Sunday, 18 August 2013

Audio Journal: 18/08/2013

There are many reasons to look forward to Fridays, but in the past six months I've found another reason: Jonny Trunk's 50p Friday emails.

Jonny runs the archival Trunk label, which remasters and reissues albums that their original labels don't feel there's a demand for any longer. Often issued as beautiful vinyl repressings, Trunk has become the place to go for unusual obscurities, forgotten soundtracks and much more. Back in February, Trunk reissued a single by The BBC Radiophonic Workshop as a download for a mere 20p and since then Jonny has been hand-picking an album from the label's back catalogue and offering it up as a download for a mere 50p. Over the past six months he's offered Louis and Bebe Barron's early electronic soundtrack to Forbidden Planet, albums from Peter Cooke, the Herbie Mann record I wrote about recently, cool bossa nova from Charlie Rouse, wonky jazz from Raymond Scott and primitive computer music - it's mindbendingly diverse stuff.

Sadly Jonny's taken a holiday this week and so there was nothing on offer on Friday, but if you want a means of comprehensively expanding your knowledge of music in these austere times, Trunk is the place to head. Navigate to the 50p Friday menu link on Trunk's website to fill your ears with great tunes you'd never think to listen to for less than the price of packet of crisps.

The past week I was tipped off about an album of covers of predominantly Eighties pop tracks by an Australian unit called Parralox. Recovery tackles classics from Erasure, Madonna, Pet Shop Boys, The Cure, Front 242, Depeche Mode and many others. My full review can be found over on Documentary Evidence here, but suffice to say it's probably the best electronic pop album I've heard for a long time.

Dave Fleet, who works under the alias Laica and who I wrote about ages ago (click here for that post) has a number of new projects in the can. Not content with lining up the Environs project for Alrealon, he's contributed to my upcoming MuteResponse project, is realising tracks inspired by my short story The Engineer and today let me know about another project, this time an EP for the Phatic Musk label. A short teaser for his latest dystopian soundtrack hit YouTube today – check it out below or hit here if you're reading on email.



Finally, I was recently sent a new track from Iggy & The German Kids which is presently doing great things on German radio. The mastermind behind this great, towering pop electronic moment is Ignacio, who I also wrote about way back in the early days of this blog. The Lynchian suburban nightmare video for 'So Hard' can be reached below, or for those reading this on email, click here to watch over at YouTube.

Monday, 12 August 2013

Audio Journal: 12/08/2013 - Sounding The Body Electric

Sounding The Body Electric (Calvert 22, 2013)
Sounding The Body Electric (Calvert 22, 2013)
Source: MJASmith
On Friday my friend Dan and I visited Sounding The Body Electric: Experiments In Art And Music In Eastern Europe 1957 - 1984 at Calvert 22 Foundation in Shoreditch. The exhibition focusses on the development of electronic music, often for experimental film and adventurous radio programming, in Eastern Europe.

The exhibition consists of audio excerpts, video footage and examples of mind-boggling graphic scores that looked more like waveform descriptions in some cases and less formalised Damien Hirst coloured dots in others.

The photo above is of a series of vinyl records turned into an artwork covering a large area of wall, each LP subjected to a specific treatment, process or design.


Sounding The Body Electric: Experiments In Art And Music In Eastern Europe 1957 - 1984 runs until 25 August 2013. More information can be found here.

An accompanying 2xCD collection of excerpts from audio works included in the exhibition was released by the Bólt label.

Wednesday, 7 August 2013

Audio Journal: 07/08/2013

Three things occupied my adventures in music last week.

The first was watching two documentaries broadcast on Sky Arts in the last year - one about Robert Moog's development of his genre-defining synthesizer, and another about the BBC Radiophonic Workshop. Both highlighted a visionary spirit that feels like it's been lost with the successive democratisations of electronic sound over the past thirty years, first with the development of digital synths and then with software synthesis. Moog synths required the user to literally engineer a sound using an array of knobs, filters and the like, whereas the Radiophonic Workshop's methods pre-dated synths completely, pitch-shifting basic oscillators by painstakingly recording to tape, cutting said tapes into loops and layering the results into dizzyingly creative soundworks. The most famous Radiophonic Workshop composition was the original theme to Doctor Who, but few who listen back to that today would appreciate just how complex it was to create.

