A WORLD OF SONIC/MUSICAL DISCOVERIES REVIEWED BY DOMINIC VALVONA

PHOTO CREDIT: AYANA WILDGOOSE

Marshall Allen ‘New Dawn’
(Week-End Records) 14th February 2025

It’s timely and says a lot about the intentions and feel, the mood music, that the debut-led album by the centenary-celebrating alto saxophonist, flutist, oboist, piccolo player and Electric Wind Instrument synthesist Marshall Allen is set to be released on Valentine’s Day. Having led the late Saturn cultural ambassador Sun Ra’s Arkestra since 1995, and before that, been a creative foil to the celestial and Afro-jazz futurist progenitor since meeting in the late 1950s, Allen bathes in the sentimental romanticism of his former teacher’s vision with a love letter to the cosmos.

It’s staggering to believe that Allen has only just, in his hundredth year, been invited to record his inaugural bannered album. Sure, Allen’s name is synonymous with that of Sun Ra’s, but since serving his time in the army overseas in France, where the action was at, during the 1940s, and then taking up the alto sax and studying in Paris, he hung out with such notable talent as Art Simmons and James Moody, and been side man to such luminaries as Terry Adams and Paul Bley, featuring on untold recordings or in concert. And so, there’s a sizable catalogue to explore.

But this must be a record, perhaps the oldest musician to ever achieve this unbelievable milestone of releasing your first solo-headed LP when reaching such an age. I’m not even sure how he has the energy, nor more importantly the breath. This is itself an astounding achievement. Not to mention that with over seventy years of experience the sagacious freeform, improvising and adventurous player-artist is still pushing – if at a more sedated and leisurely pace – and learning; still experimenting, or at least switching things up.

And yet, near spritely at a hundred as he ushers in a “new dawn”, Allen emits universal love and celestial spiritualism, whilst also flexing and bristling with Earthlier Chicago smokestack skyline, Latin and Big Band jazz of another era.

He’s backed in this endeavour by a group of fellow Sun Ra acolytates and other worthy musicians of the idiom and beyond, many of which have served on the Arkestra, or at least orbited that space age swinging cosmology of the interplanetary and Egyptology. That roll call includes a name that many Monolith Cocktail readers may recognize, Knoel Scott, who invited Allen to appear on his 2023 album, Celestial, and featured on the site with a glowing review. Made for the Night Dreamer project-label, that debut Scott studio performance was a perfect example of the Sun Ra ethos and legacy. Reed specialist, bandleader and composer Scott initially auditioned for the Arkestra troupe back in 1979. He’s joined by fellow Ra members, at one time or other, Michael Ray and Cecil Brooks on trumpet, guitarist Bruce Edwards on guitar and George Gray on drums. Rounding out the ensemble is Ornette Coleman side man – principally the thumb slapping bassist in the Science Fiction legends Prime Time 80s project -, soloist and leader in his own right, Jamaaladeen Tacuma.

Outside that key unit, there’s a host of facilitators and well-wishers taking part, plus an appearance by Neneh Cherry, who proves to have found her voice as a jazz singer on the purposefully romantic and spiritual Benny Goodman-esque inter-war ballad style title-track. Cherry’s voice melodiously flows like a cross-between Anita O’ Day and Nancy Wilson and shows a real talent for this sort of courting sentiment. The guitar, which apes at one point the sound of a piano, harks back to the age of Django Reinhardt and Wes Montgomery, whilst the trumpet is a cornet-style that Miles and Don would have recognised back during their apprenticeships in the early 1950s. Edwards’ nimble guitar playing is exceptionally detailed but free, with bursts of incredible skill that evokes the blues, Latin-American, the Southern Pacific archipelagos and the lunar – those cosmic nibbled looms, bends and arcs that set a space age scene alongside beeped communicating satellites and sputniks, the stars and rings of Saturn.

The album opens with the introductory ‘Prologue’ short, which features a part Oriental/ part heavenly celestial harp in the style of Alice Coltrane, Ashby and Alina Bzhezhinska, but builds towards an accelerated oscillated take-off into astral realms. We are then introduced to the serenading warm soft anointed tones of ‘African Sunset’, which marries an essence, a reverberation of Afro-Latin influences to melodious touches of Stitt, Paul Desmond and Joe Pass and hot breeze drives along sunset-bathed coastlines evoked scores from US cinema in the 60s and early 70s. Almost comforting at times, Allen’s sax is gentle and pleasing: his sax almost hovers in places, whilst, what I think is a piccolo, mimics starry lunar dust caught in the slowly waking sun rays of a new age and day.

Are You Ready’ has the legacy of both Chicago and New York running through it, with suggestions of early Chess Records blues, Sun Ra’s big band origins, Bernstein, Cab Calloway and the burgeoning skyscraper sets of Dos Pasos put to music by Coleman, Albert Ayler and the Jazz Messengers. Great guitar licks and mimicking again as Edwards manages to deftly conjure up a sound that resembles the marimba. ‘Sonny’s Dance’ however, is more in the freeform or at least fusion style of bristled reeds, registered breathes through the mouthpiece and pipes ala Rivers and Braxton, and harder squalls and shorter squawks. Tacuma provides a moving and sliding, near funky bass, whilst drummer Gray conjures-up percussive and cymbal shimmered mirages.

Lalo Schifrin San Fran and Spanish Harlem is twinned with Africa on the soulful ‘Boma’, a track or version of which, I believe, appeared on the Allen “directed” Arkestra live album Babylon. Here it sounds like Hugh Masekela and Cymande sauntering to simmering percussion, hand drummed rhythms and soulful Afro-jazz vibes. And as a couplet of Sun Ra imbued material, the dawn awakened album closes on ‘Angels And Demons At Play’, a version of which, credited to Allen and double-bassist Ronnie Boykins from 1960, appears on the collected studio performances gathered together for 1965 LP of the same name, released under the Sun Ra and his Myth Science Arkestra. In this space, at this time, it has a certain dub-like twilight quality and lunar loop of blown tubes and funk grooves but remains in a subtle orbit around the spiritual and loving.  

At what should ordinarily be the very twilight of an artist’s career and trajectory, is just the first steps on Marshall Allen’s new dawn pathway. His debut fronted album is imbued by a rich legacy that opens its heart to kindness, tenderness and the serenaded but also offers passages and dances of more electrifying freeform expression that sound instantly fresh and prompted by his gifted ensemble of inter-generational players. Here’s to the next one hundred years of the Marshall Allen spirit.

Trupa Trupa ‘Mourners EP’
(Glitterbeat Records) 21st February 2025

The urgency, abrasive and energy of punk and post-punk is matched by Eastern European intelligentsia, dream-realism psychedelia and erudite literary influences once more as the Polish underground outfit of Trupa Trupa continue to build on their growing reputation as one of the continent’s leading bands of recent years.

Not to keep on repeating myself, after reviewing and sharing countless posts about the recently parred down trio, but the sound they produce, broadcast and fill the space with is an intense and cerebral psychodrama of dream revelation, the hypnotic and propelled, and a succinct expressive art and psychedelia locked-in conjuncture of history and wiry Gdańsk industrialism. This is all underpinned by the poetically lyrical, atmospherically charged events, legacy and activism both personal and collective that continues to shape their city and greater homeland. For their city famously faces out into the Baltic seas as a vital and important centre of trade and industry, whilst also being coveted militarily for its strategic positioning by various competing empires over the millennium. In a perpetual tug-of-war for dominion with its Prussian, then German neighbours, Gdańsk became a sort of geopolitical bargaining chip. The city and much of its surrounding atelier of villages were turned into the Free City state of Danzig after WWI, partly as a compromised result of the Versailles Treaty in 1919. Under Nazi German control two decades later, it acted as a transportation point to the death camps for the city’s Jewish community. But even in eventual defeat, Nazi Germany’s grip was only replaced by that of Soviet Russia, who extinguished or at least tried in every way to oppress a nationalistic identity  – of course, Imperial Russia, stretching back to Catherine the Great, had already invaded and occupied Poland on numerous occasions, or, when Poland was either united with or itself absorbed against its will into Commonwealths and empires, usually at odds with its neighbour.   

An integral inspiration, and hence why they find it difficult to gain traction in their own country, is the country’s links to the Holocaust with its numerous concentration camps, and its active role amongst a minority of the population to aid the Nazi regime. Fuelled in recent times by Polish nationalism of a more hostile kind, there has been a concerted effort to, literally, pave over that history. With Russia’s invasion of the Ukraine and Donald Tusk’s victory in recent elections that wave of right wing rhetoric has been headed off to a degree: Poland now looking more and more likely the next frontline and NATO bulwark against Putin’s destructive push westwards into the heart of Europe; in my opinion, the plan being to reinstate or rather sculpt from barbarity and death a new version of the Warsaw Pact, and to bring down another Iron Curtain.

