The Digest for September 2025: New Music/The Social Playlist/And Archives
September 22, 2025
The monthly Digest includes a clutch of accumulated new music reviews; the social inter-generational/eclectic and anniversary albums celebrating playlist; and choice timely pieces from the archives.

Tom Skinner photograph courtesy of Jason Evans.
___THE NEW___
Group Modular ‘The Tunnel/Lonely Pylon’
Reissue Special Released 19th September
The first transmission (or rather a retransmission if you like) from the Group Modular duo of Mule Driver and Marky Funk in three years, marks the inaugural chapter in a new series of special 7” releases “powered” by the duo’s alter ego Confused Machine and Delights labels. Those lucky enough to have grabbed original copies (sold in separate splits editions, both sold out almost immediately) of ‘The Tunnel’ and ‘Lonely Pylon’ will know that the former was part of Norman Records’ 2021 25th Anniversary split release by Polytechnic Youth, and that the latter was recorded exclusively for the third instalment in Russian Library’s L series of split 7” EPs back in 2022.
Back on the radar, with the chance to own these hauntological sci-fi suites and dramatization soundtracks, the self-described “Outer space sounds from Jerusalem-Tel Aviv route” library music makers reacquaint us all with their brand of analogue period cult space age influences and their taste for atmospheres and theme tunes that emit something that’s near supernatural. ‘The Tunnel’ is a curious Pietro Grossi like rocket ship steam and gas fusion of soft timpani, Roy Budd and Greg Foat-esque barque sci-fi harpsichord, and d ‘n’ b like dub beats. And the electric field throbbed ‘Lonely Pylon’ is a Library music imbued psychogeography of paranormal nature and unnerving children’s sci-fi TV of the 70s and early 80s – imagine Brian Hodgson, Sapphire and Steel and bygone public broadcasted information warnings resurrected by The Advisory Group or My Autumn Empire.
Hopefully this latest 7” series will prove a catalyst for more new recordings from the duo, who haven’t released anything together since Per Aspera Ad Astra in 2022. You’d better be quick, as I have a feeling it will sell out pretty sharpish.
Lt. Headtrip & Steel Tipped Dove ‘Hostile Engineering’
(Fused Arrow Records) 23rd September 2025
The gristle, outpoured thoughts, observations, protestations and glue between the oppressive urban structures of our dysfunctional, unworkable society both poetically and rhythmically twist and flow over a counterculture haunted psychedelic-prog, Krautrock and jazz-soul production on this debut project collaboration.
From the experimental, leftfield platform of Fused Arrow Records and its stalwart producer, engineer, beat maker and artist in his own right, Steel Tipped Dove, a new partnership with rapper, producer and instigator Lt. Headtrip.
Dove’s production and various studio skills can be heard on releases from such notable talent as Fatboi Sharif & Roper Williams, billy woods & Messiah Musik, Darko The Super, MC Paul Barman and Zilla Rocca. He’s also collaborated with the most dope and pioneering Dose One. The Lieutenant’s CV is no less impressive, setting up the ‘we are the karma kids’ label, organizing projects and events in the Brooklyn, Manhattan and Queens areas, and either collaborating or sharing stages with Armand Hammer, Open Mike Eagle, Quelle Chris, Beans, Backwoods Studioz, Reservoir Sound and Uncommon Records.
A magic combination of old hands from the underground scene then, the Hostile Engineering environment that engulfs them is twisted, churned, inhaled and transformed into a sometimes gothic, sometimes industrial, and sometimes more soulfully halo-lit arena for the spoken and rapped lyrics; the cadence of which reminded me at any one time of the Antipop Consortium, Rob Sonic, dalek, and when humorously and from a self-aware but confident in their own skin way, addresses the issues of sexuality, sex and the tired old tropes of rap machismo on the smoochy drifted saxophone and crunched drum beats produced ‘We Got The Sugar’, comes across a little like Homeboy Sandman: a sample of the lyrics being, “last week I was helpin’ his girl find her panties. This week I’m his bro’s new daddy. Just cause I can rap along to Liquid Swords don’t mean my dick’s boring.”
There’s more than enough clever ideas here, with samples I’ve yet to recognize, and an atmosphere that seems to channel all kinds of musical influences; from zappy Kraftwerkian synth and drum pads electro to the Floydian, Roy Ayers, Soul cuts, cult soundtracks (of suspense, horror and sci-fi futurism), heavy rock and prog – I think I’m overthinking it, but alongside what could be a sample from Sabbath or their ilk, it sounds like a short miraged shiver of cymbal resonance and slow drums from Neu!’s ‘Weissensee’ on the automation for the people, insurance servitude and dead-end careers themed polemic ‘0 Days Since Last Accident’.
Bot factories, the nightmarish promises of constant bodily cosmetic regeneration and the self-absorbed legacies that go with hanging on to the bullshit zenith of eternity, high anxiety, and on the repurposed halcyon soul Kayne-Jay-Z-Biggie fantasy “money, money, money” ‘Fund Don’t Stop’, a backslap to rampart consumerism and unsignifying spectacles of Black Friday (“We been shoppin’ since we bought that serpent’s product in the garden.”) – a lifetime of spending, from the womb to the tomb.
At thirty minutes long, there’s no fat on the bones, and yet plenty of tempo, musical changes, and a fresh rap style that neither preaches nor sits back in a nonchalant pose. A really successful pitch, bringing both talents together to fuse and articulate the present depressing miasma of the times in which we all live; glued to this rock, with no anchor, no compass, attached to the screen and validation culture of social media and its puppet masters. One of the freshest hip-hop releases of 2025.
Tom Skinner ‘Kaleidoscopic Visions’
(Brownswood/International Anthem) 26th September 2025
Reaching the midlife point, the UK drummer and composer Tom Skinner finds time to reflect and take stock with a mature kaleidoscope of culminated visions pulled and drawn from a highly prolific career and enviable CV of performances, collaborations and recordings (from Sons of Kemet to The Smile, David Byrne Floating Points…. the notable list goes on).
Arriving a few years after Voices Of Bishara (an album inspired by the American jazz and classical cellist Abdul Wadud and his seminal privately pressed cult masterpiece ‘By Myself’), the follow up weaves the former into a rich, often cinematic, psychedelic and floated meditation and dialogue of jazz, neo soul, cult soundtracks and the contemporary classical. At 45 years of age, the time felt right for such an undertaking. A culmination of experiences, of influences now coming together; a bond that embraces not only Skinner’s vaguely Middle Eastern entitled Bishara live band but a number of congruous international collaborating foils: neo-soul doyen, and right acclaimed, award-wining polymath (but you can list the main qualifications as singer-songwriter, poet and bassist) Meshell Ndegeocello; the self-described multifaceted Charleston musician, score composer, film and radio programmer and vocalist Khari Lucas, otherwise known as Contour; London born and raised but now Berlin-based keyboardist and vocalist Jonathan Geyevu, aka Yaffra; and on electric guitar for a couple of tracks, Adrian Utley of trip-hop luminaries Portishead.
That group of friends is split between two sides of a traditional vinyl format: a moiety of instrumental material and vocalist starring peregrinations, with side A featuring the electric-chamber-jazz Bishara quartet of bassist Tom Herbert, cellist Kareem Dayer, and woodwind and reeds players Robert Stillman and Chelsea Carmichael, and Side B, a cosmic mirage of sung and spoken discourse, soliloquy and healing. Described as “distinct sonic landscapes”, both parts are harmoniously conjoined, with leitmotifs, recurring sounds and an overall feel that draws upon a cosmology of Afro, spiritual, conscious, spacey, psychedelic and experimental jazz.
It begins with the promise of comfort; a putting of the mind at ease so to speak. ‘There’s Nothing To Be Scared Of’ begins with an incipient jingle-jangle and stirring drones of woodwind and the cello before hitting a peak of what can only be descried as Lalo Schifrin meets Bobby Hutcherson and Lonnie Liston Smith and the Cosmic Echoes on a 1960s filmset. From then on out, this jazz-chamber match the flighty, craned and fantastical with amorphous hints of Nicole Mitchell, Village Of The Sun, Kibrom Birhane, the Ancient Infinity Orchestra, Coltrane, Matana Roberts and Sven Wunder. You could call it a cross-generational sound, with the first half of the album feeling itself out across an evocative landscape and more abstract metaphysical space full of reflections on emotional states and those people held either dear or inspirational. That includes the late New Jersey born and raised novelist, writer, memoirist, poet and filmmaker Paul Astor (author of the loose New York Trilogy, Moon Palace and The Music Of Chance), and Skinner’s mother, the former classical concert pianist and victim of the arts misogyny, Anne Shasby.
There are some beautiful moments captured amongst the often-slow momentum, and the gander and bird-like flexes; a sense of the mellow and unfurled: the soulful too. And yet there’s a certain drama to be found, and even mystery to this section of instrumental description, of roots and spiritual emotions.
The second section features the vocal talents and essences of Skinner’s collaborative foils; starting with the soul, funk, jazz, hip-hop, reggae and rock spanning polymath Meshell Ndegeocello, who soulfully and dreamily oozes and woos a sense of both the ancestral therapy and a mirage feeling of homely comfort. Ndegeocello’s voice emerges from a hallucinatory wilderness, floating across a nine-minute cosmic-soul and R&B jazz suite of horn snozzles and soft burbles, glassy bulb vibraphone notes, and gentle plucks.
Taking a sadder, more pained discourse-like tone, Contour’s R&B neo-soul voice aches and yearns on the bluesy chamber-jazz piece ‘Logue’. The language is one of rise and fall, trauma and endurance, survival and striving in a ruthless landscape. And yet, again, there is a kind of near diaphanous beauty about some of the music, the flutier parts and delicate bulb-like notes that seem to float around in a slow ponderous rhythm. It’s the feeling of being drained, and the attempts to break free of the malaise.
The finale, ‘See How They Run’, features the soulful poetic spoken tones of Yaffra both responding to a secondary voice and speaking out loud his thoughts, enquires to the promise of eternal enlightenment, in an almost winding, untethered fashion. It reminded me in part of Andy Hay, Diggs Duke and even Tricky, playing out over another neo-soul leaning dreaminess.
Informed and prompted by middle age (a youthful middle age of experience rather than depressing aging pains), Skinner offers a retrospective pause whilst looking towards a creative future. Cross-generational concerns, references, influences converge in a mature work of feelers, reflections and freedom. Consolation in an age of accelerated isolating atomisation and introspective anxiety.
Water Damage ‘Live At Le Guess Who?’
(Cardinal Fuzz in Europe/12XU in N. America) Released 5th September 2025
In the venerated surroundings of the Medieval city of Utrecht, the religious epicentre of the Netherlands (or so it is said), as part of the Le Guess Who? Festival lineup, the Water Damage ensemble preached their own unique fire and brimstone of monotonous locked-in drones, the wailed and frayed, the squalled and resonant.
Whilst following no recognisable domination on this plane, the Austin collective of like-minded acolytes to all things underground, invoked some kind of near religious sonic experience as they went to work on the opening track, ‘Reel 28’, from their most recent album, Instruments (released back in May of this year). Without a break or let-up, they relentlessly, but slowly, created a mesmerising lumber of the avant-garde, of Motor City, Jap, Kraut and Doom rock. Enslaved to the rhythm you could say, for a full 45 minutes both the group and their audience are caught in the hypnotic flay and sway of the scuzzed and intense bowed needling and sawing momentum that is created.
Absorbed into the core for that performance, guests Ajay Saggar (a serial offender, featured untold times on this site over the years under various collaborative and solo guises: Bhajan Bhoy, Deutsche Ashram, King Champion Sound and University Challenged) and fellow astral traveller Patrick Shiroishi (the Japanese-American multi-instrumentalist and composer, based in L.A., last appeared on this site playing foil on saxophone to Dave Harrington and Max Jaffe on the Speak, Moment collaborative album) take up the mantle on guitar and “free-reeds”. Their contributions are equally as mystical, magical, intense and droning; with Shiroishi especially summoning both a Mogadon Hawkwind and Sam Rivers simultaneously.
With the “Maximal Repetition, Minimum Deviation” motto and mantra, they conure up a monster; a ceremonial rite; even, as the accompanying press release describes it, an exorcism. And yet it is quite melodic. Reference points, for me, would be Tony Conrad and Faust’s seminal Outside The Dream Factory, but also Tony’s Transit Of Venus collab with Hangedup, Glenn Branca, La Monte Young (these last two actually referenced by in the press release), Earth, Boris, Swans, Hala Strana, France, Smote, Pharoah Overlord and Amon Düüls I and II, and The Black Angels. But like the old city that played host to the festival and the Water Damage performance, there’s an almost otherworldly summoning of the Medieval: a sort of mythologised or transmogrified evocation of an abstract atmosphere from that period; it sounds at times almost like a hurdy-gurdy is being wound up like some kind of ancient transmitter; plugged in to a mystical and harrowing age.
I must add, for once, the sound is really good. You can hear every part, every contribution, and even the bass line (you wouldn’t believe how few recordings ever get the bass right, or let you hear anything more than just a mumble of bass; live recordings are often even worse, almost bass free). The bass here is integral to keeping up that never ending rhythmic sway; and despite its repetition, is such a great little riff that is never grows tired. Compliments to the sound engineer, and who ever mastered this performance, then, for instead of a block intensity of lost instruments you get a clear production, with every cog, every drone and note audible.
I’d say an improvement on the album track, and a really intensive yet hypnotic hermetic experience that feels untethered to any particular time, age or period.
___/The Monolith Cocktail Social Playlist Vol. 101___
For the 101st time, the Social Playlist is an accumulation of music I love and want to share, with tracks from my various DJ sets and residencies over the years and both selected cuts from those artists and luminaries we’ve lost on the way and from those albums celebrating anniversaries each month.
Last month we celebrated the 100th edition of this series, which originally began over 12 years ago. The sole purpose being to select an eclectic and generational spanning playlist come radio show, devoid of podcast-esque indulgences and inane chatter. In later years, I’ve added a selection of timely anniversary celebrating albums to that track list, and paid homage to some of those artists lost on the way. In the former camp this month, and to tie in with the Archive spots on Bowie and CAN, there’s a 30th anniversary nod to 1. Outside – a tour I actually witnessed, I kid thee not: Wembley Arena if you must know – and 50th nod to Landed. Joining this celebration there’s also tracks from Kate Bush’s Hounds Of Love (40 this year), The Fall’s This Nation’s Saving Grace (also 40), Blur’s The Great Escape (30), Dexter Gordon’s One Flight Up (60), Wolf Parade’s Apologies to the Queen Mary (20) and Mew’s And The Glass Handed Kites (also 20).
Each month I also like to add a number of newish/recentish tunes (more or less anything from the last year): those that either missed out on the regular Monthly Playlist of brand-new music releases, or only just come to my attention. We have Monde UFO, Lukid, the El Maryacho team up with Nowaah The Flood, Penza Penza, the Tone Of Voice Orchestra, Elkotsch (thanks to blog friend and supporter Andy Haas for recommending this one) and the triumvirate collaboration of Phew, Erika Kobayashi and Moebius. Oh, and something not so much new but surfaced from Dylan this week.
The rest of the playlist is an anything goes selection of stuff I’ve accumulated, loved, treasured, wanted to own or played out during my sets over the decades. In that category there’s music from the Walker Brothers, the Jazzpoetry Ensemble, Mother Lion, Garybaldi, A Tent, The Barrino Brothers, Departmentstore Santas, Gene Martin, and Akofa Akoussah.
Track List:::::
Wolf Parade ‘Shine A Light’
Butterglory ‘She Clicks The Sticks’
Blur ‘Entertain Me’
Mew ‘The Zookeeper’s Boy’
David Bowie ‘We Prick You’
Kate Bush ‘The Big Sky’
Garybaldi ‘Maya desnuda’
The Fall ‘I Am Damo Suzuki’
CAN ‘Vernal Equinox’
The Jazzpoetry Ensemble ‘Motherless (Live)’
Dexter Gordon ‘Darn That Dream’
Polyrhythm Addicts ‘Big Phat Boom’
Akofa Akoussah ‘Sumga Ma Bacci’
El Maryacho & Nowaah The Flood ‘SOAPS’
The Barrino Brothers ‘Born On The Wild’
Tone of Voice Orchestra ‘Tourist at God’s Mercy’
Penza Penza ‘Dusty’
Los Darlings De Huanuco ‘Lobos Al Escape’
Elkotsh ‘Da’a Adeema’
Monde UFO ‘Sunset Entertainment 3’
Phew, Erkia Kobayashi & Moebius ‘Katherine’
The Detroit Escalator Co. ‘Manuel Transmission’
A Tent ‘Seven Years – part 2 (Abundance)’
Lukid ‘The Secret of Bell Making’
Bob Dylan ‘Rocks And Gravel (Solid Road)’
Mother Lion ‘Simple House’
The Walker Brothers ‘Walkin’ in The Sun’
Departmentstore Santas ‘Play in the Sun’
Gene Martin ‘We Shall Be Like Him’
The Hitchhikers ‘Feel A Whole Lot Better’
___/Archives___
From the exhaustive Archives each month, a piece that’s either worth re-sharing in my estimates, or a piece that is current or tied into one of our anniversary-celebrating albums.
This month there’s my previous pieces on CAN’s Landed (50 this year) and Bowie’s 1. Outside (30 years old this month).

