THE MONTHLY DIGEST INCLUDES A CLUTCH OF ACCUMULATED NEW MUSIC REVIEWS; THE SOCIAL INTER-GENERATIONAL/ECLECTIC AND ANNIVERSARY ALBUMS CELEBRATING PLAYLIST; AND CHOICE PIECES FROM THE ARCHIVES.

Cover Stars: Blanco Teta
___THE NEW___
(all reviews are in alphabetical order)
bedd ‘Monday 10:55 EP’
27th June 2025

Once more on the site after quite a break – my fault not theirs -, the Oxford project led by singer-songwriter, composer and producer Jamie Hyatt is back with a bridging style EP ahead of a debut album, released in the Autumn.
Sometimes I excel myself with a descriptive summary of a sound, and with bedd’s ‘Auto Harp’ single I described their sound as “an understated breath of fresh air from cosmic suburbia”. This beauty of a single was followed at a later date, during Covid isolation, by a premiere of ‘You Have Nice Things’, which seems to have now continued with its small-town landmarked sense of isolation and sad detachment on the EP’s title-track, the very specifically timed capture of nocturnal plaint and heartache ‘Monday 10:55’. The focus song features fellow Oxford musician, the vocalist and guitarist Emma Hunter (who’s own brand of music, created with drumming foil Tom Bruce, merges the worlds of David Lynch with a penchant for Flamenco, Catholic litany and culture and the 1950s), with extra subtle emotional pull, adding harmony and a touch of the soaring to this drifted indie-blues track. It reminded me in places of Ride and the Engineers.
Before we go any further, we must mention the rest of the band, the ranks of which feature ‘a range of celebrated local Oxford musical talents’, including bass player Darren Fellerdale and guitarist Neil Durbridge, both bandmates from Hyatt’s previous project The Family Machine. Completing the lineup is the guitarist Tom Sharp, electronic musician and producer Tim Midlen (aka The Mancles of Acid) and drummer Sam Spacsman. The EP itself was performed, recorded and produced by Hyatt himself with the band at Glasshouse studios in rural Oxfordshire and mixed and mastered by Robert Stevenson at Sweetzerland Studios.
That’s the credits out of the way. The title-track is flanked at both sides by two very differently paced and performed songs; the opening ‘Messed Your Head’, has more oomph with its mix of Blur’s sliding bass on ‘Beetlebum’ and The Breeders bass line on the equally famous ‘Cannonball’, Elastica-style “woah” and messed up knock-back passionate off-the-chest power-Britpop-indie-rock (I’d go as far as saying an influence of The Pixies), whilst the closer, ‘D Minor’, is a more echo-y reverberated stripped down and atmospheric piece of disconsolate love strains and emotional discourse that has an air of Jeff Buckley about it.
It is not meant as a criticism in anyway, but bedd sent me right back to the 90s with this EP mix of shoegaze, Britpop, indie and grunge-rock. But they add a certain quality of the soundtrack, something that’s a little bit grander. It will be interesting to see what the album is like later this year. But on the strength of this trio of songs, it looks to be a winner.
Blanco Teta ‘La Debacle las Divas’
(Bongo Joe) 4th July 2025
Delivering their 2025 manifesto of the riled and near bestial, the hellraising and electrifying Argentine quartet of Blanco Teta throw off the metaphorical chains of tech disparity and servitude with a mix of the devilish and hardcore.
In the face of AI, ‘crypto-serfdom’, ‘techno-feudalism’, the constantly ever-changing, updated feeds of social media, the pressures of instant gratification and attention seeking validation, and that everything these days only makes an impact culturally if it was prompted or began on tiktok, the group show both their venerability and strengths. They face the uncertainties and anxious dread of our times with velocity as they pound and churn, twist and channel aspects of the post-hardcore sound, punk, riot grrrl-style power-ups, death metal (almost), grunge, rock and 2000s indie-rave-punk-rock.
Marking a return to Bongo Joe, the La Debacle las Divas (‘the debacles of the divas’) album sees the quartet of Josefina Barreix (on vocals), Violeta García (cello), Carlos Quebrada (electric bass) and Carola Zelaschi (drums) change things up, recording for the very first time live in the studio direct to tape. Without edits and overdubs, the album has a real new dynamic; the whole record more or less without a pause, thrashing and driving through an eleven-song set, as if it were a live stage performance. There are various let-ups, if that’s the word, and mood changes, a change in tempo and ferocity too. But this remains a chthonian and cosmic swirl of the grounded-up, menacing, prowled, alarmed, dragged and charged.
The atmosphere of this album is one in which the bonus of youth is wasted, broken upon the pressurised novelties of being young and in the moment, but ready to be disregarded and tossed away into the internet wilderness. They band themselves declare that they feel caught between a stasis of being both in their prime yet already growing too old to be feted. And whilst they were indeed feted, their lives haven’t exactly change for the better: mentally or financially, still burdened to surviving on the vaporous fumes of goodwill, popularity and a presence on the internet. Channelling all that into this diva-rage, borrowing that title and turning its connotations on its head, Blanco Teta (which I think translates as ‘white tit’?) launch a mix of disgruntled and disenchanted maelstroms and more near plaintive reproach and forlorn.
They open with the sound of generator fuzz and scuzz, in a heavy drive of Courtney Love, the Raw Brigade, Bikini Kill and L7. Heavy trebly bass, descending spirals, pounded beaten drums rule the day, but the action and influences fluctuate; on the excitable protestation ‘Subiduki’, I’m hearing Anthrax, Faith No More and Death From above 1979, on raged thud rocked sassy and maniacal decried ‘Joven Promesa’ CSS sharing the stage with Shonen Knife, and on the hardcore, morse code guitar wired space-rocking-psych ‘Perdida’ the Klaxons and The Fall. They also reminded me in part of a Latin version of the Slavic quartet Lucidvox; only with far more guttural daemonic vocals.
Tough and ready for the rumble, yet disconsolate and bereft of answers, Blanco Teta serve up a vortex and heavy meta(l) outcry and alarm at the state of society and the music industry. That debacle of divas has produced one of the year’s most promising, fierce and unique performances.
Dave Clarkson ‘Was Life Sweeter?’
(Cavendish House) 9th May 2025
After briefly crossing paths on Bluesky earlier this month, I’m aware that I’ve entered upon the electronic sound worlds, expressions and atmospheres of Dave Clarkson at a very late point in a career that spans decades of experiment/exploration; at a point when the soloist and collaborating composer is taking stock, questioning that old generational trope of nostalgia for a time that probably never really ever existed. It’s easy to see why of course: seeking comfort, reassurance and perhaps some form of guidance from a period when you were young, still hopeful, at your creative best and fancy free – well for many of us anyway. But no one can really believe at this point in time, with all the social ills, conflict, and tyranny that the future is looking anything but dystopian. Clarkson however draws a line in the sands of wishful thinking time, opting to create a confectionary and candy concepted reification of a childhood. In Clarkson’s own words, this latest album questions ‘the whole hauntological culture of escaping to the past and whether this is a denial of a future left to live.’
Previous works have explored ‘British faded fairgrounds, coastal quicksands, shorelines, caves and forests’, and been created, at least partially, in the field so to speak. Was Life Sweeter? uses a similar device and methodology, with recordings taken in various confectionery sites around the country. And so, you will hear amongst the engineered electronics the complete journey from Space Dust powder, fizzy drinks, ice cream vans and sweet shops indulgence to the inevitable visit to the dentist’s surgery, completed with the sounds of their terrifying cavity filling drills. From what I remember in the 80s, it really didn’t pay to have a sweet tooth; the barbarity of those early visits, the fillings in my milk teeth, still plaguing me with fear to this day.
It all starts in a dreamy-like state, with translucent bulb-like notes suspended and tinkling above the swept waveforms of phaser air, on the mirage of innocence ‘Milk Teeth’. The scoped-up actions, the anticipated weighing of your favourite sweets, is transformed into another piece of skying kosmische fantasy made nearly mystical on ‘Ye Olde Sweet Shop’, whilst space dust explodes on the tongue on the next track: childhood happiness at this candy firework made near dreamlike and then sci-fi. There’s the easily identified fizz of pop later on, and the recordings of voices, the captured playfulness and buzz of devouring such sweet connections to childhood.
The innocuous treat though of a ‘Three Blind Mice’ calling ice-cream van is made cosmic, with the nursery rhyme siren carried on into the infinities of inner space, kept locked in nostalgic memory. And there’s always some sign of the more haunted, more foreboding aspects of that nostalgia trip; recalling those 80s soundtracks from supernatural TV series, the harsh life’s lessons and warnings made terrifyingly clear in TV ads aimed at kids during that decade and something that’s hard to pin down but seems off-kilter and near alien. ‘Sugar Rush (Speed of Life)’ is a speed’s freak sweetened running man, part electro and part German electronica of a certain vintage. An alarm bell rings, and the listener is sprinted off the starting blocks on a rush of candy adrenalin.
Clarkson successfully balances a hallucinatory world of childhood sweetness made more ominous and haunting with abstract quandaries of past lives, miss-reflection and the need to push on through and fully adopt the age in which someone is present. I’d recommend this album for those with an ear for the sounds of the Radiophonic Workshop, Toshimaru Nakamura, The Advisory Circle, Belbury Poly, Jez Butler, Lukid and Harmonia – which should sound like an inviting proposition.
Itchy-O ‘SÖM SÂPTÂLAHN’
Released back in May 2025
Beating out a ritualistic circus of chthonian and alchemist theatre around hell’s gateway, the expanded Denver collective of performers, artists, musicians and conjurers known as Itchy-O once more record their invocations for posterity. Although celebrated for the staging of various themed performances set against a Mad Max meets Mexican Day of the Dead like decorated back drop of iconic and wasteland ruined Denver locations (from the Mission Ballroom to New Tech Machinery buildings, and Covid initiated drive-ins), the circle has only released a smattering of packages to the public since inception.
Described as a ‘Voyage into Exocosm’, their latest behemoth of an album opens both atmospherically disturbing and interdimensional, cosmic instructive portals to the hermetic and spiritual. From – I believe – the Norwegian for ‘seam’ and ‘seven grains’, SÖM SÂPTÂLAHN envelopes mournful bowed Eastern lamented classical strings and the vibrations, frequencies of a specially commissioned apparatus of bronze percussion (to be accurate, 600 pounds of reclaimed bronze remodelled into gongs and metallophones by the group’s collaborative partners, the Colorado School of Mines) with the industrial, otherworldly visitations, magik and necromancy.
Day spa new age outer body experiences tied to mystical and darker forces, transcendental instruction, exercise converge on the astral highway to voodoo and demonology. In practice, that sounds like the Phoenix rising forth, or rather the Great Marquis of Hell, known as ‘Phenex’, to scuzz scales and fried and sawing electric guitar, ringing and resonating gongs and a lattice work of metallophones. It can also sound like an aural rebalance of spectral harmony: As found on the longer form instructive ‘Ptothing/Soktū ōbu’, which soothes the listener with an interactive navigator realignment of the speakers for a cerebral session of breathing exercises and cosmic escape. That greeting and guidance turns into a cinematic-scale, sonorous and daunting projection into dark sci-fi, before release and a unification of mind and body. This is a musical and sonic world in which you will find references to demons, the Latinized groans of chthonian dread, and tuning fork like signals to unnamed leviathans beyond the fourth dimension.
Ambiguously lurking and congregating under the canopy of mystical jungles, or, hanging from the vines; retreating to cult 50s and 60s scored Javanese islands; and conducting ritual replenishment in the shadows of a temple complex, Itchy-O simultaneously draw upon aspects of gamelan, the fairytale, industrial music, the classical, the filmic, folkloric, new age and the avant-garde to pit machine against the physical in an act of exploratory performance, instruction and esoteric mantra.
JLZ ‘Tumba’ (Swine Records) 7th June 2025
Various ‘TUROŇ/AHUIZOTL’ (Swine Records w/ Fayuca Retumba) 17th June 2025
Arriving in the last week or so, a doublet of releases from the collective webmagazine turn newly founded label imprint Swine Records. First up from this venture is the Brazilian producer JLZ’s chthonian and magical esoteric vision of the Brazilian Baile Funk genre known as ‘Romano’. Baile is itself a kind of transformation of hip-hop developed and born in Rio de Janeiro, that takes its influences from a range of sources including Miami bass and freestyle whilst also connecting back to the country’s various indigenous musical styles. The ‘Latin Grammy nominee’ emerges from a thick bass vibrating and high pitch signal arcing canopy of the supernatural and tribal. The EP’s Portuguese title translates into “tomb”, and it’s easy to see why. With a darker electronica filter, some zaps, shuttering and amorphous bass beats and collected vocal samples from hidden sources there’s a suitably mysteriously, hermetic and sometimes Catholic atmosphere of mysticism and multi-layered nocturnal city forebode. Those voices are both evocative of the Afro-Brazilian influence and from some entrancing, lamented corner of the Levant and Middle East. If I had to think of anyone as a reference, then perhaps Cities Aviv, or Escupemetralla.
The second release is a joint venture between the Slovakian imprint and the Mexican label Fayuca Retumba – a project by the Mexican producer Yourte Bugarac. After appearing in an interview for Swine Daily (the web mag outlet of the Swine hub), an idea was formed to commission a number of both Slovak and Mexican artists to create sonic and musical pieces inspired by the “Turoň”, a mythological creature, principally, from Slovak (particularly around Čičmany village), and the Aztec mythological creature “Ahuizotl”. The labels have helpfully summarised, and contextualized each of those inspired prompts for us:
Turoň also called turôň, or chriapa, is a carnival mask that was known not only in Slovakia, but also in Poland and the Czech Republic. Its name is derived from the tur, an animal similar to an ox, which became extinct in Slovakia in the 17th century, and in the magical ideas of our ancestors, symbolized strength and fertility.
Ahuizotl was a water monster in Aztec mythology. It was described as a dog with monkey-like limbs, pointed ears, and a third hand at the end of its long tail. It lured its victims by imitating the cries of a child along the banks of rivers, then caught them with its third hand. The ancient Mexicans considered it an emissary of Tlaloc, the rain god who resided in the depths of rivers. Its function was to catch people by the hand on their tails, drown them, and send them to the god’s house as his servants. In Nahuatl, a(tl) means “water” and huiz(tli) means “thorn”. This name was taken by the warlike and fierce Aztec emperor Ahuítzotl, the eighth tlatoani of Tenochtitlan, who ruled from 1486 to 1502.
Etymology folklore, magic and the ominous converge to form various takes on both of these myths; starting with Lénok electronic pad whipped demonic buzzing hardcore hallucination of swirling vortex orchestra samples, thrashing tentacle slithers and frazzled broken-up beats morphing ‘NeBoyIM’. Dead Janitor’s ‘Ooze’ is like a percussive alien farmyard scene of cow bells and crunchy, crushed d ‘n’ b, whilst Schop1nhauer transmogrifies a creepy hinge worn gate into some industrial haunted factory bit-crush and pylon static frying paranormal unease, on ‘Ungulatheion’. Con Secuencias ‘Stinking Corpse’ opens with cop car sirens before sloping in a laidback style into Miami bass culture repurposed with a flavour of Latin America. The second half of this compilation has a signature Central and South America vibe to its unorthodox techno, trance, EDM and hip-hop sources. El Ángel Exterminador’s ‘Hierba Retorcida’ has just that, a removed rhythmic interpretation of indigenous percussion, a guiro that sounds like a pack of cards being flicked through at high speed, and a sort of cumbia-like vibe that saunters along. The laser shooting 80s VHS cult sounding ‘IZANAMI’ by OFYERF sounds more like Der Plan meets Damon Wild & Tim Taylor.
Altogether a most promising start and introduction to two underground labels doing intriguing, interesting and encouragingly strange, porous boundary experimentation.