Trupa Trupa’s music, filled with a psychogeorgaphy, travails and activism, goes further than just sonically encompassing the past and present. Band member and spokesman of a kind, and my first port-of-call and pen pal of a sort, Grzegorz Kwiatkowski is not only a musician but a published poet/writer, academic and local activist. Feeding into all these roles, Grzegorz has managed to successfully petition the authorities of his home city to mark Gdańsk’s former Jewish ghetto with a special memorial plaque. Housed as it was in the Old Red Mouse Granary on Granary Island in the city, this stain on the city’s reputation was eventually bombed by the Allies in 1945. The grandson of a concentration camp survivor himself, Grzegorz campaigned with others towards building a permanent link, reminder to a mostly “forgotten” part of the Polish city’s history.

He’s also helped to uncover half a million shoes left to decay near the infamous Stutthof concentration camp. In a secluded, marshy, and wooded area 34 km east of the city of Gdańsk in the territory of the German-annexed Free City of Danzig, this camp was originally used to imprison Polish leaders and the intelligentsia and was the first such camp constructed outside Germany itself: the last to be liberated by the allies. Roughly 65,000 poor souls died there, either through murder, starvation, epidemics, extreme labour conditions, brutal and forced evacuations, or lack of medical attention. A third of that number were Jews. Many were also deported from that heinous crime scene to other death camps (estimated to be 25,000). Grzegorz has fought to have it preserved and recognised officially as a site of memory, which at this point in geopolitical turmoil, with antisemitism at record levels not only in Europe but across the world, and the increasingly depressing divisive nature of politics and activism in the X/Twitter/tiktok sphere, is needed more than ever.

A man in-demand, Grzegorz has been invited by several institutions to lead workshops, complete a residency or lecture: from Harvard and Oxford to an artist’s residency spot at Yale. The latter is an incredible opportunity, and furthers his poetic and musician roles, tying them together with his chosen speciality in amplifying the voices and testimonies of Holocaust survivors. Combing research and archival accounts from the University’s famous Fortunoff Video Archive, Grzegorz will fashion new poems and bring in his foils from Trupa Trupa to create new art. The results will be exhibited both at Yale and in his home city.   

Away from the academic, although inseparable from the Trupa Trupa cause, 2025 marks a new and second chapter for the group after settling into a trio. Joining Grzegorz on joint-vocals, guitar and lyrics is drummer Tomasz Pawluczuk and co-vocalist and bassist Wojciech Juchniewicz.

Off the back of critically acclaimed and applauded albums for Sub Pop and Glitterbeat Records (the latter a much better home for the band) and with a burgeoning reputation live, Trupa Trupa have gained a lot of momentum and traction, championed (most importantly) by me and Iggy Pop. Festival appearances are growing alongside a trio of sessions now for 6Music.

It’s with this positive acceleration of fortunes in mind that the trio have managed to fall under the favour of the much in-demand British producer, composer and engineer Nick Launey – he of Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, Anna Calvi, BRMC, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and Arcade Fire fame, and before that, at the centre of the UK’s post-punk explosion in the late 70s and early 80s (you name it, he was there, whether it was PiL, Gang of Four, the Killing Joke or The Slits). You can hear a lot of those bands and reference points on this latest release, the Mourners EP. Balancing the taut with the loose, elegiac poignancy and remembrance with the grinded, the repressed with confrontation, and darkly lit gravitational pull of the chthonian, the underworld with the illusions of a dream world in which Syd Barret fronted The Pop Group, they pull off a post-punk-psych-poetic dare of the psychedelic and industrial.

Mourners in metaphorical and real terms, the EP kicks off with the lead single of 2024, ‘Sister Ray’. Borrowing both that title and a lo fi hardliner rock ‘n roll, bordering on post-punk, spirit from the Velvet Underground the band’s echoey repeated “A line of idols, to the horizon” is beefed-up with a broody dose of snarled trebly bass and a shot of growled throbbing sinewy knotted impetus. The stripped-down, determined, and raw trio channel The Killing Joke, The Fall, Elastica, Banshees, Archie Bronson Outfit and Wire (especially the band’s Colin Newman and his solo work) on this slab of surreal attitude.

The opening is followed by ‘Looking For’, which is a post-punk and baggy cross between Renegade Soundwave, XTC, the Banshees and Von Südenfed. Searching disaffection to a sharp cymbal invert, minimalist filtered megaphone lyrics and slinking broody groove, the trio seem to occupy a relaxed yet ruffled liminal border. ‘No More’ meanwhile, bounds in with barracking drums and a slow guzzled, trebly bassline and chimed guitar; the vocals between the gothic and narrated, a story of Orpheus, absence and the death of a close friend, taken far too young in a landscape so evocative it materializes from the speakers into your living space. Could be The Gun Club and Colin Newman (I’m thinking of his A-Z album especially) working up a vivid momentum of remembrance with Brian Reitzell. The words are prompted, or use, Grzegorz’s Decree and Combustion poems to mine the sorrow, the grind of mourning those dearly departed souls and the loss, the absence (once more) of common bonds and friendship in a cruel, unforgiving landscape.

Once more referencing the underworld, the Magazine, Fugazi, Gang of Four vortex growled, and punk-spiked ‘Backward Water’ features an accelerated Eastern European vision of Mark E Smith. There are dips into more hallucinated breaks as the action seems to counter the raucous attitude and energy with more spaced-out and far out lunar and cosmic drifts into the abyss.

The title-track switches things up with a change of style and pace. Sounding like an imaginative filtered and wildly shirked and called-out dream in which we are all pulled through the mirror into a world in which the Tom Tom Club, Carlos Alomar and Phoenix meet the Phantom Band, Archie Bronson Outfit and Syd Barrett, the trio translates American and French no wave funk and psych into an idiosyncratic dream-realism of laidback but prescient keening. 

Mourning songs and elegiac poignancy run through the grind, abrasive and changeable attitude of post-punk and punk, whilst opening-up to ever more evocative chapters of disturbing history in a poetic form as the band continue to embody the subjects, politics and geography they both inhabit and rile against. Below the surface illusions lies disturbing chapters with a gravitational pull towards the underworld and tragedy. And yet, a light of a kind can be found, and the barricades thrown up against the forces of disruption and violence. Trupa Trupa have an intelligence sadly lacking in most music these days, and an angle that offers something new and different – namely that Gdansk legacy, the wounded traumas of past and present wars and genocide, but also the political disturbances of recent times in the region. Post-punk/punk, call it what you will, has seldom offered anything so important and erudite, expressive or worthy, nor mined such an important history, which is why this trio are vital. This EP will only further cement that appeal as their star continues to rise.    

Various ‘Wagadu Grooves Vol. 2: The Hypnotic Sound Of Camera 1991 – 2014’
(Hot Mule) 14th February 2025

Continuing to dig into that back catalogue of, and to shed light on a rarely told story, the second compilation from the Paris label Hot Mule goes further in unfolding the backstory and “hypnotic” sounds of Gaye Mody Camara’s iconic Franco-African label; a story that encompasses, primarily, the West African Soninke diaspora and their legacy. The entrepreneur turned label honcho and umbrella for those artists both from the mainland French migrant community and from across swathes of what was the atavistic kingdom of the Soninke ethnic groups’ Wagadu, Camara, through various means and links, helped create a whole industry of music production in Paris during the 80s, 90s and the new millennium.

Gaye Mody Camara, who lends his name to the successful label he set up in the French capital during the later 70s, built up his own little business empires amongst the diaspora communities that left West Africa.

The story of his ascendance on the music scene is laid out in the liner notes of the first volume, and far too lengthy to outline here in full. But during the course of his stewardship Gaye would rub shoulders with various iconic figures (such as the internationally renowned Guinean musician and producer Bonkana Maïga and owner of the Syllart Records label and the main distributor of tapes at the time, Ibrahima Sylla) on the scene as he moved between originally buying releases from others to resale in his own chain of establishments to producing and setting up his own cassette tape production facilities.

In-house and a label in its own right, the Camara imprint broke new Soninke acts and artists from across a wide range of West African countries. And as you will hear, fanned a four-decade period of innovation and trends whilst still maintaining the essential essence and roots of tradition: Each and every one of the artists represented on this collection has a story to tell about how they were discovered or how they came to Gaye’s attention; from the migrant housing centre to hearsay, the word-of-mouth and the gentlemen who insisted that Gaye listen to his wife’s cassette tape recordings and take charge of her career.

