Monthly Playlist Revue: September ’23: Flagboy Giz, Darius Jones, Vumbi Dekula, Rob Cave, Lalalar, Babel…
September 28, 2023
PLAYLIST SPECIAL/SELECTED BY DOMINIC VALVONA/MATT OLIVER/BRIAN ‘BORDELLO’ SHEA

Each month the Monolith Cocktail distils an entire month’s worth of posts into a choice, eclectic and defining playlist. Due to the sheer volume of releases on our radar, we don’t always get the time or room to feature all of them. And so, the Monthly is also an opportunity to include those tracks we missed out.
Dominic Valvona, Matt ‘rap control’ Oliver, and Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea put September’s selection together, which features New Orleans rap and bustle, émigré Russian post-punk, Fluxus imbued jazz and diaphanous vaporous ambience.
____/TRACK LIST\____
Flagboy Giz Ft. Spyboy T3 ‘Still Beat Cha’
Kurious, Cut Beetlez/Yahzeed The Divine ‘Mint Leaves’
Lucidvox ‘Don’t Look Away’
Flat Worms ‘Sigalert’
Public Speaking ‘Swollen Feet’
Guilty Simpson, Uncommon Nasa, Guillotine Crowns, Short Fuze ‘The Era That Doesn’t Know’
Donwill Ft. Rob Cave ‘Snob’
Apollo Brown, Planet Asia ‘Fly Anomalies’
Black Josh, Wino Willy, Lee Scott, Sonnyjim ‘E R M8’
Darius Jones ‘Zubot’
Gard Nilssen’s Supersonic Orchestra ‘The Space Dance Expirement’
Marike Van Dijk ‘Landed’
Trupa Trupa ‘Thrill’
Red Pants ‘Watch The Sky’
The Crystal Teardrop ‘By The River’
Connie Lovatt ‘Heart’
Mike Gale ‘Grumble Pie’
Yungchen Lhamo ‘Sound Healing’
Violet Nox ‘Ascent’
Vumbi Dekula ‘Afro Blues’
Anon (Parchman Prison) ‘I Give Myself Away, So You Can Use Me’
Blck.Beetl, Vermin The Villain ‘flowers.’
The Strangers, General Elektriks, Leeroy, Lateef The Truthspeaker ‘2222 (Go That Way)’
Dillion, Diamond D ‘Turn The Heat Up’
Napoleon Da Legend Ft. Crazy DJ Bazarro ‘Burning My Cosmos’
Ol’ Burger Beat, Gabe ‘Nandez Ft. Fly Anakin ‘Recuperating’
Smoke DZA, Flying Lotus Ft. Black Thought ‘Drug Trade’
Bisk, Spectacular Diagnostics ‘DIVE’
Declaime, Theory Hazit ‘Asylum Walk 2023’
Rob Cave, Thxk_u ‘Morning Prayers For Strange Days’
Dead Players, Jam Baxter, Dabbla, Ghosttown ‘Death By A Thousand Cocktail Sticks’
Marina Herlop ‘La Alhambra’
Aoife Nessa Francis ‘Fantasy’
Maija Sofia ‘Saint Aquinas’
Tori Freestone, Alcyona Mick, Natacha Atlas, Brigitte Beraha ‘Who We Are Now’
Charlie Kaplan ‘I Was Doing Alright’
Novelistme ‘I Need New Music’
Neon Kittens ‘I Was Clumsy’ Tony Jay ‘The Switch For The Light’
Graham Parker & The Goldtops ‘Sun Valley’
Lalalar ‘Göt’
Buildings And Food ‘Blank Slate Cycle’
Carlos Niño & Friends ‘Etheric Windsurfing, Flips And Twirls’
Richard Sears ‘Oceans’
Babel ‘Crush’
Louis Jucker ‘Seasonable’
Late Aster ‘Safety Second (Live)’
Rita Braga ‘Illegal Planet’
Paula Bujes, Alessandra Leão ‘Na Sombra Da Cajazeira’
The Perusal #47: Luzmila Carpio, Darius Jones, Carlos Niño & Friends, Sakamoto, Vumbi Dekula…
September 14, 2023
A WORLD OF DISCOVERIES REVIEWED BY DOMINIC VALVONA
(Unless stated otherwise, all releases are available now)

Luzmila Carpio ‘Inti Watana: El Retorno Del Sol’
(ZZK Records) 21st September 2023
Full of wonderment and magic, the Bolivian performer and composer Luzmila Carpio returns with her first all-encompassing album in a decade. Imbued with an ancestral heritage and language that predates the Conquistadors colonial apocalypse, Carpio weaves and plays with her Aymara and Quechua roots, its creation stories, shamanistic ceremonies and humble custodianship of nature.
With a providence that stretches back decades and a prolific catalogue of releases, the enigmatic icon has become a representative voice for the indigenous people of not only her Potosi home (a city and region in the Southern Highlands of Bolivia, dominated by its history of silver mining), but also the impressive, pristine “high plain” Altiplano region (said to be the most extensive high plateau on Earth outside of Tibet; the bulk of which is in Bolivia but straddles Peru and Chile too) and the South American continent as a whole. Speaking up and out again with an admittedly beautifully disarming voice, Carpio draws attention to various struggles and causes; lamenting with an almost Latin funeral march ‘requiem’ the self-centered quest for individualism and success at the expense of others on the spiritual-yearned, harmonium sustained and almost oriental ‘Requiem Para Un Ego’. A “critique on modern civilization”, Carpio uses a protagonist “powerbroker” figure who regrets a life of greed and avarice.
But for the most part Inti Watana: El Retorno Del Sol is a scenic enchantment of conversations with Mother Earth (or “Pachamam” as she calls her) and “Father Sun” (“Tata Inca”), that although localized projects its mystical and lilted beauty across the globe, opening doors to a wealth of rich instrumentation from Argentina, Armenia and Asia, and evocations of voices from The Steppes and beyond – reminding me in places of the Mongolian star Namgar and even a less avant-garde, hysterical Yoko Ono.
With the Argentinian producer and ZZK label stalwart Leonardo Martinelli, aka Tremor, on board there’s a further layer of more contemporary electronica and atmospheres added to the mix of Pre-Columbus rhythms. Under that alias of Tremor, Martinelli, alongside artists like Nicola Cruz and Chanche Vía Circuito, previously reworked the Bolivian icon’s music for a special ZZK collection in 2015. Back in that aura the synthesized production elements are quite subtle, but effective. Various vapours, wisps and drones help enforce a mystical, otherworldly, even mythological, experience.
Carpio’s voice is captivating, unusual, startling and majestic in equal measures; from the almost childlike “lada-dee” wonder of the Sentidor-like, softly trudging, dried shaking sticks opener ‘Kacharpayita’ to the rainforest menagerie of exotic trilled, chirped, tittered and whistled calls on the shivered bow stringed and more somber piano-backed whimsy, ‘Ofrenda De Los Pájaror’. She soothes a sort of lullaby on the reassuring toned Aymara dialect gauzy “celestial” tribune to the Earth, ‘Pachamama Desde El Cosmos’, and hums and warbles like a theremin on the floated bulb notes fluted new age Andean Shamanic ceremony, ‘Hacia La Luz’.
Altogether it evokes a whole cosmology of symbolist wildlife; of condors in majestic flight, strafing sacred atavistic mountains, and the sound of glacial waters flowing into the lush forests. In a manner, this is both a love letter to her home and a forewarning of the consequences of rapid modern encroachment upon the environment in question. Carpio invites us into her dreams and meditations with a wonderful message of universal care and respect for that which nurtures and feeds us; an unbroken link to civilizations like the Incas, propelled into the 21st century.
Darius Jones ‘fLuXkit Vancouver (i̶t̶s suite but sacred)’
(We Jazz/Northern Spy) 29th September 2023

Absorbing all the history and ethos of Vancouver’s multidisciplinary Western Front hothouse, the acclaimed alto-saxophonist, composer and bandleader Darius Jones conceptually, artfully embodies the spirit of that creative hub’s avant-garde, Fluxus/Duchampian foundations on his new album of free-jazz movements.
Commissioned by the artist run centre back in 2019, leading to a series of residences, Jones was able to spend some time with one of the institute’s octet of founders, the Vancouver visual/performance artist and Brute Sax Band instigator Eric Metcalfe, who alongside his fellow leopard spot Brutopia conceptual foil and wife Kate Craig and the artists Martin Bartlett, Mo Van Nostrand, Henry Greenshaw, Glenn Lewis, Michael Morris and Vincent Trasov created this space in 1973. If not all members of, they were at least inspired by the radical 60s and 70s Fluxus movement; a loose group of concrete poetry, mail art, installation, performance, urban planning, video and neo-dada noise music creators, the ranks of which included at any one time Terry Riley, Joseph Beuys, Yoko Ono, Nam June Paik, La Monte Young and of course its proto-founder, de facto leader, George Maciunas (who is said to have coined their moniker).
The Western Society, housed in what was originally the fraternal HQ of the Knights Of Pythias (which we shall come to later; inspiration for this album’s fourth and final suite, ‘Damon And Pythias’), also has a legacy of activism, but musical exchange programs too: hosting such notables as George Lewis and Ornate Coleman, who’s inspired art is suffused throughout Jones’ album. Picking up on those vibes, wired into a conceptual arts hive of activity on all sides, it’s unsurprising to find yet another celebrated Canadian artist bringing yet another cerebral vivid layer to the project. Film, video, photographer and installation artist Stan Douglas is a most congruous choice for providing the cover art. Although noted for his themes of class, the technical and societal aspects of mass media and failed, obsolete utopias, the Documenta stalwart once created a video installation in 1992, Hors-Champs, which included a performance of Albert Ayler’s 1965 composition ‘Spirits Rejoice’ by a quartet of American musicians who had moved to France during the free-jazz period of the 60s. By extension that musical freedom was associated with the rise of Black consciousness, but many of jazz’s bigwigs escaped the segregated, civil rights struggles and ignorance of America for Europe, and in particular France, where it was far more revered, appreciated; especially amongst the leftist, Marxist crowds.
Douglas has created an abstract image that’s neither painting nor photography for the album cover. Part of his DCT series (running since 2016), ‘Occ 6’ was created through manipulating frequencies, amplitudes and colour values at the point of a digitalization process where a photographic image is only represented by code. It looks like a kind of lightly blurred piece of op art, with nodes formed by the unique colourful electromagnetism. Where it fits in with this project of movements is purely abstract and visceral; part of a whole arts imbued theme with Jones producing the sonic renderings, paintings.
The Virginia-born and bred Jones feeds off a legacy whilst bringing an impressive CV of multi-diverse projects to the table (from trad-jazz to the avant-garde and freeform; from chamber to modern dance) and of course a Quintet of strings, bass and drum players. Merging the abstract, Jones combines the double bass of James Meger and drums of Gerald Cleaver with the dual front of violinists Jesse and Josh Zubot and cellist Peggy Lee, on an extemporized-like tumult, strain, drama and trauma of transmogrified out-there classical music, freeform jazz and wilder non-musical experimentation.
In these surroundings, at the Grand Luxe Hall, all six musicians push the proverbial envelope. Prompted by the titular “fLuXkit”, a collection of artworks and everyday objects placed in a small container or box, a whole opus of challenging expressive, consciousness imbued performances are given free flight to roam, prowl and tumble through space and time.
Inspired, as I mentioned, by the Western Front’s home, originally owned by the cultish sounding Knights Of Pythias, ‘Damon And Pythias’ references that fraternity’s foundation; namely the Greek legend of friendship, loyalty and honour in the time of Dionysius I of Syracuse in Hellenic Sicily. And yet this is a drama of Stravinsky, harangued and shrieked strings; a discombobulating distress of splayed drums, geese-like sax pecks and shrills, and factory machinery-like resonance. Art Ensemble Of Chicago meets The Modern Jazz Quartet across a whole seventeen-minutes of honked traffic, struggles and withering, this finale ends with a more tuneful, near chamber music linger of breath.
Named (I think we can softly assume) after the two violinists in this ensemble, ‘Zubot’ comes closet to the Fluxus idiom, with a highly experimental squawk, harried slot machine assemblage of La Monte Young, Joseph Bryd, Anthony Braxton and demigod, science fiction progenitor Coleman. The violins truly go all out, like Tony Conrad flitting, straining and pulling on taut strings until they cry. But the opening suite, ‘Fluxus VST 1S1’, takes all that art and runs it through noir-like suspense, hard bop, the far out, the troubled and dramatic. Jones impressive alto playing evokes Rahsaan Roland Kirk, Albert Ayler and Marion Brown, untethered and yet attentive, bird-like and even caressing and smoky. It’s one hell of a statement, with far too many individual highlights or worthy musicianship to mention (although as a former bassist myself, I will note James Meger, who here and later on, sounds like a strung-out Mingus thwacking and pulling at the bass).
However, ‘Rainbow’ has a self-declared influence of Duke Ellington’s Far East Suite. But I’d suggest a smoky incense too of 50s New York skylines: a touch of Gershwin perhaps and the Savoy label. It starts with a three-minute drum solo in the style of Billy Cobham; Gerald Cleaver working off the entire kit, firing off rolls, pumping the hi-hat pedal and tumbling a sort of tribal swing.
Jones and ensemble have created something emotionally charged and highly expressive (challenging too, in a good way) from a site and history. The home of the avant-garde in Vancouver proves fertile, fiery kindle for an impressive, raw at times, catharsis and unload of free thought and art.
Also released around the same time by one the partners in Jones conceptual album release, We Jazz have a just as impressive, free form and wild opus from the Norwegian drummer/composer Gard Nilssen to sale you. A debut in fact, Nilssen and his Supersonic Orchestra Family album is ambitious in scale and musicality; a real impressive first effort that in which Prikoviv, Ayler, Coleman, Braxton, Dolphy and Phil Ranelin mix it with Ill Considered, Binker & Moses and The Hypnotic Brass Band over an octet of extended suites. I can hardly do it justice in the brief space I’ve got left, but suffice to say, this is an incredible cacophony of every era in the jazz and classical cannon you can think of; everything from Latin to bop, the soulful, theatrical, wild and even stage. Wow. A real feat.
Carlos Niño & Friends ‘(I’m Just) Chillin’, On Fire’
(International Anthem) 15th September 2023

