Most Loved and Enjoyed Highlighted Albums of 2024: Part Two: M – Z
December 16, 2024
Part Two of the Monolith Cocktail’s most loved and favourite albums of 2024 lists: from M to Z. Put together by Dominic Valvona and Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea.

Picking up on where we left off with Part One of the Monolith Cocktail’s most enjoyed and loved albums of 2024, Part Two continues to list all entries in alphabetical order, starting with M. So without further ado, here is the concluding spread of chosen albums – although anything we reviewed during the year should be considered a winner in that regard.
M_____________
Felix Machtelinckx ‘Night Scenes’ (Subexotic Records)
Chosen Dominic Valvona, reviewed originally by Graham Domain/Review
“The new album from Belgium singer, songwriter and producer Felix Machtelinckx is a strange album. In part electronic, it has an ethereal dreamlike quality where the music seems distant and the vocals sound as though they have been beamed through space from a distant galaxy.
Night Scenes is an intriguing album that is hard to define, but one that grows in definition, depth and subtle beauty with each play. It might prove to be a contender for album of the year.” GD
Marcelo D2 & SambaDrive ‘Direct-to-Disc’ (Night Dreamer)
Chosen by DV/Review
“Transforming choice tracks from his back catalogue of solo albums, put out between 1998 and 2013, the influential and acclaimed Brazilian rapper Marcelo D2 replaces the samples, breaks and scratching for a live, reactive Latin-jazz and samba trio.
As part of the championed ‘direct-to-disc’ series overseen by the Night Dreamer label, the South American hip-hop legend laid down ten performed tracks backed by the brilliant SambaDrive direct onto vinyl at the Haarlem Artone Studio in Holland. With no cuts, no edits, as little interference as necessary, these recordings sound near spontaneous, in the moment. The attitude, the passion, the crammed-in flow and more peppered lyricism is still very much on show, only now lilted towards a jazzier and Latin-fuelled backing that balances the urgency and freewheeling of the rapping with something more pliable, dissipating, funky and stylishly cool. Marcelo D2 & SambaDrive have created something very special; not so much an improvement as an alternative fruitful vision of Samba-rap. “ DV
Luce Mawdsley ‘Northwest & Nebulous’ (Pure O Records)
Chosen by DV/Review
“Over several years now the former Mugstar guitarist Luce Mawdsley has progressively shorn the more predatory slurred spoken-word mise-en-scenes and lurid, sleazy torturous self-harm from their music; gradually removing the “verbasier” programmed-like demonic effects from their voice and freeing themselves from a circled abyss of sonnets.
An holistic record that rescores the English scenery and places held near for Luce, the unfolding stages are both beautifully conveyed and hallucinatory in equal measure; a retold fairytale without any prompts, and without a human cast; a window in on the enchantments but also non-hierarchical, non-binary and free nature of the wilds and geography: a metaphor for Luce’s struggles to find an identity that feels natural, safe and unburdened. One part classical, one part Americana, and one part folksy (a touch of the Celtic too) there’s still a very modern twist to what we may identify as the familiar: imagine Prokofiev on an acid trip, or Ry Cooder in an English pasture laying down breadcrumbs for Hampshire & Foat.” DV
The Mining Co. ‘Classic Monsters’ (PinDrop Records)
Chosen by DV/Review
“Continuing to mine his childhood the London-based singer-songwriter Michael Gallagher once again produces a songbook of throwbacks to his formative adventures as a kid growing up in Donegal in Ireland.
His previous album almanac, Gum Card, touched upon a silly fleeting dabble with the occult, but this latest record (his sixth so far) is filled with childhood memories of hammy and more video nasty style supernatural characters, alongside a whole host of “weirdos”, “freaks” and “stoners”.
Once more back in his childhood home, frightened to turn the lights off, checking for Christopher Lee’s Dracula and the Wolfman under his bed, yet daring himself to keep watching those Hammer house of horror b-movies, Salem’s Lot and more bloody shockers, Gallagher links an almost lost innocence with a lifetime of travails, cathartic obsessions and searching desires.
I’m still astounded by the lack of support for his music or exposure, as Gallagher’s The Mining Co. vehicle is worthy of praise, airplay and attention. Hopefully it will be sixth album lucky for the Irishman.” DV
Hannah Mohan ‘Time Is A Walnut’ (Egghunt Records)
Chosen by DV/Review
“Geographically settling long enough to pen this solo songbook offering, but anything but settled emotionally, the former And The Kids vocalist-songwriter Hannah Mohan attempts to process the break-up of all break-ups.
Mohan rides the roller coaster of a drawn-out break-up with quirkiness and vulnerability, turning tortuous heartache into one of the best and most rewarding songbooks of the year. Mohan may have let her soul sing out, as she comes to accept an emotional turbulent period of stresses and anxieties and pain. But whether she’s finally pulled through the other side or not is up to you the listener.” DV
Jamison Field Murphy ‘It Has To End’ (Tomato Flower)
Chosen by Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea/Review
“Ah yes this is more like it. At last, an album with warmth, soul experiment and beauty. Just when I was beginning to think that it was a thing of the past James Field Murphy turns up with this home recorded gem, an album that combines all the things I love about the magic of music: songs with melody, “That Boy” could well be an outtake from The Beach Boys Smiley Smile album, and “It has To End” has a wonderful bonkers McCartney feel to it [remember McCartney was the most experimental of all the Beatles], and this track combines pop with experimental to a beautifully short and wistful degree. “Hate” is another beautiful song; yes indeed, a hate that is alright to love and love it I do. I love the tape pops in the background: you really cannot beat recording on tape.
It Has To End is a rare thing, an album you do not want to end. It’s an album I will be returning to on a regular basis over the coming months as James manages to balance off pop/psych beauty with experimentation perfectly.” BBS
N______________
NCD Instigators ‘Swimming With Sharks’ (Metal Postcard Records)
Chosen by BBS/Review
“The NCD Instigators were Tony, Brendan, and Desi Bannon, three brothers from Newcastle County Down in Northern Ireland who decided to form a band in the 80s together after many years of playing in various other bands. They took their love of metal, prog, folk and rock and home recorded several albums for their own pleasure, burning them onto CDRs to give to friends and family and playing the occasional gig.
There is just something quite magical about this album, and it is sad that now it is only being released years after the fact and that Tony (bass and vocals) is no longer with us, having passed away in 2020. Hopefully this release will ignite some long overdue interest in this underground lost great band from Northern Ireland.” BBS
Neon Kittens ‘It’s A NO Thing’ (Metal Postcard Records)
Chosen by BBS/Review
“The Kittens have a magic and their own sound: The guitar wizardry of Andy G (In a ideal world David Bowie would not be dead and Andy would be his guitarist songwriter partner) and the spoken, I am going to shove my stiletto shoe heel into your yearning heart, vocal coolness of Nina K. The Neon Kittens are one of those rare bands; we need them more than they need us.” BBS
Neutrals ‘New Town Dream’
Chosen by BBS/Review
“This is splendid stuff, an album of supreme guitar jangle, of well written and catchy songs about life in a small town that at times musically reminds me of early Wedding Present and The Pastels with such wonderfully British lyrics; although I wonder when “Travel Agents Window’s” was written as he mentions buying a bag of chips for 50p, when was the last time you managed to buy a bag of chips for 50p? Maybe life in this small town isn’t as bad as the Neutrals think. I do love this album though. I love the romance of everyday life songs, like little mini-Kitchen sink dramas filmed in grainy black and white. This is quite a gem of an album.” BBS
Not My Good Arm ‘Coffee’
Chosen by BBS/Review
“They take Rock ‘n’ Roll, Ska, Punk and Soul and tie it up and skin it alive whilst berating it with the sort of political soulful joyful nous that hasn’t been heard or witnessed since the Mighty Dexy’s Midnight Runners held the Top Of The Pops viewers enrapt with their explosion of attitude and musical good taste back in the early 80’s. Yes indeed, Coffee is a Northern indie soulful romp of an album by a band that I can imagine being a hell of a good night out to watch and by the looks of it gig on a very regular basis. So, keep your eyes scanned as they may be coming to your locality soon. I understand you can pick up a copy of Coffee on CD from their gigs, as by the looks of it they’ve not yet updated their bandcamp: probably too busy putting the fun into funk.” BBS
O_______________
OdNu + Ümlaut ‘Abandoned Spaces’ (Audiobulb)
Chosen by DV/Review
“Drawn together on what proves to be a deeply intuitive union for the Audiobulb label, the Buenos Aires-born but NY/Hudson resident Michel Mazza (the OdNu of that partnership) and the US, northern Connecticut countryside dweller Jeff Düngfelder (Ümlaut) form a bond on their reductive process of an album, Abandoned Spaces.