Volume 2 in this saga showcase moves the timeline slightly, covering recordings made between 1991 and 2014, and homes in on the fusion cultures and music of the Wassoulou, a both historic and cultural region centred around the porous borders of Mali, the Ivory Coast and Guinea. Records of this vague allied society of villages set between the Niger and Sankarnni rivers are scant, but it was said to have been relatively decentralised and egalitarian. That was until much later, during the late 19th century, when the Malinka Muslim cleric and military strategist Samori Ture overthrow the previous state to create a Muslim Wassolou Empire.

But when referring to this region’s music, Wassoulou is said to be a root of the “sogoninkun” tradition of masquerade, a performance of fast tempo rhythms and singing accompanied by the “djembe” and large cylindrical dundun drums. This masked dance is centred around and named after the “the little antelope head”. It forms one of the various strands, the musical and traditional styles, the harvest dances of this compilation, which are then picked up and merged with the contemporary buzz of French housing developments to produce a hybrid. 

The Wassoulou style is also a popular form of music performed predominantly by women, backed by, traditionally, the fiddle-like “soku”, djembe, “kamalen n’goni” (a six-string harp of a kind, but in this case the prefix means “youth” or “harp of a new generation”), the metal tube percussive “karinyarn” and four-stringed harp “bolon”. Empathetic and passionate in a call-and-response style, the music deals with recurring themes of childbearing, fertility and polygamy. In recent times modernity has added MIDI instrumentation, synths and autotune effects.

I am in no way an expert, and have only a cursory grasp of this style, but I think examples on this collection include Doussou Bagayoko’s light and pretty pop MIDI pre-set groove ‘Taman’, Bande Koné ‘s highly autotuned wobbled and spindled Afro-reggae pop lilted bounce ‘Togo’, Aïchata Sidibé’s smoky sax and desert blues guitar styled noir pop ‘La Vie Est Si Belle’, and Adja Soumano’s marimba bobbled and Fatoumata Diawara-esque ‘Dja Dja’. Taken from various cassettes and CDs, spread throughout the label’s cannon, this little assembled quartet of divas and expressive singers features the talented scion of legendary Mali singer Nahawa Doumbia and guitarist Nrgou Bagayoko, Doussou, who first came to notice when taking part in singing talent contests at a young age, going on to debut with the Sinabar album and then 2014’s Dayele, from which I believe this track is taken. She famously mixes the French Antillean originated style of “zouk” with that of the Wassoulou region.

You can find examples of the Caribbean-flavoured zouk elsewhere on the collection. A fast tempo percussive driven rhythm accompanied by loud horns, made famous and said have been pioneered in the early 1980s by Kassav’, this fusion of West Indies and African influences seems to be woven, with a lilted thread, into the very ease and sway of the MIDI brass and whistly fluted sauntered Havana evoked ‘Faalé Mokoba’ track by Abdoulaye Brévété – cast somewhere, to these ears anyway, between Fania and the Buena Vista Social Club. But you can also hear something decidedly Latin American on Djelikeba Soumano’s ‘Tougharanke’, which seems to pitch the idea of both Fela Kuti and Gilberto Gil in a summery masquerade of both mating calls and more volatile expressive pains.

Elsewhere, there’s star turns from Lassana Tamoura, with the kora spun and buoyant dipped tuning drummed and MIDI effected ‘Lassana Boubou N’kana Ké Kiye’, and Souley Kanté, with his Afro-pop 80s, Fairlight CMI Afro-pop ditty ‘Bi Magni’.

But every track is a revelation, with a music that bumps, bobs and, most essentially, grooves along to the electronic sounds of the urban and modern. Another successful dive into the Camera catalogue by Hot Mule and friends, who move the spotlight this time around, introducing us to unfamiliar fusions, dances and voices from the Wassoulou diaspora. 

Helen Ganya ‘Share Your Care’
(Bella Union) 7th February 2025

Marking an embrace of her heritage after being previously put off by worries of fetishised Orientalism, the Scottish-Thai songwriter and artist Helen Ganya’s latest album is fully imbued by her Southeast Asian roots. Although rather tragically stressed and prompted by the death of her last remaining Thai grandparent, Ganya hurried to gather and record the family tree’s memories, conversations before absence and remembrance dissipated into the “ether”.

Share Your Care is however a record that wrestles dreamily, achingly and beautifully with a sense of both detachment and belonging; with the last physical trace to that heritage gone, recollection and recall is all that remains. In missing that connection, both empirically and emotionally, the Brighton-based artist feels adrift, caught between cultures. And so, she sets out on a musical journey in which family ties, rituals and cultural observations are married to an authentic and contemporary soundboard of Thai music and Western pop. It’s a refreshing take, because at least the artist’s ancestry is legit. And in making and producing this album alongside co-producer foil Rob Flynn, Ganya has brought in the trio of Thai musicians Artit Phonron, who plays the boat-shaped, cord suspended twenty-two wooden bars mallet struck ranat ek, the silky two-stringed bowed saw duang and hammered dulcimer-like khim, Chinnathip Poollap, who plays the traditional “pi” style Thai oboe, and Anglo-Thai artist John ‘Rittipo’ Moore, who performs on both the flute and saxophone.

Altogether, Viparet Piengsuwan, Omuma Singsiri, Chaweewan Dumnern and classical, traditional Thai music is melded into both an uplifting, colourful oasis and more poignant near plaintive hunger of new wave, art and synth pop. A radiant vision of sayonara-kissed blossoms, dreamily sailing on the South China Seas, and plaintive misty-eyed Mekong River-set balladry unmistakable oriental signatures are coupled with evocations of St. Vincent, Eerie Wanda, Weyes Blood and Dengue Fever. The lushly fanned and spindled pop reincarnation riffed ‘Fortune’ could be a meeting of Altered Images and Reflektor era Arcade Fire, with Ganya, vocally, channelling a more harmonic and melodious Yoko Ono – for some reason, this reminds me of Lennon’s Walls And Bridges LP too. The ‘Myna’ finale features the British-Nigerian producer and singer Tony Njoku standing in, as it were, for Ganya’s late grandfather on a sort of duet; his sympathetic soulful earthy baritone in this case reminding me a little of Murray Lightburn of The Dears. A good fit, Njoku has explored and grappled with similar themes of cultural disconnection, and conjures up the right, sensitive presence here; a reminder of “conversations left too late” and of absence. 

‘Morlam Plearn (Luk Khrueng Surprise)’ takes a different turn, evoking a range of both mystical Arabian and Southeast Asian landscapes and sounding like a fusion of Thonghaud Faited, The Cure and The Banshees.

Bringing to life a rich heritage, excerpts or brief tape-recorded passages of memory, of walks and time spent in Thailand and Singapore respectively, are slotted in-between the album’s songs and sonic evoked geographical compass points: everything from Buddhist temples to the street and traffic bustle of the city and fauna. And despite being labelled and outsider of a kind, even by her own family (the only Thai language song on the album, the psych-coloured playful ‘Barn Nork’ is dedicated to this identity struggle), her attachment to those roots is both lifting and magical; a neon signed cherished embrace that turns grief, moments of sorrow and feelings of dislocation into a musical photo album, scrap book of captured touching memories as pretty as they are emotionally charged.    

3 South & Banana ‘Tempérance’
(Some Other Planet/Symphonic Distribution) 14th February 2025

Receptors tuned to the fleeting, the poetic wistful observance of love, painting moods and sentiment with such peaceable dreaminess, Aurélien Bernard once more lightly bounces along to a laissez-faire backbeat of bouncy, relaxed snapped and little rolled drums, quasi-80s new wave/art-pop guitar, and swimmingly synths under the 3 South & Banana moniker. And now, on this latest album, Tempérance, you can add a sophisticated, snuggled and romantic saxophone to that musical makeup: a sax sound that’s reminiscent of the easy-going and 80s tuxedo donned music of such Japanese icons as Yukihiro Takahashi, and of the later indie-child, and highly influential, Shintaru Sakamoto.

Both of those inspirations can be heard throughout this Tarot card inspired album of eased poignancy, and dreampop psychedelic indie; that and an air of Nino Ferrer and Jaques Dutronic on the Franco-Japanese sparkle cruise along Akira Inoue’s freeway ‘Rear View Mirror’. And if you can imagine it, the flange-guitar and snozzled sax drifted, imaginatively described landscape of ‘Kinship’ sounds like a meeting between Gainsbourg and Barrett. The closer ‘Fugue’, which could either be a reference to the musical term or the loss of one’s identity, is an instrumental with more than a hint of Roedelius and Eno about it: a lovely – time signature wise – changeable, enchanted and clean synthesiser sound that takes turns to flow and bobble.  

‘Blueberry Night’ seems somehow innocent, describing a muse in impressionist and unworldly terms. But musically it could, with its theremin-like aria and touching acoustic feels and nice naivety could be Donovan fronting Pet Sounds era Beach Boys. The purely instrumental break or deliberate breather before continuing further along this journey, ‘Six Eight’ (which might be just a reference to the song’s time signature) could be a neo-pop Animal Collective re-imaging a similar instrumental passage from that same Beach Boys LP.     

