has released a host of albums, EPs over just the last few months alone.

The latest, and discombobulating entitled, Time Is A pˈætɚn Of Shifting d͡ʒiˈɑːmətɹiz,will officially go live a week or so after this column. As a teaser, Borenail has fucked around with AI to produce this strange, biomorphic, tumorous metamorphous of metallic clay dancers, bound together in some super fucked up hallucinatory creepy body assimilation style video. I will admit that I fucking hate AI – ‘artificially inflated’ as someone has already quipped – so it is lost on me – for those who want the tech, ‘all models’ were ‘created in blender, then whapped into ADOBE to AI generate backgrounds and randomly alter model edges.’ But musically we are talking about whippy body music that channels Detroit mechanic funk techno and the sound of grooving over broken glass. Derrick May, Suburban Knight, Ron Trent in the mechanics of the surreal and industrial. As artificial as it all is, there’s a certain soul in this machine. I look forward to hearing the rest of the album later in the month.

Neon Kittens ‘In The Year Of The Dragon (You Were A Snake)’
(Metal Postcard Records)

System of downer sinewy post-punk, like the Pop Group falling on top of PiL, the latest video output from the ridiculously prolific Neon Kittens is another semi-metal-guitar-string buzz and grind of gnashing venom and risk. The vocals sound like a toss off and up of honey trap glossed fake AI and taking no crap no wave female provocateur in the mode of Michi Hirota, unimpressed by the snake-like actions of a former lover; the action, like a lost grated down stroke of Fripp(ery) from the Scary Monsters And Super Creeps LP.     

Keep an eye out next week for Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea’s review of the band’s EP.

Dyr Faser ‘Crime Fever’
(Self-release)

Boston, Massachusetts duo of Eric Boomhower and Amelia May previously skirted the krautrock dreaminess of Amon Duul II on their hermetic, drowsy Karmic Revenge. They seem to change their sound, if only subtly, on each new album, and Crime Fever’s haunted, scuzzed playfulness leans more towards Lou Reed this time around – but only if he’d jammed with Dinosaur Jnr. Jefferson Airplane and Ty Segall.

Still, they maintain a buzzy, fuzzy, and even Byrds-like loose dusting of the psychedelic and a backbeat throughout, with those ether-giddy vocals tones of May invoking Blonde Redhead, Beach House, and of course a little of a slacker rock, shoegaze vision of Renate Knaup-Krötenschwanz.

Needs far more attention than I have the capacity to manage but have a read of my piece on their KR album from a while back to get enthused.

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

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

(R.C. Brown, Edward Brown and Annie Brown Caldwell by Adam Wissing)

The Staple Jr. Singers ‘Searching’
(Luka Bop) 14th June 2024

Revived five decades after its original localized release in 1975, the folk at Luka Bop made good on their incredible, enlightening compilation of obscured gospel and soul, The Time For Peace Is Now, with a dedicated reissue of The Staple Jr. Singers rarity When Do We Get Paid.

Pressed by that extremely young family unit themselves and sold at shows and on their neighbors front lawns, that rarefied showcase finally received an international release a couple of years ago, prompting a number of live dates for the trio: their first in forty years! Now, and with an extended cast of second and third generation family members, and with the producing talents of Ahmed Gallab (probably better known under his Sinkone artist name), they’ve recorded their first album proper, Searching – a revived title and re-recorded song that previously opened When Do We Get Paid, given a more echoed, stripped and intimate accompaniment the second time around.

Recorded live over two nights in the reverent and supportive surroundings of The Message Center church in West Point, Mississippi, this family affair picks up from where they left off: as if it were yesterday rather than fifty years ago. Those afflatus voices are not so young now of course, but remain still soulfully enriching and youthful in spirit.

Originally from the banks of the Tombigbee River, the family’s sound was, and continues to be, honed in their hometown of Aberdeen, Monroe County. A salvation searching, baptismal liturgy of Southern gospel is injected with a congruous merger of conscious political soul, R&B, funk and delta blues: the very epitome of the Southern crossroads.

From the name you may have assumed that this trio were scions, the offspring perhaps of the divine stylers themselves: The Staple Singers. But, although without doubt a chip off the old block, the group’s moniker is purely used as homage to their idols. Far younger than Mavis and her siblings and pop when they started out in the mid 70s, the Brown family of beautified and expressive soulful vocalists Annie (appearing here as Annie Brown Caldwell) and R.C., and guitarist Edward were in their teens when they made their first recordings. Yet despite being so young, the travails of the civil rights movement and social issues of the day ran throughout the trio’s equally earthy and heavenly soul music. This was a sound in honor to the Lord yet grounded in the wake of Southern desegregation, unrest, the Vietnam War…the list goes on. So whilst Annie soared in full baby Staples mode, and with a vibe of Eula Cooper and Shirley Ann Lee about her, there was plenty of attitude and sass to go around.

