Floatinghead's ramblings about music and music-related themes interspersed with various interludes and home of Cabeza de Vaca radio show on Scanner FM, Barcelona.
After a couple of heavier techno shows we make
a return to the smoother, sultry world of deep house and Christopher Rau for the new Cabeza de Vaca show on Scanner FM this week.
Quite a simple story behind the man which you
can find elsewhere, which is not to say that the music is dull or predictable. Quite the
opposite. Simple broad strokes and an impressionistic finish are the signature
of his sound here, but the elements are always well chosen and in balance. For
example, you can find the usual elements of jazz, velvet and crimson piano bars
and the hour permanently poised close to midnight, but they are invariable
always used with restraint and at the right moment. But much like Manuel Tur’s
album “Swans reflecting elephants” there wasn’t much press around “Two” which
is strange given the very high profile afforded to “Asper clouds” two years
ago. Moreover, Smallville ended up with quite a good critical score at the end
of the year, despite the relative lack of focus.
We have a lot of different shows planned for
the near future, hopefully with some interesting treats, but we will see what
will fall into place and when. So stay tuned to Cabeza de Vaca and Scanner
FM!!!
New Cabeza de Vacashow on Scanner FM with a focus this
week on Shifted. Not much known about the UK-born, Berlin-based artist, by his own design, but
there is plenty of analysis to be made of the music. There are a number of interesting stylistic features that Shifted uses. The most obvious is the repetition and the shimmering, droney finish to the sounds that give them a more vital energy. The enveloping space is cloudy and stable and resists all the kinetic energy immersed within it. Small additions to the mix change the balance and focal point completely. One thing I forgot to mention
in the show is that quite a lot of Shifted’s tracks just plug in. There is no build up, no
warning, no subtlety. You arrive in the middle. It was interesting being a non-DJ and assembling them in the studio and just seeing their raw, blunt ends plugging one into the other, almost like Lego.
There was an interesting article on Resident Advisor about heavy UK techno this week too
if you need more information.
New show is
up and this week we are all about Sweden!!! We have a triple special: firstly
Kontra-Musik, secondly female electronic artists and thirdly the late and great
film director Ingmar Bergman. You can find all this only on Scanner FM and Cabeza de Vaca.
First some thanks: firstly, “tack” to Jimi
Disco at Subwax BCN for putting me in contact with Ulf Ericsson at Kontra. Ulf duly put
me in contact with Johanna Knutsson at Klasse Recordings who helped tracking
down some female artists, some of whom I couldn’t get tracks for in time for
the show, sadly.
Secondly, in an earlier, deleted take I
gave a shout out to my old housemates Peter and Johanna who are in Malmö, but
in a subsequent version I omitted to say hi. So “Hallä” to them and their
family.
A few little points. Definitely worth
looking at the videos of Andreas Tilliander aka Mokira and TM404. Here are two
of them just to compare. New album was out too close to the show date to get a
track in, but it looks killer.
I also mention Andreas previous foray into
Ingmar Bergman territority with his Mokira moniker. His “Persona” album cae out
in 2009 on the Type label and it somehow manages to mix influences as far
afield as Bergman and Spacemen 3!
“Persona” is not only one of Bergman’s
greatest films, but one of the best films of all time. So many levels of
meaning and complication and also tricks of technique that are only possible in
the medium of film. A true masterpiece.
The only other incidence of Bergman
occurring in electronic music that I know was [Sebastian] Seidemann’s self-released
“Ice and snow” album and the track “Moder och dotter” which featured a sampled
dialogue from “Autumn sonata”
The Ingrid Bergman of the film is the
legendary Ingrid of "Casablanca" fame, but no family relation to Ingmar.
In the radio show I erroneously refer to
this film as a splendid example of one of Bergman’s colour works. It is a
colour film and a good one, but the one I was meant to mention was “Cries and
whispers”
Bergman’s other masterpiece and one that is
less often mentioned is “The Hour of The Wolf”. An absolutely devastating and
utterly paranoid and nearly delusional film with some of the greatest scenes
and characters in cinema history.