A slow musical movement, bathed in the new age transcendence of Alice Coltrane’s spiritual oasis, the latest album from the L.A. producer-percussionist Carlos Niño is a (mostly) disarming opus of afflatus and conscious jazz.
In a West Coast scene rich with multidisciplinary artists crossing genres and collaborating on their neighbor’s projects, Niño invites an abundance of notable friends to wash their feet in the calming waters of his organically evolving divine collage. Part jazz, part mysticism, part day spa and part fourth world music, (I’m Just) Chillin’, On Fire finds our host creating a experience that, literally, washes over the listener. A pause; a break from the vacuous all-up-your-face smartphone music that blights our lives with the artificial, you’re cordially invited to embrace something more lasting, connected and organic.
His who’s who of Californian natives and those who’ve made the State their creative home includes an actual Alice Coltrane protégé, the keyboardist, composer and actor Surya Botofasina. Niño oversaw the ashram acolyte’s 2022 devotional Everyone’s Children, and in kind, now features Botofasina on nearly half of this album’s communal peregrinations and hymnals; starting with a serenading and romantic turn on the John Coltrane love supreme, seashore scene of ‘Love Dedication (For Annelise)’ – Niño’s recurring shimmy percussion and tubular chimes adding a mystical spell of something almost transcendent and dreamy. His next appearance is alongside the Mesoamerican musical explorer Luis Pérez Ixoneztli on the lunar oasis hallucination of lush otherworldly presence and unseen machinery, ‘Am I Dreaming?’. And then, we hear him on a string of rattlesnake percussive spiritual jazz shimmers, washes and celestial balms.
Connecting both albums, the L.A. singer-songwriter Mia Doi Todd also appeared on Botofasina’s long player, and now joins that inimitable Outkast André 3000 and the German-American vocalist Cavana Lee for a Jon Hassell and Finis Africae-like vision on ‘Conversations’. It could be the Outback, the African bush; the condor hovered mountains of South America, or even, the Orient – especially with a touch of Sakamoto keys amongst the meditative bubbled healing waters.
The guest list keeps on giving, with a rather unsurprising appearance by one of the original divine stylers of experimental pulchritude and zither radiance, Laraaji. Eno, Budd and the already mentioned Hassell foil appears with the Woodstock producer and DJ Photay under the Afro-cosmic waterfall of ‘Maha Rose North 102021, Breathwork’. Laraaji’s heavenly touch gently permeates a noisy cascade of Vanney chemistry set effects, the fluted, tubular bells and plastic-paddled rhythms.
It’s a ridiculous, expansive circle of friends, far too numerous to list. But the saxophonist, Holophonor leader and Thelonious Monk Institute Of Jazz Performance alumni Josh Jackson, multi-instrumentalist songwriter, producer and player on records by such notables as Jay-Z, Lizzo and The Weekend, Nate Mercereau, and the multidisciplinary artist and drummer Jamire Williams all pop up the most across the album. Personally I found the contributions of the Maskandi/avant-garde fusion “savant” Sibusile Xaba almost otherworldly; his expressive merger of the alien and atavistic unique against the primordial water bathing and pouring’s of Jamael Dean’s piano and the kosmische, bird-like and computer game sounds of ‘Taaud’.
Deantoni Parks, who goes under the Technoself moniker, appears on the J. Dilla hip-hop-like, trinket glittered and wind chimes equinox ‘Flutestargate’, and the polymath, sometime Pan Afrikan Peoples Arkestra troupe member Maia features on the running man/woman, 2-step stumbled and softly bushed Iberian guitar new age jazz breakbeat vibe, ‘Transcendental Bounce, Run To It’. From replenishing streams, the Californian surf breaking on the shoreline to the branches of a memorable willow tree, Niño reflects, absorbs or echoes his surroundings on the soundtrack to his visionary spiritual retreat. The issues of the day do crop up of course, if in a more hushed, dwelled-on manner. But this is a lush conceptual fusion of new age jazz, much in the style of such luminaries as Alice Coltrane. A little repetitive, but beautiful all the same, this astral and more earthly opus is a singular concentration of divine intervention.
Richard Sears ‘Appear To Fade’
(Figureight Records) 29th September 2023

An efflux of muted, glassy notes blurred, muffled, and submerged by the tape-loop processes of his foil Ari Chersky, the very removed jazz and ambient serialism and modal improvisations of Richard Sears convey empirical passages of time, nostalgia, and locations. His fifth “led” album covers a transitional move from New York to Paris, and all the uncertainty, prospects it entails; including fond memories of his upbringing near the Santa Cruz coastline in Manresa, set to what sounds like a wax cylinder recorded timeless dream of crystal and brassier resonated piano and loop reversals.
With Chersky transforming an archive of live performed short pieces, through various tape methods of distortion and disintegration, the compositions on Appear To Fade are reduced in density but not value; sounding at times ghostly in an iteration of hiss, crackles and fog. Occasionally it sounds almost hallucinated, or like a mirage. And throughout, seems to take either a languid dive beneath the ocean, or float up on top, waiting to be brought back in on the tide. For obvious reasons, ‘Oceans’ makes this aquatic theme apparent, albeit with a near off-chord and tonal dissonance that strikes throughout this seabed discovery. ‘Flotsam’, as the title suggests, bobs up on top to a refracted lighted and pitter-patter like pretty tinkle of piano notes that evoke a pirouetting ballet music box. ‘Urchin’, to my ears anyway, is a sonic bedfellow to the two previous suites: a trippy splash of warping mystery below the waves.
Although channeling touches, influences of Nils Frahm, Kali Malone, Sakamoto and Johnny Greenwood (I’d add the “lower-case” minimalist Andrew Heath perhaps and Matthew David), Sears pays homage to the Estonian composer Toivo Tulev. The pianist/composer studied choral composition under his tutelage, and on his namesake track seems to warp that choral mystique and an atmosphere of the Estonian’s almost spooked ‘For My Little Sister’ piano piece into a haunting and melting suite of abstract modal jazz and semi-classicism.
Part of Sears sound is down to the soft pedal Una Corda, which makes the piano notes sound both glass-like and muted. This additional keyboard transformer is notably used on the album’s finale, ‘What I Meant To Say Was’, a deft delightful and timeless recital of jewelry box music, Novello and Bacharach.
Deteriorate rather than decay, there’s just the right amount of old tape disorientation to slow, warble, slur and sift the varied melodic piano pieces, and make them mysterious, magical or uncertain. Sepia veils play with memoary and time as those tape effects envelope and send Sears improvised touches back through a mirror. Together, a biosphere of recollection is transduced into dreamy fading fragments and traverses; art and music experiment in a curious union.
Ryuichi Sakamoto ‘Ongaku Zukan’
(WEWANTSOUNDS) 29th September 2023

A timely, special release in the wake of the Japanese icon’s death in March of this year, the impeccable vinyl specialists WEWANTSOUNDS have reissued Sakamoto’s cult 1984 solo album Ongaku Zukan (or “Musical Encyclopedia”).
In 1986 (or thereabouts) 10 Records/Virgin released a much different assembled version (with a different track list) of that album. But until now, there’s never been a faithful (as Sakamoto intended) version of that classic LP on the market. The original was released in both “regular” and “limited” editions, the former, with an extra 7” EP (which both included the ‘Replica’ and ‘Ma Mere L’ Oye’ tracks), and the latter, with a bonus 12” EP (this included another version of ‘Tibetan Dance’). WWS have remained faithful to that moiety of records, including the artwork and linear notes.
Hardly obscure despite a limited release outside of Japan, it does however remain one of the least well known, or written about – it’s one of the few album entries on Sakamoto’s Wiki page without any information or its own page. However, it marks a transitional period and an apex, as the Japanese doyen of electronic music finally brought a halt to his simultaneous work as a co-founding member of the Yellow Magic Orchestra after six years to concentrate on his solo and collaborative projects – of which there were many, from David Sylvain to Robin Scott.
In an enviable position as regards to exposure and creativity, Sakamoto had flirted with international stardom after the success of his acting role and debut score for the WWII Japanese prisoners of war movie Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence – much of which was down to his co-star David Bowie’s portrayl of the bleached-out blond Maj. Jack “Strafer” Celliers; the Let’s Dance incarnated Bowie spending a lot of downtime with Sakamoto during the shoot, yet never, apparently, discussing the soundtrack that his co-star was shy to push even though he would have welcomed the input and help at the time.
The former jazz-inspired (namely Coltrane and Coleman) activist turn ethnomusicologist and early electronic pioneer went on to win one of each prestigious award for his soundtracks (Grammy, Oscar, Bafta and Golden Globe). It was on this high that he entered the Onkyo Haus Studio in Tokyo with around thirty basic tracks he’d made the previous year. And despite giving up the YMO, brought in his former band mates, Haruomi Hosono and Yukihiro Takahashi (who also sadly passed away this year) to help record his fourth solo outing. In addition to those foils, the lauded composer, producer, saxophonist, arranger and solo artist Yasuaki Shimizu (pushing the origami envelope with not only Sakamoto but the conceptual artist Nam June Paik and Helen Merrill), huge Japanese star, record producer and pioneer of the City Pop style, Tatsuro Yamashita, and avant-garde fusionist trumpeter (working with a host of experimental doyens like Bill Laswell and John Zorn) Toshinori Kondo offer up there skills across a fluctuating album of genres.
A “musical encyclopedia” no less, there’s a futuristic hybrid and yet sometimes retro fusion of ideas on display; the connective, permeating and overriding influence being Sakamoto’s use of the iconic digital synthesizer, sampler embedded workstation, the Fairlight CMI (an acronym of course for Computer Musical Instrument). Not the first to be seduced by this revolutionary game-changing apparatus. With its seemingly limitless capabilities at the time, Sakamoto was among its first maestros. The Australian invention was quickly snapped up by Peter Gabriel, Kate Bush, Prince, Hans Zimmer and Nick Rhodes, and more or less became one of the 80s key sounds. There’s even footage of a demonstration by Herbie Hancock that you can find on Youtube. Jan Hammer’s Miami Vice soundtrack wouldn’t sound the same without it.
By the time Sakamoto recorded this album, the Fairlight CMI was part of the fabric that powered the decade of excess. And you can hear its sequencing, its programming and sample palette on every second of this diverse musicology; starting with the first of the bookended ‘Tibetan Dance’ variants, the first version of which features keyboard activated drum-claps, repurposed percussive scrapes and ratcheting on a sort of Niles Rodgers-like production that seems to smoothly funk-up the Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence theme. Slinking Bamboo pop with an Oriental melody, this peaceable white-funk score is extended on the second version, with additional Sign O’ The Times eara Prince acoustic guitar (very Spanish sounding), reversal effects and sleek downtime club chill-out vibes.
Moving on, ‘Etude’ suggests something classical, and in part this track evokes a tuxedo (as the cover art shows) donned host conducting a pop symphonic of Kyoto capital period pre-war Westernized Japanese officers club, or cocktail, lounge music. But merged with his Esperanto period Art Of Noise sampling experiments, and strangely, a warm soft bristled trumpeted vision of Calypso: even Ska. There are hints also to his eventual work with Robin Scott. Harpist sounds and a chuffed rhythm bring in the mysterious, cozy primordial soup shimmy ‘Paradise Lost’. Milton languishes in Polynesian waters on Taito’s Rainbow Islands to Czukay’s cuts and shunts, dialed in obscured broadcasts, cutes, vapours and a snuggled version of Coleman’s trumpet. ‘Self Portrait’ is like The Cars fused with sympathetic balladry style autobiographical reflection and Euro kitsch, and ‘Tabi No Kyokuhoku’ molds pined romantic smooching sax with Let’s Dance Bowie, electronic Shinto tubular bell ringing, City Pop and touches of the classical. ‘M.A.Y. In The Backyard’ could be a 80s thriller score; a pitter-patter notation drama of Bamboo music, Nyman, Cage, rolling marimba and Colombo! ‘Hane No Hayashide’ is a strange one; a sort of mesh of the Oriental, the misty, Herbie Hancock, art-pop and Einstein/Hawking’s cosmic science. It features the first real vocals, a singer-songwriter haze on “time”. ‘Mori No Hito’ is just as hazy, maybe foggy, and again features that transformed Shinto or ancient Japanese spiritual yin of percussive bells, played like harmonics. But ‘A Tribute To N.J.P’ feels like interloping on a personalized eulogy: heaven sent indeed. For much of that track the smoky jazz sax seems to duet with a sentimental 50s jazz style piano, but later on we hear ethereal dreams and a captured passage of a background conversation.
One of the original “extras”, ‘Ma Mere L’ Oye’ features the sort of cult Japanese childlike choir beloved by hip-hop crate diggers. It’s theater meets snuffled and raspy horns on a piece of both futurist Japan and yet also Samurai cult soundtrack. And if none of that grabs you, then I don’t know what will.
Sakamoto assails the mid 80s with his own manual, a merger of signatures and fresh horizons, but above all, rewriting the Japanese cannon whilst reaching into a future yet unwritten. There will be a lot of people very happy that this classic has been rejuvenated, whilst a new generation can hear what all the fuss is about. Not his best by any stretch of the imagination, but everything Sakamoto touched is worthy of investigation, and this feels like a bridge between periods. WWS has done us all a great favour in resurfacing this lost class piece of experimentation and groove.
Vumbi Dekula ‘Congo Guitar’
(Hive Mind Records/ Sing A Song Fighter)

