THE MONTHLY DIGEST INCLUDES A CLUTCH OF ACCUMULATED NEW MUSIC REVIEWS PLUS VOLUME 97 OF THE SOCIAL INTER-GENERATIONAL/ECLECTIC AND ANNIVERSARY ALBUMS CELEBRATING PLAYLIST.

Cosmic Ear
___/THE NEW___
LIUN + The Science Fiction Band ‘Does It Make You Love Your Life?’
(Heartcore Records) 23rd May 2025
In the making for five years the latest release from the alliance between the vocalist, artist, bandleader Lucia Cadotsch, producer and saxophonist Wanja Slavin and an ensemble of woodwind, strings and brass and electronic foils, is a magic electroacoustic trip of fantasy and fairytale.
With a voice that floats over contours, swirls, piques, spins, scales, plunges and drops, the dreaminess of Cadotsch is enhanced by an attentive soundtrack that is simultaneously dramatic, theatrical and musical. And yet it’s all somehow tethered to the urban, with its use of electronica (from synth pop to breakbeat and trip-hop) and often subtle but deep bass vibrations and near alien and imposing atmospheres.
Questioning and testing the boundaries without ever falling apart nor sounding incongruous, every turn and sound is perfectly balanced; from the near swells of orchestration that wouldn’t sound out of place in a Hans Zimmer or David Arnold score, to the jazzy woodland spritely breakbeating woodwind evocations of Otis Sandsjö found on the orbital progressive-jazz celestial ‘Bloody Breakup’ – the latter reference is unsurprising, as one of Cadotsch’s other projects, the Speak Low Trio, includes both Sandsjö and Peter Eldh amongst its ranks.
Everything is channelled into a concrete tripsy fusion of contemporary dance and the balletic, with the themes, the language translucently yet deeply connective; a yearn or near wistful set of observations on modern romance, attachment/detachment, place, belonging, and finding your feet and legacy in an increasingly cold and hostile environment. Titles include a reference to the iconic movie dame Faye Dunaway, who has gone through the mill herself, a unique tough singular talent hampered by travails aplenty, mental health, alcoholism, and the focus last year of a major (and candid) documentary, and an innocuous but curiously and inspired observed daddy longleg.
Though Swiss herself, most of Cadotsch’s partners in this union are from or work in Berlin, where this album was forged. The groundwork and ideas of which began back at the start of this decade. Does It Make You Love Your Life? was ushered in and helped on its way by Kurt Rosenwinkel, the American jazz guitarist and polymath who not only plays the synth on this album but also releases it on his own label Heartcore Records.
The talent pool is in no question, the enablers and musicians that join the mizzle and fuzzed, the blizzard-like chuffs, the lifting and raspy saxophone odes, etudes, cycles and sentiments of Slavin’s cinematic, stage and jazzy saxophone, and Cadotsch’s often melisma vocals adding an extended flavour of the playful, the worldly, the sentimental, the classical and avant-garde. At times this sound palette invokes a touch of Southeast Asia, of Indonesian Gamelan, and at others, like a strange version of a Satie music box.
Stirrings of the Tara Clerkson Trio, Qrauer, Ruth Goller, Kreidler, Alex Stolze, Nyman and Glass are transduced into urban pop and trip-jazz for an accomplished, often understated but impactful, album that has soul and magic in equal parts. Well worth the wait.
Your 33 Black Angels ‘Eternities II’
Released last month
Generously gifting us a vinyl version of their eighth album, the second ‘eternities’ volume (arriving six years after the first), the simultaneously pumped, glammed, moody and near psychedelic three-decade spanning New York kissed angels prove able and dynamic at integrating a fusion of electronic genres and ideas into their sound.
Sophisticated and lively, from the dancefloor to the darker creeping recesses of the underground and strip-light flickered underpasses, Dan Rosato, Josh Westfal and Daniel Bombach seem fresh and in an experimental mood. Considering the amount of time they’ve been producing their signature mix of “bubble house”, “acid pop wonder”, “electro” and “dream-pop”, they sound neither jaded nor tired. In fact, as familiar as the elements and various inspirations are, this is a dynamic record of the brooding and near euphoric. This is electronic pop with a certain, sometimes menacing, edge and depth of quality seldom heard in much synth-pop or electronic-indie music. For there is a range of effects, of influences and references both human and near otherworldly and alien – cosmic celestial sounds alongside more twisted and creepy affected voices; dystopian sci-fi against the cool chrome possibilities of Moroder-like arpeggiator.
The difference in mood and style is almost on a track-by-track basis; the atmospheric scene-setting ‘Test_Run’ opener of digital metaphor and cyber dread is from the underpass, or the Tresor bunker, with its pulsated broody beats, hints of Fad Gadget, a less bombastic Muse and Brian Reitzell, whilst the very next track, the surrealist novel inspired ‘Macunaíma’, has a strange, removed Latin electronica feel of vocoder lyrics, tripping memories and touch of Banco da Gaia new age trance. The latter of those two is a reference to the surrealist polymath Mário de Andrade’s famous novel, which I said to have either ushered in or been in the first flourish of what’s termed Brazil Modernism. Far too convoluted to get into here in the form of a music review, the protagonist, “a hero without any character”, stands as magical-realist metaphor for Brazil’s three races origin myths – the white, the black and the native. Director Joaquim Pedro de Andrade made a loosely based film of the story in 1969, changing some of the plot, with our main character near corrupted after leaving his Amazonian home for the city (Rio in the film, Sao Paulo in the book), and undergoing a transformation, changing his very race, meeting terrorists and birthing his only child – his own birth a really strange miracle, emerging fully formed as an adult from his elderly mother. Read into it what you will, but here there is a vibe that is swimmingly tripsy and soaring.
Further on, ‘Light Life’ seems to ape early Richard James and his Polygon Windows phase on Warp, and yet shimmers with globules and digital trails to emerge as a sci-fi pop version of Daft Punk and Beat Connection. ‘It’s In’ reminded me of 80s NYC electronic and synth collage experimentation, post-punk-disco, Front 242, Cabaret Voltaire and the Yellow Magic Orchestra. And ‘Shaggy & Joe’ could be a quirky kiss-off of Foster The People, Apparat and Reflektor era Arcade Fire. They finish off the album on a sort of Cathy Pacific serenade of glissando and plucked gilded beautifully reflective strings. But they really reminded me in places of Barbarian era Young Knifes. The grit and energy perhaps, and the acceleration. Computerised synthesisers, the drum pad fuzzes, breaks and machine-made beats and something of the kinetic is balanced by more humanistic-played instruments and vocals – although at times this voice is filtered, transformed through R&B pop-style vocoder and twisted into the near demonic. A constant thread of lip smacked rebuttals, of breakup and the machine is interlocked into a futuristic dance catalogue of eternal footprints.
Spelterini ‘Hyomon-Dako/Magnésie’
(Kythibong) 20th May 2025
Well-received last time on the Monolith Cocktail (back in 2022 as part of my Perusal #36 column with their ‘Paréidolie’ drum and drone journey) the French quartet are back with a “diptych” style album of longform rhythmic trances and squalling focused intensities.
Named in honour of the 19th century Italian tightrope walker, Maria Spelterini, who’s death-defying stunts included numerous handicapped (blindfolded, manacled or with weighted peach baskets strapped to her feet) walks across the Niagara Falls, the Spelterini pairing of Papier Tigre, La Colonie de Vacances and Chasusse Trappe members likewise walk a similar path, balancing between influences from the post-punk, minimalist, drone, kosmische and krautrock spheres. Once again keeping balanced whilst straddling the rhythmic, the droning, the hypnotising and wilder and more industrial, Pierre-Antoine Parois, Arthur de la Grandière, Meriadeg Orgebin and Nicolas Joubo emerge from their arts lab incubator to progress over what used to be in old money, the equivalent of two sides of a standard LP format.
Covering Side One, if you like, is the staccato turn cymbal splashed motoring (but not motorik) ‘Hyomon-Dako’. The starting point is a Stereolab magnetic bounce and paddled-like drums and dwindled guitars, with an essence of more modern faUSt and Beak>. You’d have to throw in Nurse With A Wound and This Heat as the action seems to build subtly over an entrancing beat that’s one part post-punk and another part locked-in kosmische hypnotism. The finale is a crescendo of harsher, near hardcore and industrial noise and static.
The white powder of magnesium oxide inspired ‘Magnésie’ is another twenty-minute build-up of similar influences but sounds like a transmogrified Velvets at times. Dot-dash-like Morse Code and heavier strains of wielding and welding work in and out of a looping-like concentration of psych-post-punk and needle-registering frequencies.
Spelterini combine their source, influences to create another hypnotising concentration of neo-krautrock and post-punk intensity and an ever-changing progressive trajectory.
Cosmic Ear ‘Traces’
(We Jazz) 25th May 2025
Traces of the Don Cherry sound imbue the debut album from the newly formed Cosmic Ear troupe of celestial and fourth world journeying accomplished intergenerational players. Referencing benchmarks, both familiar sounding and near amorphous geographical points of inspiration, this ensemble embark on the ancient trade routes that connect exotic mirages to straddle a number of inspired jazz soundscapes, rhythms and atmospheres.
No one is more able to carry on the legacy of this album’s spiritual guardian than the Swedish musician, composer and visual artist Christer Bothén, who collaborated frequently with Cherry back in the 70s. Expanding his own skills of instrumentation, and after learning hunter music and taking instruction from the Malian master musician Broema Dombia, Bothén introduced the innovative cornetist to the West African n’goni, a canoe-shaped, dried-animal skin wrapped lute favoured in Mali and its bordering regions. That same instrument now appears here, alongside the Angolan berimbau (a gourd resonating instrument used in Brazilin music) the Malian karignan (a metal scraper) and range of signature jazz instruments, from tenor sax to trumpet (of course), contra bass, clarinets, double bass, piano, various metal and tin sounding percussive tools and the congas.
Furthering the musical scope with Afro sounds (from Afro-jazz to Afro-Brazil and an essence of North Africa and Arabia) the group seamlessly meld flavours and spices, the “brown rice” ingredients, to conjure up their own worldly visionary sound that feeds on Cherry’s explorative work in the 1970s and 1980s; taking in, as referenced on the album’s finale ‘TRACES of Codona and Mali’, Cherry’s Codona triumvirate world fusion and free-jazz crossroads experiment with foils Colin Walcott and Nana Vasconcelos. The echoes ring exotically loud on not only this suite of spindly dulcimer-like threads, both calling and wilder expressions of Albert Ayler-like sax and Miles trumpet, and an overall essence of Alice Coltrane and fourth world possibilities, but across all the album’s six variant mood pieces, travels and motions.
With the leading sideman and instigating Swedish tenor saxophonist Mats Gustafsson, the Croatian roots composer, bandleader and trumpeter force behind the Tropiques, Fire! Orchestra, Angles 9 and Subtropic Arkestra projects Goran Kajfeš, South American studied noted percussionist Juan Romero and bassist and multi-instrumentalist extraordinaire Terbjorn Zetterberg (appearing here under his Kansan Zetterberg alias) completing the circle, the range of experiences is infinite. The quintet expands to include special guest Marianne N´Lemwo, adding a touch more of the West African sound to the varied peregrinations and feel. Within that lineup there’s plenty of crossovers, with various players at various points in their career joining forces: notably Bothén and the reeds experts Gustafsson and Kajfeš, all three Scandinavians having collaborated in various setups over the years.
In practice, this interchange of ideas summons up images of jungles, grasslands, sand dune processions, the cerebral, pining and cosmically mysterious and lunar. On the opening ‘Father and Son’ movement Cherry’s percussive elements – tubular metal instruments, dried beans and rice being shaken like slow waterfalls – mate with bristled and elephant trunk brass and Afro-jazz groove that wouldn’t sound out of place on an Orlando Julius or Peter King track. The near obligatory and worldly free-jazz explorers go to source of inspiration, ‘TRACES of Brown Rice’, draws from the Cherry wellspring but also recalls The John Betsch Society as the group move from the blues to mirage.
A sort of removed, or at less more oblique version of the romantic, ‘Love Train’ certainly has its dreamy evocations and serenades, but progresses from a classical but just off and contemporary enough to slightly jar Abdullah Ibrahim and McCoy Tyner style piano part to echoes of Tangiers and Salah Ragab style Cairo. That is until the horns bleat and scream, cry and climax in near hysterical fits of tumult and emotional discharge. ‘Right Here, Right Now’ features the already mentioned n’goni, but merges a Malian landscape with elements of the AEoC, Andy Haas and the oscillating shimmers of Irmin Schmidt. Sympathetically, and highly atmospheric, the hallucinatory serenades and longing conveyed on ‘Do It (Again)’ once more call upon Cherry’s spirit percussively: the general signature beads that shake and rattle, the textural sounds of instruments unfamiliar to Western ears, forming a lived-in but also fresh and exotic backdrop. There’s a suffix title, “For Sofia Jernberg”, which I believe is a nod to the Ethiopian-born and Swedish adopted singer, improviser and composer, and noted collaborator with her homeland’s most famous export, Hailu Mergia. Whilst nothing is so obvious as to reflect those roots, the track does have a certain vibration and bluesy gauze that could be said to have borrowed from that part of the world, and from Jernberg’s own cross-pollination embrace of the chamber, of jazz, the classical.
A new chapter. A new break. A new legacy-charged and inspired setup from some of Scandinavia’s most important and exploratively adroit players, Cosmic Ear is an open experiment of free, Afro, spiritual, bluesy, rootsy jazz that traverses all points of the African Continent (from South to the West, East and North), South America, the Indian Subcontinent and Arabia, whilst seeking the limitless expanses of the cosmos. A brilliant debut from a mighty fine ensemble of gifted sagacious but playful and experimental artists.
The Mining Co. ‘Treasure In Spain EP’
(PinDrop Records) 30th May 2025
More or less back in the present, or at least with recollections from a much more recent past, the Irish troubadour Michael Gallagher finds gold in his creative home-from-home of Andalusia in Spain. As the title suggests, this is a metaphorical, allegorical treasure of romantism and tender reflections on his muse and partner, but also another chance to bathe in the suffused warmth of Southern Iberia and the inspiring studio of his chosen producer Paco Loco.
Once more in the wings as overseer and foil, Loco (who has worked with the outstanding Josephine Foster, the Jayhawks’ Gary Louris and The Sadies) pitches in on bass and with a touch of glimmered and shimmering sustained Muscle Shoals spiritual organ and what sounds like an opened-up Exiles On Main Street piano – echoes of that iconic dishevelled album can be heard on the EP’s finale, ‘We Are Not Alone’, a country burred amalgamation of the Stones, Josh T Pearson and the Tindersticks in a sort of country-rock séance. That same track carries on the familiar theme of apparitions, spirits, and the supernatural that ran throughout last year’s Classic Monsters album – one of our choice albums 2024 no less –, and to a lesser extent on Gum Card. A creepy invocation, the dead walk amongst us, accompanied by flange effected guitar, harmonies and a full band feel of shambled, breaky heart Stones influences.
Filling out the role of Gallagher’s band is both Rober García and a returning Esteban Perles on drums, and Pablo Errea and Laia Vehí on backing vocals/harmonies. With the feel more or less a comfortable conjuncture of soft Southern soul, R&B backbeats as reimagined by Mick Ronson, Americana and country-rock. Perhaps the most fully realised performance yet, this four-track songbook is the most radio friendly too: which isn’t a bad thing.