Maverick noise/techno trio Frak have been
around the traps since 1987 and there are plenty of archive videos on Youtube
for the hungry. Here is one or two just for a teaser and to highlight their
oddball stage presence and their synth pop origins. Masterful!
Finally, Johanna Knutsson has just made a
nice mix for Discobelle:
And La Fleur is on the road as far afield
as Sydney in the month coming. Show your support!
New Cabeza de Vaca show at Scanner FM!!!! … who was incidentally rated
in the top 18 internet radio stations in the world as judged by the latest
issue of Rolling Stone magazine (Spanish edition).
The end of 2012
was a pretty rough ride in many ways. It also became a rich period for ambient
music partly by design, to soothe this turmoil and also to prepare for the
latest show, and partly by coincidence, listening to whatever came my way. Here
I collect a few mini-reviews and comments about some of the albums that
characterized the end of the year and that complement the show. Many people
sent me some great stuff, not all of which I could play on the air, but many
thanks as always and please don’t stop! A special shout out to Mike as well at
the Touch shop as I made a mess of an order there as I was too busy and too
stressed to read the email he sent me properly, but he so patiently dealt with
my incompetence. Gracias!
VA – Touch: 30
years and counting [Touch]
Easily the most
surprising thing about this collection on Touch is the sheer number of field
recording-based tracks there are. A scan through the list of “materials and
methods” reveals a host of locations and techniques. Label boss Jon Wozencroft
opens under the Touch 33 name with a brief excerpt of “a fast ford [not the car
(sic)] on a village road near the rocky outcrop of Ros-y-Felin”, whereas on
Jana Winderen’s track “In a silent place” she mixes the sounds of bats recorded
in Regents Park, London with ultrasound mixed with underwater recordings. Chris
Watson’s recording of Brussels Nord train station is particularly beguiling for
its sounds of men, machines and birds, so much so that it sounds like a collage
rather than a “documentary” recording. Best of all is Francisco López whose
“Untitled#286” apparently combines field recordings of Bogota and Lima,
although the sound feels more like one segment of one afternoon than any kind
of studio manipulation. As well as these more direct pieces, there are also a
lot of recordings that seem to have taken place in at least two locations,
being finished on the road or re-recorded elsewhere, such as Oren Ambarchi’s
“Merely A Portmanteau” recorded in Melbourne and Tel Aviv, or Carl Michael Von
Hausswolff’s recording made in Khufu’s pyramid in Giza and the Castle in
Stockholm. Combine all this with the label’s usual international roster and you
have a set that feels strangely ubiquitous in a purely global and spiritual
sense. Much has been made of the atemporality of the modern internet world, but
this compilation seems to suggest an aphysicality as well, a simultaneous
existence of multiple teeming places in one instant, or a literal binding of
one place within another irrespective of distance. That is to say, everything
is within Touch(ing) distance. Perhaps it is for this reason that the label
also decided to join the tracks into four long pieces to fit on the four sides
of vinyl so that one track Touch(es) another?
Oren Ambarchi –
Audience of one [Touch]
Oren Ambarchi –
Sagittarian domain [eMego]
Australian
multi-instrumentalist Oren Ambarchi was undoubtedly one of the artists of 2012.
His name turned up in far ranging media from the Wire to Resident Advisor with
regular frequency and his recording legacy from last year was simply superb.
Discogs lists at least nine albums he participated in, including two stunning
solo works, one for Touch and the other for Editions Mego. Although we will
play the plaintive short track “Salt” from “Audience of one” on this week’s
show, the highlights of the two albums is easily the long tracks “Knots” and
the title track of “Sagittarian domain” which is actually the only track, each
clocking in at over 30 minutes. Both are sumptuous and progressive jams,
building in tension, texture and wonder as they climax. There is a lot in
common with the other Australian group The Necks in “Sagittarian domain” with
its combination of bass-drum repetitions driving the track forward, but in
place of Chris Abrahams ethereal piano licks, Ambarchi unleashes his electric
guitar and various electronics until the end breaks down into wistful modern
classical finale. “Sagittarian domain” feels almost like a classic psych or
space rock group doing a freak out whereas “Knots” is more complicated and more
electric, bustling and fizzing across more uneven territory, but one that still
climaxes in a wave of raw power.
