Halloween 2024: Chthonian Party Tunes: King Gizzard, Vampire Rodents, Dust, Paten Locke, Head Shoppe…
October 24, 2024
THIS YEAR’S FIENDISH PLAYLIST SELECTED BY DOMINIC VALVONA

Morbid curiosities, ghoulish treats, horrorcore, and japes aplenty in this year’s Halloween playlist, as Dominic Valvona picks out 33 spooked, daemonic, Fortean and atmospheric tracks from across the decades and from an array of genres.
For your weekend mis-pleasures, sabbaths or monster mashing rave-ups, an ideal playlist of the macabre, esoteric and hellish.
Philip Martell ‘The Devil Rides Out Main Theme’
Shakane ‘Dance of the Dead’
Bass Drum of Death ‘No Demons’
Aphrodite’s Child ‘Babylon’
Andarta ‘Dehumanise’
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard ‘Vomit Coffin’
Vampire Rodents ‘Creeper’
CIX ‘Male Fantasies’
Vampire Lust ‘Lucretia My Reflection’
The Nausea ‘Respice Finem’
Drew Mulholland & Garden Gate ‘Witching Hours’
Tudor Lodge ‘Willow Tree’
Dhidalah ‘Dead’
Nicole Faux Naiv ‘Neocortex’
Ivan The Tolerable ‘Time Is A Grave’
Giuseppi Logan Quartet ‘Dance of Satan’
The Bollock Brothers ‘Horror Movies’
Dust ‘Learning To Die’
Lincoln Street Exit ‘Die’
Hawkestrel ‘Now I’m Feeling Zombiefied’
Pidgins ‘These Models Scale’
Faust ‘Beam Me up, Scotty’
Vox ‘Metaphysical Back Alley’
RJD2 ‘The Horror’
Paten Locke ‘Canseco’
MadShroom MC, Wolftone ‘WOLF SCAT’
Peter Principle ‘Werewolves at the Gates’
Dylan Jack Quartet ‘Of Caves, Tombs and Coffins’
Dando Shaft ‘The Black Prince Of Paradise’
Andre Tschaskowski ‘Threat and Suspense Pt. 11’
Modern Silent Cinema ‘The Moving Coffin’
Head Shoppe ‘Seance’
Philip Martell ‘Dracula AD 72 Main Theme’
The Perusal #60: Anna Butterss, Niwel Tsumbu, TRAINNING + Ruth Goller, Donald Beaman…
October 10, 2024
A WORLD OF SONIC/MUSICAL DISCOVERIES REVIEWED BY DOMINIC VALVONA
(Unless stated otherwise, all releases are available now)

Anna Butterss ‘Mighty Vertebrate’
(International Anthem)
Branching out once more to lead a company of long-time collaborators on an expletory journey of groove and rhythm (because no matter what the concept, the theory, the strategy, this album has both), bassist and composer Anna Butterss fuses the likely and unlikely into a new album of expressive possibilities, landscapes and feels.
The scope of wandering into new worlds, conjuring up new moods and peregrinations is large. Mainly a result of wanting to write music after a long period of extensive touring, Mighty Vertebrate is a refreshing outlet of ideas prompted by Oblique Strategy-like stimulations. Hardly restricting, as I’ve already laid out, these strategies spark creative trains-of-thought, of process, methodology and performance. So, for example, as Butterss describes, they are “…going to make a song where the bass doesn’t function in the role of a bass”, or, “…make a song that uses groups of three-bar phrasing”. And so on. Technical yet simultaneously vague and even open-ended, this amorphous set of rules merely acts as a starting point: not only for the in-demand bassist but their foils as well. And despite all that technical musical language and the range of influences, sounds, ideas, the bass guitar (sometimes Butterss switches to the upright) is mostly recognisable: sounding on occasion quite funky (think Bootsy Collins) and soulful, rather than avant-garde and deconstructed.
Moving in the right-on circles in L.A., and very much in-demand for not only heading their own projects but collaborating and improvising with such notable names as Jeff Parker, Makaya McCraven, Phoebe Bridges and Jason Isbell, the Australian-born artist is a member of that city’s Small Medium Large super-quintet. Members of that same group now join their bandmate on their solo adventure, with both Gregory Uhlmann (on guitar) and Josh Johnson (on saxophone) contributing parts throughout alongside International Anthem’s (pretty much) in-house sound mixer, Call & Response concert series founder, in-demand drummer and multi-instrumentalist Ben Lumsdaine (acting as the album’s co-producer and percussionist). Added to that quality lineup, the L.A. based guitarist and composer, “prolific sideman”, oft member of the highly influential Tortoise and founding member of both Isotope 217 and the Chicago Underground, Jeff Parker offers up a special one-off turn on the electro 80s, Japanese new wave and jazz twiddling fusion ‘Dance Steve’.
Hints and recalls from all the above’s own groups, ensembles and projects can be heard at one time during the duration of Mighty Vertebrate. And why not? This is one talented bunch of players and innovators, working in a very hot scene right now; encouraged by one of the most prolifically brilliant labels of recent years in contemporary jazz and beyond. And yet it feels like a culmination of musical threads being put together, whether intentionally or just going with the energy, the directional prompts of the moment.
Across many of the tracks there’s a balafon-like bobble and shuttering woody percussive influence of Africa (Mali, perhaps Kenya too), a simmered down Afrobeat rhythm ala Tony Allen in places, and the saxophone of Peter King. This fuses with a Tortoise, Yoshiaki Ochi and Ramuntcho Matta vibe on the opening ‘Bishop’, and merges with touches of label mates Jeremiah Chiu And Sofia Honer, Antibalas and LAGOSS on the fluted and smoky sax serenaded ‘Shorn’.
The more gently inclined and peaceable ‘Ella’ reminisce takes a jazzier blues and American prog approach. And the following mirage shimmered ‘Lubbock’ (named after the Texan city with a famous son, Buddy Holly, and famously nicknamed “Hub City”) reminded me of both Daniel Vickers and Daniel Lanois. ‘Breadrich’ is a real mix, with its crunching more gnarly bass, Cobham fusion jazz inklings and Brides Of Funkenstein meets cosmic 80s Italian new wave vibes. And then at other times it’s more like Ariel Kalma, Chick Corea’s Elektric Band, Alfa Mist, Joe Zawinul, Coltrane, and Matthew Halsall. But regardless of all that, Butterss finds a near intuitive pathway of individuality that crosses borders, timelines, moods, musical signatures and structures to find rhythm and groove balanced by emotional pulls to important reference points and feelings in their life. I’m not even sure if you’d call it leading so much, but this solo gig proves a stimulating treasure trove of musical and sonic ideas with purpose and skill.
TRAINNING + Ruth Goller ‘threads to knot’
(Squama Recordings) 18th October 2024
Two connective forces in the experimental, inventive contemporary jazz scenes combine their experiences and art on this sonic and musical hybrid.
Although both participants have crossed paths previously, this is the inaugural adventure from the German drumming and saxophone combo of Max Andrzejewski and Johannes Schleiermacher and the serial UK jazz movement instigator Ruth Goller. Regular readers may have recognised the former pairing, both being synonymous with the HÜTTE name, an ensemble that began back in 2011, and featured on the Monolith Cocktail back in 2019 with their radical take on the music of Robert Wyatt. Born out of more recent rehearsals, the TRAINNING appellation has stuck for now, and it is in this form that they appear now – although that Northern European HÜTTE influence is hard to resist.
Goller’s CV is way too impressive and prolific to list in its entirety here, but the composer and bass player’s most notable credits include two of the most important and influential groups to set off a jazz renaissance in recent years, Acoustic Ladyland and Melt Yourself Down. Goller has also performed with such luminaries as Kit Downes, Sam Amidan, Marc Ribot and (Sir) Paul McCartney, and plays with both Let Spin and Vula Viel.
There’s enough threads, nodes and junctions in between to feed off, but both partners in this knotted tension and more spiritual, lofty, airy and aria-like ether Linda Sharrock “ah’d” fusion of influences and prompted sparks of inspiration read each other very well. Directed by, and riffing off, the “Exquiste Corpse” parlour game so beloved by the Surrealist movement, the trio of players expand beyond the jazz idiom into shadow worlds, the mysterious, supernatural, cosmic and near industrial.
Although popular in France amongst many circles, the Surrealists used the exquisite corpse game as a subversive collaborative drawing exercise in which each participant added whatever subconscious extension they could dream up to a chain of hidden images, the results of which when revealed could result in the weirdest of oddities. With the likes of grand doyen of the form, and way beyond, Max Ernst taking part alongside Dali and Miró you might have big bird’s plumage next to the shapely naked crossed legs of a muse and tennis racket feet. It’s used differently here however, generations on, and in musical form, with one of the players either writing bars or music, but then passing only the last bar, or sometimes only the last two notes, onto the next, then the same again to the next player and so on until a song’s skeleton was formed.
Far from exotic creatures and humans of dreams and nightmares, the results are a mix of chaotic freeform, post-punk prowling, the down beat, the foggy and the fourth world experiments and suffused atmospheres of Jon Hassell.
Both the TRAINNING lads also play synths and guitars, and so the range of sounds and instruments is expanded even further than sax, drums, voice and bass: sometimes towards the electronic. There are oscillations, arpeggiators and synth lines that hint at the kosmische and early analogue sound: from Conrad Schnitzler to Kraftwerk and Schulze. The guitars meanwhile have more than a hint of Marc Ribot about them, especially in passages on the hovering, alt-country ritual of ‘Backlog’ – this one is as disturbing as it is mysterious and vague with its post-rock doom threads, singular thumped drum, shimmered hazy rattle shakes of percussion and harmonic picks and plucks.
Elsewhere, old as dirt, ‘Agelong’ walks in the shadows of Scott Walker and Krononaut; the bass guitar, gnarled and trebly in a post-punk fashion, lurking and shaking in an atavistic gloom. And the messy off-kilter escalation that grows out of the opening electronics of ‘Threadfin’ is more like Last Exit and Peter Brötzmann. But then as the track progresses the mood changes again, merging math rock and punk no wave with Ethio jazz, veiled gauzy voices and instances of a more soothed Ivo Pearlman in a spiritual communion with Matana Roberts. By contrast, ‘Finback’ reminded me of Tortoise in some parts, and Donny McCaslin in others, whilst the dotted cone-like electronics that bring in ‘Lineage’ change shape and form, breaking out into a spell of Ill-Considered jamming with Nocturnal Emissions.
Pretty much out on the peripherals of jazz, ascending, flexing, rasping, soothing and breathing iterations and more untethered expressions of freeform music, TRAINNING + Ruth Goller fashion organic fusions from a process that promises the wild, tumultuous, wrangled and strange, yet also provides the melodic and dreamy.
Niwel Tsumbu ‘Milimo’
(Diatribe Records)
So, what does it sound like when a Democratic Republic of Congo born and raised virtuoso guitarist brought up on that central African region’s homegrown Soukous, studies the classical, relocates to Ireland, and finds themselves recording their debut LP at Peter Gabriel’s famous Real World label studios with the assistance of the renowned engineer Dom Shaw. Well, it sounds almost courtly, Iberian, Baroque, intricate, studied, and bluesy with a jazzy lilt and underlying feel of the homeland. For such is the range of Niwel Tsumbu’s skills as a deft and expressively rich maestro of the nylon-stringed guitar that the blending of international inspirations and absorptions is near effortlessly merged to create something quite unique.
Outlined in the press blurb, Tsumbu’s music and direction of travel is as influenced by the classical genius of Bach as it is by the Spanish Flamengo maestro Paco de Lucía and jazz deity Charlie Parker. Match this with the inspirational sounds of François Luambo Luanzo Makiadi, aka the legendary “Sorcerer of the guitar” Franco, one of the most influential figures in Congolese music in the last century (one time leader of the mighty TPOK Jazz band), and Congolese Rhumba’s more up-tempo and brighter, more intricately played scion/offshoot, Soukous, and you have a real worldly fusion of cultures at play.
With not much more than a guitar, and on only one occasion, a voice that seems to follow that guitar’s versant and twirling patterns, you can hear legato, glissando and the “rubato” (from the Latin for “stolen time”) signature of expressing rhythmic freedom by slightly speeding up and the slowing down the tempo forms of those referenced inspirations. It’s de Lucía, with a little Sabicas too, on the opening ‘Rubato’ reflection, and on the entwinned gypsy classical, plucked and pricked ‘Polyphony’; Bach, with touches of courtly old England on the trio of ‘Etude’ shorts; and Parker, joined by Wes Montgomery, on the near romantic dappled and picked ‘Tirizah’. The open-ended finale of watery motioned notes, ‘To Be Continued’, could be Bach resurfacing during the jazz age of 1920s America. And the sliding intro title-track has a nylon buzzy toned resonation of Mali blues to it.
The album’s most experimental performance/composition, ‘The Silence Within’, takes a completely different turn. A resonation of harmonics, a shimmer and rung pluck of notes hangs and lingers in the echoed canyons of Tsumbu’s inner sanctum.
With both a depth and real intricate lightness of touch to the often rapid, near seamless phrases, runs, articulations and intonations on this solo offering, and with a foot in both Africa and abroad, a classical learning is blended with a contemporary ear and musically well-travelled soul to produce a modern guitar gem.
Donald Beaman ‘Fog On Mirror Glass’
(Royal Oakie) 25th October 2024
The play and course of light, the recurring “phantom” and a beautiful subdued, nigh on elegiac poetry conjures up a simultaneous union of the beatific and longing on the latest solo effort from Donald Beaman.
Like a drifter’s songbook of subtle, intimate and home-recorded wanderings, metaphors and the like for yearned and plaintive romantic loss, fondness, the passing/measuring of time, and the urge to find comfort and solace, Fog On Mirror Glass uses memories of the weather, the way the light touched or dimmed at a given moment in time, and the smallest of witnessed movements/touches to evoke the right atmosphere of gossamer and sparsity.
Although backed on his previous four outings by a full band, Beaman has stripped right back, recording the bulk of the material in his own living room: where he sat and wrote most of the songs. Longtime stalwart Kit Land helped Beaman set up a makeshift studio of a sort, whilst also contributing bass and keys, and that room’s resonance and reverberated surface sounds can be heard throughout. It also gives the album sound an almost lo fi quality at times: in a good way. Yet despite that pared down approach, Beaman states that this album emerged from an idea he had to “present solo performances in conversation with full-band work”. And so, he brings in Michael Nalin on brushing and dusting light drum duties – occasionally those same accentuated, snare resonating rattled and languid drums gather some more pace and rhythm -, Jen Benoit to add a subtle and emotional touch of attentive backing vocals to the stairway of winding time, ‘Awhile’, and the yearned, disconsolate ‘Usual Phantom’, and Ken Lovgren on additional guitar for the slow-paced, fatigued title-track.
In a former life part of The Doubles band, and a mover on the turn of the new millennium New York City scene, Beaman has in one guise or another shared stages with a staggeringly impressive range of artists, from the late Jonathan Richman to Sharon Van Etten, Mdou Moctar and Marisa Anderson, and toured with an eclectic list of noughties influencers.
But his music, and in this instance, is like a Venn diagram of Cass McCombs, Bob Dylan, Bert Jansch, Jeffery Silverstein, Jake Xerxes Fussell, The Mining Co. and early Fleetwood Mac. However, the opening lovely trickled and drifted warmth and resonance of ‘Glass Bottom Boat’, formed in New York and finished once making it to his new home of North California, has an air of Robbie Robertson playing some Baroque or near Greek beauty on a mandolin about it – by the way, I don’t believe it is actually a mandolin being played on the record, just has that feel. A wanderer’s tale; an alternative aquatic floating road trip in the humid heat, it’s perhaps one of my favourite songs on the album.
Some songs also have almost a country and bluegrass feel to them, like the skiffle and shuffled “drawn by the light” ‘Old Universe’ – one of those themes of distilling the entire gravity of it all, the world, the universe, into a moment captured, a gesture, a turn or look in a very particular room, on the stairwell or in an idyllic but less than homely scene by a river. There’s also the inclusion of a church-like organ to add some kind of beatific bathed light on the Leonard Cohen-esque ‘Your Dreaming Eyes’.
In all, a most impressive and understated songbook of honest quality and performance, themed largely around the way light falls upon any given metaphor, analogy, phrase, description and texture. Unadorned, the feelings are left to pull and draw the listener into a most intimate world. Each play reveals more, as the album really begins to grow on you. A fine record indeed.
Rhombus Index ‘hycean’
(See Blue Audio)
Named after the hypothetical type of planet with liquid water oceans under a hydrogen atmosphere – in other words, a promising candidate for habitability -, Rhombus Index’s fourth album for the discerning introspective ambient and electronic label See Blue Audio reflects on the ever expanding, and encroaching, fusion of artificial intelligence and the organic. Sonically in wonderment, if near joyously radiant and positive in places, that relationship between nature and the digital is stimulating, regenerative and subtly hypnotically entrancing.
Back in solo mode after his collaboration with See Blue Audio label mate f5point6, the West Yorkshire artist and crafter of biomorphic worlds continues that “symbiotic” union by releasing his album on the same day as his foil. Both are similarly cut from the same kinetic ambient and electronic cloth it seems.
hycean however, has a certain life force of softly bobbing bulb-like notes, melodic wave forms, gentle ebbing synthetic tides, dancing atoms and dispersing playful pollen fizzes that builds towards insect wing fluttered and rotor-bladed itchy ticking techno beats. The natural shapes of geography are mapped out on a soundboard of the blanketed, submerged, the beaming and vaporous. In fact, the gentle ambient undulated ‘Coastal Curve’ uses a “sonification of coastal path measurement data” to evoke the desired effect.
Sometimes the beats are more active, like on ‘Flotsam’. Here they sound almost like some kind of transformed version of sticks or hand drums, or even tablas, tapping away in a near soft d’n’b style. ‘Digital Anemone’ (from looking it up, I’ve come up with “anemone” being the word for a genus of flowering plants in the buttercup family) doesn’t so much break out into but builds lovingly towards a joyful beaming dance of subtle techno and trance.
A musical photosynthesis; a sonic growth of fauna, flora and algae; hycean is both an audio and image generated fusion – see the videos and accompanying artwork – of crystallisation, the blooming and expanding: an image manifestation that shows nature in a very alien new light. Part Dr. Alex Paterson ‘Loving You Live’, part Seefeel, part eco trance, it will (excuse the pun) really grow on you with each new listen.
Poppy H ‘Wadham Lodge’
(Self-Release)
Haunted invocations of past lives and half lost and half hallucinatory recalled memories swim around in the metallic filament ether of Poppy H’s imagination on the mysteriously veiled experimental artist’s latest release.
In “celebration” of the cassette format – the first physically tactile album in a while from the prolific composer -, all the foibles of that format are emphasised and played with; from the degradation in quality, changes in speed, and the signature surface sounds of tape itself, to the physical presses of the stop, pause and play buttons on a tape recorder. Finding its way onto tape culture, the expletory concept and processes used to conjure up Wadham Lodge – apart from the name of the semi-professional East London football team Walthamstow F.C.’s home ground, and the Tudor era Wadham patrons who founded an Oxford Collage, I’m not sure if this title is borrowed, meant to be based on a real place or a reference, or made up – are new. Physical recordings of his catalogue of work, both old and unreleased, were played and mixed live simultaneously, and accompanied by original live improvisation and compositions. This multilayered process was then captured and mixed, like much of his work, on to a mobile phone.
An interesting and novel concept that results in Fortean transmissions, mirages and vague traces of human activity, conversations and environment. Greyed out, filtered and often in a lo fi magnetic shroud that borders on the paranormal and apparitional, more melodic tunes, mechanised beats and sonic illusions manifest from the mystical fabric of reconstructed time.
Memories are fed into a cryptic model of visitations and sonic consciousness. Take ‘loosely based on grief’, which merges the familiar – albeit manipulated and filtered – sounds of industry and the train yard contact points – the iron scuffed and screeched sounds of a train moving down the tracks – with a Faust Tapes-like foreign broadcast. Or the woody mechanical slot machine-like sounds that merge with a mist of a supernatural Murcof and the Aphex Twin and tweeting bird life on the time measured ‘wild stab in the dark’. From these prompts, these maybe half lingered forgotten thoughts of scenes and the moving world around him, emerge visages and emotions.
It’s the sound of the Boards of Canada, Matthewdavid, Lukid and Oberman Knocks half reminisced, and captured on to ghost tapes. Another unique experiment from Poppy H that elicits new visions.
The Galactic Cowboy Orchestra ‘Lost In Numbers’
(Independent) 11th October 2024
Losing themselves in the mathematical technicalities, phrasings and time signatures of a tumultuous, but kind and melodious, jazz-prog-country-indie-alt-rock fusion, the highly talented Galactic Cowboy Orchestra run the numbers forwards, backwards and every which way their dynamic performances take them.
Originally founded back in 2009 by bassist extraordinaire John Wright, imbued and prompted by the music of such notable influences as King Crimson, Mahavishnu Orchestra and The Dixie Dregs, the quartet have since fashioned their own form of technically challenging music that expands beyond the fusion sphere into all kinds of genres and moods.
The most recent iteration of the group features John’s wife and electric violin/lead vocalist foil Lisi Wright, drummer/percussionist Mario Dawson and acoustic and electric guitarist Dan Neale (who also occasionally picks up the mandolin, in true prog rock instrument switching style). Across various themes they masterfully gallop, spike and pique, riding a constant shimmer and splash of cymbals and percussion, as they fuse a squalling Michael Urbaniak and Jessica Pavone with Arti & Mestieri, a noodling Jaco Pastoruis and King Crimson: and that’s just on the opening title-track. When Lisi sings however, the mood is more like The Charlottes or Belly, even Madder Rose, backed by Zappa or Rush – see the math rock prog and alt 90s female-led ‘Righteous’ and more enchanting lyrical winding ‘Faith, Peace, Hope’.
To further the sound and influences even further, the group mimic the speedy flourishes and scales of the Raga Piloo on ‘In Passing’ – entwinning the traditional Indian form with ariel-like violin and active busy drums -, and sound positively supernatural, otherworldly on, what I take to be a tamed riff on Coltrane’s even wilder, maddening ‘Ascension’.
The Galactic Cowboy Orchestra’s new album (their sixth I believe) is for those seeking something different in the jazz and rock-fusion worlds, something as melodic and tuneful as it is technically clever and complicated.
Groupe Derhane/ freddie Murphy & Chiara Lee ‘Batch #4’
ALBUM (Purplish Records)
When not in the company of the celebrated Tuareg musician-guitarist Mdou Moctar (in a roll that includes bass, guitar, backing vocals, drum machine and producing duties) Mikey Coltun runs his Purplish Records label, dropping unconventional releases in “batches”: a singing of which is the already mentioned Moctar. With this unique method, Coltun twin’s artists from completely different backgrounds, international zones and genres, in a double cassette package.
Volume #4 really attracts polar opposites, with albums from both the Niger Tuareg band Groupe Derhane, fronted by Issouf Derhane, and the Italian experimental partnership of freddie Murphy and Chiara Lee, who also go under the name of Father Murphy, channelling Catholic guilt through natural and synthetic manipulation.
What unites both participants is a shared reification of the concepts, atmospheres and geographies of deserts; Derhane, with the most exquisite camel motioned rhythm and with that signature desert blues and rock guitar resonance, contouring and paying respect, whilst also longing, for the south central Saharan region of Ténéré (which in the Tuareg language literally means “desert”), and the Murphy/Lee duo scoring the overwhelming nothingness of the white desert landscapes of Antarctica for fellow Italian film director Lorenzo Pallota. Both works find their creators embedded in the landscape, performing and extracting the mood of the place.
With a remarkable back story of travails and movement, Issouf Derhane started off life in the Tuareg (though it must be pointed out, depending on who you ask, that many from this community of freewheeling Beaudoin prefer the term Kel Tamashek instead of the later Tuareg colonial loaded name) encampment of Tidene in Niger, a hub as it turns out for exceptional musicians, including Omara “Bombino” Moctar. But he was quickly swept up, we’re told, and itching to travel, ending up in Libya where he picked up the guitar. As the horrific, destabilising shitstorm of that country’s civil war broke out, and the Gaddafi regime tumbled, Derhane was forced to move once again, returning to Niger and the city of Agadez, the “gateway to the desert”, in 2015. This is where he met a fellow guitar enthusiast by the name of Mohamed. A connection was made, fuelled by shared roots, and together they formed the Groupe Derhane band, which quickly became a bit of a sensation in Tuareg circles.
Channelling a tumultuous time in the Tuareg plight, with the fight still ongoing for autonomy within the regions that spread across Niger, Chad, Mali and the Sahel, the increasingly alarming over-desertification and effects of climate change, and preservation of their way of life, the Derhane group encapsulate a longing and paean for home and their roots that sounds entrancing, beautifully and emotionally charged. The clapped rhythms, motions of the camel trail and shifting sand dune contours, and constantly turning, brightly resonating and buzz of the guitar are close to the sound of such Tuareg icons of the form as Faris, Terakraft and Tinariwen. It’s not mentioned in the notes, but I take it that both the opening ‘Tamidtin’ and closing ‘Ténéré’ are both riffs on or covers of Tinariwen’s songs, albeit with a less bassy and low vocal, more echo and brightness.
There’s a subtle use of the synthesized and electronic, which makes the reverberating and buoyant ‘Khay Tamadroyte Tamacheq’ sound near cosmic and throbbing.
The six-track showcase is an invitation to dig deeper, consume and absorb a burgeoning talent on the Tuareg scene.
Sharing this dispatches double-bill, the Torino-based sonic partnership of freddie Murphy (the lower case is intentional) and Chiara Lee channel a whole different kind of desert. More an isolated, white awe-expansive tundra, they transform the abstract forbode, mystery and overwhelming senses of vast Antarctica into a soundtrack for Lorenzo Pallotta’s experiences aboard an icebreaker. On his return from this field trip, the film director emphasised the shock of readjustment in a land where the sun never sets; where time has no meaning, or at least is hard to measure. Pallotta also described the vibrations, the breakage of the vessel as it cut through the ice, sounding like a constant earthquake.
All of this is fed into a soundtrack of the paranormal, primal, fogged, beastly and wonderous. Manipulated off-world readings, hums, surfaces noises, drones, dissonance and obfuscated voices provide the paranoid, the esoteric and a sense of movement through a world with no borders, nothing concrete but just space: lots of white space. Nurse With Wound, Throbbing Gristles, Gunther Westhoff and Szajner lost in the cold psychogeography, the Antarctic is as disturbing as it is a polar adventure vision of the Heart Of Darkness. But then the finale double of ‘Intermezzo + Closer’ sounds like an electronic kosmische scenery of Dinger and Cluster and cult Library music; the radiant magnetic lights of the southern hemisphere shimmy to a tubular dance.
Consider the mood set, the senses retuned.
Batch number four is yet another unique pairing of influences and sounds; two different geographies, different methods, yet both sharing a general theme of landscape and all the unsaid or unsayable abstract feelings, atmospheres that go with it.
Pyramid Waves ‘Screaming Brain’
(Syrup Moose Records) 18th October 2024