Tracks are given plenty of time to breathe and resonate, to unfurl spells and to open-up primal mirage-like and psyche-concocted soundscapes from the synthesized and played. And although this fits in the ambient electronic fields of demarcation, Abandoned Spaces is so much more – later on in the second half of the eight-track album, the duo expresses more rhythmic stirrings and even some harsher (though we are not talking caustic, coarse or industrial) elements of mystery, inquiry and uncertainty.” DV
Berke Can Özcan & Jonah Parzen-Johnson ‘It Was Always Time’ (We Jazz)
Chosen by DV/Review
““It Was Always Time”, and it was always meant to be, for the telepathic readings of both creative partners in this project prove synchronised and bound, no matter how far out and off-kilter their experiments of curiosity go or take them.
The Turkish polymath drummer and sound designer Berke Can Özcan and his foil the Brooklyn-based baritone/alto saxophonist and flutist Jonah Parzen-Johnson, have worked together before, namely on the former’s Lycian atavistic geographical infused and inspired Twin Peaks album, last year.
But before even that, back in the April of 2022, Parzen-Johnson found himself boarding a flight to Istanbul to perform a one-off gig with Özcan. Incredibly the two had never met until thirty minutes before going on stage for a soundcheck. The gig must have proved a creative, dynamic success as both musicians have now come together under the equal billing of this new album, recorded for the Helsinki-based hub We Jazz.
From the dubby to tribal, the esoteric to cloud gazing, Berke Can Özcan and Jonah Parzen-Johnson play out their fears and joys across an exciting album of possibilities and expressive, erring on the heavenly at one point, feelings. A fruitful combination that will endure, and hopefully reconvene in the future.” DV
P_______________
Pastense Ft. Uncommon Nasa ‘Sidewalk Chalk, Parade Day Rain’ (Uncommon Records)
Chosen by DV/Review
“Continuing to attract and surround himself with like-minded curious, inventive artisans of prose from the underground leftfield hip-hop scene, the Long and Staten Islands’ rapper and producer/beatmaker Uncommon Nasa now facilitates Pastense’s return with a post-pandemic opus of metaphysical, cosmological unravelled consciousness alchemy.
With no let-up in the quality of the expansive lyrical metaverse, tech comes in conflict with the forest’s birds and nature’s fight for survival amongst the concrete and chemically poisoned wells of so-called progression on an artistically simulated and stimulating canvas of thoughts and connectivity.
Pastense, in partnership with Nasa, creates a most excellent mind-expanding universe, and in doing so, one of the year’s best hip-hop albums: this is an artist and record worth championing.” DV
Ivo Perelman, Chad Fowler, Reggie Workman and Andrew Cyrille ‘Embracing The Unknown’ (Mahakala Music) Chosen by DV/Review
“A true “cross-generational” (with two of the participants born in the 1930s) coming together of avant-garde, freeform and hard bop talent, the ensemble quartet of Ivo Perelman, Chad Fowler, Reggie Workman and Andrew Cyrille “embrace” experiment. You could call it an extemporized gathering, with no prior arrangements and not much in the way of dialogue.
Making the abstract seem even more so, yet somehow conveying mood, emotions and self-expression, this descriptive and totally improvisational master class in free-thought-jazz somehow captures the internal struggles and reflections of the mind during an age of high anxiety, rage, divisiveness and unease.” DV
James P M Philips ‘Spite, Bile & Beauty’ (Turquoise Coal)
Chosen by BBS/Review
“Punk, folk, rock and a medieval becoming strangeness all collide to bring us another album of psychedelic whimsy from the head and heart of James P M Phillips: an album of joy, sadness, humour and pain. Whether it be the quite wonderfully disturbingly jagged “My Head Is Full Of Rats” or the quite beautiful folk strum of “My New Friend”, James has his own unique way of making music and writing songs; dipping his own original thought patterns into a hybrid of musical genre hopping eccentricity.” BBS
Poppycock ‘Magic Mothers’
Chosen by BBS/Review
“The whole album is joy. I love the mix of jazz, folk and psychedelic pop: alas, if only the last Zombies album was as enjoyable as this.” BBS
Pound Land ‘Live At New River Studios/ Worried’ (Cruel Nature Records)
Chosen by DV, but reviewed originally by Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea
“This new album by Pound Land is a double whammy of an affair. The first side recorded live, captures the band without guitar but with a rather fetching squelching punk rock synth suppling the health out of the watching masses. Pound Land are of course a punk and post punk rock outfit of political magnitude. A band that captures the atmosphere of living in this divided land we call the United Kingdom and make a hell of a fine racket while capturing the atmosphere as the live side of this cassette magically proves. The second side is taken up by the thirty-one-minute track, “Worried”, which is a fine sonic journey of sadness, horror and experimental splendour that takes in dub, punk, and electro soundscapes; a dream of a nightmare track that really needs to be heard by all.” BBS
R__________________
Revival Season ‘Golden Age Of Self Snitching’ (Heavenly Recordings)
Chosen by DV
Totally missed at the time by us (well, we did feature ‘Chop’ on the February edition of the Monthly playlist), this incredible union between Brandon “BEZ” (B Easy) Evans and beatmaker/producer Jonah Swilley is so “now” it hurts. A synergy that captures the times it was forged in, Golden Age Of Self–Snitching crafts electronic dance music both dystopian and club, hip-hop, 2-Step, the kind of fusions that TV On The Radio used to generate, locked beats and breaks and dub into a commentary on societal change, protestation and revolution. An essential flow of concentrated angst, frustrations and observation criminally overlooked, and which should make every end of year list of there was any real justice in this god damn forsaken world. DV
Kevin Robertson ‘The Call Of The Sea’
Chosen by BBS/Review
““The Call Of The Sea” is the fourth solo album from Kevin Robertson, a man who is also one of the vocalists/guitarists from Scottish guitar band The Vapour Trails. And here we have him once again showering us with sublime melodies. Melodies that are wrapped in Byrdsian like guitar jangle and vocal harmonies that have just stepped from scratched vinyl copies of ye olde mid-sixties beat boom collectables stopped for a cup of the finest Earl Grey with late 80’s early 90’s Scottish indie guitar wunderkinds’ Teenage Fanclub and Superstar while scribbling on postcards to send their love to those old scouse reprobates Shack and The La’s and the Coral.” BBS
S___________________
Salem Trials ‘View From Another Window’ (Metal Postcard Records)
Chosen by BBS/ Review
“The Salem Trials are clinically rambunctious. They are never further than being an arm’s length away from genius. They have their own sound: their own model of post-punk if you like. They take all the usual subjects (The Fall, Wire, Gang Of Four, the Blue Orchids and Subway Army) and mix them with a no wave sound coming from the streets of New York in the late 70s early 80s. They release albums constantly – this is actually the first of 2024 though, and fits in nicely with the army of their previously released albums.