David Bowie 1.Outside (Arista/BMG) 1995
With ‘five years’ remaining until the new millennium, Bowie, tapping into the anxiety and quest for spiritual relief, returned to his first passion: contemporary art.
Back with his most innovative collaborator, Brian Eno, he dredged the bottomless pit of morose and despair. Dreaming up a morbid tale of future sacrificial performance art gone wild and taboo breaking cybernetics he narrated a woeful diegesis through a series of ‘verbasier programmed’ characters.
Disturbing to say the least, our ‘cracked actor’ pitches an avant-garde ‘whodunnit?’, set in a parallel bleak world where the self-mutilated gestures of Günter Brus (the patriarchal figurehead of body art) and ‘the orgiastic mystery theatre’ of Hermann Nitsch have been taken to new, hyper, extremes of bloodletting.
Led by the investigative diary of art crime detective Nathan Adler, a cryptic cut-up of Burroughs/Burgess language is used to not just explain the circumstances that befell the poor victim Baby Grace, but also delve into the collective psyche.
Out on a limb musically, Bowie’s home life may have been content, yet something suddenly propelled him to bravely create a depressive requiem. Easily the best, if not most original, material since Scary Monsters, 1.Outside was entirely written in the studio as the band extemporized: motivated by Eno’s synonymous oblique strategy cards.
Scott Walker lost in cyberspace; the industrial melancholy is at its most anguished on ‘A Small Plot Of Land’ (a version was used on the, Bowie as Warhol starring, tragic biopic of Basquiat directed by Julian Schnabel), yet a more revved-up, pummelling bombastic variant is used on ‘Hallo Spaceboy’ and ‘The Heart’s Filthy Lesson’ (perfectly playing out David Fincher’s Seven).
Leaving many fans bemused (as I myself witnessed on the Outside tour, the baying audience pleading for the greatest hits package), the philosophical snuff opus seemed puzzling to those familiar with the pop-lite Bowie. Thankfully Bowie cut loose the shackles of commerciality for a contemporary blast of shock and dread.
CAN ‘Landed’ (Virgin) 1975
Richard Branson’s pastoral record label Virgin hooked our Cologne ‘seven-day sonic avant-garde evangelists’ in early 1975, tempting them away from the clutches of their former masters United Artists, whose relationship with the band had been tenuous at best. They now joined the hippie-idealistically run, free thinking label of choice – at least that’s how it appeared to the onlooker-, sharing the stable with both fellow countrymen Faust, Tangerine Dream and Slapp Happy, the psychedelic progressive band Gong, and the million zillion selling Mike Oldfield, Virgin’s biggest selling artist by miles – whose Tubular Bells behemoth had reined in a load of money and success, paving and paying the way for most of the roster.
Branson may have looked like he’d stepped off the cover of a Jethro Tull album, but he turned out to be a shrewd businessman. After all, he managed to propel Faust into the album charts with their Faust Tapes mesh-mash classic: albeit that the said album was put on sale for a paltry 49p and probably didn’t actually net the group much money, but hell, it sold over 100,000 copies, so they became a household name in the head community for a while at least.
Business wise, sister label Harvest – equally rich in allusions to the Woodstock ethos – would distribute CAN’s records in their homeland, whilst EMI, who owned both labels, would just count the cash it hoped would now roll in. One of the stipulations in the Virgin contract was that the band would have to use superior recording equipment for their next album. A multi-tracking desk was delivered to their own sacred Inner Space studio HQ, which they were still allowed to use though the records would now be mixed elsewhere. Unfortunately, a deep sense of forlorn began to creep in, mixed with paranoia, the arrival of the new technology now making it possible for the band to record their parts separately if they so wished. Until this point Holger Czukay had masterminded all the recording and editing on just a two-track recorder. He had also always encouraged the group to play together in the spirit of improvisation. But now, the band could successfully overdub and add parts at a higher quality then had previously been possible before, taking a more insular approach to recording.
In scenes not too far removed from the Beatles fractured shenanigans on the White Album, the group began to play some of their own parts in secrecy, the thought of being scrutinized and criticized by their fellow band members filling them with dread.
Again, like The Beatles, they invited an outside musician into the studio to lift the tension and scrutiny. This fortunate man was Olaf Kubler, who had served as producer on both Amon Duul and Amon Duul II albums, although he dramatically fell out with one of AD II’s bandleaders John Weinzierl, who made his feelings towards him pretty clear in recent interviews. Kubler was called in for his saxophone prowess, being asked to lay down some cool sultry cuts on the track ‘Red Hot Indians’ for what would be the Landed LP.
Sessions for what would be the band’s Landed album began in the first few months of 1975, in-between tour commitments, which included a couple of gigs with the troubled American folk troubadour Tim Hardin, who it’s rumoured was asked to join the band full time.
Hardin didn’t really front CAN in these gigs, instead, he would merely leap on stage to perform one of his own tunes, usually something like ‘The Lady Came From Baltimore’, and maybe front a couple of the groups own tracks before exiting stage right. Whether he ever considered seriously joining the band, Hardin’s deadly heroin habit put a damp squib on things, finally getting the better of him in 1980 with one overdose too many.
Anyhow, Karoli had so far done a good job of semi-fronting the band, going on to lead all the vocals on this album; delivering some softly inspired dream like performances throughout.
Landed in some ways directly follows on from their previous effort Soon Over Babaluma, especially in the sound collage experiments of this album’s ‘Vernal Equinox’ centre piece and ‘Unfinished’, both of which re-work similar themes and threads found on ‘Chain Reaction’ and ‘Quantum Physics’. The rest of the LP consists of far rockier progressive tones, with allusions to their contemporaries, particularly Pink Floyd. To a point there is also an attempt towards the glam-rock of both Roxy Music, Bowie and Mott The Hopple – all influences CAN’s peers, Amon Duul II, also breathed-in on the 1974 album Hijack, though to a less successful degree.
‘Full Moon On The Highway’ and ‘Hunters And Collectors’ relish in the glow of these new influences, though remain slightly more conventional compared to CAN’s usual free roaming exploratory material. Most of the seven tracks now run in at under six minutes and sound much more formulated, the exceptions being the already mentioned two saga driven soundscape pieces, which combined, make up three quarters of the overall albums running time.
The lyrics themselves seem to be full of references to mysterious alluring women, clad in leathers, who turn up at ungodly hours on celestial described highways. Analogies run riot, the open road acting as a metaphor for following certain paths, Karoli constantly encouraging the listener to cut loose and float away. Journalist and friend to the band, Peter Gilmour, co-wrote both ‘Full Moon On The Highway’ and the lazy sedate ‘Half Past One’. Peter would also go on to write CAN’s biggest hit, the disco chugger ‘I Want More’.
Many critics have panned Landed, seeing it as the beginning of the end for the group. It does seem a slight exaggeration. Certainly, the dynamics were slowly ebbed away, the production becoming much more polished, though it suffers from some very messy trebly moments at times.
Footage of them performing ‘Vernal Equinox’ on the Old Grey Whistle Test at the time sees Irmin Schmidt wearing a fetching bondage inspired chain mail waistcoat whilst theatrically commits Hari Kari on his keyboards, whilst Czukay, all ten-yard stare, sports white gloves and a sheriffs’ badge. A mid-life crisis beckoned with all this new pomp and strange fashions, turning off many fans, including the disdain of Julian Cope who states that this act of regalia wearing extravagance ended his relationship with the band. So, in a way CAN did seem to be heading over the precipice, the best days behind them, but this album is viewed way too harshly.
Landed for what it’s worth is a decent album, with enough ideas and demonstrations of superb musicianship, Karoli alone performing some of his most sublime guitar work yet.
The albums artwork, by the curiously alluding Christine, displays a collection of passport photo sized images of the band. Each individual photo is covered in graffiti or scribbled on, lending silly moustaches, cartoon glasses and an array of comical hats and hairstyles to the now light-hearted looking band. Peering out from under the heavy de-faced images they pose in a manner that lets us know they still have much to give- also, am I imagining perhaps a Carlos the Jackal type reference here, the many disguises and such.
CAN shifted back towards the Afro-beat and World music styles on their next couple of releases and also brought in ex-Traffic members Rosko Gee on percussion and Reebop Kwaku Baah on the bass to great effect. Czukay moved away from his bass guitar duties so that he could explore radio short wave editing and cutting up techniques in greater detail. He would of course go on to leave the band in 1977, leaving Liebeziet, Schmdit and Karoli to carry on for a while before everyone split for good to pursue their own solo projects, a reunion in 1989 included Malcolm Mooney and resulted in a new album titled Rite Time.
The year is 1975 and CAN have laid down their 7th album, after being together for nearly eight years. To get this far they have travelled an etymological musical odyssey, that has taken in the dark esoteric voila seeped mood of The Velvet Underground, the psychedelic spiritual enlightenment of America’s west coast, the African dance style rhythms of Nigeria and Ghana, the dreamy hypnotic Turkish flavored folk music, the otherworld tour of the nebula emitted from Hendrix and the lessons learnt from Stockhausen and Von Biel. CAN had surpassed all their peers and become possibly one the greatest assembled bands of musicians that the west has ever seen – seriously these guys could out play anyone, though they never had time to wallow in ego and always looked towards experimentation rather than dwelling on their skills.
There now follows a run-through of the album:
Dropping in with an up-tuned arching guitar fuzz and treble heavy hi-hat, ‘Full Moon On The Highway’ leaps straight into action. Jaki Liebezeit sets down an incessant workman like beat, hammering away on the bass drum as Michael Karoli casually begins his salacious vocals –
‘I made it hard today,
For I had to do it to me.
And if it’s only to hold her,
She’s gonna get it today’
A certain sense of portend fear hangs in the air, Karoli in his full Germanic romantic disdain rattles off omnivorous statements about taking to the highway, where star crossed lovers may unlock some inner meaning and truth.
Rock hard screaming lead guitar hooks run rampant, exercising no sign of restraint and sprinting ahead as though in a 100-meter sprint. Piano flourishes and honky tonk bravado light up the mood as those bawling guitars and Alpha 77 effects wail away like banshees. Czukay takes his bass on free roaming tour of run downs, slides and felicitous infused funk workouts, never staying put in one place for too long, always running his fingers all over his instrument. An intense burst of exuberant searing drums, keyboards and clashing turmoil all culminate into a finale furore, that threatens to end in a mess but is saved by the rallying cry of Karoli riding in on his gleamed-up guitar. He transposes glam via Pink Floyd to produce something unheard, a riff from the other side.
Taking a more serene path, ‘Half Past One’ begins with some archaic ethnographically seductive Spanish guitar and heavy tub tapping drums. A dozy laid-back vocal pronounces –
Over the beach,
Into the sun,
Wake again by half past one,
Alright’
The last word being some kind of reassurance amid the strangely relaxed drug induced soirée, that peers at some snapshot of the protagonists’ relationships, a casual affair on the beach in this case.
Schmidt interjects with some delightful mandolin sounding oscillations and yowling alarmed synths, whilst Czukay adds some chuggering engine bass lines, sliding around the neck as though revving it up.
The general breathless ambiance begins to wash ashore, like a lapping tide, meandering its way towards some welcoming gypsy encampment. Quacking wah-wah and folk tale violins add to the general malaise, building towards a newfound intensity as the song picks up momentum: The final 30 seconds bathing in the now pressured final crescendo.
Now steps forward the ambiguous and genre dodging ‘Hunters And Collectors’, with its almost glam postulations and Afro- funk grooves, this four minute Floyd gesturing dose of mayhem ducks any formal categorisation.
A doom-laden piano emphasis each intro chord, like an operatic indulgence. Karoli in magi pose announces the chorus –
‘Hunters and collectors, all come out at night.
Hunters and collectors, never see the light’
The song now kicks in with some sky rocketing theatrics. Dense melodies of climbing synth lines and evocative sexed up Teutonic choral backing adding to the melodrama. Czukay and Liebezeit cook up a fine jumped-up funky backing, with double shimmering hi-hat action and posing bass guitar. They all soon break down into a more stretched out segue way, taking in the early years of Parliament and some Afro highlife.
Karoli now dabbles with the vocals, as they take on some added menace; he conjures up images of leather clad biker gangs, savage sexual degradation and drugs –
Thirty leather kids, on the gang ban trail,
Get your big brown man with the snakes in bed.
Dirty bother me now, it soaks into a cup,
She says “if you don’t start at all, you never have to stop”.
Other worldly radio signals and snippets of conversation from the ether add to the esoteric atmosphere that is entrenched in seedy tales of chemical indulgences.
The opera swoops back in before what sounds like the set-piece breakdown brings the curtain down, as strange broken cogs, ratchets and springs all produce a comical ending, just before the swept in majestic intro of ‘Vernal Equinox’ is brought in.
As the ambivalent last track on side one, ‘Vernal Equinox’ continues the dynamism and piano melody from the previous track, but runs rough shot and fancy free, producing an eight-minute omnivorous jam or epic narrative.
It all begins with a search light introduction of space age doodling, with a chorus of sonar equipment and lasers shooting off in all directions, all played out over a heavy laden piano, hurtling towards a cacophony of destruction.
Rabid lead guitar rips into the track, Karoli literally plays for his life in a fit of feverish exhaustion, running through the full collection of riffs and chord rushes that he’s picked up over the years.
Flailing drums explode like a barrage of mortars, as UFO’s crash land all around, Czukay finds some cover and rattles off his defensive bass.
That Alpha 77, the exulted secret box of tricks, spits out havoc. Crazed wrecking layers of multiplying textures take the drama back to the cosmos soul searching of Soon Over Babaluma, but with a now more invigorated pumped-up stance. The raging narrative falls into one of those accustomed breakdowns. Liebezeit and his meteoric rhythm accompany arpeggiator sonic waveforms and metallic sounding drips during this break in the pace. The full swing returns in style, turning the jamboree into a jazz funk quest, as what sounds like Robert Fripp battling it out with an alien horde from the planet of Sun Ra, delivers a belting finale of elation.
Side two opens with the bongo tribal reggae of ‘Red Hot Indians’, a jaunty slice of infectious pigeon-toed dance rhythms and cool wistful chant like grooves. Karoli goes all faux-Caribbean with his laid-back vocals, he casually lays down some lines in an almost staccato fashion –
‘It’s the DNA song, DNA song, it’s the DNA song.
Strike mess, hole mess, shadow mess’.
Kubler Olaf blurts out an effortlessly uber cool prompting saxophone melody, liberally peppering the track, whist Liebezeit just reclines back on his sun lounger, knocking off some tom rolls and sipping a pina colada.
Mixing in some more African highlife and even-tempered down Roxy Music, this track flows along in its own serenity. The second wind of extra rhythms start to sway in an hypnotic motion, like some kind of mantra as Karoli mumbles recollection of some cryptic halcyon memories –
‘Then you took me back, steam machine.
Dreamt my way into a daydream.
Let me vanish into yesterday,
And my night drops fade away’.
As though to ratify the shambling theme, the song naturally fades out on its own breezy demeanour.
We now come to the soundscape behemoth of ‘Unfinished’, which by its title remains to be determined by the listener as to whether or not this maybe the case.
A set piece of sound cutting and masking that harks back to Future Days, with its reverential cinema scope builds and gliding synths this track could just yet be one of CAN’s finest moments.
Opening with what sounds like an orchestra tuning up, we hear a noisy interlude of violins, strings, brass and unfamiliar instruments all preparing themselves for the performance. That looming ever-present box of tricks, the Alpha 77, fires up and screeches over the top of our orchestra pit, launching bolts of lightning along with the odd spark of lush melodic wonder.
Breathing in the same aroma found on their soundtrack piece ‘Gomorrha’ and the melodic beauty of ‘Bel Air’, our macabre galactic Schmidt now unleashes some welcoming felicitous doses of extreme perturbation, underpinned by some humbling broody but magisterial bass.
All of a sudden, a series of gory effects and sounds enters the stage, as the demonic bound trip to the nebula goes all pants messing chaotic. Squealing guitars, that evoke the sounds of distressed souls pleading, cut through the heightened tense mire.
Factory steam powered machinery like the sort found on the Forbidden Planet, is ratcheted up, bashing away and powering up some monstrous life form. Some tumbling toms are given a swift kicking, the occasional crash of a cymbal unsettling the air as Liebeziet desperately tries to carry on playing whilst his space craft flies into the sun: holding on for dear life he is soon saved by his comrades who now work towards an uplifting final stretch.
Whistling sounds fly overhead, and gongs gently shimmer in the background, Schmidt throws in everything even the studios sink, as a build towards some sort of journey to the upper echelons of the solar system begins.
Escapist melodies and angelic ethereal guitars all scale the dizzying heights, like the dark side of the moon played by Stockhausen and backed by Ornette Coleman. A dream- like vaporous empyrean utopia opens out as our Cologne astronauts now proceed to save the best till last. Pulchritude swathes of divine beauty flow with delight as a lavishly rich melody of heavenly choral opulence raises us to some higher plain. The final few minutes being amongst the most sublime that CAN ever laid down, a spiritual guiding stairway to the universe.
Here’s the message bit we hate, but crucially need:
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The Perusal #48: Crime & The City Solution, Tele Novella, Chouk Bwa & The Angströmers, Yara Asmar…
October 5, 2023
A WORLD OF DISCOVERIES REVIEWED BY DOMINIC VALVONA
(Unless stated otherwise, all releases are available now)