A cerebral haemorrhage; a blunt force of industrial sonics, caustic electronica and Fortean distress, the fifth work of traumatic discourse and dissonance from the French duo of Pyramid Waves drills into the four pillars of our dysfunctional modern society: that being, addictions, mental health, anxiety and cravings.
A bastard trauma of Front Line Assembly, Test Dept. and Merzbow, the Screaming Brain improvisations (recorded at their home studio) will leave you in no doubt as to the pained sufferings of its creators.
Demarcated into four parts of static white noise, analogue reverberations and interdimensional radio transmissions, crunch and crumbled beats, and echoed voices from some distant harrowing memory, doors to a tumultuous mind are opened to forces from beyond the mortal world. Because whilst the gristle for this album is all very real, the sounds grate, spin, switch towards a phantasm of the paranormal and alien. It’s as if a trapped psychogeography of echoing stresses and long dormant troubled episodes in the cortex has been wired into a supernatural apparatus of haunted and bestial sonorous severe disturbances.
Unsettling to put it mildly – especially the repeating dreamy melodic piano part that plays and meanders over a coarse bed of fearful distortion on ‘Trapped Underwater’ -, this uncomfortable but fascinating pull into the metal torture workshop of neuroscience squeals, slaps meat, drills and thumps its way to challenging and meeting its psychological demons.
If Richard H. Kirk, Richard James and SEODAH invoked Cthulhu whilst all in a room together, hunched over an apparatus of transistors, generators, motors, tools, drum pads and effects, then this is surely what it would sound like. Screaming Brian by name and nature, Pyramid Waves dissect the psyche of our troubling times, and the battles faced by the individual screwed-up by the system with horror and hurt.
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.
BOX SET REVIEW/PURVIEW
Dominic Valvona

Various Artists ‘I’m Glad About It: The legacy Of Louisville Gospel 1958 – 1981’
(The Louisville Story Program/Distributed Through Light In The Attic)
When Ben Jones, one of the many voices of authority and leading lights of the Louisville gospel legacy, enthuses that the talent at every Black church during the golden years chronicled in this ambitious box set was akin to witnessing and hearing “ten Aretha Franklins at every service”, he’s not boasting. Jones’ contributions, as outlined in this multimedia package’s accompanying 208-page full colour booklet, lays down the much unrepresented story of a thriving, enduring scene. Alongside a host of reverent members of the various Evangelist, Pentecostal, Baptist and Apostolic churches, artists, instigators and custodians, his informative, animated and passionate words draw you into a most incredible cross-community of afflatus bearers of the gospel tradition. For the Louisville scene was and continues to be every bit the equal of its more famous and celebrated rivals across the American South. And that Aretha quote is no exaggeration, as you will hear some of the most incredible voices and choirs to ever make it on to wax, or, in some cases, make it onto the various radio stations and TV shows that promoted this divine expression of worship. 83 songs, hymns and paeans of assurance, great comfort, tribulations and travails from a gospel cannon of pure quality, moving testament and joy.
‘I’m Glad About It: The legacy Of Louisville Gospel 1958 – 1981’ is an unprecedented example of just how to display and facilitate such a multifaceted project of documentation and archive – in the package I received there were links to a brilliant visual timeline and archive of some 1000 songs recorded by 125 different gospel artists. A labour of love and recognition, taking over three years to put together, The Louisville Story Program has not just set out to preserve but also equip the communities they serve with a genuine platform which can be added to overtime. But importantly, they’ve brought in a number of inspiring voices to help build a concise story of legacy and continued influence of the city and gospel music in general – Ben Jones citing Drake and Kayne unable to find a beat that they didn’t hear in church.
Louisville, one of the oldest American cities west of the Appalachians, is settled in the northeast corner of the state of Kentucky, a stone’s throw from bordering Indiana. Serving the great Ohio River, the city grew in importance and influence over the centuries, since its foundations during the American Revolution of the late 1700s (named after the King Louis XVI, in recognition of French support during the war against the British): mainly unloading and moving the river commerce before it met the famous Ohio Falls. Off the backs of the enslaved African Americans who provided the labour, Louisville expanded its economic influence and position as a major port. It was a jump off point to relative freedom for those escaping to the free state of Indiana during the Civil War. And although Union troops were stationed on mass in the city and greater state of Kentucky, making sure it didn’t secede and join the Confederacy, in the aftermath of the Civil War the city was dominated politically by those that fought on the losing side.
The next century was no kinder, especially with the zoning codes that segregated and designated where the Black community could live – eventually overturned through activism and the Supreme Court. And yet on some levels, Louisville was considered relatively progressive compared to its Southern neighbours. But it has been said that the supremist, segregated practices of Jim Crow were not maintained by law so much as observed as a custom.
As the city boomed a greater number of people would flow into the city from the country to work in the factories and blossoming industries, with numerous churches set up to accommodate their beliefs. This bolstered an already thriving gospel scene, thanks in part to a great mix and talent pool, some of which had been drawn from the deep south and further out east; lured sometimes by the affordable studio rates that another key figure in the Louisville gospel story, Joe Thomas, offered through his Sensational Sounds label – one of the many iconic labels, platforms that proved vital in spreading the good word.
Another leading voice, Raoul Cunningham proves enlightening in summing up gospel lore; his observations and authoritative teachings illuminating the change once emancipation came from the more sombre songs of the spirituals to gospel – the iconic figure of Thomas Dorsey first adding a touch of jazz and rhythm to pull the solemn scared songs of another century towards what we now know as gospel music. Cunningham opines that when freedom came the Black community wanted to forget their past and no longer identified with Africa. They stopped singing the spirituals and changed the name of their churches in the process.
As much a testament to the endurance and continued influence of gospel music on every subsequent generation coming through – every generation, that is, finding some kind of solace, a belief, a message and even purity and truth in the teachings as performed through the most beatific and soulful of voices -, the songs, hymns and paeans on this remarkable box set speak of assurance and a great comfort, but also of tribulations and travails. Some of them even rock “Zion” to its very core, causing the walls of Jericho to come tumbling down in defeat to such dynamic choral performances and electrified outpourings of devotion.