Andy still being the inspired guitarist that he is, riffing like a cross between Keith Richards, Tom Verlaine and Brix Smith with a army of admirers gathering in her Dis guarded nightwear, and Russ still being the nutter on the bus wearing the splatter ballistic cop t-shirt and spitting feathers at the naked chickens queuing up outside to be the first in line for the latest modern contraption while he is creating art at its best out of the fuzzy felt of yesteryears clowns hats. You really have to love the Salem Trials.” BBS
The Salisman Communal Orchestration ‘A Queen Among Clods’ (Cruel Nature Records)
Chosen by BBS/Review
“I love the psychedelic otherworldliness of SCO. I love the way the lead vocalist phrases his words. He sings with the soul of an sad imperfect empathetic angel, you actually believe in what he is saying, “[If I Wasn’t ]So Godam Blue” is so goddamn beautiful, and with some pretty wonderful lyrics: “remember those days when I pissed in the street, well that is not my style anymore”. Pure heartbreak poetry at its best. The following track “Rum Punch” is as equally beautiful, a psych country-tinged beauty full of sadness and pathos.
I really do love this album SCO have the perfect blend of magic and tragic, and “A Queen Among Clods” is defiantly one of the most impressive and heartfelt original sounding albums I have had the pleasure to write about this year. A true stunner.” BBS
Sly & The Family Drone ‘Moon Is Doom Backwards’ (Human Worth)
Chosen by DV/Review
“A wrestling match on the barricades between the forces of Marxism, Populism, the consumer culture, nepotism, and encroaching forces of a technological dystopia, the collective forces of this group provide a reification-style soundtrack to the crisis of our times. Often this means escaping via a trapdoor to beyond the ether, or, to off worlds and mysterious alien landscapes. But we’re always drawn back into the horror, stresses and contorted darkness of reality; a sonic PTSD manifested in industrial noises from Capitalism’s workshop.
Poltergeist’s jamming activity, fizzles of sound waves and transmissions from the chthonian, ghost ship bristled low horns and higher pitched shrieks, bestial tubular growls, cymbal shaves, disturbances in the matrix, a short melody of pastoral reeds, drums that sounding like a beating. This is the sound of Moon Is Doom Backwards; pushing and striving to score this hideous age through the cerebral and chaotic.” DV
Juanita Stein ‘The Weightless Hour’ (Agricultural Audio)
Chosen by DV/Review
“And perhaps it all comes to this, that after twenty-five years in the music business as both the frontwoman of the Howling Bells and as an established solo artist Juanita Stein has finally found the strength of her own voice and creative force. Stepping out from behind the safeguards of noisy rock to find that silence resonates deeper and further, Juanita erases everything but the most vital, emotionally receptive and connective elements from her music to produce a sagacious, confident (despite the fragility and vulnerability in places) songbook of personal memories.
The Weightless Hour is the perfect album from a great voice and songwriter, who’s now able to find that distance from the events of the past and a new sense of reflected candidness and honesty in motherhood. Juanita’s true self and strength opens-up, the noise diminished for something far more powerful. Not so much defiant as confident. A definite album of the year.” DV
Mohammad Syfkhan ‘I Am Kurdish’ (Nyahh)
Chosen by DV/Review
“Like an ascending stairway, or flowing and resonating with evocative melodious magic, lute stirring ruminations sweep over Arabia and surrounding regions; referencing anonymous, collective and some original-penned compositions and dances to Islam’s ‘golden age’ of fairytale (‘A Thousand And One Nights’); Kurdish pride in the face of repression (the title-track of course) and its peoples’ struggle for independence and respect (‘Do Not Bow’); lovelorn enquires (‘Do You Have A Lover Or Not?’) and the missed daily activities, interactions of life back home in Raqqa. Across it all the hand drums tab, rattle and roll; the cello arches, weeps and bows in sympathy; and the bouzouki lute swoons and rings out the most nimble and beautiful of ached and more up-tempo giddy tunes.” DV
T____________________
The Tearless Life ‘Conversations With Angels’ (Other Voices Records)
Chosen by DV/Review
“Both a transference of souls from the now cremated – or laid to rest, depending on your choice of metaphorical ritual death – Vukovar plus a host of orbiting “other voices”, the make-up of The Tearless Life remains relatively, and intentionally, shrouded, obscured.
Taking a while to materialize, The Tearless Life’s debut opus is both the announcement of new age, but also a bridge between this latest incarnation and the former Vukovar invocation – they are in essence, a band that continues to haunt itself. Old bonds remain, sound wise and lyrically, but with a new impetus of murky, vapoured, gossamer, mono and ether effected solace, tragic romanticism, pleaded and afflatus love, spiritual inspired yearning and allegorical hunger.
Talking to angels, conversing with both the seraph and the fallen, the daemons and spirits of the alchemist’s alternative dimensions, the group transduce the writings of that most visionary seer John Dee, the opium eater Thomas De Quincey, William Blake, and the far more obscure Samuel Hubbard Scudder, who’s 19th century, fairy-like, Frail Children of the Air: Excursions Into The World Of Butterflies publication of philosophical essays lends its title to a song of tubular airy manifestations, distortion, wisped spiralling piques and beautified touching emotional anguish.
Conversations With Angels is epic; the first step in, what I hope, will be a fruitful conversation to divine enlightenment, curiosity, psychological and philosophical intelligent synth-pop.” DV
TRAINING + Ruth Goller ‘threads to knot’ (Squama Recordings)
Chosen by DV/Review
“Two connective forces in the experimental, inventive contemporary jazz scenes combine their experiences and art on this sonic and musical hybrid.
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.
Pretty much out on the peripherals of jazz, ascending, flexing, rasping, soothing and breathing iterations and more untethered expressions of freeform music, TRAINING + Ruth Goller fashion organic fusions from a process that promises the wild, tumultuous, wrangled and strange, yet also provides the melodic and dreamy.” DV
Twile (featuring Laura Lehtola) “Hunger Moon” (Cruel Nature Records)
Chosen by BBS/Review
““Hunger Moon” is an album that combines folk, trip-hop, electronica and magic, and weaves together a tapestry of undiluted majestic swoonincity that has not been heard since the Portishead debut album “Dummy”.
Hunger Moon really does not put a foot out of place as it flows and hooks you into its warm strangeness, cradling you and sweeping you up to a safe place where dreams are free to play and cast shadows over your deepest thought and emotions. Eight tracks to soundtrack you as you come down from your highest high. Truly magnificent.” BBS
V______________________
Various ‘Athos: Echoes From The Holy Mountain’ (FLEE)
Chosen by DV/Review
“Context is vital: history essential. For the publishing house/record label/curatorial/ethnologist platform FLEE has spent a year unravelling, digging and excavating and researching their grand project dedicated to the Athos monastic community.
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.
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.” DV
Various Artists ‘I’m Glad About It: The legacy Of Louisville Gospel 1958 – 1981’ (The Louisville Story Program/Distributed Through Light In The Attic) Chosen by DV/Review
“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.” DV
Various ‘Congo Funk! – Sound Madness From The Shores Of The Mighty Congo River (Kinshaha/Brazzaville 1969-1982)’ (Analog Africa) Chosen by DV/Review
“A tale of two cities on opposites sides of the same river, the Congo, the latest excursion for the Analog Africa label celebrates and showcases an abundance of dynamite, soul and funk tracks from the two capitals of Kinshasa and Brazzaville.