Gospel music remained, and still remains central, with plenty of standard Bible belt exultations, paeans and passionate plaints. Some of which, no matter how familiar, seem to have some pretty unique and idiosyncratic rearrangements going on. Bolstered on those formative recordings by bassist Ronnel Brown and drummer Corl Walker, we were treated to a Stax-like revue of beatitude, the venerable and just down-country soulful funk. Echoes of Sam Cooke, Lulu Collins, Crusade Records, Chairman Of The Board and Nolan Porter followed humbled sermons on the soul train to Galilee. An electrifying songbook, When Do We Get Paid proved that this family trio possessed a raw talent, and could hold their own in a field packed with such incredible voices.

Fifty years later, backed this time by R.C.’s son Gary and grandson Jaylin, and Edward’s son Troy, and with the modern sensitive and magical production of the Sudanese-American musician polymath Gallab, it’s now a much more mature version on show.

Shining through at every turn with rarefied authenticity, the Brown familytakes time to softly preach a bluesy soulful gospel of intimate travails and personalized soul-searching. On the redemptive trail whilst also facing the afterlife, and yet comforting with a praised message of deliverance, the lyrics confirms the family’s dedication to walking that righteous path. And yet, amongst the Muscle Shoals bathed organs and relaxed and soothed B.B. King and Otis Rush twanged and sustained bluesy guitar evocations there’s also echoes of a magical realms hovering Dr. John on both the opening backbeat shuffled ‘Living In The World Alone’ and on the Orleans twilight dreamy juju invocation ‘Don’t Need No Doctor’. For the most part the Brown family lets the studio environment of laughter and encouragement seep out amongst the pews, as they slip between visions of a Pastor Champion fronted bluesy-country The Rolling Stones, Percy Sledge and James Carr. 

Fifty years is a lifetime to wait for such talented voices to awaken, when it seems that even amongst such gifted peers and icons The Staple Jr. Singers could have still stood out. It’s been well worth it though, with a most wizened and truthful unfiltered timeless bluesy-gospel sound of communal worship and support.

A Journey Of Giraffes ‘Retro Porter’
(Somewherecold Records) 7th June 2024

The sound of John Lane’s most prolific and artistically successful alias, A Journey Of Giraffes, is given more time (almost unlimited time) and space than ever to unfurl on the ambitious opus-spanning Retro Porter album of ambient empirical suites.

An expansion upon Lane’s previous work – especially last year’s choice album entry, Empress Nouveau – each evolving sensory piece allows all the Baltimore composer’s signatures, motifs and serialism-like enquires to recollect memories of places and scenes, of the abstract, over the course of what sounds like a whole day.

Once more akin to Hiroshi Yoshimura, Susumu Yokoto or Harold Budd absorbing the holiday reminisces of Iberia, Retro Porter picks up on the arts and crafts decorative tracery sketches of Empress Nouveau, taking inspiration this time around from the artistry of Gaudí with references to the cemented-together broken tile shards mosaic method of “Trencadis” and his most ambitious, unfinished cathedral of beatific indulgences, the proposed eighteen spires of The Basílica i Temple Expiatori de la Sagrada Família in Barcelona – the largest unfinished Catholic church in the world. Gaudí originally envisioned crowning this behemoth of a church with his monumental depictions of the Apostles, the four Evangelists, the Virgin Mary and Jesus, but only eight of the eighteen statues were completed – the near century-running project was brought a halt during the Spanish Civil War for obvious reasons, but much later, suffered setbacks due to Covid and remains at this present time a building site still.

And so, the influential Spanish architect’s legacy is picked up, his use of folk art and idiosyncratic framing of the Catalan jewel used as a methodology and inspiration for Lane’s own soundscaping craft and mosaic building ambient compositions. The album title however, I believe, is a reference to Lane’s second inspiration, Walter Benjamin’s The Arcade Project preoccupation; the work, a montage-style critique on the “commodification of things” in the age of La Belle Époque. Reflecting the growth of the “bourgeois” class, framed against the glass-roofed arcades of consumerism in late 19th century France, Benjamin writes of change as the new century beckons: and modernism with it. Originally conceived in 1927, it would take thirteen years to finish; completed just as Nazi Germany occupied Benjamin’s homeland, forcing the thinker-writer to flee. Much like Retro Porter, there’s a recurring semblance of the passing of time, of feelings that can’t easily be expressed and said, formed or quantified but an essence of which conjures up emotional pulls and a sense of environment.