Charles Kynard ‘Woga’
(WEWANTSOUNDS Reissue of Mainstream Records original release) 27th June 2025
After recent cult reissues and specials from Egypt and Japan vinyl specialists WEWANTSOUNDS return stateside and to L.A.’s Mainstream Records label, reissuing on wax for the first time the jazz-funk icon Charles Kynard’s much coveted and influential Woga LP.
Regular readers and followers of my review columns over the years may remember the label’s last stopover at Bob Shad’s imprint, with the Mainstream Funk comp a number of years back. One of the brightest progenitors of that roster, the Hammond and electric organist and St. Louis native – before relocating to L.A. after a brief period spent in Kansas – Kynard, memorably fused everything from R&B, the blues, soul and funk to his jazz and gospel background. A staple of the breaks, acid-jazz and hip-hop communities, its highly probable that you’ve heard samples of his music; especially from his key albums for Mainstream in the early 70s, and of course this revitalized LP – remastered with a bonus track and accompanying new notes and essay.
A little background is needed, and one that doesn’t paraphrase those liner notes – of which I learnt a lot. Kynard’s upbringing was imbued by the confluence of sounds washed down the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers. Born in the 1930s in that former French founded outlier, a staging post for Lewis and Clarke’s famous expeditions West, Kynard absorbed the cross- junction of church music, gospel, jazz, blues, soul and R&B at an early age. The virtuoso uprooted, journeying to Kansas before landing for more or less good in L.A. in the early 1960s having made a name for himself. He quickly started recording for the producer Richard Bock and drummer Roy Harte’s Pacific Jazz label – their signature at the time before expanding the remit, “cool West Coast jazz”. It was during this point that Kynard started working with such luminaries as Howard Roberts, Sonny Stitt and Buddy Collette. His actual debut LP came out in the pivotal year of 1963. But he then switched labels, moving over to Prestige Records; a time in which some of his most influential work was recorded: the jazz-fusion specials Reelin’ With The Feelin’ (1969), Afro-Disiac (’70) and Wa-Tu-Wa-Zui (’71).
Such was his status and rep that when once more changing labels, this time to Mainstream on the cusp of a new decade, his next trio of LPs would attract an enviable cast of talented and iconic players. For the debut offering, arriving in a tumult of social and conscious Black power, of activism and protest, the Swahili borrowed word for “fear” (or “timidity”), Woga, featured an ensemble of notable session players; all of whom, more or less, were in their own right also recording stars and bandleaders, but also sidemen and women to some of the most influential names in Black music. Amongst the ranks for that LP were bass player Chuck Rainey, possibly the most credited bassist in recording history (a 1000 album credits its believed); Tennessee bred blues guitarist Arthur Adams; the Canadian-born arranger, conductor, ensemble leader, trombonist David Roberts; Motor City native and Motown horns player George Bohanon, who at one time was a member of Chico Hamilton’s Quartet, and worked with such luminaries as Alice Coltrane, Miles Davis and Michel Legrand (on the Dingo Soundtrack); the lesser known trumpeter and flugelhorn player James Kartchner; Minnesota trumpeter and flugelhorn player Jerome Rusch, who played with such talented icons as Gerald Wilson, Ray Charles and Willie Bobo; and the exceptional Detroit drummer Paul Humphrey, who worked with the Four Tops, Wes Montgomery, Coltrane, Mingus, Marvin Gaye, Solomon Burke and Quincy Jones (the list goes on).
For the bonus track, a cover the actionist soul-funk group The Undisputed Truth’s ‘Smiling Faces Sometimes’, that same set up features a couple of noted replacements, with the infinitely famous and acclaimed Wrecking Crew member Carol Kaye on customary felt and anchored bass, and the electric guitarist Charles Mallory providing heavy soul licks, and Larry McGuire taking a turn on blazed and searing, truth-will-out, trumpet. Incidentally, on an album that split between originals and covers, Rainey played on the original version of Aretha Franklin’s ‘Rock Steady’ the previous year – featured as it was on the soul diva’s inspirational Young, Gifted and Black LP. A new arrangement means at least a variation on Rainey’s Fender tones; especially as Kynard seems to murmur or hum the original tune to slipped bristling hi-hats, breaks style drums and a movie soundtrack horn section.
It is at this point in my review that I feel I should at least outline the backstory of Mainstream Records: the label that facilitated this LP. Set up by Bob Shand as a “broad church”, the label grew out of what was already a 30-year spanning career when it took shape in the 1960s; a showcase for prestigious artists, session players and Blue Note luminaries chancing their arm at the bandleader or solo spotlight. A musical journeyman himself, Shad (whittled down from Abraham Shadrinsky) began his producer’s apprenticeship at the iconic Savoy label, then moved to National Records before taking up an A&R role at Mercury, where he launched his own, first, label EmArcy. It was during this time that Shad would produce records for the venerated, celebrated jazz singer deity Sarah Vaughan, the Clifford Brown & Max Roach Quintet, Dinah Washington and The Big Brother Holding Company.
As a testament to his craft, Vaughan would go on to record eight albums on Shad’s label, the next chapter, leap in a career that traversed five decades of jazz, soul, blues, R&B, rock, psych and of course funk. Mainstream’s duality mixed reissues (from such iconic gods of the jazz form as Dizzy Gillespie) with new recordings; with its golden era arguably, the five-year epoch chronicled in the compilation that WEWANTSOUNDS put out a number of years ago.
Spotting the potential in Kynard’s jazz-fusions and ability to transpose signatures and sounds from a wellspring of Black music styles, Shand invited the keys specialist to record a trio of LPs, with Woga being the first.
Despite the warm tones, the rays, shimmers, buzzes of church organ and of reverence gospel, this LP was forged in a time of the conscious Black movements, of Black power, Vietnam outrage, social division and revolutionary zeal. And so, most of the covers chosen for reinvention and homage were from a cadre of strong, troubled and lamented voices appealing for change. I already mentioned Aretha, but there’s also Donny Hathaway’s iconic soul anthem ‘Little Ghetto Boy’, the glorious Staple Singers’ ‘Name The Missing Word’ and the beautifully mellifluous and aching folk protestation ‘The First Time Ever (I Saw Your Face)’, written originally by Ewan MacColl for folk royalty Peggy Seeger, and made famous, given a soulfully blessed but plaintively charged direction by the late Roberta Flack. The former of that trio adds a touch of Nautilus wavy Bob James to a Southern Spiritual church organ sound of the velvety punched and near scored, whilst the latter transposes a familiar melody to sound almost like an Otis Redding ballad recorded on Stax; the organ simmering like a mirage in the sweltering Southern heat; the horns, in sympathy channelling both R&B and the blues. As a worshipping fan of all things Staples, I was pleased to see Kynard having a go at the smoother gospel-soul-R&B smoky and oozing with cool Southern attitude ‘Name The Missing Word’, first released just the previous year. Kynard retains mood, the flavour, but the bass seems a little more menacing, nearly dark, and the timing changes to one that can only be described as Latin-esque.
Kynard showcases his own talents, not just for rearranging, but for composing new jam-like numbers. The trio of ‘Hot Sauce’, ‘Lime Twig’ and ‘Slop Jar’ shows a range of styles, of timings and moods; the first, fusing soft jazz influences with ghetto soul, R&B, blazing lifted horns from Hollywood, and saddling up to funk with some whammy-like whacker guitar; the second, takes the action down a notch or two, to find a mellower tempo that’s more Herb Albert and Bacharach; the dreaminess and melody reminding me in part of Stevie Wonder. The last of those originals is a cool mix of Steve Cropper meets Hendrix and the J.B.’s. There’s some muscle and grunt to this scorched Hammond number. Occasionally the horns section recalls something of Lalo Schifrin, and at other times, of Gil Evans and his orchestra. A real showcase of influences brought together for an impressive smooth and more punchy fusion.
A treat for samplers and acid-jazz, boogaloo fusion fans alike, the range of this revived LP is wide but tethered as always to Kynard’s impressive and warm radiant, sustained and scorching spiritual, jazzy and soul-gospel keys. His wingmen, and one woman, proving an elite force of super experienced players from every field of Black music going. Anyone with even a passing interest in jazz-fusion and soul should grab a copy: I’ve a feeling this will quickly sell out.
___/The Social Playlist Vol. 98___
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 and those albums celebrating anniversaries each month.
Running for nearly 12 years now, Volume 98 is the latest eclectic and generational spanning playlist come radio show from me – the perfect radio show in fact: devoid of chatter, interruptions and inane self-promotion.
June has been a cruel month, taking two titans of popular music away from us. Losing Sly Stone is one thing, but Brian Wilson in just the matter of two days seems just plain spiteful. Wilson’s travails have been well documented, the effects of various mental and physical conditions, of traumas, taking their toil for decades. But in losing the one woman who did more than most to bring Brian back into the land of the living, to revive his fortunes, Melinda Ledbetter’s death at the beginning of 2024 must have had an unspeakable impact. Although carrying on for another 18 months, his health deteriorated even further, with news that Brian had dementia; and on the death of Melinda, the family filed a petition to place him under conservatorship to help manage his personal and medical needs. But despite all this, there had been an announcement of a new album, Brian’s country songbook, in 2026 – a revival of the 1970 Cows in the Pasture recordings that were shelved when Brian lost interest. This may now see the light of day as tribute. You will find a piece on the late genius from my Brain Wilson files in the Archives section below this.
Suffering just as many travails, addictions and setbacks, grand funk evangelist Sly Stone had spent his later years in court battling for royalty payments against his former manager – a case he won, but still lost out on -, and living a subsistence lifestyle from a camper van. Although riding high as the true innovator of funk-soul-R&B-psychedelic-rock-pop fusion in the 60s and laying down the rhythms and feel and energy for disco and much or less everything that followed, Sly’s battles with drugs – leading to jail time for absconding a drug-driving arrest – hampered his recording career in the 70s and beyond. And yet, the Pentecostal baptised superstar pretty much invented a whole explosion of unifying voices and sounds that merged the counterculture and pop worlds. He’d find a revolutionary voice alright, but one that still had faith in the spirit of compassion, and one that brought everyone together no matter what the creed.
Both late deities will feature in this month’s Social Playlist selection, with a smattering of choice cuts from each one’s cannon. But joining them this June is the electronic music composer Alexander Julien, who followers may recall appeared many moons ago on the site under one of his many non de plumes, Vision External – others included Vision Lunar and Soufferance. I was contacted by his late spouse Rain Frances recently with the sad news of his passing:
‘Vision Eternel’s Alexander Julien passed away on May 14, 2025. Those who are familiar with Vision Eternel, know that Alex’s music is based on nostalgia, emotion and heartbreak. He experienced a lot of anguish in his short 37 years and was often overcome by it. He translated this pain beautifully into his music. His idea of making concept albums showed his talent as well as his dedication to leaving a legacy of music that told the story of love and heartache. He will be missed by all those who loved him.’
Alexander had left notes in his will instructing Rain to get in contact with all the sites that ever reviewed his work. As part of a Special trio of releases from the North American label Somewherecold, I wrote about his For Farewell Of Nostalgia EP a good few years ago:
‘Back towards the ambient spectrum, the final release in the special is a most emotively drawn and purposeful EP of intimate mood music by the Montréal-based Vision Eternel. Coining the phrase “melogaze” to describe his lush “emo” brand of majestic and caressed swirling feelings, heartbreaks and loves, the band’s founder Alexander Julien soundtracks a love lost affair with a most swaddled suite of ambient music, shoegazing, and semi-classical longings.
Over a quartet of channelled “movements” (rain, absence, intimacy and nostalgia), Julien charts this affair-of-the-heart with a both cinematic and melodious touch. The EP though is a greater conceptual work that even arrives accompanied by a short story and plenty of poetic, stirring baggage. Lingering reminisces pour from this composer’s light yet deep vaporous yearnings.
On the cover itself, Julien is painted as some kind of Left Banke thinker meets Graham Greene Third Man and shoe-string Marlowe; a riff on 50s and older covers of that vogue. And so, nostalgia is certainly evoked on this almost timeless EP of abstracted emotionally pulled memories made tangible. It’s actually a most lovely, touching trembled and graceful encapsulation of the themes; beautifully put together. It’s also entirely different and like all three of these releases pushes experimental, ambient music in different directions, yet never loses sight of taking the listener on those same sonic journeys into the cosmic, imaginary, and intimate.’
A glowing review I think you’d agree. And in tribute and as a mark of respect, a track from this EP will feature in the Social playlist this month.
In a more celebratory mood, I’ve pulled together a selection of tracks from those albums that have reached specific milestones this month and year. These include the tenth anniversary of Vukovar’s debut LP proper Emperor, which is being specially re-released this month (see the Archives this week for my original review), plus tracks from Nick Cave and The Bad Seed’s The Firstborn Is Dead…(forty this month), R.E.M.’s Fables of the Reconstruction (also forth this June), Dylan and The Band’s The Basement Tapes (fifty this June), and Them’s The Angry Young Men (sixty this month).
The rest of the playlist is made up of tracks from across time, with choice cuts from Volume 10, Credit to the Nation, The Neats, Van der Graaf Generator, Helicon, Sahar Nagy, Drug Rug and many more.
That track list in full::::::
Brian Wilson ‘Rhapsody in Blue (Intro)’
Sly & The Family Stone ‘Underdog’
Karim Mosbahi ‘Hanni ya I’hanay karim mosbahi’
Bob Dylan and The Band ‘Odds and Ends’
Sly & The Family Stone ‘I Gotta Go Now (Up On The Floor)/Funky Broadway’
Credit to the Nation ‘Teenage Sensation’
Sahar Nagy ‘Baa Keda’
The Neats ‘Lies’
Kai Martin & Stick! ‘Vi kunde vara allt’
Vukovar ‘The New World Order’
R.E.M. ‘Maps And Legends’
Drug Rug ‘Day I Die’
Brian Wilson & Van Dyke Parks ‘Hold Back Time’
Brian Wilson ‘That Lucky Old Sun’
Vision Eternal ‘Moments Of Absence’
The Beach Boys ‘Cabin Essence’
Niandan Jazz ‘Idissa-So’
Louden Wainwright III ‘Dilated to Meet You’
Them ‘My Little Baby’
The Beach Boys ‘Time To Get Alone’
Brian Wilson ‘Love And Mercy’
Van der Graaf Generator ‘House With No Door’
International Noise Orchestra ‘Groovin up Slowly’
Deuter ‘Der Turm/Fluchtpunkt’
Locomotive ‘You Must Be Joking’
Sly & The Family Stone ‘Searchin’’
Sly & The Family Stone ‘I Want To Take You Higher – Live At Woodstock’
Major Force ‘America 2000’
Sly & The Family Stone ‘Fun’
Volume 10 ‘A’cappella/Styleondeck’
Helicon ‘Chateau H (D.ross Remix)’
Sly & The Family Stone ‘Luv N’ Haight’
Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds ‘Train Long Suffering’
Naked City ‘Surfer Girl/Church Key – Live in Quebec ‘88’
Vukovar ‘Regular Patrons of the Salon Kitty’
___/Archives____
The archives return this morning in homage to the late, great Brian Wilson, with a smattering of pieces from the files. Arguably the late 20th and 21st centuries rhapsodic incarnation of Bernstein, Gershwin and Bach, Brian is perhaps one of the only true geniuses of any age, an example of a once-in-a-generation icon. So where do you start? Well, over the years I’ve written reams on the subject, and of course the group he co-founded, The Beach Boys. I’ve included a piece I wrote back in 2016 on the occasion of the tour anniversary of Pet Sounds, plus my original review of the biopic Love & Mercy movie.
But there’s another chance to read my original review of Vukovar’s debut album, Emperor, which is being re-released on the event of its tenth anniversary. Sadly, the band is now defunct, reincarnated in a different light as The Tearless Life.