Removed from a full-on band setting of loud blazed, wailed horns, thundering drums and chanted vocals Kahanga “Vumbi” Dekula’s legendary guitar shines on a new solo album of his melodious virtuoso playing.
Conceived by the Swedish producer and Wau Wau Collectif band member Karl-Jonas Winqvist, who released The Dekula Band (the group that Dekula set up in 2008) debut album Opika in 2019, the idea was to hear that expressive, resonating guitar sound with little more than a minimal accompaniment of itching and woody percussion, a Casio preset Rumba rhythm, bass melodica, the most cooing and lulling harmonic voices and glassy, tine-like standup piano. Intimate, stripped this project still amplifies a big sound that fills the space: Winqvist described it as an orchestra.
Before we delve in, a little background is needed. Dekula’s travails began at an early age, born with polio in the lush region of Kivu in the D.R.C. (a large area that includes and surrounds Lake Kivu). He grew up in a Swedish missionary home, where he picked up the guitar at an early age; quickly learning the country’s number one music export of Congolese Rumba and its quicker scion Soukous off the two styles leading luminaries: Dr. Nico and Franco being two of the most notable names in that cannon.
Believed to have entered the Congolese consciousness in the 1930s, imported from Cuba and fused with the Congo’s own traditional and folk music, Rumba took a distinctive turn. Embedded and now synonymous with this behemoth of a conflicted country, UNESCO even listed it as an “intangible” part f the D.R.C.’s culture. Another one of its chief practitioners was the iconic Verckys (anointed by James Brown no less as “Mister dynamite”), who went further than most in merging the style with a funk trunk of Pachanga, pop and soul. Incidentally, Verckys was a member (for a brief time) of Franco’s famous OK Jazz band.
Soukous, as I mentioned, is an offshoot of Rumba, faster in tempo with longer dance sequences and brighter intricate guitar. Both styles remain at the heart of Dekula’s sound, a signature of infectious joy and feeling to shuffle onto the dance floor.
Dekula’s journey continues with a move to Tanzania in the 80s, where he successfully auditioned for a lead guitarist spot in the Orchestra Maquis. This was the same period in which he “earned’ his nickname “Vumbi”, and gained a reputation for his soloing chops, drawing in the crowds. Another move, this time to Sweden in the 90s, saw him play in the Makonde Band and Ahmady Jarr’s Highlife Orchestra, before setting up his own group in 2008.
Forward into the Covid epoch and Winqvist encourages Dekula to record a solo album at the Helter Skelter studio in Stockholm, over two days during lockdown. Which unless I’d read, I’d have sworn it sounds more like the humid busy, bustled, horn-honked streets of Kinshasa than the Swedish capital; the opening dual-guitar jazzy-blues cascaded and brassy resonated ‘Afro Blues’ sounding like its been performed with a opened door onto the streets outside. A beautiful start, trails of loop-like fluid rhythmic brushed handwork express a constantly turning melody of bass-y and more higher classical African longing.
It’s followed by the sweetened daintily sprung and plucked ‘Maamajacy’, a kind of Cuban or Haitian beachcombers oceanic lullaby that features Winqvist and guest Emma Nordenstam wooing a gentle swaddled balm.
Feelings, sentiments of home (or homes even) perhaps, ‘Zanzibar, Kinshasa & Vällingby’ reminded me of South Africa and Zimbabwe musically. A warmth flows over you on this pastoral, green serenade. There’s a similar South Africa vibe on ‘Congo Yetu’, which also sounds like the outside world has been encouraged into the studio space, with an atmosphere of interaction and voices off the microphones. Another Rumba preset shimmy ‘Zuka’ is a nimble dance of near calypso, South Seas vibrations and a tine-like spindled fairground piano. This sort of lo fi, muffled piano gives the music a whole different dimension; like a merry-go-round, an end of the pier music hall sound somehow. More courtly, the lightly fanned and melodica resonating ‘Weekend’ has a slightly quicker canter and stream of higher-pitched notes.
Pulling us disarmingly into the D.R.C.’s current crisis, Dekula rightly draw attention to the continuing failure of the UN forces (the “blue helmets” as they are known) in his home state of Kivu on the self-explanatory finale, ‘UN Forces (Get Out Of The Democratic Republic Of Congo)’. Known through the French vernacular as the MONUSCO, this cross-international UN sanctioned force has done little to stabilize a critical flashpoint. Invited in since 1999 to protect a local population, many of them farmers, from an ever-widening conflict across the region and its borders, more than a 120 different armed groups, including Islamist insurgents, war over control of the land, people and rich mineral resources. The situation is bleak, with the blue helmets more or less frozen in their attempts to bring any sort of security to the province. And as the armed militias’ victims’ pile up, and protest gain momentum, have even shot some of the very people they are meant to serve and protect. Although the UN is due to withdraw next year, the government wants them to leave now as anger and resentment grows. Dekula brings out the banjo on this Rumba and blues canter, as he makes a reasonable argument against those contested protectors; neither vitriol nor plaintive, but almost shimmying to a peaceable message in the most grave of circumstances. It also kind of brings us right back to the now, and Dekula’s homeland; a nice finish and return to his roots. Congo Guitar proves a worthy and entertaining showcase of the maestro’s deft, descriptive playing; a fluid mix of Rumba, Soukous, the blues, rock-a-by-baby type soothing balms, the tropical and Afro-Cuban. Hive Mind’s inaugural partnership with Winqvist’s own Sing-A-Song-Fighter label is both a joy and discovery; the Congolese star, more or less, singlehandedly capturing the listener’s attention with a captivating septet of natural, expressive performances.
Louis Jucker & Le Nouvel Ensemble Contemporain ‘Suitcase Suite’
(Humus Records) 22nd September 2023

Packed for an open-ended travail of sonic, musical and lyrical experimentation, the Swiss singer-songwriter, producer, diy musician, event curator, music prize winner and Humus Records co-founder uses his assemblage of suitcases filled full of homemade effects and electroacoustic instrumentation to produce an almost mechanized clockwork workshop version of cerebral leftfield bluesy-indie and the new wave.
The lead singer of the “hardcore” Coilguns finds a more intimate outlet under his solo guise, and prompted by a self-enforced set of parameters, offers a more intriguing, mysterious proposition. Four years after his Nouvel Ensemble Contemporain commission, Jucker releases the results of a project guided by a number of conditions; namely that he would build all the instruments (in keeping with this artist’s methodology of tinkering and constructing such apparatus from various flea market and attic finds) himself; be present on stage to sing the songs with the rest of the orchestra; be allowed to make a record or two from it; and continue the project beyond its initial remit. And with that the Suitcase Suite (with all its various “suitcase” connotations and metaphors, but basically a means of transporting all his noise making instruments) unpacks an understated moody drama of resignation, dewy-eyed eulogies and heartache. All the while Jucker sounds like a cross between Cass McCombs, Damien Rice, Jeff Buckley, The Books and Thom Yorke straddling the singer-songwriter vernacular of indie-folk, the blues and both atmospheric vapour-set and subtle effects manipulated analogue electronics.
Wooden-like contraptions and more industrial generated motors drone away, or click, turn and ripple as Jucker either strokes harp-like instruments or artfully strike’s up the electric guitar. I mentioned in relation to the vocals Thom Yorke, but the musical environment, the sometimes-near ominous saddened mood is also near Radiohead-esque. But then, on tracks such as the 80s dry-ice stirred, sloping and constant signal beeped ‘Seasonable’, there’s a hovering flute and classical chamber tune-up of squiggles being whirled into a distressed tumult.
Caustic flapped effects; reverberations and crackles sit with subtle airs of sustained, concertinaed bellowed instrumentation on the Anne Calvi-like ‘My Windy Heart’. Those generators hum an almost darkened, haunted tone (a cross between John Carpenter and Tangerine Dream) on the increasingly wooed and cooed analogue tape undulated ‘Asylee’, and yet the voice and lyrics seem more plaintive and downbeat. There’s more of that motor-generated sound and tools working away on the album’s finale, ‘March Of The Fallen Scions’, albeit to a removed form of the American spiritual and shades of David Byrne. But personally, the downcast, near lo fi, reflective lament of loss, ‘The House We Let Them Take Away’, is a standout track; if not because it’s so different to the rest of the material. A subtle but rousing stirred contemplation on the loss of a family home that despite its state, held obvious significance and memories. We’re not really told the circumstances (foreclosure, debt, fire), but can sympathize with this gently spindled plaint. Confessionals and struggling emotions are laid out to a life support system of homemade instrumentation, the constant whirling zips and ripples of a suitcase workstation proving anything but limiting; rather inspiring a sophisticated use of the diy instead to produce a very different sort of record.
Late Aster ‘Light Rail Session EP’
(Slow & Steady Records/Bright Shiny Things) 29th September 2023