With a mix of touching declarations of love and support to his muse and mini dramas, observations and reflections that play with analogies to scarred environments and plaintive souvenir collectors that hide a much deeper, troubling trauma, Treasure In Spain reminded me in parts of John Craigie, the Brakes, the Style Council and Boomtown Rats. Essentially, a well-crafted congruous production of rounded songs that balance paean with the lamented and lilting.
Gallagher’s most commercial, melodiously warm and fully communicated release yet is still rich with his Mining Co. signatures, tweaks, idiosyncrasies, turn-of-phrase and personality. Americana meets the Donegal diaspora after returning to Earth from his cosmological spells and more rooted autobiographical statements. Hopefully after plugging this man’s talents for so many years now, Treasure In Spain will finally shine more light on a under-appreciated songwriting treasure.
___/The Social Playlist Vol. 97___
The Social Playlist is an accumulation of music I love and want to share; tracks from my various DJ sets and residencies over the years; and both selected cuts from those artists, luminaries we’ve lost and those albums celebrating anniversaries each month.
Running for nearly 12 years now, Volume 97 is the latest eclectic and generational spanning playlist come radio show from me – the perfect radio show in fact, devoid of chatter, interruptions and inane self-promotion.
One of the pillars of that playlist series is the anniversary celebrating albums slots: usually 10th, 20th, 30th, 40th, 50th and 60th anniversaries. This month I’ve selected tracks from Albert Ayler’s supernatural apparition sprouting divine styled Spiritual Unity (60 this month); Minnie Riperton’s melliferous and slinking soul fantasy Adventures In Paradise (50th this month); New Order’s third album, the Kraftwerkian, German new waver Lowlife (40 this month); Scott Walker’s harrowed-by-thou-name Tilt (30 this year); and Teenage Fanclub’s Big Star and Crazy Horse imbued Grand Prix (dropping right in the middle of the Britpop phenomena in ‘95).
I always like to select a smattering of recentish releases each month, usually those tunes I missed or didn’t get the room to feature in the site’s exclusively new Monthly Playlist selections: consider it a second chance. May’s edition includes 2025 tracks from MIEN, the Natural Information Society with Bitchin Bajas, Occult Character, The Body, Dis Fig, and Peter Cat.
The rest of the playlist is made-up of tracks I rate, love, wish I owned or indeed do own, from decades of music collecting and DJing. So find RJ Payne, The God Fahim and Knowledge The Pirate on the spook vibes plus Shyheim, Joe Gibbs, Railroad Jerk, Howie B, The Black Lips, Captain Beefheart, Doris, Andre Williams, Kool Kim, Saar Band, The Mice, Toys That Kill, Luke Jenner, The Models, Docteur Nico, Charles Gayle, The Jean-Paul Sartre Experience, Mappa Mundi and French TV.
Tracks in full for Vol. 97 are:::
The Jean-Paul Sartre Experience ‘Einstein’
MIEN ‘Evil People’
Railroad Jerk ‘Don’t Be Jealous’
The Mice ‘Not Proud of the USA’
Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band ‘Click Clack’
Minnie Riperton ‘Feelin’ That The Feeling’s Good’
Saar Band ‘Double Action’
Andrew William’s Velvet Hammer ‘I Miss You So’
Shyheim ‘Here Come The Hits’
Natural Information Society & Bitchin Bajas ‘Nothing Does Not Show’
The Body, Dis Fig ‘Holy Lance (Audiotree Live Version)’
Scott Walker ‘Tilt’
Doris ‘You Never Come Closer’
Albert Ayler ‘Ghosts: First Variation’
RJ Payne, The God Fahim & Knowledge The Pirate ‘THE UGLINESS’
Occult Character ‘She’s A Reptile’
New Order ‘This Time of Night’
Luke Jenner ‘About to Explode’
Docteur Nico ‘Toyei Na Songo’
Joe Gibbs ‘He Prayed Version’
Howie B. ‘How To Suckie’
Kool Kim ‘The Heavenly Sword’
Teenage Fanclub ‘Don’t Look Back’
The Models ‘Bend Me, Shape Me’
Peter Cat ‘Starchamber’
Toys That Kill ‘Psycho Daisies’
Black Lips ‘You’re Dumb’
Charles Gayle ‘Compassion I’
French TV ‘The Kokonino Stomp’
Mappa Mundi ‘Sexafari’
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 Digest for February 2025: New Music/The Social Playlist/And Archives
February 17, 2025
THE MONTHLY DIGEST INCLUDES A CLUTCH OF ACCUMULATED NEW MUSIC REVIEWS; THE SOCIAL INTER-GENERATIONAL/ECLECTIC AND ANNIVERSARY ALBUMS CELEBRATING PLAYLIST; AND CHOICE PIECES FROM THE ARCHIVES.

Witch ‘n’ Fox: Image courtesy of Camille Blake
____/THE NEW____
Witch ‘N’ Fox ‘Outfox’
28th February 2025
Transformative spaces, panoramas, sites of meditation and sonic communication with the environment, the vulpine allegorical and metaphorical entitled opus from the Medelin-London duo of Mauricio Velasierra and Heidi Heidelbery is a vision and reshaping of a re-imagined landscape. As an escape from the divisive and addictive selfish pull of a life spent hooked up to a screen, Outfox continues the reflective “Geocache” sound walks, the return to seeking refuge in the built-up suffocation of the city.
They transport the listener to realms, atmospheres and moods caught between the melodious and experimental, the staccato and lucid. Imagine a sonic and musical balance vocally of soprano and aria-like Jen Shyu, Linda Sharrock and Flora Purim fluidly cooing, wooing or in spiritual and near-venerable passion announcing the new sunrise to chuffed and bristled, willowy and more abstracted South American flutes (both the Andean wooden canoe-shaped “Kena” and much larger blowing pipe-style “Moseño”), scratchy and rhythmic, fuzzed and plucked electric guitar, robot and metalized effects, and an essence of slow-blown and breathed wispy, misty inter-dimensional fourth world atmospheres.
Recognisable instruments, from the electric and synthesized to wind and traditional are reconfigured and converted through various manipulations and improvised suggestion to build up a magical landscape of birth, of seedling growth, of expanding fauna and invested interest in the biosphere. And yet, this landscape is also simultaneously an organic metaverse that’s switched-on to revolutionary zeal and the moment of activism, with the action moving from echoes of Hermeto Pascoal, Priscilla Ermel, Jon Hassell and Nicole Mitchell to a more needled and avant-garde punk struggle of hysterics and hard plectrum scratched “revolution”.
There’s much to unravel from this conversation, this view, as the re-wired Andean and Colombian imbued soundscapes and expressions meet the near operatic, a more freeform, tonal and rhythmically oblique form of jazz and beyond. Some tracks seem to inhabit reverberated depths (the echoed spaces of the Ariel Kalma meets Tomaga ‘Blossom’) whilst planting life, as others get caught up a squall of expressive hunger and agitation (the swamp traversed realisation ‘Expansion’).
Like Rahsaan Roland Kirk assisted by Prince Lasha on the fluted moments, mixed with the music and voices of Flutronix, James Newton and Robert Dick’s Third Stone From The Sun LP, Outfox outmanoeuvres, outplays the forces of distraction to lay down a visionary immersive atmosphere, biosphere of amorphous spiritualism and escapism: even when drawn to wild displays of rage and protestation. I highly recommend taking this journey: you may well discover something new.
Pacific Walker ‘Lost In The Valley of the Sun’
(Bluesanct) 14th February 2025
Cast adrift to the sound of a prog-rock saxophone swanning across the wisps and mists coming off topographic oceans, languid doped acoustic guitars, sparkles of icy synth, the tubular and mystical vague evocations of the cosmos, the hermetic, the new age and chthonian, the Pacific Walker pairing of Michael Tapscott and Issac Edwards once more sail beyond the earthly plains.
Invoking Roman paganism, early Christianity, self-help manuals on spiritual enlightenment inspired by India, the occult, the Fortean, peyote-inducing psychedelic desert realisation and yogi mysticism, they build up a subtle and melodic ambient soundtrack of mystified inquiry across eight varied tracks of influences/inspirations.
It all begins in the realms of the esoteric cosmic cowboy, traveller, as the rustic resonated guitar is joined by Native American invocation shakers, tinkles of glockenspiel and skying winds on the opening “Induction Ceremony” and additional bracketed “White Woman in White Robes Clapping”. A conversion, in a manner, of Bruce Longhorne, Hale Strana and Roy Montgomery, the tunnelled oscillation corridor from phantom desert to the astral is played out beautifully and evocatively.
Drifting into the next track, “Blessed In The Chapel of the Tears (Crying)”, and the mists hang over a whispered and slowed-down to near slurred undecipherable muffle of the ambient, of prog, and the sounds of Current 93, Popol Vuh, Stars Of The Lid and a Mogadon drugged Beta Band. Christian mysticism, the monastic tones of hermits and the guitar work of Sol Invictus, plus a semblance of new age Serguis Golewin and Iasos, meet space rock effects and oscillated dream casting on “Shepards”: Et in Arcadia ego meets the allegorical symbolism of the New Testament.
Another of those Biblical tracings, “Fishers of Men (Eternal Return)”, is difficult to surmise musically; making a break with both its Amazonian fluted and softly blowing pipes, elements of Ash Ra, but 80s beatific mix of singular plinked splashed Talk Talk piano notes, The Durrtti Column, Deux Filler and the near Gothic: the vocals sound almost like Boyd Rice and Friends. This, as dreamily wrapped as it is, sticks out for me as one of the album’s best, most creative tracks.
The finale, “Some Kind of Guru”, keeps with the signature feels, and yet stands out for its almost slurred and slowed vocals and general psychedelic masked vibe of strangeness, hippie instruction and spiritual hunger.
A perfect loaded vessel of psychedelic drugs, meditative self-help instruction, Alexandra David-Néel’s Himalayan mysticism, gladiatorial and Latin lament, Roman deities and the lost souls of loved ones, rainbow chasing and cosmic desires, Lost In The Valley of the Sun is a both beautiful and mystical experience to be taken in as a whole. If the kosmsiche, the new age, the progressive, the folksy, the hermetic and the idea of a strange vision of Americas desert peyote inducing self-realisation rituals sounds inviting, then open your inner and outer senses to this brilliantly lucid and indolent album.
Light.box & Tom Challenger ‘Eyre’
(Bead Records) 28th February 2025
We last heard of Pierre Alexandre Tremblay (one half of the trick noise manipulator and glitchy modulators light.box duo alongside trumpeter and electronics apparatus diviner Alex Bonney), or rather his transformative hardware effects, on last year’s Shadow Figures performance collaboration with Spaces Unfolding. Also released on the revitalized Bead Records label, that avant-garde serialism of challenging site-specific experiments coincided with the imprint’s 50th anniversary.
Fast forward just a few months later and Tremblay is back to improvise new sonic, tonal and this time tuneful expressions and cries with both his light.box foil Bonney and the noted, and very much in demand, tenor saxophonist, composer, band leader, side man, educator and researcher Tom Challenger.
Intersecting at this time and juncture, the wealth of experience and impressive CVs of all three participants’ reads like a who’s who of contemporary and extemporised jazz in the UK and beyond. Take Bonney for instance, He’s popped up on the Monolith Cocktail for his role in Pando Pando, Leverton Fox and Scarla O’ Horror, but also collaborates with Will Glaser. Challenger meanwhile has a never-ending stream of credits and projects, both one-offs and longer lasting partnerships: one of his most notable being with Kit Downes. Tremblay, meanwhile, has just as enviable a career as his two foils; a polymath electroacoustic musician who plays bass, guitar, and transmogrifies electronic sounds and operations via a laptop, he’s been on the fringes and at the forefront of pushing jazz and experimental electronics via successive projects and groupings.
Using both the reference language of a Medieval English travelling court and bonded atoms, the trio invoke manifestations of shadow play, foreboding soundtracks, the kosmische and a removed version of the great tenor saxophonist and trumpet progenitors of atonal and freeform jazz.
And yet for all of that, the actual brass is often melodic when seeping, traversing or drifting across a bed of Affenstunde era Popol Vuh and Kluster alien generations, oscillations, zaps and charged electricity. There’s an essence of Ornette Coleman, of Jonah Parzen-Johnson, of Andy Haas, of Ariel Kalma and Archie Shepp crossing nodes, or shadowing the brassy heralds of Sketches Miles and Don Cherry; both sounding out across the cosmic and more mysterious machine hums, ziplines, vibrations and dark atmospheres – like the overhead prowls of alien zeppelins or an icebreaker carving through a supernatural Artic. There are intense passages of duck-billed honks, whines, the bristled and harassed of course, but nothing quite like Last Exit.
In other sections Killing Joke and Jah Wobble loose rubbery post-punk trebly bass notes pulsate and reverberate as the frictions, frequencies, signals, waveforms, slithers, crackles of an electronic soundboard – part Irmin Schmidt, part Tangerine Dream – undulate or sweep and expand like chemistry and atoms.
If I was to summarise, or offer a reference, think Taj Mahal Travellers get into it with Oren Ambarchi, Sly and the Family Drone, Schneider Kacirek and the Black Unity Trio. A total experience that merges elements of jazz, post-punk, kosmische music, techno and avant-garde into an unnerving but also imaginative soundtrack-like performance of playful shadowy curiosity and gravitas. For all three musicians, another successful merger and pooling together of improvisational and explorative skills.
Oksana Linde ‘Travesías’
(Buh Records) 21st February 2025
Retrieved from private studio recordings, the brilliant Buh Records label compiles a second volume of traverses, floated mirages and crossings from the pioneering Venezuelan electronic composer of note, Oksana Linde.
From the same period as the previous Aquatic and Other Worlds album, released back in 2022, this latest collection/extension is divided into new age, kosmische and early electronic styled sound pieces and scores originally created for a presentation at the Casa Rómulo Gallegos centre of Latin American studies – part of the influential 3rd Encounter of New Electronic Music event that took place at that Caracas creative institution during February of 1991 -, and for use in meditation sessions. Together, it sounds truly mesmerising, magical and pretty, whilst also evoking more moody depths of misty and vaporous mystery.
For those unfamiliar with Linde’s work and notable reputation, the Venezuelan daughter of Ukrainian immigrants started out as a chemical researcher, before ill health forced her to abandon that career and turn to music. Partially informing her idiosyncratic journey and discipline of electronic exploration an embrace of meditation and Reiki was interwoven into serene passages, ebbing tidal motions and moving mood music. From original preserved cassette tapes, there’s quartet of examples from this meditative strand of Linde’s work. The opening ‘Luciérnagas en los manglares’, or “Fireflies in the mangroves”, makes a promising start with its measuring waters, sympathetic melodious sighs of tinkled and delicate synthesized chords, rounded tine-like notes and buoyancy. It reminded me of Raul Lovisoni’s work with Francisco Messina, of Klaus Schulze and Laurie Speigel.