Moog DVD (2004)
Moog DVD (2004)

One of the most interesting things I took away from Moog was Bob decrying the moves toward bedroom electronica that means anyone with a basic laptop and free software can create passable music. His synths, he explained, were designed to be played live. If the number of settings on a Mini-Moog look hard to control in a live setting, watching footage of Keith Emerson conjuring complex clusters of frantic melodies out of a vast modular system - literally the synthesizer equivalent of a telephone exchange with cables connected, spaghetti like between hundreds of inputs and outputs - justified Bob's claim. I may not yet have embraced prog, but Emerson's frightening mastery of this unwieldy beast did at least make me appreciate that we have indeed lost something in laptop electronica's global takeover. As I write, I've just filed a review of Berlin-based electronic artist James Welch's debut album under the moniker Seams, one of my two assignments for Clash this month. The accompanying press release has us believe that Welch has created the album with a nod to his live sets, but I'm not sure Bob Moog would have necessary appreciated the dry sound Welch has delivered on Quarters.

The second concern last week was jazz. With the house to myself for most of the week while my wife and kids were away, I found myself consuming jazz voraciously, starting with flutist Herbie Mann's 1962 performance at the Village Gate in Greenwich Village, New York and concluding with Stan Getz's set at the nearby Café Au Go-Go some two years later. Sadly, like most of NYC's most historic music venues from yesteryear, neither venue is there today, even if the Village remains more or less untouched by real estate development. In between Mann's deep introspective take on George and Ira Gershwin's 'It Ain't Necessarily So' and Getz's bossa nova set with Astrud Gilberto ('Girl From Ipanema', their most famous collaboration, was not part of the set), I watched Bruce Weber's documentary on West Coast trumpeter Chet Baker, Let's Get Lost. The film was made in 1988, just before Baker fell out of a window in Amsterdam, trumpet still in hand, silencing a fifty-odd year career in music. The contrast between Baker the slick young gun and the weathered junkie shown in his twilight moments was frightening, but appearances can clearly be deceptive - on the footage of Baker singing and playing trumpet on what would prove to be his final trip around the globe, he still very much had his chops intact, still capable of delivering standards with a casual vibrancy that characterised his career.

Herbie Mann 'At The Village Gate' (1962)
Herbie Mann At The Village Gate (1962)


The final musical concern last week was a lengthy piece I wrote on the overlooked post-punk unit Rema-Rema, notable for including future Adam & The Ants guitarist Marco Pirroni in their ranks and also for setting a quality standard for Ivo Watts-Russell, who released the bands's solitary 12" Wheel In The Roses on his 4AD label, one of the most important British independent labels. My archive piece benefited from the insight and recollections of the band's vocalist Gary Asquith, who I've been interviewing about his various musical projects since last year. Asquith gave me a heap of images, flyers and posters from 1978 / 79 when Rema-Rema were active, making this one of the articles I've enjoyed writing the most over the past ten years. The piece can be found here.

Rema-Rema 'Wheel In The Roses' flyer
Rema-Rema Wheel In The Roses flyer

Wednesday, 24 July 2013

Audio Journal: 24/07/2013 - Clash album reviews

TYTHE 'And Also With You'
TYTHE 'And Also With You'

As part of my ongoing occasional work for Clash, I was recently asked to review four debut albums for their website.

Benin City are named after a Nigerian state capital city and their music represents an ambitious blend of everything from dubstep through to sonorous brass recalling the arrangements of Burt Bacharach. Their debut album Fires In The Park was released at the start of July. My review can be found here, and a feature I wrote on the band will be published in the next physical issue of the magazine, due to hit newstands in early August. That issue also finds me reviewing the reissue of All Hail West Texas by The Mountain Goats.

Half Moon Run's Dark Eyes is an audaciously polished first album from this Canadian unit, and this is a band that have a stadium-filling career ahead of them if they knuckle down and work hard enough. My review of Dark Eyes can be found here.

Producer Julian Peck operates under the alias TYTHE and his first album And Also With You is one of the freshest things I've heard this year, referencing the sort of eclecticism that characterised the Balearic scene at the end of the Eighties. Every year I alight upon an album that becomes a sort of informal 'summer album' that I listen to over and over until the air turns cooler. And Also With You is probably that album for summer 2013 for me. My review is here.


Having long been enjoying a love affair with New York, I jumped at the chance to cover the debut album from Scott & Charlene's Wedding - the brainchild of Aussie frontman Craig Dermody, Any Port In A Storm recounts his disenchantment and homesickness at having moved to NYC from Melbourne. Man up Dermody and quit your whining! I would give my right arm to have the chance to live in New York! You can read a more balanced assessment here.

