Electronic Sound November 2015 PDF Edition
Transcription
Electronic Sound November 2015 PDF Edition
NOVEMBER 2015 The rise and fall of Japan CARTER TUT T I VOI D. GHOST BOX . LLOYD COLE . IRMIN SCHMIDT. LUKE HAINES. MONEY MARK . PH I L MANZ ANER A . PERE UBU. SQUAREPUSHER . Editor: Push Deputy Editor: Mark Roland Art Editor: Mark Hall Commissioning Editor: Neil Mason Graphic Designer: Giuliana Tammaro Sub Editor: Rosie Morgan Sales & Marketing: Yvette Chivers Contributors: Andrew Holmes, Anthony Thornton, Ben Willmott, Bethan Cole, Carl Griffin, Chris Roberts, Cosmo Godfree, Danny Turner, David Stubbs, Ed Walker, Emma R Garwood, Fat Roland, Finlay Milligan, Grace Lake, Heidegger Smith, Jack Dangers, Jools Stone, Kieran Wyatt, Kris Needs, Luke Sanger, Mark Baker, Martin James, Mat Smith, Neil Kulkarni, Ngaire Ruth, Patrick Nicholson, Paul Thompson, Robin Bresnark, Simon Price, Stephen Bennett, Stephen Dalton, Steve Appleton, Tom Violence, Velimir Ilic, Wedaeli Chibelushi Published by PAM Communications Limited © Electronic Sound 2015. No part of this magazine may be used or reproduced in any way without the prior written consent of the publisher. We may occasionally use material we believe has been placed in the public domain. Sometimes it is not possible to identify and contact the copyright holder. If you claim ownership of something published by us, we will be happy to make the correct acknowledgement. All information is believed to be correct at the time of publication and we cannot accept responsibility for any errors or inaccuracies there may be in that information. With thanks to our Patrons: Mark Fordyce, Gino Olivieri, Darren Norton, Mat Knox HELLO welcome to Electronic Sound NOVEMBER 2015 This month, we’re turning our attention to Japan, a fascinating outfit from an era which produced great groups and great music in a seemingly endless stream, a time when being in a band and going through a constant process of invention and reinvention was simply the done thing. The Japan story is a classic example of rapid mutation in the British music scene. By the time they released their first album in 1978, their glam style was slammed in the music press for being out of date. Japan responded with a second album within months and three more before the end of 1981, a run of fine records that sprang from the fecund and frenzied atmosphere of creativity and productivity of the day. But as each subsequent album crept closer to the glory that was their 1981 breakthrough, ‘Tin Drum’, the band was falling apart. Japan had a Greek tragedy of a career, and just as they hit gold they split up, the deep schisms that had opened up between them personally and musically unbridgeable even by the success they’d worked so hard to achieve. At the same time as Japan’s doomed trajectory, the underground scene was, if anything, even more fertile. Throbbing Gristle provided a particularly critical node of electronic music throughout the late 1970s and into the 1980s and its members continued to create interesting work many years on, so it’s a great pleasure to catch up with TG’s Chris and Cosey in this issue. They’ve just released a fabulous new album with Factory Floor’s Nik Colk Void under the name Carter Tutti Void, so we sent our man Kris Needs to spend the afternoon chewing the fat with them around their kitchen table. Kris had last interviewed Chris and Cosey in 1978. Elsewhere, we chat to Jim Jupp and Julian House from Ghost Box Records, a label whose output over the last 10 years suggests they have inherited the intensive work ethic and artful aesthetic of the post-punk era. We also talk to Irmin Schmidt from krautrock legends Can to get the low-down on his solo work, which now spans an incredible six decades, and to one-time jangly popster Lloyd Cole, whose unexpected (to us, at least) forays into electronic music are producing some impressive results. Electronic Sound is a broad church, welcoming all who approach music making with an explorer’s spirit, searching for new sounds and fresh ways to put them together. That’s why Pere Ubu’s David Thomas interests us, as well as Squarepusher, Phil Manzanera, Luke Haines and Money Mark. You’ll find them all inside and much more besides… Electronically yours Push & Mark FE ATUR E S JAPAN: A FOREIGN PLACE JAPAN Japan spent the late 1970s and early 1980s in an almost epic struggle with their own music, with their record labels and, most rancorously, with each other. The story of one Britain’s more enigmatic pop groups makes a compelling read In an exclusive extract from a brand new biography by musician and author Anthony Reynolds, we get a behind-thescenes look at the astonishing in-fighting that eventually tore the band apart CARTER TUTTI VOID Returning with a second longplayer, the legendary Throbbing Gristle duo of Chris Carter and Cosey Fanni Tutti again hook up with Factory Floor’s Nik Void and turn in one of the albums of the year. We get an invite to chew the fat over a cuppa round their kitchen table GHOST BOX Often referred to as a modernday Factory Records, Jim Jupp and Julian House’s retroreferencing, forward-looking Sussex-based label, celebrates its 10th anniversary – and they’ve given us a rare interview LLOYD COLE IRMIN SCHMIDT Indie crooner turned electronic experimenter talks to us about his long-standing love for electronic music and how the modular workflow has given him a whole new world of sound to explore While his band, Can, were true innovators, Herr Schmidt’s solo work was just as mind-blowing, as the release of a 12-disc retrospective of his solo output amply proves TECH TOKYO’S 5G SYNTH EMPORIUM SYNTHESISER DAVE Is this the greatest synthesiser emporium in the world? We investigate, but not before cutting the company credit in half Our very own synth wizard leaves his shed this month to visit the Electronic Sound studio where he diagnoses a sickly Roland Juno 106 readers’ synth The first, the original, the synth that launched a thousand synths, drum roll please, be upstanding and make squelchy noises with plenty of LFO modulation capabilities for the legend that is the Roland SH-1 ALBUM R EV I EWS ROOTS MANUVA, WOLFGANG FLÜR, LUKE VIBERT, JOHN FOXX/HAROLD BUDD, COMA, LUKE HAINES, EVERYTHING BUT THE GIRL, PUBLIC ENEMY, ZEUS B HELD, COLDER and quite a fair few more besides… NYBORG REVIEW Analogue Solutions serve up a very lovely new synth module, look mum, no keyboard required FABFILTER PRO-C 2 REVIEW FabFilter upgrade their Pro-C compressor plug-in, giving it a complete overhaul. Bet it took them ages thinking about what to call it… WHAT’S INSIDE OPENING SHOT Squarepusher’s band, Shobaleader One, marked their full live debut by battering out a bunch of ’pusher cuts from 1995-99, it was quite a night… PULSE We’d like you to meet some very fine new music and the kind people making it. This month: PUMAROSA, FOREGROUND SET, LETTA and SIM HUTCHENS UP THE FRONT TIME MACHINE Roxy Music’s guitarist Phil Manzanera remembers the three live shows he played in 1976 as 801 with some heavy friends, including Brian Eno UNDER THE INFLUENCE As you’d expect, Pere Ubu’s frontman DAVID THOMAS has some varied and fascinating influences: American literature, comedy, cities, cable TV ads… FAT ROLAND 60 SECONDS So there used to be rules for our minute-long video portrait. Did we not say “no gorilla masks” when we asked LUKE HAINES? Apparently not In the spirit of pop stars writing novels, it seems that Fats has been up in his attic and uncovered a novel written by an iconic music star who isn’t VInce Clarke. We would say it’ll make more sense when you read it, but it almost certainly won’t JACK DANGERS Casting back a mere two decades, we dig up ‘Mark’s Keyboard Repair’, the infectious debut album from Beastie Boy cohort MONEY MARK This month Jack talks about the ultra-rare ‘Casse-tête’ by Bernard Bonnier, an amazing artefact recorded in 1979 by a forgotten master of musique concrete, and a precursor of Byrne and Eno’s ‘My Life In The Bush Of Ghosts’ ANATOMY OF A RECORD SLEEVE THE REMIX REVIEW Ah, art school. Happy days. Drunk on warm beer, high on cheap drugs (and that was just the tutors). We deconstruct the daubings on JAPAN’s all arty ‘Oil On Canvas’ album cover Ukrainian/Canadian duo UMMAGMA welcome OMD’s MALCOLM HOLMES on remix duties and we invite all parties to tell their respective tales of how it all came about BURIED TREASURE NEEDS MUST Tunes that can “sprout the genitalia of a young donkey”? It can only be KRIS NEEDS’ monthly round-up of electronic strays, stragglers and assorted quirks, which makes him sound like some sort of techno rag and bone man… LANDMARKS Japan’s synth wiz Richard Barbieri talks us through the making of the band’s breakthrough hit, the very excellent ‘GENTLEMEN TAKE POLAROIDS’ THE OPENING SHOT SHOBALEADER ONE Location: The Troxy, London Date: 24 October 2015 Photo: GAËLLE BERI On one weekend in October, Tom Jenkinson took to the stage in London to play a set brimful of classic tracks from the late 90s Squarepusher back catalogue. Nothing so unusual about that. With a career that spans two decades and umpteen releases, Squarepusher has played his fair share of live shows. But they were nothing like this. Back in 2010, Jenkinson released the ‘d’Demonstrator’ album under the name Shobaleader One. At the time, the project was shadowy at best. We knew he’d recorded it with a live band, but when quizzed about his new outfit Jenkinson claimed they were “a bunch of people who you may or may not have heard of from other bands and projects”. Alongside Squarepusher on vocals and bass, there was Strobe Nazard on keyboards, Sten t’Mech and Arg Nution on guitars, and Company Laser on drums. The album came out and despite noises being made about a tour, that was sort of that… until now. Five years down the line and we’ve finally had the hotly anticipated full live debut performance of Shobaleader One. So who are they? All we can tell you is that Jenkinson has been “working with an ensemble of like-minded musicians to develop new ideas and reinterpret choice nuggets from his catalogue”. If you recognise anyone in the photo, do please let us know. THE FRONT HEN BACK WGS THIN , T WEREN ARE Y E HOW TH W NO TIME MACHINE 801 THE SUPERGROUP THAT LASTED SIX WEEKS We’re heading back to the sizzling summer of 1976, where one-time Roxy Music colleagues Phil Manzanera and Brian Eno are heading up the intense but brief experiment they called 801 Words: PUSH In the summer of 1976, as Britain enjoyed the longest stretch of hot weather on record – “Phewnomenal!” declared the Daily Express – and The Clash and The Damned played their first ever live gigs, four men gathered in a cottage in rural Shropshire. They were all significant figures on the UK music scene and they were there at the instigation of Phil Manzanera, guitarist with Roxy Music, who were on a break at the time. Brian Eno had played alongside Manzanera in the earliest days of Roxy. Bill MacCormick had been a member of Quiet Sun, Manzanera’s pre-Roxy band, before joining Robert Wyatt in Matching Mole. The fourth man was Bill’s brother Ian, who had written lyrics for Quiet Sun but was best known as Ian MacDonald, assistant editor of the NME. Manzanera, Eno and MacCormick had been discussing the idea of recording together for a while, but during their stay in Shropshire they came up with an idea for a band that put their original plans on the back-burner. The result was 801, named after a reference in ‘The True Wheel’ on Eno’s ‘Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy)’ album – “We are the 801 / We are the central shaft” – and an outfit quite unlike any other, either before or since. “It was a crazy project,” admits Phil Manzanera almost 40 years on. “There were basically two premises for 801. The first was that it would be a band with a limited time scale, a band that would only last for six weeks, which was a very Eno type of concept. The second was that the line-up would bring together people who were highly technical musicians with others who were totally against even the notion of technique. The whole thing was designed as an experiment, both in terms of music and format, with no purpose other than to see what happened.” Keyboardist Francis Monkman from Curved Air and slide guitarist Lloyd Watson, who had played on Eno’s ‘Here Come The Warm Jets’, were hastily recruited and the line-up of 801 was completed by a then unknown 18-year old drummer called Simon Phillips. Manzanera booked some rehearsal time at Island Records, where they started reworking tracks from Manzanera and Eno’s solo albums, plus a couple of old Quiet Sun songs and a couple of covers. And as the sessions got underway, Manzanera arranged for the group to play three gigs at the end of the six-week period. The first was a low-key set at West Runton Pavilion in Norfolk on 26 August, which was followed by an appearance at the 1976 Reading Festival two days