From the same mould, there’s a “starry” (‘Estrellas I’ and ‘II’) couplet of meditations that drift off into the cosmic, dreaming of diaphanous comfort and transference. The first of which sparkles with clean glassy synth crystals, a near romantic tune and soft rings, peal of enervated bells – a vague sounding of the Tibetan and closer to home monastic church bells found in Catholic Latin American. Oddly or not, and perhaps with Lynch’s passing on my mind, it reminded me of Angelo Badalamenti’s Twin Peaks soundtrack music.
Once more evoking tranquil far-off worlds and oceans, ‘Kerepacupai vena’ has an air of Cluster about it. Crystals, winds and tides moodily invoke the famous waterfall of the title. The tallest uninterrupted waterfall in the world, Venezuela’s magnificent majestical feature was rechristened Angel Falls in the last century after the American aviator, Jimmie Angle, who was the first person to ever fly over it – his ashes were later scattered over the fall in 1960. I’m not sure if it ever ended up officially being recognized or rectified but about fifteen years ago, Venezuela’s then President, the now late Hugo Chávez, declared that he would change the name back to its indigenous etymological origins. That Venezuelan landmark can’t help but inspire, and so it proves an evocative source for Linde’s meditative washes.
Moving on, this collection’s title is itself taken from the Travesías Acuastral (“Aqua-Astral journey”) project created for the already mentioned 3rd Encounter of New Electronic Music event, produced originally by Maite Galán in collaboration with the Venezuelan trio Musikautomatika – said to have been “a milestone in shaping experimental electronic music” in Venezuela. From that set – if that’s the right word – there’s the bass-y synth undertow and shaved metallic textures and cyber-organic dream state of ‘Mundos flotantes’ (“floating worlds”); a presence like zeppelin looms over a beautiful yet moody piece with echoes of Vangelis, the Berlin-Japanese Garden music of Bowie and Eno and Tangerine Dream. From that same landscape, ‘Horizontes lejanos’ (“distant horizons”) feels near Artic in comparison: chilled with its icy synthesized voices and tubular frozen wisps.
Effective throughout, revealing sublime ambient and new age kosmische explorations of the imaginary and very real inspiring features of the Venezuela’s wilds and beyond, this latest collection of Oksana Linde’s work is revelatory, and a great introduction to the talents of a pioneer that needs further investigation. I shall definitely be investigating further, and at the end of the day, if an album switches you on to that artist’s art and makes your life that more rewarding or enriching, then it has succeeded.
The Bordellos with Dee Claw/Neon Kittens ‘Half Man Half Kitten’
(Cruel Nature Records) 21st February 2025
Before the social media tide turned, and in its infancy, MySpace was at the epicentre of a collaborative, multinational experiment; a platform for so many of us to share our music whilst meeting potential new foils and connecting with labels, promoters and those facilitators that could push bedroom music towards a global audience. Negatives…there were plenty. But somehow, in a naïve age before the divisive hot war took over and condemned us to a life of online addiction and validation, MySpace felt less viral led, less “me me me”, and more creatively positive. Personally I loved it. People, artists seemed so much approachable and down-to-earth. At a time when Mick Ronson was riding high with Amy Winehouse, we chatted about The Coasters – the janitor at one of Mick’s early schools had been a member of that 50s doo-wop R&B cult act that had slipped into obscurity -, and as Edan was releasing one of the most iconic and influential leftfield hip-hop albums of the 2000s, we chatted about his incredible pool of samples and influences. I wasn’t even really writing at this point, working a day job, a career in music and sound production, whilst trying to make a name for myself with various projects and remixes.
As MySpace pegged it, superseded by Facebook and then in turn Twitter and its ilk, a whole generation has passed through unaware that it existed.
The first half of this latest split release from Cruel Nature Records, was first conceived and recorded during the dying embers of that platform. A collaborative affair/flirtation between St. Helen’s most idiosyncratic bedraggled family, The Bordellos, and the Stateside Persian Claws enchantress feline Dee Claw, the pun-intended riff of Songs In The Key Of Dee release should have been released over 18 years ago. But due to various hurdles and roadblocks, self-sabotage and a general lack of interest from labels at the time, remained sitting on an unloved server. Praise be that a revival of interest, stoked up on Facebook, rescued it from cult oblivion and the graveyard of “what ifs?”. And that Andy of this split cassette tape’s Neon Kittens, was there to encourage its retrieval from the vaults, agreeing that his most recent needled guitar led hustle could share the release. Step forward Cruel Nature, who kindly offered to put it out on their label and Bandcamp page.
Taking up the first half of this C60 split – a riff in itself, format wise, on one strand of the band’s influence, the 1980s culture of C86 and the various cassette tape length releases that were doled out and evangelized by the music press at the time – The Bordellos own lo fi rough and maverick homegrown tunes of aphorism, the pursuit of love in a Northern town, of frustration and above or, of being ignored, are given a more feminine, less blokey quality by their foil Dee Claw. With a shared love of all thing’s cult, the sound of the Shangri-La’s, The Cramps, Lenny Kaye’s iconic and highly influential Nuggets compilation of 60s garage, backbeat, American Mersey beat impressions and psych, the punk and post-punk scenes, both partners on this project repurpose a songbook of abrasion, fuzz and distortion to reach across the Atlantic.
A Zoroastrian, Achaemenian to pre-revolution 60s swinging Shah ruled imbued Dee wiles and beguiles, sings with defiance, duets and coos apparition style over the mixed vocals of Brian and Dan Shea and a scrunch and whine and tambourine shake of Half Man Half Biscuit (another riff title wise), New Order (Dan turning in a killer Bernard Summers, whilst the bass guitarist, who I think is family affiliate Gary Storey, corralled into the recording, does a very keen Peter Hook impression), The Flatmates, Anton Barbeau, early Floyd (as anyone with even a cursory knowledge or interest in The Bordellos’ Brian Shea will know, only Syd Barrett era Floyd will pass muster, anything after that is loathsome) and The Misfits influences.
Northern burred malcontent passions meet with the exotic and rockabilly, as the sound of Iran’s The Rebels and Littles rubs up against Denim, Spiral Scratch Buzzcocks and a supernatural teen death rider vision of Hawkwind on the solar mist formed ‘Set Your Heart To The Sun’. Mind you, ‘Pretty Rich Girl’ is the sound of Johnny Thunders slinging an arm around the BMX Bandits.
It’s hard to pin down Dee’s voice: part Pat Benatar, part Siouxsie, part sunset strip. But her voice, her presence pays dividends, especially on the evangelized power of rock ‘n’ roll homage to Julian Cope: the Piltdown Man of head music, who’s musical legacy and art of turning his apostles and followers onto the greatest cult sounds and countercultures of the past 70 years is legendary. Here they anoint him with saintly beatification to a version of, arguably, The Bordello’s resounding grinded down anthem. We’ve waited far too long for this. But what a collaborative turn.
The Neon Kittens, formed by The Salem Trials’ Andy Goz, includes Nina K on near insolent, automated, indifferent and dismissive vocals, and Hope M on drum, synthesized operations. A lost group from the 80s no wave and post-punk eras, they release tunes at the drop of a proverbial hat and knock out albums by the week.
With a signature sound that transmogrifies the guitar work of Keith Levene, Michael Karoli and Wires’ Matthew Simms with Scary Monsters and Outside Bowie, the Banshees, Neue Deutsche Welle, Annie Anxity, the Putan Club, Martin Dupont and Kas Product, the Kittens (named apparently after mishearing a lyric by Ultravox) display a taut aloofness of grinded gears and rebar twisted angulations. The vocals, out of spite, sometimes in a near dominatrix putdown to the snivelling, and at other times near coyishly, seem to be read out like a transcript from chatbot. Nina’s voice being almost like an AI girlfriend putting down her prompter, is vaguely Japanese, vaguely European, and then again, vaguely Slavic; emoting tongue-lashes, sexual undertones and intimate moments on the leather couch that could be purposely initiated to get caught out, sex dungeon menace and disgust.
The Kittens seem to be getting plenty of milage out of their both driving and torqued guitar embrace of needle and sustained industrial wielding. Each track is great: a post-punk clash of new wave and no wave and waves that no-one can name yet. A recall of another age, of abrasion, humour and caustic catty acidic observations.
You won’t find a finer low budget gathering of cult music anywhere else; a showcase, after all these years, that may just gain both groups of collaborators the limelight and respect they deserve: the Monolith Cocktail has certainly been plugging away at it for a decade or more.
____/THE SOCIAL PLAYLIST VOLUME 94___
The Social Playlist is an accumulation of music I love and want to share; tracks from my various DJ sets and residencies over the years; and both selected cuts from those artists, luminaries we’ve lost and those albums celebrating anniversaries each month.
Running for over a decade or more, Volume 94 is the latest eclectic and generational spanning playlist come radio show from me – the perfect radio show in fact, devoid of chatter, interruptions and inane self-promotion.
We bid farewell this month to Marianne Faithfull of course, marking a career blighted by incidents, addiction and travails, rather than celebrated for her majesty. Of course, those who know, know otherwise; of her gifts, her magical allure and strength. And so, I’ve picked out an offering of both diaphanous plaints and maladies from a decades-spanning songbook of intelligent emotional pulls.
My anniversary selection this month includes entries from hardcore electro and hip-hop legend Schoolly D (his school of hard knocks self-titled debut LP is 40 years old this month), Country-folk troubadour Doug Firebaugh (his lone album, Performance One, is 50), Greenwich mover, Dylan bestie David Blue, (Com’n Back For More is also 50 this year), Neu! (See below in the Archives section for a full purview of Neu! 75, which marks its 50th birthday this month), Louden Wainwright III (Unrequited, my favourite LP in the iconic songwriter’s oeuvre, is also 50), Lowlife (the band’s mini-album Rain is 40) and Amon Düül II (their ambitious theatrical opus Made In Germany is 50 this year: see my full-on purview in the Archives section below).
Missing from our new music Monthly playlist, I’ve included a small number of recent(ish) tunes from Kloot Per W, Peter Evans, Etella, and Verses Bang, plus a smattering of olds from across the decades: Krown Rulers, Michael Gately, Dando Shaft, Skip Battin, Swamp Rats, Roland Haynes, Natik Awayez and more…
Marianne Faithfull ‘It’s All Over Now Baby Blue’
Skip Battin ‘Bolts of Blue’
Collectors ‘Things I Remember’
Dan Melchior’s Broke Revue ‘Hungry Ghosts’
Swamp Rats ‘Hey Freak’
David Blue ‘Lover, Lover, Lover’
Kloot Per W ‘Music’
Verses Bang ‘Prudence’
Krown Rulers ‘Kick the Ball’
Schoolly D ‘I Don’t Like Rock ‘N’ Roll’
Peter Evans ‘Roulette’
Roland Haynes ‘Descent’
Dila ‘Adeus Bomfim’
Marianne Faithfull ‘Song for Nico (Live at Montreux Jazz Festival)’
Amon Düül II ‘Ludwig/The King’s Chocolate Waltz/Blue Grotto’
Ken McIntyre ‘Cosmos’
Lowlife ‘Sometime Something’
Etella ‘Omorfo Mou’
Dando Shaft ‘Magnetic Beggar’
Loudon Wainwright III ‘Kick In The Head’
Marianne Faithfull w/ Warren Ellis ‘She Walks In Beauty’
Neu! ‘Isi’
Doug Firebaugh ‘Past The Point Of Caring’
Michael Gately ‘Karo’
Zoppo Trump ‘Confusion’
The Auras ‘Charlton Heston’
Marianne Faithfull ‘Witches’ Song’
Comsat Angels ‘Missing In Action’
Natik Awayez ‘Al Manafi (The Land of the Exiles)’
Nick Kuepfer ‘Red Sand Market’
___/THE ARCHIVES___
Each month I pick out two or three appropriate pieces from the Archives; usually those that tie in with an anniversary, an announcement or, more unfortunately, the passing of an iconic, championed artist.
This year marks the 50th anniversary of albums by two of the German scene’s most influential progenitors, the acid-rock Amon Düül II and motorik driven Neu! The first, ADII’s conceptual opus Made In Germany, and the second, Dinger & Rother’s ’75 special. Both pieces were originally part of my 40-plus chapters series on Krautrock from twenty years ago.
Neu! ‘Neu! 75’
(Brain Records)

‘I am sure that in this very moment of national disaster the German nation will develop life-giving forces. It may be that they will produce intellectual and artistic achievements, which will in some measures, compensate for our evil reputation in the world in the last few years’.
Correspondence from Albert Speer to Werner Baumbach, during the Nuremburg trials, 30th July 1946.
A presumptuous, even pseudo, introduction perhaps, but Germanys cultural comeback, less than a generation after the apocalyptic war, helped shape the musical landscape and went some way to removing the country’s shame.
As a reactionary, mostly Marxist and Socialist, protest, the German youth rejected their elder’s post-war governance and hang-ups; breaking with heritage, breaking with convention. And Neu! demonstrated better, to some extent, this separation.
The third chapter in their motorik traversing career, ‘Neu! 75’ certainly went some way towards creating a new aesthetic as a precursor to the punk scene – and a heavy influence on such future scene-shapers as John Lydon –, whilst also lending the spark to Bowie that culminated in him producing some of his best work alongside Eno.
Yet side one of this LP, their finest hour, betrays moments of the Germanic grand tradition of representing the landscape. In a way Rother and Dinger compose a meditative spiritual suite that sounds both ancestral and, at the same time, modern. The tracks ‘Isi’ and ‘Seeland’ convey similar grandiose outdoor themes; scored with elements of established time-honoured and present-day instruments that are distinctly different to the motorway ode-to-joy of Kraftwerk. Neu! would in effect bridge the divide between the old country and new.
Back in 1973 after the initial fallout from ‘Neu! 2’, Rother was attracted to the work of the stripped-down duo Cluster, whose Hans-Joachim Roedelius and Deiter Moebius had just joined the Brain label. Suffering from ennui themselves, Cluster looked for a new direction and welcomed in Rother. The now legendary brave new sound of Harmonia was born.
Rother and his sparring partner, Dinger, had never formally laid their Neu! creation to rest: temperamentally there were of course differences, even exchanged words in anger, but Rother’s unease and move towards forming new partnerships didn’t stop Dinger from holding onto the hope that they would heal their rift and reform.
As it was, Dinger passed the time setting-up his ill-fated Dingerland label and conceiving the eventual formation of La Dusseldorf. Fortunately, in 1974 they decided they’d both been hasty, and that they should at least give it one last chance; pulling the Neu! dreadnought out of dry dock, and once again setting sail towards uncharted waters.
Rother’s more chilled and tripping atavistic approach met head-on with Dinger’s Germanic snarling nihilistic, new wave attitude. A greater palate of instrumentation was introduced to that benchmark sound, with Dinger recruiting his brother Thomas, and former Neu! recordings tape-operator Hans Lampe to the cause; both playing drums live and on the new album – this would also be more or less the foundation set-up for La Düsseldorf.
Rehearsals for the album began in the summer of 1974 with an apprehensive gig or two. Their faithful producer, Conny Plank, came back on board recording the band in his new Cologne studio during both the December of ’74 and the first week of January ‘75.