But where do you to start on a survey that more or less encompasses every change, every variation on the gospel signature, from the opening Golden Tones a cappella pull of bass and near falsetto voiced ‘Just A Closer Walk With Thee’, to Rev. Tommy William & The Williams Family’s Ray Charles-like bluesy ‘I Want To Thank Jesus’, and, the already mentioned, Joe Thomas’ and his stained glass lit and beautifully plaintive Percy Sledge and Sam Cooke delivered ‘I Won’t Mind’.
Just to show the diversity of background and the movement of travel – as outlined in the accompanying booklet, which features a history and information on every artist involved -, The Golden Tones roots lay with their Mississippi founder Leroy Graves, who relocated after military service to Kentucky and the First Baptist Church in Elizabeth Town. They started off as a cappella group before incorporating instruments, a practice that so many of the groups on this collection followed; in part down to certain churches hostility to electrified music or instruments of any kind other than the church organ, being used to embellish or even distract the purity of the choral voices. This number was recorded for the Grace label – one of many iconic labels mentioned and poured over in the accompanying booklet -, released in 1971. The group sang together for fifty years.
Rev. Tommy William & The Williams Family is more of a mystery however, with this 45” on the WMS label believed to be their only known release. Thomas, perhaps one of the most repeated names in this story, was a noted church organist, music teacher, composer, arranger, record engineer and label owner: a one-man industry. Likely the most prolific collaborator in the Louisville gospel community through his BJ Sounds studio, he would sit in on most recordings.
Four discs, 83 tracks, we really are spoilt for choice. Just taking a cursory glance, naming a mere smattering of delights, I loved both The Travelling Echoes entries: ‘He’s A God’ from 1959, released on the Avant label, and ‘Looking And Seeking’ from 1960, released on Tye. The former reminded me of the revived gospel soul queen Naomi Shelton and a little of Aretha, being emotionally exalted over a tremulant organ and near swinging R&B rhythm. The latter, a little closer to Dorthey Love Coates and The Staples Singers and the school of gut rousing delivery.
Completely different, the award-winning soloist, who started young (from the age of seven, which is not uncommon in the gospel community), Joe Robinson makes a moving case for God’s magnificence on the harpsichord-like flange organ divine ‘How Great Thou Art’. If you wanted to dig a little deeper, this song was released on his only album, Joe Robinson Remembers, which he recorded in memory of the great gospel icon Mahalia Jackson after she died in January 1972.
Other notable (though there isn’t a single track without merit and quality: the perfect compilation in other words) entries include the Atlanta-based The Echoes Of Zion’s B-side cut ‘Just A Closer Walk With Thee’, another gem recorded at Joe Thomas’ Sensational Sounds set-up. The vibe is strangely not too dissimilar to Monty Young’s ‘James Bond Twist’ from the Dr. No soundtrack, but with a walking bassline and lilt of rock ‘n’ roll. Rev. William H. Ryan’s ‘There Is Someone To Care’, released in 1967, sees the Salem Baptist Church pastor channel Otis Redding and Solomon Burke in exalting God’s grace, whilst the highly gifted Beatrice Brown and her singers (another entry in the Sensational Sounds stable of acts) merge marimba Afro-sounds with a Meters backbeat on ‘You Are Special’. The intergenerational The Religious Five Quartet prove their worth and importance with four entries, some of which were recorded from performances on Bishop Cliff Butler’s gospel variety TV show, Lifting Jesus. One of which, retold by the grown-up lad himself in the booklet, included the young drumming prodigy Nathaniel ‘Peewee’ Brown, who was eight at the time when he made his TV debut with one such incarnation of the group. The most memorable of their contributions includes the playful ad-lib Calloway-like routine on cheating lovers – featuring door rapping effects -, ‘Running For A Long Time’.
On what feels like a journey, we meet some remarkable characters, with remarkable back stories and connections. Take Jimmy Ellis for example, son of a pastor and longtime member of the Riverview Baptist Church’s Spiritual Singers. An accomplished boxer, who softened the blows thankfully when it came to pining redemptive gospel soul and Godly embraces, Jimmy’s fame grew as a friend of Louisville’s most celebrated sporting icon, the “Louisville lip” Muhammed Ali, and for holding the World Heavyweight title during Ali’s conscientious objection to the Vietnam War in the late 60s. Once Ali was stripped of his title, the World Boxing Association staged an eight-man tournament to determine a new champion. Ellis won, holding it for two years. From then on out The Riverside Spiritual Singers became known as Jimmy Ellis and The Riverside Spiritual Singers.
And what about Rev. Charles Kirby, the country-born son of sharecroppers, who formed his own church in the mid 50s after moving to Louisville from the sticks. In between Civil Rights marches, boycotts, the setting up of a free food store, Kirby was renowned for his singing prowess. He sounds like a bluesy pulpit Wilson Pickett on the familiar sounding ‘Lord Come On’ – recorded live at Southern Star for the Cincinnati label Vine.
And I can’t not mention gospel music’s Jackson Five, The Junior Dynamics. “Pre-teen prodigies” with a fervour for the good book, they’re represented by the astonishing live performance recording of ‘God Is Using Me’. Recorded at the Lamentations Baptist Church in 1968, these vehicles of the Lord begin with testified seriousness and more dour suffused evangelical suffrage before upping the tempo and building up to a crescendo of soul power gospel ye-ye.
The cast of this carefully curated box set is numerous, the background information truly enlightening. This project’s partners have invested a huge amount of time and effort into setting the scene, making sure every detail is correct, and that not only the music but the accompanying booklet and liner notes are just as inviting, riveting and extraordinary. Everyone benefits from what is a gold standard in not only celebrating but educating an audience eager to learn and consume some of the greatest gospel music ever recorded and performed.
Louisville has so much to offer still, and future generations will thank the organisers, the researchers and custodians behind this epic retelling of a community previously overlooked, overshadowed.
Without doubt The legacy Of Louisville Gospel 1958 – 1981 is one of the best things I’ve heard in years: it truly made a believer out of me. I’ve learnt so much, and enjoyed a whole day of gospel heaven listening to all four discs in one go. I’d be amazed if it doesn’t make all the end-of-year lists: disappointed too. Because it certainly makes mine. And that is as good a recommendation as you can get. In short: nothing less than an exceptional example of how to showcase music history, one that is still ongoing and thriving.
The Monthly Playlist For September 2024
September 30, 2024
CHOICE MUSIC FROM THE LAST MONTH ON THE MONOLITH COCKTAIL: TEAM EFFORT

The Monthly Revue for September 2024: Fifty choice tracks from the last month, chosen by Dominic Valvona, Matt ‘Rap Control’ Oliver and Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea. Features a real shake up and mix of tracks we’ve both covered in our review columns and articles. We’ve also added a smattering of tracks that we either didn’t get the room to feature or missed at the time. Covering many bases, expect to hear and discover new sounds, new artists. Consider this playlist the blog’s very own ideal radio show: no chatter, no gaps, no cosy nepotism.
TrAcKliSt
David Liebe Hart ‘James Earl Jones’
Mosik Rhymes & Tha God Fahim ‘E.S.P.’ – this month’s cover art
Seez Mics & Metermaids ‘Walter Wrong’
Kong The Artisan, Essa & Phat Kat ‘Get Nasty’
Etran de L’Air ‘Amidinine’
Carmen Souza ‘Amizadi’
Daniel Inzani ‘Beyond The Pale’
Zerrin ‘Spring Cleaning’
Black Artist Group ‘For Peace And Liberty Part 2’
Michal Urbaniak ‘UrbTrap’
AINON ‘Komorebi’
Derrero ‘Painting with Sound’
Neon Kittens ‘Lika Like’
SHITNOISE ‘Gum Opera’
The legless Crabs ‘Piercings And Tattoos’
I do You do Karate ‘Jabiru’
Cuushe ‘Faded Corners’
Inflatable Men ‘He’s Going Out With Marilyn’
Inre Kretsen Grupp & Prins Emanuel ‘Volta Semantron’
Phantom Handshakes ‘Dusk Enchanted’
Xeno & Oaklander ‘Via Negativa (in the doorway light)’
Beauty Stab ‘Use Me As Bait’
Wings Of Desire ‘OTTAMYMIND’
Nonpareils ‘Bring It On’
Short Fuze & 4Most ‘3AM Thoughts’
Desert Camo, Heather Grey & Oliver the 2nd ‘Sun Lord Mixtape’
leisure fm ‘illuminated manuscript’
Ghostwriter ‘Satan, Your Kingdom Must Come Down’
Elea Calvet ‘Trigger – Acoustic’
Holy Matter ‘The Dove’
Trust Fund ‘The Mirror’
Christopher Haddow ‘Look Homeward’
John Howard ‘Great Horse’
Minarets of Nessef ‘Instrumental’
Daniilaioi Brotherhood Choir ‘Christos Anesti, Mode Plagal A’
Umlaut ‘Gaze back into you’
Anja Ngozi & OKI ‘Utanobori’
Will Lawton and the Alchemists ‘Fossils of the Mind – Sebastian Reynolds Rework’
The New Tigers ‘Saba’
Viktor Ori ‘Vsetci sme v tom spolu’
Banca De Gaia ‘Electric Sheep’
Tanya Morgan, 6th Sense & Rob Cave ‘The Motion’
The Doppelgangaz ‘W.I.T.H.H.’
Xray & Monsta Island Czars ‘Evacuate The Club’
Jon Phonics ‘U JUST A LYING ASS HOE’
Ant ‘4-Track Beyond Beat 1996’
Leonard Charles ‘Rose’
Dr. Syntax & Pete Canon ‘Robot Problem’
Diamond D & KRS-One ‘THE KINGS’
Dead Players ‘Just Above Water’
Our Daily Bread 627: Violet Nox ‘Hesperia’ LP & ‘Aruna’ Video
September 27, 2024
ALBUM REVIEW/VIDEO REVEAL
DOMINIC VALVONA

Photo credit: Sasha Pedro
Violet Nox ‘Hesperia’
(Somehwerecold Records) 1st October 2024
Building new worlds, futuristic landscapes and intergalactic safe havens, and leaving vapour trails of laconic, hypnotizing new age psy-trance mysticism, a message of self-discovery and of resistance in their wake, Violet Nox once more embrace Gaia, Greek and Buddhist etymology and astrology to voyage beyond earthly realms.
Referencing mythological starry nymphs, a sun god’s charioteer, Agamemnon’s granddaughter and scientific phenomenon as they waft, drift and occasionally pump through veils of ambience, trance, dub, EDM and techno, the Boston, Massachusetts trio (although this core foundation is pliable and has expanded its ranks on previous releases) of synthesists and electronic crafters Dez DeCarlo and Andrew Abrahamson, and airy, searching siren vocalist and caller Noell Dorsey, occupy a dreamy ethereal plane that fits somewhere between Vangelis, Lisa Gerrard, Mythos, Kavinsky, Banco de Gaia and ecological revering dance music.
Feeling even more languid and floaty than usual, album number seven seems more subtle and sophisticated, taking its time, hanging around much longer in those signature vapours. But then there’s the padded kick drum that occasionally drives the beat, and the tightly delayed synthetic ticking rhythms can be more rapid and dance music orientated; especially on both the touchingly voiced, softly metallic whipped and foggy ‘OneSixty’ and the cosmic time-traveller’s club trance and voice-looping ‘Xena’. The latter of which could either be a reference to the famous TV culture warrior princess or the male sibling of Electra in Greek mythology – the etymology could be interchangeable and equally translated as “guest”, “stranger” or “hospitable”.
As with many of these symbols there’s a theme of either androgyny or feminine guardianship, council or guidance; the title’s starlet, the Greek Hesperia nymph also called Asterope, is known for many things in Greek mythological lore: a daughter of the evening star and golden sunsets, and a guardian of the golden apples. With all those connotations, Violet Nox bends the light towards an inclusive agenda and queer awareness with both misty shushed and stronger, more rousing messages of affirmation.
Violet Nox have expanded their live sets over the years, backdropped by film, visuals, and as part of a response to various museum and art environments. Hesperia feels more like one of those performances; a complete journey, experience and soundtrack to a tubular geometry, a pulsation of possible futurism and feminine-driven cerebral cyber evolution.
As a bonus, so to speak, Violet Nox is sharing their latest video, for the opening track ‘Aruna’, with the Monolith Cocktail’s readers. After already providing visuals for the group’s Nordic mythological ‘Loki’ single at the start of this year (premiered by us at the time, the track originally appeared on their 2023 Vortex And Voices album), Del Siervo now conjures up new kaleidoscopic images for this entrancing number. For those who aren’t familiar with his work, Siervo is a Venezuelan artist and ambient/new age musician living in Argentina, who’s art evolves around myths from different ancient traditions, especially from the Amazon. Siervo works with new technologies to create images that evoke the mysteries of life, the creation and the unseen.
For more info on the group, links to previous videos and releases and updates, click on here https://linktr.ee/VioletNox
THE DIGEST FOR SEPTEMBER 2024: New Music/The Social Playlist/And Archives
September 23, 2024
THE MONTHLY DIGEST INCLUDES A CLUTCH OF ACCUMULATED NEW MUSIC REVIEWS; THE SOCIAL INTER-GENERATIONAL/ECLECTIC AND ANNIVERSARY ALBUMS CELEBRATING PLAYLIST; AND CHOICE PIECES FROM THE ARCHIVES.