Chouk Bwa & The Angströmers ‘Somanti’
(Bongo Joe)
Reuniting for a second explosive dynamic album of electrified Vodou and Mizik Rasin, the Haitian collective Chouk Bwa and the Belgian production duo The Angströmers once more propel ritual and ceremony into an otherworldly futuristic setting.
Originally crossing paths back in 2016, formulating a project performance two years later followed by the release of the partnership’s inaugural album, Vodou Alé, in 2020, this Euro-Haitian combination was interrupted by the Covid pandemic. Unable to meet in the flesh, as it were, for two and a half years they still managed to release a string of 12” EPs; the bridge to what would be that eventual reunion in the May of 2022 and an intensive workout tour of Europe.
This enabled them to record their second album together, Somanti, in a Brussels studio; the culmination of tour performances and interactions, quickly recorded in just one day, such was the energy.
Framed as a more “mature” record, and different in focus to Vodou Alé, there’s now an emphasis on the ritual, ceremonial aspects of this African exported religion, spiritualism and rites, and the sagacious proverbs that are hailed, harnessed and playfully invoked by the Vodou chorus of voices. The hypnotizing and galloping barrage of drums are back, with each ritual subscribed its own rhythm and call. But if we go deeper, the hotbed of Haitian independence Gonaïves-hailing Chouk Bwa also invoke their ancestral African homelands; that being the once powerful, rich and pivotal kingdom of Oyo (growing to become the largest Yoruba speaking state in what is now eastern Benin and western Nigeria); the central African kingdom of Kongo (a Portuguese vassal but independent state with 600 years of history behind it); and key regional kingdom of Dahomey in what is now within the borders of Benin (once uncoupled from a tributary state to the larger Oyo, a global trading post built unfortunately on slavery and conquest). The latter of which, a prominent source of Vodun, the belief system that was torn from its roots and shipped with the poor souls that were transported into slavery, to the Americas and Hispaniola.
That age-old roots music, summoning of spirits, pummeled, beaten and danceable rhythm is given a transformation by the Belgian duo, who zap it with shooting laser beams and cosmic fuzz, fizzles, buzzes of oscillations and reverberations. The dub genes of Lee Scratch Perry, African Head Charge and Major Lazer can be heard throughout, alongside post-punk, Ammar 808, Moonlight Benjamin and Ifriqiyya Electrique on an album of both mysticism, danger (in an exciting way) and spirit world communion.
The groove on the female lead and group sung ‘Fèy Nan Bwa’ is like a cool no wave vision of Vodou-House music – it actually reminded me of Glasgow’s own international project, The Green Door Allstars. But that contemporary fused electronica of magnetic force fields, echoes, phasers, subsonic bass thumps and metallic elements never overshadows the authentic rollicking, tribal bounding and bobbing drums and the expressive, sometimes bordering on hysterical and manic vocals/voices.
Music from another dimension, the Haitian roots music and performative religious invocations and words of wisdom from Chouk Bwa are sent through a vortex into the future on another successful union.
Crime & The City Solution ‘The Killer’
(Mute) 20th October 2023