As I’ve already mentioned, the album is made up of two parts: in short, the Rother Seite and the Dinger Seite. ‘Isi’ – phonetically pronounced as “easy”, and an abbreviation for the Spanish name Isabella – opens up the unimaginatively, matter of fact, titled ‘Neu! 75’ album. A tempting, diaphanous piano leads us ceremonially into this scenic gliding mini-opus, which features a thematic ticking metronome – a key part of the entire album, marking the passage of time – and astral travelling alluded, gracious melodies. Rother’s Harmonia mindset takes full control as his blessed-out overture breathes in an air of Popol Vuh majestic, and even, dare I say, Kraftwerk peregrination Euro-traveller-like pace.
The following monotheistic bookend ‘Seeland’ – which can be interoperated as either sea land or lake land – is a more pronounced dreamy requiem, or indeed hymn. It methodically prowls across palatial horizons, soaking up the immortal Teutonic scenery, and seeping into the ethnographical layers of the soil. The ebb and flow of this passing soundtrack is interrupted by a contemplative downpour and lapping tide – the river, and shore motif can be found throughout all of Neu!’s work.
Slowly fading in, during this rumination, is the Rother trance wash of ‘Leb’ Wohl’, or ‘Farewell’, a flowing metronome stream of swooning choral utterances, and low eulogy composed piano. If nothing else, ‘Leb’ Wohl’ created a template for the future sublime drones of Spaceman 3, and a whole atelier of shoe-gazing bands.
Side 2 is more or less a Dinger pet-project. He plays lead agit stance guitar and handles the continental-styled sneering sibilant vocals throughout, and ropes in the pairing of his sibling, Thomas Dinger, and Hans Lampe on drums.
More a guidebook then blueprint to Bowies krautrock flirtation and trio of Berlin LPs – we must not forget, Eno, who was dully implicit in adopting the Fatherlands music for the UK– , the 3-tracks that made up Dinger’s contributions are now seen as a leading influence on punk and its post resulting musical scenes. The opening ‘Hero’ – borrowed and made a lot more radio-friendly by the leather-clad, dry-ice, cold-war impressionist Bowie – features Roxy Music-esque chugging guitar riffs ploughing over a man-the-barricades strut. Dinger raves a vehement “Riding through the night” chanting chorus in the style of a Westphalian Iggy Pop, to a motoring rallying-call drumbeat.
‘E-Musik’ – or ‘series music’, the contraction of the German term, ‘Esmte Musik’ – sloops into the sound of birds chattering and planes flying overhead. Vapour turns to phaser as the instruments are manipulated through this cyclonic, weaving effect. The constant shuffling drums never skip or miss a trick, whilst the tripped-out knees-up on the surface of Mars beat fades in and out of consciousness. Warped and bent to fit, this oval-shaped rhythmic workout sounds like nothing else.
Misty atmospherics once again cloud over, plunging us back into the revisionist version of ‘Hero’, on ‘After Eight’. Spiky and full of spunk, Dinger leads a final Hussar charge. Far from being a tribute to the after dinner treat for show-offs, ‘After Eight’ is a huffing proto-futuristic howling blues mash-up of ‘Virginia Plain’ and the ‘Can-can’, played by louts schooled in Wagner and Stockhausen: a fine ending for such a tempest of an album.
Neu! their work done, yet again walk off into the Hinterland. Rother ran back to the arms of Moebius and Roedelius, producing their Cluster album ‘Zuckerzeit’, before reforming the Harmonia supergroup. Meanwhile Dinger reinvented the Neu! sound for his Euro-anthemia, new wave riding La Düsseldorf outfit; taking his brother and Hans with him.
Of course there would be several attempts to resurrect Neu!, with numerous material from previous sessions seeing the light of day. Yet due to various wrangles and fallings-out over ownership, both Dinger and Rother stayed away from each other for over a decade, before trying out the old magic for one last time on the ‘Neu! 86’, or ‘Neu! 4’, album sessions – an ill-fated venture left unfinished, and released without Rother’s consent in 1996 as a bootleg. After the death of Dinger in 2008, Rother worked out a deal with his widow to re-edit and finish the tracks and release the sessions as the revised ‘Neu! 86’ album: completed with remixes and other related material. Only last year, Rother released the all-encompassing Neu! boxset, which draws together the entire history and catalogue of the band: a deserved survey of a much lauded and respected duo.
Amon Düül II ‘Made in Germany’
(Nova Records/ATCO) 1975

This epic homage (arguably) to The Who’s Tommy and other such monolithic concept albums, broadly mixes in all the most tragic and culturally celebrated highlights from Germany’s much tumultuous and troubled history: from the birth of a united country in the late 1800s, to the fall-out of World War II. Along the way countless references incorporate a host of cultural figures, from composers such as Wagner to the philosopher Kant. Politically charged and self-mocking this album both courted mock disdain and controversy – more of which, we will come to later.
But first, let us rewind back to 1974, a stressful period in the band’s career. Coming home after a taut and emotionally draining tour the guys were needing a little downtime; a revolving door policy had seen members leave under a dark cloud; the band unsure of musical direction and management. Along comes the A&R man Jurgen. Korduletsch, a man of considerable means who had recently set up his own label Lollipop Records. Certain promises were made and before you knew it, they found themselves signed up to a new contract. Once the ink dried, Korduletsch immediately pushed the band straight into the studio. These hastily orchestrated sessions would become the backbone of their next release Hi-Jack. This strange record became their most commercial marketable album yet and oddly borrowed heavily from Bowie, Roxy Music and Mott The Hoople: known as the rather demeaning toe-curling ‘glam rock album’ alongside Viva La Trance.
It was at this point that Atlantic records came calling, offering a deal to release the band’s music in the States: though they would also release the LPs under the ATCO division in the US and Canada. This may have been in response to the relative success that Virgin were currently having with German bands like Tangerine Dream and Can.
After some initial success with Hi-Jack it was agreed that now would be the time to follow up with something quite ambitious: as well as a great fuck-you to the establishment and sensibilities of the man. As the group’s defacto co-leader John Weinzierl puts it, they basically become disillusioned with the so-called changes in society and empty gestures of the underground youth movements. Also, it was apparent to him that history itself was not moving on and that his fellow compatriots were still seen as the bogeyman of Europe. Even though his generation had seen the horrendous fall-out from the former regime and reacted to it by pushing the leftist antidote forward, they were still envisaged as the bad guys. As much as they tried to separate and fight against it, the world carried on viewing them with suspicion: always eager to remind them of the war.
With all this in mind Weinzierl and the group embarked on a grand project, which would see them releasing a double album of songs based around a central theme of irony and self-provocation. This would take both real and made-up figures from the rich history of the country, borrowing heavily from literature, film, opera, fantasy and real-life events: The Weimar Republic, Fritz Lang, King Ludwig, Hitler and Marlene Dietrich would all make an appearance in this cliche heavy diatribe.
From unification under the heavy brow beating of Prussia – which came decades before, and after the eventual victory over Napoleon – to an initial story involving a character named Mr. Kraut, this LP crams it all in.
By this point they shared little in common with any of their fellow countrymen in style or direction, as they went out on a limb with their new brand of classical music and progressive rock.
In the krautrock fraternity this record is usually given a wide berth: which is unfair. A loyal bunch of us have a certain fondness though and will go on about it quite a lot: spreading the word so to speak.
The cover artwork of Made In Germany is itself different, depending on which of the two different versions you have. In both the US and UK, a compressed single LP version was released. This had the band’s Teutonic siren Renate Knaup dolled up to look like Marlene Dietrich from the movie ‘The Blue Angel’; she has an alluring but contemptuous gaze as she straddles a chair in true Cabaret style.
The original version used a picture of the band sitting for an old-fashioned portrait bedecked in various costumes of Bavarian pomp, what looks like a Zeppelin pilot and Renate as a heroine from Wagner’s Ring Cycle – Bizarrely, and considering their bland music and influences, Kasabian re-enacted this same image on the cover of their West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum album; fans apparently of the acid-rock progenitors and Made In Germany.
This original was included in the single version on the inlay sleeve as well. The reasons for their being two variations comes down to a fall out with Atlantic boss Ahmet Ertegun, who was mightily surprised to find his latest signing offer up this platter of Germanic mayhem and political satire. Finding it in poor taste and, possibly, misreading the concept he got cold feet and cut the album down: only Germany itself, to my knowledge, received the proper double album at the time. It’s pretty obvious that Ahmet’s Jewish heritage played a part in this decision. It didn’t help that Amon Duul II wanted to embark on a US tour/invasion by traveling over in a Zeppelin: Remember, this is only thirty years after the end of World War II itself. Also, the original contains a mock shock DJ interview with Hitler, which uses his speeches as the DJ pokes fun with a knowing wink and some poor taste quips. All this has been available on CD for years now, so you don’t have to miss any of the material that was cut out on the single album.
The recording itself included session players such as Thor Baldursson – the Icelandic keyboardist and singer who worked with Giorgio Moroder and Grace Jones – Heinz Becker, Lee Harper, Bobby Jones and Helmut Sonnleitner, who all had backgrounds in jazz. New boy Nando Tischer became a fully ingrained member of the band, playing guitars and singing as well as composing some of the songs. Robby Heibl was back on duty again and mucked in on near enough everything; he was also now the designated bass player of the group. John Weinzierl is credited as guitarist but was the leader so to speak of Amon Duul II and is responsible for a far old share of the concept and composition. Renate and Chris Karrer alongside Tischer do most of the singing whilst Falk U Rogner supplied his sonic deft touches on synth and organ. The talented Peter Leopold, who gets some room to show off his old Yeti solos, supplied drums as usual.
There now follows a run-through the album:
A rolling timpani and clashes of cymbals announce the theatrical opening bars of ‘Overture’. A prelude orchestral snippet of all the tunes to come, it is used in a similar fashion to the same titled overture on The Who’s Tommy magnum opus. This Wagner evoking composition transcends his Ring Cycle stiffness and is instead an uproarious celebration of the inspired requiem Amon Duul II have set sail upon. Played out in full classical pomp this overture of sorts’ sets us up for the 150-year journey through Germany’s history.
The track makes its way through all the album’s different melodies; eight-bars or so of each song to come is given the ceremonial treatment before a final clash of the gong and the next track ‘Wir Wollen’ strikes up. Roughly translated as “Come On!”, this rock steady instrumental groover continues the classical mood: an assortment of old joy-de-vie orchestral pieces from past dead German composers interacts with the lead guitar of Weinzierl as the percussion crashes about in the background; culminating in an epic finale.
‘Wilhelm Wilhelm’ breezes along on some hip riffs as Renate and Karrer enter the fray with their harsh Germanic tones, recalling the tale of King Wilhelm I of Prussia (between 1861 – 1888) and later, the whole of united Germany (1871 – 1888). Wilhelm had fought against Napoleon in his youth and went onto to rule the kingdom of Prussia before eventually brow beating all the separate states, of what was to become Germany, into eventual unification. He famously appointed Otto Von Bismarck as his Prime Minister, which was in part due to the ill feeling and distrust between the royal household and parliament. Bismarck was to act as his man on the inside and to be sympathetic to the King’s views, but this gave way to him taking on most of the decisions and led to him gaining most of the real power. Added to this the founding of a new Fatherland were plots of assassination by anarchist and left-wing groups, which led to draconian laws being introduced against liberals and free thinkers alike. King Wilhelm was lucky to escape with his life, wounded in one of the many attempts. He saw this as a wakeup call: not for reforms but a militarised state: ring any bells!
Our three-minute funky number encapsulates all this background into a poppy little ditty that is both sung in English and the native German tongue. A chiming melody and a crunchy wah wah effects driven guitar gives this song an almost rock disco feel, whilst Leopold lets loose on the cymbals that climax in another AD II proto-eruption.
The strange and exotic titled ‘SM II Peng’ is next up; another instrumental interlude. It ambles along in fine fettle abandon, riffing off a 12-bar blues boogie with the accompaniment of some spooky sounding effects from Rogner. The track sounds like a cheerful wander through a graveyard or a sit down at a séance in a Gothic bedecked palace. This is followed by another instrumental segue way entitled ‘Elevators Meets Whispering’, which apart from its strange use of English is another slice of mysterious creepy and misty fog bound graveyard atmospherics. Our odd curio is given some gravitas from Weinzierl; and his strung-out haunting guitar strums before this short interruption abruptly ends and makes way for the big guns.
‘Metropolis’ begins with a grand piano, which accompanies a staccato riff of rock as Renate’s sultry Teutonic tones gloriously paint a picture of 1920s Weimar through the films of Fritz Lang. Lang and his most famous work of art Metropolis is dissected and referenced throughout the tune; nods to both locations and the underlying plot are connected to paint a picture of disillusionment. Angles, Dr. Mabuse and Zeppelins all pop up, as the workers remain left at the bottom of a modern-day version of the Tower of Babel. As in the biblical tale a common language is lost between those in control who reached the peak by standing on the proletarians faces, and those who ended up in a shit pile after building futile monuments to false ideologies. This expressionistic romp both mixes Sparks and Roxy Music into a boogie Euro stomp; Renate adds a dose of eccentricity with her approach to the vocals that are sung with enthusiasm but also with the hint of cynicism. She sounds like a heroine from one of Klimt’s paintings or an oracle from Wagner’s Valkyrie. This is one of the albums many highlights.
Next up is the three-part story arc suite of poor old King Ludwig, a much maligned and ridiculed figure from German history. The first of these acts is ‘Ludwig’ itself, which tells the tale of his apparent suicide by drowning; part, it’s said, of a strange plot to get rid of him by his ministers that makes for a good conspiracy theory.
Ludwig II of Bavaria was brought up in a privileged world. He inherited his father’s exuberance for fantasy and myth – This lonely king it is said, was more at ease with images of old folklore and Arthurian legend then with the day-to-day running of his country. And his love for music and the arts led to him patronising the controversial Richard Wagner, who had been involved in anti-establishment intrigues and had run away once after taking part in protests.
After the unification of all the individual kingdoms by Wilhelm, Ludwig stayed on his throne but with a diminished role. Following his late father’s building plan of extensive palaces and castles, he plunged his domain into bankruptcy. Not wishing to take advice from his ministers he threatened them with being removed. Plots to have the king certified as mentally unstable were slowly put into place: a hasty draft was sent for approval to Bismarck himself who dismissed the claims. Another attempt with the involvement of four prominent physicians of the day sealed his fate; though he didn’t come quietly, and its alleged he may have been shot whilst escaping on Lake Starnberg. It was announced to the world that he had committed suicide, but we know better – right?
Ludwig’ crams all of this background into a satire inspired Kraut-boogie, with Renate on lead vocals.
Following on, ‘The Kings Chocolate Waltz’ is an instrumental stopgap built around a sad sounding Wurlitzer loop. Some echo and deep reverb drenched guitars are added to the stirring ambiance.
Our short story arc is finalised with ‘Blue Grotto’, with its poetic and fairytale lullaby crooned delivery from Renate. Ludwig and his eccentricities are given an airing in this ballad to the misunderstood actions of the deluded king. What chance did he have when he was famously brought up in the Disney like palace of Neuschwanstein, situated near to Schwansee: or under its better-known moniker Swan Lake. Ludwig was nicknamed the Swan King after it.
All the references in this song are adhered to in the true misfortunes of the foppish monarch, moonlight picnics and hanky panky in the nude with his male servants add to the fascinating tale of a little boy lost. Renate has named this her favourite song in the whole Amon Duul catalogue.