Stained-glass passages, bulb-like notes of inspiration, resonated and tubular metallic rings, linger and drift and float in the vapours and obscured fogs of Lane’s creation. In a constant ebb and flow of iterations, reversals, each track is like the chapter of an extensive soundtrack; a balance between a removed channeling of real tangible geography, architecture and masked. And although all these sounds and inspirations draw upon Europe, and both composition wise and sonically hint at Andrew Heath and Matthew David’s corridors of voices, environment and movement, it all still somehow sounds vaguely Japanese: with just the merest hint of Java too.

Like a dialogue with the past, history and the detritus of previous generations that inhabited Lane’s spaces seem to be constantly present: visitations from unidentified vessels like layers of geology. At times we’re subtly pulled towards the shadows, the alien and otherworldliness. But then some passages are edging more towards Laraaji, to cathedral anointed Popol Vuh and the cloudy bellowed Orb. I’d suggest shades too of Andrew Wasylyk, a trumpet-less Jon Hassell, a Mogadon Panda Bear (especially on the extended opening suite, ‘Happy Every Holiday’), Phew and His Name Is Alive.

Mirages, imaging’s, the sound of birds in the iron lattice gardens of an ostentatious arcade percent as described in late 19th century novella’s, sonorous pitches, the softened sound of a taiko drum at the Kabuki theatre, various hinges, dulcimer-like strokes all evaporate then solidify to create an ambient opus; a lifetimes work coalesced into one expansive, layered work of soundscape art and abstraction. Lane has allowed his mind to wander and explore organic and cerebral long form ideas like never before to produce, perhaps, his most accomplished unrestricted work yet. 

Pastense Ft. Uncommon Nasa ‘Sidewalk Chalk, Parade Day Rain’
(Uncommon Records)

Continuing to attract and surround himself with like-minded curious, inventive artisans of prose from the underground leftfield hip-hop scene, the Long and Staten Islands’ rapper and producer/beatmaker Uncommon Nasa now facilitates Pastense’s return with a post-pandemic opus of metaphysical, cosmological unraveled consciousness alchemy.

Joining the Uncommon fold and orbit, the eloquently descriptive and connective rapper Pastense emerges from the dystopia of COVID; navigating the current social, divisive and polarizing ills of the modern world by taking sanctuary amongst the city’s sometimes innocuous, passed over and by, patches of life-affirming “beauty”. In a world of urban chaos, destruction and impending war our main protagonist finds solace and inspiration, but also embarks on a whole universal journey of connections prompted by the smallest of curiosities. Inspired by his father’s own ever-inquisitive fascination with the world around him – describing his dad as “the kind of person that will pull over the car just to look at a interesting stone” – and his artistry – providing the artwork for this album’s cover and CD inlay -, he attempts to find the rays of hope in a shadowy miasma of volatility.

With a Your Old Droog crossed with Beans-like delivery, those lyrical links reference both high and low art, culture, basketball gods, the pulling down of statues – at one point connecting the recent destruction wrought and fueled by the BLM movement with the famously, quite literally, armless Venus de Milo – and death: or rather its unavoidable approach.

Creatively opening up the mind and memory banks to contemplate life’s travails and inevitabilities, Pastense cleverly runs free with his highly descriptive and omnivorous evocations. These deliveries are prompted by such original influences as the Portrait of Whistler’s Mother to the unframed beauty of graffiti on the side of a subway train and the way the rain droplets form like “pearls” on the metal debris and rusted machines of industry and transit, left to degrade in every corner of the city. The latter resonates later with the venerated NBA legend Erol Monroe, known as “The Pearl”. It’s as if everything is linked, and comes full circle, with the recurring words, phrases and name-checks popping up across the album’s twelve tracks of astral-planeing, dream realism and sci-fi expansive universal mining: What can’t be solved on Earth, is looked for in the cosmology and future.

With Uncommon as his foil, offering his own lucid candid lines but also building a both menacing and unique sound and sampled world of fluty prog-jazz, video nasties and 80s sci-fi like soundtracks, cult Samurai flicks, mystique and krautrock, Pastense’s visions come to vivid psychedelic life. It’s as if we’d been pulled into The Matrix, or the retrograde arcade where Tron still sits tucked away in the shadows, as those heavy synths invoke dystopian Vangelis, Schulze, later Tangerine Dream, Bernard Szajner, Zeus B. Held and others.

There’s some really cool productions nods, some I just can’t place, including a thriller-type brooding rolling piano (Lalo Schifrin perhaps?) on ‘The Ills’, and a sort of post-krautrock loosened faux-reggae beat that sounds like either the Phantom Band or Dunkelziffer on ‘Broken Statues’. Hopefully Uncommon and Pretense will take this as a compliment, but the whole thing has that Madlib vibe and quality; a touch of the moodier parts from BDP’s final album, Sex and Violence too – especially the atmospherics of ‘The Real Holy Place’ speech.  There’s certainly no wastage, nothing out of place; which isn’t to suggest it is lean, but just perfectly aligned, layered and mixed. I especially like the go-go meets Tonto slow roll of ‘Journey Back To Reality’, which also reminded me of the UK’s very own King Kashmere.