A decade on from the last project inception of the Simon Bonney and Bronwyn Adams led Crime & The City Solution, and yet another restless move back to one of the city’s that solidified their gothic, hard won reputation and shadowy presence, Berlin.
If 2013’s American Twilight was suffused with the dying embers and toxic fumes of Detroit, with its mass unemployment, foreclosures and desperations, then The Killer seems almost resigned to the fate and inhumanity of our divisive post-Covid times. Incidentally, American Twilight was itself released after an even longer hiatus of twenty years, and with a, near enough, entirely different lineup. Although conceived back in Bonney and Adams native Australia (where Crime & The City Solution were born in the late 70s, burning up the Sydney and Melbourne scenes before following their skulking bedfellows of Nick Cave and Mick Harvey to London, and then onto Wim Wender’s Wings Of Desire backdrop Berlin) during the harsh conditions of lockdown, the band and production were forged in the German capital. The roll call of which includes Frederic Lyenn (on piano, bass and synth), Donald Baldie (guitar), Georgio Valentino (synth and guitars), Chris Hughes (drums and percussion) and Joshua Murphy (piano and guitar). That ensemble is overseen, or rather, ‘conducted’ as it were, by the highly respected producer Martin J. Fiedler.
Originally conceived as a PhD application on decision-making in Afghanistan during the late 1980s, the initial brief was expanded by Bonney’s work delivering aid programmes across the Indo-Pacific region, his professional and personal relationship with Adams, his brief time in post-invasion Ukraine, and lyrically by the ‘syncopated’ delivery rap styles of Mos Def and Talib Kweli’s Black Star collaboration. Although America isn’t mentioned, its leading part in the events that unfolded during the 80s in Afghanistan is impossible to deny. As part of the Cold War strategy to checkmate an expansion-driven Soviet Union, America unintentionally stirred up a viper’s nest in aiding the Mujahedeen and warlords in their outgunned fierce war against the invading aggressor. In forcing the Soviets into a humiliating withdrawal, followed by the entire collapse of the Bloc and regime, and the fall of the Berlin Wall, those Cold War partners turned on their enablers, as they became hardline Islamist fanatics.
Decades later, and after the still never reconciled bloody Balkan wars, and it’s the turn of Putin’s Russia to unleash barbaric bloodshed. But this time, after successfully propping up the heinous regime of Assad in Syria, death and destruction has been dragged to Europe’s front door. The scenes of dead bodies may keep Bonney awake at night, but it’s also the resilience, the matter-of-fact manner in which lives go on in the face of such despairing evil that filters through to the music, themes and lyrics of The Killer. Just as one of his idols, Scott Walker, could convey horror and resignation but love too, Bonney and his foil and muse, Adams, churn up a tempest of emotional tumult in which romance of the hungered, yearned, longed and sentimental kind offers some sense of humanity: the spirit not yet crushed by the enormity of it all. And again, though never mentioned, it is to a both Southern Gothic and Cormac McCarthy-esque America that they turn musically. For this is the broody, Biblical Western terrain the band and their Bad Seeds, Wovenhand peers have trodden for decades; a kind of almost esoteric Americana and dark moody Southern rock ’n’ roll signature that offers haloed magnificence, reverence in the face of apocalyptic dread.
The album begins with the morbidly sinister entitled ‘Rivers Of Blood’ and Bonney’s plaintive, ached declarations for his muse, under a blood moon lit panorama. Danger prowls the Chris Isaak on the road with Cave mood, as a broken Bonney pines with fatalistic worship for his flame, and makes sense of, processes the turmoil in his psyche.
‘Hurt You, Hurt Me’, with its subtle sentimental, wept strings, sounds more like a loose duet between Avalon era Bryan Ferry and Patti Smith. Two voices starting at different points, shadowing each other, emote pain and suffering, and breath languid despondency on frosted glass. Angels cry and faith is promised on a flange affected entwined romance.
A sullen longing pervades the dramatic, slow, testament-poetic ‘River Of God’ (another of those river metaphors). And yet despite the various references to death, the suffrage of the “children of war” and somber tones, there’s a message that “you can be anything you want to be” after all, and a sprouting of wings encouragement – the very opposite of Icarus’ sticky fall to Earth.
As mentioned and alluded to earlier, Bonney pays a most deeply felt form of romantic thanksgiving to his partner Adams with the resounding ‘Brave Hearted Woman’. Going through sophisticated changes – from Cohen to Dylan and Barrett vibrato psychedelics -, Bonney, with the occasional lofty yearns from Adams herself, shares his passionate wants for the woman he so obviously holds in the highest of regards, respects, loves, falls to his knees for, and forms part of his very fibre: “She is ecstasy, filled inside me”; “You are creation for all to see”.
I’m sure it’s Adams’s coos on the next song, ‘Killer’, a piece of torn gothic withering noir, malevolence and redemption. It’s yet another protagonist who’s no damn good, strung out, morose and struggling with self-identity, their place in the world, and perhaps, their heinous crimes. Those syncopated influences that I mentioned much earlier, can be heard weaving an almost non-stop serious-voiced incantation of consciousness and gristlier Western preacher’s song. It seems to take notes from Amon Düül II (Yeti period) and The Rolling Stones.
It’s followed by the outlaw pained ‘Witness’ wake-up call and the seriously hard won conclusion of ‘Peace In My Time’. With a resigned sadness to suffering and a gothic simmered weep of Diamanda Galá style piano arrangement, the latter song, and finale, finds some reconciliation with a world in eternal chaos and torment; Bonney unsurprised, yet not humbled, to the atrocities and harm that we humans dish out on a hourly basis. And yet, there’s an eventual peace in the valley moment there; a glimmer that love will lead Bonney out of the nightmare of his own troubled psyche.
As a statement on Afghanistan, the references are very cryptic, symbolic and veiled. Rather it’s a catalyst, prompt for the Bonney and Adams and the band to expand those horizons and murky textures, and to say much about the external and internal state of the world we live in.
Tele Novella ‘Poet’s Tooth’
(Kill Rock Stars)