Brian Wilson presents ‘Pet Sounds’ 50th Anniversary Celebrations
Friday 27th May 2016 at the Glasgow Royal Concert Hall
In a soft power musical arms race with The Beatles, Brian Wilson more or less now mastering the known limits of the studio, was nudged towards ever more ambitious levels of creativity. As the old adage, music history folklore if you like, goes it was Rubber Soul that finally did it for Brian. The retort to this foil would not only be The Beach Boys first masterpiece, but one of pop and rock music’s most enduring triumphs, Pet Sounds. No longer happy with the California high school, deuce coupe cruising beach party spirit that had so far made the group world famous, cast even further adrift, introspective and all but retired from playing live with the his brothers and comrades, Brian was moving on from the fancy-free and footloose sound of the 45s that had always guaranteed a top ten place in the Billboard charts for something more…well, grown up. Voicing a growing anxiety – or the growing pains – of youth, Brian would compose the sound of young adulthood. As the world came to terms with the idea of the ‘teenager’, Brian began encompassing and articulating a new uneasy transition.
As much about the times as about the heartache and pains of being pure of heart, Pet Sounds marked a growing resentment towards the previous generation. At the beginning of a revolutionary change in attitudes, but a year before the ‘free love’ hippie idealism that brought in the psychedelic epoch, these former golden tanned beachcombers were breaking from their parent’s traditions and rules to set their own course: a life mapped out, from education to career and marriage. But at the very heart of all Brian’s work, even today, was a sense of innocence. An innocence lost as the lovesick but married Brian, now in his mid-twenties, was coming to terms with the anxieties of that adulthood and his growing mental anguish. Undiagnosed for years, left at the mercy of countless well-wishers and confidence tricksters, quacks and pseudo-therapists, Brian’s meticulous obsessive production of Pet Sounds and its subsequent, but not satisfactorily finished until 40 years later, magnum opus SMiLE tipped him over the edge.
Pet Sounds would also mark a lyrically shift, with Brian collaborating with his friend the lyricist and copywriter Tony Asher. A task of reification, Asher would take the often abstract and difficult expressions that roamed around inside the troubled mind and put them into song. Not exactly the most unified of atmospheres, Cousin Mike Love, a constant daddy-o stuck-in-the-mud character, was ready to pour a cold bucket of egotistic sick over anything that he felt would compromise or trouble the calm waters of The Beach Boys, so far, winning formula. To be fair, Love would be right to question this new shift towards the melancholic, almost philosophical anguish. Asher at that time was but a burgeoning talent with little to back up his credibility as a top pop songwriter. Replacing previous writers and solid contributors with an unproven lyricist would however prove to be genius decision. But the success of the album was slow. Its renaissance and rebirth as one of the greatest albums of the twentieth century was down to the audiences overseas. The change in direction had unsettled the market, as America baulked at this sadder, more cerebral tone. Yet, the UK loved it, buying it in droves and sending it to the number 2 spot in the charts – compare that with its 106 placing in the Billboard. Pet Sounds could have been a disaster, but it was saved, becoming a cult, an iconic masterpiece. And though it would take a while to pick up the desirable sales, its legacy grew and grew years after its original release.
Arriving almost in tandem, The Beatles Revolver was released just a couple of months later. Brian’s answer: SMiLE. If Pet Sounds had not only threatened but also sent Brian into a funk, then this grand American musical tour through the ages, from Plymouth Rock to the shores of the Spanish Peninsula, would all but consume and nearly destroy him. So ambitious was the vision that despite the near godlike genius of his assiduous sessions’ ensemble, The Wrecking Crew, the social, political and historically woven rich tapestry lyrics of new songwriting partner Van Dyke Parks, and his own production prowess, the project stalled. Numerous mixes, snippets, vignettes and even completed songs made it onto various albums and compilations over the decades, including the enervated and rushed out – to appease and bring in some much-needed revenue – Smiley Smile. It would take decades for SMiLE to be eventually completed, albeit (sadly and for obvious reasons) without his brothers Dennis and Carl’s near ethereal soulful compassionate voices, and missing any input from Love – now more or less carving the Beach Boys brand up, sporting it like a trophy as he has carte blanche and ownership of the name when touring with his own cabaret version of the group’s back catalogue. Brian did however manage, after spending the longest amount of time and money in recording history on a single, to release the perfectly epic pop rhapsody ‘Good Vibrations’.
Recently documented, quite favourably and sympathetically, by the Love & Mercy movie, Brian’s wilderness years lasted throughout the 80s and into the 90s, before the most accomplished of L.A. bands and Beach Boy fans The Wondermints helped lure Brian back on the road, performing a Pet Sounds extravaganza in 2000. Just four years later the band would join Brian in the studio to finish that nigh mystical, greatest album there never was, SMiLE, before taking it out on the road. Following in 2011 the eventual hidden away, locked in some fabled vaults, SMiLE Sessions of original material was finally released to the public.
A near renaissance, a scarred and troubled but blooming Brian Wilson is back once again on the road. This time he celebrates the 50th anniversary of Pet Sounds, arriving in my new hometown of Glasgow on a nationwide tour. Billed as an ‘anniversary celebration’ – the final performance of the iconic album in its entirety – tonight’s performance is a generous one. Split into two performances of greatest hits and Pet Sounds, with an encore of good time classics, Brian was backed by members of the Wondermints and flanked by special guests, Al Jardine and honouree Beach Boy Blondie Chaplin: a set up that has been repeated on many occasions.
As a steady presence for the vulnerable Brian, Al was on hand to soften the odd tremors of quivered uncertainty. But who was on hand to back up Al? Well as it happens his son Matt Jardine. Proving himself the most apt of Beach Boy scions, he was there to aid his old man and Brian with the most adroit and sweetest of falsetto voices. A counterpoint to the now – and for good reason – limited vocal range of Brian, Matt took on the high notes with aplomb and even performed lead on one of the evenings early highlights, ‘Don’t Worry Baby’. He would play the role of a younger Brian during the entirety of the Pet Sounds album suite, almost seamlessly taking on each alternating verse. However, and it seems almost too disingenuous to point out, there were a few wobbles and miscues throughout that just couldn’t be patched over. Yet we all willed Brian on, and when he took lead on the most diaphanous of love declarations, ‘God Only Knows’, the entire audience stood to their feet in adulated applause – the first of many rapturous ovations that night.
Directed and conducted by Paul ‘Von’ Mertens the entire ensemble began the evening with the heavenly choral warm-up ‘Our Prayer’; featured on 20/20 but originally the lead-in to the album version of SMiLE’s grand trans-American tour ‘Heroes And Villains’, which followed. We were then treated to a litany of favourites from the bobby sox high school daze back catalogue of hits, including a swinging, swayed medley of ‘California Girls’, ‘I Get Around’ and ‘Little Deuce Coupe’. Handing over the spotlight, Al performed centre stage with renditions of ‘Wake The World’, ‘Add Some Music To Your Day’ and ‘Cotton Fields’ – all songs plucked from the Brian breakdown period, when the rest of the Band were prompted to take over the creative reins. As lithe and energetic as ever, former Flame and Beach Boy band member (on tour and in the studio during the early 70s) Blondie Chaplin sprouted onto the stage to add some light-hearted theatrics and rock’n’roll vigour. The much-accomplished Durban guitar maestro, looking more and more like a cross between Jagger and Richards (all that time he spent touring with the Stones in the late 90s has worn off on him), launched into a strutting version of ‘Wild Honey’. Expanded from its soulful howled original setting, Chaplin went into bohemian guitar solo overdrive; showboating across the front of the stage and playing to the audience, who lapped it up. From The Beach Boys’ troubled but most brilliant 1973 album Holland, Chaplin picked up the ocean current waltz ‘Sail On Sailor’. The original vocalist on that recording, he returns to it with carefree élan, adding a wild guitar solo to the end, which sends Brian off into the wings in playful mock exasperation.
Back out for act two, the band minus Chaplin for now, begin the reverent Pet Sounds album. Largely enduring because it encapsulated a particular age and time in Brian’s genius, but mostly for capturing the love tribulations and torments of young adulthood in the most perfect pop songs, the album still chimes deeply with audiences fifty years later. Intricate and multi-layered but never ever laboured or strained – witness the Bond-esque Tropicana lounge instrumental suite title track -, each purposely-poised ballad, paean and tryst says all it needs to in less than two minutes. The rousing ‘Wouldn’t It Be Nice’, shared vocally by the Jardines and Brian, opens proceedings of course, followed by a gentler, more serene ‘You Still Believe In Me’. Highlights from the album set included an Al led version of the sea shanty in the manner of a doo wop Ivy League bruiser, with a reference to a particular paranoia plunged bad acid trip thrown in, ‘Sloop John B’, and flipping over the B-side, a poignant and encouraged Brian led ‘Caroline, No’.
The encore promised a “fun, fun, fun” package of hits. But first the band introductions, each band member receiving a musical signature tune as they came back out onto the stage after the interval. It was then straight into a full cast version of ‘Good Vibrations’, including the gesticulating tambourine wielding Chaplin who turned his percussive role into an art form. Rewinding back through the songbook, we were treated to the sing-along classics ‘Help Me Rhonda’, ‘Barbara Ann’, ‘Surfin USA’ and ‘Fun Fun Fun’. By now the audience were up and out of their seats, dancing where they could in the face of the po-faced security and attendants. From our balcony seats looking down on the main auditorium we witnessed hundreds swaying and weaving in almost perfect timing: the atmosphere couldn’t have been better. On a poignant, perhaps paused note Brian finished the evening with a version of the song that spawned the title of the recent movie, Love & Mercy. Written in more recent times, a reminder of the anxieties and anguish that once crippled Brian, the song’s central tenet is a perfect theme to finish on: a great sentiment for the audience to carry with them as they head home into the night. A joy to witness, the Pet Sounds legacy is in safe hands, especially here in Glasgow; a city twinned with Big Sur for one night only. Simply magical.
Love & Mercy Film Review/Purview