Congo Funk in all its many variations is put under the spotlight, with an outstanding set list of fourteen tracks (whittled down from a container’s worth of singles) that will enthral and educate in equal measures. Essential dance floor fillers await.” DV
Various ‘Ghana Special 2: Electronic Highlife & Afro Sounds In The Diaspora 1980-93’ (Soundway Records) Chosen by DV/Review
“The first decade of the new millennium proved a fruitful period for (re) discovering Africa’s rich dynamic and explosive music heritage, with both (through their various Afro-funk and Afro-psych compilations) Soundway Records and Analog Africa (in particular their influential African Scream Contests) spoiling connoisseurs and those with just a curiosity alike to sounds rarely heard outside the continent. The former’s original five album Ghana Special spread was one such indispensable collection from that time; a perfectly encased box set survey of one of Africa’s most important musical junctions. Now, unbelievably, a full twenty years later Soundway have followed up that “highlife” triumph with a second volume; moving the action on into a new decade. Ghana Special part two is a refreshing map of the diaspora fusions and hybrids that spread across Europe during a time of movement and turmoil from Ghana’s hotbed of influential stars and musicians. In highlighting the stories and journeys of Ghana’s émigrés, and in introducing us to those sounds, movements that remain either forgotten or just not as celebrated, Volume 2 will become as indispensable as the first.” DV
Various ‘Ulyap Songs: Beyond Circassian Tradition’ (FLEE)
Chosen by DV/Review
“Broadening the scope, the guest list of collaborators stretches the imagination; often completely uncoupled from the source material. All together in one bumper package of ethnomusicology, it makes perfect sense, futuristic alternative planes and visions of a forgotten – mostly passed down orally – tradition. This is a document and testament to the hardiness, perseverance and survival of a culture massacred, exiled and incarcerated, the remnants of a culture almost lost in time, but proving to be very much alive and intriguing to our ears. FLEE and their collaborators, aiders have put together a brilliant, thorough piece of musical research that bristles and wafts with a bounty of possibilities.” DV
Various ‘Wagadu Grooves: The Hypnotic Sound Of Camara 1987-2016’ (Hot Mule)
Chosen by DV/Review
“Shedding light on a rarely told story, the latest showcase compilation from the Paris label Hot Mule unfolds the backstory and “hypnotic” sounds of Gaye Mody Camara’s iconic label; a story that encompasses the West African Soninke diaspora and legacy. The entrepreneur turn label honcho and umbrella for those artists both from the mainland French migrant community and from across swathes of what was the atavistic kingdom of the Soninke ethnic groups’ Wagadu, Camara, through various means and links, helped create a whole industry of music production in Paris during the 80s, 90s and new millennium. The sound is always amazing, and the voices commanding, a mix of those inherited Griot roots, the club, pop and caravan trial. Most importantly Wagadu does have that eponymous ‘groove’ of the title: the ‘hypnotic’ bit too.” DV
Violet Nox ‘Hesperia’ (Somehwerecold Records)
Chosen by DV/Review
“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.” DV
Virgin Vacations ‘Dapple Patterns’
Chosen by DV/Review
“From a multitude of sources, across a number of mediums, the concentrated sonic force that is Virgin Vacations ramp up the queasy quasars and the heavy-set slab wall of no wave-punk-jazz-maths-krautrock sounds on their debut long player. With room to expand horizons the Hong Kong (tough gig in recent years, what with China’s crackdowns on the free press and student activists; installing authoritarian control over the Island) ensemble lay out a both hustled, bustled and more cosmic psychedelic journey, from the prowling to the near filmic and quasi-operatic -from darkened forebode to Shinto temple bell-ringing comedowns that fade out into affinity.” DV
Z__________________________
Tucker Zimmerman ‘I Wonder If I’ll Ever Come True’ (Big Potato Records)
Chosen by DV
Whilst living in idyllic seclusion in Belgium during the 1970s, the venerated but underrated idiosyncratic US-born troubadour/singer-songwriter Tucker Zimmerman left the door ajar to friends (namely Ian A Anderson & Maggie Holland) and the like to spin a collection of unburdened, unpressured homegrown recordings. The results, unsurprisingly magical, halcyon and unassumingly poignantly poetic. The first ever release for ‘I Wonder If I’ll Ever Come True’ is as revelatory as much as it is sublime, felt, intimate, boosting a reputation and clamour for an overlooked maestro. DV
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The Monthly Playlist For May 2024
May 31, 2024
CHOICE TRACKS FROM THE LAST MONTH, CHOSEN BY DOMINIC VALVONA/MATT OLIVER/BRIAN ‘BORDELLO’ SHEA

Representing the last 31 days’ worth of reviews and recommendations on the Monolith Cocktail, the Monthly Playlist is our chance to take stock and pause as we remind our readers and flowers of all the great music we’ve shared – with some choice tracks we didn’t get room or time to feature but added anyway.
Virgin Vacation ‘RED’
The Johnny Halifax Invocation ‘Thank You’
Chris Corsano ‘The Full-Measure Wash Down’
Essa/Pitch 92 Ft. Kyza, Klashnekoff, Tony D., Reveal, Doc Brown, Perisa, Devise, Nay Loco ‘Heavyweight$’
Hus KingPin ‘Tical’
Nana Budjei ‘Asobrachie’
Amy Rigby ‘Dylan In Dubuque’
The Garrys ‘Cakewalk’
La Luz ‘Always In Love’
Bloom De Wilde ‘Ride With The Fishes’
El Khat ‘Tislami Tislami’
Gabriel Abedi ‘Bra Fie’
Ibelisse Guardia Ferragutti & Frank Rosaly ‘TURBULENCIA’
Red Hot Org, Laraaji, Kronos Quartet, Sun Ra ‘Daddy’s Gonna Tell You No Lie’ (THIS MONTH’S COVER ART)
King Kashmere, Alecs DeLarge, HPBLK, Booda French, Ash The Author ‘Astro Children (Remix)’
Oddisee ‘Live From The DMV’
Amy Aileen Wood ‘Time For Everything’
Low Leaf ‘Innersound Oddity’
Jake Long ‘Celestial Soup’
Jonathan Backstrom Quartet ‘Street Dog’
Gordan ‘Sara’
Cuntroaches ‘III’
Morgan Garrett ‘Alive’
Cadillac Face ‘I Am The Monster’
Tucker Zimmerman ‘Advertisement For Amerika’
Poppycock ‘Magic Mothers’
Little Miss Echo ‘Hit Parade’
Olivier Rocabois ‘Stained Glass Lena’
Ward White ‘Slow Sickness’
Lightheaded ‘Always Sideways’
The Tearless Life w/ Band Of Joy ‘The Leaving-Light’
Michal Gutman ‘I’m The Walker’
Malini Sridharan ‘Beam’
Micha Volders & Miet Warlop ‘Hey There Turn’
Copywrite, Swab ‘Vibe Injection’
Napoleon Da Legend, DJ Rhettmatic ‘The King Walk’
Dabbla, JaySun, DJ Kermit ‘No Plan’
Gyedu-Blay Ambolly ‘Apple’
Brother Ali, unJUST ‘Cadillac’
Hometown Heros, DJ Yoda, Edo. G, Brad Baloo ‘What You Wanna Do’
Cities Aviv ‘Style Council’
Illangelo ‘The Escape’
Mofongo ‘Manglillo’
Aquaserge ‘Sommets’
Xqui, David Ness ‘The Confessions Of Isobel Gowdie’
Conrad Schnitzler ‘Slow Motion 2’
Noemi Buchi ‘Window Display Of The Year’
Hi, my name is Dominic Valvona and I’m the Founder of the music/culture blog monolithcocktail.com For the last ten years I’ve featured and supported music, musicians and labels we love across genres from around the world that we think you’ll want to know about. No content on the site is paid for or sponsored and we only feature artists we have genuine respect for /love. If you enjoy our reviews (and we often write long, thoughtful ones), found a new artist you admire or if we have featured you or artists you represent and would like to buy us a coffee at https://ko-fi.com/monolithcocktail to say cheers for spreading the word, then that would be much appreciated.