Released on Valentines Day, this love album of playfulness (a date bonding with a romantical partner over ‘Mario Cart’) and more wistfully plaintive sightseeing ruminations of paradise (the Brazilian set ‘Lights of Minas Gerais’) uses the 14th (most usually) symbolic, divination guidance card from the Tarot deck to imbue a relaxed songbook of musing on the ideas of balance, reflection and connection.

The (again, usually) androgynous angel like figure of Tempérance pouring water from one cup, or water carrying implement, into the next, can be interpreted in many ways depending on who you seek out and ask. As one of the three “virtues” in the pack, most can agree that it signifies strength and justice. Famous British scholarly mystic and poet Arthur Edward Waite opined that it could also, after much research, represent economy, moderation, frugality, management and accommodation. And when reversed, multiple things to do with churches, religion, sects, the priesthood, but also disunion, unfortunate combinations and compelling interests.

The opening track, ‘The Fool The World’, which has musical echoes of Orange Juice, Peter Bjorn and John and Air, riffs lyrically on a reading, namechecking other iconic figures and omens from the Tarot deck. And yet, the symbolism is less hermetic and more whimsical: more a beautifully penned balance of sweet moments and call for some kind of guidance.

The easy-going nature of this album might well hide or disarm more despondent airs of melancholy and wantonness; the emotional turmoil smoothed over by the prettiness of the melodies and perfect subtle production, but there’s a sweet hint of wooing lovelorn hunger and disconsolation on this charming pop album. 3 South & Banana will grow on you with each listen, and soon become one of your favourite albums of the year.

Jupiter & Okwess ‘Ekoya’
(Airfono) 7th February 2025

In what turned out to be a blessing, the latest, and fourth, album from the electrifying Congolese band Jupiter & Okwess was conceived during one of the insufferable lockdowns of 2020. Stuck in Mexico during a tour of South and Central America, with time on their hands, the group and their lively instigator/bandleader Jean-Pierre ‘Jupiter’ Bakondji breathed in and embraced the local Latin American culture and sounds as they waited for the green light to return back to the Democratic Republic of Congo’s capital of Kinshasa; making a note to return when the time was right to record a polyglot album infused by the two continents. That time came a little later under the recording stewardship of Camilo Lara, the DJ, electronic artist, musical consultant and film/TV composer, who also created the Mexican Institute of Sound project, with the sessions spread between both Mexico City and Guadalajara. 

Marking a change in sound, or at least a tweak and embrace of sounds and a feel carried from Africa across the Atlantic to Brazil and Mexico, the group weave Afro-Latin and indigenous Zapotecan voices, rhythms and vibes with a mix of funky riffs, soul, Afro-rock and sounds indigenous to the south of Africa and their DRC homeland.

But before we go any further, a very brief history of the lifeforce behind that outfit, Jean-Pierre ‘Jupiter’ Bakondji and his most enduring creation, Okwess International (the later dropped after a time of course to a more slimmed down moniker). The son of a diplomat, grandson of a traditional healer, Bakondji’s musical apprenticeship started early. Between playing percussion at various ceremonies and funerals of the faith by his Grandmother, and absorbing the latest soul and funk and R&B sounds through a transiter radio, he soon learnt to fuse international influences with those of Congolese soukous (in short, an offshoot of rhumba but faster in tempo and with longer dance sequences and brighter intricate guitar parts), the street scenes of the capital and the traditional ethnic signatures of the equatorial forest Mongo people. The later would inspire and form the backbone for his first band proper, Der Neger; formed whilst relocating behind the Iron Curtained East Berlin with his family after his father secured an ambassador role in the divided city.

At a later point in the 80s, Bakondji returned to the mega city capital of Kinshasa before travelling around the wider interior of the country, soaking up and engaging with all the various music scenes. It didn’t take him long to form a new band, Bongofolk, which lasted through the mid to later 80s. However, a new decade led to the creation of his most famous and lasting group. And despite civil war and the loss of band members who’d decided it was preferable to escape the ensuing horrific violence to find sanctuary in Europe, the band managed to pick up again when the fighting died down.

Although well-meaning, and despite neither seeking validation nor approval, and being already popular in their own lands, the group was catapulted into the Western spotlight by Damon Albarn as part of his Africa Express project. This would lead to a tour spot with the revived Blur. Massive Attack picked up on the vibe, and ended up remixing the band, whilst fortune and exposure followed with performances across all the noted Western festivals.

Now in 2024 they’ve extended a hand to a number of female performers whilst falling for the sounds of South America. Although still a recognisable Congolese vibe and groove of contemporary street music scenes, soukous, polyrhythmic township guitar, soul and funk, the goodwill and reflective gazes now have an added flavour of Latin America. Acclaimed Brazilian singer Flavia Coelho does much to bring a melodious and lucid rich taste of her homeland to the funky Franco-Latin ‘Les Bons Comptes’, and the confrontational no-nonsense Mexican rapper Mare Advertencia Lirika brings fire to the equally funky Afro-American ‘Orgullo’. The former encapsulates that fusion, with Coelho’s own effortless eclectic style of samba, bossa, reggae, ragga and even jazz effortlessly evoking the hot-tempo dances of the continent, whilst the latter, gives voice to Lirika’s indigenous Zapotec origins; the rapper voicing uncomfortable truths about the disrespect and prejudice shown to her people and machismo attitudes of men towards women in a country that deals daily with the violence and killings of the female population.

From the DRC itself, the album opens with a near exotic crowing and bird-call-like vocal contribution from Soyi Nsele, who joins Bakondji on an infectious shuffled funky and moving, sliding baseline number that blasts Pedro Lima, Franco and Papa Wemba into the present.

Through different moods, and now adopting that South American influence, the group and their leader move between the humbling and reflective to the excitable, and from the soulfully cooed and wooing to leaping funkified expressions of joy and energy. And so, you are just as likely to pick up hints of Niles Rodgers guitar licks as you are the iconic Congolese star Vercky’s. To these ears though, tracks like the near twinkled and warm emotionally cherished ‘Na Bado’ sound like a fusion of Koffi Olomide and Afro-Latin lullaby, whilst ‘Eyabidile’ could be an amalgamation of Afro-Cuban, Soweto and Zimbabwe influences.

It all gels perfectly together, producing a lively, harmonious and funky dynamic fusion of cross-continental riches that opens and expands the Jupiter & Okwess signature. But that’s because much of the music embraced here from Central and South American music is itself either influenced or built on the African rhythms and sounds that were brought to those shores via the slave trade. You could say there was an instant click, an understanding. And yet of course, the indigenous influences and styles and the Colonial Latin influences are all at play too, creating a multi-layered modern approach to cultural exchanges. Nothing can work as tight as this latest serving from the premier Congolese outfit, who blend all those elements effortlessly as they both rip up the stage and find time to ruminate with touching and more heartfelt messages whilst dwelling or gazing out across the lands they inhabit. 

Sophia Djebel Rose ‘S​​​é​​​cheresse’
(Ramble Records/WV Sorcerer Productions/Oracle Records) 17th February 2025

Both vivid and more shrouded, ghostly invocations of time and place are conjured up by the Franco-Moroccan artist and activist Sophia Djebel Rose on the arid entitled S​​​é​​​cheresse – which translates as “drought”. Enacted atmospheres and sensory emotionally troubled and libertarian expressions from a free-spirited soul channel a well of recollections and despair to vapours, wisps and a deeper felt backing of tones, timbres and stirring tremulous instrumentation across nine-poetically prompted and more obvious themes mined from the North African and more mythological, fabled French landscapes of literature and conceptualism.

Uncoupled for a time now from the psychedelic-folk An Eagle In Your Mind duo, Sophia has chosen to the walk the solo pathway as an idiosyncratic artist marrying her North African roots to the avant-garde, folk, experimental and near gothic spheres of influence. And within that framework, you can add the influences of the French literary and poetic greats like Baudelaire, Eluard and Ferré, and the wordship of Leonard Cohen – especially the lyrics of ‘God is Alive, Magic is Afoot’, which was iconically covered by Buffy Sainte-Marie on her incredible, but until recent decades underrated, subtly synthesized game-changing Illuminations LP from 1969. That LP makes a mark here, with a similar use of synths and drones, and the sound of parallel visions, soundscapes. Only the topics, the history, concerns and magic are drawn from different sourced and experienced visitations, intimate projector screened home movies, and both Medieval and esoteric tragedy; the former playing out on one of the album’s few extended pieces, the lead single ‘Blanche Bicke’ or “white doe”.