By now (or so I believed) the well documented rise and fall and then revival of one of pop music’s titans and true geniuses, shouldn’t come as any shock. Perhaps the nuanced details remain a mystery to most, but the crippling mental fatigue and illnesses that conspired to overwhelm Brian Wilson now go hand-in-hand with and are synonymous with The Beach Boys legacy. Plagued since childhood by the overbearing bullying of others, Brian was made nearly deaf by the clouting punishment of his patriarch Murry Wilson (a failed composer with little talent, forever enviously cruel towards his eldest son); worn down by his cousin and bandmate Mike Love – a year older than Brian but may as well been twenty, the omnipresent ‘straight’ put off by anything less than sweet and commercial, constantly grappling in a power game to control the band -; and emasculated, cut off from the world by the dubious therapist Dr. Eugene Landy. Arguably this triumvirate of manipulative, all damaged in their own way, individuals reflected their own insecurities, envy and even misunderstandings – Love just not getting it and stoic in not wishing to rock the proverbial boat of success – onto Brian; and perhaps due to a lack of ego himself, was unable to believe in his own self-worth allowing others to both take advantage and question his musical aspirations.
Unnerved, strung out and growing isolated from both his childhood sweetheart and first wife Marilyn, and his siblings, Brian went into a slow and long-drawn-out decline. Rare touches of genius would still sparkle occasionally, but after the less than rapturous reception at the release of Pet Sounds, and the aborted (though saved from the ashes and finally recorded and played live forty years later) American peregrination SMiLE, it was more or less downhill all the way.
Adrift now of The Beach Boys, wheeled out sporadically but later sacked, Brian had already undergone numerous treatments during the late 60s, and in 1975 at her wits end, Marilyn called in the services of the quack to the stars, Landy. The movie depicts his motives and less than orthodox style of treatment as quite sinister, but nevertheless he did manage to reduce a bloated lethargic Brian into a slimmer, healthier individual, ready to return back to The Beach Boys fold. However, as it would transpire, Landy took rather too much of an interest, going as far as to attend band meetings and make decisions on Brian’s creative dealings. He was ceremoniously sacked and cast out, losing not only his golden egg, but also losing his professional licence for his methods and liberal pill dispensing (the press would Christian him Dr. Feelgood). Yet ironically, he was recalled back during the 80s after Brian, at his lowest ebb, took an overdose of alcohol, cocaine and psychoactive drugs. This time Landy gave no quarter and micromanaged every single aspect of his patient’s life. Brian would be completely cut off from everyone, and handled like a simpering child by his new legal guardian (who merely replaced Brian’s monstrous real father Murry), with a team on standby to make sure he never wandered from the good doctor’s path of recovery: a recovery that led to Brian’s eponymous solo album of 1988 (Landy brazenly got credits as executive producer and co-writer), of which the opening track Love & Mercy is used for the film’s title. In fear of being institutionalised, Brain would meekly allow this infringement of his privacy and daily life. Overstepping his remit and coming up against Brian’s – depending on who’s account you believe – saviour Melinda Ledbetter (a model turn Cadillac sales women), Landy was eventually forced out when his name mysteriously appeared as the main benefactor on Brian’s will. Already handing over a percentage and forced back into the studio to cover costs, Brian’s publishing rights would still not satisfy Landy’s mounting costs – charging an eye-watering $430,000 annually between 1983 to 1986 – and this along with Melinda’s timely intervention conspired to finally remove him.
A complicated story then, the emphasis on redeeming a fragile genius from a reversion to a near childlike numb state, the film makers and script writers can’t possibly capture every nuance. Instead, Oren Moverman and Michael A. Lerner‘s touching story and unconventional story arc focuses on the perspectives of Brian and Melinda, and hones in on two specific timelines: the mid 60s and 80s. Whilst the story begins with the muddled mind of a younger Brian (an uncannily fragile and compassionate performance from Paul Dano) fading out to darkness, followed by a background montage of the Beach Boys more naive, carefree days (though even these moments show an already uneasy Brian plucking away on his bass guitar, wishing to be anywhere but on stage or in the limelight), we’re speedily propelled forward to John Casuck‘s placid later day Brian’s first meeting with Melinda. Virtuously played throughout by a thoroughly convincing, purposeful Elizabeth Banks, director Bill Pohlad uses her face as a gauge for reaction, whether it’s being played a whimsically beautiful piano motif or hearing the disturbing abuse meted out to Brian by his father. In her opening scene she attempts to sell him a car, before Landy and his posse arrive, but not before Brian slips her a note with ‘Lonely, scared, frightened’ scrawled on it.
Not that the intention is to show any balance in Landy’s depiction, the wig adorned Paul Giamatti is a raging control freak; ready to suddenly blow in a torrid at any time, and constantly, even when smoothing things over, adding a creepy and threatening undertone to every word of advice and suggestion. Meeting one of the only real forms of opposition, Landy’ warnings towards Melinda eventually boil over into some hostile confrontations: an early scene in the dating storyline, with Giamatti’s Landy holding court whilst flipping burgers, grows steadily uneasy and finally ends with an explosive outburst, as a doped-up Brian petulantly interrupts a boorish egotist regaling his own questionable writing virtues with calls to be fed.
Faithfully recreated, Dano’s parts are sometimes tear-jerking. Though we’ve grown used to the back catalogue, hearing the building blocks and attentive beginnings of ‘You Still Believe In Me’, ‘Surf’s Up’ (this performance further convinces me of its eulogy quality and that it belongs on the 1971 titular LP rather than SMiLE), and ‘God Only Knows’ (stunning even its most fragile form, when the young Brian seeks his father’s approval but is despairingly put down by pater’s heartbreaking responses) send chills down your spine. Enthusiasts will be interested in seeing the mechanics of the Pet Sounds and SMiLE sessions; the fantasy of seeing the famed and near mythical Wrecking Crew at work. The crew’s revered and experienced drummer, possibly the best session drummer of the 60s, Hal Blaine is used as a vessel to get the plot moving; his references and reassurances (in one memorable exchange and moment of doubt, the elder statesman’s and cool Hal, sucking on a cigarette, assures Brian that having worked with Phil Spector and a legendary rooster of other talent, the young pup is on another level entirely of genius) are used to settle a young Brian in the grip of mania. But wait until the final sequences, a redeemed Brian breaking from his stupor, soundtracked by the stunning, and reflective diaphanous ‘Til I Die’ – a song that took Brian a year to complete, and was to no one’s surprise by now, originally dismissed before being embraced by Love.
With the emphasis on these characters, most of the extended cast are reduced to walk-on parts and though some background is referred to, Van Dyke Parks and many others aren’t introduced at all, merely swanning about – apart from a meeting in the swimming pool – at various dinners and pool parties. Even his poor siblings Dennis and Carl are more or less demoted to the odd clueless look whilst Al Jardine doesn’t even get a line: Dennis himself succumbed to his own torments, which left him adrift of his family and band mates; his spiral into drink and drugs ended tragically when he drowned just weeks after his 39th birthday in 1983. It is the mixed portrayal of his cousin Love that is emphasised, not really a hero or villain, but malcontent and totally unhip individual uneasy at the changing face of a turned-on L.A. in the grip of LSD. I feel a little sorry for him, played I might add brilliantly by an unrecognisable Jake Abel, who would eventually have to lead the group and take up the mantle; always that little bit older, not so fortunate in the hair department (his fetish for hats arguably covering up his early balding), and ever the professional he found it hard to fit in.
Love & Mercy moves full circle, Melinda coaxing the responsive artist and adult from his child like shell, finishing with Brian’s – and I was lucky enough to attend one of his comeback shows with the Wondermints – return to the stage in the noughties, performing the titular song. Those stumbling blocks and manias that prevent not just geniuses, from making their ideas concrete, still persist. But at least Brian finally received the correct diagnosis of manic depression with auditory hallucinations that can be successfully treated: Landy’s schizophrenia diagnosis and treatment did more harm than good, arguably worse than the cocktail of illicit drugs that Brian was popping so freely before the quack came on the scene. The best hope is that this movie encourages discussion; that we can talk candidly and address the controlling mechanisms that condemn many people to a life spent dealing in isolation with their mental health.
Vukovar ‘Emperor’
(Small Bear Records) – Originally release in 2015; re-released on the 1st July 2025 with various mixes and extras.
Punching well above its weight, the serendipitous label of vaporous lo fi and languid shoegaze Small Bear Records has slipped onto the market its most ambitious marvel yet. From their Isle of Man recording HQ, the Vukovar builds a funeral pyre for the ‘new world order’.
Helping them man the barricades are Rick Clarke and Dan Shea (also of The Bordellos and Neurotic Wreck, but most formerly of the “disintegrated” The Longdrone Flowers), joined by an extended cast of Small Bear artists; including the dreamily aspiring Postcode’s Mikie Daugherty, Jonny Peacock and Marie Reynolds, and Circus worlD’s Mark Sayle all making guest appearances: a super group performance if you will.
Rallying round the decree of “idealists, voyeurs and totalitarians”, and referencing a list of one-word actions/stances (“Ultra-Realism”, “Depravity”, “Monotony”) to describe their sound, the band’s lyrics certainly seem fuelled with protestation and anger. Yet for the most part, they sound despondently magnificent in the most melodic, beautiful shoegaze fashion. Their brand of lush 80s driven alternative rock and more caustic, punchy industrial noise is far too melodic and majestic to be truly brutal.
Taking their name from the infamous Croatian city, the site of an heinous blight on modern European history (always conveniently airbrushed from bellicose EU propaganda; the sort that preaches its union has put paid to and secured the continent from conflict and war amongst its neighbours), when 300 poor souls, mostly Muslims, were rounded up and barbarically executed by Serb paramilitaries and the Yugoslav People’s Army (the worst committed atrocity of its kind since WWII), Vukovar appeal to the listener who wants to scratch beneath the surface of the banal mainstream. They offer an invitation into the darker recesses of history and social politics unseen in much of the dross that calls itself alternative – even their bandcamp page features an exhaustive manifesto style edict (sometimes tongue-in-cheek) of intent. And so they offer a an out-of-body majestical shoegazing waltz through Reinhard Heydrich’s honey trap brothel and centre of Nazi espionage, the ‘Regular Patrons of Salon Kitty’; drift into Spiritualized and New Order territory on the softly pranged hymn to a former Japanese princess, ‘Part 1: Miss Kuroda’s Lament’; and channel a despondently romantic but resigned Ian Curtis as they utter with despondent beauty that “we’re cowards” on the beautifully sullen and dreamy ‘Nero’s Felines’.
With a maelstrom of clanging, fuzz and Inspiral Carpets jamming with a motor city turned-on Julian Cope vibe, the group yells, shakes and rattles on their noisier outings, ‘Lose My Breath’ and ‘Concrete’. Not always their best material it must be said, they add some tension to the more relaxed melodic and – dare I say – pop songs, which sound far more convincing: ‘Koen Cohen K’ and ‘The New World Order’ are just brilliant; imagine what Joy Division might have sounded like if Ian Curtis had lived on and found solace in the lush veils of shoegaze, or if he fronted Chapterhouse.
Fiddling romantically whilst Olympus burns, the Vukovar’s stand against the illuminati forces of evil couldn’t have sounded any more beautifully bleak, yet somehow liltingly inspiring.
If you’ve enjoyed this selection, the writing, or been led down a rabbit hole into new musical terrains of aural pleasure, and if you can, then you can now show your appreciation by keeping the Monolith Cocktail afloat by donating via Ko-Fi.
For the last 15 years both me and the MC team have featured and supported music, musicians and labels we love across genres from around the world: ones 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 or interest in. 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 say thanks or show support, than you can now buy us a coffee or donate via https://ko-fi.com/monolithcocktail
Our Daily Bread 627: Violet Nox ‘Hesperia’ LP & ‘Aruna’ Video
September 27, 2024
ALBUM REVIEW/VIDEO REVEAL
DOMINIC VALVONA