Friday, 19 July 2013

Audio Journal: 19/07/2013

Devendra Banhart
Devendra Banhart
Last night Mrs S and I found ourselves in London for a concert together. The concert was Devendra Banhart at The Barbican, supported by his bandmate Rodrigo Amarante. I reviewed the concert itself for Clash, and that review can be found here.

Of late, possibly inspired by the hot weather, I've found myself listening to a bit of Latin music - bossa nova, Latin pop and so on - and so Amarante's set in particular appealed to that current musical interest of mine. Amarante appears to be preparing an album for release, so while I wait for that, here's one of the tracks that he played in his too-brief set. (If you're reading this on email, click here to hear the track.)


Sunday, 9 June 2013

Audio Journal: 07/06/2013

Lately, two factors have made me re-consider my music purchasing habits.

The first was moving house last September and finally having somewhere to present my collection of records and CDs. In unpacking all of my CDs from plastic boxes that had previously resided in my loft, I was surprised at how many things I'd accumulated that I no longer especially cared for - half-built collections of New Order singles and spin-off projects from that band, dance music singles that haven't lasted the test of time, compilation albums that I bought just for one song; that sort of thing. There was also the attendant realisation that actually I still didn't have enough space to put every CD I own out on display, and so I've been thinning out my collection ever since via eBay and Discogs.


The second contributing factor arose out of more ethical considerations. Since I started being taken slightly more seriously as a music journalist with the pieces I've written for Clash, most of the music that I've written about has been delivered to me digitally. PR companies and labels tend to issue promotional copies of releases these days in the form of watermarked downloads, the watermark being there to discourage you from sharing it; the implication is that if you do leak or share it, it can all be traced back to you and the appropriate punishment administered. Consequently there are less and less 'physical' pieces of music coming into my house these days. Anything I do buy tends to be something that's genuinely worth buying from a collectability point of view - highly limited cassettes such as ones I've received lately from bands like Security and Table Scraps, boxsets or limited, special items such as a recent hand-stamped Maps 12" - or cheap second hand vinyl bought from Discogs. In the case of any physical music arriving on my doorstep, I tend to convert it more or less straight away so I can listen to it on my iPod whilst travelling, given that this is where I write most of my reviews.


What's ethical about the latter factor? Not a lot on face value, but getting more music sent to me digitally has made me ponder on what the most ethical, or more accurately, sustainable way of purchasing music is. The answer isn't readily available. I've seen no academic papers on this, no official research and Google searches don't seem to throw anything up. I enquired of an ethical investment research company that I meet with periodically, and they were also not aware of anything that had been written on the subject.

So, my own very crude and simple assessment. On the one hand, physical formats - vinyl, CD, cassette and even the advent of ever-cheaper cheap USB sticks loaded with music - are energy- and resource-intensive to manufacture and the resultant physical object is not easily recycled, nor is it easy (except perhaps with vinyl) to manufacture them from recycled materials. On the other hand, the energy and server requirement that's needed to keep the cloud online as a placeholder for downloadable music makes the comparison and decision over the most sustainable format really difficult; with more and more stuff getting put into the cloud, the energy consumption (especially for cooling servers) is on the increase, as is the requirement for the hardware to support it.


In the absence of any meaningful guidance and until someone tells me otherwise, I'm going with gut instinct and opting for downloads. All of which makes the $100 I dropped on CDs in New York in the last fortnight somewhat surprising, but you'll have to wait until next time for that.

Friday, 9 November 2012

Audio Journal: October 2012

David Byrne, How Music Works

In October I attended a talk by former Talking Heads frontman David Byrne and electronic musician Matthew Herbert at the Curzon Cinema in Chelsea. Herbert has been churning out electronica since the Nineties, recently made a record comprised entirely of the sounds of a pig from birth to bacon, and was recently installed as the director of the Radiophonic Workshop, a venerable BBC institution best known for producing the early electronic theme music for Doctor Who. Byrne, on the other hand, has just published a book titled How Music Works, and this London date was part of a small global tour to promote the book.