later. The Reading gig was billed as “Phil Manzanera”, with Eno and their other associates’ names underneath in smaller letters. “Yes, quite right that everybody else’s names were smaller than mine,” jokes Manzanera. “I suppose the organisers billed it like that because Roxy were at their height at the time whereas nobody knew what the hell 801 was, let alone what we might sound like. The gig was very nearly a disaster because Francis Monkman got stuck in a traffic jam and only just made it. We thought we were going to have to play without him right up until five minutes before we went on. The relief of him turning up meant we actually played quite well. John Peel said some lovely things about us afterwards.” The third and final gig was a headlining show at the Queen Elizabeth Hall in London on 3 September. The set was recorded and released by Island as ‘801 Live’ a few weeks later and stands as a fascinating testimony to the intense if brief experiment that was 801. It’s almost a sort of bridging album, with heavy doses of prog, strong hints of new wave, and plenty of Bill MacCormick Brian Eno Lloyd Watson Francis Monkman Simon Phillips Phil Manzanera innovative electronic sorcery. The version of Manzanera’s ‘Diamond Head’ is head-spinningly beautiful and proves that there’s so much more to guitars than big riffs and long solos, while their take on Eno’s ‘Third Uncle’ is as fierce as anything you’d hear at a punk club over the next couple of years. Of particular note is ’TNK’, a dramatic version of The Beatles’ ’Tomorrow Never Knows’ underpinned with glorious synth washes. “That was always one of my favourite Beatles tracks and at that point nobody else had covered it,” says Manzanera. “It sort of felt like an outrageous thing to do, but I thought it was perfect for that particular combination of musicians. Eno had a cassette of random stuff he’d recorded from the radio, which he turned on when we started playing ’TNK’ and it comes in and out throughout track. So we utilised some of the ideas behind the original ‘Tomorrow Never Knows’ in terms of using extraneous sounds, but then we had all this great musicianship too. “The Queen Elizabeth Hall gig went very well and people seemed to like it. They seemed to like it a lot. I remember thinking, ‘Oh, that’s it, it’s over, that’s not a very clever career plan, is it?’. But then we all got on with other things, exactly as we’d planned to do. Something I was especially pleased about was how much interest there was in Simon Phillips after 801. He was incredible for his age. I mean, ‘801 Live’ is worth getting for the drums alone. Everybody who saw Simon at that gig thought, ‘Bloody hell, who’s this guy?’ and he got so much work as a result, with Mick Jagger, Robert Fripp, Stanley Clarke and many more. These days, he’s one of the most famous drummers in the world.” That wasn’t quite it for 801, though. There was actually a second release, a studio album called ‘Listen Now’ which came out in 1977, but this was essentially a Manzanera, MacCormick and MacDonald record with a bit of help from guests such as Godley & Creme and Tim Finn from Split Enz. Manzanera admits that they just used the name 801 to capitalise on the success of the Reading and Queen Elizabeth Hall shows. “801 was brilliant fun and I’m still in touch with everybody who was involved, but there’s no question of a reunion,” notes Manzanera, who co-produced David Gilmour’s recent ‘Rattle That Lock’ album and is currently a key member of the Pink Floyd man’s live set-up. “For one thing, there’s no way I’d even suggest something like that to Eno. It’s not in his nature to do the same thing twice. And although 801 did feel more like a band than a project, we really couldn’t have stayed stayed together any longer than six weeks without killing each other. The technical people wanted it more technical and the others were saying, ‘Nooooo, stop playing so many notes – simplify, simplify, simplify’. When I think of it, I find it quite amazing that we managed to last as long as six weeks.” pulse Yanking on our new music chain it’s the glamorous electro-voodoo of PUMAROSA, the ice-cool Norse invasion of FOREGROUND SET, darkside West Coast grime producer LETTA and the splendid twitch-techno of Essex’s own SIM HUTCHINS XXX FRONT THE PUMAROSA London quintet invoke demons in an old Italian cinema WHO they? A London five-piece who formed from the ashes of fashionista-approved vocalist and guitarist Isabel Muñoz-Newsome’s failed attempts to get a punk band together with drummer friend Nick Owen. After the addition of Tomoya Suzuki (synths/sax), Neville James (guitar) and Henry Brown (bass), they decamped from a stinking hot 10-foot square chipboard rehearsal room in London’s glamorous Manor House to the 40 degree heat of Calabria in Italy. A residency in a ruined cinema owned by a surrealist artist found them sweating out a batch of songs. the air when their hypnotic debut single ‘Priestess’ is spinning. Described as a mix of the heavier songwriting of PJ Harvey or Patti Smith meets nocturnal electronics of The Knife and Cocteau Twins, Pumarosa themselves have the track down as an “industrial spiritual”, which conjures up a beautiful, but unlikely image of Throbbing Gristle performing at a gospel brunch. With saxophones. Clocking in at a mesmeric seven and half minutes, it’s not entirely clear what exactly is going on – but there’s plenty of time decide, and in any case, there’s much here to like. MAT SMITH WHY pumarosa? You mean apart from the fact that there’s a distinct shortage of bands named after obscure fruit? How about that they seem to operate in the same dreamy shoegazy ephemeral territory as The xx while picking up where SCUM left off in trying to use their music to conjure demons out of thin air. It’s a common complaint when recording in abandoned film houses apparently. Lots of ghosts. TELL US MORE And talking of spirits, there’s very much something of Siouxsie & The Banshees in ‘Priestess’ is out now on Chess Club XXX FRONT THE FOREGROUND SET Scandinavian funktronica at its finest WHO he? Joar Renolen from Lillehammer is the brains behind your new favourite Norwegian electronic outfit. His latest release, six-tracker ‘All Peak Run’, is jam-packed with super squelchy sounds, feel-good beats, funk-fuelled rhythms and a smattering of bleepiness – what’s not to love? backbone of relentless, driving bass and shuffling drums, coming up clean as a freshly bought whistle. ‘Mega Trees’ feels like the theme tune to a futuristic ‘X-Files’ (think robotic Mulders and Scullys), while ‘Quickfix’ features vocals from Fieh, another emerging Norwegian artist whose voice lends an eerie air to what is otherwise a beautifully chilled slow-jam. WHY foreground set? TELL US MORE Because in less than a minute, ‘All Peak Run’ EP will have you tapping your toes at the very least, if not up and on your feet and dancing like no one’s watching. The title track is a tour de force, with a Norway has form with this kind of ice-cool funk, take the genre-morphing Röyksopp or ethereal dreampopsters Bel Canto for starters. Big boots to fill but Renolen is rising to the challenge and has been pretty busy over the past few years, starting back in 2010 when he was featured as “Ukas Urørt” (unsigned band of the month) by P3, Norway’s hippest radio station. Since then he’s released three EPs on Slekta Grammofon – ‘Good Luck’, ’Nullpunkt’ (‘Zero’) and ‘Høy På Pære’ (‘Keeping Up Appearances’) – as well as having strong affiliations with the Diskorama Records gang. ROSIE MORGAN The ‘All Peak Run’ EP is out now on Balsa Wood/Slekta Grammofon XXX FRONT THE LETTA Grimy LA beatmaker exorcising demons in stunning greyscale WHO HE? American producer Tony Nicoletta has quite the backstory. Having left home at 13, he grew up fending for himself in Seattle and Arizona, dealing with addiction and homelessness for much of his young life. He was a junkie for six years, and has been in and out of rehab countless times. Since getting his act together (he’s been clean for some years now), Letta’s been living in a warehouse in LA’s Skid Row district, known for its sizeable homeless population. WHY letta? Despite difficult circumstances, he’s always remained committed to making music. His resolutely insular debut album, ‘Testimony’, is full of echoes of his troubled past. Letta has a real affinity with pitch-shifted R&B vocal samples, akin to producers such as Burial or Mssingno. These voices cut through the layers of sonic fog like ghosts from the past, the lost souls who weren’t quite as lucky. a new type of music where atmosphere takes precedence over energy, and lush, heartrending synth melodies occupy the same space as gunshot snare hits and deep sub-zero bass. COSMO GODFREE TELL US MORE While he may have grown up stateside, his musical influences come shrouded in the dismal gloom of the British Isles. He’s spoken of his love for Portishead and Joy Division, both groups that share that same sense of melancholy and darkness. In particular, ‘Testimony’ owes a great deal to the current clutch of UK producers (Visionist, Logos and Mr Mitch) and the early grime instrumentals of Wiley and Ruff Sqwad, and repurposing their textures for ‘Testimony’ is out now on Coyote Records XXX FRONT THE SIM HUTCHINS Off-kilter glitch-ambience meets weird-techno WHO HE? Audio/visual artist from, rather specifically, north west Essex, who deals in ambient judder flecked with twitchy off-piste techno. His compelling debut album, ‘I Enjoy To Sweep A Room’, comes on like a tinkly music box rewired by twisted musical gremlins. Expect outdated effects units, shoddy guitar pedals, AM radios and 80s digital reverb galore. WHY sim hutchins? Having honed his production licks in and around the grime scene, on Essex pirate radio and at East Anglian free parties, Hutchins retreated to the blurry edges of ambient/drone/techno to cook up his debut outing ‘Ecology Tapes Volume One’ in early 2015. With a teaser track, ‘I Will Unify The Hood Through My Vision’, appearing on No Pain In Pop’s ‘Bedroom Club III’ compilation in August, his first long-form is due on the label in early November. TELL US MORE Hutchins fell into experimenting with video, messing with circuit-bent FX boxes and screen grabs, to complement the style of his tunage. Think fuzzy, lo-fi and re-processed. No Pain In Pop commissioned him to make Ukkonen’s ‘Luomus’ video, his debut promo, and a short film by Sim, ‘We Believe In Technology’, is set to be screened at the prestigious London Short Film Festival in January. The video for his album’s lead track, ‘Tie Me To A Rocket (And Point Me At The Ground)’, deals with “psychic driving”, an experimental psychiatric procedure that saw patients drugged and exposed to looped audio message in a bid to alter their behaviour. You will love Sim Hutchins, you will love Sim Hutchins... NEIL MASON ‘I Enjoy To Sweep A Room’ released by No Pain In Pop on 6 November 00:00:60 XXX FRONT THE sixtySECONDS The excellent LUKE HAINES doesn’t technically break any of the rules for his one-minute portrait – but we might have to include a limit on masks from now on… https://www.youtube.com/embed/eS9Mg56y6RM NAME: Luke Haines BORN: 7 October 1967, Walton-onThames BANDS: The Servants, The Auteurs, Baader Meinhof, Black Box Recorder FAVOURITE KRAFTWERK ALBUM? “‘Radio-Activity’ is the one,” he tells us. “It was a much more important record to me than ‘Autobahn’. When I first heard ‘Autobahn’ it was kind of a downer that they were using flutes. It was half a good record, there were a couple of cool synthy things, but the flutes and the bird calls… I didn’t get that as a kid.” the recent Mark E Smith tribute ‘Adventures HIGHEST CHART POSITION? Oh come come, let’s not be churlish. While In Dementia’, a micro opera about The Fall’s mighty leader going on a caravan holiday. it is still illegal in many parts of the world to allow Haines an existence outside of The Auteurs, he has released 11 albums under WITH IDEAS LIKE THAT, his own name since 2001’s ‘The Oliver WHO NEEDS HITS RIGHT? Twist Manifesto’… which is more than his “I like people like Robert Wyatt who just previous four groups combined. But if we’re get on and do what they do,” explains counting, Black Box Recorder’s ‘The Facts Haines. “I never really considered it being a of Life’ grazed the Top 20 in 2000. career. I probably did for about 10 minutes in 1994. If it comes to it I can go and get a job if I have to. I can serve a pint, you SO NO HITS THEN? Well, erm, no. But that’s a minor detail when know. I’d be happy to chat to punters.” the man is clearly some sort of maverick mastermind. Take the 2003 album ‘Das Capital – The Songwriting Genius of Luke Haines And The Auteurs’. It was his own orchestral testimonial to himself. Face it, no one else was ever going to bother. Or there’s THERE’S AN APPRENTICESHIP GOING IN OUR LOCAL BAKERY… “You should send me the details… £100 a