A wistful, almost disarming, Tele Novella weave their magic on an album that takes its cues from Harold & Maude and a removed version of the heartbreak yearning vulnerability of Nashville and Texas country music; albeit a version in which Cate Le Bon and Aldous Harding sip despondently from a bottle of life’s despair.
As whimsical and beautifully executed as it all is, Poet’s tooth is a moving album of timeless tropes, somehow delivered musically and visually through a slightly off, sometimes surreal, vision of the familiar. Natalie Ribbons and foil Jason Chronis dream up an idiosyncratic staged world, their moniker taken from the serial drama/soap opera phenomenon of the “television novel”, a format most prominently produced for the Latin American markets.
It’s a world in which, much like Harold and Maude, the bonus of youth is squandered until a mature presence at the very opposite end of the aging equation – with death not far away and looking to grasp every opportunity of youthful risk and carefree adventure – closes the circle with a life lived without regret. That cult movie said much about the Boomers age of high anxiety, caught in the headlamps fretting away their youth; stuck between suicide and depression, hard drugs (proscribed and otherwise) in the face of a society moving past the hopes of the last decade into the violence and despondency of the 70s: Take your pick, from Nixon to Vietnam, the crushing resistance in the Soviet Bloc and so on…
Roles are reversed, with Maude more childlike (yet wise) and the morbidly curious Harold, fearing for experiences yet to materialize, on a death trip. The most obvious reference to this movie’s odd romance can be found in the video for the band’s toy box like, almost twee but charmingly evocative ‘Broomhorse’, which features one such dark comedic episode, with Chronis playing the part of a bathtub, wrists slashed suicidal Harold in a magical world of 70s furnishings and wallpaper. Maude is from a pre-war generation, with the all too real traumatic experiences of her youth literally tattooed on her arm, and yet attempts to bring her partner round to the possibilities of perseverance and making do with one’s lot in life – Harold is a typical lost child of the wealthy Socialite classes; in material and nepotistic terms rich, yet devoid of connection and mentally adrift.
Before I start running away with myself, and this becomes some sort of screen review, the purpose of all this analysis is that Poet’s Tooth is suffused with those same themes; borrowing heavily from the Hal Ashby playbook of tragic-comedy and the screwball to make some sense of the world now. And yet this is only one aspect of the album.
Ribbons and Chronis – joined it must be mentioned by Danny Reisch, who handles the drums, samples, loops and field recordings but is also involved with the production too – hail from an increasingly creatively changing Austin, Texas. And so this is also a 21st century take on that State’s cowpoke, steers and rodeo signature of yodeled hangdog country music; only the heartbreak is coming from a female protagonist’s point. Not a new concept but any stretch, but still undervalued. But this is a whole other version of that; the Country & Western scores of Morricone and music of Sacri Cuori, Bonnie Dobson, K.d. Lang, Chris Isaak merged with an air of Lynch’s go to composer Angelo Baldametti, Kathy Smith, Gene Clark, Elyse Weinberg, the Laurel Canyon, Georgia Greene and Rosemary Clooney.
This music is both knowing and naïve, charming and disturbing. For there’s an esoteric alchemy of pitched-perfect fluid poetry on the surreal pillow, Lewis Carroll and Sandy Denny reading the Tarot, ‘The Unicorn’ song. Part renaissance, part death pact, part Percy Sledge’s reverent church organ, and part Temperance Society, Ribbon’s captivating voice charms us into a magical kingdom that at first seems to hide a much creepier menace; the language fantastical but progressively alluding to “poison”, “zombies” and what can only be described as some cultish gathering, waiting on “angels” to arrive. Meanwhile, the titular song – utterly compelling and beautiful – alludes to “incantation”, a “goblin”, a “cloak” and a “cauldron” on a song that sounds more fairytale than dark bewitching arts. Although of the metaphorical kind – A mosey June Carter and Lee Hazelwood type of down-on-the-ranch country tune, with a rhythmic horse canter -, there’s a ‘Vampire Cowgirl’ to add to that sense of the “other”. There is the mention of war too; or a war: The Vietnam War? The Iraq War? The American Civil War perhaps?
But just when you get some sort of measure, songs like ‘Eggs In one Basket’ takes an arty Baroque turn (courtesy of the autoharp I’m sure), via Gainsbourg and 60s cult French/Italian cinema: I say Baroque, it could easily by Tudor. Imagine the Thomas Crown Affair scored by Michel Legrand as Fellini directs and you’ll half way there.
Adolescence escapism wrapped in a softened, but no less stirring, epiphany, Tele Novella has a surreal, dreamy quality about them. From the Tex-Mex border of yore to the contemporary Austin scene of City Limits, they weave a really impressive songbook that’s as Hal Ashby and Sidney Lumet as it is pining Country and Western. Poet’s Tooth is both lyrically and musically perfect; one of my favourite albums of 2023 – no idle boast. Prepare to be equally charmed and moved with a counterculture resurgence of quality, subtle comedy and tragedy, eccentric disillusion.
Raf And O ‘We Are Stars’
(Telephone Records) 27th October 2023

Few artists have purposely entwined themselves so deeply with their idols than the Raf And O duo of Raf Mantelli and Richard Smith (the “O” in that creative sparked partnership). David Bowie and Kate Bush loom large, permeating near every note and vocal infliction of their idiosyncratic, theatrical, cinematic and up-close-and-personal intimate style of avant-garde pop and art school rock experimentation. Raf even has a Kate Bush tribute side project; coming the nearest I’ve yet heard of anyone to that maverick progenitor’s range-fluctuating, coquettish and empowered delivery, and her musicianship and erudite playful and adventurous songwriting.
The death of Bowie however, must have had a crushing effect on the duo, who, perhaps, covered his music better than anyone else: at least in spirit. They got close to their hero through the supportive words of Bowie’s key pianist foil of the 70s, Mike Garson. But an audience with the thin white duke eluded them. It’s a pity, as I think he would have certainly connected with the duo’s fifth album, We Are Stars. He certainly would have recognized the signatures and the references, both the in your face eulogies, homages to his most dedicated of alien roles in The Man Who Fell To Earth, and the less obvious but musically inspired ones too.
Omnipresent throughout, there’s the angular, shredded and bended guitar of Scary Monsters era Robert Fripp and Carlos Alomar, and the strangely interesting progressions of the arty-pop and dress-up of that album, but also some pre-Ziggy albums too. ‘Tommy Newton’ stands out of course; the Icarus alien fallen to Earth in the hope of returning with water to save his family on an arid distant star, is woven into a fatalistic existential love eulogy, as told in the third person by Mary-Lou, his estranged human love interest: if you can call her that. Recognizable plots and scenes from Walter Tevis’ novel and Nicolas Roeg’s film versions – later given a second wind in the form of the Lazarus ‘off-Broadway’ musical, based on Enda Walsh’s book vision, and with lyrics provided by Bowie -, appear in a non-linear, otherworldly mournful tragedy. Loving the alien, Mary-Lou’s character introduced the distracted, disconcerted Newton to some of Earth’s vices, little knowing his true identify until the dramatic reveal: unknowingly waylaying his task, plied with alcohol and the foibles, deceit and nature of humankind. Raf embodies this dislocated figure, lost and cast adrift in a thematic void; pining for what was and what could have been.
But it’s not all about Bowie and his famous film role. That last track also reminds me of Deux Filles, and so much of this soundtrack to the current restless age of high anxiety, disconnection and our reliance on technology, swims around in a most curious new wave suffusion of 70s and 80s sounds. The opener, ‘Still Sitting In Our Time Machines’, actually seems to recall the duo’s decade-old Time Machine EP, but has a more cosmic, canoodled, neo-romantic soul funk sound and feel. With a message for retro nostalgia, with nothing moving on since the last time machine voyage, the early 80s portal is reopened.
Raf comes close to Lene Lovich on the Radiohead crosses paths with a Latin-flavoured Banshees ‘Andy Warhol’. Warhol is the theme here on this yearned, wooed and urgent changeable curio; or rather the pop art icon’s obsession by a homeless character.
The titular song itself once more enters a starry void; those common celestial objects and all their various metaphors, analogies form the substance to an alternative, stressful The Man Who Fell To Earth soundtrack, yet recalls the influence of Tricky and Portishead.
It’s all change by the time we reach the avant-garde electronic pop ‘Every Time It’s Bleak We Dance’, with Raf now channeling a merger of Alison Goldfrapp and Liela Moss, but with a meandrous European allurement. Stranger too, the makeup in ‘Eyeliner’ is blusher coquettish Bush languidly draping an arm around Jane Birkin at her most untethered, whilst Joe Meek’s reverb pings and ‘Telstar’ whizzes by. Ah yes, as if to reinforce a thematic thread of retro-futurism there’s a lot of 1950s space sounds and effects: part of the sci-fi tapestry. But it’s the 1960s, albeit a fantastical version, I’ve dreamt up as a critic to describe the beguiling oddity ‘Waterloo’; a beautiful sentiment to an inspiring, supportive partner, and not a cover of The Kink’s standard paean to London. In my mind this sounds like Lou Reed penning a Berlin period balled, time travelling back to the early 60s and handing it over to beat group era Rolling Stones, who in turn, pass it on to Marianne Faithful.
If you’ve never had the pleasure of experiencing Raf And O in a live setting before, then drink in the intimacy of the club lounge-esque ‘The Guardian Of Your Mind’. During or in between Covid lockdowns, the duo performed a series of incredibly striking, fragile and artful concerts online; and this stripped, but no less powerful, untethered, vibrato echoed and Raül Refree-esque performance shows you what you missed.
An alternative time travelling theatre of interwoven fantasy, dream realism and the reimagined, We Are Stars is as playful with its unique style as it is only too aware of the deep held stresses, strains, pain and detachment that plagues society in the aftermath of a global pandemic, economic meltdown and war. Looking to the stars, but knowing that even escapist dreams of the cosmos have failed us, Raf And O (who I haven’t mentioned in name at all, but is an adroit craftsman of his form, accentuating, punctuating or loosely weaving a meandered musicality around Raf) take their concerns, observations and curiosities into ever more arty and intriguing directions. They remain one of the most individual acts in the UK; true inheritors of Bowie and Bush’s legacy and spirit.
Yara Asmar ‘Synth Waltzes And Accordion Laments’
(Hive Mind Records)