Leaving behind the fateful old charming Ludwig we end the first part of the album with the eight minute long tale of ‘Mr.Krauts Jinx’. A heavily German toned vocal from Karrer sets up the story of our unfortunate character Mr. Kraut: more of that tongue in cheek approach of self-disdain. Whilst exploring the Valley of the Kings in Egypt, our protagonist is beamed up by extraterrestrials. This unforeseen addition to his holiday sees Mr. Kraut travel through the cosmos and placed in a space zoo as an exhibit: Some anthropologist type of table turning or reference to the search by right wing ideologists for a white superman: we can’t be sure. But over the course of the song, we go from a warm acoustic introduction in the vein of Dylan before progressing to what amounts to some thrashing out rock aspirations.
The end of our story is kind of positive, as Mr. Kraut is thrown a concubine of well-equipped proportions to spend his eternity with; our man now has a smile on his face. With a final refrain of “Cause future ain’t tomorrow, future is today” fate is sealed. Karrer seems to have a few problems with singing this track, as he almost goes out of tune with some of the lines.
I’m at odds with this track as it remains in my eyes a bit of a filler and lets the whole album down with its almost embarrassing Euro-pop direction.
The second part of the album starts with the country rock inspired buoyant jaunt of ‘Wide-Angle’. Renate is at her ‘All Years Round’ best as she reminisces about the days of self-abandon in the Munich communes. Dropping acid and hanging onto every word of a lost love interest that long since moved on and left the original principles of change back at the bed-sit.
Both the aspirations and drugs are now replaced in the star’s backstage with “compromised cocktails”, lavishly bestowed upon our band by the new suit wearing management. I can’t help but think this is a dig at how their music has been adopted into a more commercial arena along with bands like Can who after seven or eight years had to, to a point, compromise their sound.
‘Three Eyed Overdrive’ is another one of those instrumental interludes, which features more haunting synths and organs. This time the main thrust is a pulsating synth that becomes pretty disturbing as it moodily stews away.
Karrer delivers a heavy burdening thick German accent in the next tune ‘Emigrant Song’. Cuckolding a parody driven lament to the story of the first German settlers to try and make their way in the USA. Escaping all the loons and stiffs from back home they hope to take a slice of the new world but end up in the inhospitable lands of Sierra Nevada. It would take brave men indeed to tame this mountainous region which had the worst of both climates: it could be either stiflingly meltingly hot or become a snowbound frozen tomb.
Some stereotyping of German traits is delivered with an outburst of banjo and homage to the Native Indians history as penned by Bob Dylan and The Band.
The paintings of Otto Dix, Max Beckmann and George Grosz influence the Weimar Republic hedonism of the next track, ‘Loosey Girls’. Heavy doses of Pink Floyd era Meddle are played out over this alluring jazz number, which features a saxophone solo and the hard-pressed vocals of Karrer. A cabaret inspired world of depravity in the days before the stirrings of the far right put an end to such loose times, this song weaves a heartfelt poem of woe as our prostitute heroine falls into a society of despair. It all sounds like Karrer has seen it happen too many times, though it has quite a moving melody and hits the right spot even though it carries some sentimentality.
Top Of The Mud’ ups the tempo as we get a heavy rock rendition of blues that ends in a glam infused knock at the current music scene. Renate and Karrer sing in unison as they lampoon their own route from space rock troubadours playing music from another dimension to the more structured ambitions of recent years. With lines like “might not be much fun, without any fans” they comment on their own situation within the industry and sound jaded and knocked about by the increasing lack of faith in what they’re doing. Though it is unfair as this album could be among their best.
Confidently sweeping in is the heavy South American tango tinged ‘Dreams’. Passionate Cuban tango like sounds and melody infused with the ruminants of a flamingo style shindig add to a track that has Karrer swoon about sharing thoughts of a love that got away through his dreams.
A segue way instrumental ‘Gala Gnome’ intrudes proceedings with an ambient brief interlude. Delayed synth combined with a low engine like hum produce an unnerving breather before the next song ‘5.5.55’ arrives: to much anticipation. Better known as the 5th of May 1955 this is the date that West Germany gained full sovereignty, though the US kept a presence there hoping to put off any plans the Soviets might have creeping over the border. The economic miracle of which this track speaks started off through the seeds of the Marshall plan and catapulted the Germans to becoming one of world’s most productive and eventually rich economies. By 1973 they had helped found the G6 nations group and became the industrial capital of Europe, all within thirty years of the end of the war. Contrary to belief they didn’t exactly get away with it easily, as both culturally and scientifically all intellectual property was either appropriated by the US or swallowed up into the allied nations own companies. Both France and the UK received more money through the Marshall plan then Germany: it wasn’t until the 1980s that we in the UK paid our debt off. Germany had paid a higher interest fee off and eventually by the mid Seventies had got rid of its debt. All this is adhered to in the song as this rock heavy jolting tune asks what could have been, space programmes are both mentioned in the sense of lost opportunity but also pilloried as being paid for by those who can’t afford it.
A reference is also made to the Krupp dynasty, a 400-year-old industrial family who owned some of the biggest steel and ammunitions factories in the country. Sympathetically playing to whoever was in charge at the time the family business survived most leaderships. A cosy relationship with the Nazi party helped them get all the major contracts to supply the army. Alfried Krupp, head of the company at the time in the 1930s and 40s, was an opportune shady wheeler-dealer who used slave labour during the war supplied by an ever-helpful Herr Hitler. Alfried got cold feet after the failure of the German invasion of Russia and started to siphon off money and try to keep a distance from the regime. After the war he was put up for war crimes and received a 12-year sentence. He was made to sell off his company, but here’s the sickening part. No one bought his business, and after spending half his initial sentence incarcerated, he was allowed out to take back control of it. This reinforces in part the underlying mistrust by the next generation who inevitably ended up trying to overthrow the system.
At the end of ‘5.5.55’ there is a short interjection. In the style of a shock jock US radio interview, a rambling 80 syllables a second ranter puts across questions to Hitler as though he was questioning the leader of some band. Hitler answers with snippets of his original speeches as our DJ mockingly goads him. This interview builds up with what sounds like an audience waiting in a theatre for the performance to begin. All of a sudden, they all break out into a fervent applause and cheering as Amon Duul II strike up their last jam. It becomes apparent that this audience is the one at Nuremberg.
The six minute instrumental ‘La Krautoma’ is based on the popular South American derived ‘La Paloma’, an old folk type of song that has been recreated a million times across every country: Hell, even Elvis used it for his hit ‘No More’. This space rock balling freak- out mixes in the old country tune as Leopold lets rip with one of his most ambitious drum solos of all time. Aggressive guitars intercede as notes are left on sustain and put through pitch shifters, whilst all hell breaks loose as pure flights of fancy take hold of the band. As the last galactic charging rhythms and effects fade out ‘Excessive Spray’ draws this grand opus to a close.
Military played recall on the snare accompanied by Yeti era subtle ambient stirrings end in triumph. Falk’s synth has its last say with some Gothic pretensions, whilst we feel a sudden sadness loom over the horizon. Never again would we hear Amon Duul II in such a creative manner, complete sounding: even if it is a move away from the improvised jams of yore.
And so, ends Krautrock’s most overtly ambitious and aspiring work of art; a beacon of farce that attracts only those willing to learn and willing to experience a direction in music rarely repeated. To be fair I’ve dissected this album to the point of obsession but hope in doing so that my enthusiasm sends you in the right direction and that you don’t dismiss the record as folly or high jinks theatrics. Though I hate bands who gabble on about their influences, Kasabian’s unexpected nod to Made In Germany may give it some attention, the richly deserved sort of attention that bands like Neu! and Can attract with ease. Though these guys sound practically stiff and cold in comparison to this flight of fantasy.
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Hi, my name is Dominic Valvona and I’m the Founder of the music/culture blog monolithcocktail.com For the last ten years I’ve featured and supported music, musicians and labels we love across genres from around the world that we think you’ll want to know about. No content on the site is paid for or sponsored and we only feature artists we have genuine respect for /love. If you enjoy our reviews (and we often write long, thoughtful ones), found a new artist you admire or if we have featured you or artists you represent and would like to buy us a coffee at https://ko-fi.com/monolithcocktail to say cheers for spreading the word, then that would be much appreciated.
THE MONTHLY DIGEST OF ACCUMULATED NEW MUSIC, THE SOCIAL INTER-GENERATIONAL/ECLECTIC AND ANNIVERSARY ALBUMS CELEBRATING PLAYLIST, AND ARCHIVE MATERIAL CHOSEN BY DOMINIC VALVONA

___/NEW\___
Jonah Parzen-Johnson ‘You’re Never Really Alone’
(We Jazz)
The soloist is never alone it seems, when on stage. And the highly prolific, serial collaborator and in-demand Chicago born, but Brooklyn-based, alto and baritone saxophonist and flutist Jonah Prazen-Johnson (regular followers will recognize the name from his trio partnership appearance with the Lycia inspired Berke Can Özcanon the Twin Rocks album from late last year) stands in the spotlight reacting to, feeding off of, and giving it all back to his audience and the wider community: hence the “We made this together” statement included on the album cover.
In the age of high anxiety, division and unwilling compromise, Jonah finds both the space to let go of the strains on the mind, the worries and concerns. In a nutshell, with just the use of his polytonal saxophone holds, wanes and drones (between higher trills and deeper bass-y vibrations; often together simultaneously) and willow-y, natural blossom garden flute, he projects invocations of regret and rumination whilst offering support, and even “courage” to see through the worst of it. To the undulating waves, near bristled distortions and more melodious tones, to the didgeridoo-like circles, fog horns, honks and drawn-out, Jonah evokes melodic traces of his native home (Chicago), the avant-garde, explorative and pastoral. If names and luminaries such as Sam Rivers, Marshall Allen, Coltrane, Roscoe Mitchell (especially his partnership with Anthony Braxton), John Zorn, Peter Brötzmann and Jeremy Steig grab you, then make the commitment and purchase a copy a.s.a.p.
ZA! + Perrate ‘Jolifanto’
(Lovemonk) 22nd March 2024
Bonding together on one Dadaist inspired transmogrified cross-pollination of sonic and musical ideas, the Spanish collaboration of the duo ZA! (No strangers to this blog; first featured in my highly popular Spanish Underground piece from more than a decade ago) and the experimental vocalist Perrate come together on an extraordinary album of sound assaults and hybrids that turn Iberian traditions and cultures on their heads.
Both partners in this enterprise have spent two decades or more transforming the traditional music of their native land; the critically applauded Perrate exploring the “outer edges” of Flamenco, his identity and heritage entwined with the age-old Gitano Iberian Romani community of which he is descended – a culture abundant with the stars and progenitors, innovators of Flamenco -, and ZA! often crazily and imaginatively merging a variety of Spanish styles, folk music, with anything from the African beats to the psychedelic, electronic, Balinese polyrhythms, thick distortion, free jazz and the shepherds of Tuva.
Taking the first word from Hugo Ball’s exhaustive Dada recited ‘Karawane’ phonetic poem, “Jolifanto” is packed with ideas and flights of fantasy; yet never loses its Iberian foraged roots, with plenty of recognizable Flamenco guitar frills and intimate quivery entwined attentive and descriptive accompaniment – sometimes sounding like a cross between Raül Refree and Jeff Buckley. You can also pick up the atmospheric settings of the dance, the performance throughout the album. The original performance of that poem, performed at the famous iconic Cabaret Voltaire, put Hugo in a trance; the captivated audience compelled to rush up on stage before the Dadaist luminary was dragged away. A certain lunacy, this spirited experimentalism and performance is transcribed to a lot of ZA!’s music, but it somehow makes perfect sense when combined with the poetic longing calls, mewling, whoops, mantra, assonant and almost muezzin-like vocals of Perrate. At any one time you are likely to hear echoes of Moorish Andalusia, oscillated dub, elephant horns, percussive scuttles, krautrock, Vodun invocation, post-punk, no wave and Afro-Cuban, and pick out bursts of Jah Wobble, Anthony Braxton, Zacht Automaat, CAN, Greco and Cambuzat, African Head Charge, the Reynols, Mike Cooper & Viv Cooringham’s ‘A Lemon Fell’, Harry Belafonte (I kid you not), Sakamoto and the Gypsy Kings.
From the cosmic and unsettling to near terrifying, there’s a lot to process in this slightly madcap collaboration. And yet in saying that, this album has soul and a seriousness about it in revaluating, pushing at the boundaries and ideas of what Iberian culture means in the 21st century; finding connections across the borders with music from as far away as Arabia, South America and the original roots of the region’s Romani communities. A great work of art and brilliance from the partnership that will excite, wrong foot and entrance in equal measures.
Leonidas & Hobbes ‘Pockets Of Light’
(Hobbes Music)
Expanding upon their sonic partnership with a debut album of epic cosmological proportions, Leonidas & Hobbes reach further than ever before into both the cerebral and outer limits of space to channel a litany of anguish woes.
Between them, this pairing of like-minded curious and lauded electronic musicians/DJs/club night instigators, cover the capitals of London and Edinburgh with their enviable CVs and provenances in everything from house to techno, the ambient, Balearic and dance music genres. Making good on previous EPs (2017’s Rags Of Time and 2021’s Aranath) they now face the philosophical quandaries of humanity, technology, climate change, extinction and metaphysics across thirteen movements, dance grooves, soundtracks and celestial symphonies.
A self-proclaimed ‘lockdown album’, the pandemic and stretches of time spent apart from socializing and giging, have had a deep impact on both artists; combine that with becoming parents and breakups, and you’ll find a pair of minds concentrated on finding the ‘light’ in a universe of emptiness and apocalypse. With effected dialogue snatches of ground control communications and alternative pseudo drug escapes from authoritarian mind control and conditioning speeches, and broadcasted weather reports from the eye of the storm (in Charleston, North Carolina to be exact) smattered throughout, the concerns, enquires and philosophies of both partners on this odyssey are made clear.
Like one long set, a voyage of peaks, beats and more trance-y and contemplated ambient pieces, this album goes from literal takeoff to drifting untethered in the void and back to the inner mindscape. Production and style wise there’s retro-space and kosmische hints of Vangelis, La Dusseldorf, Iasos and Klaus Schulze next to more acid zapping old school evocations and breaks of Wagon Christ, Orbital, Luke Slater, Mo Wax and Howie B, plus a Balearic vision of The Orb and echoes of the 303 drum sounds of Mantronix and Man Parrish. Vapours and wisps mystify certain suites, whilst others bounce along on more kinetic waves as mindscapes are mixed with technology, science and the sci-fi. Pockets of Light channels Leonidas and Hobbes’ worries and prophecies into a reflective existential soundtrack.
Their Divine Nerve ‘The Return Of The Lamb’
(Staalplaat)
A second inclusion this year for the Ukrainian trick noise maker Dmytro Fedorenko, his last Variát collaborative venture with Masami Akita (under his Merzbow alias), Unintended Intention, was featured in this year’s inaugural Digest. A brutal, scarred abrasion of twisted steel and concrete that same atmospheric heavy set of dark META electronica is now stripped almost entirely of the human touch for something altogether more esoteric and alien.