Diaphanous throughout as they merge hints, evaporations and more heralded swirling signs of a (cornet) trumpeting Don Cherry, Miles Davis and Chat Baker with synwaves and dream pop to produce what I would call vapour-jazz, the gauzy efflux San Francisco duo of Aaron Messing and Anni Hochhalter are somewhat unique.
Both classically-trained in brass instrumentation, but open-ended on their embrace of the ethereal and electronica, the blossoming Late Aster duo build upon their 2021 debut EP, True And Toxic, with a relenting but emotively-pulled quartet of previously unreleased “live” audio and visual tracks. On this voyage they extend the lineup to include the guitarist Charles Mueller and Mark Yoshizumi, who not only mastered this EP but also co-produced and co-engineered it with Mueller. They also brought in another fellow San Fran creative, the artist and photographer Deadeye Press, to film the session on hi-8 tape from a handheld video recorder – each track will be accompanied by its own visual hallucination and heat sensor trip.
Recorded in a day (the 9th of June to be specific) in the Light Rail studio of the title, the resulting traversing and wrapping, enveloping mirages are near translucent in delivery. Using an apparatus of brass (the already mentioned trumpet, but I think the French Horn too), fx pedals, drum machine/sampler, the Korg Miniloge and Moog Subharmonicon polyphonic synths, and of course a free-roaming creativity, they offer a trio of original peregrinations and one transformative vision of an old standard. The latter, ‘It Never Entered My Mind’, is a wispy, submerged and wafted vision of Rodgers & Hart’s 1940s musical plaint, covered by an assortment of stars and luminaries, from crooner Sinatra to Julie London and jazz notables like Stan Getz, Sarah Vaughan and Ella Fitzgerald. But this take seems to sail closet to Miles Davis’ Quintet recording, a solitary romantic pine of regret. Hochhalter sings a gauzy absorbed spell that’s barely there.
Songs like ‘Safety Second’ voyage towards the algorithms and arpeggiator of kinetic-pop and trance; a drifted Chet trumpet is present of course, but this feels less jazzy, more dreamy and cerebral. ‘Play It As It Lays’ sounds like the male/female duet affected ethereal sound of Hackedepiccitto in a cosmic starry embrace with Hugh Masekela, whilst ‘Ripple’ exists in a electronic-pop fog of Miles in Spain, near echoes of Mexico, Panda Bear and Colliery soul brass.
Effortlessly converging a removed version of the classical, jazz, dream pop and analogue-sounding electronica, Late Aster, in a live and filmed setting, produce moving music with a spacey, ethereal hazy feel. I love this EP, which bodes well for the duo’s inaugural album, released sometime in 2024.
Rita Braga ‘Illegal Planet’
(Comets Coming)

The stardust cowgirl, Lynchian chanteuse and idiosyncratic Portuguese siren Rita Braga is back with another disarming celluloid and kitsch songbook of alluring noir and daytime soap murder-mystery theatrics. I say disarming, because as fantastical, dreamy and exotic as it all is, there’s always a sense that something is not quite right: the plunge of a knife or drop of an axe, a creeping spine-tingling box of sounds, is never far away. A carnival of supernatural illusions and shivers permeates an often whimsical and lilting mood of warbled, wobbled lunar vibrations, Casio pre-set rhythms, shimmy and sauntering percussion, cinema organ and bobbing vibraphone and marimba.
At the heart of these off-kilter mambos, rumbas and jazzy enchantments lies a despondent feminist message, with Rita as femme fatale condoling lounge crooner and bewitching spell-caster, the star of her own Singing Detective musical, breaking the fourth wall to deliver beguiled thoughts on some very serious topics. Illegal Planet is bookended with dialogue borrowed from a film or TV show I’m not familiar with, the crux being that a mysterious “Rita” has enticed, charmed the male protagonist into her web and intrigues. The title-track features an exchange with a second male character, who more or less tries to shake his pal out of her spell, before the real Rita swoons sweet nothings from a spook-tinged cocktail lounge stage. Stereotypes are played with and owned you could say; Rita firmly in charge. Outside of that, the finale, ‘Unclassified’, with another line from that source, is a sleepy dusted, chiming outro of “thanks” and “gratitude” to the listener. But no matter how nice and whimsical, the “Please don’t forget to hit subscribe”, “one of the reasons I’m still alive”, lyrics (in my mind) can’t help but end on the all-too-real struggle of an artist in the online world: competing for validation, but more importantly attention, from the seldom found generosity of an audience increasingly used to freely streaming their favourite artists, or being blinded by the distractions of tiktok et al.
Rita has cast herself as costume-changing everywoman-like character, evoking Julee Cruise’s The Art Of Being A Girl on one role, and dreaming up fleeting exchanges with a mystical dog in a Belle Époque Paris setting in another. There’s also visits to Hawaii and the tropics (suggested by Rita’s beautifully played ukulele), out into the cosmos, the gothic and even a spot of climate change time-travelling – a hundred years to a boiling Earth, the colour scheme of burning scorched planet at least “cool” enough to pull-off a 70s retro style décor to match a bland IKEA world of decorated conformity.
We’re reminded too that “nothing comes from nowhere”; Rita pulling from out of the four winds, the ether, a bluesy kind of noirish yearning, accompanied by a smooching and aching saxophone. With no real prompts as such, maybe you can read a comment on cultural appropriation, culture recycling or just an echo that there really isn’t “anything new under the sun” so why worry about it. We all borrow. Then again it could be about the spread of information, or misinformation.
Kooky yet seductive, deep yet flighty and often fun, Rita’s masquerade of dames is a combination of Hollywood, Twin Peaks, Tim Burton, Pulp Fiction and a Renaissance Fair. But above all this is a world of its own making, a familiar sound magically screw-balled towards Rita’s worldview.
Trapped on the surface of a never-ending hell, Rita dreams up and fantasies in the glare and soft focus of the film camera. An “illegal” – with all what that word entails- alien cast adrift in a Walter Mitty world, Rita escapes the bland with eccentric élan on a finely crafted album of the imaginative and charmingly odd.
Hi, my name is Dominic Valvona and I’m the Founder of the music/culture blog monolithcocktail.com For the last ten years I’ve featured and supported music, musicians and labels we love across genres from around the world that we think you’ll want to know about. No content on the site is paid for or sponsored and we only feature artists we have genuine respect for /love. If you enjoy our reviews (and we often write long, thoughtful ones), found a new artist you admire or if we have featured you or artists you represent and would like to buy us a coffee at https://ko-fi.com/monolithcocktail to say cheers for spreading the word, then that would be much appreciated.
Our Daily Bread 592: Trupa Trupa ‘Thrill’
September 7, 2023
NEWS/TRACK
DOMINIC VALVONA

Announcement time from our dear friends in the famous Polish port of Gdańsk, with the city’s most notable band of recent years, Trupa Trupa, full of encouraging news and prospects.
If you’d read my previous posts on the quartet’s ttt (released as a limited cassette run), B Flat A and Of The Sun albums then you’ll have some idea of context for this band of psychodrama, dream revelation, hypnotic, propelled and industrial post-punk, art and psychedelic rock deep thinkers. Their music, filled with a psychogeorgaphy, travails and the cerebral, goes further than just sonically. Trupa Trupa band member and spokesman of a kind, and my first-port-of-call, Grzegorz Kwiatkowski is not only a musician but a published poet/writer and local activist: all three of which are channeled into the band’s unique sound.
Grzegorz recently notified me of one such piece of positive activism, with the official go ahead for a memorial marking Gdańsk’s former Jewish ghetto. Housed as it was in the Old Red Mouse Granary on Granary Island, this stain on the city’s reputation was eventually bombed by the Allies in 1945. The grandson of a concentration camp survivor, Grzegorz campaigned with others towards building a permanent link, reminder to a mostly “forgotten” part of the Polish city’s history.
The Jewish Chronicle recently published a piece on this achievement, interviewing Grzegorz, who commented upon the proposed site: “…one of the last empty places [on the island] not full of luxury apartments”. For, as if to pile drive over such a heinous crime, this once last stopping point for the city’s remaining Jewish population before being cattled and sent to the death camps, is now rapidly becoming gentrified: a chapter, forensic scene, closed and paved over, as if nothing had ever happened. Just in time, a marker will now act as a point of remembrance, education.
You can read more abut that campaign in the JC here…
Second on the agenda, Trupa Trupa have confirmed a spot on the idiosyncratic Rockaway Beach Festival lineup next year. A sort of unique and close-up multimedia experience down on the Southern Coast of England, in the holiday camp dominated Bognor Regis; they’ll be sharing the bill with the Sleaford Mods, The Vaselines, The Cribs and The Selector. Visit the site for more details and tickets here...
Lastly, ahead of what could be a future album perhaps, Trupa Trupa release there newest and most ‘Syd Barret’ in spirit single, ‘Thrill’. In a ‘broken world of psychedelia’, the signatures of a madcap laughs – the pre dirge-y progressive and humourless incarnation that appeared in the wake of Syd’s chemical trip death – version of the Floyd manifest in a dreamy meander turn climatic vortex spun cycle of The cure, Ty Segall, Crispy Ambulance and post-punk hallucination. The “thrill” in question is “artificial”, the titular mantra sent down the rabbit hole before surfacing, pressed and increasingly deranged. This truly is Trupa Trupa at their most uniquely psychedelic; as tripping as they are disturbing, making sense of a senseless world.
The band had this to say about the video that accompanies it:
The video was directed by Adam Witkowski (1978), a Polish audiovisual artist, painter, musician, video and installation artist, professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Gdańsk. As a visual artist, he co-created several hundred exhibitions, and as a musician and sound engineer, he released several dozen albums (e. g. Nagrobki, Wolność, Gówno, Langfurtka, etc.). He creates music for films and theater performances.
Witkowski talks about the video: “My assumptions when working on the video clip for the song “thrill” was to integrate the image with the music as much as possible and to refer picture to the style of early music films from the late 1960s. I wanted many dimensions to permeate the image, hence the parallel use of several techniques of analog animation (plasticine, colored paper, printing) and digital animation. The photos we took at the Pomeranian arboretum were made using several different recording devices, and we obtained deformations by passing the image through glass filled with water. In the background, there are echoes of gnostic tales from the early films of Derek Jarman and the book “Valis” by Philip K. Dick – a ray of knowledge sent from outside the labyrinth penetrates the chaotic reality, gives a potential opportunity to catch it, tune in to its vibrations and understand the essence of all things.”
ALBUM PURVIEW/CONTEXT: DOMINIC VALVONA

‘Parchman Prison Prayer – Some Mississippi Sunday Morning’
(Glitterbeat Records) 15th September 2023
Back in the state penitentiary system, the producer, author and violence prevention expert Ian Brennan finds the common ground once more with another cast of under-represented voices. Eight years on from his applauded, Grammy nominated Zomba Prison Project, Brennan, thousands of miles away from that Malawi maximum-security facility in the deep, deep South of America, surprises us with an incredible raw and “uncloyed” (one of Brennan’s best coined interpretations of his production and craft) set of performances of redemption and spiritual conversion.
On the surface, what connects that Zomba experience and this Sunday service communal at the infamous Parchman Prison in the Mississippi Delta is less a somber woe me sense of bitterness at incarceration, but a documentation of endurance and spirit. In fact, the inmates of Parchman seem, or the individuals put on tape and prosperity, to face up to their crimes, misdeeds; a self-realisation you could say. Most of this is down to finding religion; in this setting, and with the history, it’s Christianity – although no actual denomination is mentioned, its fairly obvious we’re talking the Baptismal, Evangelical kind that fires up the soul and glorious magic of Gospel music in the Black communities of America. In many ways, with suspicion and well-founded doubt, this paean, celebration of God and Jesus is routinely sniffed at or dismissed; the premise of salvation mocked even, and constantly skewered to certain groups, individuals own selfish purposes. Musically, this tradition has undeniably given birth to some of the greatest sounds and voices in the American music cannon; a sanctuary to find understanding and guidance in the face of oppression and racism. It’s difficult for many of us to understand faith, but there’s no way you can’t be moved by Arthea, the Staple Family and Sam Cooke (to name just a few of those hot-housed in the church). And although we’re not told of their crimes, their sentences (remember this is a prison that includes both a men’s and women’s death row), you can’t help but be moved by the inmates on this testament to spiritual salvation.
For some context, Parchman squats across 28sq miles of unconventional farm-like enclosures near to the uninhabitable swamps of the Delta, but also within shouting distance of the Blues map of iconic landmarks and civil rights flashpoints. In the former camp, the birthplace of Muddy Waters, Ike Turner and Sam Cooke (in nearby Clarksdale), and the place where Bessie Smith breathed her last and junction where Robert Johnson signed over his soul to the Devil. In a nutshell, the very birthplace of Blues as we know it. And if we go even further back, the conjuncture of at least two First Nation routes across the South. In the latter camp, Parchman is a “hop” and “skip” away from the gruesome, evil racist torture and murder (eventually lynched) of Emmett Till in 1955. That’s some psychogeography right there.

