29 Feb 2020

Islet Buzz

Got a CD to review this month for Buzz Mag. An actual compact disc. Lovely stuff.


ISLET
Eyelet (Fire Records)
*****

Local heroes Islet (Powys counts as local yeah?) return with album number three and their first release since 2016’s Liquid Half Moon EP. Lusher and more melodic than previous releases, Eyelet is a crazy cawl of tropical pop, electric psych, and odd rock. In lesser hands, such a scattergun approach could soon grate, but here Islet has made something special, in particular, the tabla-driven Radel 10 and the sweeping electronica of Geese. A brilliant live band too, Islet play Clwb Ifor Bach on March 7th.



Related post: Islet + Free MP3s


2 Feb 2020

5 in 1 (4)

Let's get listy. Five tracks for this week.


Four Tet - Baby


So that's what Ellie Goulding has been up to. Another top cut from Four Tet's upcoming new album, Sixteen Oceans

Nicola Kazimir - Angel Of Light Saturday Appropriation Acid Mix


Anyone for an acid workout featuring lifts from the Legend of Zelda: A Link To The Past OST?

Squarepusher - Terminal Slam


What a video. A response to T69 CollapseDaito Manabe directs on Terminal Slam, the latest release off Be Up A Hello.

AFX - Bodmin 2 


Another week, another rare-ish Aphex Twin track. Bodmin 2 was a previously unreleased track from Analord 6. Reminds me that I didn't finish reading Walking the Music of Aphex Twin.

Gang of Four - Damaged Goods


RIP Andy Gill.

Related posts:
Original image: Ulamm [CC BY-SA]

1 Feb 2020

Slowly Repeating Myself


Month two of a new decade* and I'm sticking to the rivers and the lakes that I'm used to.

Why try something new when I can post about Aphex Twin and Simon Reynolds? The latter was all up in my feed again this week with a piece for Resident Advisor2010-19: Back To The Garden: The Return Of Ambient And New Age is a thorough recap of the scene. With Reynolds though, it's where this music sits in our culture, what it says about where we are and where we might be going, that really chimes.

"Whether the impetus is entirely personal or a semi-conscious response to the runaway train of geopolitical instability, many people involved in ambient and New Age see the music as something close to self-medication."

And while the New Age stuff isn't really my bag (with the exception of Beverly Glenn-Copeland), that's not the case with ambient. Which leads me on to something I've been meaning to post about properly for a while, Aphex Twin - Sleep Mix (by naked flames).



This mix helped me so much in 2019. Whether it was helping me cope successfully in hospital around Frank's birth or helping me cope unsuccessfully in my previous job, it delivered breathing space, goosebumps, and time to think. It's mainly made up of tracks from Selected Ambient Works II with a little bit of Drukqs sprinkled in.

I'm not sure how I came across it but it was definitely on YouTube. It's since been hit with a YouTube copyright strike. Probably didn't help to have a free download link underneath it. However, it looks like other Sleep Mixes by naked flames are still up, so give them a go too.

Another top thing about that Simon Reynolds article is that I'm now aware of a compilation called Kankyō Ongaku: Japanese Ambient, Environmental & New Age Music 1980–1990. I've never heard of a release with a more perfect title.

*Jog on if you're one of those bores who's all "well actually 2021 is the start of a new decade as there was no blah blah blah" - no. Not interested.