With the Washington DC experimental artist Jeff Surak (who has a CV far too numerous and varied to list here, but in brief, he made his first tape manipulations in the 80s under the 1348 moniker on his own Watergate Tapes imprint, lived in Russia in the early 90s, and after returning home, directed the annual Sonic Circuits Festival of Experimental Music in DC for thirteen years…the list goes on) as his foil, Dmytro finds yet another vehicle for expelling demons, the bestial, the apparitions in the machines and unearthly. Under the afflatus/supernatural imbued Their Divine Nerve title both accomplished participants retune the Fortean radio set for a corrosive, fizzled, buzzing unholy noisy embrace of the pained, hurt, mystical and chthonian.
Generous with the amount and duration of the material, this is a serious set of discordant and more hermitic vibrations, spread over ten (thirteen tracks if you buy the “bonus” version, which does actually include the title-track) post-industrial strength hauntings of the soul and psyche. The action varies, however, from invocations of early Richard H. Kirk to Basic Channel, Bernard Szajner, SEODAH, Coil, Alejandro Jodorowsky’s Holy Mountain score, and Spain’s underground tape culture in the 80s. And within that sound-off board, portals and channels open up to the slithered tentacles of the Cthulhu and other leviathans from the depths, as dark matter is resourced to build a haunted factory of unidentified operative machinery and tools. Phantoms are everywhere in this fuckery of scrunched marches, square bladed sawing, needle sharp scratches of surfaces and iron materials.
Axes to grind, metaphors for the growing unease and trepidations of unimpeded violence, the continuing evil invasion of Ukraine, you could easily read the sonic tealeaves on this immersive experiment. All I know is that the biblical inspired The Return Of The Lamb offers analogies to the Christian symbol of sweetness, forgiveness, meekness, gentleness, innocence and purity, but it’s also a representation of both Christ himself and that of a sacrificial animal – when depicted with the Lion it can mean a state of paradise. Make what you will of that liturgy, but hope and salvation might yet arise from the distresses and savagery. In short, Their Divine Nerve is a successful debut in noisy art forms, horror, alien visitations and mystery.
Dave Harrington, Max Jaffe and Patrick Shiroishi ‘Speak, Moment’
(AKP Recordings)
An enviable trio of acclaimed and highly prolific musicians pulls together their talents and experiences for an improvisational album of both suffused gazing/reflection and wilder, unbound avant-garde extemporized entanglements. Dave Harrington, Max Jaffe and Patrick Shiroishi’s CVs, appearances and collaborations are lengthy and varied: far too numerous to list here anyway. But suffice to say this triumvirate of contemporary jazz explorers covers more or less all avenues of that genre’s legacy and penchant for change, experiment – from the more pliable to wielding and addressing the abstract evocations of trauma.
In the spirit of improvisation, all three players dashed this recording off in a single afternoon (as it happens, a couple of years back in an LA studio on the 25th October, my birthday!) having only met that same day for the first time. Astonishingly, Speak, Moment is a very sophisticated, cohesive album that gels together perfectly: even during its more untethered and intense passages of abandon.
The performances move loosely from the near ambient undertones of Jaffe’s incipient and resonating textural cymbal and sieved-like snare washes, the subtle twangs and psychedelic mirages of Harrington’s guitar, and the lilted tonal flutters and more tuneful rises of Shiroishi’s saxophone, to the near cacophony of staccato breaks of later tracks like ‘Ship Rock’ – a sort of stormy tempest rock-jazz fusion that sounds like The Jim Black Trio tied to a maelstrom tossed raft with Chris Corsano, Pat Metheny and the Red Crayola.
The traversed dreamy opener, ‘Staring Into The Imagination (Of Your Face)’, seems to allow the trio all the time and space needed to eloquently and in a more gauzy manner, express a soliloquy to the processing of feelings, environment and the unsaid – Harrington’s guitar reminding me in part of Fernando Perales and Myles Cochran, whilst Patrick Shiroishi’s sax has touches of Dexter Gordon, Roscoe Mitchell and Sam Rivers. Talking of Harrington, I did read that his own influences range from Bill Frisell to John Zorn and Jerry Garcia. The latter is very much channeled on the spiritual percussive trinket rattled and leviathan looming ‘How To Draw Buildings’, with guitar parts that sound almost late 60s Woodstock acid-rock in inspiration (almost Hendrix-like in his more restrained and meditative mode). You can also hear the aria-theremin higher voice-like notes of Sonny Sharrock amongst the wilderness and mizzle and sizzled resonance of Jaffe’s drums on that same track.
The next track, ‘Dance Of The White Shadow And Golden Kite’, reminded me of Ariel Kalma – that and Ornate Coleman in an exotic Afro-jazz bobbing dance with the Art Ensemble Of Chicago.
The atonal sensitivities shift amongst the ambiguous presence of other forces and introspective moods across a quintet of spontaneous explorations on an accomplished gathering of talented musicians. If you have an ear and like for the Cosmic Range, Tumi Mogorosi, Yonatan Gat and the Gunn-Truscinski Duo then you have to own this traversing improvised experiment.
Twin Coast ‘To Feel’
Back with another enveloped in guitar feedback sculpted and layered vision, the Chicago shoegazers and noiseniks Twin Coast get pulled into a paranormal alternate dimension: A static TV set cell that seems to be at least languidly comfortable and dreamy. Almost numbed to the whole sorry state of it all, the duo lose themselves in an unholy hallucinogenic white noise of static fuzz and crystal shimmers and flange reverberations. I’m calling erased apparitional shoegaze.
The traditional B-side as it were, is handed over to diy electronic artist Isaac Lowenstein, aka Donkey Basketball (a EDM project that apparently started off a joke but quickly grew into a very real act, mixing and merging everything from acid to jungle and techno). Isaac, a fellow Chicago resident, transform the original into a kinetic, machine and mechanics switching, twisting, ratcheting and spring-loaded minimalist techno percussive tunneled and vaporous space-trip. I’m hearing a touch of Mike Dred, Mouse On Mars, Ritchie Hawtin, Basic Channel and Autechre added to the mere essence of the original shoegaze immersion from the ether.
___/THE SOCIAL PLAYLIST: VOLUME 84\___

Continuing with the decade-long Social – originally a DJ club night I’d pick up at different times over the past 20 plus years, and also a café residency from 2012 to 2014 – playlist, each month I literally chose the records that celebrate anniversary albums, those that I’d love to hear on the radio waves or DJs play once and while, and those records that pay a homage and respect to those artists we’ve lost in the last month.
Anniversary spots this month go to the Style Council’s ’84 special Café Bleu (I’ve chosen to kick the whole playlist off this week with the more dance-funk, WAR impressionist ‘Strength Of Your Nature’, from an album that slips mostly into more Post-MOD, Jazz Café piano), RUN-DMC’s self-titled holler from the same year and Scott Walker’s menacing, out-there Climate Of The Hunter masterpiece. From a decade before, I’ve added a glam pop-gun tune from T. Rex’s Zinc Alloy And The Hidden Riders Of Tomorrow – the LP that must have been on Bowie’s mind when recording Young Americans. Leaping ahead twenty years and there’s a smattering of ’94 releases from the Hip-Hop royalty Gang Starr (Hard To Earn), Main Source (Fuck What You Think), The Auteurs (Now I’m A Cowboy) and the Aphex Twin (Selected Ambient Works 2; so good I’ve included two tracks). From more recent(ish) times, there’s a choice track from the late metal face don of leftfield Hip-Hop MF Doom and the equally revered Madlib, under their partnership guise of Madvilliany – I’ve chosen the Sun-Ra anointing ‘Shadows Of Tomorrow’, which pulls in the aardvark Quasimoto. And, as featured below in this month’s archive spot, a track from the Ministry Of Wolves ensemble cast of fairytale weavers album Republik Der Wölfe: subtitled ‘A Fairytale Massacre With Live Music’, a joint enterprise between the Dortmund Theater’s production director Claudia Bauer and musical director Paul Wallfisch, with the unholy musical alliance of Bad Seeds co-founder and adroit solo artist Mick Harvey, one time Einstürzende Neubauten, Crime And The city Solution grizzled maverick and one half of the Hackedepicciotto duo Alexander Hacke and fellow Crime and the City band mate, Berlin Love Parade co-instigator and the better half of that Hackedepicciotto partnership, Danielle De Picciotto, providing the suitable nursery grime soundtrack.
We can’t pass the month without marking the sad death of Karl Wallinger, the master songwriter behind hits for others, but also sole instigator of World Party – after leaving The Waterboys in the mid 80s. I guess ‘She’s The One’ will be rotated extensively, but I’ve chosen the just as popular and more soulfully blusy ‘Ship Of Fools’.
From the new to old past gloires, missives and curiosities, making up the rest of the playlist are tracks from Fat Francis, Dalla Diallo, Alamo, Trips And Falls, De La Soul, Heldon, MIZU, Gary Clail, Incentive and more….
TRACK LIST IN FULL:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
The Style Council ‘Strength Of Your Nature’
Vampire Rodents ‘Trilobite’
Gang Starr ‘Code Of The Streets’
Run-DMC ‘Hollis Crew (Krush Groove 2)’
Madvillian (MF Doom/Madlib FT. Quasimoto) ‘Shadows Of Tomorrow’
Dalla Diallo ‘Sinde M’bobo’
T-Rex ‘Painless Persuasion V. The Meathawk Immaculate’
Metamorfosi ‘Caronte’
World Party ‘Ship Of Fools’
Walpurgis ‘Disappointment’
Fat Francis ‘It’s Not Rock and Roll’
Alamo ‘Got To Find Another Way’ We Cut Corners ‘Three People’
In Time ‘This Is Not Television’
The Wizards From Kansas ‘Hey Mister’
Eyes Of Blue ‘Largo’
Trips And Falls ‘I Learned Sunday Morning, On A Wednesday’
Kevin Vicalvi ‘Song From Down The Hall’
The Auteurs ‘Chinese Bakery’
Scott Walker ‘Rawhide’
The Ministry Of Wolves ‘Rumpelstiltskin’
MIZU ‘prphtbrd’
Heldon ‘Ballade Pour Puig Antich, Révolutionnaire Assassiné en Espagne’
Aphex Twin ‘#24’
Stringmodulator ‘White Noise’
Aphex Twin ‘#12’
Liz Christine ‘Two Seconds’
Heldon ‘Ouais, Marchais, Mieux Qu’en 68’
Incentive ‘Time Flows Beyond You’
Gary Clail ‘A Man’s Place On Earth’
Okay Temiz ‘Galaxy Nine’
De La Soul ‘What’s More’
Main Source ‘F*CK WHAT YOU THINK’
___/ARCHIVE\___
TEN YEARS OLD THIS MONTH: THE MINISTRY OF WOLVES ‘MUSIC FROM REPUBLIK DER WÖLF’
The Ministry Of Wolves ‘Music From Republik Der Wölfe’(Mute) 10th March 2014
Pre-dating the Viennese totem of the subconscious but already a Freudian labyrinth of analogy, metaphor and augury, the Gothic fairytale fables of the Brothers Grimm have just got a hell of a lot more unsettling and personal. Given a Pulitzer Prize winning overhaul by the esteemed award winning, self-confessional American poet Anne Sexton in her 1971 book ‘Transformations’, these same tales were brought back into the realm of the adults. Her candid, revisionist take, from the point of view of a ‘middle-aged witch’, on these standard stories is a beat poetic vivid survey on human nature: those all too familiar idiosyncrasies and failures set to a contemporary (for its time) miasma of inner turmoil.
Proving to be just as poignant forty odd years later, those reinterpretations are revitalized in a brand new multimedia stage production, debuting at the Theater Dortmund. To be performed tonight (15th February 2014) the Republik Der Wölfe, subtitled ‘A Fairytale Massacre With Live Music’, is a joint enterprise between both the Dortmund’s production director Claudia Bauer and musical director Paul Wallfisch, with the unholy musical alliance of Bad Seeds co-founder and adroit solo artist Mick Harvey, one time Einstürzende Neubauten and now Crime And The city Solution grizzled maverick Alexander Hacke and fellow Crime and the City band mate and Berlin Love Parade co-instigator Danielle De Picciotto, providing the suitable nursery grime soundtrack. Detached however from the visual spectacle, that very same soundtrack is due its own inaugural release next month; its loose narrative a series of congruous chapters, easily followed without any other stimulated aide to guide you.
Original characters that we’ve grown to love, hate, revile or recoil from, are transposed into the darker parts of our psyche. Those parable like lessons and auguries of danger get kicked around in a quasi-junkie Burroughs nightmare of cynicism and surreal terror. Tucked into a all too knowing grown ups world of jealousy and greed, Picciotto plays the part of storyteller – in this case switched, as I’ve already mentioned, from the usual young, naïve heroine into a middle-aged witch – on the opening account, ‘The Gold Key’. It’s followed by the Teutonic heavy drawling gusto of Hacke’s ‘Rumpelstiltskin’; played up to full effect, as the poisoned dwarf is revealed to be our doppelganger, ‘the enemy within’, and the spilt personality waiting to cut its way out of all of us. Sounding quite like a missing Amon Duul II number from the Hi Jack era, the song’s maligned and mischievous protagonist elicits a kind of sympathy: ‘No child will ever call me Papa’. Condemned to play the part of cruel interloper, poor old Rumpelstiltskin exists to remind us of our demonic, primal nature: a nagging inner soul tempting us to commit hari-kari on restraint.
The fabled ‘Frog Prince’ is a slithery customer, made to sound like an odious creep pursuing his very turned-off love interest. Mick Harvey moons and croaks with relish in recalling the bizarre tale of doomed romance; the moral, though dark and disturbing, can be summed up as: be careful what you wish for, the law of averages doesn’t exist and in this case turned out to be a dud, the frog was certainly no prince.
Happy endings become even more blurred with the triumvirate of leading ladies ‘Cinderella’, ‘Rapunzel’ and ‘Snow White’. ‘Cinders’ is a Casio pre-set piece of waltzing lullaby, dreamily led by our protagonist chanteuse, whilst Rapunzel and Snow White are given a fluid pained Leonard Cohen treatment. The latter a roll call of ‘seven’ inspired symbolism and metaphor, the former an idolised plaintive requiem to the exiled and ill-fated American dancer, Isadora Duncan – forced to leave the States for Europe because of her pro-Soviet sympathies, Duncan died rather ironically at the hands of the famous scarves she used to so great an effect in her dances, after one become entangled around the open-spoked wheels and rear axle of a car she was travelling in, breaking her neck.
Other notable tales of woe include the opium-induced, somnambulist ‘Sleeping Beauty’ – literally a languid sleepwalk through some Tibetan flavoured labyrinth – and lurid Harvey sung ‘Hansel & Gretel’ – the apparent naïve, saintly, twins getting the better of a cannibalistic old crone. But its ‘Little Red Ridding Hood’ who inhabits the most contemporary street hustling environment, transported from the danger lurking Black Forests into a world of creeps, junkies and ‘transmorphism’. The levels of macabre are amped up and the underlying psychosis adroitly delivered with atmospheric relish; our cast of ‘make-believe’ characters all too fallible human traits and sufferings enriched with a Murder Ballads style makeover, part Gothic part horrid histories.