PHOTO CREDIT: Marilena Umuhoza Delli
The inmate population of the prison is mixed, with racial tensions resulting in some forms of segregation. Statistics wise, its ranked as one of the worst prisons for mortality rates and rioting. Improved, depending on who you listen to or read (Jay-Z was moved and enraged enough to back and file a class action suit against the “barbaric conditions” of this prison not all that long ago), Parchman was once run more or less like a private fiefdom, with prisoners routinely worked to near death; the Black inmates picking cotton, back in servitude and chains as if emancipation had never happened. This was Jim Crow country after all. A bleak environment to put it mildly, it formed the backdrop to Bukka White’s (one in a long line of Bluesman, Rock ‘n’ Rollers, Bluegrass and Country luminaries that spent time there) forewarned ‘Parchman Farm Blues’, to Faulkner’s The Mansion (christened with forebode by the author as “destination doom”) and Jesmyn Ward’s award-winning 2017 novel Sing, Unburied, Song. They based prisons in both Cool Hand Luke and O Brother Where Art Thou? on it too.
Whilst Brennan, as part of his ongoing acclaimed series of “in-situ” recordings around the world (mostly in some of the globe’s most dangerous and remote locations) with his filmmaker, photographer and activist partner Marilena Umuhoza Delli, hones in on just one such scandal hit prison, he’s shining a light on America’s entire prison system; its laws, sentencing and the disparity in incarcerating those from the Black population. Funds from bandcamp pre-sales for example went towards the NAACP Legal Defense Fund.
In answer to the intergenerational strife of racism in America, the voices on this album turn to the Gospels; guided by the prison’s chaplains, although services are in some cases segregated: but not here.
It took three years of bureaucracy to unlock the cell doors, and much apprehension, but Brennan’s skills in diplomacy eased the way for candid, pure performances; both a capella style and with the accompaniment of instruments from the prison chapel. And as ever, with minimal fuss the he captures some stark epiphanies, afflatus revelations and paeans from a cast of both partially identified and anonymous prisoners. The oldest of which, the seventy-three year old former rock ‘n’ roll singer turn chaplain, C.S. Deloch, who offers one of the most poignant quotes: “You’ve got to get out of prison while you’re still in prison”. That former life comes in handy as Deloch leads the congregation on the Muscle Shoals gospel (via Jamaica) ached ‘Jesus, Every Day Your Name Is The Same’, and the final group effort, hallelujah clapping with Fats Weller piano jangling, ‘Lay My Burden Down’.
Past lives for the most part are kept secret, but as you listen to those unfiltered (ok, the odd bit of echo here and there) humbling songs it becomes apparent that there isn’t any distinction or difference in quality to those professionals on the outside. The twenty-nine year old L. Stevenson, stripped back to nothing, has such a soulful reverence on ‘Open The Eyes Of My Heart, Lord’. And on the handclapped, iterated ‘I Gotta Run’, he performs a brilliant doo-wop-esque turn, complete with lower frog-like register bass. One anonymous participant sounds like John Legend, on the beautifully yearned love paean, ‘I Give Myself Away, So You Can Use Me’ – a real highlight that if buried on any compilation would have been assumed to be from some pianist-singer R&B troubadour of repute.
You could hear L. Brown’s ‘Hosanna’ litany being used as a hip-hop sample by Jay Z or the dodgier Kayne West – who’s had is own flirtations with the good book and gospel music.
Surprisingly, the only actual proto-rap inclusion on this album is the Robinson and A. Warren collaboration ‘Locked Down, Mama Prays For Me’, which combines a sympathetic soulful hum with a spoken word walk through of shame. There are rumminations on the hurt caused, and the machismo that comes with the territory, plus a special heartfelt apology to his mum.

PHOTO CREDIT: Marilena Umuhoza Delli
The sixty-three year old N. Petersen wades in the waters on the Holy Land baptismal Galilee, transferred to the Mississippi bayou, ‘Step Into The Water’, whilst A. Warren’s second appearance, ‘Falling In Love With Jesus Was The Best Thing I’ve Ever Done’, has a real Willis Earl Beal vibe. The most unusual recording is by the sixty-year old M. Palmer, who’s deeper than deep throaty baritone is almost mystical on ‘Solve My Mind’; especially with what appears to be a reverberated otherworldly drone accompaniment.
There’s music, song and litany that would be recognizable to inmates from the turn of the last century, whilst others, tap right into the modern age. The Gospel’s message runs deep in the Southern realms, and encouragingly seems to motivate even those with little hope of being released. Hard times are softened by belief and redemption on a revelatory production. Returning to America after a myriad of recordings throughout the world’s past and present war zones, scenes of genocide and remote fabled communities, Brennan finds just as much trauma and the need for representation back home.
Hi, my name is Dominic Valvona and I’m the Founder of the music/culture blog monolithcocktail.com For the last ten years I’ve featured and supported music, musicians and labels we love across genres from around the world that we think you’ll want to know about. No content on the site is paid for or sponsored and we only feature artists we have genuine respect for /love. If you enjoy our reviews (and we often write long, thoughtful ones), found a new artist you admire or if we have featured you or artists you represent and would like to buy us a coffee at https://ko-fi.com/monolithcocktail to say cheers for spreading the word, then that would be much appreciated.
Our Daily Bread 590: Violet Nox’Vortex And Voices’/Droneroom ‘The Best Of My Love’
September 1, 2023
A SOMEWHERECOLD RECORDS DOUBLE BILL/DOMINIC VALVONA

Violet Nox ‘Vortex And Voices’
(Somewherecold Records) 15th September 2023
A sci-fi chemistry of vapours the Boston, Massachusetts electronic outfit Violet Nox once more entrance with a futuristic new age album of psy-trance, cerebral techno and acid ethereal-voiced self-realization/self-discovery. Wired into the “now” however, messages of self-love and inclusiveness waft and drift to a rhythmic, wavy vision of EDM, crossover rave music and soulful electronica.
For this newest venture – their first for the highly prolific and quality North American label Somewherecold Records – features, more than ever, the experimental, often effected, vocals of group member Noell Dorsey: a mix of hippie cooed yearn, Tracey Thorn, Claudia Brücken and Esbe if you will.
A siren-in-the-machine, Dorsey expresses dreaminess, sadness and on the near mystical, wispy and lightly dub-y ‘Loki’, a past life as some Egyptian wraith – yes, I get that the title would favour something more Nordic in atmosphere and theme, but this regression into an old incarnation sounds more like a oboe trippy hallucination of Egyptology.

Often expanding the set-up, apparatus and lineup, this time around the Gaia attuned ensemble consists of core members Dez DeCarlo (on synth/effects pedals), foil Andrew Abrahamson (“synthesis”, sampler and clocked machines) and the already mentioned Dorsey. Musically, sonically they keep up the trance and minimal techno, melodic and kinetic rhythmic signatures, whilst erring towards club-like sung vocals and electronic pop. But it’s a real mix of synthesized influences, cybernetics and cosmic voyages into the internal and external mind.
The opening magnesium cooking vapoured and ached ‘Ascent’ evokes elements of Musicology, The Higher Intelligence Agency and Jarré; a lost trance-y peregrination from the early Warp label files. The more ominous, leviathan shadowed drama in granular cyberspace, ‘Chaos’, reminded me more of Harthouse, even Kraftwerk (those mesh-sizzled compressed drum pads especially), and the light note arpeggiator cascading and floated gauzy ‘Senzor’ sounds like a mix of Sven Vath and Vangelis’ Blade runner score.
Whether it’s journeying into the subconscious or leaving for celestial rendezvous’, Violet Nox turn the vaporous into an electronic art form that’s simultaneously yearning and mysterious. Fizzing with techy sophistication and escapism, the American electronic group continue to map out a fresh sonic universe.
Droneroom ‘The Best Of My Love’
(Somewherecold Records) 22nd September 2023

The barest hovering of a held note and most minimal of traced finger work, brushes and brassy resonance is enough to conjure up arid vistas, rumination and “sullen” emotions on Blake Edward Conley’s fifth album for the North American label Somewherecold.
The Louisville-based guitarist-composer can convey or draw out deep-held feels, sentiments and remembrance from scarcely rhythmic loops and drones – hence the Droneroom moniker. And whilst recording stations include the arrival/departure lounges of the Soulsville, Memphis TN and Denver International airports – Las Vegas too –, this latest vaporous and resonated transformation pictures mirages on mysterious desert horizons and both McCarthy and Lynch’s supernatural, occult ghosts of the old American West; think Ry Coder as an alternative choice for The Blood Meridian, or, the Gunn-Truscinski duo collaboration scoring Paris, Texas. ‘You Can’t Piss In The Same River Twice’ (sound advice) goes even further in evoking something both alien but recognisable. A filtered, muffled spherical vortex spins around like some off-world portal as Conley picks at and sort of strums a very removed vision of bluegrass on a brassy-resonating banjo.

‘Other Desert Cities’ sounds more like an enervated Sunn O))) with Brian Rietzel in a haze of blurred and more trilled echoes of nothingness. And yet a landscape image of something other and paranormal emerges from razor buzzes, scaly nickel strings and soft harmonies. It’s as if there’s a prevailing presence of someone, a thing, even time itself. ‘Cole Morse Was A Friend Of Mine’ whilst not so much elegiac, does paint a personalized desolate empty world of dust and reflection. It’s followed by another tribute/homage/thank you allusion to remembrance. ‘Nothing Of Value Is Ever Truly Lost (For Jess)’ is filled with warm feelings, a fondness, that’s weaved into an intimate gentle cascade of melodic country-folk-Americana guitar stirrings (reminding me a little of Raul Refree) that sound almost sitar like.
Abandonment, oaths, mourning and love hang like tangible descriptions in rippled, palpitating and softly juddered panoramas. Loops, vibrato, fanning effects are both wispy and sonorous; the guitar and banjo both recognisable and oblique on an album that applies an ambient and drone mystery to what you could call an abstract expansion of Americana.
The Monthly Playlist: Choice Music From August 2023: GOAT, Ramson Badbonez, Jaimie Branch, Part Bat, Dave Meder ..
August 30, 2023
PLAYLIST/TEAM EFFORT
A summary of the last month on the Monolith Cocktail site

Each month Dominic Valvona curates an eclectic musical journey from all the choice releases featured on the Monolith Cocktail, with records selected from reviews by Dominic, Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea and Andrew C. Kidd. Plus Matt Oliver’s essential hip-hop revue and a smattering of tracks we didn’t get the chance to write about for a lack of time and space.
_____TRACKLIST_____
Ramson Badbonez ‘Weight’
FRSHRZ X Tom Caruna Ft. Essa, Phill Most Chill, Clencha, Frisco Boogie, YU, Jehst, Homeboy Sandman, Willie Evans Jr., Dr Syntax, Doc Brown, Wizdom (Green Jade), Chill aka Greenzilla, Jaz Kahina, Mas Law, Koba Kane, Blade, Pavan, Seanie T, Michie One, Graziella, Watusi87, K9, Si Philli, Apex Zero, Genesis Elijah, Longusto, Nutty P, Tubby Boy, LeeN, Skillit, F-Dot-1, SKANDOUZ, Dray, Artcha, Georgious Lazakis, Dekay, Dee Lush, Briti$h, Anyway tha God, Quartz Crystallius, Lemzi, BREIS, Leo Coltrane, Jugg GTB, Slippy Skillz, Scorzayzee, Obi Joe, El Da Sensei, Whirlwind D, Dillon, Cuts From Jazz T ‘BARS 50MC – Remix’
Azalu ‘Fleshbite’
Lunch Money Life ‘Love Won’t Hide Your Fears (The Bishop And The Bunsen Burner)’
GOAT ‘Unemployment Office’
Flat Worms ‘Suburban Swans’
Part Bat ‘Okay’
Group O ‘The Answer Machine’
Black Milk ‘Downs Get Up’
Apollo Brown ‘Three Piece’
Open Mike Eagle ‘We Should Have Made Otherground A Thing’
Raw Poetic, Damu The Fudgemunk ‘The Speed Of Power’
Stik Figa, Blu ‘Uknowhut? (The Expert Remix)’
Jaimie Branch ‘Bolinko Bass’
Trademarc, Mopes, SUBSTANCE810 ‘No Huddle’
Joell Ortiz, L’ Orange ‘In My Feelings’
Kut One, Jamal Gasol ‘Stay Sucker Free’
Belbury Poly ‘The Path’
Hydroplane ‘Stars (Twilight Mix)’
Slow Pulp ‘Broadview’
Yann Tiersen ‘Nivlenn’
Rojin Sharafi ‘dbkkk’
Andrew Hung ‘Find Out’
Misya Sinista, ILL BILL, Vinnie Paz, DJ Eclipse ‘Verbal Assualt’
Verbz, Nelson Dialect, Mr. Slipz ‘Edge Of Oblivion’
Koralle, Kid Abstrakt ‘Mission’
Rhinoceros Funk, Rico James ‘Pump This’
Sa-Roc ‘Talk To Me Nice’
Elisapie ‘Isumagijunnaitaungituq (The Unforgiven)’
MacArthur Maze, DJ D Sharp, Blvck Achilles, Champ Green, D. Bledsoe ‘Switching Lanes’
Bixiga 70 ‘Malungu’
Gibralter Drakus ‘Exode Ritual’
Dave Meder ‘Modern Gothic’
Knoel Scott, Marshall Allen ‘Les Funambules’
Vitamin G, Illinformed ‘Big Spender’
NC Lives ‘Cycle’ Candid Faces ‘Coming Home’
The Legless Crabs ‘Unstoppable’
Neon Kittens ‘Sunburn On My Legs’
En Fer ‘Mon Travail, Mon Honneur Et Ma Perseverance’
Craig Fortnam ‘All Dogs Are Robots’
Liraz ‘Bia Bia – JM Version’
Galun ‘Mirror’
Exit Rituals ‘A Fluid Portrait’
Dot Allison ‘220Hz’
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.
DOMINIC VALVONA’S MONTHLY RECCOMEDNATIONS AND DISCOVERIES

