Blogiarhiiv

12/28/2010

Interview with Dave Keifer/Cagey House


I sent some questions over to the United States, to David Keifer aka Cagey House, a webaudio legend whose year of 2010 was dedicated to constructing lots of crafty issues apparently looked upon very purpose to be improved on his cut and paste/sound collage/plunderphonics/sampledelic/hauntology approach.


The year 2010 is coming soon to its very closure having been very profilic for you. More concretely, are you satisfied with your goals and those realizations in principle?


In general, I was pretty happy with what I came up with this year. There was a kind of density on the tracks I made in 2010 that hadn't been there previously. That's especially true of Flapper with Tuba and some of the tracks on Ratty Boo. The only thing I was kind of disappointed with was the spoken word parts on Stupid Grin. I had thought that coming up with texts would be really easy, but it's not. So if I'm going to continue in that direction, I'll have to work a lot harder than I thought I would. Which isn't necessarily a bad thing.

Indeed, regarding your dense, alchemist-alike, even obviously tiresome way to explore the tracks, could you step backwards and analyze what were the basic differences and features of the issues?

Looking back, this year was about achieving a higher level of density - a kind of multi-voice critical mass. Up until around November of 2009, my main technique had been a kind of sequential collage. I'd make different tracks, then cut them up and string certain parts of them together, one after another. The Major Monk tracks and the B for Breakfast tracks are good examples of that. But then when I was finishing up Camping with Jimmie, which was one of the last things I made for Do the Magnet, I got to the point where I actually had two different tracks running at the same time - one in the left channel and one in the right. And it was a really cool effect. Then, without really thinking about it much, I just kind of threw myself into that kind of "everything at once" style of writing. Flapper with Tuba is really just an extended experiment in that. Each of those numbers started out as a little scrap of melody which I would keep dubbing back over itself - after some tinkering with voicings, and pitch and tempo. The cool thing is that, to me at least, they had a lot of emotional impact - they really took on a life of their own, and didn't sound just like experiments in technique. Through the rest of the year, I kept trying to expand that technique. And I started dubbing larger structures over themselves and over each other. For instance, instead of staring out with just a little bit of melody, I'd start out with more elaborated things, things that already had multiple parts to see how they would sound when played simultaneously with themselves, or some other multi-part thing. Most of the time the results were horrible, and I had to abandon them, but every now and then things got really interesting, and wild.

What could the melomans expect for the next year by you? What are your further doings to be planned out?

I have an album called June through the Window coming out on Weird and Wired in January. That one has lots of the really dense stuff on it. There's also lots more of that on an as-yet un-named album that I hope will be out on Just Not Normal later in the spring. That one also has some much simpler music on it as well. After that, I really don't know. My wife bought an ipod touch, and there's tons of music app for that. It would be fun to explore that - to be able to write away from a PC - to be able to write on the sofa, or even outdoors, that would be great! In any event, I'd like to really hone the emotional impact of what I do. A lot of the time I get hung up on method - I'd like to really start focusing on the buzz the music gives off.

Thanks a lot, David!

[Artists] Jean Dean


Myspace
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[Old but important] Time Columns Sunriseinthesea EP (Bandcamp)


Time Column`s debut, the 5-track Sunriseinthesea EP (released on the 25th December of 2009 promptly after the ensemble`s first US-based tour had finished off) has already been looping at the non-stop regime for some hours in my headphones, and indeed, as for the whole set the better sorts of scents are brought forth after every following listen time. Two guys - Kenny Eaton and Jordan Miller - coming from Baltimore, Maryland, USA, exploiting guitars, keyboards, drums, and effect-sustained devices (moreover, Gibson Echoplex can be suggested as their third member) to conjure a mix of fusion/jazz rock, post-rock, math-rock, and classically layered progressive rock sound. No doubt, their interplay is an instrumental rock-relied synergic reflection, which does search for diverse chord compounds and complex, cadence-based realms, sometimes being "stuck" in restraint runs and even introspective hoverings, the another time, yet, blown up into the acceleration of synth-infused guitar grimaces, acquiring lots of panoramic flashlights to be brightened up and broadened into near-epic glider trips. Indeed, it is a solid example of intelligent rock music which can be enjoyed at the duo`s concert tour coming soon at the beginning of the January of 2011.