The Perusal #55: Liraz, Ibelisse Guardia Ferragutti & Frank Rosaly, Ghana Special 2, Bab L’ Bluz…
May 7, 2024
A WORLD OF SONIC/MUSICAL DISCOVERIES REVIEWED BY DOMINIC VALVONA
(Unless stated otherwise, all releases are available now)

Various ‘Ghana Special 2: Electronic Highlife & Afro Sounds In The Diaspora 1980-93’ (Soundway Records) 10th May 2024
The first decade of the new millennium proved a fruitful period for (re) discovering Africa’s rich dynamic and explosive music heritage, with both (through their various Afro-funk and Afro-psych compilations) Soundway Records and Analog Africa (in particular their influential African Scream Contests) spoiling connoisseurs and those with just a curiosity alike to sounds rarely heard outside the continent. The former’s original five album Ghana Special spread was one such indispensable collection from that time; a perfectly encased box set survey of one of Africa’s most important musical junctions.
Now, unbelievably, a full twenty years later Soundway have followed up that “highlife” triumph with a second volume; moving the action on into a new decade. Crossing over, just, from the inaugural edition’s 1968 to 1981 span, Ghana Special 2: Electronic Highlife & Afro Sounds In The Diaspora picks up in the 80s as Ghana’s signature highlife phenomenon went through yet another evolution, incorporating the tech of the time: from drum machines to synths. From marching big bands and tea dances in colonial times to the explosive embrace of wailing R&B and funk, highlife kept on moving through the decades. And as that helpful title makes clear, this eighteen-track survey hones in on the electronic enhanced, augmented phase of that genre’s development during a period in which many of Ghana’s most promising music stars had been forced to leave for Europe and further afield.
The diaspora in this case a result of a particular authoritarian period in Ghana’s post-colonial history. Following Ghana’s promising independence from Britain in the late 50s the political landscape tossed around between the rule of military coups and civil governments: the only constant, Ghana’s impressive musical pedigree and its influence across the continent. In light of particularly damaging and disastrous economic policies in the late 70s, and with the quelling and censorship of musicians – previously so popular that their support or protestations could prove vital in a political leader’s survival – there was a mass exodus of talent.
As the new decade beckoned Ghana became a hostile environment for its artists, many of whom would join the migratory caravan of workers leaving to find jobs in an increasingly welcoming West Germany (a booming economy and desperate need for workers resulted in a relaxation of the immigration laws and work permits). The cities of Berlin, Hamburg and Dusseldorf were havens for this influx of Ghanaians; proving a fruitful network for a new musical fusion between the locals and their new arrivals called “Bürger life”, named after the German word for “citizen”. A hybrid of German new wave, post krautrock loosened dance sounds and modern tech, Bürger life transformed the original Afro-musical trends through such progenitors of the scene as George Darko and Charles Amoah. Both artists feature here, Darko with his sun-hazed fusion of Masekela, Sunny Adé, the Phantom Band and Lounge Lizards ‘Kaakyrie Nva’, and Amoah with the 80s modern R&B pop steal and whistled and tingled starry ‘Fre Me (Call Me)’. Of a similar ilk, Starlife’s cosmic suffused ‘Amoma Koro’ sounds like a tropical soca infused Flow Motion (and Out Of Reach) era CAN at times.
Speaking of soca (the “soul of calypso” shorthand), that Afro-Caribbean style can be found on the funky disco sauntering, “wahoo”, opener ‘Ebe Ye Yie Ni’ by The Godfathers, and on Pat Thomas’s swayed plea ‘Gye Wani’ – the highlife horns all still in attendance, blazed but subdued and more relaxed. The Gold Coast vocalist and songwriter (Ebo Taylor foil to boot) Thomas had previously worked with the iconic Marijata trio back in Ghana, but emigrated to Berlin in 1979, like so many artists on this compilation.
A standout tune (of many) and extensive workout (like many tracks on this compilation, more like a 12” dance mix in duration), the Pepper, Onion, Ginger & Salt ingredients named obscurities turn out a smooth crossover of downtown NYC (think Don Cherry produced by Ramuntcho Matta), Osibisa and the Lijado Sisters – there’s even a sort of quasi-loose rap vocal at one point. Another standout name (as it were), the revitalized in recent years Ghanian icon Gyedu Blay Ambolley is famous for his breakout hit ‘Simigwa-Do’ and early adoption of hip-hop – fusing it with highlife to form the highly influential and inventive “hiplife” genre. Ambolley appeared on the original Ghana Special by the way. But on this occasion, in a new decade and phase, he picks up hints of Grace Jones and Herbie Hancock on the Island life funky ‘Apple’.
At this point I can’t not mention Dadadi’s fun ‘Jigi Jigi’ track, a soca-light flight from Accra to Havana in the mode of a carnival celebrating Kid Creole.
Synthesized and programmed, the old highlife rhythms/percussion is just about audible as the smother 80s technology rounds out much of the rougher signatures, replacing some traditional instruments and sounds with keys and keytar, slap bass and wobbly effects. But the sleekness can’t hide those vibrant roots, even when embracing reggae, boogie and the new wave. Ghana Special part two is a refreshing map of the diaspora fusions and hybrids that spread across Europe during a time of movement and turmoil from Ghana’s hotbed of influential stars and musicians. In highlighting the stories and journeys of Ghana’s émigrés, and in introducing us to those sounds, movements that remain either forgotten or just not as celebrated, Volume 2 will become as indispensable as the first. If you were fortunate enough (and without rubbing it in, I was lucky enough to purchase the original on its release) in acquiring that first box set then this latest compilation will sit beside it very nicely. And that is my way of saying that you should buy a copy.
Bab L’ Bluz ‘Swaken’
(Real World)
An embodiment of the Moroccan “Nayda” (“up”) youth movement for change in the Arab World, the fuzz-toned electrified Bab L’ Bluz launched their debut album in a tumultuous political climate; just as COVID gripped the global newsfeeds and moved the focus away from the fallout from the Arab Spring.
Fronted and built around the playing energy and voice of Yousra Mansour, this female-led troupe embraces the influences of rock-blues gods Led Zeppelin and Morocco’s very own version of The Rolling Stones, Nass El Ghiwane, matching it with a myriad of Arabian sounds and traditions from North and Western Africa; all of which are transformed from their conservative and male dominating roots into a feminist-strong message of empowerment.
Mansour’s protestations for equality – in everything from inheritance laws to the gender wage gap and roles in society – rung out in the wake of civil unrest, governmental crackdowns and censorship to the buzz and clattering/rustled rhythms of acid-garage-blues-psych-rock and Morocco’s age-old Gnawa tradition of spiritualist invocation and trance. Previously the sole (more or less) preserve of the patriarch, and against the odds, Mansour learnt to play many native Moroccan styles: standing out especially for studying the “guembri”, a three-stringed bass-like lute that is then electrified.
That debut album set a blaze, evoking Arabia’s own experiments in the 1970s with rock music fusions, the psychedelic and prog-rock whilst, like a tornado or whirling dervish, spinning through the region and absorbing everything on offer, from Mauritania Griot and Hassani to Chabbi and the Islamic dances, poetry and exalted music of Morocco itself. This same hybrid of sounds continues on the group’s newest album, Swaken, a title that when translated from the region’s Darija dialect (the main language of the Nayda movement) encompasses the transcendent rituals of Morocco’s spiritual possession ceremonies.
Invoking visitations and a dialogue with the past, Bab L’ Bluz (made up of Mansour and band mates Brice Bottin, Ibrahim Terkemani and Jérôme Bartolome) open up their signature edge and buzz to even more influences than usual. After honing their performances on an extensive tour schedule, they’ve taken on a far rockier, even heavier sound. Led Zeppelin at both their loudest and also most acoustic permeate this album’s eleven tracks spread – that and early 70s The Who, especially on the closing roused and riled ‘Mouja’. And with the whistled and airy peul flute making an appearance, there’s even a hint of progressive folk too.