(Photo credit: Ben Semisch, courtesy of Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts)
Jaimie Branch ‘Fly Or Die Fly Or Die Fly Or Die ((word war))’
(International Anthem) 25th August 2023

As an unwittingly last will and testament, the late experimental trumpeter Jaimie Branch’s final led album with her Fly Or Die ensemble is a beautiful collision of ideas and worldly fusions that pushes and pulls but never comes unstuck. In fact, despite the “world war” suffix backdrop this album of both hollered and more disarming protestation colourfully embraces the melodic, the groove and even the playful.
Whilst the “avant-garde” label sticks, this rambunctious, more ambitious, more demanding minor opus flows and swings to a polygenesis mix of spiritual, conscious, Afro, Latin and Ethio-jazz, the great American songbook, no wave, noise and the psychedelic. And yet, on the other hand, is almost punk in attitude; a sort of anything goes in the pursuit of the message: an embodiment of challenging the boundaries.
In light of her untimely death at the age of just thirty-nine last year (the release of this album tying in with the first anniversary of her passing), this incredible statement can be read as a sonic monument; a legacy project left behind as a blueprint for a whole movement. The lyrics to the actionist rumpus ‘Burning Grey’, delivered more like Ariel Up or Polystyrene, to a swinging protest march of Phil Cohran, the Pan Afrikan Peoples Arkestra and Cab Calloway, seem almost prophetic: “Wish I had the time” and the lasting sign-off, “Don’t forget to fight”.
The final album is one Branch would recognize; more or less musically complete, recorded as it was back in April of 2022 during an artist residency at the Bemis Center For Contemporary Art in Omaha, Nebraska. However, Branch’s sister Kate and a cast of collaborators rallied round to finish the artwork and production; the final article a proud achievement encouraged on by well-wishers and friends alike.
Alongside “Breezy” Branch, who not only masters the trumpet but pushes her voice like never before and picks up on the percussion and some keys, is her stalwart troupe of Lester St. Louis (cello, flute, keys, marimba and voice), Jason Ajemian (double bass, electric bass, marimba and voice), and Chad Taylor (bells, drums, mbira, timpani and, you guessed it, marimba). That quartet is expanded further by an array of guests, including a trio of notable Chicago-hailed innovators (the city, one of Branch’s biggest influences and home for a period), the arranger/composer/engineer/trombonist Nick Broste, musician/vocalist Akenya Seymour and fellow International Anthem label mate, the drummer Daniel Villarreal (he released his debut, Panama ’77 on the imprint last year). Rounding that worthy impressive list off is the American multi-instrumentalist, Cave/Exo Planet/Circuit des Yeux (the list goes on) instigator Rob Frye.
Not so much a surprise, the album opens with a sort of stained glass bathed organ overture: part the afflatus, part pastoral hallowed ELP, part new age kosmische. A roll of bounded controlled thunder and gravitas is added to a crystal bellow and squeeze of radiant notes and the thinly pressured valves of Branch’s trumpet, which makes a brief appearance after the Ariel Kalma-like transcendence. ‘Aurora Rising’ lays down a short ceremonial communion with nature’s light before changing gear and spheres of influence. ‘Borealis Dancing’ now adds Mulatu Astake Ethio-jazz, a touch of Fela Kuti, Don Cherry and Yazz Ahmed to the ephemeral Northern Lights show as Branch toots long and softly at first before changing to higher pitch shrills. The rhythm, timing changes at the halfway mark towards a slinking groove of funk and Afro-jazz, the trumpet now cupped and echoing.
By the fourth track, ‘The Mountain’, there’s a complete sea change in mood, direction as Branch and her foils transform The Meat Puppets quickened country yin ‘Comin’ Down’. A dueting Branch and Ajemian bring it back home (so to speak) to the Ozarks and Appalachians via Paul Simon, Dylan, 60s West Coast troubadour traditions and a reimagined Sun Records. A brassy-sounded trumpet repeats the tone and springy country vocals as a gurgle of drawn-out cello plays a more somber rumination of hardy travail. To be honest, I was unaware of The Meat Puppets original, but this is a welcome meander in a different direction.
A full lineup joins in on the marimba heavy carnival turn mysterious swamp ether ‘Baba Louie’. Francis Bebey swerves to Satchmo New Orleans, whilst taking a dance around Masekela’s Soweto on a bustled bounce of joy and triumph, before succumbing to the voodoo psychedelic vapours; enticed by a cooing R&B flavoured misty Seymour. This bleeds into the bluegrass fiddled stirrings of ‘Bolinko Bass’, another Orleans evoked, almost regimental drummed bayou Mardi Gras of David Byrne, Funk Ark and Phil Ranelin. Almost mournful, ‘And Kuma Walks’ is more bluesy sounding, yet estranged at the same time; skulking amongst the spirits as someone saws through a fiddle as the trumpet aches in elegiac plaint.
Single, ‘Take Over The World’ is a hyped-up rattle and untethered excitement of no wave, punk jazz. Branch repeats a wild mantra and plays a burning bright thrill of trumpeted blasts whilst a controlled chaos spins all around her. Protest and partying converge for an electrifying, and later on, psychedelic bending stretched act of defiance.
The album ends by simmering down to a period of Afro-spiritual lament and reflection, on the sloganist berating ‘World War (Repirse)’. There’s serious bowed strings, trilled and forewarned trumpet, a sustained organ and windy, desolate enacted atmosphere on this weary actionist swan song: Branch urging caution at “false flags” and encouraging the fight.
For me Branch’s main instrument burns bright, and yet never seems to dominate, lead or overstay its welcome at any point on the album. Not for nothing is her own quote of “…meaning every note”, with not one rasp, trill, toot and cycle out of place; nothing is pushed but just felt and right at that moment. It feels to me, despite such a rich and diverse back catalogue, that Branch had so much more to give, her best still to come. And her gift was not just in crossing and mixing styles, influences, but also in pushing others to reach their own full potential as musicians. Fly Or Die Fly Or Die Fly Or Die ((word war)) is an accomplished album that channels the legacies of Chicago, New Orleans and New York to create an eclectic modern adventure in protest jazz.
Knoel Scott Ft. Marshall Allen ‘Celestial’
(Night Dreamers)

A leading light in the Sun Ra cosmology since auditioning for the Saturn jazz ambassador’s famous Arkestra ensemble in 1979, the baritone saxophonist, composer, vocalist and, when the occasion arises, dancer Knoel Scott amasses a lifetime of experience and musicianship on his debut solo-headed album. I say debut and solo, and without the extension of his previous KS Quintet named release, but the reeds specialist shares his Celestial project title with the Arkestra’s freeform progenitor, Marshall Allen.
Allen’s relationship with Sun Ra, on an album positively radiant and lunar with his guardianship and influence, goes back much further than Knoels; a stalwart since the ensemble’s formation in the 1950s, leading the troupe, the baton passed down as it were, after the cosmic Afrofuturist titan’s death in 1993. Unbelievably still in fine fettle, despite almost celebrating his centenary (that’s next May by the way), the avant-garde, inter-dimensional alto saxophonist, flutist, oboe, piccolo and EWI (that’s Electronic Wood Instrument) synthesist can be heard lending the latter’s strange sci-fi arcs, bends and space dust to the album’s title-track. It’s unsurprising to find that ‘Celestial’ has all the hallmarks of Ra too, written as it was originally with strings for the Arkestra, but never recorded.
The Arkestra family is extensive with celestial poetry taken from the late Arnold “Arto” Jenkins, recited on this universal lullaby. Art stuck with the Arkestra for thirty-six years, right up until his death in 2012. You can hear him and his “space megaphone” delivered offerings to the galaxy on Secrets Of The Sun, way back in 1962. As a homage to that universal-spiritualist’s wanton guidance, Knoel trips the radiant light fantastic, giving praise to the wisdom of the ancients and star people on a seeker’s performance of UFO oscillations, serenaded sentiments and dreamy translucence. It sounds like Cab Calloway and 50s wings being beamed up into Sun Ra’s off-world paradise.
The influence continues with the presence of the Paris scene stalwart and multifaceted (from Dancehall to Makossa, and of course jazz) drummer Chris Henderson, who’s experiences lend a both studied and more untethered freeform feel that moves between swing, big band, Latin, bop and the experimental.
This however is an inter-generational album, with fresher faces of the London scene, the very much in-demand UK keyboardist and versatile pianist Charlie Stacey and Verona-bred electric bassist and oft Arkestra and Knoel Quartet foil, Mikele Montolli. Hailed, quite rightly, as an advanced player, able to adapt to a wealth of styles, Stacey’s touch can evoke the best of those sublime 50s Blue Note recordings, touches of Oscar Peterson and Allen collaborator Terry Adams. The piano both flows with a tinkled busy lightness or strikes the heightened and jarring near-dissonance of freeform jazz; a descending off-tune part here, Cuban show time and bluesy or smoky lounge parts elsewhere: Unstated, yet moving along the action, or taking a soft stroll down the scales.
It’s another musician, part of the luminary brethren, that inspires the Afro-Cuban via Saturn’s rings ‘Makanda’. Paying tribute to a late mentor, Dr. Ken “Makanda” McIntyre, Knoel cooks up a Latin flavoured cool breeze of Havana, Harold Land vibes and R&B grooves: all undulated by sci-fi warbles and flits. A pivotal figure and influence for Knoel, “Makanda” (a name bestowed upon the reeds maestro and composer when playing in Africa, it translates from the Ndekele language as “many skins”, and in the Shona as “many heads”) founded the first ever African American music program in the States in 1971, and had worked with such notable talent as Eric Dolphy, Cecil Taylor and Nat Adderlay. Knoel and friends up the funk and balmy rhythms on this soulful homage to the late great man.
On his part, Knoel’s saxophone squawks, strains, honks and squeaks, and yet also serenades: even soothes. Wilder higher registered beak pecks turn into a near chaos, a cacophony, on the improvisation piece ‘Conversation With The Cosmos’. Coltrane, Sam Rivers and Anthony Braxton wail in zero gravity, whilst those wild rasps feel almost smoldering and lounge-like on the final mid paced twelve-bar slinky ‘Blu Blues’.
What a stellar set from the Arkestra acolyte, the Marshall and inner circle; and well done to the Night Dreamers for coaxing out this cosmic marvel. The process if you’re new to this label project, is to record the performances direct to tape before cutting on a Sally lathe the final vinyl artifact. In mono, recorded in an analogue studio, the sound is alive, inviting and, well, “celestial”. The experience speaks, communicates, and pushes the perimeters on every note, as a culmination of African American jazz styles are attuned to the stars.
Andrew Hung ‘Deliverance’
(Lex Records) 11th August 2023