From the extended pool of Uncommon Records there’s signature lyrical contributions from Shortrock, Guilty Simpson (highly recommended if you are in the mood for digging), Guillotine Crowns (the Hills To Die On comes highly recommended by me and our resident hip-hop aficionado Matt Oliver), Shortfuze and Junclassic. None of these guest spots seem like opportune showboating, nor are they incongruous to the flow and direction of travel, and the themes. It is yet another example of the rich tapestry of talent that is out there and being missed in favour of vacuous grudge theatrics and tiktok trends.

The fruity shogun beat-provider, Banana Samurai remixes the bonus version of the oasis picturesque urban-building ‘Beautiful’; the beats more staggered and now featuring a ringing glassy resonance and echo.  

With no let up in the quality of the expansive lyrical metaverse, tech comes in conflict with the forest’s birds and nature’s fight for survival amongst the concrete and chemically poisoned wells of so-called progression on an artistically simulated and stimulating canvas of thoughts and connectivity.

Pastense, in partnership with Nasa, creates a most excellent mind-expanding universe, and in doing so, one of the year’s best hip-hop albums: this is an artist and record worth championing.

L’ Étrangleuse ‘Ambiance Argile’
(La Curieuse) 7th June 2024

Drawing once more upon his ngoni training and visits to Mali’s capital and centre of musical influence, Bamako, Maël Salètes continues to entwine the sound of his feted African lute instructor Abdoulaye ‘Kandiafa’ Koné and reverberations of Lobi Touré, Bassekou Kouyate and Ali Farka Touré into the Lyon-based L’ Étrangleuse partnership. With his vocalist and harp-playing foil Mélanie Virot, West Africa travels to the dream-reality rural imaging’s of Eastern France’s Swiss border on the duo’s first album since before the Covid crisis.  

Whilst setbacks hampered their progress in lockdown limbo, and with years of anxiety building a less certain future for live performance and recording, they decided a rebirth was in order; a revitalized reboot of the signature cross-pollinated sound they’d honed and explored. Already bringing in the drummer Léo Dumont straight after the duo’s last album, 2019’s Dans Le Lieu du Non-Où, but on hold whilst the pandemic crippled the world, a fourth member, the bassist Anne Godefert (also appearing under the electronic guise of Noon) completed the refashioned quartet in 2022. Both obviously double-up the live like sound (billed in the PR notes for the most part as “the sound of four musicians playing live in a room”) but also expand the possibilities and direction of travel. In this setting, in this case, that translates into both nimble tactile plucked and turned over Tuareg desert contoured blues, Bamako fuzz rock, and riffs that could have easily made Maël’s contributions to the Somaliland freedom fighter activist and siren, Sahra Halgan, mixed with rustic folky, psychedelic and post-punk.

Lyrically and vocally, whether whispered or sung or in choral-like harmony and spoken, the quartet channel (in part) the writing processes and dream-realism of Toni Morrison and Russell Banks, and the poetry of Dadaist modernist progenitor and international socialist Srecko Kosovel – leaving an incredibly influential legacy behind despite dying at the age of 22, the poet remains one of Slovenia’s most noted icons and literary figures of the 20th century.

Fantasy is transcribed across a French/Swiss landscape in the age of great anxiety and uncertainty, as the gnarled and scuzzed is balanced with the pastoral and African. At times it comes across like Ben Zabo meets the Incredible String Band and The Raincoats, and at other times, like Hugo Race crossing the arid Malian outlier with Peter Kernal, Crispy ambulance and the Holydrug Couple. The title-track conjured up Faust, but with R.E.M.’s Mike mills on harmony duties. Meanwhile, Mélanie’s delightful harp, falling at times like bucolic snowflakes, reminded me of Catrin Finch’s collaboration with Seckou Keita.

With constant rhythmic and motion changes, the entire album feels quite naturalistic: “organic” as the PR notes say. Nothing feels pushed, artificial, augmented or forced anyway. Although older than Merril Wubslin and Ester Poly it’s those Mitteleuropa dimension hovering groups that L’ Étrangleuse evoke the most as they hoof it, gallop, meander and navigate the clay beneath their feet.

In a dream world of their own reinvention the newly formed quartet expand the worldliness and dreaminess for a both fantastical and recognized fuzz tone album of experimentation.        