Bee Mask –
Vaporware / Scanops [Room 40]
Bee Mask – When
we were eating unripe pears [Spectrum Spools]
Chris Madak’s
Bee Mask project has been in existence for several years, since 2005 at least, with
plenty of releases now on his own Deception Island cassette label amongst
others. Even though I don’t own a cassette player anymore, there is no reason
why I shouldn’t have come across his work until last year. But I still have the
first moments of listening to “Vaporware” etched deeply in my mind. There was
no sense of needing to grow into it, of music and listener testing each other,
it was within a minute or two an unresounding “yes”. The Room 40 release was
the first I heard with the opening spill of sound reminiscent of PopolVuh’s
“Aguirre” soundtrack, but never quite feeling like a mindless homage either as
it slowly thickens into a more corporal piece. The B side “Sacops” also wears a
few influences on its sleeve for the opening minutes, harking back to some
classic ambient and minimal classical composition before blasting itself into
outer space via a frenzy of analogue synth chatter underpinned by meditative
choral drones. But this is the key to Bee Mask’s sound: exploration,
re-synthesis and technology with an inherently spiritual core. That said, this
is not anywhere near New Age music although the longer form tracks do have a
healing energy. In a 2011 interview with Foxy Digitalis
Madak claimed to have taken some influence from American abstract artists like
Ad Reinhardt, Brice Marden and Robert Rauschenberg, stating that:
“I got
interested in the idea that once you’re looking at your project as one
progressing toward the identity of work and surface, the concept of fidelity
loses its object and becomes meaningless.”
The key concept
appears to be this idea of surface, as there is a curiously superficial feel to
the music, not in terms of meaning or vision, but of gliding between
transparent surfaces or states, where all musical colour and meaning comes from
the collections of light and reflections shifting across the dual interfaces.
Moreover, Madak makes sure to break the surface at certain moments, with gnarly
synth workouts or volume effects, to facilitate a penetration of the material
and precipitate vulnerability in the listener. “When we were eating…” is
altogether different compositionally, working off much shorter pop song
lengths, albeit wonderfully sequenced, but combining much of the same sound
synthesis: 70s sci-fi effects, serene hypercoloured backdrops of mystic
temples, melancholy angels and nature hallucinating an idea of itself. Essential.
Robert Hampson –
Répurcussions [eMego]
Robert Hampson –
Signaux [eMego]
Robert Hampson –
Suspended cadences [eMego]
It seems a long
time since I heard anything from former Loop and Main man Robert Hampson
although he hasn’t been entirely inactive of late. However, three albums at
once is almost a frightening load for anyone. In many ways, there is not a
great deal of difference between any of these, with “Signaux” and “Suspended
cadences” even going together to form a pair. The sound is post-Main in that it
extends the micro guitar textures of the Main material into even more minimal
and insectoid forms. “Suspended cadences” represents two studio improvisations
whereas “Signaux” is essentially the same material recorded live in Paris on
two separate occasions. It appears that no laptops were used in the music
making process, only to record the material, but there appears to be plenty of
source machines and instrumentation used to create these side-long pieces, particularly
guitars and various analogue electronics, some of which sound like circuit bent
gadgets. The three tracks on “Répurcussions” had their origins in different
live performances, being commissioned for different spaces and festivals. The
source sounds for the track “Répercusions” are distinctly percussion based
instruments, though as with all Hampson’s material since Main, they are highly
processed. “De la Terre à la Lune” on the other hand from takes its inspiration
from NASA missions and sci-fi classics like 2001 and Solaris. Understandably
there is little rhythm across all three releases, though pulses do surface in
“Signaux” and drum sounds do create a cinematic sense of drama in
“Répurcusions”. Such Spartan and spidery music can feel academic and dry at
times, but there is always a wealth of micro texture and detail to focus in on,
whereas the improvised construction loosens the tracks from any overbearing
rigidity.