Retrieving a 16th century French ballad based on an even older tale, in the style of Madame d’Aulnoy, Sophia retranslates the sorry tale and metaphor of omens, of shape-shifting females, of menstrual bloodletting into a contemporary statement on feminism and ecology. The original ballad told the tale of a woman who transforms into a white doe at night, only to be murdered by her own unsuspecting brother whilst out hunting in the evening and devoured at a banquet. Musically it sounds like a Levant version of The Doors and a spindled hermetic-style Velvet Underground and Stones fronted by an apparitional Paula Rae Gibson conjuring elemental tragedy and harmonium-like bellowed lament.

Moorish Spain and North Africa and the dark underground is woven into a mourning and mystical tapestry of literary orchards and symbolic literary referenced scenes, some from paintings and others from sorrowful conjured chthonian imaginings, on an album of ghosts, grief, hallucination, pleaded emotions, martyrdom and both beautifully sullen and more melodious tremulous torment.

From those archival passages of a more sedate nature, amongst a running spring and the almond trees, where childhood is relived, to the more tortured and tumultuous gothic atmospheres of pained experiences and protestation, there’s hints of Nature and Organization, Current 93, the Putan Club, Annie Anxiety, All About Eve and an avant-garde version of mystical Morocco in the shadow of minarets. Altogether, it makes for a very immersive experience; a layered album of mystery, uncertainty, the felt and troubled that channels real world misfortune and concerns and transforms them into a unique minimalist requiem trapped between the shadow world and horrors of reality. Highly recommended.  

     

Mirrored Daughters ‘S/T’
(Fike Recordings) 21st February 2025

Bards, pilgrims of a kind on a road well-traversed, the Mirrored Daughters communion of the Firestations’ guitarist and singer Mike Cranny, the Leaf Library’s drummer Lewis Young and Matt Ashton, and the singular talents Hannah Reeves (on cello) and Marlody (vocals) gently meditate and in near weary plaint weave a parchment defence against the encroachment of the city sprawl on the pastoral fey landscapes and woodlands of Epping Forest in Essex.

Lightly as they go to a folksy-indie and near country-style soundtrack of dusting and brushed shuffling drums, sympathetically beautiful cello, progressive rather than jazzy saxophone, percussive elements taken from the pastures and the imaginary farmed and toiled smallholdings of olde England an age ago, and both held and near concertinaed and pumped bellows, the ensemble evoke visions of a mystical arcadia whilst lamenting the ecological realities of a disappearing lifestyle and community lost to the so-called forces of technological and concrete-pouring progress.

A world of dreams, a psychogeography of ley lines and old ghosts is invoked in a filtered bathing of venerated and more cosmic light, as new life is breathed into iron age ruins, streams and hallowed mystical nocks and crannies. All the while it seems illusionary, like being enticed into the magic mirrors of the titles, as the stirrings often merge the rural and forest canopy of idyllic of the rural with something approaching the alien, the otherworldly: As the familiar jangles and chimed traces of livestock, of cattle and flocks are shepherded around the scenery, oscillation dial turns and pulsations from a more hermetic or spacey dimension conjure up images of Popol Vuh or Sproatly Smith being dropped surreptitiously into the Essex countryside.

Imbued by both the real landmarks of this county’s ancient woodland – such as the hill fort remains of Ambresbury, the legendary last stand of Boudica against the Romans in 61 AD, but unfortunately proven to be utter rot historically – and literary references – the “lanthorn” light as featured in George William McCarther Reynolds The Magic Lanthorn of the World, an archaic word for a particular large lantern favoured by the Greeks, used much later as a light for rural and more darkened towns and villages and placed, it is said and speculated, in church belfry’s –  the Mirrored Daughters spin a folklore of concern and wistfulness at on the edges of the London metropolis. Epping Forest amorphously spreads around the edges of the capital, a site of untold fables, tales, history and sanctuary. Across that loose, undefended and porous border peoples mix, old and new ways merge and cross. And so, it proves a fruitful inspiration.

Method wise, this inaugural album by the ensemble was put together remotely, with each participant applying their skill and musicianship imagination to the initial “quickly recorded acoustic guitar and bass pieces” dreamed up by Young. And yet, you’d have no idea, such is the beatified and harmoniously coalesced results.

Vocalist Marlody, who sounds at times like a cross between Dolly Collins, Sally Oldfield and Sharron Kraus, doesn’t just sing as woos and swoons folksy enchantment, forlorn and loss. Whilst familiar to those schooled in the English scenes of the 60s and 70s, Marlody can subtly change the pitch and tone effortlessly between mediated wanderings and deeper, lower near contralto register yearnings to sound idiosyncratic. Musically elsewhere, obvious references can be made to a haul of folk-rock, folk-indie inspirations, from Fairport to The Unthanks, Mellow Candle and The Incredible String Band. But on the pastoral bluesy and propheted ‘City Song’ there’s echoes of Fleetwood Mac and a vague American influence. The similarly acoustic guitar stroked, brushed and traced seasonal woo of despondent beauty ‘The New Design’ reminded me of Junkboy, and the plaintive metaphorical, allegorical doorways of ‘Unreturning Sun’ the Beta Band and Cocteau Twins. If you can imagine it, the delicate awakening, rebirth of an enriching landscape, giving nourishment and beauty to the world around, themed ‘Waiting At The Water’ could be a nostalgic halcyon meeting between Radiohead and the Fleet Foxes.

A diaphanous as much as lamenting wisp of veiled pastoral folk rich tapestry, Mirrored Daughters haven’t just evoked the landscape but blended right in with it, becoming part of the stories, the myth and dream realism of an iconic English woodland. The ensemble manages to inhabit many different ages of existence as they stage an intervention against urbanisation and the loss of wildling areas.

Many fans of the folk idiom, of the English school of folk-rock and bards and troubadours will feel very much at ease with this album, whilst presently surprised by the touches of the unearthly, of visitations and the near cosmic. A case of the familiar and yet, not so familiar. A good start to a new project.   

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.

PLAYLIST/TEAM EFFORT
A summary of the last month on the Monolith Cocktail site

Each month Dominic Valvona curates an eclectic musical journey from all the choice releases featured on the Monolith Cocktail, with records selected from reviews by Dominic, Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea and Andrew C. Kidd. Plus Matt Oliver’s essential hip-hop revue and a smattering of tracks we didn’t get the chance to write about for a lack of time and space.

_____TRACKLIST_____

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

Hi, my name is Dominic Valvona and I’m the Founder of the music/culture blog monolithcocktail.com For the last ten years I’ve featured and supported music, musicians and labels we love across genres from around the world that we think you’ll want to know about. No content on the site is paid for or sponsored and we only feature artists we have genuine respect for /love. If you enjoy our reviews (and we often write long, thoughtful ones), found a new artist you admire or if we have featured you or artists you represent and would like to buy us a coffee at https://ko-fi.com/monolithcocktail to say cheers for spreading the word, then that would be much appreciated.

DOMINIC VALVONA’S MONTHLY RECCOMEDNATIONS AND DISCOVERIES

(Photo credit: Ben Semisch, courtesy of Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts)

Jaimie Branch ‘Fly Or Die Fly Or Die Fly Or Die ((word war))’
(International Anthem) 25th August 2023

As an unwittingly last will and testament, the late experimental trumpeter Jaimie Branch’s final led album with her Fly Or Die ensemble is a beautiful collision of ideas and worldly fusions that pushes and pulls but never comes unstuck. In fact, despite the “world war” suffix backdrop this album of both hollered and more disarming protestation colourfully embraces the melodic, the groove and even the playful.

Whilst the “avant-garde” label sticks, this rambunctious, more ambitious, more demanding minor opus flows and swings to a polygenesis mix of spiritual, conscious, Afro, Latin and Ethio-jazz, the great American songbook, no wave, noise and the psychedelic. And yet, on the other hand, is almost punk in attitude; a sort of anything goes in the pursuit of the message: an embodiment of challenging the boundaries.

In light of her untimely death at the age of just thirty-nine last year (the release of this album tying in with the first anniversary of her passing), this incredible statement can be read as a sonic monument; a legacy project left behind as a blueprint for a whole movement. The lyrics to the actionist rumpus ‘Burning Grey’, delivered more like Ariel Up or Polystyrene, to a swinging protest march of Phil Cohran, the Pan Afrikan Peoples Arkestra and Cab Calloway, seem almost prophetic: “Wish I had the time” and the lasting sign-off, “Don’t forget to fight”.

The final album is one Branch would recognize; more or less musically complete, recorded as it was back in April of 2022 during an artist residency at the Bemis Center For Contemporary Art in Omaha, Nebraska. However, Branch’s sister Kate and a cast of collaborators rallied round to finish the artwork and production; the final article a proud achievement encouraged on by well-wishers and friends alike.