week? That’s good money.” Subscribe to Electronic Sound LESS THAN £3 PER ISSUE FREE 7" SINGLE PLUS FREE MUSIC DOWNLOADS www.electronicsound.co.uk/subscribe to find out more THE FRONT UNDER THE INFLUENCE Pere Ubu’s infamous frontman DAVID THOMAS takes his turn to share some of the building blocks behind his groundbreaking work Interview: DAVID STUBBS THE FRONT “ A M E R I C A N L I T E R AT U R E AN EPIPHANY IN GEORGIA As a kid, I read lot of Hemingway and Ray Bradbury. In theory they’re two very different writers, but in reality there are similarities: Bradbury writes about things that aren’t seen and Hemingway writes about things that aren’t said. I also remember listening to recordings by Vachel Lindsay, the so-called “singing poet”. My dad was doing his masters on Lindsay – he was an American Lit guy – he was into the Beats, Ginsberg, Kerouac, he knew Gregory Corso’s wife. He was of that generation. Kerouac I liked because Kerouac was The Kid. I loved that whole idea of the journey east to west and following the sun. I thought the other Beat poets were theatrical, detached, whereas Kerouac was like, “Hey, let’s go!” and that to a child is much more interesting. My father had a few albums which he listened to endlessly like ‘The World Of Harry Partch’, which was my introduction to music. He didn’t have a huge record collection, but this was in it. It was amazing. I was 10. No one told me this stuff was weird. It sounded cool to me. My dad also had a Lenny Bruce album, which features Bruce lying on a gravestone on the cover. I also liked The Kingston Trio’s song ‘Tom Dooley’ as well as ‘Worried Man Blues’, a folk song that has become something of an obsession for me over the years. Pere Ubu were pre-punk, not post-punk. We came up as part of a short-lived generation in America in the mid-1970s who were literate kids. Groups like Television and us and The Residents and a number of other little groups you never heard of had ambitions – it seemed very clear to us at the time that there was another step coming and that we were the step. The evolution of the rock movement was really an upward straight line from the adolescence of rock ’n’ roll: ‘Heartbreak Hotel’, which formalises the third person narrative voice of rock music (it’s not about the Elvis character, it’s the bellhop who’s watching the Elvis character), then The Beach Boys and The Beatles. Then, in the 70s with the arrival of the analogue synthesiser and the realisation that the hippies were just a bunch of corporate tykes and the counterculture was a total farce, there we were, we seized our mission, and punk came along and wiped the whole damn thing out. . The first album I ever bought was Frank Zappa’s ‘Uncle Meat’ and then ‘Hot Rats’, which featured a really cool vocalist called Captain Beefheart, on the basis of which I bought ‘Trout Mask Replica’. Then came the MC5 album – that, along with Curtis Mayfield’s ‘Super Fly’, ‘Wild Honey’ by The Beach Boys and ‘Burnin’ by The Wailers, was the constant soundtrack to the sort of crypto-White Panther commune I lived in after I graduated from college. My very first epiphany came in a village called Somerville in Georgia – actually, it may have been the next village along – and it was a pop song that came on the radio sung by some English woman, who may or may not have been Dusty Springfield. What I remember is that the song perfectly transmitted the feeling of summer in Georgia. There was a scent in the air that probably came from a processing plant nearby, yet it was a very distinct moment. Looking back, that was when I realised the power of sound. The pop song itself was obviously forgettable because I don’t even remember the name of it. But I remember the sound of it. I’m not an arty person, though I reckon I understand art better than a ton of artists. We were low culture people; we thought the high culture had its head up its ass. It was detached from the lives of the people we saw around us, ordinary people. It was in the debris and the detritus of ordinary people that we thought the work was being done. Folk culture – I’ve always been a folk culturist. I have a high regard for the “common man” and a disregard for the elites of society. So yeah, I watched TV. We were kids. We understood that the TV was a propaganda tool, a medium of deception – I saw that in 1965 as a 12-year-old. I understood at that age that this media elite, this great and good whose faces you saw on the TV every day, were nothing more than a bunch of used car salesmen. But we liked the actual used car salesmen on TV because at least they were honest. Their adverts had spirit, had drive. We loved it – after midnight, they’d show the cheap stuff. We loved the idea of selling, of product, of progress. It’s a shame that most of it has disappeared now, but in those early days, all the Pere Ubu visual stuff, our ads, our posters, were based on cheap 1am adverts. Big Ed Stinn, come on down, he was a huge influence on us. That’s quintessential: it’s about what people do, it’s about the road, the journey, the future. It’s about free, white and 21, it’s about 30 cent gas and all that kind of crap. But it’s self-aware at the same time, it’s about mythologies, and it loves the mythologies, the same as TV, it’s about mythologies. If you choose the right ones and understand that they ain’t real, then it’s not a problem. It’s like the Sistine Chapel. The Sistine Chapel ain’t real. So what? CLEVELAND, OHIO The place I grew up, where Ubu were formed. It fed in, in ways that are difficult to communicate. It was totally isolated and became kind of a big joke. There were endless numbers of comedy writers who were born and raised in Cleveland, went into television and discovered these old Polish jokes that they could turn into Cleveland jokes. You probably have the same thing in the UK with Irish jokes, and I bet they’re the same damn jokes. So we were aware of being disdained for where we came from and probably developed a fortress mentality. They say women have to try twice as hard as men to get to the same place – we felt the same minority chip on our shoulder – and Cleveland itself was hard, very competitive. None of this happy-clappy “we’re all in it together” stuff – it was more like “fuck you”. You might only get a gig twice a year in some crappy little dive and you’d damn well better be good. And if you didn’t know the latest Popol Vuh album you couldn’t even show your face in town. This was the golden age of the record shop. Record stores were incredibly important. Most people in the scene at that point worked in record shops and if your shop didn’t have everything, and I mean everything, then it was like an alpha dog thing, you were sunk. “ BIG ED STINN, CAR SALESMAN The Record Rendezvous stores in Cleveland, those places had everything. Anton Fier, who played with Pere Ubu for a while, was the manager at the Record Rendezvous on Prospect Avenue. That was the place Alan Freed discovered the term rock ’n’ roll along with the store owner, Leo Mintz. Pere Ubu’s‘Elitism For The People 1975-1978’ reissues boxset is out now on Fire Records XXX FRONT THE BURIED TREASURE IN SEARCH OF ELECTRONIC GOLD Thick as thieves Beastie Boys’ compatriot MONEY MARK is perhaps best known for his eclectic 1998 album ‘Push The Button’, but his earlier debut, ‘Mark’s Keyboard Repair’, was really where it’s at Words: MAT SMITH 1995 was a curious year for electronic music. Following its crossover to the mainstream a year earlier, 1995 saw its metamorphosis become evident to a broader audience. The rapid, almost viral way that trip hop, jungle and electronica styles – to use the parlance of the day – infiltrated one another was nothing short of mesmerising, even if it left curious listeners wondering what the broad church of electronic music actually represented. One of James Lavelle’s early Mo’Wax signings was Mark Ramos-Nishita, otherwise know as Money Mark. Nishita was a key figure in the Beastie Boys’ backroom team, hitching himself to their party wagon as they landed in California from New York and appearing on every album from 1992’s ‘Check Your Head’ onwards. But his 1995 debut solo full-length, ‘Mark’s Keyboard Repair’, was the point where Nishita stepped up to the front. As he sang on the album’s soulful last track, “sometimes you gotta make it alone”. Had ‘Mark’s Keyboard Repair’ been executed in the 1970s, it would have been lumped into a terminally unfashionable jazz-funk bucket and would never have made it above ground. But this was 1995, and the British record-buying public were pretty much up for anything and so ‘Mark’s Keyboard Repair’ settled improbably at the low end of the Top 40 album chart. The main reason for its success was that it was so damn funky; most trip hop could only hope to deliver grooves like the ones in Mark’s repertoire, but here was someone casually throwing out hooks, breaks and percussion loops like an imaginary lo-fi jam between George Clinton, Booker T and Stevie Wonder circa ‘Songs In The Key Of Life’. Organs, vibes, kazoos, vintage electronic pianos and battered old synths – pretty much anything that could deliver a meaningful melody was fair game for Money Mark. And, on tracks like ‘Don’t Miss The Boat’, Mark added vocals that nestled somewhere between Isaac Hayes, Barry Adamson and Jon Spencer. The whole thing was so utterly off-the-wall it proved irresistible. OK, so other artists would pepper their breaks with humorous samples (see J Saul Kane’s Depth Charge, early DJ Shadow, the entire Wu-Tang back catalogue etc), but Mark made every instrument, every dusty old keyboard or drum machine, sound fun to play. Some of the melodies he bashed out – such as on ‘Insects Are All Around Us’ – couldn’t help but make you smile. But under that wacky lackadaisical vibe lurked the virtuosity that might make Nishita electronic music’s Les Dawson, whereby learning to unplay an instrument requires you first to be able to play it to an exceptionally high standard. It’s that visionary, scholarly musicality that made Nishita such a dependable sparring partner for everyone from Damo Suzuki to the Chili Peppers. ‘Mark’s Keyboard Repair’ has managed to stand the test of time principally because it was never really of a particular era in the first place. Twenty years on, it still sounds maddeningly fresh – and still ridiculously good fun. ‘Mark’s Keyboard Repair’ is available as a free download from moneymark.com THE FRONT FAT ROLAND BANGS ON Oh, the folly of the rich and famous. Imagine if our lot got on a MORRISSEY I-can-write-a-novel kick… we stare off into the distance all wistful, like, and imagine such things… Words: FAT ROLAND Illustration: STEVE APPLETON I found this in my attic. It’s some kind of novel written by an iconic music star. I think it’s the future of literature; someone like, say, Penguin should publish it immediately. It’s only an excerpt because if I was to post the whole thing, this magazine would short-circuit in lyrical ecstasy. Vince Clarke The Quiet One Out Of Erasure barrel-rolled through the bulbous, golden fields of vegan wheat, eyes gazing up at the English sky scattered with tea-stained clouds as if Mother Nature herself had been casting runes. “O to be free,” trilled Clarky Clarke, the words preciously careening into the air as if to intone “hark the canopy of the sky and tell me if this is a blue savannah song”. And what a song, the blue savannah song, the songiest of English songs. Suddenly, Clarke thought of The Other One In Erasure, the one he calls PVC Andy because of his penchant for highstyle attire and posturing costumes. In the secrecy of his mind, Clarke pictured PVC Andy on stage, song-entwining the manful microphone in lustful joy, his words step-sliding from his lyrical tongue into the frenzied and open ears of the quietly shouting audience who followed as pilgrims from English city to English city, o praise those who have tramped and trudged with every fibre of their bulbous being. Clarky-Clarke-Clarke shook this thought from his blue savannah tea-stained mind, because for the first time in his three-score and half-score years, Clarke was alone and free. So he sang and sang until he murdered a scarecrow, thrashing and bashing with a cosy killer’s rake until, with deathblow upon deathblow, he rendered the straw man as lifeless as an adverbially proverbial, primordial dinosaur. “Take THAT, Andy, crusher of my freedom desires,” uttered Clarke in lustful, precocious voice, each flurry of battered straw a copulation of bulbous relief bursting into the reality of the air like a bride-thrown bouquet of metaphorical gladioli. “Vince, why are you hitting that scarecrow with a rake?” came a sudden reply from Andy, who stood bulbous and unnoticed on the trampled carpet of vegan wheat that was the most wheatingly of English wheat. “Uh, nothing,” topspan Clarke, and they both left with Andy lecturing Clarke about leaving the rehearsal