Retina.it –
Descending into Crevasse [Glacial Movements]
There is a
marked difference between the Italian duos previous album “Randomicon” and
“Descending into crevasse”. The former is more complicated and mechanistic, more
aligned with IDM via its beats, whereas the new album is noticeably more fluid
and rich in feeling, perhaps to fit better in the Glacial Movements label
aesthetic and sound. Indeed, some passages of “Descending…” are so mesmerizingly
rich with beauty and soft-lit emotions that they are almost painful. The key is
the simple melodies that repeat in different spaces and with varying
trajectories, often derived from what sound like samples of jazz and classical
music. This is not to say another Gas-like album as here the constructions are
melodic, simply repeating phrases that wash and tremble. The second track
“Freezing the fourth string” is perhaps the most obvious, at least by the name,
combining string washes as if hearing chamber music play in the room next door
from the throes of sleep. “Moonshine” is perhaps the standout track and
features on this week’s show. The mood is harder to divine, a little dramatic
like the “Moonlight sonata” perhaps, and yet uncertain and merged with
endlessly changing thought. The mood darkens as the album plays out, with the
micro rhythms of “-32°F Porcelain, Metal & Ice” adding an extra sense of
urgency, whereas the closing title track is stark and threatening at times with
monumental grandeur. But “Descending…” is not overly a dark album. Rather its
coolness is a slowing of process that gives a luxurious sense of immensity.
Christoph Berg –
Paraphrases [Facture]
“Paraphrases” is
the debut album from Kiel-born and Berlin-based composer Christoph Berg under
his own name after two more electro-acoustic albums under his Field Rotation
alias released in 2011. The album is a collection of chamber music compositions
recorded over a period of two years and apparently all played by Berg, with
some remix help on various tracks by Aus (Yasuhiko Fukuzono) and Peter
Jørgensen. The pieces are mainly written for violin, piano and double bass
although extra non-musical sounds also work their way inside, such as drones,
found sounds and the electronic tones and typewriter effects used on the
intriguing track “Poems written by an old (prepared) piano” which features on
this week’s show. The mood is sombre or pensive throughout, evoking wooden
houses and the skeletal thread of winter trees etched into the mist. The cover
depicts a similar image, of a lonely woman’s silhouette lost in the fog. It is
the violins that dominate the opening sequences, one mixed into a tapestry
beneath the fluttering, sing-song expression of the first violin that cries the
melodies. The bass is plucked almost percussively and drops out altogether in
many moments to enhance the sense of loneliness and fragility. Piano comes into
play during “Poems…”, but the following “Buildings at night” returns to the
violin-bass combination and almost offers a brighter ray of hope for a moment.
However, “Interlude”, like “Poems…” is a stand-alone piece, merging reverbed
ambient recordings of what sounds like a train station, with droning violins
and isolated notes of a glacial piano. There is a wooden timbre to the violins as the
end draws in, such as on “A small path crossing”, bringing a richer mid-range is
sturdier and offering strength. The finale “Quiet times at the library” brings
back the violin call of the opening track, but sets it free over a sparser and
more evanescent backing this time completed with piano. “Paraphrases” as a
whole feels like some kind of travelogue, a memory of a journey in a quiet
vehicle, the landscape trapped behind the glass and disappearing in time and fog.
An absolutely beautiful and heart rending work.
Superstorms –
Superstorms [Experimedia]
Superstorms is
the project of Michael Tolan formerly of Ohio noise group Tusco Terror and sometimes
working with the trio Trouble Brooks who have also collaborated with EmeraldsMark McGuire. Across the five nameless tracks here of varying length, Tolan
explores the interaction between timbral pressure, feedback and drones which, once
collided, seem to hang precariously over a chasm of infinite space. One analogy
would be to take meaning from the project name and picture dark and potent storm
clouds suspended overhead. The sound seems to surge forth from an invisible
sonic crevasse, jagged and buried at the centre of the mix like a crack of
lightning. From a distance the scene is smooth and roiling, but on closer
inspection the sound is distinctly fractured and particulate, almost granular,
like lightning atomized into micro sparks that remain embroiled in the clouds
without pouring forth in rain or forking into the earth. This is not immersive
ambient, but expulsive listening, like a rejecting from gravity instead of
falling into the abyss. Volume here does actually help too as there is a lot of
movement in the small sounds at different velocities and hearing with
headphones helps the microscopic analysis, but doesn’t give any sense of the
whole.