____/THE NEW
Holy Matter ‘Beauty Looking Back’
ALBUM 4th October 2024
Bathed in a new diaphanous light, Leanna Kaiser steps away from her ambient shrouded Frances With Wolves duo (albeit with an embraced cast of familiar faces and musicians) to take up the soloist guise of Holy Matter.
Following up on a tapestry of enchanted and dreamy singles, woven from gossamer threads of fairytale and fantasy, the musician, songwriter and filmmaker now unfurls an entire beautiful album of nostalgic imbued troubadour-folk, softened psychedelia and country woes, sad lilted resignation, solace, reflection and pathos.
Using a poetic license inspired by Leonard Cohen (that new moniker lifted straight from the pages of Beautiful Losers, and one inspiring mantra from that same book, “I change; I am the same”, can be read as this album’s slogan) and the Ukiyo-e style artworks of Hishikawa Moronobu as an illustrated mirrored metaphor, Beauty Looking Back explores the personal, environmental and seasoned changes in Kaiser’s life. Namely her move to L.A. from St. Louis, and the relationships either left behind or maintained through the framing of memorable weather and atmospheres.
On the surface a most magical, wisped and tubular bells chiming yearning, and at times full of moving regret and the evocations of the Laurel Canyon and Riot On Sunset Strip eras, there’s a real depth to the lyrics, musicianship and reference points. Moronobu’s iconic Beauty Looking Back painting for instance, features sartorial readings of status and the changing of fashions and traditions in Edo period Japan; the muse, subject of this work embellished in the striking red kimono decorated with chrysanthemums and cherry blossoms of the wealthy and yet to be married. To keep a relative peace during an epoch of conservative but prosperous Shogunate rule, an age of pleasure was ushered in with the building of designated walled areas inside Japan’s cities, put aside for the growth of tea houses, brothels and Kubuki theatre. Artists such as Moronobu were on hand to paint and depict the new “free-flowing nature of urban life”.
Seeking both comfort and reassurance from a nostalgic haze however, Kaiser, together with her former bandmate foil Andy Kahn on keys, guitar and bass, her partner Matt Popieluch (of Big Search note) on classical, near Iberian and South American-flavoured guitar, 12-string and violin, Kate Bellinger on backing vocals, and producer David Glasebrook, who also brings in drummer Raphi Gottesman and upright bassist Josh Housh, convey a mirage shimmer and fey delicate trace of Judee Sill, Sibylle Baier, Jewel, Marina Allen and The Unknown Mortal Orchestra. The vampiric Laurel Canyon ‘Eve’s Hollywood’, apart from its magik and scene-setting lyrics, has a touch of a laconic and knowing Nancy Sinatra about it.
Gazing both lamentably and in sighed resignation from metaphorical fairytale towers and vantage points emphasised by poetic weather patterns, Kaiser gently exudes a longing sense of wistful pulchritude. The past is always near, inescapable and worn like a comfort blanket; moulded to Kaiser’s desires, sorrows, reflections and duality. Holy Matter proves an interesting alluring and enchanting creative progression for Kaiser, her debut solo a refreshing take on the familiar and the tropes of time.
Scarla O’ Horror ‘Semiconductor Taxidermy For The Masses’
ALBUM (Not Applicable)
We could be here all day if I listed the various musical achievements, the actions and the cross-fertilisations and creative fraternizing of this London-based collaboration of jazz (in all its many guises) players and explorers. Within the Scarla O’ Horror’s sphere of influence, in-demand tenor saxophonist, bass and clarinettist James Allsopp has worked with such notable pioneers and shakers as The Last Poets, David Axlerod, Mulatu Astake, Kit Downes, and picked up awards for innovation and the best album from the BBC over the course of a twenty-year thus career. His foils in this quartet include the no less talented and renowned producer, performer and, on this album, trumpet player Alex Bonney, who you may recognize from such groups as Leverton Fox, Brass Mask, lightbox and both Olie Brice’s Quintet and Octet; the multiple award-winning prodigy drummer Tim Giles, who’s credits include collaborations with Allsopp, Riaan Vosloo and Ben Lamdin; and the electronic trick noise maker, sound artist, software developer and composer Sam Britton, otherwise known as Isambard Khroustaliov – Monolith Cocktail readers will definitely recognise this name, as San has appeared under that non de plume a number of times on the site over the years.
An enviable dynamic grouping of talent that’s ready to push the boundaries, react and counteract to the environment, situation and conditions of the studio setup, the quartet pool their resources and experience into another experimental free form and avant-garde extemporization. Dissection, taxidermy, semi-conductors…what’s that all about? Well, sound wise those prompts unleash a supernatural, data and robotic calculus off-world soundtrack of tremulant, tooted, straining brass, rolling and scrabbling drums, near avant-garde classical clarinet strains and synthesized mirages, illusions and gleaming, glinting and searing alien technology. It all begins with the lead-in, introductory ‘Racoon With A Wound’, which reimagines some kind of mysterious, near extraterrestrial fusion of Esa Helasvuo, cult Italian horror soundtracks, Walter Smetek, Don Cherry and Kinkajous.
We then hit the main event, with two uninterrupted improvisations of far out Fortean radar, and ghost freighter free jazz. The first, ‘The Rats Of Gilet Square’ is inspired by the group’s observation one night of rats having a whale of a time scurrying around and “plundering” the rubbish bins outside the Vortex Jazz Club. Sound wise, you can pick up elements of Sun Ra, Kaleidoscope Ornette Coleman, Anthony Braxton, the Art Ensemble of Chicago, BAG, Sam Newsome, Bendik Giske and Marja Ahti. The second long form piece, ‘Ermine Chowder’, reminded me of Chet Baker wandering a futuristic space version of the Mary Celeste. The atmosphere is sifting almost, with peaks and sci-fi, György Ligeti, Khroustaliov’s In The Gloaming album collaboration with Lothar Ohlmeier and Rudi Fischerlehner, Lynch, Eric Dolphy and Daniel Carter’s collab with Jim Clouse.
Untethered responses to a method, of a kind, and process, Semiconductor Taxidermy For The Masses opens up possibilities, spaces and expands horizons further. Concentrated, yet free, exploratory jazz at its finest, the quartet chalk up another illusionary and paranormal, sci-fi and near ominous performance.
Banco de Gaia ‘Trauma’
ALBUM (Disco Gecko)
Has it really been eight years since Toby Marks last made a record under his trance global alter ego Banco de Gaia moniker. Apparently so, as the latest digital and compostable bio-wrapped coloured vinyl LP Trauma follows on from his 2016 set of peregrinations The 9th Of Nine Hearts. And from that title, and period of travails, there is a lot to unpack: climate change, Brexit and an ungovernable land, war, a pandemic, economic disparity, divisiveness on a scale not seen before, the advent of AI….the list goes on and on and on.
For those unfamiliar with Marks Banco de Gaia project and label, next year marks the thirtieth anniversary of his highly influential trance and techno marker Last Train To Lhasa. On the cusp of Britpop, hung-over from grunge, guitars were about to once again dominate whilst house and techno music in all its many guises had reached superclub status; the underground movements fractured and broken up into a myriad of smaller tribes. Ambient and trance, usually the preserve of after hours clubbing or allocated space in the “chill out” zones had already blossomed into its own industry. That unfairly and often fatuous “chill out” idiom used to sell everything from nirvana relaxation and transience to any ‘new age” missive. Never new, until progress and technology made it easier and offered more options, the core ambient ingredient had already been in existence for decades. And despite what you may have read, Eno may have given it a name, but he certainly didn’t invent it. In this evolving stage of dance music, Marks went to town, sitting on a fluffy cloud, hovering between trance and techno.
Last Train To Lhasa’s suffused panoramic station-to-station soundtrack was different. Sharing some of the peaceable beautiful nephology of The Orb and Air Liquid but with the satellite guided twinkle and kinetic rhythms of Orbital, the album sounded every bit as organic as it did electronic. And despite the heavy Tibetan reference, the album and sound was global, taking in samples, sounds from Africa, the Middle East and Orient.
Expanding that unique universe, Marks has built up a discography of eclectic experiments over the decades. And now, in 2024, he’s decided to unload his concerns, worries about the state of the world across eight tracks (the digital versions include two extra tracks, the trauma channelling and pained Natacha Atlas-like, dub-ricochet shot ‘Endure’ andthe Philip K. Dick meets Adamski and Coldcut-up exotic whomp and whooped ‘Electric Sheep’) of varying moods, timings and influences. On an album of, as Marks himself points out, ‘juxtapositions’ the opening serene spacy ‘Mir’ plays of both the Russian translation of that title, “peace”, and the name of that nation’s orbiting space station. Looking down on Earth before re-entering the atmosphere, the Floydian saxophone space bird plaints and enormity-emotional stirrings of guest Matthew Jenkins serenade a prog-ambient yearn. Sparked by a bee sting – the poor crash-landed bee on the album’s cover I’m assuming -, ‘A Bee Song’ features said hive humming buzzes and sense of earthly nature. The first signs of the Banco global samples appear alongside the insect accompaniment, with a recording of a traditional hand and wood clapping song/dance from Namibia. When such ethnic strands meet with electronica and trance, the new age and breaks, it sounds like Real World Records fusing with Gary Numan, System 7, Saafi Brothers and Children of the Bong.
The read-out Cymraeg poem of ‘Draig Ddu’ is a vehicle for Welsh nationalism but is also used here as a process for grieving and loss. An air of mystery wraps itself around this ratcheted-up 90s techno-trance plaint. ‘War is self-explanatory. The frustrations, the breakdown in international dialogue and onset of violence, are transduced into a heavier slice of techno and EDM, with missiles and projectiles and various questioning and resigned spoken samples laid over a production that’s part The Prodigy, part The Orb and part Ammar 808.
Borders, or maverick circumnavigations of them and government control, are the feature of the next track, ‘My Little Country’. To a dance like mix, you can hear the voice of the late radio ham Roy Bates being interviewed on his self-declared Sealand principality and famous former sea fort turn pirate radio station, Roughs Tower; a convoluted story of evading the censorship and draconian broadcasting rules of the 1960s in Britain that needs far more room and space to regale in full here – but look it up.
From the Irish for “my god”, Marks looks at the near religious awe of space exploration, the universe and all that, on the talking head satellite orbiting, Massive Attack and Lisa Gerrard-like ‘Mo Dhia’. But by the “dying light”, the insect chatter has returned, and a sense of universal worth and levity is invoked with a cosmic uplift and bathing light beams. Through it all, Marks finds himself transcending the traumatic breakdowns of communication and umpteen different disasters that threaten to tip civilisation over the edge into total disaster, finding solace and escape routes, ideals and joy despite it all to a soundtrack of trance, EDM, techno, new age, trip-hop, breakbeats and vapour synth conjured moods.
Unicorn Ship Explosion ‘There’s A Rhinoceros In The Mega Church’
ALBUM (Sound Record) 4th October 2024
Refreshingly self-deprecating in their own skills as musicians, despite their listed achievements (of a sort) and obvious knowledge and experiences with juggling around with a multitude of styles and influences, the Unicorn Ship Explosion duo of Rob (who apparently did attend jazz school at least, whatever that is, and is “near the final chapter of piano lessons”) and Sash (a “great guy” we’re assured, but “average musician”, who gets by on tinkering around with modular synths whilst making the odd sound design pitch for designer brands) unleash their debut album of cross-pollinated sounds upon the general public.
Where to begin on an album that seems to pack a lot in, fusing countless genres into a discombobulating and atmospheric playful hybrid that AI would find beyond its capacity to emulate. Just the opening account of ‘All Things Everywhere’, which gives us a clue to this method, traipses over borders, timelines and inspirations to sound at any one time like a limbering Tony Allen, Ethio-jazz, Melt Yourself Down, Embryo and pylon buzzed electricity.
By track two we’ve already shifted the pitch by being introduced to the drawled, questioning and confrontational performative voice of sometime collaborator Agnieszka Szczotka – a Polish cross between Gina X, Saâda Bonaire’s Claudia Hossfeld and Little Annie -, who in lingering and almost dismissive style inhabits the nighttime and dances with identities on the celestial edges primal space bound ‘Agi Took The Choo Choo Train’. Szczotka, a former Royal Academy student of conceptual art, is used sparingly, and only appears again with the Freudian mothering sexual analogy of “cum” and spit loaded poetics ‘Bloody Bastard (Like Mother)’ – there’s many connotations to unload from that one.
The influences, the combinations expand further than that though, with hints of Library music, sci-fi, dark jazz, fusion jazz, percussive passages that sound like the missing link between Tibet and Valentina Magaletti, Battles, Holy Fuck, Jan Hammer, Portico Quartet, International Pony, floppy disk experimenting Sakamoto (listen to ‘Yeah But’ and get back to me if I’m wrong) and Rave At Your Fictional Borders. It’s a mad roll and round kit demonstration of drums and electronic apparatus in full breakbeat, electro, funky, otherworldly and metal pots and pan rattled splash mode. The album bends between playful fuckery and reconfiguration, free of artifice and dullness. Put it this way, they don’t take themselves too seriously: even if there are obvious loaded references, a pun here and there that suggests unease, protestation and that all is not well in the state of the world. Enjoyably familiar at every turn, the duo and their foil partner in this escapade fuse various mood music and energetic performances together to make anew.
ShitNoise ‘I Cocked My Gun And Shot My Best Friend’
ALBUM (Cruel Nature Records)
Shit noise. Shit house. Shit shitty world. Shit outcomes for one and all. Yes, as rats fester on our decline and the parasitic spectres of autocracy, divisive ideologies and malware bleed into our craniums, you can always rely on someone or some group, in this case a duo, to channel such bleak outcomes into a riling torment of mania, hysterical, resigned and frothing near daemonic expression. And ShitNoise dine out on a veritable feast of outrageous indignation, piss poor behaviours, and the problems that grind many of us down each day. But some rats eat out better than others and being down and out in Monte-Carlo is better than most places. Hailing from that Rivera paradise, the duo’s Aleksejs Macions (on vocals and guitar) and Paul Albouy (on drums) can see, experience a near unparalleled division between the casino, the F1 jet set and those eking out a living from the morsels drip fed from those bulging crypto, old money, asset rich digital wallets. There are worse places to be for sure, but a killer to witness all that luxury during an age of such misery and despair.
This brings us to the duo’s latest and third album thus far, I Cocked My Gun And Shot My Best Friend, which is framed as a more polished and mature departure from their more noise-crushing signature. I can hear that. But as someone who is very new to the duo, it still sounds intensely dissonant, grinding and full of barraging, barrelling and head-kicked-in drum bashing. However, it does have melody, and it does have some tunes too. I also believe there are points in which you can even dance to it. They’ve widened their influences, and brought in a little more shade and light, changed the tempos and had a go at knocking the shit out of and repurposing a haul of bands from the punk, metal, alt rock, no wave, noise, grunge, doom and industrial scenes. Although, ‘Hashish (The Yelling Song)’ features UFO oscillating take-offs and Itchy-O ritual magik. It’s like Mudhoney brawling with the Sea Hags one minute, Nitzer Ebb in a knife fight with Ministry and Lightning Bolt the next. And I do believe they are having a lot of fun doing it: despite the crushing blows, dread and yelling!
It gets less noisy as the album progresses; the trajectory between the opening cranium screams and angle grinding industrial punk scrawl of ‘Ho-Ho! (No More)’ and the closing alt-rock late night bar room knockabout chorus affinity of ‘The Ballroom Brawl’ is congruous but worlds apart. The former, sounds like the Revolting Cocks, Spanish underground tape culture of the 80s and CUNTROACHES in some unholy union, whilst the latter, is a more lolling drinking game between Swans and The Heartbreakers, with David Bowie’s Hansa saxophone serenading and coiling round the bar tab. The vocals meanwhile have a range that takes in the Occult Character, the indescribable, the resigned, the sulky and menacing.
Playing hard and loose with the noise, the duo have moulded frustration and protestation into a hacked-off thrashing, barracking and distorting maelstrom of various funnelled music channels and organised chaos.
Leisure FM ‘Illuminated Manuscript’
Single
Like some Gothic fairytale from Eastern Europe, the Szymanek twins materialized a while back in Southeast London, via time spent in the lyrical Wales of Dylan Thomas. From the English capital’s warehouse scene of recent years and a monthly RTM Radio spot, Milena and Weronika progressed to conjuringuphallucinatory imagery, dejection andfate under their later ego, Lesuire FM. Receiving a favourable review by me, their fables EP set an atmosphere of Eastern European morose, magic, demons and cathartic relief.
Loaded with the Catholic imagery and theatre of their Polish homeland, the twins of woozy struggles of the heart turn their chthonian and weary poetic gaze on the fatalistic Greek myth of Icarus with a new single, ‘Illuminated Manuscript’. Flying too close to the sun, his wings clipped and burned and crashing to his death, the tragic parable of that sorry tale and all its connotations are whittled down into a modern resigned plaint that balances the ecstasy of freedom and escape with the agony of falling out of the sky to one’s death, and the devastating consequences of not heeding instruction, advice in the pursuit of big rewards and high risk: in Icarus’s case, ignoring the advice of his sagacious dad Daedalus. This sorry tale plays out to a misty veil of chugging and flange-like Banshees guitar, trip-hop drums and swirled Tom Arnold thriller-like strings, sounding at times like Lomi MC singing over Delerium, Switchblade Symphony, the Tara Clerkin Trio, SU and Propaganda. But in short, thematically, poetically and fatalistically, imagine a Hellenic Lyudmila Petrushevskaya conspiring with Dylan Thomas.
The B-side (in old money) is a guest remix version of the title-track from the twin’s 2023 EP fables. The chosen candidate Kourosh Oliver Floyd Adhemy casts a phantasmagoria spell over the original, adding his very own misty filters, near demonic voice effects, vapours, tabla-like tripsy beats and bulb shaped notes. Together, both tracks atmospherically waft around in Gothic trip-hop revelation, caught between worlds.
Elea Calvet ‘Trigger (Acoustic)’
SINGLE (Mahogany Records)
After artfully captivating listeners with the sighed adroit wistfulness of ‘Sinuous Ways’ earlier this year, the burgeoning enchantress Elea Calvet now breathes an almost knowing southern gothic air of doomed bleak mystery and trauma into the subtly dramatic ‘Trigger’.
Triggering a sublime duality of the diaphanous and noirish, of malady and allurement, of the pained and unbound, Calvet’s vulnerability is matched by her strength in conveying abstract feelings of the bittersweet and identity.
Entirely self-produced over the course of one inspiring weekend at her “overcrowded home studio”, ‘Trigger’ can be imagined as a misty and near supernatural country cinematic hunger of Anna Calvi, PJ Harvey and Amanda Acevado.
We’ve been assured that another single is on its way next month, but in the meantime take in the magical torment and achingly writhed quality of Calvet’s growing songbook.
____/THE SOCIAL PLAYLIST VOLUME 90