studio on his own, and if he wanted a little respect, next time he might want to put some trousers on, the bulbous blue savannah berk. JACK DANGERS’ SCHOOL OF ELECTRONIC MUSIC Professor Dangers digs out an album that holds its own against Eno and Byrne’s 1981 masterpiece ‘My Life In The Bush Of Ghosts’, yet pre-dates it by a couple of years. Meet Bernard Bonnier, a former colleague of musique concrete don Pierre Henry, and his 1979 album, ‘Casse-tête’ Bernard Bonnier was a French Canadian composer from Montreal who worked with Pierre Henry in the early 1970s. Henry taught him everything he knew, first as a student and then as his assistant. After working in Paris with Henry for quite a few years, Bonnier went back to Canada and started his own studio, which he called Amaryllis. Most of his ‘Casse-tête’ album was recorded there in 1979, but it wasn’t released until 1984, and even then no one really noticed. One track, ‘Soldier Boy’, is simply stunning. It was recorded at Pierre Henry’s Apsone-Cabasse Studio in Paris. It uses a short tape loop of Elvis Presley and makes an 11-minute track out of it. It’s a really early example of using familiar pop tunes and hacking them up to create something completely new and startling. It’s the kind of thing that Jimmy Cauty and Bill Drummond did in 1987 with The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu when they cut up The Beatles’ music with Samantha Fox. Really subversive. The album is a mix of tape loops, found sounds, electronics and live drums and percussion. Some tracks, like ‘La Demoiselle Au Corsage Vert’ (‘The Girl In The Green Blouse’) is a collection of noises, like creaking wood and birds, proper musique concrete stuff. But then there’s ‘Italian Junk Food’, which could have come straight off Brian Eno and David Byrne’s ‘My Life In The Bush Of Ghosts’. It’s incredible to think that it was recorded a good couple of years before ‘My Life In The Bush Of Ghosts’, which is such a landmark record. ‘Casse-tête’ is as good and uses samples and electronics in really similar ways. With the live drums, which are really tight and controlled, but with more strange sounds and a human feel, it’s also little bit like the ‘Zero Set’ album by Moebius, Plank and Neumeier, which came out in 1983. But it predates that too. I first came across Bernard Bonnier on a seven-inch single. It was put out by a Canadian publishing company called CAPAC, the Canadian Authors and Publishers Association of Canada Limited. Where ‘Casse-tête’ is funny and commercial, that was a more serious record. Bonnier died in 1994, when he was only 41, I think it was in a car crash. He was almost forgotten, but his son remastered the album and it’s been re-released so his legacy is being looked after. Bernard Bonnier’s ‘Casse-tête’ is available from Oral Records - oralrecords.bandcamp.com THE FRONT XXX THE REMIX REVIEW In association with Prism Sound This month we’ve got a remix from the hands of longtime OMD drummer, Malcolm Holmes. And yes, it’s every bit as good as you’d expect… Words: BEN WILLMOTT Listen to The Remix Review radio show on the first and third Thursday of each month at 3-5pm GMT at www.hoxton.fm Internationally renowned manufacturer of high quality analogue and digital studio products, PRISM SOUND is supporting the B-SIDE PROJECT, which promotes new artists and provides additional platforms for live electronic music and remix productions. To get involved in the B-Side Project network, visit www.b-sideproject.org Prism Sound take their audio production experience and knowledge on tour each year, along with industry partners and guest speakers, with their Mic To Monitor series of events. After successful tours of the UK and the USA this autumn, Mic To Monitor will be going global in 2016. For more information and to keep updated, please visit www.prismsound.com and join the mailing list, and follow Prism Sound on https://www.facebook.com/Prism-Sound-141480894399/ and https://twitter.com/prismsound Ummagma are Canadian-Ukranian duo Alexander Kretov and Shauna McLarnon who blend ambient soundscapes with multilayered, effects-laden guitars and Shauna’s blissfully pure vocals. ‘Lama’ is one of five originals on their new offering ‘Frequency’ and the track comes complete with three remixes which complete the package. Cocteau Twins linchpin Robin Guthrie provides a typically slow burning version that builds to a tempestuous climax and Welsh outfit Lights That Change evoke Joy Division’s later experiments on theirs, but it’s the rare remix outing for Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark’s Malcolm Holmes that will surely get fans of 80s electronics salivating profusely. Although all due heed is paid to the original, you’ll find all the hallmarks of key 80s synth pioneers OMD in the mix, officially titled ‘Malcolm Holmes’ OMD Remix’. It sounds effortlessly simple, but on closer inspection there’s so much going on beyond the surface. OMD’s grasp of melody – sweetly innocent and joyful, but with an undercurrent of the melancholic – is very much at play too. At its heart are the subtle throb of the sequenced synthesiser and the smack of electronic drums, sounding so authentic you’d swear Holmes had made it on the same gear such classics as ‘Souvenir’ and ‘Enola Gay’ were forged on. But in fact everything was made and mixed “in the box”, as he puts it. “No analogue was harmed in the making of this record,” he jokes. “I keep my studio really simple, I’m not big on a room full on cables and mess. I love working totally from the screen with no clutter around me. I was using a Mac Pro 2 x 2.4 GHz Quad-Core Intel Xeon with 32 GB Ram running Logic Pro X 10.1.1, Digi 002 and Quested S7Rs for monitoring. Waves plug-ins included all the usual suspects, CLA-76, an SSL equaliser and SSL G-Master Buss Compressor. Software instruments included Spectrasonics’ Trilian, Omnisphere and Stylus.” “Every remix is like a separate creation born from the stems of our song ‘Lama’, each of them taking this song in a different direction,” explains Ummagma’s Shauna McLarnon. “We are big fans of many remixes. With taste, skill and enough originality, they can take on a life all their own. Malcolm Holmes brought a brilliant OMD 80s-era vibe and awesome synths to the remix and, I must admit, it sounds unlike any remix we could have even imagined – such an awesome upbeat surprise. Malcolm also did another remix for us in 2014 for our collaboration with Russia’s Sounds Of Sputnik, which is already out and won us a Russian Indie Music Award.” “Although I’ve been programming for a long time, remixing is something I had never taken too seriously or pursued as an alternative to playing live,” adds Malcolm. “After I had a problem with my heart at an OMD show in Toronto in 2013, I needed time to recuperate and this was perfect way to do that. ‘Lama’ was my first proper venture into the remix world. Shauna has a great voice and alongside a ton of sweeping guitars, I wanted to take it away from the ambient vibe and put the track into a more pop form and structure. It’s important for myself and the artist to be completely happy with the track and OMD has set the bar really high for me. But… I must say, I love it when a band lets me loose on a track and I turn it on its head.” XXX FRONT THE ANATOMY OF A It’s always interesting when the paint brushes come out for a record sleeve... our arts correspondent FAT ROLAND discusses the merits of JAPAN’s oil on canvas for, erm, ‘OIL ON CANVAS’... It was either this or a bowl of fruit (pastilles) It was either this or a painting from Pink Floyd’s life modelling class The original cover model was a Cantonese boy but instead they got Geoff from Wales Dulux colour: Sunshine Mucus Thinks: “This had better chuffing be a Spandau Ballet album” Thinks: “I might have the beef casserole tonight” Dulux colour: Distressed Frog Other albums by Japan: Tin Drum, Plastic Kazoo, Papier Mâché Sousaphone Worst. Selfie. Ever After this album, Japan disappeared. The band, not the country Alternative band names: Belgium, Chad, Stoke-on-Trent David Bowie during his bourbon biscuit years The Mona Lisa during her custard cream years Turn this upside down. Your album is now upside down Dulux colour: Farmer’s Ooze Paint by numbers (goes up to four) Thinks: “Did I leave the iron on?” David Sylvian, of course, went on to form the Vengaboys or something I dunno Artist materials: brushes, palette knife, paint roller, annoyed hamster The members of Japan later reunited under the name Rain Tree Wildebeest Flower Sausage We’re Not Japan Honest You too can recreate this album cover by taking a photo of this album cover BORIS BLANK GETS ELECTRONIC SOUND MAKE SURE YOU DO TOO subscribe and save money each month www.electronicsound.co.uk/subscribe THE FRONT NEEDS MUST Our resident electronic explorer is back, venturing into the unknown to bravely capture the weird and wonderful for your listening pleasure… Words: KRIS NEEDS SUN RA Gilles Peterson Presents… To Those Of Earth & Other Worlds STRUT | 2XCDS/2XLP This month’s column starts with one of the last century’s most monumental electronic innovators and iconoclasts. Sun Ra, who insisted he came from Saturn, was first to use an electronic keyboard in jazz (the primitive Hammond Solovox he acquired in 1941), was early to adopt the Moog synthesiser then take it further out than anyone else dared, and he predicted dub reggae with his wild studio techniques. Ra’s discography is a labyrinth of mysterious releases on his pioneering independent Saturn label and now in an ever-growing archive of compilations and live sets. Following last year’s highly successful ‘In The Orbit Of Ra’, curated by current Arkestra commander Marshall Allen, Strut has teamed up again with Art Yard to present an interstellar selection from DJ Gilles Peterson who straddles early vocal group outings, chestnuts such as ‘Love In Outer Space’ and unreleased nuggets from the colossal Ra archive to forge a mind-frying intergalactic odyssey that favours space chants and oddities over jazz blow-outs. This is a whole parallel world that serves as a good launchpad for first-timers and producing previously unheard delights for veterans. ESTEBAN ADAME Rise And Shine EP EPM MUSIC | 12-INCH/DOWNLOAD Detroit was a Ra stronghold, early to embrace space-jazz. It’s also the home of my beloved Underground Resistance, one of techno’s remaining pockets of below-the-radar electronic subversion. Last issue we met LA-based UR affiliate Santiago Salazar with his wonderful album. Now here’s his partner in the ICAN label Esteban Adame, who’s taken the atmospheric opening track of his recent ‘Day Labor’ LP and turned it into a loincloth-singeing monster, adding surging killer beats to its ethereal majesty. There’s the lusciously deep ‘Frequencia Deconstruction’ version on the download, and UR have supplied two rare remixes; the flickeringly subtle ‘Underground Resistance Mix’ (complete with tape reversals) and Mark Flash’s propulsive rework. METAMONO THE MISSING BRAZILIANS M-PLANT | 12-inch / Download ON-U SOUND | VINYL+DOWNLOAD CARD From Detroit to the subterranean south London latrine where Metamono splash merrily surrounded by their arsenal of handbuilt vintage analogue synths, ring modulators and theremins. The Crystal Palace trio of Jono Podmore, Paul Conboy and Mark Hill are shortly to follow 2013’s towering ‘With The Compliments Of Modern Physics’ with a second album, ‘Creative Listening’. It’s trailered here with a delicious out-take slab of their mischievous, wired-to-the-gills urban clatter, which can appreciate that Sun Ra was the first modern electronic musician but imagine him jamming with Can. Midway through, an aggressive invading rooster drops his keks and breaks wind. Metamono’s uniquely crafted sonic sparks are flying again and flaying the lazy scrotum of the laptop brigade with idiosyncratic defiance. Trevor Jackson’s recent ‘Science Fiction Dancehall Classics’ could only scrape the surface of the colossal On-U archive which, while presaging modern electronic music, still often sounds frozen in time and out on its own. 1984’s ‘Warzone’ was the sole album released as The Missing Brazilians and the nearest Sherwood got to a solo album then. It could also be the furthest out he got in his dub-stretching quest, stripping the music to bare, radioactive skeletons, with ghostly melodies and electro-derived mixing desk mangling. Handling mostly bass and drums, Sherwood is occasionally joined by various On-U musicians, including a pre-Massive Attack Shara Nelson and Annie Anxiety. Re-cut from dub plates, it still sounds unearthly and ruinously futuristic. CARDOPUSHER THE BLACK DOG BOYSNOIZE / LP/DOWNLOAD DUST SCIENCE | DOWNLOAD I’m a sucker for the unmistakable sound of the 303 and primal darkness of the earliest acid house. From the malevolent squelch of the opening ‘Exceptions’, Venezualan-born Barcelona-based producer