Damian Valles
–Nonparallel (in 4 movements)
[Experimedia]
All the music on
“Nonparallel” was composed and arranged entirely from samples from the
recordings of avant-garde Western classical composers and computer music
released by the Nonesuch label in the 60s and 70s, including artists like
Elliot Carter, William Bolcom, Charles Ives and Charles Wuorinen. The project
then recalls Wolfgang Voigt’s Gas, although sounds much noisier, and also
Indignant Senility’s “Plays Wagner”, itself inspired by Gas and yet sounding
much closer to Canadian multi-instrumentalist Valles. All samples for the album
were taken from vinyl originals with the intention of leaving in all the snaps,
crackles and pops which probably accounts for the buried glitch and percussion
elements the push at the surface from below, but never break through. Each of
the four tracks is almost identical in length and in a way structure, being
long dense fields of noise, but as would be hoped they all differ in their
timbral range and the timing of the slow-motion climaxes that rage within.
“Movement II” is particularly menacing at times, as is the closing track. “Movement
III” bends and twists like a dancer as it emerges and even hints at melodies at
times. He layering here is perhaps the most subtle of the album which compels,
but can also feel heavy and at times a little over controlled.
Charlatan –
Isolatarium [Type]
Digitalis label
boss Brad Rose has a huge collection of cassette albums, but surprisingly only
three or so on vinyl or CD. Aguirre re-released his debut album “Equinox” in
2011, whereas his “Triangles” album came out on his own label in the same year.
Birmingham label Type now give us the pleasure of a new release which has a
similar sepia/ochre tinted cover image to Bryter Later’s “Two lenses” released on
Students of Decay last year. And just like Bryter Later, there is a strong representation
of the music in the cover art. Here a woman stares forth from the yellowy gloom
bearing a bandits mask and this is perhaps the essence of the album: a cloudy
hijack. The dreamy, ambling tones of opening track “Codex” suddenly jolts awake
with the lumbering slow motion techno garble of “Kinetic disruption”, a more
than apt name for its arrival. “Anti-crash device” feels horrendously
cacophonous at times, yet its chiming synths and earnest, but untethered
searching are strangely protective. The rest of the album follows suit, if not becoming
noisier, providing juxtapositions, stable discomforts and mazey escapes. Not as
easily digestible as “Equinox”, but its all-terrain influences from buried techno,
to synth jams, noise and beyond keep it from becoming obnoxious.
Alex Cobb – Passage
to morning [Students of decay]
Intimacy is a
word that can be thrown around a lot in ambient circles, just like isolation.
Almost anything that is quieter than normal requires you to get closer or
exposes you to a rawness or a sense of precariousness or evanescence that
invariably draws the intimate tag. In addition, how much happy ambient music is
there, meaning there is more scope for intimacy since sad feelings are often
the more guarded? So much ambient music is tinged with this sadness, the waking
and falling feeling. Intimacy is thus a cliché, but often an apt one. You can
find the word in the press notes for Alex Cobb’s latest release, for example,
an album that arrived almost two years after his prolific run as Taiga Remains
came to an end. Perhaps then the tag fits in with something from his personal
life that is not mentioned, but as far as listening goes, it certainly feels appropriate
here, but not in the typical obvious way. This is not sad or even overtly
emotional music. At times there feels like there is only a stark neutrality to
the sound. But yet the music is somehow intimate, demanding that you come close
to it to hear its purpose. There are so many tiny ripples slipping to the
surface here, that it is easy became enchanted following them, wondering where they
had arisen from and where they go. There is an amazing amount of simple
movements occurring and an obscure number of sound sources. There is feedback,
perhaps, and samples, but the microprocessing of the sound is wonderful even if
the overall character may not be the most original.