FIFTY YEARS OLD THIS MONTH: T-REX ‘ZINC ALLOY AND THE HIDDEN RIDERS OF TOMORROW’
T-REX ‘Zinc Alloy And The Hidden Riders Of Tomorrow’ 1st March 1974
Whilst we are, or should be, aware of Bowie’s flirtatious lifting of Marc Bolan ideas, it’s the Zinc Alloy And The Hidden Riders Of Tomorrow: A Cream Cage In August album’s experiment with soul, a full eighteen months before the Thin White Duke’s own Young Americans, that proves to be the most obvious example of this latent influence (or if you want to be less generous, theft).
Swelling the ranks with the seductive, sumptuous tones of Gloria Jones – who evidently became Bolan’s love interest and partner till he died in 1977; a relationship that resulted in the birth of their son, Rolan – Bolan’s music opened out into yet greater velvety, blue-eyed soulful panoramas; a mix of plastic R&B, glamorous strutting and quasi-New York candy pop. From the bomp and shoop of the Gloria(fied), ‘Truck On’, to, in Bolan’s mind, one of T.Rex’s most ambitious singles, ‘Teenage Dream’, there’s an almost salacious knowing sophistication at work.
Already being regarded in some circles as washed-up, the ‘Zinc’ alter ego was an attempt to concentrate resources on the UK, as he’d spent considerable time attempting to crack the US market. He would continue to adapt the soul train, jingle-jangle sound with various other ‘boogie-woogie’ styles, including swamp rock; as he demonstrates with zeal on the poorly received LP, Bolan’s Zip Gun – at this point he may have thought seriously about sticking that ‘zip gun’ to his head as the album didn’t even chart.
Hi, my name is Dominic Valvona and I’m the Founder of the music/culture blog monolithcocktail.com For the last ten years I’ve featured and supported music, musicians and labels we love across genres from around the world that we think you’ll want to know about. No content on the site is paid for or sponsored and we only feature artists we have genuine respect for /love. If you enjoy our reviews (and we often write long, thoughtful ones), found a new artist you admire or if we have featured you or artists you represent and would like to buy us a coffee at https://ko-fi.com/monolithcocktail to say cheers for spreading the word, then that would be much appreciated.
THE MONTHLY DIGEST OF ACCUMULATED NEW MUSIC, THE SOCIAL INTER-GENERATIONAL/ECLECTIC AND ANNIVERSRAY ALBUMS CELEBRATING PLAYLIST, AND ARCHIVE MATERIAL CHOSEN BY DOMINIC VALVONA

Continuing a series that started in 2023, the Digest is my one-stop column of the new and the old; a secondary home to all those releases I missed out on or didn’t get room to feature in either my Perusal reviews features or singular Our Daily Bread posts, plus a chance to celebrate timely anniversary albums and dip into my own record collection with the a special anything goes playlist, and to, finally, dip into the Monolith Cocktail Archives.
The New: this will be a briefing of a sort, with a short outline, thoughts and reactions to a number of recent albums from my inbox – currently a 1000+ releases a month on average!
The Social Playlist: choice music collected from across the ages, borders and genres, with a smattering of tracks from choice anniversary celebrating albums of worth and cult status. Consider it my unofficial radio show.
The Archives: self-explanatory, but each month I chose past pieces from the extensive Monolith Cocktail back pages that have a timely ring to them.
_((THE NEW))_
LINA_ ‘Fado Camões’
(Galileo Music)
Fado dramatist with the spellbinding voice, LINA_ follows up her impressive collaboration with Raul Refree with another unique reading of the famous Portuguese form of sullenness, sorrow and plaint. On that previous project, the diaphanous and emotionally sonorous pulling songstress and composer transformed the music of the Fado legend and actress Amália Rodrigues; filtering that icon’s songbook through a modern production of minimalistic gauze and sonic atmospheric effects.
Back this time with the British producer and musician Justin Adams (credits include projects with Robert Plant, Tinariwen, Eno and Sinead O’Conner to name but a few) and a small ensemble, LINA_ takes on the classical 16th century poetics of Portugal’s most famous literary son, Luís Vaz de Camões. So titan a figure in that country’s rich history, his medieval period language of lyrical romantic aches, mortality and nature is said to be the basis of Portuguese itself: often called the “language of Camões”. Integral to the very soul of Portugal then, it’s fitting that such a talent as LINA_ is behind this interpretation of his work; transcribing it’s prescient and near timeless reach to the music of Fado. Examples of which include, when translated into English from the original lyrical language, “They hear the tale of my misfortunes, and cure their ordeals with my hell”. Tortured but also overwhelmingly beautiful and romantic throughout, it suits the musical form very well across twelve near magical songs of air-y mysticism, the venerable, yearning and dreamy. Musically tender, accentuated and like a fog, mist at times, even vapour of the mere essence of a score, there’s echoes of old Spain, the Balearics, North Africa, the Middle East but also Turkey and the Hellenic. You can also add the supernatural to that list too: a passing over into the ether. At times other times there is an almost semi-classical feel, merged with Iberian and Galician new wave, with some songs standing out as radio-friendly floated diaphanous pop visions of the Fado spirit.
Incredible throughout, LINA_ once more proves herself the most striking if not talented artist in this field of exploration and music; bring together beautifully and evocatively time honoured traditions and the legacy of literary Portugal with the country’s most prized and famous export to magic up another essential album. LINA_ is a leading light, pushing the boundaries without losing the soul, truth and appeal of the music she adopts and transforms. Fado Camões is another artistic triumph.
Andy Haas/David Grollman ‘Act Of Love’
The experimental NYC percussionist-assemblage artist and knight of the Ghosts Of The Holy Ghost Spermic Brotherhood (alongside saxophonist Andy Haas and the late multi-tasking Michael Evans) David Grollman knows more than most about the cruelties of the Alzheimer’s Disease; losing his wife, the poet Rita Stein-Grollman to Early Onset Alzheimer’s in early 2023.
Funneled and channeled into this most recent album with Haas, Grollman and his sonic partner of avant-garde arts and evocations reflect the very essence of loss through an apparatus of Dadaist and Fluxus apparatus: namely in Grollman’s case the balloon, with the textured tactile touches and stretches of its latex surface wrinkling as it expels its air; in a manner, like the life force slowly leaving the deflated body and personality of what someone once was as they lose themselves to this incurable disease. Meanwhile on sax, Haas deals in exaggerated long, slowly drawn-out breathes and blows; sometimes appearing to lift the weight that sits on his lungs, and at other times making noises that resemble steam and the pressure of valves being released and squeezed. Together it sounds like La Monte Young, John Zorn, Anthony Braxton and Marshall Allen in remembrance.
But then there’s another dimension, the brilliant, often acerbic poetry of Rita (written before she succumbed to the disease), which is read out in both almost laconic and grumpy confrontational style by David. Another piece of text, ‘Message From ME’, which the title makes obvious, is a voicemail left by the already mentioned and late Michael Evans (who passed away back in 2021), another knock-about figure on the scene and much missed member of the Ghosts Of The Holy Ghost Spermic Brotherhood. Act Of Love is a challenging and strained but obviously emotional well of remembrance, with the harsh and more attentive abstractions of the performances somehow managing to convey that which can’t always be said or represented.
Variát & Merzbow ‘Unintended Intentions’
(I Shall Sing Until My Land Is Free) – Released the end of last year
Unsurprisingly concentrating the mind, the brutal barbaric dystopian-scarred landscapes of war-torn Ukraine have been transmogrified into the abrasive, concrete debris soundscapes of nightmares by the trick noisemaker of dissonance and pulverizing noise, and co-instigator of the Prostir label, Dmyto Fedorenko (aka Variát). As his homeland continues to be bombarded and churned up by the invading forces of the despot Putin, Fedorenko teams up with fellow noise sculptor of some standing, Masami Akita – the harsh and confrontational Japanese artist behind the 500 plus back catalogue Merzbow project – to reshape the needled, scowled, squalled, overbearing, sinister, menacing and static coarse ruins: the only hope of which, is in the “resilience” of the Ukrainian people holding back the tide of destruction and evil.
Crushing morbid forces merge with the air raids of drone attacks, decay, coded signals, charged force fields, transistors, the Fortean radio set and the alien. Occasionally a keyboard chord materializes, along with the recognizable sounds of toms and breaks – the drums sounding like at times like they’re being beaten with boxing gloved pummeling hands. At one point it could be the set of a roofless cathedral, another, from the charred remains of a devastating fire: I could of course be projecting all this.
Throbbing Gristle, Gunther Wüsthoff, Jóhann Jóhannsson, Sunn O))) (if they cashed in their guitars for synths and a laptop), Oberman Knocks, Boris and Scott Walker are all brought to mind. And yet this is a unique collaborative pneumatic and caustic vision from the two artists, one that can’t help but evoke the devastating, mindless and distressing scenes unfolding. And if you needed any prompting or a reminder, profits for this release all go to supporting ‘Ukraine resistance against Russia’ with donations made to self-defense and humanitarian foundations. PS: Thanks by the way to the label, I Shall Sing Until My Land Is Free, for the CD and stickers; always appreciated to receive something physical in an increasingly soulless, downloaded or streaming, non-committal world.
Various ‘Hyperboloid 2024’
(Hyperboloid Music)
I had to try and shoehorn this end-of-year compilation from the Latvian label in to the Digest this month. Twenty-five visionary trance-y and techno tracks from the roster’s myriad of artists – a sort of Balkans and beyond Warp label Artificial Intelligence series for the new age and new century -, there’s variations of the electronic genre spread out across a generous showcase that marks yet another creatively successful year for the imprint. Old skool rave breaks sit next to entrancing vista soundscapes; d’n’b with hardcore; and near Grimes-like pop electronica with thoughtful rumination. Get stuck in.
Roma Zuckerman ‘Phenomenon of Provincial Mentality’
(Gost Zvuk)
Filaments, electric currents, crispy buzzes and granular fizzles combine to form the most redacted and evocative of minimal techno, deep house and EBM-esque dance music on the Siberian producer’s archival showcase for the Gost Zvuk label. Charged, pulsing and rhythmic at all times, Roma Zuckerman’s spheres of influences run through glimpses and throbs of Basic Channel, Kreidler, Rob Hood and Dave Clarke, twinned and merged with an alternative cosmonaut Soviet era vision of Sky Records. And most surprising of all, on the collection’s finale, ‘Compañeros’, there’s a move toward windy-fluted Latin American with the use of a Spanish pastoral rhythm guitar. Voices, the echoes and morphed ravings, communications and alien warped effects of which, play their part too; at times sounding like Richard H. Kirk, and at others, like some two-way radio cosmic interface between ground control and Soyuz shuttle. A highly recommended slice of deep bass, futuristic and simultaneously retro-futuristic minimalist techno that will almost definitely make the end of year lists.
(((THE SOCIAL/VOLUME 82)))

Continuing with the decade-long Social – originally a DJ club night I’d pick up at different times over the past 20 plus years, and also a café residency from 2012 to 2014 – playlist, each month I literally chose the records that celebrate anniversary albums; those that I’d love to hear on the radio waves or DJs play once and while; and those records that pay a homage and pay respects to those artists who we’ve lost on the way.
January starts with one such sad but celebratory nod to the late Marlena Shaw, who passed away last weekend (I’m incidentally writing this at the start of the third week of the month). The California Soul(stress) had some real sass and attitude, as proven by the provocative, taking-no-shit, title of her 1974 LP, Who Is This Bitch, Anyway?; from which I’ve included the short gospel-light ‘The Lord Giveth And The Lord Taketh Away’. Also 50 this year, there’s tracks from Pekka Pohjola’s Harakka Bialoipokku, Harmonia’s ‘Musik Von Harmonia’ and (sticking with a kosmische/krautrock theme) something from the quartet of albums made under the auspices of The Cosmic Jokers nom de plume – a supergroup that never really was, the main participants of which included such lauded icons as Manuel Göttsching, Klaus Schulze, Jürgen Dollase and Harald Grosskopf fucking around in Dieter Dierks’ studio; the results of which, unknowingly recorded by Rolf-Ulrich Kaiser and Gille Lettman at the time were put out during 1974 – Schulze was incandescent enough to sue over the whole affair.
40th anniversary nods go to Finnis Africae’s incredible fourth world self-titled peregrination, Bob Dylan’s Planet Waves and Harold Budd & Eno’s prized and influential The Pearl LP. A decade later and there’s also tracks from The Wake’s Tidal Wave Of Hope and Air Liquide’s Nephology (see my archive essay style piece further down the column).
I usually leave the most current and newest of tracks to the Monolith Cocktail’s Monthly Playlist (next edition due next week), but have included recent(ish) tracks from Igor Osypov, Bagaski, Nicole Mitchell and, not really new but reissued late last year, a track from the originally 1984 released Ein Bundel Faulnis in der Grube album by Holger Hiller (of Palais Schaumburg German new wave fame) – reissued that is by krautrock/kosmische specialists Bureau B.
The rest is for you to discover; a smattering of eclectic delights, wonders and nuggets from across time and from across the globe. Actually, if you are reading this, and if you have time, I’d really like some feedback on the length of these playlists. I’ve gradually tightened the running order down to around the 30 mark and the length under 3 hours – down from 33 last year, and before that anything from 40 to 100!!! Let me know if this is a ridiculous number, or just right.
___TRACK LISTING AS FOLLOWS:
Marlena Shaw ‘The Lord Giveth And The Lord Taketh Away’
Bob Dylan ‘Tough Mama’
Ethel-Ann-Powell ‘The Jaybird Song’
Acayouman ‘Si Ou Ladje Moin’
The Wake ‘Britain’
A Passing Fancy ‘Your Trip’
The New Tweedy Brothers ‘I Can See It’
Americo Brito ‘Sabe Na Panama’
J.O. Araba ‘Kelegbe Megbe’
Finnis Africae ‘Zoo Zula’
The Cosmic Jokers ‘Power Drive’
Ike Yard ‘Beyondersay’
Air Liquide ‘Semwave’
Holger Hiller ‘Chemische und physikalische Entdeckungen’
Harmonia ‘Sonnenschein’
Fireballet ‘Carrollon’
Pekka Pohjola ‘Hereillakin uni jatkuu’
Dhidalah ‘Adamski’
Son Of Bazerk ‘The Band Got Swivey On The Wheels’
Bagaski ‘Hawkish Torso’
Joe Mubare ‘Number 8’
Nicole Mitchell ‘You Know What’s In There’
Igor Osypov ‘Vango’
Lard Free ‘Warinbaril’
Teengenerate ‘Something You Got’
Tasavallan Presidentti ‘Weather Brightly’
Second Hand ‘I Am Nearly There’
Duffy Power ‘Glimpses Of God’
Grothbros ‘Tollah Tra Flex’
((((ARCHIVES))))
Air Liqude ‘Nephology – The New Religion’ Is 30 Years Old This Month

Selective electronic musicians often come out with the line that they’ve been influenced on a particular album by the Krautrock greats, citing such luminaries as Roedelius, Michael Rothar, Klaus Schulze, Irmin Schmidt etc. – as though they were in some way picking up the baton and running with it.
Of course most of this is a whole crock of shit, as hardly anyone essentially understood that those innovators from the 70s were always moving forward and re-inventing their sound, never usually dwelling on the past; just copying it or reprising it totally misses the point.
OK, so I’m sort of meandering off on a tangent, but basically you can take a look at the likes of Neu!, Cluster, Kraftwerk and CAN and see they were making something fresh and new; to really take on their train of thought means to push those delineated boundaries even further.