Cardopusher displays uncanny finesse in seducing floornapalming new juice out of arcane machine sounds. ‘Dance To The Acid H’ practically reworks ‘Acid Tracks’ while ‘Cult 91’ is as filthy as a hippo’s back passage. The sexed-up rattle of ‘Photinia’ strips down to basic proto-house and ‘Morning Traffic Dance’ recalls the electro-based Underground Resistance productions of last decade: mercilessly nagging, but innately funky with acid undercurrents swarming like piranhas around a Portuguese manof-war’s pendulous todger. All told, this positively luminous set is a masterclass in how original analogue blueprints can evolve in the hands of new generations; homaging with an unobtrusive hand from modern technology. It seems amazing that I’ve been writing about The Black Dog for over a quarter century now, but August’s ‘Neither/Neither’ album was another inimitable excursion into the electronic unknown. The Black Dog chose a few remixers who in turn picked which tracks from ‘Neither/Neither’ they wanted to rework and they’ve come up cocking a highly-creative leg against the monolithic originals. In Ambivalent’s case, it squirts techno gold as ‘Commodification’ gets lathered up with glitch and shadowy noise, with nifty use of the mighty Godzilla bowel bugle blast that rears rudely throughout. Then GoldFFinch come and open the windows on their breezily dazzling canter through ‘Hollow Stories Hollow Head’. Application mangle the title track into a dense, big-stringed churn before The Dog themselves reposition the groove and strings into a dark shimmer that has more fun with Japanese movie monster flatulence. Their War & Peace version of ‘B.O.O.K.S.’ stretches the track into a soaring 23-minute beatless floatation epic. Dystopia Manipulator Warzone Very Extended Play EP XXX FRONT THE REKORD 61 FREAKS Vremya Versions Let’s Do It Again Part One KONSTRUKTIV | 12-INCH/DOWNLOAD MUSIC FOR FREAKS | 12-inch/download Russian producer Rekord 61 presents new mixes of last June’s ‘Vremya’, spearheaded by his ‘Time Won’t Change Us’ version; a subtly building mosaic built on shimmering synth pulse and masturbating frog loop. UR’s Rolando supplies a second rework, his ‘RRR Mix’ layering Morse code icing and nagging acid underpants in a compelling exercise in controlled dancefloor explosives as percussion and synthesised edginess ups the pressure. The set is completed by two atmosphere-laden mixes from Russia’s Alexander Matlakhov, aka Unbalance, whose ‘Tight’ version stalks dark, shuddering acid alleys and ‘Viscous Remix’ scatters the kick to support further manipulation of the elements into a spectral ghost party recalling heavenly early 90s Frankfurt trou’-toppings. Hot news this month is the resurrection of Luke Solomon and Justin Harris’ Music For Freaks, one of the most idiosyncratic but fun-packed label of the 1990s and 2000s, which is spearheaded by this shorts-liquidating double-header of spanking new overhauls. Freaks stood out for relentlessly trying to push house music past the outer limits, while not losing sight of its original aim to prod the rectum into frenetic action. TERRENCE PARKER/ NO SHIT LIKE DEEP/ MELODYMANN Here they see 2003’s ‘The Man Who Lived Underground’ reworked into an edgy 12-minute monster of the deep by Ricardo Villalobos before German duo Tuff City Kids sprinkle some magic over Turner’s ‘Been Out’. Their blissful, 80s-tinged golden shower enables it to sprout the genitalia of a young donkey. The package is completed by a previously unreleased edit of Freaks’ ‘Instrument’ from 1999. Only got a poxy Soundcloud clip, but it’s great to have the Freaks back out for some much-needed warped groove action. DETROIT’S FILTHIEST Heart Break After Hours MELODYMATHICS | 2X10-INCH MOTOR CITY ELECTRO COMPANY | Download Great little operation that provides tools for DJs and producers in the form of loops, acapellas and good oldfashioned sample-built tracks. Their fifth release comes as two 10-inches, led by Detroit house stalwart Terrence Parker’s starkly simple, but irresistible piano pounding ‘Heart Break’, the mysterious No Shit Like Deep’s rough-shod and cheeky jigsaw of soul vocal group motifs ‘Ambassador Of Love’ and label head Melodymann’s loping disco-house locked groove ‘Broken Loop’, which he continues on disc two’s ‘Low Funk’ and ‘What Are You Gonna Do’. Back to basics and great fun. Michigan marauder Julian Shamou, aka DJ Nasty, continues his reissue campaign by resuscitating 2005’s brutal jungle mutant ‘After Hours’ (previously released as DJ Nasty’s ‘100% Hood Certified’). Effectively utilises Detroit house singer Aaron Love and, in keeping with the series, boasts new 125bpm treatment for housier floors. TALE OF US & MIND AGAINST Astral LIFE & DEATH | 12-inch/download Finally, a lovely slice of luminescent deep techno laced with glimmering melodies and restlessly creative spirits in full flight. For some reason it makes me want to go out and stroke my pet rabbits. Till next month… SUBSCRIBE TO ELECTRONIC SOUND AND GET A FREE LIMITED EDITION SEVEN-INCH SINGLE BY WOLFGANG FLÜR AND JACK DANGERS www.electronicsound.co.uk/subscribe to find out more THE FRONT LANDMARKS JAPAN ‘GENTLEMEN TAKE POLAROIDS’ Synth master RICHARD BARBIERI remembers the heady days of 1980 and gives us the full skinny on Japan’s first single for Virgin Records Interview: ROSIE MORGAN At the time Virgin signed us, we didn’t have any hits. What convinced them to take us on was this growing interest in the band. They came to see us play live and realised we’d been playing all these London shows that were sold out in advance. We had a residency at The Music Machine in Camden – I think it’s called Koko now – and we used to sell that out every week. So Virgin took a gamble with us, and ‘Gentlemen Take Polaroids’ was the first recording we did with them. I think Japan had three stages. You can group them: the first two albums are of a type, and then ‘Quiet Life’ was a big musical change, and then there was another massive change for ‘Tin Drum’, which was a completely different sort of animal altogether. The ‘Gentlemen Take Polaroids’ album is an extension of ‘Quiet Life’ really. With ‘Quiet Life’, we’d found a way of doing things and a producer we liked working with, so ‘Polaroids’ was about perfecting a new style we’d developed. The hardest thing to explain is how we used to compose and arrange our music. Nowadays, you can move tracks around on a computer within seconds and easily test different things out. Back then, you couldn’t record everything you did, so to try new ideas you’d have to play the whole thing again, but that’s how we did it. Just in a studio, a couple of keyboards each, building the track up like that. Although David Sylvian is credited as the writer on all the tracks, by that time we were working on material together as a band and arranging them in rehearsal rooms. David would come in and he would usually start playing either an acoustic guitar or, as in this case, a keyboard. He had this basic line which is on the album, playing single notes, going through the verse, and we would all start playing along. I still have tapes of us rehearsing and writing this song. The sections gradually built up from that and then we’d start working on the arrangements. Of course, David would have a vocal in mind already: it’s always good to have the security of the song behind whatever you’re doing. It was an authentic, organic process, but it worked because we had a good understanding of each other. It was a process we’d developed while recording ‘Quiet Life’, so by this time we were quite comfortable with it. The studio we used belonged to Virgin and it was really wellequipped. I ended up playing a few things that weren’t part of my normal set-up on the ‘Gentlemen Take Polaroids’ track itself, like a Polymoog and a Micromoog, and I think David played an ARP Omni and a Roland Jupiter 4. They’re things that didn’t feature before, and didn’t feature in the future either, they were just around in the studio. Everybody’s very precious about vintage gear now, but in those days you didn’t think the kit was anything special. When I look at the old stuff I was using then – and I’ve still got it all – I’m so full of awe, I love it, but at the time, I didn’t really feel that way about it. I just thought, “This is what I need in order to get the job done”. Looking back, what I find hard to imagine is how I managed to go on stage with some of these synths! Some of them didn’t have memories, so you couldn’t store your sounds, you had to program everything as you went along. Sometimes you had to program for the next track while you were still playing the previous one. I would never even attempt that now! We had a piano on the track too. We used to sometimes treat an acoustic piano by opening it up and putting little weights on the strings to get different tones and mutes and generally make each note a little more interesting harmonically. Studios would be horrified to find out people did this. It was nice to hit on those low notes in unison with the bass drum and it gave a nice emphasis to what Steve Jansen was doing with the drums at that point. Mick Karn played a lot of other things besides his bass on the track too, like saxophone and oboe, and Rob Dean played a beautiful EBowed guitar throughout, which helped give it a really rich sound palette. ‘Gentlemen Take Polaroids’ doesn’t have a normal versechorus-verse-chorus arrangement. It’s about seven minutes long and it has this really nice outro segment after the last chorus. Most tracks would fade out or start to end there, but this goes into a whole new piece at the end. Everything drops down dynamically and David starts singing layers of baritone voices, and all these abstract electronics start coming in. And it builds from there and becomes quite eerie. That’s the favourite part for me, when that outro starts. There’s this application I liked to do back then, which I used in the outro here: I would have my Roland System 700 on a sample and hold setting. It makes random pitches controlled by an LFO that aren’t in time with the track, just running randomly, but the notes often fall in quite interesting places. It’s never exactly wrong, because there’s always seemingly a beat it can attach to; the tuning is off as well, so sometimes it’s just a tiny bit out and it sounds lovely. It’s like an accident. You let it run and think, “I hope it works!”. But you end up with little electronic tones in exactly the right places that you could never replicate again. ‘Gentlemen Take Polaroids’ was the last album we recorded with John Punter as our producer. We started working with John on ‘Quiet Life’, which was for me the most enjoyable album we ever made, and John really brought his personality to the ‘Gentlemen Take Polaroids’ single. Whenever I listen to it now, I’m always surprised at how processed the whole thing is: there’s a flanger, or a phaser, or a pitch shift on everything – the drums, the bass, the vocals, everything. At that time, everybody in Japan had an innate respect for each other whereby we gave each other a lot of space and time to try things out. If I walked into a rehearsal room today and somebody was playing and they wanted me to join in, I’d be conscious about coming up with something that would be safe and would fit in and would work, because I wouldn’t want to embarrass myself. But being fearless comes with being young – and we were only about 22 when we recorded ‘Gentlemen Take Polaroids’. If you don’t have any fear and you don’t know what’s involved, then you don’t really worry about it, do you? When Orson Welles first started making films, he didn’t know the rules, so he could break them. He could come up with something original because he didn’t know what he was supposed to do. He just did what he felt was right. And we had that same attitude. When you’re not having to follow any particular guidelines, and you’re working with people you trust, people who give you the space you need, you come up with stuff. You don’t know if it’s what you should be doing or not, but you do it anyway. In the end, the ‘Gentlemen Take Polaroids’ single only charted at Number 60 and Virgin weren’t too happy about that. But a year later, our old label, Hansa, re-released all our earlier singles and we were in the charts every week. By the time ‘Tin Drum’ came along, the New Romantic thing had started, and ‘Quiet Life’ and ‘Polaroids’ seemed to fit really well with that scene. It’s funny really, because we never felt a part of it, but at that time Japan and Soft Cell were the most popular chart acts of the year. For his latest news and releases find Richard Barbieri on Facebook or go to richardbarbieri.net JAPAN FROM THE GL AMOUR TO THE ETHER Beautiful faces, fabulous hair, immaculate clothes. Laconic vocals, luxurious synths, sinuous rhythms. We are talking about JAPAN. Of course. To mark the release of a superb new biography, ‘Japan: A Foreign Place’, we chronicle the steady rise and sudden fall of one of the most perfect pop groups of all time Words: CHRIS ROBERTS JAPAN “I WAS ALREADY MORE DRAWN TO ABOUT WHICH THE BAND WERE LE Japan were the elegant emperors of elegiac electronica. Proud as Picasso, shy as Schiele, they were not like other bands. They expressed an immortal yearning and melancholy, often via the Trojan horse of throbbing electropop. And then, just as they “made it”, they stripped everything down, broke every rule, with a boldness that startled and seduced. Strictly speaking, they were releasing records for just four years. So in the great timeline of popular music, they were effectively only for one night and no repeat (bar Rain Tree Crow, but we’ll come to that). Yet what an impact they made. Though far from the biggest stars of their era, their legacy left a long tail which still twitches. Even those who mocked their foppish earnestness at the time now acknowledge their grace, guile and genius. Daringly re-wiring the house of art-pop while veiled by their immaculate image, Japan made three turn-of-the-80s albums – ‘Quiet Life’, ‘Gentlemen Take Polaroids’ and ‘Tin Drum’ – which coaxed new elements of sorrow, soul and beauty from electronic instruments. If their presentation, for all its peacocking, was aloof and chilly (nobody did hauteur like David Sylvian), the music was warm, emotive, proving that synths could sigh, and could dovetail with other instruments and voices to map out previously uncharted terrain. ‘Ghosts’ is surely the least likely Top Five hit of its (or any) decade. Japan’s influence since has been implicit rather than explicit. While most around them in the early 1980s were realising electronica could be great fun as a buzz and a beat and a shiny happy signifier of ersatz futurism, Japan used synths as a texture, a mood: mindfully eerie rather than mindlessly ecstatic. They were less interested in surface sheen than in the spaces in between. Silences, pauses and juxtapositions were in their palette, years ahead of the curve. You can perhaps discern slight traces of their pensive lineage in James Blake, alt-J, The xx, FKA twigs. They mapped out new methods of dance. David Sylvian, of course, has all but disowned Japan’s work, embarrassed by his juvenilia. When I interviewed him in 2004, discussing some reissues, he at first feigned to have “no interest”. He relaxed later, offering a few insights into the work and the well from which it sprung. “‘Tin Drum’ moved away from the rock/pop background we’d grown up in and we diversified somewhat,” he said. “Obviously synthesisers were developing throughout the early 80s and we were creating our own imaginary, exotic, mini-orchestra. We dug into the dirt of all that, to see if it bore fruit.” As it turned out, we liked them apples. Japan’s “career” – running rings ahead of or behind fashion – torched the trad. Formed in south London during their mid-70s schooldays, the brothers Batt (New York Dolls-fixated and hence surname-changing David and drummer Steve Jansen), bassist Mick Karn (who also played wind instruments) and keyboardist Richard Barbieri at first offered – with guitarist Rob Dean – abrasive, lippy glam-funk. Out of step both visually and sonically with punk, ‘Adolescent Sex’ and ‘Obscure Alternatives’ are now mostly dismissed by the people who made them, but regardless of genre they fire on all cylinders, overflowing with flair and bravado. Then-manager Simon Napier-Bell pitched Sylvian as “Jagger meets Bardot” and the band were – inevitably, ironically, whatever – big in Japan. “I don’t cringe as much as I laugh,” Sylvian told me in the 1980s. Their name, intended as a stopgap, stuck. Touring the East, they assimilated new sounds. ‘Life In Tokyo’, one of Giorgio Moroder’s most underrated pulses, repositioned them as nouveau disco. At the same time, Sylvian in particular was pushing for sparseness, more restraint. One imagines the band members not so much having blazing rows as Britishly sulking in silence at each other. Sylvian’s previously highly sexualised vocals became so laconic and suave they all but out-Ferry-ed Bryan Ferry. Jansen’s intricate rhythms and Karn’s unique bobbing bass style (it’s all about that bass) broke many moulds, and Barbieri’s washes of synth were allowed to pour forth. And being exceptionally well dressed, with fabulous hair, Japan were embraced by – or lumped in with – the nascent New Romantic movement. 1980’s ‘Quiet Life’ was the next level of romance-among-robots that Roxy Music were struggling to find. Bizarrely, just as Japan found themselves and a whole lot more, their original record label (Hansa) dropped them. Virgin, liking the hair, stepped smartly in. With a shunt of publicity, Sylvian was “the world’s most beautiful man” (a reductive tag he loathes to this day) – and Japan were minor chart stars. ‘Gentlemen Take Polaroids’ was narcissistic but noir, rich with regret, and combined electronica (assisted by Ryuichi Sakamoto from Yellow Magic Orchestra) with organic instruments to achieve a sophistication of atmosphere. Guitarist Rob Dean left, feeling superfluous. Japan’s impulses, European by blood and futuristic in feel, were no longer following but leading. Many of the “bigger” New Romantic bands stole not just their look but their ideas (and diluted or defused them; less sad pierrots, more clowns). O MELANCHOLY PIECES OF MUSIC, ESS THAN ENTIRELY ENTHUSIASTIC” Sylvian, now brunette and bearded, recalled this period for me with a typical self-effacing shrug. “I remember the recording being laboured,” he told me. “The label wanted an album immediately. I felt pushed: we hadn’t really defined where we were going next. It did pick up momentum, find its feet, but there was an enormous amount of tension within the band. I guess the seeds of ruin were probably sewn during that project.” Seems he couldn’t “relax and swing”. “With greater success came more pressure to tour, hence more friction,” he continued. “And I was already more drawn to melancholy pieces of music, about which the band were less than entirely enthusiastic. My heart was calling me as a writer to conceal myself less, to strip things away. With ‘Polaroids’, I was just beginning to get there. With ‘Tin Drum’, the door really opened and I saw a path ahead that resonated for me.” As it did for others, surprisingly, which shows how open the era was to aesthetics and the quiet storm of the new. ‘Tin Drum’ was definitively non-commercial yet stayed on the charts for a year. Sylvian’s visions of China and the Far East wove around eccentric synth burbles and minimalist rhythms. ‘Ghosts’ brought existentialism and fatalism (and an arrangement of deceptive precision) to ‘Top Of The Pops’. “I don’t know why, but I convinced Virgin to release it, against their wishes, understandably,” said Sylvian. “I just felt we had something original there. Its strange popularity felt like justification, vindication. It was a very important piece of music in terms of my own development and confidence. It was personal, but it communicated too, and that was gratifying. But it was my interest, not the band’s.” Suddenly, everyone who’d sniped at Japan got it. Their future looked golden. And so they split up. “We broke up just as ‘Tin Drum’ was released. But we were committed to a huge tour. So there we were – ‘successful’ – playing our biggest ever shows and TV, knowing between us that it was over.” Success had come too late, according to Sylvian. They’d grown up together in public and were different people to the original school friends. “In particular, Mick and I were pulling apart. The band had reached a peak, and it seemed a noble way to bow out after all that hard work. To say, ‘Well, we got there, finally’.” As for the New Romantic scene, he insisted, “We genuinely did not feel a part of any movement or genre. We were a very self-contained group of people socially. Always felt on the outside. Of that, or anything else. Yes, image and presentation had been important to us from the beginning, but it became something I was less and less interested in sustaining. It had been convenient, given me something to hide behind. Initially, I doubt I could have walked onto a stage without that: I was just too shy. A mask got me through it. Once I decided as a writer I wanted to express myself clearly, it had to be done away with.” Working with Ryuichi Sakamoto on ‘Forbidden Colours’ for the film ‘Merry Christmas Mr Lawrence’, Sylvian had an epiphany on how to move forward himself, and 1984’s landmark ‘Brilliant Trees’ album (on which Jansen and Barbieri appeared) was the first in a series of fascinating and meditative solo works. “At that point I knew there was a richness about it that no longer required ‘critical acclaim’,” he said. And so he retired from the spotlight. As of December 2014, he’s all but benched his trademark luxuriant vocals, releasing ‘There’s A Light That Enters Houses With No Other House In Sight’, a sparse, mostlyinstrumental collaboration with electronic musician Christian Fennesz, pianist John Tilbury and poet Franz Wright, which muses on creativity and mortality. JAPAN The Japan story had a coda or two. In 1987, Sylvian had recorded vocals for Karn, beauties such as ‘Buoy’ confirming that any feud was on ice. Ten years on from ‘Tin Drum’, Sylvian, Jansen, Barbieri and Karn reunited, recording as Rain Tree Crow. But although earlier rows over girlfriends had passed, tension and resentment ensued, with the others accusing the singer of egomania and frustrated that he wouldn’t agree to the name Japan being used. Sylvian told me he was “in analysis” at that time. “Things were prickly and volatile between us, but the actual recording was a joy. We were talking about further albums, but it fell apart. There were financial pressures. We had the biggest budget I’ve ever worked with in my life, and somehow we still managed to exhaust it.” Japan or not Japan, it’s an underrated album with, as Sylvian says, “a warmth which resonates throughout”. One dividend of the project was the subsequent work by JBK, or Jansen Barbieri Karn. Sylvian met and married Ingrid Chavez, moved to America, found serenity (for a while). ‘There’s A Light That Enters Houses’ shows that such serenity remains inconstant. Jansen and Barbieri made an album under the name The Dolphin Brothers, then across the 80s and 90s there were records from the permutations Jansen/Barbieri and Jansen/Barbieri/Karn. The trio also played with No-Man, after which Barbieri became a long-term member of Porcupine Tree. He’s also recorded with Tim Bowness and Steve Hogarth. In 2004, Sylvain told me he was working with Jansen again. “That’s good – and obviously he’s my brother. As far as I’m aware, there are no bad feelings between Rich or Mick and myself, but we’ve lost contact. That happens.” The resulting album, 2005’s ‘Snow Borne Sorrow’ by Nine Horses, was a collaboration between Sylvian, Jansen and Burnt Friedman which echoed the Japan mood as gorgeously as anything since the band’s heyday. But then in 2011 came Mick Karn’s untimely death from cancer, losing us one of the most creative bass players the world has known. He left a body of work, from Dalis Car (with Peter Murphy) through sublime solo singles like ‘Sensitive’ to cameos on Kate Bush and Gary Numan albums, of breadth and imagination. His memoir, ‘Japan & Self-Existence’, emerged prior to his death and his work as a sculptor was widely praised. “I wouldn’t dismiss pop music,” Sylvian said to me in 2004. “It’s easy to generalise and say it’s all superficial and meaningless, but I don’t believe it is. A great deal of it is just based on ego and image and style… but in a way people need that. It lifts them up for a moment.” The music of Japan remains a double-edged caress: perversely poignant pop which sounds stronger and silkier as the years pass. What’s becoming ever more evident is that when their chance came to be king, they took it. THE JAPAN ALBUMS ADOLESCENT SEX Inspired by the New York Dolls, Roxy and Bowie, early Japan weren’t subtle but were thrillingly visceral, Rob Dean’s guitar riffs lacing gritty white funk while David Sylvian drawled of lust and politics. Their louche cover of ‘Don’t Rain On My Parade’ is a gas. OBSCURE ALTERNATIVES More songs about cities and sleaze, with some startlingly good cod-reggae thrown in. For all the band’s later progress, the sheer strut, crackle and presence of ‘Obscure Alternatives’ is something to be marvelled at. QUIET LIFE The critical tide turned as they explored both Moroder-ish avant-disco and Sylvian’s fondness for mournful elegy. They still dressed like a bonfire in a Zandra Rhodes warehouse, but they were maturing fast. GENTLEMEN TAKE POLAROIDS They learned to relax and swing. Filtering rain-swept romanticism through layers of lush Richard Barbieri synths and that insanely brilliant rhythm section of Mick Karn and