The Social Playlist is an accumulation of music I love and want to share, tracks from my various DJ sets and residencies over the years, and both selected cuts from those artists, luminaries we’ve lost and those albums celebrating anniversaries each month.
Running for over a decade or more, Volume 90 is as eclectic and generational spanning as ever. Look upon it as the perfect radio show, devoid of chatter, interruptions and inane self-promotion.
This month’s choice tracks include a bundle of anniversary albums from John Lennon (Walls And Bridges ’74), David Bowie (Tonight ’84), R.E.M. (Monster ’94), Cluster (Zuckerzeit ’74) and Gudrun Gut and Joachim Irmler (500m 2014). I’ve gone for something a little different with the first of those two selections; choosing to kick off the playlist with the TV Personalities rambunctious gnarly version of Lennon’s ‘Whatever Gets You Thru The Night’, and Icehouse’s sympathetic take on Bowie’s ‘Loving The Alien’. I’ve also chosen a live cut of one of my favourite tracks from R.E.M.’s Monster, ‘Strange Currencies’.
There’s a small selection too of newish tracks – those that have been released in the last couple of months that I either missed or didn’t get room to place in the Monthly Playlist selections. In that camp there’s Jay Cue, Conjunto Media Luna, Dr. Walker, Reymour and Vox.
In between those selections I’ve scattered a smattering of music from Bad Dream Fancy Dress, Son Of Noise, Ms. Melodie, Baseball Furies, Tal Rose, Antonino Riccardo Luciani and others. There’s also a cap doffed in respect to the late Herbie Flowers, who passed on earlier this month, with the inclusion of Sunforest’s ‘Where Are You’, just one of many such album session Flowers played on over the years.
tRaCkLiSt
Television Personalities ‘Whatever Gets You Thru The Night’
Flora Purim ‘Stories To Tell’
Cossa Nostra ‘Nuestra Cosa’
Poobah ‘Watch Me’
Reale Accademia di Musica ‘Macumba Hotel’
Azar Lawrence ‘Novo Ano’
Conjunto Media Luna ‘Doombia del Agotamiento’
Dogbowl ‘Love Bomb’
Nicolas Greenwood ‘Hope And Ambitions’
Reymour ‘Sleepy time’
Bad Dream Fancy Dress ‘Lemon Tarts’
Icehouse ‘Loving The Alien’
Jay Cue ‘Hyperbolic Time Chamber’
Dr Walker ‘Was ist Dad Rap?’
Son Of Noise ‘Down With Son Of Noise’
Ms. Melodie ‘Remember When…?’
This Kind Of Punishment ‘Some More Than Others’
Baseball Furies ‘Ain’t Comin’ Home’
Bass Drum of Death ‘Left For Dead’
Tal Ross ‘Green and Yellow Daughter’
R.E.M. ‘Strange Currencies (Live at the BBC)’
Lee Baggett ‘All Star Day’
Appaloosa ‘Tulu Rogers’
Sunforest ‘Where Are You’
Antonino Riccardo Luciani ‘Eclisse lunare’
General Strike ‘Next Day’
Cluster ‘Rotor’
Michael Garrison ‘Theme to Onday’
Vox ‘Metaphysical Back Alley’
Gut und Irmler ‘Chlor’
____/ARCHIVES
Albums decades apart, both released originally during this month, there’s another chance to read my review of Bowie’s Tonight LP from 1984, and Gudrun Gut and Joachim Irmler’s dizzying altitude 500m collaboration of 2014.
Tonight (EMI)

‘Keeping his hand in’ so to speak, Bowie kept up the pop-lit pretence with Tonight. Arriving straight off the back of his Serious Moonlight world tour, and with the very same backing group – including the Borneo horns troupe – the follow-up to his massively successful Let’s Dance showcase was a far patchier affair.
A filled-out, skiing obsessed, pastel shaded crooner, long since divorced from his moiety Angie, and now in custody of their child Zowie, he was less concerned with previous concepts and play acting and more interested in growing pains and heart-strung romantic indulgence.
Of course, every time ‘Davey Jones’ sported new garbs and ventured out on the road he was always acting a part. But the burgeoning film career, which began with The Man Who Fell To Earth through to his stage roles in Baal and The Elephant Man on Broadway, allowed a new avenue of total immersion for Bowie. Channelled then via celluloid, the previous year alone saw him star as a forlorn ageing vampire in The Hunger, and as the English prisoner-of-war ‘Strafer Jack’ Celliers in Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence: that exuberant theatrical spirit was missing for the most part from his music.
However, Bowie did get to indulge himself on the ‘Blue Jean’ (perhaps Tonight’s saviour from total disaster). Well, the video/mini-movie at least, directed by Julian Temple, and stretched out to twenty-minutes, featured the singer adorned with a makeshift turban and piled-on make-up.
A new production, the largely untested Derek Bramble, and Hugh Padgham tried to mix things up, but instead lost their way as Bowie made a pig’s ear of things. The fact that his knock-about ‘comrade-in-arms’ Iggy Pop pitched in is almost irrelevant, as all the edge is erased by a fuzzy saccharine mush. Using a maudlin calypso and faux reggae backing he teamed up for countless misfires; duetting with Tina Turner on the dawdling title track (originally sung by Pop on his second solo LP, Lust For Life): ruining all his erstwhile partner’s contributions. “God Only Knows” what he was thinking by covering Brian Wilson’s (lyrics by Tony Asher) beatific masterpiece, and you also must question the addition of Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller’s gold standard, ‘I Keep Forgettin’: thrown in as a so-called return to rock’n’roll? Hardly!
Luckily ‘Saving The Alien’ was on hand to at least stop the spread of rot. ‘All the gear and no idea’, Tonight paved the way for Labyrinth, Bowie’s forked tongue and sardonic protestations all but muted so that his crossover, inter-generational appeal could now reach even the youngest sections of society.
Gudrun Gut and Joachim Irmler ‘500m’
(bureau b) Released 8th September 2014

Doyens, and for that matter mavericks, of the more cerebral and avant-garde boarders of the German music scene, otherworldly evocative organ grinder Hans-Joachim Irmler and his visual artist musical polymath siren, Gudrun Gut, join forces for a mesmerizing electronic trip.
As a founding member of the mighty irritant, heavy mentalists Faust in the 70s, Irmler’s keyboard hovered ominously between the alien and sublime. Continuing to bear the name – existing in a disconnected alter-dimensional timeline with an alternative Faust that features fellow founder members, Jean-Hearve Péron and Werner ‘Zappi’ Diermaier – Irmler founded an eponymous named studio, used by a who’s who of the German and beyond experimental electronica and classical scenes: from Cluster to the Modern String Quartet. Whilst the man himself has collaborated both wide and far, recently releasing the Flut LP with Can’s drum titan, Jaki Liebezeit on his own label, Klangbad – set up 15-years ago to originally release continuing Faust projects, but since expanded into a full-on label and festival, duty bound in ‘nurturing’ ‘genre bending’ music.
Gudrun, no less active, moved to Berlin in the mid 70s. An early member of the industrial strength Einstürzende Neubauten, Gudrun would go on to appear in and help form a number post-punk and electronic bands, including Mania D, Malaria!, Matador and also bring out a solo debut effort, I Put A Record On, in 2007. She is also head honcho at the labels Monika Enterprise and Moabit Musik.
Together, both artists create a collection of transient progressive techno moods. Developed in two stages, the congruous collaboration first improvised at Irmler’s lightheaded inducing Scheer, Baden-Württemberg located Faust studio – the name of the album alluding to the giddy effecting altitude of the studio, 500 meters above sea level, which gave Gudrun a constant sense of dizziness – before Gudrun refined and added her own techy, scuttling and nuanced drum loops, back in her own space. These recordings would then once again make their way back to Irmler for further exploration and tweaking.
Billed as a merger between Irmler’s ‘meandering, wistfully psychedelic organ sound’ and Gudrun’s ‘reverb-laden, whispering, breathy voice’, the results of this union obscure and abstract both. Loaded instead with vapourous and metallic waltzing veils, interchangeable programmed drum patterns (mostly caustically trebly but cut with pinpoint accuracy and among some of the most sophisticated I’ve heard in ages) and esoteric percussion.
Succinctly entitled, each track is both simultaneously a concomitant lead into the next and an individual self-contained, evocative story of its own. Not that those titles give much away, but on occasion they allude to a rectification of some vague theme. For example, ‘Traum’, translated as ‘dream’, has a magical Freudian hallucinatory quality, and festive wintery charm broken up by a freakish raspy and squelching noise, underfoot.
‘Noah’ on the other hand may or may not bare any relationship to the Biblical flood survivor and great God hope for the future, being more of a ritualistic gaze at shooting stars and passing satellites. However, Irmler adds some extemporized gabbling speech, delivered by a remote transmission affected, introverted megaphone – you can even hear Gudrun off mic, laughing or encouraging Irmler, from the sidelines.
‘Früh’ translates as ‘early’, but early for what exactly we can’t quite tell, the rotor-bladed intro cylindrically bringing in a chain-reaction of busily interchanging particles and tight delay mechanics, all heading down a highway marked ‘the future’.
Always moving somewhere, either skywards from a subterranean vault or as with ‘Auf Und Ab’, ‘to and fro’ between the kinetic beats of Detroit techno, circa Rob Hood’s Metroplex days, and a sort of moody decadence. Upward and onwards then, 500m travels on the solar winds and elevates from a reverent esoteric organ produced sanctum into another great mystery.
Our Daily Bread 625: Various ‘Athos: Echoes From The Holy Mountain’
September 13, 2024
ALBUM FEATURE
DOMINIC VALVONA

Various ‘Athos: Echoes From The Holy Mountain’
(FLEE) 27th September 2024
“Let this place be your inheritance and your garden, a paradise and a haven of salvation for those seeking to be saved.”
And thus spoke, in Christian lore, the mysterious voice to the Blessed Virgin Mary as she set foot upon the lands around the Holy Mountain of Athos in Northeastern Greece, two millennia ago. Athonite (the Orthodox religious form that takes its name from Athanasios, a Byzantine monk who is considered the founder of the monastic community on the peninsula of Mount Athos) tradition tells of the exalted Mary’s planned journey from Jaffa to visit Lazarus in Cyprus. Fated to be blown off course, Mary and her party, which included St. John The Evangelist no less, were forced to anchor at the port of Klement, close to the present monastery of Iviron – one of twenty such monasteries to be built upon that sacred mountain and outlier of the course of centuries. But this was Pagan territory in those near ancient times, yet to be Christianised. The Virgin Mary however so fell in love with its idyllic beautified landscape and awe inspiring heights that she’s said to have blessed it. Mary’s famous Son then anointed it as her garden.
And so begins the Christian legend of Mount Athos, its long checkered – often beset by occupying enemies and theological conflicts – history and embrace of the Orthodox faith. Or at least that’s just one thread: one such origin story of many.
If we go back much further, and if Greek mythology is to be believed, this outcrop was named after the Gigante who, during this incredibly strong and aggressive race’s epic battle with the Gods of Olympus, tussled with Poseidon. Despite the name these warring offspring of Gaia were not actually giants, nor to be confused with the Titans. But somehow Athos was able to lope a humongous rock at the Sea God, which missed and fall into the Aegean, where it stands to this day. Other versions of this same origin myth say that Poseidon buried his adversary beneath it.
Mentioned in Homer’s Iliad, the histories of both Herodotus and Strabo, ancient references to Athos all remark upon its geography, strategic positioning – used as a route for Xerxes I and his invasion of the Greek kingdoms – and more fateful reputation to lure ships onto its rocks – during another invasion, this time on the city state of Thrace, the Persian commander Mardonius lost 300 ships and 20,000 men off that treacherous coastline. Pliny the Elder, who could always tell a good fib, wrote that the inhabitants of this pre-Christian landscape feasted upon the skins of vipers, the properties of which allowed them to live until 400 years of age. After the death of Alexander The Great, the architect Dinocrates is said to have proposed carving a statue of the Macedonian out of the mountain.
Historical records, documentation is slim on the matter, but the more modern history of Athos and its conversion to Christianity begins during the 4th century, and Constantine I’s reign (324 – 337 AD). It is recorded that followers of the faith were already established or living there however. But just a generation later, under the rule of Julian, its burgeoning churches were destroyed, its people forced to flee into the woods and more inaccessible areas. Believers must have lived and shared with pre-Christian Greeks and religions, as under Theodosius I’s reign in the later years of that same century, there were still traditional Greek temples standing – we know this, because they were unceremoniously destroyed during this period.
By the later period of the 7th century, Christian worship was in full flow, with Athos becoming a sanctuary to those escaping Islamic conquest. Many of the monks from the outlier desert regions of Egypt, sought protection abroad in Athos.
We emerge during the Byzantine era with old Rome all but destroyed, its empire now either overrun by various tribes/confederations/enemies, and its power either erased or enervated. The baton was picked up however, and a new Rome, of a kind, was built in Constantinople; long part of the original Roman empire, shared and split at various times amongst generals and rulers vying for control of the whole. One iconic character of this new epoch, the revered hermit and monk Euthymius The Younger, settled in Athos, followed by the already mentioned Athanasios the Athonite. The latter would famously build the large central church of the Protaton in the largest of the Athos settlements, Karyer – home to the famed “Axion Estin” icon of the Blessed Virgin Mary, and also the name of a hymn sung in divine services.
I’m in gratitude to Norman Davis and his impressive tome Europe: A History, for a concise outline of Athos. Davis tells us that the 9th century Byzantine Emperor Basil I formerly recognized the “Holy Mountain of Athos” as a territory reserved for monks and hermits in 885 AD. You may have noticed the absence of a sizable proportion of the populace from that, for women were banned from the “Garden of the Virgin” – there’s gratitude for you. Davis also writes that the first permanent monastery, the Great Laura, was founded in 936 AD.
The history just keeps on rolling; the rise and fall, the declines in waves over the next thousand years.
The centre of Orthodox theology to a degree, despite continued attempts of Catholic conversion in the next millennium and obvious intrigues of the Popes, the fortunes of Athos depended much on the outside support of strongmen, kings and emperors alike. As the Byzantine Empire, not before thwarting an invasion of this sanctified retreat, faded and the Ottoman rose, the Orthodox sect looked to new benefactors: interestingly enough, this included the sultans. A far too convoluted story follows, but it was the Serbian kings who offered that vital support and protection for a time. However, the Russians targeted this seat of international learning, swelling the monastic community with 5000 monks sent by St. Petersburg. Influence wise, Russia lasted until the revolution, by which time fortunes once more had changed as Europe suffered the devastations of World War I and the first of the Balkan Wars – Athos couldn’t help but suffer as a backdrop to all these events.
Decades of decay would follow until the 1980s saw another rise in numbers of monks. But Athos disappears into mysticism; a timeless part of Earth unbound to time.