The scope then is wide, taking in echoes of Liraz-style pop, the Sahara and North African desert song of Aziz Brahim, the blowing piped Sufi music of Bargou 08, the evolved Gnawa music of Houssam Gania, trills of Griot, Modern R&B and evocations of Nahawa Doumbia, Dimi Mint Abba, Baba Zulu and Noura Mint Seymali. The lyrical messages sung across the Berber trails, in the cities and in the shadow of the sand dunes are just as varied: anger at inaction and lament for the growing number of suicides and cases of depression in Morocco being just two such subjects.
Bab L’ Bluz scale new heights whilst also reflecting with passages of more acoustic downtime as they once again amplify and kick into touch conformity and restraint. New vices twist and transport Arab traditions and the spiritual communions for a both rock-heavy and electrifying new wave album of polemic, the mystical, cosmic and the blues. Nothing less than an essential album from an essential band built for our times.
Liraz ‘Enerjy’
(Batov Records) 17th May 2024
It’s hardly surprising that with the ongoing conflict between the nefarious Iranian regime and its neighbours, and with the continued oppression of its own population, that attempting to show the Middle Eastern titan in a good light is frustratingly difficult (an understatement in itself). Especially when you’re Jewish and part of that atavistic empire’s age-old Jewish community that stretches right back to Persia’s Biblical entry in the Old Testament: A community originally bound in chains, the spoils of conquest marched into slavery in 727BC, but eventually granted citizenship and even given the right of return to build a new temple in Jerusalem by the more enlightened Cyrus in the 6th century BC. Or that one of your most famous roles on screen is playing a clandestine Mossad agent on a mission to infiltrate the Iranian air defenses so that Israel can disable a nuclear reactor (the Apple+ series Tehran). But the actress, dancer, and electronic pop siren Liraz Charhi was willing to give it a good go, covertly recording several cinematic lensed Middle Eastern fantasies with a myriad of Iranian musicians under the radar of the ayatollah hardliners, over the internet.
In a climate in-which tolerance is scarce, and with most creative forms and freedoms of expression attracting, at the very least, suspicion, and at the worse, imprisonment, even death, trying to make a record with a strong feminine message seems an almost impossibly dangerous task: Liraz’s collaborators on the album’s Zan and Roya remain anonymous indefinitely for their own safety.
Liraz’s family were forced to escape during the tumultuous upheavals of Iran’s revolution in the 70s; setting up home in Israel’s capital, Tel Aviv, a safe haven for those escaping an ever-authoritarian Islamic regime. That city has grown to become an artistic community of foreigners, living cheek-in-jowl with both an older Israeli population and diaspora of Jews from around the globe. Liraz however, still feels bound to that Iranian heritage. And it seems when listening to her evocative soothed and lush bright vocals, she is the latest in a long line of strong outspoken women from that community. A baton has been handed down you could say.
Feeling adrift, Liraz upped sticks to become an actress in L.A. Little did she know that the city would open her eyes to another concentration of Iranian émigrés, including many from the Iranian-Jewish community. Whilst starring in major productions such as Fair Game and A Late Quartet, Liraz would find comfort and a sense of belonging in that diaspora. She’d learn much absorbing both the ancient musical traditions and the pop and disco that filled the clubs in a pre-revolutionary, pro-miniskirt Tehran, including such famed Iranian acts as Googoosh and Mahasty.
It was much in part down to the courage of the women in this astoundingly large community (so large that L.A. is nicknamed “Tehrangeles”) that emboldened Liraz to take up singing. She would record her debut Persian imbued album Naz in 2018, inspired by those whose only outlet and determination of self-identity and freedom was through music. Two years later and once more ingrained in that atavistic land’s richly woven musical history, she enacted a clandestine connectivity between cultures on the “second chapter”, Zan.
Prompted by the death of Mahsa Jina Amini in the custody of the authorities in 2022, an ensuing battle of ideals and freedoms from the women and a new generation in Iran threatened to topple the tyranny. However, the regime has pushed back harder than ever and with an almost unprecedented violence started executing (mainly men so far, with the rapper Toomaj Salehi only just in the last week or so sentenced to death for criticising the regime) supporters and activists on trumped up, tortured confessional charges of treason. Women are routinely taken off the streets by the so-called morality police and raped, whilst only in the last year school age girls from all over the country were poisoned. But even in the face of this bloody repression history is on the side of Iran’s younger more liberal generations. However, with the barbaric, evil attack on Israel by Hamas on October 7th 2023, Iran has weighed in with various proxy attacks. In the last month – after Israel attacked their consulate in Syria – Iran has escalated its campaign, launching, in one night, a 300-plus missile/drone attack on Israel itself. In a less dramatic tit-for-tat, Israel launched a retaliatory missile at the Isfahan region inside Iran.
The unfolding horror in the wake of Hamas’s emboldened sickening attack last year, has seen the IDF level Gaza to near rubble and dust; the casualty and deaths, whether you believe Hamas’s figures or not, are impossible to justify. Battle lines have been drawn across the world; protest marches have now become part of the daily routine.
One of the most scary and depressing consequences of this conflict has been with the record-breaking growth of anti-Semitism across Europe and North America. Division has been sown down political lines of grievance: you either stand with Palestine or Israel it seems, with no room for nuance, the complexities let alone balance. The sheer mindlessness and oblivious lack of decency by many is staggering; with opinions cast, placards held, and slogans shouted by people without the faintest clue or knowledge of what they pontificate. You can quite rightly rile against or denounce both parties in this escalating conflict, but to only take one side is disingenuous at best, at worst, deplorable. Yes, the catalyst argument is trotted out every time, but if we want history lessons and context, we should go back not just 70-odd years but a thousand, two thousand.
It’s with this in mind that Liraz has become just one of the voices behind the #MeTooUnlessYouAreAJew campaign that grew in the face of complete silence and inaction from the world community when Hamas murdered and eviscerated and raped its Israeli victims on that fateful day – they continue to use sexual violence as a weapon against the female hostages that were taken on that same day, a number of which remain in and around Gaza, yet to be handed back. Those hostages that have been freed, made it out alive and been rescued by the IDF, testify to such heinous crimes. Feeling betrayed and abandoned at the lack of any outcry or even a recognition of these events at the UN, in international circles, and on International Women’s Day, a movement was born. Liraz was recently invited to represent that movement at the UK’s House Of Lords, where she read out a poignant, personal (as with so many citizens of Israel, Liraz lost members of her own extended family and friends that day) statement.
“I suffer terribly from all the human pain in this war on both sides. I wish for the abducted to return to their families in Israel. I want the suffering of the innocent Palestinian people to end. I am praying for peace and justice for all.”
And so, her latest EP of dazzling Middle Eastern and Arabian disco and fuzz toned psychedelia arrives with a message of hope, reconciliation. The message: “Now is the time to change the energy (or “Enerjy”) frequency”.
After releasing a couple of albums for Glitterbeat Records, the Persian-Israeli star takes up residence at the Middle Eastern grooves promoting Batov label – perhaps Liraz’s natural home. Working with the highly prolific Israeli singer-songwriter, guitarist & musical producer, Uri Brauner Kinrot, who’s groups include Ouzo Bazooka and Boom Pam – both of which can be picked up across all four tracks on this fantastical dynamic empowered EP – Liraz probably reaches her zenith as a feminist siren of The Levant, balancing pure Egyptian-Moroccan-Lebanese-Israeli glitterball zappy nostalgic exotic disco and pop with Anatolian psych and feminine strength.