Head Shoppe ‘S-T’
(Meadows Heavy Recorders)

Mellowed hermetic dimensions are crossed as California’s pine coves and Idyllwild meadows, and the famous city park lungs of Mexico City are given magical-like properties. Yes, the 1960s West coast imbued Head Shoppe, with vague influences of progressive folk and rock, the psychedelic, krautrock and more modern fare as the Unknown Mortal Orchestra, reference their own escapist pastures and an iconic psychogeography held sacred by the Toltecs and then the Aztecs on a self-titled debut LP.

Away from the mania and chaos of the metropolis sprawl, the Eric Von Harding led troupe, which includes Blake Jordon and the album’s producer Kenneth James Gibson sharing keyboard duties, plus Joe De Flore on flute, Eric and Rhea Harding on apparitional coos and dreamy voices and Charlie Woodburn on drums, finds sanctuary in more bucolic retreats. The Chapultepec Park of the opening magically wistful hauntology instrumental name-checks one such hideaway. One of the largest parks in Mexico City, a place of safety held sacred by the ancients, its most defining typography is a hill. Named by the Toltec’s, it translates as “grasshopper hill”, and it’s the sound of those insects that can be heard later on in a humid heat on the album. And although the musical direction of softly turning guitar, enchanted and meandrous airs is closer to Eroc, Sproatly Smith and Belbury Poly there’s a supernatural atmosphere application of otherworldly Latin America in evidence on both the bone rattled, looking glass transformed cover of Violeta Parra’s iconic “prayers of gratitude” ‘Gracis A La Vida’, and on the out-of-body ‘Drive Back From Idyllwild’. The former, with its slow released burnished cymbal reversals and mirage-like dreaminess, channels Alice Coltrane (at the start anyway), Raul Refree, Society Of The Silver Cross and Barrio Lindo on a rattlesnake Blood Meridian reimaging of the classic Peruvian yearn. The latter of the two hovers over a Tex-Mex border version of Twin Peaks, as scored by Broadcast.

Another of the backyard locations, ‘Saunders Meadow’ features some more of that hermetic, pagan naturalistic alchemy; a heavy pollen gauze lingers to a spell of twine and harmonic picked acoustic folksy guitar, felt-ripping flutters, bulb shaped notes, quivery wobbled Moog and Arp and evocations of Mythos, Walter Wegmuller and The Focus Group. 

‘Séance’ is every bit as apparitional ether dwelling as it implies. Crossing into the spirit world with Fortean passages of visitation and supernatural elementals, it reminded me in part of Alex Harvey’s more bewitching excursions.

A final ‘Candlelight Vigil’ however, features Faust’s seagulls’ effects, the oceanic lapping tides, country-tone acoustic wanes, pagan-hippie enchantment and touches of Jacco Gardner and the UMO. With a diaphanous mystique of portal-hopping Head Shoppe balance the supernatural with inviting pastoral psych on an occult LP of organic, spiritual simplified escapism; a most spellbinding transported and naturalistically unfurled debut that takes the familiar and makes it sound somehow freshly hallucinating and languidly traversing.      

Charlie Kohlhase ‘A Second Life’
(Mandorla Music) 7th June 2024

Maybe it’s with the passing of time, forty years give or take, since the AIDS epidemic, or that despite the initial stigma, ignorance, the lack of compassion and worse, lack of treatment that the autoimmune condition is now, in the space of just one generation (even less) now relatively treatable, understood and certainly far freer from discrimination – there will always be pockets of prejudice and misunderstanding of course, but sufferers no longer face the discrimination, ostracizing they once did; and importantly, it is no longer the death sentence it was neither. Defining the 80s, with gloomy predictions and health campaigns of monolithic doom, AIDS swept through creative society with a scythe; a whole lost generation remembered, amongst its ranks some of the most gifted and accomplished artists/writers/musicians of the age, but still missing. And yet in the last two decades, perhaps even longer, it has been all but forgotten, or at least cosigned to the history books.

Well, that was until now, with concurrent public enquires on the scandal of infected blood both in the UK and USA – as of writing, the UK chair’s damning verdict is both enraging and scary, laying out how governmental ministers and doctors, experts in the NHS acted complicity in covering up infected blood supplies tainted with not only HIV but Hepatitis A, B and C given to hemophiliacs: 30,000 of which were infected between 1971 and 1991, resulting in at least 3000 deaths over time. That scandal aside, HIV and the illness it causes, AIDS is still considered more or less parked: that is unless you are a sufferer.

Contracting HIV in more recent times, a decade ago, the “multi-reedist” and composer Charlie Kohlhase gained the courage to “come out” to his jazz circle, encouraged to tell his story, express his journey by a younger queer jazz musician. The Boston jazz scene stalwart and instigator gives thanks to the Massachusetts health board for his treatment, whilst marking the personal loss of those near to him and the “40 million” people who died from the disease at a time when medical advancements were still a long way off.