Photo credit: Sasha Pedro
Violet Nox ‘Hesperia’
(Somehwerecold Records) 1st October 2024
Building new worlds, futuristic landscapes and intergalactic safe havens, and leaving vapour trails of laconic, hypnotizing new age psy-trance mysticism, a message of self-discovery and of resistance in their wake, Violet Nox once more embrace Gaia, Greek and Buddhist etymology and astrology to voyage beyond earthly realms.
Referencing mythological starry nymphs, a sun god’s charioteer, Agamemnon’s granddaughter and scientific phenomenon as they waft, drift and occasionally pump through veils of ambience, trance, dub, EDM and techno, the Boston, Massachusetts trio (although this core foundation is pliable and has expanded its ranks on previous releases) of synthesists and electronic crafters Dez DeCarlo and Andrew Abrahamson, and airy, searching siren vocalist and caller Noell Dorsey, occupy a dreamy ethereal plane that fits somewhere between Vangelis, Lisa Gerrard, Mythos, Kavinsky, Banco de Gaia and ecological revering dance music.
Feeling even more languid and floaty than usual, album number seven seems more subtle and sophisticated, taking its time, hanging around much longer in those signature vapours. But then there’s the padded kick drum that occasionally drives the beat, and the tightly delayed synthetic ticking rhythms can be more rapid and dance music orientated; especially on both the touchingly voiced, softly metallic whipped and foggy ‘OneSixty’ and the cosmic time-traveller’s club trance and voice-looping ‘Xena’. The latter of which could either be a reference to the famous TV culture warrior princess or the male sibling of Electra in Greek mythology – the etymology could be interchangeable and equally translated as “guest”, “stranger” or “hospitable”.
As with many of these symbols there’s a theme of either androgyny or feminine guardianship, council or guidance; the title’s starlet, the Greek Hesperia nymph also called Asterope, is known for many things in Greek mythological lore: a daughter of the evening star and golden sunsets, and a guardian of the golden apples. With all those connotations, Violet Nox bends the light towards an inclusive agenda and queer awareness with both misty shushed and stronger, more rousing messages of affirmation.
Violet Nox have expanded their live sets over the years, backdropped by film, visuals, and as part of a response to various museum and art environments. Hesperia feels more like one of those performances; a complete journey, experience and soundtrack to a tubular geometry, a pulsation of possible futurism and feminine-driven cerebral cyber evolution.
As a bonus, so to speak, Violet Nox is sharing their latest video, for the opening track ‘Aruna’, with the Monolith Cocktail’s readers. After already providing visuals for the group’s Nordic mythological ‘Loki’ single at the start of this year (premiered by us at the time, the track originally appeared on their 2023 Vortex And Voices album), Del Siervo now conjures up new kaleidoscopic images for this entrancing number. For those who aren’t familiar with his work, Siervo is a Venezuelan artist and ambient/new age musician living in Argentina, who’s art evolves around myths from different ancient traditions, especially from the Amazon. Siervo works with new technologies to create images that evoke the mysteries of life, the creation and the unseen.
For more info on the group, links to previous videos and releases and updates, click on here https://linktr.ee/VioletNox
Our Daily Bread 590: Violet Nox’Vortex And Voices’/Droneroom ‘The Best Of My Love’
September 1, 2023
A SOMEWHERECOLD RECORDS DOUBLE BILL/DOMINIC VALVONA