Once more in the Farsi language, she sings equally from a position of power and yearning; like an Iranian chanteuse swooning and swirling, mystical and soulful. Liraz bangs the tambourine to Arabian-futuristic grooves, cosmic rays, vapour swirls, wisps of mirages and some of the most danceable music to have left the region in years. Within that framework I’m hearing shades of Altın Gün, Elektro Hafiz, and a host of equally charismatic singers from the Arab world.
You really can’t fault the quality and production, the songs and delivery. The emotional charge, the anguish and lament are unmistakable, even at its most lush and upbeat. Liraz disarms a powerful statement with elan and skill to produce an incredible lively and danceable record of pop excellence.
Ibelisse Guardia Ferragutti & Frank Rosaly ‘MESTIZX’
(International Anthem X Nonesuch)
Transformed and remoulded for a more progressive age the “MESTIZX” title of this partnership’s debut album takes the Spanish term for “mixed person” (namely, a union between those indigenous people in the Latin conquered territories of South America and the Spanish) away from its colonial roots and repurposes it on an album of dream realism duality.
With the multimedia performer and singer Ibelisse Guardia Ferragutti’s Bolivian and the jazz drummer Frank Rosaly’s Puerto Rican heritages, the pre-colonial history of South America is woven into a contemporary revision of magic, organic forms and ritual rhythms mixed with elements and a suffusion of Chicago post-rock, post-jazz and alternative Latin leftfield pop.
Without repeating the storytelling liner notes and various quotes, the duo explore their “outsider”, “other”, status as the ancestors of that mixed ethnicity: neither wholly a part of the atavistic nor Spanish (and to a point, as they crossover into Brazil, Portuguese) lineages they both feel detached, and to some degrees, uprooted from their legacy, and yet take advantage of it to weave such worldly creative perspectives. In a state of certain flux, between worlds, the music and song on this imaginative and explorative album balances the mystical with invocations and the calls of nature. They do this, enabled by an extended cast of friends from both within and outside the International Anthem label community; merging congruously the skills and voices of Matt Lux, Ben LaMar Guy and Bitchin Bajas’ Rob Frye (to name just a few of the many contributors) to expand the remit beyond the Amazon, the Bolivian tin-mined mountains and landscapes to take in mirage evocations of the alien, the sci-fi and naturalistic.
This is music that draws you in; unfurls its depths over time. The vocals are simultaneously beautiful yet split on occasions into a spirit shadow form; a near apparitional invocation that’s separated from its sister, a guide that takes us back to the old phantasmagoria of pre-colonial conquest, when Bolivia was yet to be demarcated, owned and named after its European conquistador’s ancestor and was still separated between the Incas and various independent tribes in the country’s northern and southern lowlands. That voice carries and yet seems at times almost lulled and translucent beside the water carrier percussion, the attentive and descriptive drums (only occasionally breaking out into, well…a sort of jazz breakbeat of a kind) and rainforest canopy of either mimicked or real bird life and exotica. This is a world in which the Afro-rhythms of Höröya, the psychedelic nature of Caetano Veloso and Paebiru find room next to the Sao Paulo Underground, Ale Hop, Cucina Povera, Jaimie Branch, Art Ensemble Of Chicago, Don Cherry’s Organic Music Society and Tortoise. And from that reference pool, you can tell that the lineage goes back far: all the way to the original rituals and folk music of the people that first trod on those sacred grounds.
There’s much to admire in this world of the untamed and wild, with new perspectives, mixed histories and the largely melodious reverberations of the lost exercising a new language of ownership. Ibelisse Guardia Ferragutti and Frank Rosaly perfect and expand their organic explorations, bewitching messages and oracles on an intriguing, moving and dreamily trippy debut album.
Goran Kajfeš Tropiques ‘Tell Us’
(We Jazz)
Through various developments drawn together over the last decade and more, the Croatian heritage Swede trumpeter, composer, producer and bandleader Goran Kajfeš once more sets in motion another “hypno-jazz” opus under his Tropiques exotic moniker.
Those who know, who might recall, the name will have perhaps already heard this branch of his expanded guided ensemble: going since 2011. But there’s also his equally praiseworthy absorption of jazz ideas troupe, the Subtropic Arkestra, and a myriad of other set-ups, including both the Fire! Orchestra and Angles 9.
Goran has an impressive CV as a session player to boot, playing with such luminaries of the form as Lester Bowie, who’s influence rings out on the latest Tropiques’ odyssey.
The first of those groups (and indeed the second) acts as a crossover, a recruiting ground for the Swedish-based make up of Goran’s ensemble; his pianist and keys foil Alexander Zethson, acoustic bassist Johan Berthling and violinist Josefin Runsten all served in the Fire! Orchestra. Runsten was brought in with fellow adroit strings maestro and cellist Leo Svensson Sander to expand the sound and bring a feel of uplift to the dynamics, in so doing, expanding the ranks from a core quartet to a sextet. Each band mate brings with them a convoluted family tree of intersected and separate gigs in other groups, from Trondheim Jazz to Dungen, Oddjob and Sven Wunder. And between them, this sextet covers everything from award-winning jazz recordings to composing for film and the stage.
With a sense of movement and openness that seems to organically unfold, and to unfurl and grow like winter buds opening in the first weeks of spring, the Tropiques’ latest album together is a thing of synthesis and nature balanced with the messages, hopes and celebration of conscious spiritual jazz from another age.
It all begins with the incipient classical feels of Riley and Nyman and an air of sympathetic bowed and “possible musics” Širom-esque Galicia and the Balkans before flowering into those spiritual Alice Coltrane vibes. Goran’s almost drowsy trumpet awakens on this deep dived scene of Afro-spiritualism; it’s sound evoking hints of the already mentioned Lester but early Don Cherry and Jaimie Branch. Meanwhile, Zethson’s tinkled sensations, runs and liquid scales flow reminded me of Nduduzo Makhathini and the keys found on Bobby Jackson recordings. Runsteen and Sander’s violin/cello partnership slowly grows and blloms into a lush light orchestral spell.
But it’s the influence, as stated in the accompanying PR notes, of John Coltrane’s Crescent LP – the incredible luminary’s quartet on that iconic recording including such notable icons as McCoy Tyner, Jimmy Garrison and Elvin Jones – that stands out; a spot-on absorption of that mid 60s record vital, the building blocks of which can be heard being riffed on and off of.
The middle movement, ‘Magmatique’, seems to perhaps take its inspiration from the kosmische instead, starting as it does with the piano ambience of Popol Vuh’s Florian Fricke. The trumpet sounds almost cupped as the bass quietly stretches and mumbles away. That is until the drums take on a more breakbeat style that stirs up the influence of hip-hop. The strings, however, go from muted Skies Of America Ornette to the more drawn and flighty influence of Michael Ubriank. There’s also a certain progressive or sort of post-rock feel; like Radiohead making a jazz album under the tutorage of Ill Considered and the Chicago Underground duo.
On a slow boat to China, or perhaps sailing across the east China seas to land somewhere on blossom canopy Japanese shores, ‘Prije I Posle’ (translated from the Croatian, “before and after”) dreamily embraces Far Eastern signatures; at times, on the wind, replicating near zither-like strokes and brushes, and the bulb-shaped notes of some kind of Oriental glockenspiel. The drums though take on an almost d’n’b rhythm, whilst the kabuki theatre unfolds, and Goran’s trumpet exhales Chat’s woes and sad romantic illusions of yielding yearns. As summer takes hold, this odyssey fades out with the vague caresses of Alice Coltrane and Dorothy Ashby; and a cycle is completed.
Amorphously travelling on an eclectic pathway that includes all kinds of jazz styles, the transcendental, kosmische, lush, classical and the ensemble’s own Swedish homeland’s adoption of prog and pysch, the Goran-led Tropiques prove their mettle with a deep “slow music” rich journey in three movements. Environment counterbalanced by open-ended developments and the inner cerebral make for an impressive opus that proves so easy to take in and enjoy.