With pain, suffering and anguish former Fuck Buttons trick noise maker Andrew Hung finds a cathartic release on his third solo outing, Deliverance. But as that title suggest, the anxieties and sense of isolation and belonging now seem to have slowly dissipated as Hung feels he’s been delivered from the morose and dark fog of depression; although there’s plenty of broody, moody despair and darkened thoughts to wade through before catching the light of hope.
Hope, being set free, the constantly developing artist and producer does seem to have found his creative peace; likening this album to “the end of the chrysalis stage, like breaking free from a previous life.” Not so much reincarnation as a new incarnation, pushed on during lockdowns to mine the deep well of his soul, to face regrets and failings, but also find what’s missing.
An act of self-realization perhaps, Hung conducts a therapeutic session both unflinching and revealing. If the lyrics of ‘Don’t Believe It Now’ are anything to go by, thoughts and mental anguish at one point were truly dark. However, that filtered vapour counters the resigned with a reviving build up. And on the opening tunneled, Sister Bliss and Underworld like, moody turn freedom spin, ‘Ocean Mouth’, Hung faces a list of disappointing traits head on: Almost like taking a breath as the Robert Smith-like palpitations and rave-y Bloc Party velocity of the production avoids suffocation and gravitates towards the techno cathedral of light. Submerged at every turn with recurring references to water, Hung swims and navigates the torrents and tides to find a number of revelations about himself: conquering fear.
The previous solo album, Devastations (a choice album no less in my end of year lists for 2021) looked to the cosmos with a propulsion of electronic, kosmische, motorik, Madchester and synth pop influences, and featured Hung the self-taught singer evoking a mix of Robert Smith (some very cure-esque touches musically too), Karl Hyde, Mark Hollis and The Cry’s Kim Berly. More distressed, gasping and wrenching Hung takes some of those same influences forward on Deliverance, whilst also seeming to whip up a touch of Minny Pops, New Order, Soft Cell and John Foxx on the struggles of isolation and need to belong themed neo-romantic ‘Find Out’.
In another honest cycle of shedding shame and casting away the pain in favour of finding that alluded love “saturation”, ‘Never Be The Same’ builds from synthesized drum pad elements of the 80s German new wave, Factory Records and industrial synth-pop into another unshackled escape towards the light of revelation. I’d throw in Martin Dupont, Tears For Fears and Yazoo to that both pumped and vapourous mix.
Floundering no more, Hung looks to have found his place, his voice too. Deliverance finds him channeling his lamentable, pained, and unsure emotions into something positive and bright with another candid confessional solo album of rave-y synth-pop indie brilliance.
Various ‘Intended Consequences’
(Apranik Records)

With a hellish multitude of flashpoints and distractions across the globe keeping the continuing fight for women’s liberation in Iran off the news rolls, it has become apparent that the Iranians themselves have been left to carry on the struggle with little support. In an ongoing war between the forces of the authoritarian religious state and a younger generation demanding an end to the erosions of there civil liberties and freedoms, the crisis in the country entered a dark bloody chapter last year with the murder in custody of Masha Zhina Amini by the “morality police”.
After a rightful campaign of protest and action at such a heinous crime, a brutal crackdown by the state led to mass arrests and even executions (mostly of male supporters, activists, and usually on trumped up charges). Further restrictions were invoked. And just as horrifying, in the last year, and right up to the last few months, there has been a nationwide spate of deliberate poisonings of schoolgirls (one of the groups who mobilized against the authorities in the wake of Amini’s cruel death) on mass. Defiant still, even in the face of such oppression, the brave women of Iran have strengthened their resolve only further.
In the face of such attacks, clampdowns, the music scene has responded with a strong message of resistance and solidarity. Despite everything, cities like the capital of Tehran have a strong music scene of contemporary artists, composers, DJs and performers working across all mediums, including art (which is probably why so much of the music is also so visceral, descriptive and evocative of imagery). One such collaborative force of advocates, AIDA and Nesa Azadikhah, co-founded the Apranik Records label, a platform for female empowerment. Following this year’s earlier Women Life Freedom compilation, a second spotlight volume delves further into not only the Tehran scene but picks out choice tracks from those female Iranians working outside the country, in such epicenters as London (AZADI.mp3) and Berlin (Ava Irandoost).
Sonic wise it covers everything from d’n’b, trance, deep house and techno to sound art experimentation. The range of moods is just as diverse in that respect, from restlessness to the reflective and chaotic.
Contributions from both Azadikhah (the hand drum rattled d’n’b breaks and spacy, airy trance ‘Perpetual’) and AIDA (the submerged melodious and dreamy techno ‘Ode To Expectations’, which features the final love-predicament film sample, “You know that I love you, I really do. But I have to look after myself too.”) can be found alongside a burgeoning talent pool. The already mentioned London-based producer and singer AZADI.mp3 opens this collection with a filtered female chorus of collective mantra protest, set to a sort of R&B, 2-step and bass throbbed production, on ‘Empty Platform’– just one of many tracks that uses the sounds of a more traditional Iran, especially the daf drum, alongside modern and futuristic warped effects. The sound artist and composer Rojin Sharafi likewise features the rattled rhythms of hand drums and some hidden spindled instrument – like running a stick across railings – on her entrancing kinetic techno ritual of “trauma”, ‘dbkk’.
Abji_hypersun allows the sounds of the environment to seep into her slow-building track of field recordings, collage and breaks (two-stroke scooters buzz by as distant female conversations reverberate on the street). Part jungle breaks pirate radio, part Matthew David, Jon The Dentist and LTJ Bukem, ‘Resist The God Trick’ evokes a tunneled vision of haunted reminisces and resistance in the shadows.
Emsho’s ‘Down Time’ is a rotor-bladed electro mix of Basic Channel and The Chemical Brothers, and Aida Shirazi’s mysterious wind of dark meta ‘R.E.V.O.L.U.T.I.O.N’ spells out the rage with a shadowy, near daemonic scripture of wrath and revenge – a gothic synth sinister avenging angel promises that the women of Iran will neither “forget” nor “forgive” their oppressors, torturers and murderers. Farzané seems to evoke the alien, the sci-fi on her experimental, sometimes disturbing dial twisting and crackled ‘Quori’ transmission, and the Berlin-based DJ, video artist and music producer Ava Irandoost draws on Laraaji-like dulcimer tones for her dream mirrored kosmische evocation ‘CINEREOUS’. The Tehran composer, pianist and bassist Ava Rasti draws a close to the compilation with a classical-tinged, harmonic ringed, saddened piano-lingering performance, entitled ‘Eight Night’ – an atmospheric troubled trauma is encapsulated with the deftest of touches.
It might be my own nostalgic penchant for 90s electronic music (my formative years of course), but this series (if we can call it that) could be an Iranian version of the Trance Europe Express compilations brought out during that decade; a treasure trove of discoveries and whole scenes that opened up a world of previously unknown music to many of us not living in the epicenters of North America, the UK and Europe and beyond. Hopefully this latest platform of innovative artists from across the arts will draw the attention it deserves; the message hardly virtuous, in your face, but sophisticated: the very act of female Iranians making a name for themselves despite censorship and bans a sign of empowerment and resistance in itself. Few groups deserve our support (which in the West has been sadly absent) more, but don’t just purchase for the cause but for the musical strives being awakened and produced under tyrannical oppression, and because this is a solid collection of great electronic music.
Nagat ‘Eyoun El Alb’
(WEWANTSOUNDS) 25th August 2023

Renowned as one of the greatest, most exceptional voices to have emerged from the golden 40s/50s/60s epoch of Egyptian and the greater Arabian songstresses and divas, Nagat El Seghirah was a rightly revered performer, who’s career spanned more than half a century.
Even in an age rich with accomplished, influential and groundbreaking singers Nagat held her own against such icons as Oum Kalthoum, Fairuz, Warda and perhaps the most celebrated of the lot, the anointed “voice of Egypt” Umm Kulthum. The latter, hailed the “star of the east”, was an influence on the early starter during the burgeoning years of imitation, when Nagat was a child, barely in her teens. Her affectionate appellation, “El Seghirah” or “El Sagheera”, can be translated as “the small”, “the young”, and marks the singer, performer and film star’s young apprenticeship; from entertaining the notable guests that gathered at her father’s (the famed calligrapher Mohamad Hosny) home at the age of five onwards, to her first role in cinema at the age of eight, starring in the 1947 film Hadiya. Hosny was known to push his extensive brood of children from two marriages, sometimes excessively, into various creative careers: Nagat’s half-sister was the famous actress Soad Hosny, her older brother, Ezz Eddin Hosni, a notable composer who helped her own development and natural talent.
During those initial years of development Nagat would interpret songs by such legendary figures as Mohamed Abdel Wahab, Baligh Hamdy and Kamal Al Taweel, but would find both her true and distinctive voice when interpreting the work of the Syrian diplomat-poet Nizar Qabbani. She gained adulation and fans after performing the esteemed poet’s tragic ‘Irja Ilyya’ (“Return To Me”), which is based on his sister who committed suicide rather than enter into an arranged marriage. Plaintive, stark, it rightly struck a chord with the public at the time, with its feminist lyrics and spotlight on forced marriages. It would be become a torchlight for freedom and injustice, with Nagat adding her own improvised original lines during the 1970s.
Born in 1938 but already gaining plaudits by the end of the next decade, into the next, Nagat released her first actual song ‘Why Don’t You Allow Me To Love You’ in 1955; the year she would also be married, for the first time, to a friend of one of her brothers: still only sixteen. It’s no surprise, although in no way a forced marriage, that she could, with a commanding voice, perform Qabbani’s tragedy. That marriage would only last however until the turn of the 1960s; when Nagat went on to marry the Egyptian film director Houssam El-din Mustafa in 1967 (a marriage that lasted an even shorter time). Nagat would remain, in fact seeing as she is still alive, in her eighties, remains unmarried. In recent years, since her singing retirement over twenty years ago, living a semi-reclusive life in Cairo but in poor health, there’s been some contact, even projects floated. Only last year she was featured on the official soundtrack for the streaming service series Moon Knight.
From concert to soundstage with starring roles in the films Black Candles, Beach Of Fun, My Dear Daughter and Dried Tears, Nagat gradually moved from shorter songs to ever more lengthy performances, some of which would last an hour. As time went on the songstress actress would find it harder to find those inspired works to perform. Retiring from film in 1976, Nagat would still persevere with music. And by the time she reached her early forties, in the 1980s, would release this four-track showcase of matured talented performances entitled Eyoun El Alb.
Originally brought out exclusively on cassette (like so much of the Egyptian music market), forty odd years later the reissue vinyl specialists of impeccable tastes (releasing a myriad of jazz titles and nuggets from across the Arabian world and Japan), WEWANTSOUNDS in conjunction with the Arabia and North African crate-digger Disco Abrabesquo (the moniker of the Egyptian, Amsterdam-residing DJ, Moataz Rageb), have pressed it onto vinyl for the first time. If you are a regular reader, or in fact a regular WWS’s follower and buyer, then you will be aware of that label’s previous collaboration with DA, last year’s (although they’ve also released a smattering of Egyptian focused records too over the years) Sharayet El Disco compilation. One notable inclusion on that eye-opening compilation (reviewed by me in May’s Perusal column) was from the legendary Al Massrieen. A much sought after recording outfit, the group’s Hany Shenouda produced the scenic, romantic ‘Ana Bashaa El Bahr’ (or “I Adore The Sea”) finale on this Nagat album. Adoration and yearned dreaminess for a place and time are evoked to Shenouda’s trebly near-psych tremolo guitar and light hand drum patters. Alongside the more lilting and fluted ‘Bahlam Meeak’ (“I Dream With You”), this is one of those examples of Nagat’s shortened form of storytelling romance and heartache. ‘Bahlam Meeak’ is also an example of Nagat’s more lightened, honeyed approach to what is a tinkled serenaded, wafted vision of blossom scented sand dune balladry. It evokes the music of Bacharach and the cool soundtracks of early 60s French and Italian new wave cinema.
Taking up the entirety of Side One, there’s the long form titular performance of heightened drama and searing swirled strings oboe and scuffled trinkets. Over eighteen-minutes of longed romantic gestures, the action pauses repeatedly between undefined sections; allowing the auditorium audience to show its appreciation, encouragement, which they do constantly, even when the music starts back up again. On a Matinee scale, this mini-story, unveiling of lovelorn exultations, but vulnerability and occasional lament, moves like a desert caravan across an Egyptian set, or, sumptuously glides into a Persian court. A fantastic display of sagacious craft, Nagat’s voice never has to rise or push to convey a class piece of theatre and effective yearn of love.
Only half that duration, but still a long track, ‘Fakru’ (“Do You Remember”) is a rumination; the vibrating pools of memoary reflected in the dreamy wobbled effects that permeate this fluctuating lead vocal delivery and prompting chorus of female voices. Classical Cairo, there’s a chink and tinkle of percussion and shimmy-shaking, belly dancing rhythm that luxuriantly accompanies a yearning poetic and sometimes coquettish Nagat on her reminisces. As I said already, this album represents various sides of the enchanting, soulful and also distinctive icon’s vocal presence and range. The long and short: the unmistakable sound of Egypt, but also those influences from abroad too, are melded together on a classy piece of cinematic and poetic mastery. Make room again on those creaking shelving units for another vinyl addition to the collection.
CHELA ‘Diagonal Drift’
(Echodelick – USA, We Here & Now – CA, Ramble Records – Aus, Worst Bassist Records – EU)