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

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

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

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

In this amorphous crisscross of genres and borders I take a look at the latest in the label Night Dreamers ‘direct-to-disc’ series, a dynamic live album of fresh performances from Istanbul’s legendary souk reggae/dub and Krautrock psych legends BaBa ZuLa; Analog Africa delve through the stranger corners of the “B-movie” Colombian label Disco Machuca on their upcoming La Locura de Machuca compilation; and Daniel O’Sullivan explores library music for his latest transformation, a series of instrumental albums in collaboration with KPM.
Two front vocalists step away from their bands to go solo, with Ghent stoner/alt-rock band Wallace Vanborn frontman Ian Clement returning to the fold after many travails with a personal songbook collection, See Me In Synchronicity, and Diamond Thug’s Chantel Van T going out on her own with a debut country blues imbued songbook, entitled Nicalochan.
There’s also a label special, with three recent and upcoming ambient and experimental imbued records from the North American hub Somewherecold Records: an ambitious cosmic suite of Kosmische analogue synth odysseys from Giacomelli, snapshots, threads and lingering traces of esoteric and ether materialised country and bluegrass guitar sketches from Droneroom, and an emotive suite of love-lost movements from Vision Eternel.
BaBa ZuLa ‘Hayvan Gibi’
(Night Dreamers) Album/2nd October 2020