A “second life” then, Kohlhase is equally thankful for contracting HIV in more enlightened times, finding empathy in a scene that’s embraced his free-floating and free-jazz triple saxophone explorations since the 80s. Already leading his own Quartet by the end of that decade, Kohlhase also played with the Saxophone Support Group and collaborated long term with the noted John Tchicai, who’s own ‘Berlin Ballad’ composition is sympathetically translated on this new album – still with a certain romantic reflective air of the city, but now with colliery-like brass, a touch of Louis Armstrong and trinket percussive dangles and a shake of Afro-spiritual jazz.

A member of Boston’s Either/Orchestra from ’87 to 2001, rejoining for a second phase in 2008, the baritone-tenor-alto swapping composer also widened his craft collaborating with the Ethiopian icons Mahmoud Ahmed and Mulatu Astatke.

But it’s the lasting relationship with his Explorers Club troupe that is called upon for this latest mix of original material and re-purposed, reconfigured compositions by a host of progenitors and deities of the form. Undergoing various changes over the years, the Explorers Club is now expanded to a Octet, the lineup of which features tenor saxophonist Seth Meicht, trombonist Jeb Bishop, trumpeter Dan Rosenthal, tubist Josiah Reibstein, guitarist Eric Hofbauer, bassist Tony Leve and drummer Curt Newton. In various combinations, with a change in dynamics between all the brass and variations of accompaniment, there’s space enough for each participant to maneuver, diverge and then come together to blend a host of jazz and bluesy styles. 

Homages are paid, dues given, to the titans of the free-form and experimental, but also to less championed influences like the jazz pianist, composer and arranger Elm Hope, who recorded with such luminaries as Coltrane and Rollins, working for a large part in the be-bop and hard-bop styles. Hooked on heroin, convicted and encumbered by the authorities in NYC, Hope briefly moved out West, working with Harold Land for a short spell of time (another influence I would suggest is in evidence on this album). Taken far too soon to tragic circumstances, it’s Hope’s noirish plaintive reminisce, ‘Eyes So Beautiful As Yours’ that finds its way on to the album. An empathic version with the evocations of city dockyard blues and Gershwin musical solace, the romantic sympathies remain on what is the most congruous of adaptations.

A moiety of Don Cherry and the science fiction titan Ornette Coleman, ‘Man On The Moon’ borrows liberally and riffs on both icons whilst also channeling Sun Ra, Marshall Allen and Knoel Scott on a celestial wind. The action, part cosmic wild birds, part snuggled elephant trunk rises and part lunar bound.

The album’s more soulful curtain call, ‘Tetractys’, riffs on the American trombonist and composer Roswell Budd’s catchy “four-bar line”. After a serenade and subtle swing, a little echo of Freddie Hubbard, each band member drops out, one-by-one, to mimic the melodious lullaby lull until a harmonious company of voices replaces all the instruments.

Back tot the very start, the personalized ‘Character-Building Blues’ opener is an almost relaxed, a little playful, loose arrangement of New Orleans brass, light jazz guitar hummed meanders and hops, a baritone soliloquy and rustled buzzing trumpet. There are obvious bluesy expressions of doubt, some more woeful uncertain times, but overall it’s a great melodious and yet explorative free-from performance to kick things off with.

The sphere of influence widens on the next arrangement, ‘No Such Explorers’. Inspired in part by the spirited “inganga” music of Burundi, and more dance beat orientated, there’s a bounce and Savoy label skyline sound that also conjures up evocations of Hugh Masekela and Paul Chamber. There are swells of drama, a pecking geese-like wildness and woody harmonic prowling and pulled double bass intro that’s rather cool.

‘Lennette’ – a “portmanteau” of Ornette and the jazz pianist, composer, arranger and teacher Lennie Tristano – has a swing to it, but also features bouts of Roscoe Mitchell heightened stage crescendos, NYC fire escape moon gazing and bleats. 

Overall, the Explorers Club lives up to their name across a cross-pollination of moods and descriptive free form languages. Timeless influences seamlessly come together with more heralded, squealed brassy resonance and burnished untethered expressions, and the abstract with the more melodic and tuneful. The sound of many struggles, diagnosis is transduced into an incredible testimony; a “second life”, rebirth that’s sprouted a first rate intelligent and free-spirited leap into the light.       

The Nausea ‘Requiem’
(Absurd Exposition/Buried In Slag And Debris)

Anju Singh’s dark materials have developed over time; the breadth and depth expanding from black death metal to chamber and classical heavy meta(l) and dissonance. Under The Nausea inducing guise Singh coalesces the embryonic sound ideas of her 2017 album Requiem Aeternam, and even older catalyst explorations that stretch right back to 2005, for a transmogrified vision of the Latin liturgical and ceremonial. 