In communion with his long-time friend and collaborative foil in the University Challenged trio (alongside Oli Heffernan) Kohhei Matsuda, Ajay Saggar extends his blessed travels along the astral highways and byways with a new venture, CHELA.
Absorbed, imbued and inspired by Indian spiritualism, history and travails, its psychogeography and trauma, both partners in the new direction come together under the Sanskrit word for “disciple”; taken from the verb and root “to serve”, the “Chela” is similar in concept to a student, but implies a more loyal closeness with their teacher. In Hinduism this bond is considered sacred: An apt moniker for such inter-dimensional, afflatus dreamers and acolytes of raga, the new age, psychedlia and kosmische music.
Divine styler Saggar (who is also a member of King Champion Sounds, solos under the Bhajan Bhoy alias, and collaborates with Merinde Verbeck in the Deutsche Ashram duo) and Japanese noisenik Matsuda (most notably a member of the Bo Ningen quartet) spent much of 2022 putting this inaugural baptism together. And so with dedication to their art, the duo have sonically and melodically taken time, given depth to their new mysterious broadcast; that is, broadcasts from the ether, supernatural, uncertain, Fortean and cosmic. Different yet not entirely detached from previous incarnations, fans of both artists will pick up on past signatures, sounds and conceptions. However, they’ve managed to realign those same signatures, tuning into the mystical but often with trepidation and a sense that the noisier elements could consume all in their path.
Think Julius Eastman meets Fennesz we’re told; a good succinct summary. But I’d add a hell of a lot more, including Taylor Deupree and a cosmology of cosmic couriers. The opening ripple in the fabric of time, ‘Flyspray’, is an expanded peregrination of Beautifully tinkled Florian Fricke-like piano hauntings, Ariel Kalma and Syrinx new ageism and various Sky Records pioneers (Asmus Tietchens and Riechman spring to mind), all caught up in analogue wispy wind cacophony of divine rays, the esoteric and Eastern drones. Trippy warped reversals and folds, generator and processors nearly overwhelm the vague evocations of Tony Conrad, Schultz and a springy, but also spoke splayed banjo (which in itself seems to vaguely evoke the Balkans, Greece and strangely, India) on the reverberating ‘Appalachjo’.
In what could be a suggestion of “peace” and “harmony”, or reference to the Japanese town, ‘Heiwa’ is a hummed raga-like hymnal. A stand-up barrel-type piano plonks away from the ether, whilst ambient waves and traces of Dyzan invite heavenly reflection. ‘Ticker’ is a very different proposition. An intense chemistry of signals, beeps, quickened arrpegiator, moody signs of Faust and the sound of the Heart Of Darness are melted with Günter Schickert guitar, heavy acid Gong and various calculations.
‘Tanker’ feels like the most obvious attempt to score the sound of the title’s overbearing object; sounding like a alien freighter, both foreboding and mysterious. A scrawl and flapped ripple of radar and sonar bites into a resonating field of drones and sound waves, fog and guitar.
The final, spiritual and otherworldly track, ‘Worship’, features ghostly Indian voices and visitations from an event, service or chapter in time and history. A melodious piano chimes away in wisps of fanned cosmic mystique and cyclonic radio effects, whilst shades of FSOL, King Creosote (From Scotland With Love period) and Boards Of Canada linger. The video is more illuminating, a sepia film of bedside “worship”, healing for a leader, martyr, and a travelling funeral cortege that takes in rows of witnesses moved to touch, or just be in the essence of a distinguished teacher.
Once again with the cosmic and afflatus, Saggar and Matsuda expand their sound further. Diagonal Drift’s transcendental projection is just that, despite the building intensity and uncertainty, the broadcast noise of krautrock and kosmische styled aerial bends and radio tunings. CHELA is another welcome addition to the two artists oeuvre: one more step on the astral journey of mind-expanding experimentation.
Monthly Playlist Revue: July 2023
July 28, 2023
CHOICE MUSIC SELECTION FROM THE LAST MONTH ON THE MONOLITH COCKTAIL
TEAM EFFORT: DOMINIC VALVONA/MATT OLIVER/BRIAN ‘BORDELLO’ SHEA/GRAHAM DOMAIN/ANDREW C. KIDD

The Monolith Cocktail Monthly playlist is a revue of the last month on the blog, plus those tunes we didn’t get time to review or feature: including Matt Oliver‘s special hip-hop selection. Curated as a musical journey by Dominic Valvona, there’s a huge diverse array of choice tunes from across the genres and the globe, collated from an amalgamation of posts by Dominic Valvona, Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea, Graham Domain and Andrew C. Kidd.
THOSE TRACKS IN FULL ARE…
Habitat 617 Ft. Jack Slayta ‘Bricklayer’
Young Van Gundy Ft. Al Divino & Tha God Fahim ‘Fuyu No Senso’
J. Scienide & Napoleon Da Legend ‘Wind Parade’
Annie Taylor ‘Fucking Upset’
White Ring ‘Before He Took The Gun’
African Head Charge ‘Asalatua’
Mokoomba ‘Ndipe’
OKI ‘Tukinahan Kamuy’
Dip In The Dub ‘La Cumbia Del Sufi Que No Sabia Bailer’
Luiza Lian ‘Eu Estou Aqui’
Deja Blu ‘Crash’
It’s Karma It’s Cool ‘Vacations In A Taxi Cab’
Life Strike ‘Whip Around’
K-Nite 13 & Lee Scott Ft. Homeboy Sandman ‘Staple Junk’
The Moose Funk Squad ‘Abe Simpson’
Verb T & Vic Grimes ‘Your Heart Deserves’
SadhuGold ‘Fear Of A Black Yeti’
The Difference Machine ‘His Country’
Rusty Santos ‘Focus’
August Cooke ‘Shed With Me’
Maija Sofia ‘Telling The Bees’
Circe ‘My Boy Aphrodite’
Natalie Rose LeBrecht ‘Holy’
Hackedepicciotto ‘La Femme Sauvage’
Fat Frances ‘The Worm In The Wood’
Mike Gale ‘Summer Be Gone’
Stella Burns & Mick Harvey ‘My Heart Is A Jungle’
Emil Amos ‘Jealous Gods’
Oopsie Dasies ‘Illusioned-Broken Toys’
Zohastre ‘DUNE’ <THIS MONTH’S COVER ART STARS>
The Holy Family ‘Hell Born Babel’
The Dark Jazz Project ‘Jazz’
Healing Force Project ‘Inharmonious Layer’
Sebastian Reynolds ‘Cascade’
Caterina Barbieri ‘Sufyosowirl’
Ziur Ft. Abdullah Miniawy ‘Malikan’
Pierce Artists ‘Black Hooded Generals’
Stu Bangas & Chino XL ‘Who Told You’
Teflon/M.O.P. & DJ Premier ‘The Thoro Side’
Remulak & Moka Only ‘Starlings Green’
Jonny Wickham ‘Uncanny Valley’
Marty Isenberg ‘Life On Mars’
Gibralter Drakus ‘Exode Rural’
Las Mijas ‘Ronca (Carta Para Una Mija)’
Our Daily Bread 586: Hackedepicciotto ‘Keepsakes’
July 25, 2023
ALBUM REVIEW/DOMINIC VALVONA

Hackedepicciotto ‘Keepsakes’
(Mute) 28th July 2023
Responsible, in part at least, to helping shape a certain darkened yearned and dramatic sound over the last four decades in Berlin, the husband and wife partnership of Alexander Hacke and Danielle de Picciotto have at any one time, both separately and together, been in Einstürzende Neubauten, Crime And The City Solution and the Anne Sexton Transformations imbued theatrical Ministry Of Wolves. During that time Danielle also co-founded the famous Love Parade carnival. And so it’s unsurprising to find the influence of many of those bands rubbing off on them with this latest album for the highly influential Mute label. It’s a signature sound that could be described as a cabaret and soundtrack gravitas of post-punk, post-industrial, electronica, the esoteric, weird folk and twisted fairytale.
Ministry Of Wolves co-conspirator Mick Harvey (both as a foil to Cave and as a solo artist) and CATCS can be heard suffused throughout with a more distilled taste of Neubauten. However, it’s the history, spectacle of a Neapolitan environment that’s really got to them; the city’s legendary Auditorium Novecento and its stock of various instruments played host to the “symbiotic” entwined duo. The spirit of such early-recorded crooners and composers as Enrico Caruso, in one of Europe’s first recording studios, hangs in the air. And amongst the tubular bells, the brass and grand piano Ennio Morricone’s twinkled and xylophone-like chimed sounding celeste is put to good use across an album of dedications to close friends. For Keepsakes is (despite the cliché) the couple’s most personal, intimate album yet.
Following in the wake of the lockdown epoch produced The Silver Threshold (one of my favourite albums of 2021), which offered heightened snatches of beauty, romance and drama from a backdrop of the Biblical, cinematic and ominous (the last two attributes spilling over into this album), Keepsakes is partially autobiographical in style and content. Like a sonic, musical photo album, except far too cerebral to name or make explicit the people behind each track, they use a lyrical description, language and narration to build those pictures, feelings and terms of endearment. There’s no mention in the accompanying album press, but it didn’t take me long to find that the harder edged, gnarled and classical counterpoint ‘Aichach’ could only be a dedication to that small Bavarian town’s native electronic dance music pioneer, Chrislo Haas – it was either the late provocateur of the German New Wave or the infamous Ilse Koch, the “concentration camp murderess”, “witch of Buchenwald”, who topped herself after being imprisoned for life by the Americans in the late 1940s at that town’s women’s prison to chose from. Haas was an integral agitator as part of Liasions Dangereuses, Minus Delta F, D.A.F. and Der Plan (the last three of which he co-founded), and his own proto punk and Tresor techno signature can be heard racing against sorrowful bowed strings on an instrumental that’s both sadly poignant and yet has a scuzzy, heavy attitude. It must be noted that Haas died in 2004, at the age of only 47. A premature end from where I’m standing.
On the other hand, I’m guessing and stretching the subject of the Weimer jazz age noir and Brecht magic show ‘Schwarze Milch’. Featured last month in the June Digest, I said that the title translated as “black milk” and could be a reference to the German-Mongolian film drama of the same name by the director Uisenma Burchu, who also stars in it. And yet that Steppes liberated tale of culture-clashed sisters couldn’t be further removed from the odd cabaret sift and brushed, hurdy-gurdy winded and smoky sax circus of the playful, disturbed and animal-mask wearing cultish: I really adore it.
Apart from that the bestial, throat song from the bowels of the chthonian ‘Mastodon’, could be evoking the unholy, leviathan-invoking American heavy metal band of that title. The track is certainly darker, ghostly and has shades of John Carpenter and late Scott Walker. Yet there’s also weeping strings, Ennio’s struck bell tolls and a removed vision of the Italian maestro’s Westerns scores.
I’ve deduced that ‘La Femme Sauvage’, or “wild woman”, is a book and a film – also a recurring French storytelling trope of women brought up in the wilds by wolves and such. Sound wise it has more of that Ennio influence, mixed with a poetically spooked version of chanson, and a descriptive autobiographical, numerical, narrated part by Hacke: “three languages”, “four books” and “36 years in Berlin”. The celeste is very nicely chimed, as bulb-like notes ring out in the midst of a theremin dreamy yarn.
The album’s finale, ‘The Blackest Crow’, riffs – as only these two enchanters can – on the old American folk song. An American Gothic transformation, with the sound of waves evoking a bookend farewell, shipped off on tail sails – very much in keeping with the similar atmospheric, lapping tidal ‘Troubadour’ opener – this Appalachian and Ozarks provenance song of departed lovers in a cold, dark world is a perfect curtain call of unified plaint: an esoteric Carter Family. Thought to have emerged after the 1860s Civil War, the main lyrical theme of metaphorical crows, glass breasts, remains after infinite changes, additions and subtractions. Even the title can be different: ‘The Lover’s Lament’ in Carl Sandburg’s 1927 published The American Songbook, but also known as ‘My Dearest Dear’ and ‘The Time Draws Near’ – the former sounding more appropriate in this case. ‘The Troubadour’ itself has an air of something older about it; an essence of Tchaikovsky enchanted celeste with the courtly echoes of the Elizabethan.
In the more menacing stakes, ‘Songs Of Gratitude’ is a dramatic soundtrack of Walker with Sunn O))), Dead Can Dance and Brian Reitzell subterranean and scuzz strains: Hackedpicciotto entering the underworld with a song of yearned thanks.
The sound of Berlin with stopovers across Europe and New York City, Keepsakes conjures up evocative visions, dramas and characters out if the arty, the gothic, the cerebral and surreal; creating an alternative photo album and collection of memories, events. As earthy as it is dreamily floating in a constructed world of fairytale, myth and magic, the creatively sagacious couple draws upon a lifetime of experiences, friendships to produce another captivating album for the Mute label.