The latest release in Night Dreamer’s “direct-to-disc” series stars the rebellious stalwarts of Anatolian cosmic dub and psych, BaBa ZuLa: a three decade spanning Istanbul group originally birthed from the embers of the band ZeN.
Fusing the folkloric with solar flares of Krautrock, souk reggae, 60s and 70s Turkish psych and cosmic-blues the rambunctious group come on like a Sublime Porte vision of Can’s Ege Bamyasi and Soundtracks albums, only replacing much of the Teutonic legends setup with more traditional instruments like the “oud” and “saz”: albeit electrified and fuzzed up to the gills. That Can reference isn’t so surprising, as the BaBa have worked with the band’s late human metronome Jaki Liebezeit on numerous occasions: his two-way influence felt and inspiration noted on BaBa’s 2019 album Derin Derin. That same 2019 album, like so much of their output, was originally produced for a soundtrack, a documentary about falcons. And this latest “live” and direct special showcase includes a number of such tracks scored for film and stage; it also, like that falcon inspired work captures the materializations, mood, feelings of a menagerie of symbolic animal subjects.
Recorded before lockdown in the pre-pandemic nightmare, Hayvan Gibi (which means ‘to act with the natural grace of an animal’) includes six almost untethered, unleashed vivid performances from the Istanbul mavericks. It’s an album that seeks to fulfil the “live” feel and energy that some fans have commented has been lacking on previous studio albums. Invited to the Artune Studio setting in Haarlem by the label, they were encouraged to freely take-off on a flight of Eastern fantasy; encouraged to also riff on and extend past glories too. “A musician’s dream” as the band’s electric, scuzzy defacto leader and founding member Osman Murat Ertel puts it, this, also challenging, method of recording and cutting a disc from start to finish on one session gives them that energetic impetus. It also showcases each of the band’s talents. On the elliptical rhythmic Can-like dervish ‘Sipa Dub’ (also known as “The Foal”), the group’s braying oud soloist and keyboardist Periklis Tsoukalas gets to shine and sing a kind of spiritual Sufi-imbued emotive intensity on a song about an Aegean coast donkey and its foal. Percussionist virtuoso Ümit Adakale is unleashed unaided on the drilling, rattling and hotfooted breakbeat ‘Nal’ (or “Horseshoes”).
Old favourites like the ‘Çöl Aslanlari’ (“desert lion”) composition, originally made for Antonie de Saint-Exupéry’s stage production of The Little Prince, go off on a long improvised peregrination of clopping psych-rock and shimmering cymbal washes, whilst the group’s earliest groove, ‘Tavus Havasi’ (which furnished the soundtrack to the Tabutta Rövasata film) assails close to the mooning of Guru Guru and a Turkish Bar dance.
A let loose BaBa ZuLa is a most incredible experience; a scuzzed, scuffed, trinket shimmery, rippling and blazing rhythmic energy and dynamism both intense and yet also a mirage of reggae and dub imbued Anatolia mountain gazing. It’s also a reminder of what we’ve been missing in these dragging pandemic restrictive times.
Further Reading…
BaBa ZuLa ‘Derin Derin’ here….
BaBa ZuLa ‘XX’ here…
Various ‘La Locura de Machuca: 1975 – 1980’
(Analog Africa) Album/16th October 2020

Quite possibly the kookiest oddity so far in the Analog Africa catalogue, this distant outlandish relative to the label’s Diablos Del Ritmo: The Colombian Melting Pot 1960 – 1985 compilation from 2012 is the sort of “B-movie” discovery you’d expect Finders Keepers to release. From the same international Colombian gateway of Barranquilla as that collection’s purview, La Locura de Machuca: 1975 – 1980 features a similar spread of Afro-Colombian saunters, scuttles and scratchy percussive funk as that record, yet finds a twist: a kink.
For all the familiar traces of that folkloric electrified Cumbia, the Caribbean-African-Colombian hybrid Champeta Criolle, and Congolese rumba (to name just a few styles), the music that flourished from the Colombian underground is…well, different. Much of this is down to the genius and bizarre mind of the former tax-lawyer turn record company executive Rafael Machuca, who wowed and seduced by the Barranquilla music scene jacked in the day job to set-up and sit behind the control desk as the producer of his own label enterprise, Disco Machuca. This was the heady mid 70s, an age in which Colombia’s music scene was thriving with the sounds of imported nuggets and blasts from the African continent. Though native dance styles such as Bolero and Vallento still rocketed up the charts, the fervor was for a spread of Afro prefixed sounds that proved popular at the neighbourhood sound-system joints, known as “the picos”. The locals would in time add more traditional flavours, including the already mentioned versatile Cumbia, but also more modern influences such as psychedelic music and disco.
Machuca channeled that exciting dance mix with his unique label of specially put-together one-offs and more established mavericks; the often experimental and kitsch productions of which is described as the “B-movies of Colombian music” by the label’s stalwart recording engineer Eduardo Dávila. Some of that self-depreciative description is warranted for the label’s roster of artists and acts, but also for Machuca’s habit of just creating from scratch a studio band to front one-off singles and albums when he couldn’t find the right band to realize whatever vision he had leaping about in his head. Two of which, the mono skiffley itching and squiggly, Stylophone like buzz and gargled organ Samba Negra and the bongo rattling, carnival lolloping space age garage band El Grupo Folelórico, lasted only the time it took to enter the studio and press stop on the recording desk. Both of these outlets feature heavily on the compilation. Though the El Grupo Folelórico’s binary data zapping Afro bustle ‘Tamba’ qualifies as the closet of these tracks towards that B-movie status.
The label could accommodate such fancies with the money they made from more established and popular stars; such as Alejandro Durán (left off this more unconventional comp) and Aníbal Velásquez (who does feature with his slightly unhinged belly laughing and hurried Cumbia track ‘La Mazamorra del Diablo’). “Fringe artists” like La Bande Africana, King Somalie, Conjunto Barbaco and Aberladro Carbono were able to cut loose off the back of those hit-makers. The first of those names lends the collection a salacious boy/girl hush and sigh of Gainsbourg meets Bollywood in a Colombian coastal town, with their coquettish and playful ‘Te Clavola…Mano’. King Somalie meanwhile riffs on the “funky monkey” with a talky Afro-boogie and turns in a sexy fun conversational on ‘La Mongui’.
Personal favourite of mine is The Grupo Bela Roja, or to be more exact their both swooning and jaunty lead singer who channels a young Miriam Makeba on the beachside ‘Caracol’.
There’s much to discover from this sometimes-unhinged label, yet nothing so avant-garde or “loco” as to neglect an essential rhythm or hypnotic good groove. Samy Ben Redjeb’s decade-long-in-the-making project unearths some mesmerising rarities from the stretched-descriptive scenes of Afro-Caribbean and Afro-Colombian music, throwing in some curveballs and raw 45s.
For those looking for a fresh perspective and for something strange, the La Locura de Machura compilation will fill that need. Ad for everyone else, this is just a great vibrant mad world of South American sounds that deserves space inside your noggin.
Further Reading…
Analog Africa Tenth Anniversary Special here…
Various ‘Jambú e Os Míticos Sons Da Amazônia’ here…
Chantel Van T ‘Nicalochan’
Album/23rd October 2020

Stepping out on her own from the South African dreamy space-indie Diamond Thug, the country blues and folksy lilted voiced Chantel Van T makes a boldly intimate and vulnerable statement on the debut solo songbook Nicalochan. Via a Danish solstice and summers spent contemplating at the shoreline’s edge, the hushed and swooned songwriter/singer opens up in a considered, soothed and sometimes creeping fragile manner over gently sweeping Dylan-esque Western soundtracks, mountain songs, the knowing enchantment of Lee Hazelwood, and lush morning dew yearn of Catherine Howe.
With a maturity and depth beyond her years, the often sadly but constantly dreamy Cape Town artist seems to channel a country twang that evokes shades of Emmylou Harris, Bonnie Dobson, and on the prohibition era Appalachian Lomax ‘Bittersweet Absolute’ a touch of Josephine Foster. Chantel has a voice deep, diaphanous, ached, resigned, and drifting, yet at times almost fatalistic.
An introduction to Chantel as much a candid therapy and chance to let all those thoughts and philosophically poetic questions on what reciprocated love really means (and how far it can be taken), the growing pains of womanhood and childhood.
A suffused accompaniment (all recorded with the Danish producer Anders Christopherson and a small intimate ensemble of musicians) of wallowed brass, softened string caresses, gauzy tremolo twanged and acoustic rhythm guitar, and patted toms and splashes of cymbal provide a subtle stripped backing track. One that sometimes can’t help but meander into Dylan’s ‘Knocking On Heavens Door’ on the leading, waning beauty travail single ‘Rumble And Crawl’, and a 50s yuletide mix of Rosemary Clooney and bobby-sox Spector on the album’s early punt at a seasonal number, ‘Christmas’.
Full of pining, searching affairs of the heart Nicalochan is a most hazy and beautifully executed testament of timeless country blues imbued vulnerability from an artist going it alone: A great debut of understated wisdom and inquisitive questioning songwriting, which I can see making many of the end-of-year lists, including my own.
A Somewherecold Records Special:
Vision Eternel ‘For Farwell Of Nostalgia’ Out Now
Giacomelli ‘Cosmic Order’ 9th October 2020
Droneroom ‘Blood On Blood’ 16th October 2020
All three released via Somewherecold Records.