As any Catholic will know, they can’t half send converts off in morose gilded drama; the funeral services can be lengthy, arcane and solemn. Singh’s own experiences as a young child attending such affairs has struck a chord (or two); the impact, “confusion” and “tears” of which have inspired a strong fascination, leading to such works as this latest repurposed Requiem. With everything that title holds, the history and connotations, Singh processes the various levels of the Latin and Orthodox Greek churches’ writings and etymology on death and fate.

A member of such blood-curdling and morbidly curious bedfellows as Grave Infestation and Ceremonial Bloodbath, the unnerving caustic Fortean-tuned industrial distress that consumes each suite and vignette on this new album is about as close as it gets to those extreme dark invocations. For the multi-instrumentalist stirs up an atmosphere of chthonian Hellenic myth and harrowing distress from Klezmer Galicia, the Balkans and the Middle East through the tonal and psychical experiments of the violin and viola. Already coined as “doom chamber”, this often heightened, sawed, scratched, frayed, attack and stressed style of eliciting and sometimes torturing forebode, trauma and apocalyptic grief summons up vague invocations of Tony Conrad and The Theatre Of Eternal Music, Phillip Glass, Xaos, Scott Walker’s scores for film, Fran & Flora and Luce Mawdsley. And caught between “ascension” and purgatory, reciting Kyrie Eleison and considering the “end”, centuries of melancholic liturgy and dread are stoked up for monumentally disturbing and serious elegies, death marches and Dante spirals into the abyss.

The coarse-charged frazzled override of bestial manifestations, scored marble floors, metal tank reverberations, claw-marked pews, afterlife TV sets, factory noise and apparitions threaten to engulf the classical instrumentation, but the malady, pastoral rustic and fairytale style attuned strings seem to make it out the other side alive.

The album’s enflamed violin artwork is partially right in visioning some funeral pyre; a fiery cleanse of one of the album’s central vessels. But despite the ominous chills, harrowing psychogeography and feel the use of the classical and chamber can sound quite ascendant and sadly yearning in all its dark beauty. Singh’s artistry culminates in a remarkable Requiem for our end times.

QOA ‘Sauco’
(Leaving Records) 21st June 2024

Collaborating with Argentina’s biosphere of fauna, flora, bird and insect life Nino Corti, under the QOA nom de plume, creates a blossoming, growing synthesis of organic and synthesized meta and matter; absorbing the healing, thoughtful and curiosity of a native wilds rich in biodiversity and cleansing balms.

Corti is both replenished by the surroundings and simultaneously plaintive at those elements that have been lost from the atavistic oasis; nature’s medicine cabinet and haberdashery, as referenced in the track-titles, offering up “Senna” – the plant’s leaves and fruit providing a natural laxative amongst other properties – and “Sauco” – used as a dye for basketry by the Coahuilla Indians of Northern Mexico. There are also references to the flowering plant “Lippia Alba”, and the “Anartia” and ‘Zafiro del Talas” butterfly families. From outside the Americas, there is a strange excursion to Japan in the shape of the “Yatai”, or “food cart” that typically sells ramen and other foods. And to further expand the horizons of influence and inspiration, there’s also a reference to the “swamp deer”, the “Barasingha”, found in subcontinent India.

Sonically unfolding and refractive like an engineered life form amongst the glass insect chatter and itches, the crystalized bulbs and filaments, the recurring flow and splash of running water, the jug-like marimba bobs and pebble kinetics envelop transportive airs of Sakamoto and Sylvian Orientalism and soft malleted instruments. And, unsurprisingly considering one of the musician and multimedia artist’s many projects includes a “committed” role as a member of a Gamelan collective, you can hear vague suggestions of Balinese music in the amorphous blending’s of musical and field-recording geography.

Corti pulls you in gently to a both recognizable and almost alien lush, piped, filtered and gladded green world. Ale Hop, the Elusive Geometry of The Reverse Engineer, Autchre, Moebius and Schulze were all brought to mind(fullness) when listening to these absorbed light-bringing tracks, which at times take on a rhythmic quality with mechanized dances of exotic electronica and psytrance.

Alive and in growth at every turn, this is a fecund of meandered and directed chiming, chromatics, searing, sonorous nature, a paradise in the midst of an ever crushingly dull oppressive world of harm and destruction.

___/+ THESE RECOMMENDATIONS IN BRIEF

Regular readers will know that I pride myself in writing more in-depth purview-style reviews with a wider context. This means I naturally take more time and effort. Unfortunately this also means that I can only ever scratch the surface of the 2000+ releases both the blog and I get sent each month. As a compromise of sorts, I’ve chosen to now include a really briefly written roundup of releases, all of which really do deserve far more space and context. But these are recommendations, a little extra to check out of you are in the mood or inclined to discover more.