In a diaphanous gauze of dream-realism, the Beirut multi-instrumentalist, composer, video artist and puppeteer Yara Asmar conveys a sense of dislocation, loss and remembrance on her second album for one of the Monolith Cocktail’s favourite labels, Hive Mind.
Last year’s Home Recordings palette of serialism, atonal atmospheres, ambience and minimal semi-classical melodies has been expanded upon, with an emphasis on the synth and accordion of the title. Surrounded by a sound source of electronics, toy xylophones, a metallophone, music box, percussive mobiles and wind chimes, and of course her grandmother’s handed-down green-coated accordion, Asmar seems to float once more above a city in turmoil and distress; a place in which psychogeography and family history haunt present Beirut. For as beautiful, immersive and dreamy as it all is, these ‘waltzes’ and ‘laments’ seem to have an almost supernatural, even spooky feel: The veiled wisps, high sounded whistles and bubbled ‘Everything Is Wrapped In Cling Film’ reminded me of both Jodie Lowther and Lucrecia Dalt in that regard; bewitching but not so much scary. The fate prompting ‘It Is 5PM And Nothing Bad Has Happened To Us (Yet)’ actually reminded me of that knowing supernatural and library music group, Belbury Poly. I guess what I mean is that this sound, mood is more like the suffused enveloping veils of the ether, a translucent resonance, reverberation of Asmar’s family tree and the lives they lived then esoteric.
This is the sonic memory of that family’s toil, trauma, but also the small observations of daily life, For example, ‘three clementine’s on the counter of a blue-titled sun-soaked kitchen’; scenes that hold more than just a descriptive title for a good painting. Like that kitchen scene, those meanings soak through to emote a magical garden in a bustling city.
A bellow or concertinaed accordion movement can say so much. That same accordion was originally made in a workshop in the German town of Trossingen; a stones throw from Asmar’s residency in the Black Forest, last March. Locally famous it would turn out; people recognized its maker’s mark and directed Asmar to visit the source. Although the town was a farming community, during the winter they’d turn their hands towards building clocks and accordions. Asmar’s workable heirloom, keepsake, was recorded in an old ledger at the back of the workshop that made it; sent to the Lebanon on the 21st October 1955 with seven other models. That date, or near enough, marks the release of this album, and that providence is inspiring enough to inform some of the direction of wafted travel and emotions contained within.
Better times perhaps, less upheaval; maybe with hope for something, whatever happened or was dreamed for in the past, the present is full of uncertainty. Clinging to those memories, there are abstract sonic feelings of limbo and loneliness; a call to those that left the city, but also a reference to those that returned or stayed throughout. ‘Are These Your Hands? Would You Like Them Back?’ the only peregrination to feature a clear voice, features the poetic questioned turmoil of Majd Chidiac, who poses a consciousness of lament, unfairness and grief to a Carlos Niño-like spell of xylophone-esque bulb notation, atmospheric wisps and dreamy uncertainty. Elsewhere there are the faint, obscured or just ether-emitted signs of either a siren spiritual voice, or those that are more sorrowful and harrowing: Not so much haunted as the apparitional calls for remembrance and recognition of that which was lost or taken away.
And yet, there is a real alluring, magical pull to those strange warm ambient reverberations and removed ideals of waltzes. It’s much in part down to the accordion (French sounding on some tracks, and like a church organ on others) that these visions sound so unique; taking ambient music in a different direction and to a different environment that few have attempted before. Saying that, although performed in Beirut it remains universal, with themes and feelings we can all recognise, or at least sympathise with. But Asmar stays true to her home; bringing us adroit but empirical examples of quality ambient and explorative music that hopes to convey stories from the family photo album; the observed scenes from childhood made real in a sonic, immersive experience.
Bex Burch ‘There Is Only Love And Fear’
(International Anthem) 20th October 2023

In the moment extemporized expressions in multiple locations, both in Europe and North America, the feels on Bex Burch’s new album are led or prompted by a hand made xylophone. Any yet, there’s no particular pattern nor pathway to these captured performances; Burch joined as she is by a myriad of notable artists/musicians, all of whom only met for the first time before each improvised performance. That collaborative roll call was picked by International Anthem’s Scottie McNiece and Dave Vettrainoi, the same label responsible for invitng the percussionist, producer and instrument maker over to the US to make this album.
Proving fruitful foils, the eclectic polymaths Ben LaMar Gay and Macie Stewart, the in-demand bassist and composer Anna Butterss, drummer Mikel Patrick Avery and Tortoise member and multi-instrumentalist Dan Bitney pop up alongside Rob Frye (on clarinet and flutes), Diego Gaeta (piano), Ben Lumsdaine (the second drummer to join this cast), Oren Marshall (tuba) and Anton Hatwich (another bassist is seems) across various location stimulated pieces of music. Yorkshire, The Baltic Sea, Berlin, SüdTirol, Wyoming, L.A. and a storefront in Bridgeport, Chicago stand in as the stages for descriptive sound work and grooves that traverse between freeform/cosmic/spiritual/Afro-jazz and the arty and avant-garde. But even within that scope there’s elements of Appalachian country, Hassell’s fourth world possible musics series, the 80s no wave melting pot of Ramuntcho Matta and The Lounge Lizards, and the more contemporary partnership of Matthew Herd, Will Glaser and Liam Noble. And it all begins with nature’s spell on the cuckoo-proclaimed rhythmic trudge through the woods, ‘Dawn Blessings’. Burch lightly introduces us to the glassy bulb bobble of her beatific xylophone on a slowly awakening intimate landscape.
The great outdoors is suffused across much of Burch’s ‘love’ and ‘fear’ emotive passages; a chorus of birdcalls, chirps and warbles, the sound of the sea crashing against the beach, the breeze itself mixed with human interactions such as the bustle and greetings on the street, an appreciative audience in the garden and the feint recordings of conversations. Intimate and up close, even on the more avant-garde needs to draw breath, you can hear all the squeezed and winded blows, the strained exhales of the brass and woodwind on the Anthony Braxton-like ‘If I Was You I’d Be Doing Exactly The Same’. Well, the first part anyway, as this same sucked and almost inaudible reedy rasped piece goes on to feature more recognizable instruments, an increase in volume, and hits a Marshall Allen and Yusef Lateef burst of jazz energy.
The rhythm, groove is changed again on ‘You Thought You Were Free’; a kind of amalgamation of the Art Ensemble Of Chicago, Sun Ra, New Orleans Nightcrawlers and Hugh Masekela herding percussive cattle across a police siren urban street corner.
‘This Is The Sound Of One Voice’ is a pretty clear title description, featuring as it does a soothed faint female “doo-doo” woo over, what sounds like, tine plucks and scrappy, scuffled and shaken percussion (Širom meets Alice Coltrane’s healing balm).
‘On Falling’, which I take it is in the more anxious fear category, sounds like watery plops and the quiet slow turn of a winding down music box.
Burch’s instrument of choice, a bought handmade xylophone, often sounds like a vibraphone or Gamalan mettlaphone. On the Laraaji-esque ‘Don’t Go Back To Sleep’ you can hear a polyrhythm trickled variation of that xylophone: Two of them in fact, crossing over into separate timing signatures.
Each day is a different sound and a new canvas for Burch, who transcends her bearings and musical boundaries. There’s rhythm to these improvisations, a real groove that at times counterbalances the passages of avant-garde expression to create a non-linear journey of emotions, thoughtfulness and sense of yearned fears.
Mike Reed ‘The Separatist Party’
(We Jazz/Astral Spirits) 27th October 2023