Alongside “Breezy” Branch, who not only masters the trumpet but pushes her voice like never before and picks up on the percussion and some keys, is her stalwart troupe of Lester St. Louis (cello, flute, keys, marimba and voice), Jason Ajemian (double bass, electric bass, marimba and voice), and Chad Taylor (bells, drums, mbira, timpani and, you guessed it, marimba). That quartet is expanded further by an array of guests, including a trio of notable Chicago-hailed innovators (the city, one of Branch’s biggest influences and home for a period), the arranger/composer/engineer/trombonist Nick Broste, musician/vocalist Akenya Seymour and fellow International Anthem label mate, the drummer Daniel Villarreal (he released his debut, Panama ’77 on the imprint last year). Rounding that worthy impressive list off is the American multi-instrumentalist, Cave/Exo Planet/Circuit des Yeux (the list goes on) instigator Rob Frye.   

Not so much a surprise, the album opens with a sort of stained glass bathed organ overture: part the afflatus, part pastoral hallowed ELP, part new age kosmische. A roll of bounded controlled thunder and gravitas is added to a crystal bellow and squeeze of radiant notes and the thinly pressured valves of Branch’s trumpet, which makes a brief appearance after the Ariel Kalma-like transcendence. ‘Aurora Rising’ lays down a short ceremonial communion with nature’s light before changing gear and spheres of influence. ‘Borealis Dancing’ now adds Mulatu Astake Ethio-jazz, a touch of Fela Kuti, Don Cherry and Yazz Ahmed to the ephemeral Northern Lights show as Branch toots long and softly at first before changing to higher pitch shrills. The rhythm, timing changes at the halfway mark towards a slinking groove of funk and Afro-jazz, the trumpet now cupped and echoing.

By the fourth track, ‘The Mountain’, there’s a complete sea change in mood, direction as Branch and her foils transform The Meat Puppets quickened country yin ‘Comin’ Down’. A dueting Branch and Ajemian bring it back home (so to speak) to the Ozarks and Appalachians via Paul Simon, Dylan, 60s West Coast troubadour traditions and a reimagined Sun Records. A brassy-sounded trumpet repeats the tone and springy country vocals as a gurgle of drawn-out cello plays a more somber rumination of hardy travail. To be honest, I was unaware of The Meat Puppets original, but this is a welcome meander in a different direction.

A full lineup joins in on the marimba heavy carnival turn mysterious swamp ether ‘Baba Louie’. Francis Bebey swerves to Satchmo New Orleans, whilst taking a dance around Masekela’s Soweto on a bustled bounce of joy and triumph, before succumbing to the voodoo psychedelic vapours; enticed by a cooing R&B flavoured misty Seymour. This bleeds into the bluegrass fiddled stirrings of ‘Bolinko Bass’, another Orleans evoked, almost regimental drummed bayou Mardi Gras of David Byrne, Funk Ark and Phil Ranelin. Almost mournful, ‘And Kuma Walks’ is more bluesy sounding, yet estranged at the same time; skulking amongst the spirits as someone saws through a fiddle as the trumpet aches in elegiac plaint.

Single, ‘Take Over The World’ is a hyped-up rattle and untethered excitement of no wave, punk jazz. Branch repeats a wild mantra and plays a burning bright thrill of trumpeted blasts whilst a controlled chaos spins all around her. Protest and partying converge for an electrifying, and later on, psychedelic bending stretched act of defiance.

The album ends by simmering down to a period of Afro-spiritual lament and reflection, on the sloganist berating ‘World War (Repirse)’. There’s serious bowed strings, trilled and forewarned trumpet, a sustained organ and windy, desolate enacted atmosphere on this weary actionist swan song: Branch urging caution at “false flags” and encouraging the fight.

For me Branch’s main instrument burns bright, and yet never seems to dominate, lead or overstay its welcome at any point on the album. Not for nothing is her own quote of “…meaning every note”, with not one rasp, trill, toot and cycle out of place; nothing is pushed but just felt and right at that moment. It feels to me, despite such a rich and diverse back catalogue, that Branch had so much more to give, her best still to come. And her gift was not just in crossing and mixing styles, influences, but also in pushing others to reach their own full potential as musicians. Fly Or Die Fly Or Die Fly Or Die ((word war)) is an accomplished album that channels the legacies of Chicago, New Orleans and New York to create an eclectic modern adventure in protest jazz.

Knoel Scott Ft. Marshall Allen ‘Celestial’
(Night Dreamers)

A leading light in the Sun Ra cosmology since auditioning for the Saturn jazz ambassador’s famous Arkestra ensemble in 1979, the baritone saxophonist, composer, vocalist and, when the occasion arises, dancer Knoel Scott amasses a lifetime of experience and musicianship on his debut solo-headed album. I say debut and solo, and without the extension of his previous KS Quintet named release, but the reeds specialist shares his Celestial project title with the Arkestra’s freeform progenitor, Marshall Allen.  

Allen’s relationship with Sun Ra, on an album positively radiant and lunar with his guardianship and influence, goes back much further than Knoels; a stalwart since the ensemble’s formation in the 1950s, leading the troupe, the baton passed down as it were, after the cosmic Afrofuturist titan’s death in 1993. Unbelievably still in fine fettle, despite almost celebrating his centenary (that’s next May by the way), the avant-garde, inter-dimensional alto saxophonist, flutist, oboe, piccolo and EWI (that’s Electronic Wood Instrument) synthesist can be heard lending the latter’s strange sci-fi arcs, bends and space dust to the album’s title-track. It’s unsurprising to find that ‘Celestial’ has all the hallmarks of Ra too, written as it was originally with strings for the Arkestra, but never recorded.

The Arkestra family is extensive with celestial poetry taken from the late Arnold “Arto” Jenkins, recited on this universal lullaby. Art stuck with the Arkestra for thirty-six years, right up until his death in 2012. You can hear him and his “space megaphone” delivered offerings to the galaxy on Secrets Of The Sun, way back in 1962. As a homage to that universal-spiritualist’s wanton guidance, Knoel trips the radiant light fantastic, giving praise to the wisdom of the ancients and star people on a seeker’s performance of UFO oscillations, serenaded sentiments and dreamy translucence. It sounds like Cab Calloway and 50s wings being beamed up into Sun Ra’s off-world paradise.

The influence continues with the presence of the Paris scene stalwart and multifaceted (from Dancehall to Makossa, and of course jazz) drummer Chris Henderson, who’s experiences lend a both studied and more untethered freeform feel that moves between swing, big band, Latin, bop and the experimental.

This however is an inter-generational album, with fresher faces of the London scene, the very much in-demand UK keyboardist and versatile pianist Charlie Stacey and Verona-bred electric bassist and oft Arkestra and Knoel Quartet foil, Mikele Montolli. Hailed, quite rightly, as an advanced player, able to adapt to a wealth of styles, Stacey’s touch can evoke the best of those sublime 50s Blue Note recordings, touches of Oscar Peterson and Allen collaborator Terry Adams. The piano both flows with a tinkled busy lightness or strikes the heightened and jarring near-dissonance of freeform jazz; a descending off-tune part here, Cuban show time and bluesy or smoky lounge parts elsewhere: Unstated, yet moving along the action, or taking a soft stroll down the scales.

It’s another musician, part of the luminary brethren, that inspires the Afro-Cuban via Saturn’s rings ‘Makanda’. Paying tribute to a late mentor, Dr. Ken “Makanda” McIntyre, Knoel cooks up a Latin flavoured cool breeze of Havana, Harold Land vibes and R&B grooves: all undulated by sci-fi warbles and flits. A pivotal figure and influence for Knoel, “Makanda” (a name bestowed upon the reeds maestro and composer when playing in Africa, it translates from the Ndekele language as “many skins”, and in the Shona as “many heads”) founded the first ever African American music program in the States in 1971, and had worked with such notable talent as Eric Dolphy, Cecil Taylor and Nat Adderlay. Knoel and friends up the funk and balmy rhythms on this soulful homage to the late great man.

On his part, Knoel’s saxophone squawks, strains, honks and squeaks, and yet also serenades: even soothes. Wilder higher registered beak pecks turn into a near chaos, a cacophony, on the improvisation piece ‘Conversation With The Cosmos’. Coltrane, Sam Rivers and Anthony Braxton wail in zero gravity, whilst those wild rasps feel almost smoldering and lounge-like on the final mid paced twelve-bar slinky ‘Blu Blues’.

What a stellar set from the Arkestra acolyte, the Marshall and inner circle; and well done to the Night Dreamers for coaxing out this cosmic marvel. The process if you’re new to this label project, is to record the performances direct to tape before cutting on a Sally lathe the final vinyl artifact. In mono, recorded in an analogue studio, the sound is alive, inviting and, well, “celestial”. The experience speaks, communicates, and pushes the perimeters on every note, as a culmination of African American jazz styles are attuned to the stars.