Steve Jansen, Japan were the thinking person’s pop visionaries, more Leonard Cohen than Duran Duran. (1978) (1978) (1979) (1980) TIN DRUM Images of the Orient were now used deftly rather than heavy-handedly. ‘Tin Drum’ was so finely nuanced, it was in places almost ether. Karn’s rubbery bass gave it all flesh, but wasn’t actually on the holy near-silences of ‘Ghosts’, a rogue existential hit. OIL ON CANVAS A farewell live double album featuring tracks taken from the band’s final gigs, a six-night stretch at the Hammersmith Odeon at the end of 1982. Japan were never the most exciting live act in the world, but the song selection is nothing short of superb. (1981) (1983) RAIN TREE CROW (1991) The class reunion hit hurdles, with the others blaming Sylvian’s control-freak tendencies. Yet among diverse delights, jewels like ‘Blackwater’ and ‘Every Colour You Are’ caught that lightning in a bottle again. JAPAN BOOK EXTRACT IN FORE PLA A EIGN ACE ANTHONY REYNOLDS’ recently published book ‘JAPAN: A FOREIGN PLACE (THE BIOGRAPHY, 1974-1984)’ is a fascinating insight into Japan, featuring contributions from the band and their associates, as well as many previously unseen photographs. In this exclusive excerpt, Reynolds reveals the rising tension in the ranks as Japan made preparations for their ‘Visions Of China’ UK tour at the end of 1981 JAPAN BOOK EXTRACT The forthcoming ‘Visions Of China’ tour would be Japan’s biggest yet in the UK, and their third that year [1981]. The group were riding a rare wave for any pop group – they were now commercially successful, critically respected and fashionable. As such, it was planned that the tour should incorporate a lavish stage set that travelled with the band from venue to venue. The designers chosen for this job were Markus Innocenti and Edward Arno, two hip and happening set designers who worked as partners and even dressed identically. Markus Innocenti: “We came to Simon’s [Napier-Bell, Japan’s manager] attention through Virgin as we’d done some work for Simple Minds. We were given ‘Tin Drum’ and then met with David and listened very carefully to what his ideas were. David was the band’s voice, and he had the greatest say. What we came up with was a kind of English music hall version of a Chinese village. The drum riser was big – it almost came up to David’s head and had an opening in its front that someone could walk through. The stage was covered in cloth and had a paving look, but it had to be really taut otherwise Mick couldn’t do his shuffle. There was even a ladder that David could climb up in order to sing from a raised platform, but he wasn’t keen on that idea. There was a small bridge and behind it all a projector screen. This was very important to David, as he wanted to project actual visions of China onto it – stock footage of China we got from the Chinese embassy. The whole thing was a huge, theatrical deal.” Edward Arno: “They were intense people, or David was, or maybe the situation was. David was very self aware, to the point that it was almost weird. I remember one meeting we had with him in this very spare room and it was like everything was arranged just so for him. You felt like you were a walk-on part in the ‘David Sylvian Story’. It was almost funny. I mentioned this meeting to Mick; I said, ‘Is he always like this?’ and Mick said, ‘Yeah, and that’s one of the reasons we love him’.” Innocenti: “Of course, we were made to feel that Simon was doing us a favour by letting us do this gig. He got us incredibly cheap. I got on with Mick best. Richard was quiet but a lovely guy with a core of steel, I thought. Steve was a sweet guy and all the girls loved him. David was very aloof. I wondered if this was in part because I became so close to Mick.” Arno: “Mick and I became very close as the tour went on. Anyway, we listened to David’s ideas and went away and had the set built. We thought the band were going to be very excited by what we’d come up with.” After two weeks at Nomis [a studio and rehearsal space], in early December the band assembled at Shepperton Studios for a dress rehearsal, where the Chinese-influenced set design was finally assembled and on display. Exhibiting behaviour that was becoming a pattern before an important live event, Sylvian seemed to panic on entering Shepperton, declaring that he “hated” the set and promptly walked out again. Innocenti: “We turned up for a dress rehearsal and David freaked out. He said, ‘It’s all too much! It’s not what I wanted at all!’. I tried explaining that we had no lights on it and that when it was lit it would make all the difference; lit, it would have looked stunning. We were due on tour in two days, and I couldn’t believe he was saying this. I suddenly realised there was something going on in the band that I wasn’t privy to and I put it down to nerves. Anyway, David kept going on, ‘I hate it! This is not what I wanted’, and so on. I persuaded him to let me light it, just a bit, and the rest of the group were blown away by it – ‘Oh, it’s awesome’, and so on, but David wouldn’t budge.” Mick Karn: “I’ve known him for about 11 years and he’s very easily influenced by anything anyone might say; it stays in his mind. The week before the tour started, he did an interview with one of the papers and the guy who was doing the article said how dated he thought the whole rock scene was and that it was pathetic the way we were trying to make it stay alive by using things like slides and stage sets, and Dave agreed. I think that’s what put the spark in his mind and a week later he wanted to do the tour with no lights at all, which would have been a total contradiction of what we had planned for four months before the tour. I think it’s a great weakness not to see something through that you’ve decided upon.” Richard Barbieri: “We eventually lost a lot of money when it was decided the stage set construction wasn’t right and a new one had to be rebuilt.” Karn: “The set was completely taken over by Dave and designed by Dave, so if there was anything in it he didn’t like, then it was his fault. When we turned up to rehearse the weekend before the tour started, the set was much bigger than anyone ever saw; it had towers in the top where I would be playing saxophone, Dave would be singing ‘Ghosts’, the others were at the bottom, and there was a roof over the whole thing. All the lights were theatrical lights especially designed for the set; you can’t use them on a normal rock concert, so Dave would have been letting down all the lights people as well, not to mention the fans because he just refused to do the tour in the end.” Innocenti and Arno were shocked, but pragmatic. Innocenti: “Another meeting was arranged between me, Arno and the group. It was like walking into the middle of an argument. David kept on saying that he wasn’t prepared to tour with that set and there was talk of cancelling the tour. Mick looked sullen and annoyed, Steve was embarrassed and Richard was furious. He was the most confrontational with David. And it suddenly seemed to me that David was using the set thing to sabotage the band. He was trying to distance himself from them.” Karn: “That whole night was spent arguing with Dave, everyone arguing. It came to a stalemate where he said he would not do the tour with that behind him, so that left Richard, Steve and me in the position of saying‚ ‘Alright, we won’t do the tour if it’s not there’, which would have been really childish so we didn’t do that, we said‚ ‘Okay, you can have your way again, we’ll do the tour without the set’, because we just couldn’t let all those people down.” Karn recalls this crisis happening within 24 hours but others involved recall it playing out over a number of days. In Karn’s version, he states that the band argued all night on the eve of the tour, with Sylvian offering the ultimatum: “It’s not my decision any more; either the stage set goes, or the tour is cancelled. It’s up to you.” Karn was, understandably, “livid”, telling Sylvian: “Have it your way, but get this straight – I can’t carry on like this, you’re impossible to work with, and it’s just not a band any more. I’ve had enough.” Karn states that this was the point that Japan broke up, while not mentioning that he had already aired plans to make a solo album, thus breaking, according to Sylvian, an “unspoken agreement” that none of the members of Japan would ever record solo while still part of the group. Karn says that the arguments raged until early morning, leaving only a few hours left to pack. When he returned to his flat to do so, Yuka [Fujii, photographer and Karn’s girlfriend] was of course waiting for him. She apparently cut short Karn’s justified grumbling with the shocking words: “I will be moving out while you are on tour and moving in with Dave.” Anthony Reynolds’ ‘Japan: A Foreign Place (The Biography, 1974-1984)’ is published as a deluxe hardback book on Burning Shed and is available exclusively from the Burning Shed website. Visit burningshed.com CARTER TUTTI VOID TRIP TRIP TRIP STREN STREN STREN PLE PLE PLE NGTH NGTH NGTH When CARTER TUTTI VOID invited us to spend an afternoon at their remote rural HQ, it was an offer we couldn’t refuse. Two parts Throbbing Gristle to one part Factory Floor, the threesome made their recording debut with a live album recorded at their very first gig. Now there’s a second album, ‘f (X)’, a rare non-TG release on the seminal Industrial Records. And it’s an absolute corker Words: KRIS NEEDS CARTER TUTTI VOID One afternoon in early 1978, I stood with Chris Carter and Cosey Fanni Tutti gazing through the kitchen window of their terraced house in Hackney, east London. Trains thundered frequently over the nearby railway bridge and Throbbing Gristle’s Death Factory loomed a threatening walk away in nearby Martello Street. What had once been another street running behind the house was now a derelict bomb site, but they took great delight in pointing out the distinctive TG lightning flash defiantly sprayed amid the National Front graffiti on a crumbling opposite wall. At that time, Throbbing Gristle were the most dangerous band in the UK, punk-struck as it was. Their 1977 debut album, ‘Second Annual Report’, had been an unexpected success, selling out of its first pressing of nearly 800. On an autumn afternoon nearly four decades later, I’m visiting Chris and Cosey again, this time to talk about their new outfit Carter Tutti Void, and we’re looking through another window at a very different view. Over 30 years ago, determined to bring up their son Nick in a better environment, the couple left London for a quiet Norfolk village and set about renovating an abandoned former school. Instead of Hackney’s urban wreckage, our gaze is greeted by a rich, green lawn stretching to the old school’s now converted toilet block, which is framed by flowering trees and Cosey’s vegetable garden. Pastoral calm surrounds this idyllic domain, which still sported blackboards on the walls when they moved in and began turning it into their new home and the nerve centre of their activities ever since. The only surviving blackboard is now used for works in progress. Today it’s covered with paper to hide the top secret project they’re working on. The front room is sparsely furnished but comfortable, housing a spectacular cabinet of toys and memorabilia Chris has acquired over the years, from Daleks to Kraftwerk promo items, while Cosey’s collection of cat ornaments are spread over an adjoining sideboard. To the right is their studio, where Chris, Cosey and the third member of Carter Tutti Void, Nik Colk Void from Factory Floor, create their music. Although Chris has sold his original 808 and other analogue antiquities, he still boasts a formidable electronic arsenal, including the Machinedrum that provides the beats on Carter Tutti Void’s new album, ‘f (X)’, the first non-Throbbing Gristle release on the fabled Industrial Records since 1981. The very positive reaction to ‘f (X)’ has taken Chris, Cosey and Nik by surprise, especially as it was only selectively sent out online, with no high-profile promotion. A combination of glowing reviews and word-of-mouth buzz has led to history repeating itself as the first (white vinyl) pressing sold out sharpish. It might seem hard to believe the coruscating washes and spectral pulsings of ‘f (X)’ were created in this distinctly rural setting, but when you consider how Chris and Cosey have always remained gloriously isolated from the fleeting trends and shallow mundanities of the outside world, why wouldn’t it be recorded in a place like this? And speaking of places like this, Norfolk is also where Nik calls home. She was born and raised here, returning after a spell in the smoke, when she fell pregnant. Chris, Cosey and Nik sit around the large table which dominates the light-filled country kitchen, ready to commence what turns into a hugely enjoyable two-hour conversation rather than a gruelling interview. There really is no need to retread what transpired in the years after TG splintered and Chris and Cosey embarked on their idiosyncratic path. That’s a story for another time. Too much is happening in this latest phase of their remarkable career, which started when they were joined by Nik to play Mute Records’ Short Circuit Festival at London’s Roundhouse in 2011. The set appeared the following year as Carter Tutti Void’s debut album, ‘Transverse’. Conducting a parallel life in Factory Floor, Nik stayed on to add her processed Fender Telecaster and spark a new dynamic with the former TG pair, as so startlingly captured on ‘f (X)’, Carter Tutti Void’s first studio incarnation. The invincible bond between Chris and Cosey has obviously been enhanced by Nik’s like-minded outlook and thirst for sonic foraging, the trio now sufficiently united to share the kind of telepathic creative soul searching that produces magical spontaneous combustion. During our chat, they often make a statement, then look to the others with an “isn’t it?” or “wasn’t it?”