Heir apparent to the synthesizer and analogue re-wiring school of exploration, were, and still are, the Cologne duo of Air Liquide. They took up their forefathers brave new world mantle, and built an ambitious and inspiring variation based around the technological leaps in music production; concentrating on the styles of Techno and Acid House.
Their seminal opus of 1994, Nephology, adopts vestiges of cinematic, industrial, ambient and dub; producing an impressive soundtrack that stands up well even by today’s standards, and adheres to the German desires of progress.
The duo comprised of the exceptionally talented Cem Oral and Ingmar Koch, better known as Jamin Unit and Dr. Walker, both entrenched in technical know-how – Koch was the lucky recipient of a Roland JX3P synthesizer on his 14th birthday, a gift that led to him being hired by Korg to program sounds for a number of their iconic models.
Koch began recording in the late 80s, composing, as he puts it, assembly line House and Hip Hop tracks for the German labels Hype! and Technoline. The latter label went bankrupt, prompting him to join a course on electronic composition at a University in Cologne. He would soon meet fellow student and synth enthusiast Oral, and find that he also shared a common interest for groups like Tangerine Dream, CAN, Heaven 17, early New York Hip Hop and Chicago acid: working together seemed almost inevitable.
By the end of 1991 Air Liquide was born, with their first EP release following in a matter of months, and a self-titled debut at the end of 1992. Their second album, the 1994 released Nephology opus, really upped the ante with its mostly innovative themes and layered tracks modeled around the more sophisticated tones of intelligent Techno and dance music – future projects saw the duo experimenting with Gabba hardcore and ethereal fashioned traversing styles of trance.
Singing from the same hymn sheet as The Orb, and many similar ambient acts, they immersed themselves in a haze of new-age touchy-feely rhetoric, using both celestial horizons and the skies above as the central theme to hang their music to: That Nephology title is itself taken from the, originally Greek, word for clouds; adopted as the terminology for the study of their formations – interestingly over the last century it has remained a rather marginalised and forgotten art…well, that was until the recent interest in global warming.
The 14-track album is split into various sections, with the main tracks interspersed amongst the otherworldly type segue ways and vignettes.
A central atmospheric resonance runs throughout, evoking a cosmological and space-age mood, one that has an often ominous or threatening feel to it; charged with rippling static effects.
Mainly we are treated to some indolently and cleverly multi-layering techniques, produced from an impressive display of iconic analogue/electronic equipment, including the Roland Tr 808, Jupiter 8, ARP 2600 and a pair of Moogs.
Side one of this double album entirely consists of acid drenched grooves and bouncing taut techno. The grand opening of ‘The Cloud’ emerges refined and full of empyrean quality from the ether, its tightened rolling drums and throbbing bass cascade over an electrified wild jungle rich sound collage; sounding like a Germanic 808 State. As though in tribune to Klaus Schulze and his cohorts, the duo interweave startling ambient sequences, dousing the beats in swathes of metallic walled corridor sounds and whispering missed conversations.
This swirling tome is followed by the more Chicago house style of ‘Semiwave’; a sauntering announced rhythmic workout, full of ever-tightened repetitive percussion, moody dramatic bass and lethargic plonking notes. Ethereal strains of some distant cooing float in and out of the track, setting the look-to-the-skies above scene perfectly, sending us hurtling ever further into the stratosphere.
Caustic meatier bass lines and squelchy 909 bleeps flourish on the bonus track ‘Auroral Wave’ – seems this and one other tune, are not included on all versions.
Hardened ticking away drums and pre-set handclaps encounter Mo Wax space-esque sustains, whilst moving along at a Mannuel Göttsching pronounced building pace.
Air Liquide manage to absorb many different styles of music including dub; the strong use of dark moody bass can be found on tracks like ‘THX is on’, where Sly and Robbie meet Carl Graig’s Plastic People period flow. There’s also room for Hip Hop, with the duo re-working Cypress Hill’s ‘Insane In The Brain’ for their own beguiling electro track ‘Stratus Static’. They manage to meld both the stoner-induced sample of the Hill’s track with what sounds like a dub-esque clattering Art of Noise, to produce something quite original and sublimely dizzying.
Scattered throughout are more light-hearted moments, including ‘If There Was No Gravity’, where they take on the ambient workshops of both The Orb and Orbital. Wispy willowy female vocals poetically describe a sort of dipsy journey through the clouds, the lyrics leaning towards cliché almost:
“How you’d love to live up there,
Kiss the sun and walk on air.
If there was no gravity,
You’d be in nephology”.
Dubtastic bass lines bumble along to fill the sweeping calm and dreamy melodics, in a display of evanescent pulchritude. The looming presence of Kubrick, or rather the meticulous chosen soundtracks that go hand-in-hand with his films, add dramatic passages of tension and suspense. ‘Die Reisse Im Teekeesel’ (loosely translated as ‘Those travels in the tea boiler’) uses 2001 A Space Odyssey harrowing soundscapes, with the chanting evocative mantras from ‘So Spoke Zarathustra’ to add intrepid doom. Both ‘Kymnea’ and ‘Im Grlenmeyerkolben I and II’ echo and groan with menacing moments plucked straight from A Clockwork Orange: Walter (Wendy) Carlos’s switched on treatment of Henry Purcell’s ‘Music For The Funeral Of Queen Mary’, and the tormented ‘Timesteps’ are brought to mind.
Eerily the duo can’t help but intersperse a sober and haunting array of imbued cinematics, dropping in hints of Dune, Star Trek and The Thing to create an often emotive or imaginative atmospherics, which lends the album a certain gravitas.
On the closing track, ‘The Clouds Have Eyes’, they end on a chaotic hypnotic flourish. Helicopter chopping Jeff Mills style beats rapidly rotate, as an operatic style haunted choral sweep swirls around in the tumultuous cyclonic blades. That almost disturbing voice-like loop, calls out from the melee as though an apparition from some distant planet or dimension: a perfect finish.
Nephology does undoubtedly sound of its time to some extent; tied in some respects to a particular epoch, yet though it’s over thirty-years old it somehow rises above sounding dated. In fact recent revivals of the late 80s and early 90s electronic scenes – where labels such as R & S, Harthouse, Structure and Rising High fed the deep thinking dance music appetite – have encouraged a mini-renaissance and re-valuation. In 2024 you could easily slip a bit of the old Nephology into the club, and no one would blink.
Hi, my name is Dominic Valvona and I’m the Founder of the music/culture blog monolithcocktail.com For the last ten years I’ve featured and supported music, musicians and labels we love across genres from around the world that we think you’ll want to know about. No content on the site is paid for or sponsored and we only feature artists we have genuine respect for /love. If you enjoy our reviews (and we often write long, thoughtful ones), found a new artist you admire or if we have featured you or artists you represent and would like to buy us a coffee at https://ko-fi.com/monolithcocktail to say cheers for spreading the word, then that would be much appreciated.
The October Digest: Social Playlist Volume 80, Tamikrest, Billy Cobham and David Bowie…
October 18, 2023
ANNIVERSARY ARCHIVE SPOTS AND THE 80TH EDITION OF THE MONOLITH COCKTAIL SOCIAL PLAYLIST: DOMINIC VALVONA

Welcome all to the October edition of the Monolith Cocktail Digest, an archival driven column that celebrates anniversary albums each month and marks those special icons we’ve lost. In recent months this column has also become the home of the long-running cross-generational/international eclectic Social Playlist, which reaches its 80th edition this month.
Plucked from those back corridors of the blog’s archive, there are original pieces on the Tuareg desert blues-rockers Tamikrest and their 2013 album, ‘Chatma’, jazz drummer extraordinaire Billy Cobham’s Spectrum (50 years old this month), and David Bowie’s Reality (unbelievably already 20 years old).
The Social meanwhile features tracks from all three of those featured records, plus 50th anniversary mentions for The Who (Quadrophenia) and Elton John (Goodbye Yellow Brick Road), a 40th mention for Bob Dylan (Infidels), and 30th mentions for the Leaders Of The New School (T.I.M.E.), Black Moon (Buck Em Down) and Teenage Fanclub (Thirteen). Amongst that smattering, there’s choice tunes from Henry Franklin, Cee-Rock, David Liebe Hart, Dog Faced Hermans, Elias Hulk, Prix, Sofia Rosa and many more special selective tracks.
FULL TRACK LIST IS AS FOLLOWS::::….
Tamikrest ‘Djanegh Etoumast’
Pinky-Ann-Rihal ‘The Indian Dance’
Dog Faced Hermans ‘How We Connect’
Bob Dylan ‘Man Of Peace’
The Meditation Singers ‘Look At Yourself’
Billy Cobham ‘Spectrum’
Henry Franklin ‘Venus Fly Trap’
Leaders Of The New School ‘Connections’
Black Moon ‘Buck Em Down’
Kid Acne & Spectacular Diagnostics ‘Batman On Horseback’
Cee-Rock, Stealthguhn & Don Jazz ‘Linden Boulez’
officerfishdumplings ‘Divine Procrastinator’
David Liebe Hart & Th’ Mole ‘Michael Likes To Smoke His Weed’
Thiago Franca, Marcelo Cabral & Tony Gordin ‘Parte 1, Pt. 2’
Missus Beastly ‘Gurus For Sale’
Elisa Hulk ‘Ain’t Got You’
David Bowie ‘Never Get Old’
M ‘Baby Close The Window (12” Version)’
The Research ‘Feels Like The First Time’
Teenage Fanclub ‘The Cabbage’
Rabbit Rumba ‘Don Toribio’
Sofia Rosa ‘Kumulundu’
Tabaco ‘San juan Guaricongo’
Dick Stusso ‘Haunted Hotel’
Pin Group ‘Hurricane Fighter Plane’
The Spells ‘Number One Fan’
Prix ‘Girl’
Stiv Bators ‘Little Girl’
Agnes Strange ‘Give Yourself A Chance’
The Who ‘The Real Me’
Shyane Carter & Peter Jefferies ‘Randolph’s Going Home’
Roger Tillison ‘Loving You Is Sweeter Than Ever’
Elton John ‘The Ballad Of Danny Bailey (1909-1934)’
ARCHIVAL SPOTS/ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATING LPS

50th Anniversary Of Billy Cobham’s Spectrum
Moving on into the seventies with the voracious fusion of jazz, funk and the far out, former US army conscript Billy Cobham allowed his drum kit to roam wildly: and take a fair old pummelling in the process.
Leaping from the starched fatigues of conformity into apprentice slots with Miles Davis (famously on the Bitches Brew opus, and sitting-in at the Isle Of Wight Pop Festival of 1970) and Horace Silver, Cobham went on to form the influential Mahavishnu Orchestra: stretching the limitations of jazz all the way.
Whilst still a member of the MO (he’d leave for the first time in 1973, before returning for the MK II incarnation in the 80s), Cobham recorded his solo debut Spectrum; an unequivocal energetic mix of unwieldy cosmic slop guitar, thundering and rapid ricocheting double kick peddling drums, and 12-bar jazz gone native!
Featuring the arching, noodling rock guitar solos and lead that would become a familiar presence to the Cobham sound, Tommy Bolin (later to join Deep Purple), is tasked with really giving it some gospel. Sampled by future generations – Massive Attack fans will recognise Status – Cobham’s first album also drifted across the pond to Europe – Krautrock connoisseurs may pick up on the relationship to the music of Mani Neumeier’s Guru Guru (especially after their UFO LP). No matter how sophisticated, or ‘twiddly muso’, Cobham always inserted some humour into his work, from the video-game effects and title of Snoopy’s Search to the general free spirited nuttiness of some of the playing itself.
A great marker, laid down for the generations to come.
DAVID BOWIE’S REALITY IS TWENTY

Making the most of his creative flow, David Bowie’s next critically assiduous, soul-searching suite would draw from the ‘oil well’ of despair.
The hyper ‘reality’ that permeated throughout this sophisticated album reflected a woeful climate, specifically the unfolding drama in the Middle East. Allusions to neocon diplomacy, nepotism of the most colonially threatening kind and the crescent of Islam are interspersed with more pining romanticized themes of loss.
Assembling a ‘dream team’, Bowie’s backing group once again swelled with the talents of Mike Garson (piano), Tony Visconti (production duties), Earl Slick (guitar) and Carlos Alomar (guitar) – the latter two, both veterans of Young Americans. Slick and Visconti would of course go onto to form part of The Next Day recording hub.
That quality and old camaraderie proved every bit as tightly dynamic, Reality unequivocally the thin white duke’s best work since Earthlings.
Again, Bowie insists on appropriating or at least resorting to past endeavours, recalling Outside on his sardonic hustled cover of Jonathan Richman’s ‘Pablo Picasso’; Tonight on the samba weepie ‘Days’; and Black Tie White Noise on the thinly veiled indicative Dick Cheney putdown, ‘Fall Dog Bombs The Moon’: Bowie at his bleakest, “The blackest of years that have no sound, no shape, no depth, no underground/What a dog!’ But full marks for trying to get a grip of George Harrison‘s ‘Try Some, Buy Some’; made most famous (and infamously) by a reluctant Ronnie Spector.
An augury of what was to follow in 2013, the thumping kickdrum, rollicking anthem ‘Never Get Old’ has a resounding statement of intent from the artist: “Never ever gonna get old!” In character he may be, but Bowie’s cry against mortality is a personal one, echoed in the present. Unfortunately bowing to the so-called market forces – regardless of artistic values and sanctimonious vitriol, he always had an eye for making dough – Bowie lent the tune to mineral water brand Vittel, appearing in an advert which has an uncanny resonance with the ‘The Stars (Are Out Tonight)’ video.
For various reasons outside his control, namely the poor sods heart attack, Bowie had to wait eight years to produce another volume of reactionary post-millennium blues. The Next Day, despite the decade-long absence from recording, picks up where Reality left off.
TAMIKREST’S CHATMA IS TEN YEARS OLD ALREADY

Mali’s rich musical culture isn’t confined to just the central and southern regions of the country, the northern Tuareg desert lands also evoke some passionate, soulfully rhythmic surprises too. Despite the unfavourable attention meted out to the Tuareg community in recent years (there cause for autonomy hijacked by far less scrupulous zealots for there own religious and political ends), many voices from that community have offered their services to peace. One example is the nomadic, sub-Saharan rock’n’rollers Tamikrest, whose Hendrix meets desert blues template proves there are two sides to every story; the new album, Chatma – which translates as ‘sisters’ – a tribute to the courage of the Tuareg women and spirit of a people.
Forced into exile in Algeria, Tamikrest plaintively, but with an ear for a good melody, reflect on the imposition of Sharia law – by those outsiders who at first lent help to the course but soon dominated with their own destructive agenda – and the loss of there heritage. Producing beautifully cooed laments with an infectious kick, but also deftly crafting meandrous, ethereal, desert songs, the group can transverse the grooviest of Bedouin rhythmic funk anthems with ponderous soundscapes – ‘Assikal’ is pure Ash Ra Temple meets atavistic sand dune eulogy.
Separated into many a ‘world music’ best of list this year, the Monolith Cocktail sees no such reason for such boundaries or demarcated categorising; Chatma is simply a wondrous piece of ‘head music’.