Blogiarhiiv

9/26/2011

Valery & The Greedies - Where's Satan? (2011)



/Punk funk, Post-punk, Alternative dance, Dance rock, Art rock, Disco, Alternative, Experimental rock/


Comment: punksters have always loved to dance and abandon their bodies to grooves. All of that embarked on once at Hacienda headed by such groups as Joy Division, Section 25, A Certain Ratio. On the other side, at the same time in the USA were some groups living up to the melomans` expectations, for instance, James Chance & Contortions, and ESG. However, the Petrozavodsk/Petroskoi, Russia-based quartet Valery & The Greedies revivifies and revamps this glorious dance rock/dance punk tradition, making it out in a very eminent way. Indeed, Where`s Satan? is one of the best groove rock albums I have listened throughout the 00`s and 10´s. And you are used to think that the Klaxons is a good one... .

Christian Galarreta - Computer Music Is Dead (2011)



/Noise, Drone, Experimental electronica, Avant-electronica, Drone noise, Microtonal, Sound-art, Electro-acoustic/


Comment: this is a 2-track album by a Peruvian laptop musician who provokes and reconstructs the very core of electronic (computer) music. Or at least our imagination of it. Incessantly buzzing drones, static yet tense electricity and a shitloads of phase changes, drilling noiseful ghosts are represented here as if gigantic butterflies striking with their wings above the maelstrom of bits and bites. In fact, it almost rings out like an instance of noise symphony chalking out a picture of the cemetery of dead computers. Of computers within the sound is ceased to chime.

9/25/2011

awaycaboose - Glencarse Jam

Rob Bridgett - Arkhives (2008)



/IDM, Experimental electronica, Dubstep, Ambient, Jungle, Experimental, Breakbeat, Epic, Ambient dub/


Comment: behind this project is Rob Bridgett, a Canadian based composer and sound director. Here are represented 13 diverse tracks veering from lofty ambient dub and epic dark-hued steps to intellectual dance music to rattling, thudding breakbeats to bewitching jungle maze. On the other side, Black Lodge sounds like drone/weird folk-alike appearance. Such sort of music does have as similar relation to the rhythms of club dance as post-rock-ish energy used to have a spot upon the adult oriented rock music. This issue belongs to such sort of releases yet waiting its time to be glorified decorously in the future.

Les Enfants Sales - V.I.T.R.I.O.L. (2011)



/Art punk, No wave, Avant-garde, Dark wave, Apocalyptic folk, Neofolk, Post-punk, Noir, Experimental rock, Noise rock, Gothic punk, Crossover/


Comment: Les Enfants Sales is anything but ordinary. The French band consists of Chris Zèro, and Madame B, the latter of them has been very profilic in her doings, who, by any means, could be compared with such outstanding vanguard-ish (female) punkers as Lizzy Mercier Descloux, Lydia Lunch, and Linder. This 10-track album showcases a brooding art punk/no wave/gothic punk/cutting edge post-punk approach, yet on the other side having murky flirtations with apocalyptic folk/dark wave-esque muses. More detailly, those slowed-down incantations are craftily varied with noisy mayhems, in the midst of it Madame B used to intone or even groan her wraithful manifestations. Furthermore, the closure track Exi ab eo is a martial anthem centered around Zèro`s angst-filled shouting, Madame B`s reverberations, all of that assisted by medieval flute whiffs and ghastly sounding theremin. A superb issue indeed. This is our punk rock for sure.

Diym - Nine (2011)


Diym

8.6

/Alt-folk, Singer-songwriter, Indie folk, Dream folk, Alternative pop/rock, Soft rock, Folk indie,Dance rock, Electro-rock/

Comment: this is already the ninth compilation by the Diym label. Here are represented such artists as 4our5ive6ix, Revolt at the Robot Factory, Five Star Debauchery, John Burns, Lothian 121, The Orange Strips, and Pete Davis. The miscellany has its focus stretched out from introspective alternative folk ditties to mainstream-appealed heavy guitar riff-based songs, from dance rock/new wave/electro-rock grooves to soft rock/bombastic pop scopes to dream folk appearances.