Jake Long ‘City Swamp’
(New Soil) 17th May 2024
Stepping out on his own but once more backed by the same who’s who of contemporary UK jazz musicians that formed the eclectic lineup on previous recordings under the Maisha title, the drummer, composer and producer Jake Long conjures up a Bitches Brew of funk, soul, spiritual, Afro and fusion jazz on his debut as a solo artist.
From a pool of talent that includes Nubya Garcia, Binker Golding, Tamar Osborn, Shirley Tetteh, Artie Zaite, Amané Suganami, Al Macsween, Twm Dylan and Tim Doyle – many of whom have crossed paths with each other on projects outside the sphere of the Long led Maisha ensemble – a both cosmic and despairing suffused odyssey of the intuitive and electrifying is formed. In the ruins of societal decay and riled-up division, looking out across an increasingly soulless gentrified London (where all these artists and musicians reside) lost to corporate greed and a breakdown in community relations, Long and his troupe tread the uncertain pathways of the primal city swamp and sift through the “ideological rubble” of dystopian collapse – a term absorbed and borrowed from the political theorist and lecturer in digital media and society Alex Williams, echoed in Mark Fisher’s Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative.
Reassembled at a later date from a series of extended recordings at the Lightship 95 studios in the capital, made during 2019, that landscape and decay has only got worse with the further loss of public spaces and supportive networks, arts spaces and music venues. And yet this album is not so much a raging polemic nor untamed and unruly cry from the soul – well, it has its moments of course but nothing so abstract and tortured as to sound angry. In fact, for most of the time golden percussive threads, floated bulb-like organ notes, a mantra trickle and shimmer of Alice Coltrane and spiritual jazz vibrations indicate escapism for the lunar and astral: the spiritual balance much needed in such dire times of avarice, social media validation and the pursuit of fame. But then, as the action picks up, we’re into the territory of Maggot Brain phase Funkadelic, Owen Marshall, Herbie Hancock, Bernie Worrell and Miles Davis’ Lost Septet. An extra thread, or layer, arrives in the form of King Tubby, African Head Charge and the On-U Sound label reverberated and echoed dub; often taking the jazz elements into the hallucinatory and dreamy.
Within those spheres of influence you can also pick up hints of Byard Lancaster, Joe Henderson, Marion Brown, Last Exit, (very specific) Slow Foot era Norman Conners, the Pharoah, and Bobby Hutcherson and Harold Land’s simmered down partnership as the music moves between the strange JuJu vodun Orleans spell of ‘Swamp’ to the more melodious, almost romantically, played horns evoked soul-jazz-on-the-streets-of-70s-NYC vibes ‘Silhouette’ – I’m also hearing signs of The John Betsch Society on this one. With time on their side, movements, passages and direction of travel is performed and assembled without distraction and limits; with some tracks breaking the ten-minute barrier to move through various fluctuations of light and shade, squalling and smashing crescendo and more near ambient vapours and mists of mysticism and reflective soul-bearing.
It’s impossible to pick out any one contribution, any one performer, as the entire ensemble interweave and act as parts in a much greater expansive world of metaphorical expressions, descriptions and atmospheres; all feeding into a haunted magical entwined statement on the symptoms of urban decay and the nightmare of a post-capitalist society with little to offer, little to give and little in the way of answers to all our ills. A Bitches Brew for our end times.
Morgan Garrett ‘Purity’
(Orange Milk Records) 17th May 2024
Daemonic wrenches, caustic slabs of derangement and Fortean paranormal invocations grind against chemically poisoned alternative grunge-country indolence and the unraveling clusterfuck morose mind of Morgan Garrett on his latest collection of both menacing and playfully disturbing experiments.
A “culmination of over a decade’s worth of collaborative and relentless” discombobulations and harrowed heavy-set-to-lo-fi-and-no-fi resignations, torn dispersions and traumatic-drawn cries for help, the Purity album is a troubled trip across a morbidly hallucinated inner and outer landscape, with the age of anxiety, COVID, war, record level cancers, environmental catastrophe, cost of living crisis, societal and generational division, governmental incompetence, lawlessness, drug dependency and technological/AI capitulation being just some of the topics, grievances and stresses to unpick.
Garrett’s status in the American experimental scene is in no doubt as he mines a lifetime of pain and transmogrifies both his own work and that of Scott Walker’s, the Sun City Girls, Swans, Daevid Allen, the Boredoms, Dean Blunt, Fugazi, the Putan Club and others. Within that scope of references expect to hear Garrett speaking in slithery tongues, transmitting from Mina Crandon’s spiritualist parlour whilst twanging away like some scarred deeply troubled and vicious figure from Blood Meridian on LSD, and somehow twinning a fucked-up Pavement with a paranormal screamed Skip Spence. Hell’s fires lap away as nu-metal, the industrial and heavy mental/heavy meta crush all resistance and resolve and those country/American leanings. There’s sure enough a soul in that there slumbered and more beaten-up hallucination; a pained maverick clawing their way out of a opioid languish, stripped of dignity and resilience, across a battlefield they once called home. Then again, I could be reading too much into it all.
Malini Sridharan ‘Tombuex’
(Birdwatcher Records) 10th May 2024
Death is a fairytale, a fantasy, a mythological poetry that’s navigated with almost diaphanous and playful devotional curiosity by the Brooklyn-based composer and multi-instrumentalist Malini Sridharan on her new album Tombeux.
With a title that derives from the French plural for “tomb” or “tombstone” but also refers to a musical commemoration style of composition that was all the vogue back in the 16th century – originally in poet form but later musically transposed with the accompaniment of lute and plucked instruments -, Sridharan assails Ursula K Le Guin’s Earthsea cycle of fantasy novels, the Greek-Roman ideas of Hades, the venerated devotions of the celebrated Indian Hindu mystic poet Mirabai, and the loss of those nearer to home. For this chamber/classical set of vocalized suites deals with that unavoidable fate: death. But with such a lucidity and magic, and candidness that it never seem too elegiac of morbid. Only skirting the chthonian, the suites and song on this album turn more towards yearns of the pastoral, bucolic and courtly: Closer to the fairy-like tapestry weaved folk of Joanna Newsome and the brass-y more sweetened trunk-like low bass-y tones of the euphonium and woodland and bird-like flutiness of Prokofiev, of Elgier and Vaughn Williams.
The mini stories that make up Tombuex are almost shorn of melancholy and mournful dirge. This is both down to Sridharan’s shared entwined influences of both India and Michigan roots, and her diverse range of literary, historical sources – the Indian classical strains that you hear are in some part from her father, and the curiosity for history, archeology and Medieval music that permeates this album, from her mother. And so the brassy resonance of the sitar, twinkles of vibraphone, duck-billed sound of the bassoon and shake of bells (all played by Sridharan) merge perfectly with a full Western-sounding classical woodwind and brass ensemble to elicit the tearful and dramatic, the fantastical and regal, whilst weaving a tale of bereavement in its many forms.
The lasting resting places of both Greek-Roman myth (Hades) and the speculative-fiction writer Le Guin’s Earthsea afterworld (The Dry Land) are invoked by a filmic-like score and Sridharan’s modern day Bhajans and Medieval-style rounds. And through it all, she creates a soft wellspring of personal connections, longings and a sense of loss: A remembrance that exudes lovely dreaminess and certain majesty in the face of pain.
Tombeux is an ambitious work of the classical that bridges both time and worlds to address in its literary, literal and poetic forms the spectre and history of death and how to face it without spiralling into the void. Nothing less than a very impressive work that expands Sridharan’s ambitions further.
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 or love. If you enjoy our reviews (and we often write long, researched and 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.