It wasn’t planned this way, and both releases are from entirely different labels, but the drummer, composer and band leader Mike Reed’s new album shares collaborators with the previous album (see above) by Bex Burch. It’s also entrenched in the same Chicago hothouse. For also appearing on Burch’s There Is Only Love And Fear is the multi-instrumentalist, singer, poet Ben LaMer Gay and flute clarinet maestro Rob Frye. Both join Reed’s oft-used live performance appellation, The Separatist Party; now used as a album title for his latest album project.
And added to that Constellation in-situ hive of creativity (the C being the multi arts venue in Reed’s hometown that he’s successfully owned and operated since 2013) is Cooper Crain on guitar, synth and engineer duties; Dan Quinlivan on synth; and Marvin Tate on vocals.
Drawn together under less celebratory circumstances, the Chicago AACM hot-housed Reed and his talented troupe explore the societal, political and monetary crisis of ‘forced seclusion’; inspired, influenced by both the renowned New York Times reporter and non fiction author N.R. Kleinfield’s 2016 Pulitzer Prize nominated essay on the death of George Bell, and the restricted rules of Covid lockdowns. The former, a sad indictment on isolation, the lack of human contact and neighborly care, the latter, a self enforced curtailment of freedoms that led to a tsunami of mental problems, and again, isolation. Bell’s fate is said to have haunted readers, including Reed: We all unfortunately know or have heard of such scenarios; the hoarder neighbor with no family, the neighbor that no one looks in on; dying without anyone even noticing for a week. In the case of this Jackson Heights (79th Street to be exact) resident, the authorities, of which there were many, struggled to piece his life together. The Pulitzer Prize site described Kleinfield’s expose as a ‘part detective, part eulogy, and part exploration of a city’s bureaucracy of death’.
Although not named specifically, the first chapter in what will be a three-album cycle, finds a vocalized and musical language that demonstrates this growing epidemic and its causes. This can sometimes be delivered with clear urgency, and at other times with a more abstract but emotive expressive performance, from a band totally in synch, yet still able to crisscross, counter and push at the direction of travel. What I mean by that is, in spite of the tumult, untethered freedoms, there’s never a chance this music will come unstuck, nor descend into chaos.
With a voice pitched somewhere between blues-rock performer, Malcolm Mooney and Amiri Baraka, spoken and word artist poet Marvin Tate adds a very loose narration. On the opening synth undulated and drum shuffled ‘Your Soul’, Tate’s intensity strengthens as he sorts through a “mosh pit” of a life lived, laid bare with cryptic descriptions: “I reached the wooden floor/Decades of old shit.” A hoarder’s accumulation piled high; nonsocial and maddening to those who don’t get it, or understand. The musical style is partially Idris Ackamoor, partially Kahil El’ Zabar and a little Don Cherry’s Organic Society. It’s followed up by the Werner ‘Zappi’ Diermaier drum motioned, and Hugh Masekela conducted Mardi-Gras ‘A Low Frequency Nightmare’, which now moves on over into a semi-Krautrock-jazz lane. That same track features some great trumpet action (hence the Masekela reference), and a Donny McCaslin cosmic synth signature that envelops his saxophone peregrinations. ‘We Just Came To Dance’ has Tate repeating the titular statement over a backing or primal Chicago House music, as played by El’ Zabar, and laid out in Embryo’s African percussion explorations. It pops and clops along like Basquiat’s figure limbering and breaking down a 80s NYC no wave boardwalk.
A musical partner to Reed over recent years, the incredible visionary Nicole Mitchell springs to mind on the fluted and diaphanous constellation yin of ‘Floating With An Intimate Stranger’. Almost in the spiritual waterfall vein, this feels like a tranquil spot to gather one’s thoughts; take a pause and then float on up into the astral.
Rolling in on a Sam Rivers’ vibe and tumble of drums, ‘Hold Me, Hold Me’ is more a case of spurned pleas of unrequited love declaration. And yet it’s followed by the cupped trumpet serenade of ‘Our Own Love Language’, which features dappled electric piano and Bobbi Humphrey style flute; taking romance into the spheres of Knoel Scott and early Miles Davis.
Tate is back to walk through a neighborhood photo album of foibles, connections, anecdotes and fate, on the centerpiece track, ‘One Of Us’. Amongst the characters (the guy too fucked-up on booze to make anything of an invitation to join The Temptations, to some guy who could punch like “Tyson”) and location spots on this bluesy saunter, Tate regales the story of someone he grew up with (attending the same “fucked-up schools” and church): “one of us”. And despite being on the receiving end of the “N” word from Mary Wells (I’m not sure if this is “the” Mary Wells, Motown songstress, fucked over by that label and many others during a career of false starts and travails), her idiosyncrasies and failures, is someone whose loss is to be marked and mourned: a missed part of the community. That final vocal statement of the album proves one of its most insightful and visceral.
Reed and his troupe pull off a real feat in drawing the listener into a rich Chicago imbued and eclectic soundtrack: that’s Chicago Jazz, Godspell, Blues and House merging with New Orleans, Afro, the spiritual, and consciousness styles of jazz. A deep emotive statement about societal ills and seclusion is made by a seriously class act. I look forward to the next cycle in this conceptualised body of work.
Raül Refree & Pedro Vian ‘Font De La Vera Pau’
(Modern Obscure Music) 20th October 2023

A most auspicious occasion, the Iberian pairing of avant-garde polymaths Raül Refree and Pedro Vian marks a rightly welcoming proposition for those of us in the experimental scene.
A familiar name to Monolith Cocktail readers over the years, Refree has gained plaudits for his transformation of the Flamenco tradition, with such doyens of the form as Rosalía and Rocío Márquez, and for his Fado reinvention partnership with the extraordinary and captivating Lina. In between those projects he’s also produced a number of albums for other artists, including Sonic Youth’s Lee Ranoldo. That relationship in particular has led to Refree’s wider role in the contemporary New York scene. As a composer he’s scored music for various films, some of this material released in the form of his Spanish sketchbook, La Otra Mited, followed up by the El Espacio Entre album, released at the beginning of the year: an album I rated highly at the time, describing it as a ‘Spanish Neel Murgai Ensemble and Hackedepiccotto trapped with Nacjo Mendez in an undefined, veiled timeline and atmosphere…’ It’s no surprise, considering the ambiguous blurring of boundaries between disciplines and styles that Refree is set to make his theatre director’s debut next year.
Finding it hard to believe, but Vian is a stranger to this site. Making his debut appearance in the MC, the Catalan producer, musician, composer and DJ also runs the deep thinkers’ experimental label that is facilitating this album of nine explorative suites. Vian has previously released a trio of solo albums and a collection of singles for his imprint, and last year, after instigating an ‘immersive’ live set at the Sonar Festival, released the Cascades collaboration with the Piedmont-born composer and producer Mana; setting him up nicely for this tactile, sometimes physical, stretch of piano, synth and organ – those being the main trio of instruments used on Font De La Vera Pau; the replenishing, fluctuating fountain waters of serialism, the atonal and the more melodic.
Simply labeled with no prompts or points of reference, each improvised sounding piece is a passage in itself and yet part of a whole performance, with both partners taking the familiar into curious, mysterious and often alien settings. And yet, when the droplets of piano notes, and moist resonance evoke the subterranean (a pool of water in the cavern), the sound of chirping birds and the sunlit woods opens up a window into the fresh air.
The low but soft rumbles of bass piano and metallophone like playing of that instrument’s inner workings conjures up hints of Alice Coltrane’s Turiya Sings, Terry Riley and Fluxus. Even the piano’s lid and frame is used in the process, tapped to create a rhythm of a kind. And at other times, it all sounds like a glass-strung vision of Chinese music, or something from South Korea: dal:um spring to mind. But then there’s obscured valves, whistles of a strange pitch, the hovering presence of spacecraft and evocations of slow ships moving through a vapour.
Surface noises; the sound of a running film projector, there’s more to decipher from what appears to be minimalistic, marginal changes and hidden instrumentation.
The fluctuating undercurrents, patterns, trickles of melodious notes float between echoes of Harold Budd, John Lane, Sylvain & Sakamoto, The Corrupting Sea, Vangelis, Roedelius and Susma Yokota on a hard to define collaboration. Not so much out of either foil’s comfort zone, this partnership does offer something challenging; a link back to their respective catalogues, and yet intuitively, texturally and tonally something a little different. It is another immersive experience in avant-garde, in the moment exploration.
Fantastic Twins ‘Two Is Not A Number’
(House Of Slessor) 13th October 2023

Competitive from the outset, birthed from a primordial cosmic womb, the Fantastic Twins in Julienne Dessagne’s otherworldly sci-fi fantasy go through hellish travails and separation before finding a final resolution. From the bawled birth of ‘I Was First’, the Berlin-based French producer, musician and vocalist explores the magic, duality and multiplicity of twins over an album of metallic, chrome and liquefied material sci-fi and otherworldliness: even the haunted and supernatural.
This is the dry-ice coldness of futurism merged with the Lynchian, strung out and drifting in a cerebral void. The title of this album, Two Is Not A Number, paraphrases a quote from the schizophrenic monkey in Lynch’s What Did Jack Do?, but is also suffused by the atmospheric esoteric wisps and vapours of that cult auteur’s go-to composer, Angelo Baldametti.
With a sizable apparatus of the electronic, synthesized and sequenced, Dessagne creates a refined concept, imbued with influences and a multimedia stimulus of ideas and sparks. In the PR spill, which more or less writes the review for itself, Sun Ra’s New Horizons is mentioned as resonating with Dessagne’s approach to music: “The sight of boundless space reaching ever outward as if in search of itself.” Another reference point is the Blight Of The Twin documentary, filmed in Vodun practicing Benin. As an added layer it forms another piece in the collage, taking in, as it does, the cultural mythology of this atavistic African religion and its ritual celebration of twins.
On the number counting, cyborg techno building ‘Land Of Pleasure Hi Fi’, one or both of the twins is cast adrift in that infinite space; repeating the ached “Feel alone in space” line as Basic Channel, The Pyrolator and Cabaret Voltaire coolly and intelligently pulse and reverberate away.
Albums from Carl Craig, Man Parrish, Fever Ray, Andy Stott and others, alongside the influence of Cosey Fanny Tutti, Chris Carter, Coil, Nina Simone and Pan Sonic can be added to the depth and range of this accumulative mood board and framework. And you can indeed pick up all of it, especially in the second data count of ‘Silver Moon Dial’, which is very Germanic, but a little Cosey too. Yet is also the most club-like of techno tracks too; a sort of Boiler Room session remix of Dessagne’s music in real time.
The vocals are wafted and manipulated in vapours, but sound at their most agitated and conniption-like a smoother Diamanda Galás apparition, and at other times when more icy, cleaned by the frosted synth waves, like Fever Ray, Ladytron and Zola Jesus.
The Fantastic Twins at the heart of this album are brought into a gauzy tubular paddled and padded melodic dream hallucination of a technological world; reconciled at last in the final Sylvain and Sakamoto-esque ‘All Of This Is Resolved’: the lasting statement of reassurance, connection and family unity being “I’ve come to take you home with me”.
It proves a fertile concept and doorway to the investigations of the “psyche” and its relationship to all manner of inquisitive explorations. A most striking sophisticated debut from an artist with depth and curiosity.
Lukid ‘Tilt’
(Glum)

It might well be a sizable break between Luke Blair’s last solo Lukid alias expanded work and this newest album (eleven years in all!), yet the North London artist has still been busy and prolific: as his CV will testify. In that period of time Luke has worked with Jackson Bailey under the Rezzett duo title; formed his own label, Glum; created another pseudonym, Refreshers, for his more dance focused productions; and of course notched up credits as a composer for projects with the BBC, ESPN, Palace Skateboards, the American Ballet Theatre and Arsenal Football club. And in between that there’s also been a smattering of releases on a number of other notable labels. I think we can all agree it’s a very full schedule.
Those of you waiting on a new Lukid album will not be disappointed. If more ‘refined’, composed and ‘simplistic’ than before, there’s still a real rhythm to Luke’s form of subtle but effective electronica. A ‘tilt’ perhaps of process, method and outcomes, this is a minimalistic iteration styled vision of dance music, submerged in lo fi veils, fuzz and gauze.
At the most purposely-produced low quality filtered end, ‘Confessions Of A Wimpy Kid’ sounds like an old cassette recording from an early 90s rave; compressed and under a sizzle of static, the tape so poor as to wind in and out of becoming inaudible, as if disappearing into water: More the memoary, mirage of a Techno track, played in the open air.
Despite the lo finess and more stripped-down approach, this is a danceable album: of a sort. There’s a bounce, spring to the rhythms that easily flow between deep House and Techno. But the percolated muffled beat and percussion of the opening track, ‘End Melody’, evokes a vague suggestion of Finis Africae and Jon Hassell (albeit it without Jon’s purred trumpeted wisps).
The subtle old school Techno tempered ‘Harringey Leisure’ has the air of a bobbed fourth world marimba or bamboo instrument; part African, part South American perhaps, but nestled in North London.
The environment seems to bleed into some tracks; distant, obscured chatter, utensils in a kitchen perhaps, extending out into the ‘Daisy Cutter’ rotor arppegiator, playful and Roedelius-like soundtrack garden lawn.
The almost foggy, gauzy ‘The Great Schlep’ has a more classical sound: more in the style of Reich or Glass, albeit with a Techno undulation. And the final ‘End Loop’ seems to hazily ebb in the clouds on a Boards Of Canada vibe. But for the majority of the time there’s a real subtle network of sophisticated generated beats that recall everyone from Richard H. Kirk to Tim Hecker, Black Dog and Autechre gently powering along trance-y and attenuated square waves. Tilt is an album of real quality; a cerebral distillation of Ambience, Techno, House and Electronic forms into some reification of time and moments caught before they disappear in smoke. This is a great returning album from the Lukid alias, one of the best in its field in 2023.
boycalledcrow ‘//MELODY_MAN’
(Waxing Crescent Records) 27th October 2023