Am reading
Thomas Mann’s “Doctor Faustus” (1947) at the moment, the story of a tortured musical
genius Adrian Leverkühn who sells his soul to the devil for success at the
price of love.
“A night
where it doesn’t get dark for the lightning”
quips
Adrian towards the books end. Such a price.
The book is
a thinly veiled critique of the German psyche and the rise of the second world
war. My translation is H. T. Lowe-Porter’s original one from a 1968 Penguin
edition with yellowed pages, typewriter font and lines pressed so severely together.
Not as enjoyable as I had hoped. Nonethless, the books greatest feat is to run
three parallel times together. It begins with Adrian’s life lasting from the
late 19th century to the outbreak of war. It also covers almost
journalistically the closing phases of the war when the book was written, as if
it was being written s it was read, with Mann injecting himself into the pages
via the character and narrator Serenus Zeitblom PhD. The third time is of
course the present, which is where we find ourselves now.
Some small
updates about some recent comings and goings. Many will have seen the recent
updates of artists for three of Spains upcoming music festivals.
Sonar: Darkstar, Paul Kalkbrenner, Sherwood
+ Pinch, and Karenn (Blawan + Pariah) among other artists join the show in June.
L.E.V. Festival: Plenty of good names on the roster
for L.E.V. this year in Gijon on the north coast of Spain (low cost flights do
go there). Music is great and beer is cheap, food plentiful and who can beat
the line-up of Oneohtrix Point Never, Raime, Andy Stott, Tim Hecker, Pole and
more.
Micro Mutek: Micro Mutek is now only two weeks
away and obviously everything is now in place so its time to make plans and get
tickets. Jeff Mills, Monolake, Laurel Halo, Jon Hopkins, Kuedo, Deadbeat and
more. There will also be the usual Q&A sessions with artists, workshops and
discussions. Click on the link for full schedule.
Speaking of
Mutek, here is a link to a recent interview I did for Mutek with Jon Hopkins who will play
a live set at this year’s festival to promote his new album that is coming out
on Domino.
This week on Cabeza de Vaca our search for classic house cuts takes us all
the way back in time to 2012! Just kidding. We go back in time to the mid 80s
and up to the mid 90s, cherry picking the best tracks from some of the recent
house compilations that came out in 2012, although some date from a little bit
before. It was arguably Gene Hunt’s reel-to-reel treasure chest of unreleased
tracks on Rush Hour that opened the door, but certainly the flood of historical
interest has well and truly been unleashed. It would seem that somewhere around
the 20 year mark it almost becomes mandatory to start scouring again the
origins of scenes, bands and labels. Maybe it is the generational leap? Suddenly
the world is full of kids born in the 90s to whom the origins of house are not factual,
but mythical, swirled into the mists of time and increasingly foggy with each
passing day as truth gets lost and primary sources dry up.
Strut Records has also been in on the act of late, and
although a lot of the emphasis has been on house, there is still plenty more to
mine. Where, for example, are the compilations of hardcore or Balearic? Has
anyone got the balls to try and overview and contextualize Gabba, for example?
Time will tell.
Some brief additional notes:
Aaron Carl’s track is not from a compilation as
I mention, but both “Wallshaker” and “Crucified” were re-released by Millons of
Moments who have also snuck out the odd house track on their many compilations,
like the fantastic “Styrax special A” with Ron Trent and Larry Heard. The
original of “Wallshaker” was released in 1997, almost a dcade after Fingers Inc’s
(Robert Owens') classic “Bring down the walls”, released on Chicago’s Trax in
1986, and one wonders if it is a little homage? The catch cry of “Can you feel
it?” seems so universal, but one cannot also forget that Owens also had a track
by this name.