Context is vital: history essential. For the publishing house/record label/curatorial/ethnologist platform FLEE has spent a year unraveling, digging and excavating and researching their grand project dedicated to the Athos monastic community. Regular readers will perhaps recognise the name and my review of the hub’s Ulyap Songs: Beyond Circassian Tradition purview. Echoes From The Holy Mountain is no less extensive and documented; arriving with an accompanying book of essays, articles, photos and commissioned artwork by a both Greek and international cast of experts and artists.
My opening history is but brief, but within the pages that accompany these both original recordings of Athos voices and visionary reworks and soundboards by contemporary experimental artists, you’ll find a fascinating story.
No one quite puts in the work that FLEE and their collaborators do, with the scope and range of academia wide and deep. Musically, across a double album vinyl format there’s a split between those artists, DJs and producers that have conjured up new peregrinations influenced by the source material, and a clutch of recordings taken in the 1960s and in recent times of the Daniilaioi Brotherhood Choir, Father Lazaros of the Grigoriou monastery, Father Germanos of the Vatopedi and Father Antypas – there’s also attributed performances to the Iviron and Simonopetra monasteries too.
The liturgy, holy communal a cappella voiced and near uninterrupted hummed, assonant harmonies of the monastic choirs stretch back to the Byzantine epoch; a mysterious, gilded age in which the Orthodox strand of Christianity flourished. You can easily picture such gold leafed mosaic scenes, as the incense burned in somber reverence to the Virgin Mary, the idol of Athos.
The only accompaniment to these beatific choral undulations and ascendant exaltations is the semantron percussive apparatus. Used to summon the monasteries to prayer at the start of a procession, strips of metal that hang from a wooden frame (although there are variations to the construction) are struck with a mallet. It sounds almost like a mix of thwacked leather and wooden poles being rhythmically shuttered. Opening both the original non-augmented recordings and used not only in the title but as the prompt for the first of the modern treatments, adaptations, the semantron ushers in the Vatopedi vespers, the evening prayer, and is veiled beneath a echo-y vapourous mist on the breathed, clock-chimed, fourth world jazz suffused Prins & Inre Kretson Group transformation.
Picking up on the near mystical, the atmospheric sanctuaries and timeless settings, each prayer, divine service, stanza travels beyond Athos; the soundings, language seem to reach out and draw comparisons to much of Eastern Europe, Russia, the Caucuses, and even India. Unmistakable is the Orthodox cannon, the rites. But I’m hearing parallels to other cultures, forms too, whether intentional, or for obvious reasons, because the reach is wide and overlaps former empires, conversions and borders. And so these recordings are ripe for further geographical transference, none more so than with Baba Zula legend Murat Ertel and his foil and wife Esma’s pastoral Mediterranean caravan ‘Garden Of Kibele’. The duo seems to reimagine a Japanese ceremonial garden transplanted to Byzantium Constantinople – cue courtly Medieval Velvet Underground echoes, a whistled flute, a detuned drum, a Jah Wobble bass, and obscured singing voices. It sounds like an Anatolian version of Hackedepicciotto.
Glorifying God to a fusion of the Orthodox, Turkey, the Hellenic, Med coastlines and Middle Eastern fuzzed-up grooves, the Athenian-born, but London-based, drummer and multi-instrumentalist Daniel Paleodimos evokes Mustafa Ozkent, Altin Gün and the Şatellites on the afflatus paean ‘Doxology’. Jimi Tenor cooks up a suitable inter-dimensional, near supernatural, soundtrack from haunted gramophone-like recordings on his tremulant, fluted and gravitas swelled ‘Idan Kuoromiehet’, and Jay Glass Dubs goes down the Daniel Lanois, Dennis Bovell and Finis Africae routes on the signature dubby, paddled and breathless “huh” reverberation ‘Synaptic Riddles’.
The German and American “improvised and spontaneous storytelling” pairing of Hilary Jeffery and Eleni Poulou cast a hallucinogenic spell of uneasy confessional sexual and dreamy obsession on the vaporous wisped ‘I Swim In Your Dreams’. Swaddled blows of sax can be heard in a cosmic air of post-punk dance and trip-hop – I’m thinking Deux Filles and Saáda Bonaire meeting Meatraffle in the cloisters.
Some repurposed, reimagined traverses seem to erase any trace of the monastic brethren’s intonations and hymnal divine stylings, whilst others feature the source material: albeit in an illusionary manner, or as a jump-off point for further mystification and flights of fantasy. As an overall package however, Echoes From The Holy Mountain is a deep survey of a near closed-off world and all the various attached liturgical and historical threads. FLEE reawaken an age-old practice, bringing to life traditions that, although interrupted and near climatically hindered, stretch back a millennium or more. No dusted ethnographical academic study for students but an impressive and important purview of reverential dedication and a lifetime of service, this project offers new perspectives and takes on the afflatus. Yet again the platform’s extensive research has brought together an international cast, with the main motivation being to work with tradition to create something respectful but freshly inviting and inquisitive. The historical sound, seldom witnessed or heard by outsiders, is reinvigorated, as a story is told through sonic exploration.
The Perusal #59: Nonpareils, El Khat, BAG, Christopher Haddow, Daniel Inzani, John Howard…
September 9, 2024
A WORLD OF SONIC/MUSICAL DISCOVERIES REVIEWED BY DOMINIC VALVONA
(Unless stated otherwise, all releases are available now)