At Herbert's suggestion,the Curzon debate was titled Do We Need Any More Music?, and began with a stark statistic from a friend of Herbert's who works at Apple that 75% of music released on iTunes has never been downloaded once. Not once! The pair then began dissecting music's current ease of production owing to cheap and ubiquitous software, often including so many preset sounds, rhythms and styles that Herbert said it was akin to 'shopping', while Byrne countered that it was more like 'spellchecking' in the way that the software encourages everything to sit neatly on a grid. Herbert somehow kept steering the conversation round to the topic of food (he was clearly hungry); in contrast, one tedious question in the audience Q&A afterwards pondered on the fact that 'Byrne will collaborate with anyone for a packet of Doritos'.

One of the topics that the pair kept returning to was the economics - of lack thereof - in music today, turning their focus on the hairy topics of copyright, declining incomes and illegal downloading. Byrne cited a book by someone I've never heard of, who downloaded his way through college until an epiphany struck him at the Brooklyn coffee shop he worked in once he'd graduated. He began to notice that many of his customers were from local bands like Yeasayer and TV On The Radio, much-feted bands that he'd seen on TV, in the press, heralded as cool and whose records he'd downloaded - for free. He couldn't get his head around why these people had no money, until someone explained that they made no money from record sales as no-one was really buying music, tours rarely broke even and that the financial realities of being a musician today were pretty stark. Byrne never managed to complete the anecdote, but Herbert said we all had a responsibility to encourage scenes to develop.

At some point in proceedings my mind started to race, and I came to two conclusions:

1. Though I write about music pretty much every day, either for my own Documentary Evidence website or for the magazine Clash, I'm not doing enough to support the artform I love the most; and

2. I feel a need to expose my two children to as much varied music as possible.

In response to the point Herbert made around encouraging scenes to develop, I realised that I'm already part of a small scene. Documentary Evidence is a website devoted to the music of one label, Mute, a label that released music by Depeche Mode, Moby, Nick Cave and countless others, whose Blast First sub-label first brought Sonic Youth and Dinosaur Jr. to the UK, and who played an integral role in dance music's development via the Rhythm King and NovaMute imprints, releasing genre-defining works by S'Express, Bomb The Bass, Plastikman and Speedy J. My site has a small and ardent following of like-minded fans, and so I've decided to do something within that scene beyond writing reviews and conducting interviews.

I haven't worked it all out yet, but it's called MuteResponse and I'll post details soon.



As well as curating my own site with more or less daily reviews, from February this year I've been writing occasionally for Clash's website, covering gig reviews and interviews. I've tended to focus on Mute acts because it's my main interest, and that's lead to interviewing people like Dave Gahan from Depeche Mode, Jon Spencer from the Blues Explosion and Chris Keating from Yeasayer. My good friend Andy put me in touch with Clash and through that connection and the stuff I've done since for them, I think I can now legitimately call myself a freelance music journalist, particularly after my review of Yeasayer's gig at The Lexington made it into the magazine edition of Clash in the summer. It doesn't pay a penny, but it's a lot of fun getting to talk to your musical heroes and being on guest lists, and I've learned more about the music industry this year than I ever knew before.

Andy and I have worked on three gigs together - Barry Adamson, Inspiral Carpets and, at the end of October, Crime & The City Solution at the Queen Elizabeth Hall. A few weeks back I got to interview Crime's frontman Simon Bonney. Links to both can be found below. Hopefully it goes some way to allay any concerns that I've simply stopped writing.





Yeasayer, mentioned above, are masters of songs that I described to the band's Chris Keating as being 'balanced precariously above a chasm between joyous and miserable'. He didn't disagree, and more or less took it as a compliment. In the last week I've found myself listening to Robyn's 'Dancing On My Own' far more than is good for me. I'd never heard the song before, but it was played in a particularly and unexpectedly moving scene at the end of an episode of Girls, a programme that I fully accept is not really designed for me and possibly highlights that I'm far too prudish.

In the scene, Hannah is mulling over a tweet that she intends to send about having caught an STD from a former partner and finding out that her ex boyfriend is gay. She sends a pithy melancholy message and Robyn's song starts playing in the background. She begins to dance - pretty badly, even by my standards - and her flatmate, Marnie, returning from work, joins in. The scene has that joyous sense of expression mixed in with a pretty depressing backdrop. Robyn's smart song straddles that same chasm as Yeasayer in a much more overtly display of visceral, intelligent and savagely addictive pop. It joins the playlist I've yet to make - stuff like MGMT's 'Time To Dream' (a song that eulogises having sex with models and shooting up smack and which leaves you unsure whether you're celebrating that, condemning it or regretting that you can't join in), most of Polly Scattergood's work and loads of other bittersweet songs I seem to make a habit of collecting.