Elbee Bad’s track “I like to move (solid mixx)”
was also a curious one to track down. The original mix, as well as several
others, came out on a 12” in 1996 on the Red Heat Label under the L. B. Bad
name, but the only mention of the “solid mix” (sic) comes from the French label
House Music Records, where the remix is credited to DJ Deep, a French DJ and
producer. However, the truth is that it appears to have been unreleased until 2005
when it came out on Cricklewood’s BBE (Barely Breaking Even) label compilation
CD (not on the vinyl) “City to city” which appears to be a pretty rich trove of
house treasure. I used to live in Cricklewood which is why I highlight this
otherwise meaningless fact. The actual “solid mixx” with a double “xx” is
probably just a way of distinguishing it for some reason. Incidentally, “True history of house
music” was a name Rush Hour appropriated from a 1999 Elbee Bad 12” that came
out on the famed International Deejay Gigolo Records. The name of the track is
not ironic, but literal by the way:
The original mix of Nexus 21’s “Still life” is
much more indebted to the classic house and the early rave sound than the more
techno-styled remix, although both are simmering and still wonderful.
Finally, Gemini’s “Le fusion” ultimately won
out as the best track off the Strut compilation collecting Cajmere and Cajual label
stuff for its unashamed proximity to real jazz. One interesting aside of Green Velvet was the recent remixes of the
track “Feeling kinda high” featuring the vocals of Terence F. M. that appeared on
Chris Liebing’s CLR 10th anniversary singles. Here though, it received
a German translation to become “Auf Und Ab Und Kinda High” by Dustin Zahn.
NOTE: when I have time I will re-load all the old programs as well so that they will be available for anyone who is interested.
As always, send promos, emails, comments to floatinghead9[at]yahoo.es and keep the peace.
The dub techno community seems to inspire as
much devotion as it does scorn, especially from critics who often complain of
its sameness. A trawl through the eight tracks in this week’s Cabeza de Vaca showwould suggest that they don’t sound the same
even if many stick to the tried and true template. But what genre of
electronica does not have its ground rules? This is indeed the framework of
electronica and the dancefloor: it has to fit together, like Lego bricks and it
doesn’t fit if the pieces are changed too much. Dub techno’s strength is in
texture and ambience. Dancing is not necessary, neither is breathing or
movement sometimes given the gaseous and will-o-wisp nature of so many tracks
and that can only be a good thing.
The original idea of today’s show was to have a
focus on some of the recent releases by Deepchord, who like some other dub
techno artists, namely Quantec, My Cloudy and Bvdub (if you still consider him
dub techno) release a lot. It soon became apparent that looking for some of the
smaller and often more net-based labels was a more rewarding way to focus the
show. The sad thing was there was also plenty of tracks that couldn’t fit in.
A special shout out then to Merino at the Woods n Basslabel
as I really wanted to fit in “Retina”, but didn’t have time. Next show! There is
also so much good stuff on Entropy Records especially that couldn’t fit in.
Maybe a special on them one day. They deserve some extra attention as well for
their packaging details and broad release policy, doing everything from ambient
to modern classical. Their proposed vinyl box set could also be an interesting
one to keep an eye on for 2013. Many of them are branching into vinyl such as
Pong Musiq and ZeECc, but some are still digital only or even fledgling like
Future Reactions. This is also a subtle way of saying that these labels need
support as they really do hold the community together and they do work hard. It’s
often difficult to stand out when there are so many labels vying for your time,
but it would be a great loss if these labels went the way of record stores and
disappeared.
For a great
round-up of dubtechno in 2012 head over to dub technology
Important Note : many of the older shows are no longer archived at Scanner FM doe to change of the server to host the new layout and programming. If anyone is interested in hearing older shows, please email me at floatinghead9[at]yahoo.es and I will arrange something for you.
First proper show for 2013 is all about the Long
Island Electrical Systems (L.I.E.S.) label from New York which should by now be
no stranger to followers of electronic music. Head over to First proper show for 2013 is all about the Long Island Electrical Systems (L.I.E.S.) label from New York which should by now be no stranger to followers of electronic music. Head over to Scanner FM to listen. If you didn’t hear any of the two singles on the Glasgow label Dixon Avenue Basement Jams yet then I also recommend you keep listening right to the end for the extraordinary crunch and grind of Marquis Hawkes.