Nonpareils ‘Rhetoric & Terror’
(Mute) 20th September 2024
Amicably uncoupling, nearly eight years ago, from the group he co-founded with foil Angus Andrew, the former Liars instigator Aaron Hemphill has pursued an inventive conceptual imbued pathway collaborating, recording and scoring a host of projects, from cinema to the gallery space and music stage. The L.A. born and raised artist upped sticks for the year before the Liars split for new horizons and a new cultural hotspot.
Three years later and with a fresh start and process of working, Hemphill released his debut solo album Scented Pictures under the Nonpareils appellation – chosen so that it didn’t evoke a single person or a producer’s name but instead, hopefully, in Hemphill’s words, “sounded like a group or a band name…something plural too.” Christened as “metaphysically reconstructed pop” at the time, that inaugural album was accorded a raving review from me. My description went a little something like this: “Cyclonic churning and confusing barrages of sonic displacement”, and “a window in on the woozy state of Hemphill’s mind, all those ideas, snippets and memories channelled through an abstract and broken staccato and heavy reverb obstruction that’s still capable of throwing out some pretty good hooks and tunes.” My favourite track from that album, ‘The Timeless Now’, sounded like a centrifugal space sequence breakdown of time itself.
But now moving away slightly, philosophically and methodically, Hemphill attempts an unbroken flow between family life and his theoretical practice. The personal relationships arrive in the form of Hemphill’s spouse and creative foil Angelika Kaswalder, who lends voice to many of the tracks on this second Nonpareils album; sharing space with old pal and post-hardcore Blood Brother Morgan Henderson, who is on hand to suffuse the constantly changing sonic and musical landscape with chamber-style enchanted fairy tale and pastoral woodwind.
Although now embracing a fluid relationship between the reasonability’s of home life, of bring up children and his art, Hemphill has lost none of his conceptual curiosity. Rhetoric & Terror is a very different album yet still carries some of the debut’s signatures: highly experimental with signs of John Cale, R. Stevie Moore, Coil, Deerhunter and Royal Trux-like feel of druggy-induced languidness.
More “emotionally available” this time around, but not without devices and themes, the album takes its name from a chapter in Giorgio Agamben’s The Man Without Content. The Rhetoric & Terror heading in the original book is used to describe two different types of writers: the “terrorist” being the misologist (in its simplest terms, someone with a hatred for argument, debate or reasoning) who is only into feeling, and the “rhetorician”, committed to logic and form. The connotations and feels/emotions all play out across a mix of fantasies, nightmares, hallucinations, and corrupted industrial and Gothic pop-synth duets of a very removed kind, or swell into crescendos of the tortured, the sonic howled and distorting unsettling blocks of corrosive scuzz. During these moments Kaswalder’s voice sounds either like Jarboe or peculiarly like a haunted Lennon! Whilst Hemphill’s voice is smothered at times in a Bradford Cox fog, in pain or strung out.
With the additional subtly of woodwind, there’s suggestions of dreaminess and woodland adult tales. There’re multilayers of Meta, heaps of influences at play, and counterbalances of light and shade, repulsion and candid sexuality, morphed into a constantly changing soundtrack. At any one time this can all sound like the Flaming Lips, the Legendary Pink Dots, Glenn Branca’s Symphony No.1, the atmospherics of Norman Westburg, Swans, Faust, DAF, Current 93, FLips or Brian Reitzell. There’s a lot to unpick, and some tracks threaten to overload the listener on the first run through: everything from post-punk to the German new wave, the gothic, indie-dance music and the psychedelic wrapped up and expelled, catching the emotional rollercoasters. Logic and feelings clash, with the latter winning out.
Gristly fear and surreal theatre find common ground in a strange reality on yet another successfully untethered and unbound album of ideas from the Nonpareils project.
Various ‘Synthesizing The Silk Roads: Uzbek Disco, Tajik Folktronica, Uygher Rock & Crimean Tatar Jazz From 1980s Soviet Central Asia’
(Ostinato Records) 20th September 2024
Everything you’d expect to hear in the West but transported via the 80s equivalent of a workhorse camel along the silk roads network that connected an age-old trade between nations, kingdoms and city states across Eurasia and beyond, the latest compilation “anthology” from the Ostinato label surveys a synthesizer-fuelled musical revelation in the Soviet Union’s double landlocked central Asian realm of Uzbekistan.
No one asked the various mix of Turkic peoples that made up this trading post and hub whether they wanted to be absorbed into the Russian and then, later, revolutionary Soviet communist empires. An old community of diverse ethnicities (though originally, so I believe, descended from Scythian nomads) once divided for an epoch between the Emirate of Bukhara and Khanates of Khiva and Kokand, the lands known as Uzbekistan (named after the largest of the Turkic official languages, Uzbek) contain such real but fantastical exotic atavistic draws as Samarkand and Tashkent. Surviving brutal conquests by Tamerlane in the 14th century, and waves of interference, authoritarian rule and cultural, historical erosion and the quashing of nationalism and identity by the Russians, these nomadic peoples have managed to maintain their roots and practices and spirit.
The demographics were radically shaken up during the summer of 1941 when a struggling USSR – caught out and caught short by Nazi Germany’s invasion -, under a panicking Stalin, ordered a mass evacuation eastwards of sixteen million people. Many of ended up in Tashkent. Not only the Uzbekistan capital but the country’s largest city, Tashkent was infamously destroyed by Genghis Khan in 1219. Rebuilt over time, but felled by a devastating earthquake in 1966, it was once more put back together, but this time built in the image of a model Soviet propaganda city.
One of many such transfers of people – from 1930 to 1952, Stalin forced various groups east, either as punishment, as labour or to fill ethnically cleansed territories – the wartime waves included, of all trades, several gramophone engineers. This would prove very handy, leading to the establishment of the Gramplastinek pressing plant in Tashkent near the end of the war; a central, we’re told, player in Soviet era record production, knocking out 200 million records by the 1970s. With the death of Stalin in 1953, the iron glove replaced the, well, just iron fist, and the Soviet music scene saw a “blossoming” of jazz clubs and later, discotheques. The story behind this selection brings together a number of communities, all playing their part in building a unique multicultural scene in the face of dictatorial censorship, surveillance and continued repression.
One such vital contribution includes those members of the Bukhavan Jewish community that had started importing “state-of-the-art” music technology from the USA and Japan to the region: namely both Moog and Korg synths. Combined with a growing demand for homegrown produced music, the sounds of disco, fuzz rock, the pop new wave (the American, French and German kinds), funk, soul and the troubadour were all lent a distinct Eurasian romantic fantasy of the pouted, the courtly, the lovelorn, dreamy and pumped. Several artists on this compilation suffered for it, punished by the KGB, sent to the gulags and even forced to undergo psychiatric treatment in some cases: hardly the fertile conditions for the music artist and industry. But then some, still, view that time, before the Berlin wall came down, as a golden period of art and cultural expression.
Words such “groundbreaking” and “rare” are used by the label and their curatorial partners Maqom Soul. And to be fair, I’ve certainly never heard any of the records included here, nor was I previously aware of an Uzbekistan scene as such. But from a “dead stock” of vinyl retrieved from the Gramplastinok plant (which closed its doors in 1991) and a smattering of live TV recordings that period is revived and roused from relative obscurity. What with all those diverse threads, musically and ethnicity wise, we’re introduced to transit points between Western and Eastern, Northern and Southern Asia; a place in which the Uzbek meets the Afghan, the Russian, the Uyghur, the Tatar and the Tajik. A veritable fusion of cultures bounce, zip and zap around a track list that includes doe-eyed dreamy and phaser effected vapours of the silk road, woven into chanteuse stepper pop (Nasiba Abdullaeva’s Afghan dialect oozed and longing caravan trail ‘Aarezoo Gom Kardam’ – or translated into English, “I lost my dream”); Lipps Co. laser-beam shooting disco with a macho beat (the “live” edit of the Original Band’s pumped ‘Bu Nima Bu’); NRG consults with Gino Socco and bamboo music Sakamoto (Bolalar’s Jewish harp springy muse yearn ‘Lola’); and inspiral garage organ and scuzzy fuzz rock guitar (Yashlik’s joyful ‘Radost’).
Outside those spheres of influences, the misty drizzled Minarets Of Nessef’s (Uzbekistan has been and is still majority Sunni Muslim) ‘Instrumental’ wouldn’t sound out of place on a Greg Foat album these days, with its smoky and smooching bluesy and jazzy saxophone, smozzy romantic landscaping cult sounds and Aphrodite’s Child like evocations. Khurmo Shirinova’s filmic mirage ‘Paldot Kardam’ (“found a sweetheart”) sounds like a lost Michael LeGrand ballad from Never Say Never Again, and the Korean ethnic Ariran’s ‘Pomni Menya’ (“remember me”) sounds like a saddened hybrid of Issac Hayes and Lalo Schifrin dropped into Seoul during the early 1970s.
You’ll hear soundalikes of Jarre, Space, Patrick Cowley, Carrone and, rather surprisingly, Liquid Liquid, but with a Eurasian twist of the exotic, sometimes naïve, and on occasion, fun. In my books, that makes Synthesizing The Silk Roads everything you’d hope it would be; the gateway to a chapter in synth history you never knew existed, never knew you needed, and now can’t wait to add to your life.
Christopher Haddow ‘An Unexpected Great Leap’
(Erol’s Hot Wax)
A comfort blanket bookended by the reassuring signs of life via the sounds of an ultrasound, Christopher Haddow’s first steps out as a solo artist (flanked on either side by the contributions of Josh Longton on double-bass and Jamie Bolland on piano) capture the abstract feelings of parenthood. An Unexpected Great Leap is in fact, partially, an ambient tool to send both Christopher and his artist wife Athene Grieg’s son Louie off to sleep.
As a documentation, a lovely musical sonic gift, this debut album is also a response to Athene’s 2020 Til Morning Wakes exhibition: “a reflection on time spent as a new parent”. As companion pieces they evoke the sleep-deprived hours spent waiting for baby to nod off. This is often represented by the continuous loops, the actions of pushing a buggy in circles around the park. And yet, aside from the child rearing, the ambient mirages, illusions on this album offer a vague semblance of Americana and Western panoramas, but also a sense of landscape and atmospheres captured by time-motion cameras; places mostly empty, devoid of people, machinery and distractions: and all the better for it too.
This is ambience style music with a specific mission; a hazy congruous score of beautifully crafted melodious serialism and deeply felt tactile evocations. And although Christopher probably didn’t envision this when producing this work of languid patience, my Jack-Chi Poppet fell gently asleep in peaceful comfort beside me as we both listened through the album.
Laconic in a good way, dreams are cast, but mysteries too. And that sense of building scenes thousands of miles away. For this sounds like a fantasy collaboration that never was between Eno and Daniel Lanois, Paul Tasker, Daniel Vicker and Chuck Johnson.
Away from a Glasgow environment and the local famed Green Door studios, and his own Stroud studio, there’s echoes of country-folk, porch music and bluegrass melting into subtle painted ebbing strokes of ambience and the neo-classical – the piano of Roedelius, and although it’s not an instrument listed in the making of this record, some of the plucks, bows and tactile quivers sound like the work of the experimental cellist Simon McCorry.
There’s so much more going on beneath and above the surface: a texture of whirring tape machine, flange-like mirages and magical bendy open-tuned guitar-rung versions of the dedicatedly romantically swooned ‘Plaisir d’amour’ (or as Elvis crooned, making it truly famous, “I just can’t help falling in love with you”) under crepuscular skies.
You may know Christopher as the former lead guitarist of Paper Planes and as a member of Jacob Yates and the Pearly Gates, but under his own name and with a different, more personal, direction he’s beautifully, imaginatively and conceptually complimented his wife’s visual feels of parenthood with a searching and settling album of ambient Americana and womb music.
Daniel Inzani ‘Selected Worlds’
(Hidden Notes Records/Tardigrade Records)
Still leading a myriad of ensembles and collaborating with a host of artists and collectives both on and outside the Bristol contemporary and neo-classical scenes, Daniel Inzani, after two decades, is only now stepping out under his own name.
The CV is an enviable one, and far too long to list here, but in the last four or five years the composer, pianist and arranger and oft musical director has worked with the label and festival platform Hidden Notes Records, both recording albums with his own Spindle Ensemble quartet and teaming up with the Toronto-based Evergreen Club Contemporary Gamelan octet. His third project for that facilitator hub of carefully chosen discerning releases in the experimental classical and worldly spheres is a most ambitious trio of connected, but also experienced in their singular forms, vinyl albums made with different ensembles and bands with various configurations, and with the sound, musicality and performances gradually transforming from chamber impressionism to jazz and the cosmic.
As intimate as it all is truly cinematic, the scale and breadth are impressive; the performances as articulate and stirring as they are dramatic and full of descriptive scenes, thoughts, meditations and moods.
As I’ve already said, you can either take this triple spread in as a whole work or individually, as each LP (broken up into the Form, Lore and Play titles) is a complete concept, an encapsulation of a separate recording sessions with several different lineups, and even sometimes, different instrumentation – although some instruments, including Inzani’s piano remain constant across all three records. What also stays constant is the influence of such pioneers and mavericks as Moondog and a mix or reignited classical and more modernist, avant-garde composers.
However, the scope is stretched towards African (Ethiopia specifically but also Northern and Western Africa) and American jazz, soundtrack scores and the one-man omnivorous Zappa by album number three. But Selected Worlds first begins with the impressionist brush strokes of a small chamber ensemble and a mix of string movements, suites and soloist piano performances. Recorded live, like all the albums in this collection, over three days, Form takes the classical sparks and the pastoral scenes of both the romanticised and more sorrowful evocations of Ravel and Mahler and wraps it around heightened, thriller and cutting shrilled violins, 50s cinema, theatre, the more modern work of Johnny Greenwood and Steve Reich’s Mallet Quartet. ‘Midsummer Piano Trio’ captures that titular seasoned yearn as Inzani’s piano touches on vague reminisces of Duke Ellington, Pascal Amoyel and Camille Saint-Saëns, or a silent age soundtrack.
Not quite the Four Seasons, the Form album does however capture seasonal changes with a palette of both the measured and more dramatic.
Album number two, Lore, extends the orchestral ensemble of players, introducing more percussion and, I believe, the deep bassy tones of the cello. This set-up takes the mood into ever more expansive areas of inquiry, of intensity, and at times the ominous. Here the influences (whether purposefully or not) point to Bernard Hermann, Krzysztof Penlerecki, Riley, György Ligeti (especially on the sombre and scary swelled creation of ‘In The Midst’) and Sun Ra. You can a semblance of Saturn’s cultural ambassador to Earth’s celestial-otherworldly-meets-transformed-old-time-jazz-vibes throughout, but notably on the sweetly sorrowful stargazing ‘The Zodiacal Light’.
As I mentioned, you can hear a lot more percussion, and the soft bass drum and dusting, sifting and brushing of cymbals and snare.
The serious ‘Based Around’ pulls the listener back into the soundtrack world, with viola (maybe) and violins at one point aping the menacing shark signatures of Jaws, albeit if Hitchcock and not Spielberg had made the movie and commissioned the score.
Album three, the final piece in this grand work, retains some of the previous musicality but now finds a new rhythm, a groove even, as it shifts the classical action towards Africa, the Levant, Anatolia and America. Performances now take in a vague lilt of Morricone and combine it with the Ethio-jazz sax and melody of Getatchew Mekurya, the beautiful scores of the cult Norwegian composer Sven Libaek and a hint of Mingus and the more contemporary Misha Panfilov: and that’s all just on the LP’s opening somnolent spell ‘Sleepwalking’. ‘Beyond The Pale’, meanwhile, sounds like a restless Marshall Allen squawking and pecking over a mix of Anatolian scuzz rock, Jimi Tenor, Mulatu Astake and The Heliocentrics: the soundtrack for a chase through the souk. ‘Sultana’ takes a leaf out of the Kasmi Washington’s playbook but also features the bobbing bulb-like notes and hallowed tubular sounds of gamelan. ‘The Great Nebula’ matches that malleted influence with an Afro shuffle backbeat and clarinet to create a Javanese-Ethio Tony Allen fusion. It’s the saxophone of Peter King that can be felt on the Afro-jazz imbued ‘The Wind Bids Me Leave You’ – that title sounds more like a haiku than sweltered African movement -, and on the ‘Roundup’ track, it sounds like he’s been joined by a rasping, mooning Pharoah and Idris Ackamoor. It all ends with the sleepy dust sprinkled Satie meets Sven Wunder dream sequence ‘Glasswing’, which is every bit as glassy as that title suggests.
It seems like a lifetime of work and practice has gone into this impressive cycle of albums, with every composition and performance a rich, stirring and cinematic dance of sources and influences moulded to make something anew. Classical theory and foundations are reignited, revitalised and congruously fused with jazz, film scores, the avant-garde, pastoral, the impressionistic and worldly to announce the inaugural Daniel Inzani-named opus. Fans of the Spindle Ensemble, his contributions to Cosmo Sheldrake’s big band and the Ethiopian inspired octet Tezeta, and his work with Alabastor deplume, will find some common ground and overlaps, but be surprised in the scale and the free reign that he’s been given. There’s no fear either of showboating and egotistical grandstanding, despite that scope and broad canvas as Inzani is generous in letting others come to the forefront. Selected Worlds is nothing less than an incredible achievement.
El Khat ‘Mute’
(Glitterbeat Records) 13th September 2024
The great upheavals that once forced the Jews of the Yemen to emigrate, at first in waves then on mass, to Israel during both the late 19th and mid 20th centuries mark out this unique community. Before Islam, and even before the birth of Christ, Jewish settlements in Northeastern Africa and the Arabian Peninsula were numerous. It’s believed that the Yemenite Jews can trace their roots all the way back to 110 BC, during an epoch in which the Yemen was considered a vital rich interchange of cultures and trade. It proved a haven two centuries later to those Jews escaping the barbaric fallout of the Bar Kokhba revolt against Rome in 132 AD.
These same Jewish communities survived for a further thousand years, even in the face Islamic conquest and conversation. Yemenite Jews had previously, during a sixty-year period since the 1880s and rise of Zionism (the return) emigrated in small numbers to their spiritual home of Israel. But in1924 (Northern) Yemen ruler Inman Yahya forbid any further attempts to leave. Once Israel was (re)established a generation later, and although reluctant and unprepared for such an influx, David Ben-Gurion’s government carried out the controversial Operation Magic Carpet uplift of those Yemenite Jews still trapped there. Because of the 1947 UN Partition Plan, Yemen’s authorities, and many in the Muslim community, began to persecute their Jewish neighbours; partly fuelled by the declaration of an Israeli state, but also, specifically, down to the claims that Jews had murdered a couple of Muslim Yemeni girls. Alongside smaller community numbers in Aden, Djibouti, Eritrea and Saudi Arabia, around 47,000 Yemenite Jews were brought to Israel. Not without criticism, many were forced to live in transit camps, with mortality rates high, corruption and a government that had stalled and questioned whether it should have even carried out this mass immigration plan.
Fast forward to modern times, and bearing that legacy, the Eyal el Wahab led El Khat trio have continued the nomadic-like exodus, emigrating from their Jaffa home to Berlin. Never an easy fit in Israel and abhorred by the politics of their adoptive home in recent years, they’ve chose to leave in the summer of 2023. This was of curse before the war in Gaza, which they strongly condemn. The title of their third album, Mute, is a reference to this, but also takes that word’s many other connotations into account too. But specifically, it is used to define the absence of unity, of finding commonality and resolution. As el Wahab puts it: “Every distance between two people is an opportunity for conflict. Two of anything creates sides and sides create conflict. In such cases there will be muting.”
The journey to Europe is chronicled in the El Khat way, with a both hypnotising and elliptical shambled buzz of swaddled heralded horns, taut-strung sawing and bowing, scrappy percussion and dot-dash staccato organ and haunting old country, salon barrel, Lloyd Miller-like piano.
Somehow the multi-instrumentalist el Wahab and his percussionist Latan Yaish and organist Yefet Hasan foils manage to convey the seaward passage (I suppose they could have just caught a plane, but it sounds so much less romantic and adventurous) of a ship horn, the nomadic caravan motion of emigration with the emotions of leaving something precious behind. With a fusion of Yemeni influences – especially Fatimah Al-Zaelaeyah on the “la la” lulled bandy, scrapped, rubbed and dusted percussive canter and clopped ‘Commodore Lathan’, but also Raji Ali and abu Baker Salim – plus something from Egypt, Anatolia, Arabia and Ethiopia – Emahoy Tsega Mariam Gebiu and Getatchew Mekurya -, El Khat mix traditional pulls with a modern twist of dub and post-punk and a subtle use of electronic frequencies and filters.
Not so much a cacophony as a diy, raw and lively ramshackle brilliance of Yemenis wedding and processional marching bands music and the craziest of taxi rides amongst the Arab diaspora, the sound lollops, circles, whirls or stumbles along gloriously.
El Khat throw up some surprises too, sounding like a removed Two-Tone Specials waylaid on the Arabian coastline waiting to board an ocean liner to Europe on the tub-rattling, funnel horn sounding ‘La WaLa’. They evoke label mates Avalanche Kaito on the clanging and fiddled, Ethio-organ drumming circle ‘Zafa’. The electrified garage band stamping and tin can rattle ‘Ward’ even reminded me of those Istanbul legends Baba Zula, whilst yet another former Glitterbeat label mate, Bargou 08 rings loud throughout the entire album.
But I’m not sure anything else quite sounds like this mix of cultural and geographical influences; the hybrid of their former Jaffa port scene, the Levantine and greater regional fusions all coming together on traditional instruments and reconstituted junk. It all makes for a dizzying, mystifying, energetic and yet near languid spin of speeds, timings signatures and tunings. El Khat finds a language of their own to express serious issues in an amazing colour of rambunctious rustic yearning, joy and magic.
John Howard ‘Songs For Mr. Feld’