Andrew Hung ‘Deliverance’
(Lex Records) 11th August 2023

With pain, suffering and anguish former Fuck Buttons trick noise maker Andrew Hung finds a cathartic release on his third solo outing, Deliverance. But as that title suggest, the anxieties and sense of isolation and belonging now seem to have slowly dissipated as Hung feels he’s been delivered from the morose and dark fog of depression; although there’s plenty of broody, moody despair and darkened thoughts to wade through before catching the light of hope.

Hope, being set free, the constantly developing artist and producer does seem to have found his creative peace; likening this album to “the end of the chrysalis stage, like breaking free from a previous life.” Not so much reincarnation as a new incarnation, pushed on during lockdowns to mine the deep well of his soul, to face regrets and failings, but also find what’s missing.

An act of self-realization perhaps, Hung conducts a therapeutic session both unflinching and revealing. If the lyrics of ‘Don’t Believe It Now’ are anything to go by, thoughts and mental anguish at one point were truly dark. However, that filtered vapour counters the resigned with a reviving build up. And on the opening tunneled, Sister Bliss and Underworld like, moody turn freedom spin, ‘Ocean Mouth’, Hung faces a list of disappointing traits head on: Almost like taking a breath as the Robert Smith-like palpitations and rave-y Bloc Party velocity of the production avoids suffocation and gravitates towards the techno cathedral of light. Submerged at every turn with recurring references to water, Hung swims and navigates the torrents and tides to find a number of revelations about himself: conquering fear.   

The previous solo album, Devastations (a choice album no less in my end of year lists for 2021) looked to the cosmos with a propulsion of electronic, kosmische, motorik, Madchester and synth pop influences, and featured Hung the self-taught singer evoking a mix of Robert Smith (some very cure-esque touches musically too), Karl Hyde, Mark Hollis and The Cry’s Kim Berly. More distressed, gasping and wrenching Hung takes some of those same influences forward on Deliverance, whilst also seeming to whip up a touch of Minny Pops, New Order, Soft Cell and John Foxx on the struggles of isolation and need to belong themed neo-romantic ‘Find Out’.

In another honest cycle of shedding shame and casting away the pain in favour of finding that alluded love “saturation”, ‘Never Be The Same’ builds from synthesized drum pad elements of the 80s German new wave, Factory Records and industrial synth-pop into another unshackled escape towards the light of revelation. I’d throw in Martin Dupont, Tears For Fears and Yazoo to that both pumped and vapourous mix.

Floundering no more, Hung looks to have found his place, his voice too. Deliverance finds him channeling his lamentable, pained, and unsure emotions into something positive and bright with another candid confessional solo album of rave-y synth-pop indie brilliance.     

Various ‘Intended Consequences’
(Apranik Records)

With a hellish multitude of flashpoints and distractions across the globe keeping the continuing fight for women’s liberation in Iran off the news rolls, it has become apparent that the Iranians themselves have been left to carry on the struggle with little support. In an ongoing war between the forces of the authoritarian religious state and a younger generation demanding an end to the erosions of there civil liberties and freedoms, the crisis in the country entered a dark bloody chapter last year with the murder in custody of Masha Zhina Amini by the “morality police”. 

After a rightful campaign of protest and action at such a heinous crime, a brutal crackdown by the state led to mass arrests and even executions (mostly of male supporters, activists, and usually on trumped up charges). Further restrictions were invoked. And just as horrifying, in the last year, and right up to the last few months, there has been a nationwide spate of deliberate poisonings of schoolgirls (one of the groups who mobilized against the authorities in the wake of Amini’s cruel death) on mass. Defiant still, even in the face of such oppression, the brave women of Iran have strengthened their resolve only further.

In the face of such attacks, clampdowns, the music scene has responded with a strong message of resistance and solidarity. Despite everything, cities like the capital of Tehran have a strong music scene of contemporary artists, composers, DJs and performers working across all mediums, including art (which is probably why so much of the music is also so visceral, descriptive and evocative of imagery). One such collaborative force of advocates, AIDA and Nesa Azadikhah, co-founded the Apranik Records label, a platform for female empowerment. Following this year’s earlier Women Life Freedom compilation, a second spotlight volume delves further into not only the Tehran scene but picks out choice tracks from those female Iranians working outside the country, in such epicenters as London (AZADI.mp3) and Berlin (Ava Irandoost).

Sonic wise it covers everything from d’n’b, trance, deep house and techno to sound art experimentation. The range of moods is just as diverse in that respect, from restlessness to the reflective and chaotic.

Contributions from both Azadikhah (the hand drum rattled d’n’b breaks and spacy, airy trance ‘Perpetual’) and AIDA (the submerged melodious and dreamy techno ‘Ode To Expectations’, which features the final love-predicament film sample, “You know that I love you, I really do. But I have to look after myself too.”) can be found alongside a burgeoning talent pool. The already mentioned London-based producer and singer AZADI.mp3 opens this collection with a filtered female chorus of collective mantra protest, set to a sort of R&B, 2-step and bass throbbed production, on ‘Empty Platform’– just one of many tracks that uses the sounds of a more traditional Iran, especially the daf drum, alongside modern and futuristic warped effects. The sound artist and composer Rojin Sharafi likewise features the rattled rhythms of hand drums and some hidden spindled instrument – like running a stick across railings – on her entrancing kinetic techno ritual of “trauma”, ‘dbkk’.

Abji_hypersun allows the sounds of the environment to seep into her slow-building track of field recordings, collage and breaks (two-stroke scooters buzz by as distant female conversations reverberate on the street). Part jungle breaks pirate radio, part Matthew David, Jon The Dentist and LTJ Bukem, ‘Resist The God Trick’ evokes a tunneled vision of haunted reminisces and resistance in the shadows.

Emsho’s ‘Down Time’ is a rotor-bladed electro mix of Basic Channel and The Chemical Brothers, and Aida Shirazi’s mysterious wind of dark meta ‘R.E.V.O.L.U.T.I.O.N’ spells out the rage with a shadowy, near daemonic scripture of wrath and revenge – a gothic synth sinister avenging angel promises that the women of Iran will neither “forget” nor “forgive” their oppressors, torturers and murderers. Farzané seems to evoke the alien, the sci-fi on her experimental, sometimes disturbing dial twisting and crackled ‘Quori’ transmission, and the Berlin-based DJ, video artist and music producer Ava Irandoost draws on Laraaji-like dulcimer tones for her dream mirrored kosmische evocation ‘CINEREOUS’. The Tehran composer, pianist and bassist Ava Rasti draws a close to the compilation with a classical-tinged, harmonic ringed, saddened piano-lingering performance, entitled ‘Eight Night’ – an atmospheric troubled trauma is encapsulated with the deftest of touches.

It might be my own nostalgic penchant for 90s electronic music (my formative years of course), but this series (if we can call it that) could be an Iranian version of the Trance Europe Express compilations brought out during that decade; a treasure trove of discoveries and whole scenes that opened up a world of previously unknown music to many of us not living in the epicenters of North America, the UK and Europe and beyond. Hopefully this latest platform of innovative artists from across the arts will draw the attention it deserves; the message hardly virtuous, in your face, but sophisticated: the very act of female Iranians making a name for themselves despite censorship and bans a sign of empowerment and resistance in itself. Few groups deserve our support (which in the West has been sadly absent) more, but don’t just purchase for the cause but for the musical strives being awakened and produced under tyrannical oppression, and because this is a solid collection of great electronic music.

Nagat ‘Eyoun El Alb’
(WEWANTSOUNDS) 25th August 2023

Renowned as one of the greatest, most exceptional voices to have emerged from the golden 40s/50s/60s epoch of Egyptian and the greater Arabian songstresses and divas, Nagat El Seghirah was a rightly revered performer, who’s career spanned more than half a century.

Even in an age rich with accomplished, influential and groundbreaking singers Nagat held her own against such icons as Oum Kalthoum, Fairuz, Warda and perhaps the most celebrated of the lot, the anointed “voice of Egypt” Umm Kulthum. The latter, hailed the “star of the east”, was an influence on the early starter during the burgeoning years of imitation, when Nagat was a child, barely in her teens. Her affectionate appellation, “El Seghirah” or “El Sagheera”, can be translated as “the small”, “the young”, and marks the singer, performer and film star’s young apprenticeship; from entertaining the notable guests that gathered at her father’s (the famed calligrapher Mohamad Hosny) home at the age of five onwards, to her first role in cinema at the age of eight, starring in the 1947 film Hadiya. Hosny was known to push his extensive brood of children from two marriages, sometimes excessively, into various creative careers: Nagat’s half-sister was the famous actress Soad Hosny, her older brother, Ezz Eddin Hosni, a notable composer who helped her own development and natural talent.