The face behind the most recent incarnation of the Chester-based sound artist, Carl M Knott, earlier this year revealed a very unique vision of folk music with the Nightmare Folk album. Mysterious, near supernatural and alien in a manner, but hardly nightmarish: just different. Filtered, rotor-bladed, flipped and fluttered through various effects, and seen through many angles, the familiar sounds of a nylon-stringed guitar were transmogrified beyond recognition.
That previous album was in part, inspired by William Gibson’s dystopian sci-fi novel Virtual Light. And although there’s no direct mention of that alt-futuristic San Francisco plotted work here, the second boycalledcrow album of the year is musically, sonically and atmospherically similar. And that translates as both melodically spindled and tabbing guitar being concertinaed and chopped up through various effects across passages or score that are alien, esoteric and hallucinatory. This is a kind of pastoralism and primitivism folk music, channeled through a Fortean radio set, the obscured machinery of alien spacecraft, and the stray heavens.
Between darker passing phases of heavier set metallics (‘8lob’), a Lucrecia Dalt and Emptyset invocation (‘1414[]’), and ambient solar pleasantries (the eventual Boards Of Canada and Ariel Kalma softly radiant ‘SUNSun+’, and the changing course of the elephant machine noisy, turn crystalized Peter Schickele fluted, ‘FOREST/…\MOON’), there’s vague speed-shifted hints of dulcimer and zither; paddled, tub-hand thwacked rhythms; removed versions of techno electronics; shadowy forces; and strange folkloric dances from another dimension.
I’m picking up Laraaji, Xqui, Black Dog, Eno & Fripp and Panda Bear’s Portuguese-imbued Tomboy vibes. And yet, //MELODY_MAN, with its coded, distinct titles, is a quite idiosyncratic and unique vision: folk music from off-worlds and alternate histories…some not yet written.
Andrew Heath ‘Scapa Flow’
(Disco Gecko)

Always developing and exploring his self-coined ‘lowercase minimalism’ craft, the adroit Andrew Heath has produced a number of sublime and empirical albums for the Disco Gecko label over the years. His latest carries on the good work with a deep ambient reading of the Scapa Flow body of water that lies surrounded by the Orkney Islands of the Mainland, Graemsay, Burray, South Ronaldsay and Hoy.
A geopoetry; a psychogeography of that famous body of shallow waters, Heath’s gauzy drifts, serene washes, glassy piano notes, Myles Cochran and Joe Woodham-like post-rock refracted guitar bends and harpic zither spindles coalesce to score an effective mysterious soundtrack to the former naval base and battleship graveyard.
Closer to Norway than the capital of Scotland, it’s unsurprising that the Orkney Islands have a shared history with the Vikings; both on land and with Viking kings mooring their longboat fleets in the waters – as recorded in the famous sagas. The Vikings called it ‘Skalpaflós’ (‘bay of the long isthmus’); a name that through dialectal changes stuck. Fast-forward to the War Of The Three Kingdoms during Charles I’s ill-fated reign, and Scapa Flow (as it was now known) was the anchorage point of operations for the 1st Marques of Montrose’s preparations to raise a rebellion in Scotland, from his Herderinnan ship.
By the turn of the 1900s, in the face of German expansionism and a build up of their naval forces, the British looked towards protecting their North Sea borders. Although a number of harbours were considered, Scapa Flow would eventually be chosen for mooring the northern wing of British sea power. When the cataclysm of war finally did come, in 1914, German U-boats attacked it: unsuccessfully I might add. Although the Vanguard was a non-combatant casualty of that period, exploding and sinking beneath the waves; one of the harbor’s noted war graves. The Germans would be forced to surrender their fleet just four years later; through subterfuge they would famously scupper their ships rather than hand them over. Joining those shipwrecks, twenty odd years later, German submarines managed to penetrate Scape Flow and sink the anchored HMS Royal Oak (a WWI era battleship). Days later, the Luftwaffe would go on to damage HMS Iron Duke.
The Royal Navy pulled out of the site during the 1950s, whilst the petroleum industry moved in. Scapa Flow became the main hub for oil and gas operations in he Orkneys after that, hosting the Flotta Oil Terminal. Amongst the near haunted calls and apparitions from under the shallow waters, there’s traces or an essence of hidden industrial machinery, the pulling of chains and swept brushes of work.
Some titles helpfully set the scene, mood, and subject matter sparks of inspiration. They also point to Heath’s expansion of the main theme, outbound from the Orkney Islands to the autonomous (but considered part of the Kingdom Of Denmark) archipelago of the Faeroes, and generally out into the North Seas and beyond. For example, the opener is a reference to the powerful warm Western boundary current of the ‘North Atlantic Drift’.
Mostly capturing a shrouded, blanketed feel of the environment, its past livelihoods, distress and natural powers, this album mines the impressions left behind; from the murky depths where the light barely touches, to the prowling silent creep of submersibles.
Andrew plays a combination of instruments, merged with ambient and real sounds that falls somewhere between such notable artists as his old foil Roedelius, Eno, John Lane (i.e. A Journey Of Giraffes), Jon Tye, Ulrich Schnauss and Flexagon. Stirrings from beneath are conveyed with a subtle drama and sonic history on yet another exemplary album of minimalist music.
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.
Album Review: Dominic Valvona

Raf And O ‘The Space Between Nothing And Desire’
(Telephone Records) 31st May 2019
Imbued by both the musicality and spirit of David Bowie, Scott Walker, David Sylvian (both as a solo artist and with the fey romantics Japan), Kate Bush and in their most avant-garde mode, Bjork, the South London based duo of Raf (Raf Montelli) and O (Richard Smith) occupy the perimeters of alternative art-rock and experimental electronica as the true inheritors of those cerebral inspirations.
Previous albums by the unique duo have featured the most spellbinding, frayed accentuate of Bowie covers, with even Aladdin Sane’s oft pianist Mike Garson extolling their strung out exploration of ‘Lady Grinning Soul’, and a version of the Philly Soul period ‘Win’, quite exceptional in its purring beauty, that ranks amongst the best covers I’ve ever heard. Paying further tribune to, easily, the duo’s most revered musical deity, they lay a diaphanous ethereal accompanied wreath at the metaphorical graveside on the latest, and fourth, album opener ‘A Bow To Bowie’. With all the duo’s hymnal and venerable qualities in full bloom, Raf’s dream-realism coos and fluctuating accented velvety tones ripple through the Bowie cosmos; sending thanks across a strange space-y soundscape of satellite bleeps, mirror reversals and twilight vortex. If he is indeed somewhere up there in the void or ether, pricking our consciousness, I’m sure he’ll appreciate such sentiments and idol worship.
To add to the covers tally, Raf And O also weave a sophisticated dreamy elegy of the early but burgeoning Bowie plaint ‘The London Boys’; a wistful malady, already ghostly when it first emerged, resurrected by Bowie himself and slipped into later setlists, now elegantly clothed in a spell bounding, draped gauze by our duo.
Almost held in as high esteem, sharing the pantheon of idols, Kate Bush can be heard channeled through Raf’s extraordinary vocals: on the surface vulnerable and stark yet beneath lies a steely intensity that often whips, lashes and jolts. It’s unsurprising considering that Raf’s most recent side-project, the Kick Inside, is an acoustic tribute to Kate Bush that almost spookily capture’s the doyen’s phrasings and deft piano skills perfectly.
On their spiritual and philosophical quest to articulate the space between nothing and desire, Raf embodies that influence once more; crystallizing and reshaping to just an essence; part of a diverse vocal range that always manages to sound delicate but otherworldly, like an alien pirouette doll full of colourful giddy exuberance, yet a darker distress and tragedy lurks in the shadows.
Swept up in the Lutheran romantic maladies of a third idol, Scott Walker, Raf And O strip down and reconstruct the late lonesome maverick’s Jack Nitzsche-string conducted gravitas ‘Such A Small Love’. That stirring, solemn almost, ballad of existential yearning was originally part of the inaugural solo-launched songbook Scott. In this version those strings are replaced by, at first, a minimal revolving acoustic guitar and wash of sonorous bass. And instead of the reverential cooed baritone Raf’s hushed beatific voice is shadowed instead by a second slurred, slowed and deep, almost artificial, one: think a dying HAL.
Beautifully spinning a fine web of both delicate vulnerability and strength, at times even ominous, Raf And O seek out enchanting pleasures beneath the sea on ‘Underwater Blues’, crank up the gramophone and let the tanks trundle across a churning lamentable wasteland re-imagination of Bertolt Brecht’s famous unfinished WWI Downfall Of The Egoist Johann Fatzer on ‘With Fatzer’, and coo with a strange clipped vocal gate over a mellotron-like supernatural ballad soundtrack on ‘The Windmill’.
Sublime in execution, subtle but with a real depth and levity, TSBNAD is an astonishing piece of new romantic, avant-theater pop and electronica that dares to unlock the mind and fathom emotion. I’m not sure if they’ve found or articulated that space they seek, between nothing and desire, but the duo have certainly created a masterclass of pulchritude magnificence. Lurking leviathans, strange cosmic spells and trips into the unknown beckon on this, perhaps their most accomplished and best album yet; an example of tactile machinations and a most pure voice in synergy.
The influences might be old and well used, but Raf And O, as quasi-torchbearers, show the way forward. They deserve far more exposure and acclaim, and so here’s hoping that TSBNAD finally gains this brilliant duo their true worth.