Stick with me on this one, but if you’d previously zero knowledge of Marc Bolan and his music, or didn’t recognise the song titles you could easily imagine this homage EP being from the hand of, and written, by John Howard. Replacing Bolan’s characteristic fey acoustic, and later leaner electric, guitar and the percussive elements of both Steve Peregrin Took and his replacement Micky Finn with the piano and just a little touch of strings and low bass-y cello (or so that’s what is sounds like), Howard makes every reinterpretation sound his own.
The lyrical flairs of Tolkenism, magical scenes, pastoral fairytale is not so much Howard’s, but here he is taking a quintet of songs from Bolan’s transformative period between the campfire invoked fantasies of Tyrannosaurus Rex and the full-on boogie glam rocking T. Rex and lending them a certain committed touch of flowing but weighted graceful wisdom.
There’s been many such dedications to Bolan, or should I say, as Howard does, Mr. Feld –that’s Mark Feld, the name his parents gave him. Nick Cave for one, during Covid, set to the ivories and attempted a frank plaintive version of ‘Cosmic Dancer’.
Howard has however chosen an eighteen-month (give or take) period, pre the rock-pop titan of ‘Get It On’, ‘20th Century Boy’ and ‘Jeepster’. A time when Bolan was still lost and swept-up in wistful enchantment, lyrically painting images of faraway places across an imagined time. This would all tie-in with Howard’s own formative years, studying for ‘O’ Levels whilst hanging out with his best friend and confidant Pauline in her bedroom, playing all their latest musical discoveries on the record player. Regaling in a bon vivant mood, Howard wraps each song he performs – be it a track or single that appeared on either the Unicorn, A Beard Of Stars or the eponymous T. Rex albums – with anecdotal context and fond memories.
He’s had plenty of practice at this in the last five or so years, turning raconteur author with three volumes of autobiography, staring with Incidents Crowded With Life. I feel a brief outline of those chronicles is needed now, before we go any further. After an almost meteoric rise to fame off the back of his accomplished piano-driven Kid In A Big World songbook in 1975, it soon became apparent, as the first honest account in his triple autobiographical series documents, that the adulation and glitter would quickly fade. Though never written-off as such Howard was, like a magnitude of artists before him and ever since, continuously hampered and screwed-over; the records ever far and few between as time went on. The next “big thing” at one point Howard’s real troubles began after a life-changing accident in 1976. In an attempt to escape the mad raging clutches of his Filipino housemates’ bit of rough (a violent maniacal Russian sailor as it turned out), Howard jumped from a flat window, breaking his back in the process. Despite this horrific chapter there was still the CBS contract, recording at the fabled Abbey Road studios, the theme song to a Peter Fonda movie and countless promises to lift the mood. But by the end of the 70s and early 80s the music career had all but stalled, with only brief flashes of ill-advised makeovers and one-off songwriting projects. Book two in this life story, Illusions Of Happiness picked up that period, documenting a post recovery Howard on the cusp of a new decade and mounting a comeback. Again, even with such future big names as Trevor Horn and Steve Levine in his corner, nothing really took off. Frustrated by various ill-thought out and misplaced marketing ploys Howard gallivanted to a soundtrack of synthesised Eurovision pop and overproduced easy listening balladry.
Volume three, or the third chapter, in that life story finds a not so much disillusioned Howard as a waning artist making the most of it; playing the cards dealt, moving from front stage to a role behind the scenes in music licensing. Making perfect sense really, keeping a hand in the game so to speak, Howard began this career change of a sort at Pickwick Records in 1986. As it turns out, even this corner of the industry is riven by egos and petty one-upmanship, bitter jealousies. And so, there’s a number of “jump ships”, with stints at MCA and Readers Digest to follow. Sorry tales of bad bosses and greed follow as In The Eyeline Of Furtherance fills in the blanks of a decade in which Howard really swam against the tide of the bean-counting petty executives in charge. Even when successful (and Howard was constantly that) his actions would rile whoever was in charge it seems.
If we fast-forward, and into the 2000s, with Howard now in semi-retirement, enjoying the idyllic countryside of Pembrokeshire, his debut LP was reissued to another generational audience. Receiving much critical acclaim and coverage in the music press, it sparked what was perhaps and still is, Howard’s most prolific creative period. Starting with the Robert Cochrane collaboration, The Dangerous Hours, and Howard’s first collection of wholly original material in decades, As I Was Saying, albums, another seven albums of quality songwriting followed. But it was his 2015 collaboration with Andy Lewis and the estuary pipe-dreaming Gare du Nord record label chief Ian Button, and one of his signings, Robert Rotifer, under the John Howard & The Night Mail moniker that really set things in motion. Garnered with countless plaudits and five-star reviews that most brilliant album drew the biggest attention yet and proved another ideal opportunity to perform the back catalogue. However, two years on from his last solo effort, My Name Is, and with a renewed vigour to try something different, Howard experimented with long form songwriting on Across The Door Sill – in my estimation, one of his finest albums yet. Untold records have followed, from the accomplished Cut The Wire LP to the From The Morning covers EP (Howard’s version of Mike Heron‘s bucolic, sun anointed delight ‘You Get Brighter’ was playing in my head whilst listening to a number of songs from this latest EP) to concept works such as LOOK! The Unknown Story Of Danielle Du Bois.
But now, even more sagacious and happy with their lot, Howard chooses the projects that give him complete freedom, joy and creative control.
His latest EP is another fond piece of nostalgia, a return to his formative years; a time when Howard may have struggled with his sexuality, brought up as he was in a staunchly Catholic household during the 1950s and 60s, but nevertheless, had rebellious fun replacing the religious symbolism of the church with elfin beatific posters of Marc Bolan. With a fifty-year distance or more, he now pays a certain recollected homage to Mr. Feld. Far from a work of idol worship and fandom, Howard lends credible depth, emphasises the brocade and Baroque tapestry of Bolan’s original ‘Dead Meadows’ by playing what sounds like a harpsichord, and reflects even more the ephemeral veiled nature of Bolan’s muse on ‘The Seal Of Seasons’.
Bolan had a beautiful poetic gift for setting imaginative illusions, myths and legends with just a rhyming couplet of lines. The saddened Barrett-esque dreamy ‘Great Horse’ is no exception: “Great horsey champer goldbriad, pranced proudly in the golden villas/Dipped diving with his horned onyx, saddle shinning in the black aped eyeballs of the gun.” An Arthurian magical, near hazy plaintive yearn from A Beard Of Stars, here it’s given an equally diaphanous fluidity by Howard.
The already referenced, and earliest recording (taken from the Unicorn LP, released in the May of 1969) on this EP, ‘The Seal Of Seasons’, with its Orcadian lore and allure, is lent a more oceanic motion. But it all begins with ‘Dove’, the song that Bolan once introduced at a BBC concert taping on New Years Day in 1970, as his first “love song”. The gentle original pastoral acoustics and tubbing hand drums are replaced with semi-balladry classical piano, a new sense of gravity, and the barest of sympathetic strings. Howard underlines a more purposeful, meditative mood with a long-undulated bass-y piano fade out.
I think ‘Dead Meadows’ could also claim to be a love song. Taken from the filed-down, easier to consume, T. Rex LP, and now featuring more of that electric guitar, more riffs (also minus the Hobbit inspired Steve Peregrin Took, who was quietly fired and replaced by Micky Finn), ‘Dead Meadows’ has a Medieval courtly magic about it. The original featured some chamber strings, and Howard seems to have stayed relatively faithful with what sounds like a viola or cello on his most prettily woven interpretation.
Moved onto the piano, or pianos if you like, Bolan’s more fey, wistful and longed storyteller lovelorn hippie enchantments, the loss of a certain innocence, are treated with respect and the gentlest of touches by Howard. His fondness and love for the work is undeniable. And yet he somehow makes the material his own, attaching his own memoirs to each song. I think Bolan would have approved.
Black Artist Group ‘For Peace And Liberty, In Paris December 1972’
(WEWANTSOUNDS)
Saved from obscurity and jazz lore, the previously believed “long-lost” recordings of the Black Artist Group’s radical free, avant-garde, spiritual and Afro jazz (with a side order hustle of funk) performance in Paris has been thankfully unearthed, dusted off and remastered in a project partnership between the band and the French Institut national de l’audiovisuel. Facilitating this operation are the reissue revivalist vinyl specialists WEWANTSOUNDS – regularly featured in my review columns over the years -, who’ve invited various connoisseur experts to provide liner notes, essays and photographic images to this package.
Only the actual second official release from the St. Louis group, For Peace And Liberty, In Paris December 1972 is taken from a session recorded at the French state broadcasters ORTF (that abbreviation reads as the Office de Radiodiffusion Télévision Française, an institution that lasted between 1964 and 1975) for the Jazz sur Scene radio show; the format of which included a two hour showcase of groups (usually four) performing live for a studio audience.
Radically different, we’re told, to the quintet’s first and only album proper, Aries from 1973, the near continuous thirty-five-minute set finds the lineup of Oliver Lake (on saxophone), Baikida Carroll (trumpet), Floyd LeFlore (trumpet), Jospeh Bowie (trombone) and Charles “Bobo” Shaw (drums/percussion) totally untethered: at liberty and free.
Part of this title expression is down to the group’s recent, at that time, move to France; partly encouraged by Jospeh Bowie’s older brother and established jazz supremo Lester Bowie, but partly because that city offered more culture and a less racially hostile environment in which to push the limits of jazz. Leaving behind the bitter, divisive fallout of the Vietnam War, of segregation, of Watergate for pastures new, BAG made steps to leave America for France, which beckoned a host of Black artists to its shores and capital, mostly because Black jazz artists felt more appreciated on the European continent; their practice better understood.
The quasi-house band of a sort for the much larger St. Louis BAG collective of musicians, poets, playwrights and dancers, they found a fertile scene filled with compatriots, many of which the quintet had individually worked with back in the States. The CVs read like a jazz family tree. At a glance you have the alto/soprano saxophonist/flutist/composer/poet/visual artist Lake who founded the World Saxophone Quartet and Trio 3; the trumpeter, big band director, sextet band leader Carroll who worked with such illustrious company as Lester Bowie, Albert King and Little Milton; the composer/poet/trumpeter and BAG founding member LeFlore; Lester’s younger sibling, the trombonist and vocalist Joseph Bowie, who would go on to lead the jazz-punk outfit Defunkt and join Kahil El’Zabar’s Ethnic Heritage Ensemble; and the free jazz drummer “Bobo” Shaw who played with Lester, Anthony Braxton and Cecil Taylor and led the Human Arts Ensemble. You won’t be surprised to learn that this ensemble also found common ground and had links with the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians, Chicago’s iconic hothouse for Black artists and jazz musicians.
Channelling that whole bag of experiences, the different strands, motivated by forces inside and outside the jazz idiom, the extemporised quintet both naturally and in sporadic leaps and bounds performed a set (not so much divided into five parts as congruously labelled with natural pauses and winding downs between each movement) without boundaries. Shaw’s drums alone follow from the African and near Latin to swing joints like a New Orleans marching band at a sports day. There’s also a section in which he drills the snare like he’s at a military revue, which isn’t so surprising as Shaw, like some of his other band mates, had drummed for the Bugle Corp in the 1950s – Carroll had spent some of his formative years of study at the Armed Forces School of Music, and LeFlore had served in the army during the early to mid 60s. Cattle bells and other percussive trinkets evoke either African pastures or spiritual mystery.
Brass wise you can hear both familiar cupped and unhindered heralding, hooks, blazes and ascendent spirals of trumpet, sax and bassoon, but also shrills, the driest of near fleeting ripping, tearing and zippy rasps, gasps for air and chirped experimental expressions. From near excitable elephant trunk calls to a menagerie of duck-billed pecks, swallows and ruffling feathered turmoil the action evokes an exotic wildlife. This is matched with the inner arty smokestack outlines of NYC and Chicago, and the police-like whistles, the careering horn-honked freight train and bustles of the streets.
At times we’re talking Coltrane and Sun Ra, and at other times Roscoe Mitchell, Carlos Garnett and the Art Ensemble Of Chicago. You can also pick up some Chick, a touch of Cymande, of Art Blakey, Sam Rivers and Anthony Braxton. But to be specific, if you dig Rahsaan Roland Kirk’s ‘Safari’, Ornnette Coleman’s ‘Lonely Woman’ and Don Cherry’s Organic Music Society then you’ll really need to part with the cash and have this on your shelf asap: not before blasting it out from your turntable.
Ghostwriter ‘TREMULENT’
(Subexotic) 13th September 2024

Drawn from the veils of time and from several overlapping spiritualist and reverent sources, author, musician and instigator Mark Brend once again winds up and sets in motion the mechanisms and retunes the hauntology radio for a third Ghostwriter album.
A collaborative affair since day one (started back in 2009), with a revolving cast of cross-disciplinary “music-makers”, writers and vocalists, the Ghostwriter lineup this time around includes the talents of Michael Weston King (formerly of the alt-country pioneers The Good Sons, soloist and currently one half of the country duo My Darling Clementine), Suzy Mangion (musician, artist and historian) and Andrew Rumsey (an Anglican bishop, of all things, writer and musician who released the critically acclaimed Evensongs album just last year, and who also provides this album’s cover photo).
All three provide a suitable beatific, near supernatural and spiritual hymnal atmosphere of vocals to the pipe organ imbued and inspired TREMULANT. That title references the device on a pipe organ that varies the wind supply to the pipes of one or more divisions, causing amplitude and pitch to fluctuate. This produces a tremolo and vibrated effect. You can hear its more subtly sustained and held suffused bellows and air-pumped tremulant effects throughout on a record that occupies a liminal space between pastoral English church service, the American spiritual, and esoteric.
Altogether it sounds like a collage of antique recording sources from another age and the ghostly – like parlour seances in places – stirrings and visitations of Americana, gospel music, Georgian posey, the Celtic, folk and late 90s and early 2000s alternative American indie (Mercury Rev, The Music Tapes). But within that sphere of influence there’s an air of Christian Evangelism and the twinkled chimes of a godly majorette marching band on the opening traditional inspired ‘Satan, Your Kingdom Must Come Down’; a vibrato voiced supernatural Blood Meridian redemptive take on a standard covered by a wealth of country and bluesy-rock icons, from Robert Plant to Willie Nelson.
Amongst the reversals, the vortex and morphing elementals and more uncertain passages, the vocals can be harmonious and moving. Especially the contributions of Mangion, who can channel a choral, hymnal beauty that lies somewhere between holy communion and the Laurel Canyon (see the 1960s troubadour evocations of ‘Often Forfeit’).
Seeking sanctuary and protection in the face of tumult and torment there’s fishing community set anchor metaphors and analogies, devotions and shipwreck coastline pleas that merge The Polyphonic Spree with The Mekons’ ‘How Many Stars’ tricorn hatted period Georgian Child of the Jago influences too to be found amongst the purposely dated evocations.
Considering that all four participants on this album recorded their parts in isolation – I believe none of collaborators have ever actually met in person – project coordinator Brend has managed to pull together a complete coalesced soundtrack of both changeable and repeated phases, ideas, passages and swells. TREMULANT by name, tremulant by nature and divine calling, the third Ghostwriter album is a curious cult recommendation.
The Monthly Playlist For August 2024
August 30, 2024
CHOICE MUSIC FROM THE LAST MONTH ON THE MONOLITH COCKTAIL: TEAM EFFORT

The Monthly Revue for August 2024: Thirty-eight choice tracks chosen by Dominic Valvona, Matt ‘Rap Control’ Oliver and Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea from the last month. Features a real shake up and mix of tracks we’ve both covered in our review columns and articles. We’ve also added a smattering of tracks that we either didn’t get the room to feature or missed at the time. Covering many bases, expect to hear and discover new sounds, new artists. Consider this playlist the blog’s very own ideal radio show: no chatter, no gaps, no cosy nepotism. An Oasis free zone.
TrAcKliSt
Zack Clarke ‘Alternativefacts’
Leif Maine/Jackson Mathod/J. Scienide ‘Volte-Face’
OldBoy Rhymes/Mr. Lif/Sage Francis ‘American Pyramids’
boycalledcrow ‘magic medicine’
Dead Players ‘Gasoline Sazerac’
J Littles & Kong The Artisan ‘Do The Job’
Flat Worms ‘Diver’
Fast Execution ‘Total Bitch’
The Mining Co. ‘Time Wasted’
Tucker Zimmerman/Big Thief/Iiji/Twain ‘Burial At Sea’
Alessandra Leao & Sapopemba ‘Exu Ajuo’
Randy Mason ‘Wallet Phone Keys’
L.I.F.E. Long/Noam Chopski/Elohem Star ‘Cross Ponds’
Jacob Wick Ensemble ‘Rough And Ready’
Silas J. Dirge ‘Running From Myself’
Kayla Silverman ‘Maybe’
Hohnen Ford ‘Another Lifetime’
Sans Soucis ‘Brave’
Sweeney ‘School Life’
Chinese American Bear ‘Take Me To Beijing’
Tony Jay ‘Doubtfully Yours’
The Soundcarriers ‘Sonya’s Lament’
Henna Emilia Hietamaki ‘Maan alle’
Drew Mulholland & Garden Gate ‘Tumulus’
Tetsuo ii ‘Heart of the Oak’
Xqui & Agnieszka Iwanek ‘Echoes of Serenity 10b’
Poeji ‘Whoo’
Camille Baziadoly ‘Fading Pressure’
Petrolio ‘La Fine Della Linea Retta’
Fiorella 16 & Asteroide ‘PRIMAvera’
Michele Bokanowski ‘Andante’
Jan Esbra ‘Returning’
Nicole Mitchell & Ballake Sissoko ‘Kanu’
Jasik Ft. Frankie Jax No Mad ‘Atako (Pass The Champagne)’ Apollo Brown & CRIMEAPPLE ‘Coke with Ice’
Verb T/Malek Winter/BVA ‘Rubble’
Ivan the Tolerable ‘Floating Palm’
Pauli Lyytinen ‘Lehto II’