During those initial years of development Nagat would interpret songs by such legendary figures as Mohamed Abdel Wahab, Baligh Hamdy and Kamal Al Taweel, but would find both her true and distinctive voice when interpreting the work of the Syrian diplomat-poet Nizar Qabbani. She gained adulation and fans after performing the esteemed poet’s tragic ‘Irja Ilyya’ (“Return To Me”), which is based on his sister who committed suicide rather than enter into an arranged marriage. Plaintive, stark, it rightly struck a chord with the public at the time, with its feminist lyrics and spotlight on forced marriages. It would be become a torchlight for freedom and injustice, with Nagat adding her own improvised original lines during the 1970s.   

Born in 1938 but already gaining plaudits by the end of the next decade, into the next, Nagat released her first actual song ‘Why Don’t You Allow Me To Love You’ in 1955; the year she would also be married, for the first time, to a friend of one of her brothers: still only sixteen. It’s no surprise, although in no way a forced marriage, that she could, with a commanding voice, perform Qabbani’s tragedy. That marriage would only last however until the turn of the 1960s; when Nagat went on to marry the Egyptian film director Houssam El-din Mustafa in 1967 (a marriage that lasted an even shorter time). Nagat would remain, in fact seeing as she is still alive, in her eighties, remains unmarried. In recent years, since her singing retirement over twenty years ago, living a semi-reclusive life in Cairo but in poor health, there’s been some contact, even projects floated. Only last year she was featured on the official soundtrack for the streaming service series Moon Knight.

From concert to soundstage with starring roles in the films Black Candles, Beach Of Fun, My Dear Daughter and Dried Tears, Nagat gradually moved from shorter songs to ever more lengthy performances, some of which would last an hour. As time went on the songstress actress would find it harder to find those inspired works to perform. Retiring from film in 1976, Nagat would still persevere with music. And by the time she reached her early forties, in the 1980s, would release this four-track showcase of matured talented performances entitled Eyoun El Alb.

Originally brought out exclusively on cassette (like so much of the Egyptian music market), forty odd years later the reissue vinyl specialists of impeccable tastes (releasing a myriad of jazz titles and nuggets from across the Arabian world and Japan), WEWANTSOUNDS in conjunction with the Arabia and North African crate-digger Disco Abrabesquo (the moniker of the Egyptian, Amsterdam-residing DJ, Moataz Rageb), have pressed it onto vinyl for the first time. If you are a regular reader, or in fact a regular WWS’s follower and buyer, then you will be aware of that label’s previous collaboration with DA, last year’s (although they’ve also released a smattering of Egyptian focused records too over the years) Sharayet El Disco compilation. One notable inclusion on that eye-opening compilation (reviewed by me in May’s Perusal column) was from the legendary Al Massrieen. A much sought after recording outfit, the group’s Hany Shenouda produced the scenic, romantic ‘Ana Bashaa El Bahr’ (or “I Adore The Sea”) finale on this Nagat album. Adoration and yearned dreaminess for a place and time are evoked to Shenouda’s trebly near-psych tremolo guitar and light hand drum patters.  Alongside the more lilting and fluted ‘Bahlam Meeak’ (“I Dream With You”), this is one of those examples of Nagat’s shortened form of storytelling romance and heartache. ‘Bahlam Meeak’ is also an example of Nagat’s more lightened, honeyed approach to what is a tinkled serenaded, wafted vision of blossom scented sand dune balladry. It evokes the music of Bacharach and the cool soundtracks of early 60s French and Italian new wave cinema.

Taking up the entirety of Side One, there’s the long form titular performance of heightened drama and searing swirled strings oboe and scuffled trinkets. Over eighteen-minutes of longed romantic gestures, the action pauses repeatedly between undefined sections; allowing the auditorium audience to show its appreciation, encouragement, which they do constantly, even when the music starts back up again. On a Matinee scale, this mini-story, unveiling of lovelorn exultations, but vulnerability and occasional lament, moves like a desert caravan across an Egyptian set, or, sumptuously glides into a Persian court. A fantastic display of sagacious craft, Nagat’s voice never has to rise or push to convey a class piece of theatre and effective yearn of love.

Only half that duration, but still a long track, ‘Fakru’ (“Do You Remember”) is a rumination; the vibrating pools of memoary reflected in the dreamy wobbled effects that permeate this fluctuating lead vocal delivery and prompting chorus of female voices. Classical Cairo, there’s a chink and tinkle of percussion and shimmy-shaking, belly dancing rhythm that luxuriantly accompanies a yearning poetic and sometimes coquettish Nagat on her reminisces. As I said already, this album represents various sides of the enchanting, soulful and also distinctive icon’s vocal presence and range. The long and short: the unmistakable sound of Egypt, but also those influences from abroad too, are melded together on a classy piece of cinematic and poetic mastery. Make room again on those creaking shelving units for another vinyl addition to the collection.         

 

CHELA ‘Diagonal Drift’
(Echodelick – USA, We Here & Now – CA, Ramble Records – Aus, Worst Bassist Records – EU)

In communion with his long-time friend and collaborative foil in the University Challenged trio (alongside Oli Heffernan) Kohhei Matsuda, Ajay Saggar extends his blessed travels along the astral highways and byways with a new venture, CHELA.

Absorbed, imbued and inspired by Indian spiritualism, history and travails, its psychogeography and trauma, both partners in the new direction come together under the Sanskrit word for “disciple”; taken from the verb and root “to serve”, the “Chela” is similar in concept to a student, but implies a more loyal closeness with their teacher. In Hinduism this bond is considered sacred: An apt moniker for such inter-dimensional, afflatus dreamers and acolytes of raga, the new age, psychedlia and kosmische music. 

Divine styler Saggar (who is also a member of King Champion Sounds, solos under the Bhajan Bhoy alias, and collaborates with Merinde Verbeck in the Deutsche Ashram duo) and Japanese noisenik Matsuda (most notably a member of the Bo Ningen quartet) spent much of 2022 putting this inaugural baptism together. And so with dedication to their art, the duo have sonically and melodically taken time, given depth to their new mysterious broadcast; that is, broadcasts from the ether, supernatural, uncertain, Fortean and cosmic. Different yet not entirely detached from previous incarnations, fans of both artists will pick up on past signatures, sounds and conceptions. However, they’ve managed to realign those same signatures, tuning into the mystical but often with trepidation and a sense that the noisier elements could consume all in their path.

Think Julius Eastman meets Fennesz we’re told; a good succinct summary. But I’d add a hell of a lot more, including Taylor Deupree and a cosmology of cosmic couriers. The opening ripple in the fabric of time, ‘Flyspray’, is an expanded peregrination of Beautifully tinkled Florian Fricke-like piano hauntings, Ariel Kalma and Syrinx new ageism and various Sky Records pioneers (Asmus Tietchens and Riechman spring to mind), all caught up in analogue wispy wind cacophony of divine rays, the esoteric and Eastern drones. Trippy warped reversals and folds, generator and processors nearly overwhelm the vague evocations of Tony Conrad, Schultz and a springy, but also spoke splayed banjo (which in itself seems to vaguely evoke the Balkans, Greece and strangely, India) on the reverberating ‘Appalachjo’.

In what could be a suggestion of “peace” and “harmony”, or reference to the Japanese town, ‘Heiwa’ is a hummed raga-like hymnal. A stand-up barrel-type piano plonks away from the ether, whilst ambient waves and traces of Dyzan invite heavenly reflection. ‘Ticker’ is a very different proposition. An intense chemistry of signals, beeps, quickened arrpegiator, moody signs of Faust and the sound of the Heart Of Darness are melted with Günter Schickert guitar, heavy acid Gong and various calculations.  

‘Tanker’ feels like the most obvious attempt to score the sound of the title’s overbearing object; sounding like a alien freighter, both foreboding and mysterious. A scrawl and flapped ripple of radar and sonar bites into a resonating field of drones and sound waves, fog and guitar.  

The final, spiritual and otherworldly track, ‘Worship’, features ghostly Indian voices and visitations from an event, service or chapter in time and history. A melodious piano chimes away in wisps of fanned cosmic mystique and cyclonic radio effects, whilst shades of FSOL, King Creosote (From Scotland With Love period) and Boards Of Canada linger. The video is more illuminating, a sepia film of bedside “worship”, healing for a leader, martyr, and a travelling funeral cortege that takes in rows of witnesses moved to touch, or just be in the essence of a distinguished teacher.

Once again with the cosmic and afflatus, Saggar and Matsuda expand their sound further. Diagonal Drift’s transcendental projection is just that, despite the building intensity and uncertainty, the broadcast noise of krautrock and kosmische styled aerial bends and radio tunings. CHELA is another welcome addition to the two artists oeuvre: one more step on the astral journey of mind-expanding experimentation.