Listen to it here

12/27/2010

Th.en.d Metaphors EP (Mixgalaxy)


The Berlin-based Norman Dauskardt aka Th.en.d has released two EPs to date. His first, the 3-track issue Schizophrenic Birth (2009, Acustronica) was composed in a seemingly loose way, yet, regarding some aesthetical intentions and sonic feats, it can be admitted now, those aspects of the sonority foresaw the future upon the next release(s). Beside overwhelming, lazy downtempo milieus, or more punctually, below the lustrous play of colours the motorik rhythms are pretending for the dominating position to be overtaken sometime. Moreover, though The Beatles and The Doors are referred as Dauskardt`s main influences, the krautrock-ish angle is the most evident characteristic on the new record. In any cases, it is not possible that a decent German-based experimental musician could somehow have had no idea about the glorious tradition and continuity of the Teutonic experimental rock scene. Buzz-injected, heavy-weighted in a psychedelic way, symphonic-inflected synth chords, austere yet dynamic metronome-drowned beats do play up a solid whole, first of all, reminding the doings of NEU!, and the soundscape of recent compatriots by the likes of Mina, Cidulator, Isolèe, and Lali Puna as well. If you wish call it as neokrautrock, or call it as post-disco, however, it is quite impossible to resist against the kind of mesmerizing, determined rhythm-based magic sound.

Listen to it here

9.3

[Artists] Channeller

Channeller
Myspace
Lastfm

A Sunny Day in Glasgow Autumn, Again (ASDIG)


Ben Daniels-headed Philadelphian sextet released the third album, as a total sum, having the longitude of 33 minutes on 11 tracks. Vis à vis with their previous, shoegaze-meets-doo wop album Ashes Grammar (2009) it is used to be a bit more straightforward shoegaze/atmospheric/electronic pop release, though, in principle, the basic elements for manipulating to get involved in new patterns are previously the same ones, featuring catchy harmonic walls, burbling keyboard surfaces, blissful, female-based vocal oozings, fuzz-infused guitars, and lo-fi-inflected, synth-driven, rough-formatted cadences at times. Aside 100/0 (Snowdays forever), which sounds as a shoddily nude tribute to Stereolab and Laetitia Sadier, it might be watched upon it as a possible go-ahead, even rock-ish format for the English-French combo. Yet, nowadays, when Stereolab might be considered as an ensemble without its proper place and time, reflecting via retrodelic memories upon the past time cliches only while ASDIG has much more to add for, because of having incorporated the influences by the poptronica/chillwave movement and vital shoegaze hooks as well.

Listen to it here

8.7

12/26/2010

Jean Dean Steps (Jean Dean)


I have big pleasure and honour to announce the Tallinn-based ensemble Jean Dean released recently their debut single Steps and video for it at their Myspace page. Undoubtedly it is the day single (and obviously for the next days as well) of mine because of creating vast monumentums and evoking lots of nostalgic memories in my head and shaking strongly some of my soul`s inactivated edges and pouring over the imaginary borders, offering a flying platform for to get glidered from the snowy present toward the fairy tale-alike past to be drowned into great parallels applicated to Estonia and the United Kingdom as well. In any cases, Jean Dean is a quartet consisting of musicians known by their previous and parallel independent musical activities in various groups. Kene Vernik (song, guitar), Allan Pilter (guitar, synths, harmonica, electronics), Margit Korbe (synths, backing vocals), and Inga Nõlvak (bass, backing vocals) are intended to create suggestive, dream-filled (not catchy tunes in the first sense, though) soundscapes with crisscrossed guitar lines, velvet-infected noisy indie feedbacks, with lots ups and downs and key changes. If to come back to the above cued reference it reminds of apparently forgotten Estonian band 1983 (having been active in the first half of 90`s) and of course Lush ( their line-up consisted of 3 women and a man as well!), though, Jean Dean is used to be a bit more murky, a bit more dark-hued, more detailly, via mostly Kene Vernik`s lush, velvet-filled timbre. A perfect workout indeed. The nineties are coming back? It seems to be so at least...

Listen to it here

10.0