From the highly prolific online magazine/shop-front and facilitator of various underground electronic and experimental artists, a trio of recent refined and concept-bound releases has drifted onto the Monolith Cocktail’s radar: Just three from an exhaustive roster that’s updated weekly. Extensively a soundboard and platform for composers and mavericks alike from both sides of the North American border, Somewherecold Records offer up the intimate and ambitious, depth and the translucent, peregrinations and wanderings with their most recent spread of albums.
The first of these is the grand Kosmische analogue spanning opus from Silicon Valley composer Steve Giacomelli; a triple CD expansive series of cosmic ordered suites that traverse the astral plane, new age transcendence, various thermos, gases and topographic ebbs and flows. Giacomelli’s fourth such album of cosmic ambient minimalism for the label, this celestial and evolutionary mined impressive ARP Odyssey (portable) synth birthed work of thirty-six scales into deep space, refractions of light play, pulse and gravitas uses a number of techniques to accomplish an overall sound of forgotten Sky Record maestros, Tangerine Dream, early Cluster, Tomat and Vangelis. This synthesised vision – that can sometimes err towards the ominous forebode and mystery of Kubrick – synthesis of the abstract, deep space, the inner mind, nature and the heavenly is accomplished with an apparently limited pallet and the use of counterpoint sequences, the generative and a method, favoured by Frank Zappa, called “xenochrony” – that is the extracting of a solo or other part from its original context and placing it into a completely different song/composition.
A three-hour journey through the imaginings of Giacomelli’s inner and outer star-guided mind, compositions vary between the beautiful cathedral-in-the-sky heralded ‘Cosmic Fanfare’ and the Klaus Schulze-rescores-Zardoz forebode and deep space hum of ‘The Best Laid Plans’; from the 8-bit orchestral manoeuvres of ‘SMPTE Of The Universe’ to the heavenly choral-blowing space fantasy ‘Diplodicus Green’, and the tubular generator, dash communicating ‘Remembrance Petition’.
No matter where he guides us, Giacomelli fashions a most diaphanous and mysterious epic. The Cosmic Order is a grand project, nothing short of immersive and starry.
The second of this trio of albums and EPs from the label takes us into the Kosmische-cowboy experimental soundscaping world of the Louisville-based artist Blake Edward Conley. Trading, moseying and meandering under the Droneroom alter ego, Conley pulls together a number of tracks and ideas from compilations for this transformative and transduced album of layered resonating guitar soundtracks and pauses.
A “two-lane blacktop” drive across the imagined travails of an alternative strung-out country and bluegrass accompanied America of gas station stops, mechanical breakdowns, and side road excursions, Blood On Blood gathers those “stray tracks”, threads and “snapshots” to meander through an evocative if distant landscape. Whether inspired by or in their finished state sailing close to, a number of these drowsed post-country instrumentals are dedicated to Conley’s fellow compatriots, and both explorative and old testament liturgy guitar imbued artists: The Tennessee psalm fanning Joseph Allred and folk artist Cole Morse to name just two.
Some of these sonic-thoughts-out-loud ruminations and traverses are more country than others. A certain cowboy swoon can be plucked from the lingering traces of ghostly country blues and bowing vibrato of ‘Truckstop Déjà vu’, and there’s an air of a Lynchian vision of Ry Coder on the galvanized steel gate stick rattled and didgeridoo like drone mysterious ‘And On The Last Day The Land Did Sing Me’. A removed form of Americana, with the tremolo wanes and quivers and spirit all there but veiled by the Baroque, Latin, cosmic and supernatural, ‘Let The Bluegrass Hold My Head’ is anything but. However, the dreamily acid ‘The Coyote Adrift In The Unfamiliar’ evokes a more Kosmische and Krautrock influence; sounding like an esoteric ripple in the fabric by Ash Ra Temple. In fact there’s a lot of spacey spectral leanings, an otherness, even alien, from beyond the ether: There’s even a supernatural enough transmission from that void in the shape of ‘Ghosts For Sale’.
Another impressive if unassuming album for the label that does something different, out there with its source, Droneroom’s Blood On Blood is an incredibly strange album of guitar experimentation that warrants discovery: A cult album in the making.
Back towards the ambient spectrum, the final release in the special is a most emotively drawn and purposeful EP of intimate mood music by the Montréal-based Vision Eternel. Coining the phrase “melogaze” to describe his lush “emo” brand of majestic and caressed swirling feelings, heartbreaks and loves, the band’s founder Alexander Julien soundtracks a love lost affair with a most swaddled suite of ambient music, shoegazing, and semi-classical longings.
Over a quartet of channeled “movements” (rain, absence, intimacy and nostalgia), Julien charts this affair-of-the-heart with a both cinematic and melodious touch. The EP though is a greater conceptual work that even arrives accompanied by a short story and plenty of poetic, stirring baggage. Lingering reminisces pour from this composer’s light yet deep vaporuos yearnings.
On the cover itself, Julien is painted as some kind of Left Banke thinker meets Graham Greene Third Man and shoe-string Marlowe; a riff on 50s and older covers of that vogue. And so nostalgia is certainly evoked on this almost timeless EP of abstracted emotionally pulled memories made tangible. It’s actually a most lovely, touching trembled and graceful encapsulation of the themes; beautifully put together. It’s also entirely different and like all three of these releases pushes experimental, ambient music in different directions, yet never loses sight of taking the listener on those same sonic journeys into the cosmic, imaginary, and intimate.
Somewherecold Records is proving a catalyst and platform for some of the most interesting and ambitious of under-the-radar artists. Expect to see plenty more or their releases on the Monolith Cocktail in the future.
Ian Clement ‘See Me In Synchronicity’
(Cobraside Records) Album/October 2nd 2020

All the better for it, full of sagacious yearning, frontman of the Ghent stoner/alt-rock band Wallace Vanborn, Ian Clement makes a welcoming return to the musical fold with his second solo album See Me In Synchronicity. After many travails and a series of breakdowns, Clement opens up with a songbook collection of musings on troubled romances, escaping, intimacy and more mystical, metaphysical queries on the altered states of consciousness: a subject that stems from the earnest singer/songwriters interest in mysticism and the spiritual, and its place in an increasingly secularized, atheistic Western culture.
Further, as Clement himself illuminates, “mysticism and madness touch each other, even in ordinary life. The daydreamers whose hope lies in love and fantasy or in loneliness or madness, is something that everyone can relate to.” And there is, at least, some of that title’s “synchronicity”; as also reflected on the album cover’s dream state alpine juxtaposed with cityscape and beret fitted beachcomber meandering below a seductive muse collage artwork.
Though far from mystical sounding or esoteric, this is a solid songbook with just enough edge to set it apart from the well-worn tropes and sounds found in most alt-rock of a similar persuasion. For Clement traverses not only hard rock but also country (verging on Americana), indie, post-Britpop and, even, new wave (chugging away tot the dashboard emotional pulling pop motor pop of The Cars on the “consciousness” imbued ‘Turtle & Crow’). And so you can expect to hear a subtle pallet of influences and sounds prompting this brooding but often mature and wise album.
Vocally Clement evokes a touch of Jeff Buckley (via Blackbud’s Joe Taylor) and Mark Lanegan, whilst the mix of blazing rock guitar shadings and hooks leans towards Bends period Radiohead, post-punk and early noughties Bowie. However, the most surprising humbling and yet bittersweet romantic song, ‘Bliss’, strays into the Floydian. There’s also a dappled gospel-tinged organ that keeps popping up throughout the album; a kind of low-key Muscle Shoals vibe.
Making sure this all gels, and offering some of that edge, is the luminary German producer Renė Tinner, who knows a thing or two about pushing the envelope and finding that important synchronicity between the commercial and experimental having worked with such polar opposites as Can and George Harrison. This culminates in a production and sound with depth, soul and a few surprises. Clement unloads his pains and intimate resolutions on a most sophisticated, hard-fought and lyrical work: A brave work at that.
Daniel O’Sullivan ‘Electric Māyā: Dream Flotsam And Astral Hinterlands’
(VHF Records/KPM) Album/23rd October 2020

The latest in a long run of explorative transformations for Daniel O’Sullivan, of both Grumbling Fur and This Is Not This Heat fame, sees the London-based musical polyglot traversing the “library music” oeuvre.
Although often the preserve for lovers of cult mavericks and the kitsch, library music is infinite in scope and varies considerably in quality. Often, because of its very nature dismissed as either a pale imitator of the sound and music it’s trying to ape, or void of true artistry and depth: produced in many cases as a background soundtrack and cheap off-the-shelf filler. Of course this is all bullshit, the label itself now so diverse and overused as to include some truly gifted composers alongside one-offs and obscure unknown peddlers of lo fi and unassuming skits. Essentially though, it is seen as music that fits specific criteria or commission, as O’Sullivan puts it, music made “more for functionality than sonic self-portraiture”.
It also includes, in more recent years, an increasing number of artists-in-the-know appropriating library music’s guilty pleasures and forgotten acolytes: Not so much as pastiche but rather in the mode of homage and mining ever more obscure sounds. And so a very much “knowing” O’Sullivan in collaboration with those purveyors of such rediscovered treasures, KPM, invests a lot of time and effort in producing an 18-track suite of sophisticated redolent library music gestures, sweeps, memories and fleeting incipient soundtracks on the first of a trio of such albums. The challenge however is in creating a fully-realised composition with a start, middle and sort of conclusion in short form: every track on the album being more or less under the 3-minute mark.
Delving into the cosmology of the elaborately psychedelic entitled Electric Māyā: Dream Flotsam And Astral Hinterlands you’ll find a full body of atmospheres, inner spaces, emotions, sciences and supernatural elements articulated by a diverse pallet of sounds and instrumentation. O’Sullivan caters for every occasion, from beatific meditation Eastern transcendence (‘Adoring Solitude’) to emerging from a mysterious mist-clearing landscape (‘Butterscotch Broth’) and Tomat evoked celestial cathedrals-in-the-sky (‘Eagle Ears’). And that’s all within the first five tracks: the mystical, the ambient unveiling of inspired scenery and the cosmos. Elsewhere there’s deft evocations of the sort of tender Italian pianist-driven soundtracks of the 70s favoured by Greg Foat (‘Flashbulb Memory’), a bird’s eye view from above wispy, translucent clouds (‘Feathered Earth’), a kooky burbled and steam-post-punk merger of Kraftwerk, Bernard Estardy and Jon Hassell (‘Gray’s March’) and haunted monastic dream muses (‘Sybil’).
From the sublime to the strange, ethereal to the earthy, most bases are covered on this expansive album of the vapourous and gazing. Most of which is beautifully produced and entrancing. Mixing semi-classical with ambient music, avant-garde and electronica, O’Sullivan has created an inspiring sonic journey through library music’s most lunar and traversing, stirring highlights without reverting to that pastiche and lazy homage. It is nothing short of a great piece of instrumental work, the soundtrack to a most wondrous ambitious movie.
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.