The Lazy Jesus ‘UA Tribal Vol. 2’
(Shouka) 21st June 2024

A collaborative cross-continental union of the Ukrainian producer The Lazy Jesus, the Peruvian duo Dengue Dengue Dengue and the Argentinian producer JaiJiu, the second volume in this experiment transform’s the former’s heritage of traditional pipe music with bass culture, cumbia and the tribal.

A mizmar-like mystery of faraway places is woven together, through remixes and augmentation, with the stick clattering dance rhythms of South America and Ammar 808-like stumbling and reverberating bass, transporting the source Ukrainian instrumentation beyond its borders into hypnotising realms. A very successful merging of cultures (creating a lost continent of sounds) that makes for some interesting and entrancing club-like imaginings.

Various Artists ‘Turkish Back Porch Scene EP: Vol. 1’
(Bone Union Records)  Available Right Now

Hovering Delta slide, bluegrass and heat melting dirt music from the imagined back porches of various (of all places) venues in Turkey, by a clutch of blues-imbibed players, the inaugural EP from the Bone Union label is authentically rich with the genre’s history and legacy, and yet freshly inviting and worth the entrance fee. A mix of standards (Sarp Keskiner’s faithful version of Mississippi Fred McDowell’s quivered sliding ‘Big Stars Falling’) and originals (Bora Çeliker’s ambled old-timer wistful ‘Pine Hill Blues’), each performance is as close as you can get to its source: homage but also the act of passing down to a new generation some of the most authentic of roots sounds. The geography and destination will of course surprise many; a different angle for sure, and reminder that the Blues is universal: think a Turkish Sun Records meets Alan Lomax.

Cumsleg Borenail ‘Another Acid Spew’
Available Right Now

I’ve been meaning to and trying to get a few words up on the site about the prolific discombobulating, A.I. hallucinogenic phantasmagoric maverick that is Cumsleg Borenail for bloody ages. Every time I’m about to, and I think I’ve got a hold on the latest broadcast from that electronic-transmogrifying artist’s over-stimulated mind, another release drops and I’m once more playing catchup. Anyway, I’ve managed to catch this latest squelchy frenzy of high tweaks, acid burbled bubble-baths, bell-tolls and playful twitchy protestations. Think Autechre rewire Lenny Dee’s circuits whilst the Sad Man throws a few spanners into the acid spewing works. Mad, dangerous but good to know, the inner madness and fuckery of Borenail is unveiled in fits and more chemical farting magnificence.   

Grotesque Misalignment ‘S-T’
(Syrup Moose Records) 28th June 2024

Prowling amid the gothic, hermetic, post-punk, noisy and bestial the electrifying Grotesque Misalignment sacrifice the Daevid Allen, Killing Joke, Vampire Rodents and other such references on the altar of doom skulking menace. The mysteriously shrouded group, though intensely loaded on the “heavy”, can surprise with their more subtle passages, and even have a swing at times to their rhythm that could almost be interrupted as jazzy! But in the main, this is doom, chthonian metal crawling through a primal abyss.

Saccata Quartet ‘Septendecim’
(We Jazz) 28th June 2024

Avant-hard jazz from the impressive attacking foils Nels Cline, Chris Corsano, Darin Gray and Glenn Kotche, otherwise known as the Saccata Quartet. Stretching, squalling, tearing, drawing wild intensity and ariel droning and alien broadcasts from their apparatus, the free-jazz foursome sound like a harrowing and galloping, scattering merger of Faust, Roscoe Mitchell, Sam Rivers, Zappa and AEOC in a dense experimental world of scares and uncertainty. What’s not to love about that.

E.L. Heath ‘Cambrian’
(Wayside & Woodland) 7th June 2024

Perfectly congruous bedfellows of such scenic cartographers as Junkboy, and for that matter, the entire Wayside & Woodland roster, E.L. Heath’s rolling versent ambles and hazy countryside meanders evoke a pastoral picture of misty recollection, history and daydreams. Trainspotting has seldom sounded so diaphanous as Heath makes personalized, emotively drawn stops along the Cambrian Coast Railway; passing through the loveliest of scenic locations whilst wistfully sighing at the “decommissioned” stations, and unsympathetic, politically motivated and hardened discissions that have left scars across this humbling countryside vista. Totally captivating, a most wispy train ride down memory lane (or should that be memory tracks?).    

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

A ROUNDUP OF REVIEWS FROM BRIAN ‘BORDELLO’ SHEA

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Heskey ‘Crack In The Mirror’

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

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

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

Liam Gallagher & John Squire ‘Just Another Rainbow’

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

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

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

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

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

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

Corduroy Institute ‘Take A Train To Manchester’

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

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

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

Orchard Til You Fall Down
(Cruel Nature Records)

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Cumsleg Borenail ‘…Plays The Beatles’

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