. We ease in by discussing the effect of domestic surroundings on their music. Cosey Fanni Tutti: “I think what’s going on in your life has more of an impact on your music more than the environment in which you produce it. Like recording at Martello Street affected the music because of what we went through going to and from the studio, with the NF and gangs that were around. You had to watch your back all the time. There was all sorts going on politically, which we were very aware of, and punk was coming up. We went back to Martello Street for a BBC programme and it was quite shocking. People were having picnics! You should never go back, really. I didn’t like it, I felt quite angry. Give me a placard and let me go down London Fields!” Nik Colk Void: “Where I lived in Tottenham, the place was reverberating from six in the evening to six in the morning. The whole feel of being in London and going out the door was really claustrophobic. The area was pretty grim, but it was also very creative. When I moved back to the countryside, I was going somewhere I was completely familiar with, but after a couple of months my music started coming out a lot darker. Not intentionally, but I suppose it’s the relationship with nature opening my mind up.” Cosey: “In the city, that kind of environment locks you into a mindset... and it’s hard to get out of it because you have to protect yourself on all levels.” Nik: Cosey: Chris Carter: Cosey: “I was going into central London on the tube and it seemed quite bleak, but when you get to the countryside it’s completely different. When you’re flying off to shows at the weekend, it’s nice coming back here, rather than a warehouse where you hear the sewing machines going on the other side of the wall.” “It’s an age thing as well. When you’re young, you don’t even notice it. When I think back to Martello Street and even to when I was in Hull, the conditions we lived in were appalling, but that was just a means to an end. As long as I had a roof over my head and could sleep somewhere, I was quite happy. But then you realise it’s actually having an impact on your work and health, and you have to do something in the end. You go to where you know you can function and breathe.” “The biggest thing for us was having kids, though.” “You’re not selfishly driven any more once you have kids. You have someone else to think of. They become number one on the list and then what you want to do is next. That has a lot to do with it.” CARTER TUTTI VOID How much does this environment affect your recording methods? Chris: “When we recorded here with TG, we did it a similar way. We all just set up in the studio. When we did the first Carter Tutti Void album, the live album, we set up in there, trying out all the ideas first, then we did it the same way with ‘f (X)’. A lot of people say the first album doesn’t sound like a live recording, but it was. The preparation for it was similar to the way we recorded this one.” Cosey: “We just get comfortable with the starting points. Chris writes the rhythms, then plays them to me and Nik, then we all decide whether it has legs. You start working with it and feel your way through it and take it on the stage… and everything changes then anyway.” Chris: “Whatever we do in there never sounds like that when we get onstage.” Cosey: “And we don’t want it to. We just want to know that, if we’re going to do it live, we know the territory when we go onstage and then we can go where we want. There’s no script really.” Nik: “We have our own work spaces, our separate tables, our tools that we’re familiar with, and that’s kind of like our language. I’ll have a different setting for each track and I’ll literally have it all written down. As far as playing in different spaces goes, you can never determine that. What Cosey is playing or what Chris is playing is always a response to the live situation.” Chris, 37 years ago you said you were building your own equipment. Is there still an element of that? Chris: Nik: Chris: Nik: “Yeah, although I don’t build so much now. The stuff I do now is for myself. I don’t use it with Carter Tutti Void, but I do some programming with software. It’s a combination of how you use bits of gear in unconventional ways, putting things through other things they don’t usually go through.” “Do you read the manual?” “I do! I’ve got a t-shirt that says ‘RTFM (Read The Fucking Manual)’. I wrote for Sound On Sound for about 10 years and would have to read the manuals to write the reviews. When we’d go on tour, I used to take manuals on the road and read them like novels. I used to quite enjoy it. The thing is, I don’t like to settle too much on one piece of gear, which is why we were constantly selling old gear and buying new stuff. I like the feeling of being slightly outside my comfort zone. I’ve got favourite bits of gear, of course. I’ve got a Machinedrum drum machine I’ve had for years and I do like that. It’s like a heartbeat pulse all through ‘f (X)’. It’s quite low-res so it’s got a quirkiness which adds to that heartbeat feeling, but it’s quite a clunky, heavy machine, so I sampled it and put it on my laptop.” “When we rehearsed the new album, Chris’ set-up had changed so much. I’ve never seen anything like it. I’ve still got my box and stuff which looks like a car boot sale compared to Chris’ set-up.” Chris: “When we did The Roundhouse, there were wires everywhere. We had so many different boxes. I think that’s what made the live album so unusual. There was so much interaction going on. Like that bit where we had someone torturing a metronome. We never figured out who it was.” Cosey: “It was like a workshop, wasn’t it? When we went on the stage, I remember the audience cheering, and I looked out at them and thought, ‘They’re really up for whatever we want to do’. It was such a wonderful feeling. I think now there’s an expectation that they shouldn’t expect anything! With our Chris and Cosey stuff, and even TG, they were actual songs. This is quite different. These are non-songs. It’s the pulse. You kick in and ride with it and it goes up and down. It’s a fabulous feeling when we’re playing live.” How did the three of you get together? Chris: Nik: “We first met at the ICA in 2006 when we were DJing at the Cosey Club. We had some history going back, but we hadn’t connected. I was actually in Factory Floor for a while, I did three gigs. Then Mute asked if we would collaborate with someone at the Short Circuit Festival.” “Initially, we were only going to do one performance, so didn’t really talk about how we were going to go about it. It just happened. We had about a week to prepare for it. And because that’s how it started, it became the foundation of how we wanted to go on. We got away with it and loved it... so we thought we’d just carry on doing what comes naturally to us.” CARTER TUTTI VOID Were you already a fan of Chris and Cosey’s work, Nik? Nik: “Oh yeah. At first I imagined it might be quite scary to meet them [much laughter], but musically we clicked straight away.” Cosey: “We said, ‘Let’s set up your gear and try something out’. We kept going for quite a while, didn’t we? When we stopped we went, ‘Well, that was kind of easy, wasn’t it? It works then’. It was as simple as that. You don’t often get that. After Sleazy [TG founding member Peter ‘Sleazy’ Christopherson, who died in November 2010], it was ‘I can’t get this with anyone else’. I would say there’s only Sleazy and Nik I’ve ever played with like that.” Nik: “I like going into one instrument with loads of different effects. I’ve got my head down, really concentrating and listening hard. I think just being able to concentrate on the guitar, which I’ve been playing since I was 16, is the best thing I can do. When I came to work with Chris and Cosey, I thought, ‘You’ve got to be loud!’, but then I realised it wasn’t about that. It was about being really controlled about what I was doing at quite a low level in order to get these intricate sounds that you won’t get when you’re blasting it.” Cosey: “Although it sounds like a self-indulgent way of doing it, it’s not at all. It’s all of us together. The sound is the focus, not one person or what they’re doing. It’s the little parts that make up the whole and that’s what you’ve got to try to build and be sensitive to. I think Chris is the only one who has a job, if you like, because he’s the engine, the starting point. Once it kicks in, nobody has to do anything.” It’s just the momentum of the track? Cosey: “You feel it physically and emotionally and you interject with what you feel your emotions are building up to... driving it along, bringing it down, bringing it up again. And you’re feeding off the audience as well. It’s very intuitive and a wonderful way to create music.” Chris: “When we did the live shows, there were cheers from the audience when we did certain things.” Cosey: “It’s when you arrive at the same moment at the same time. It’s almost like you’ve given them a present. ‘Yeah you’ve heard me, that’s really what I wanted’. And it’s like, ‘Yeah, we did as well’.” Is it strange for you, Nik, hopping between Factory Floor and Carter Tutti Void? There has to be some overspill, hasn’t there? Nik: Cosey: “Not too much. I play different instruments in Factory Floor, whereas I concentrate on the guitar with Carter Tutti Void. I don’t play anything in a traditional way and I approach every instrument the same. That’s just where I’ve got to from doing this for years. I’ve found my own identity in what I play in my music. It doesn’t matter what situation I’m in, I just apply it to that.” “I think the difference is in the fact that expectation has gone with us, so you can sit back and lose yourself. There isn’t an aim or a format as such with us. It could be anything. It could be a 60-minute track or a two-minute one.” Nik: “With Factory Floor, you do think about how people are going to enjoy the tracks. You always feel like you’re working on music you did yesterday as opposed to tomorrow... I don’t find that with Carter Tutti Void. The next Factory Floor album is the last one of our contract with DFA and after that I’m looking forward to being able to put tracks out as we record them. We finished a single a couple of months ago and that’s not coming out until next year because there isn’t anywhere to do the vinyl pressing. Psychologically, that’s a bit strange when you want to evolve with your music.” Chris: “That is a big drag with vinyl. I wanted ‘f (X)’ to come out sooner, but we we couldn’t get the pressing. The majors have jumped on the vinyl bandwagon and are buying all the time in the pressing plants. It’s outrageous. If you want to press vinyl, you’ve got to have so many pressed a month to keep your account open. Only the majors can do that. Our white vinyl sold out quicker than we thought it would, so now we’re trying to get it repressed on black and that’s proving to be a problem.” Cosey: “The people that started this and created a market have been pushed out by the majors. It’s the third time this has happened to us. It happened when we did TG’s ‘Second Annual Report’ and didn’t expect people to like it. Then with Chris & Cosey’s ‘Heartbeat’ album, which sold out, and now with Carter Tutti Void!” Chris: “For this one, we didn’t even bother to do any promotion. With ‘Transverse’, we had Mute and that’s a big machine. I can understand why we got so many reviews for that, but it’s been the same thing for this. It’s word of mouth as well. You only need a couple of good reviews. The Guardian gave it their Record of the Week, which was really good.” It’s impossible now to convey the overwhelming impact that came from going to see bands such as TG or Suicide. Listening to ‘f (X)’ reminds me of those times. It sounds like nothing else out there. Cosey: “To me, this album feels like when you have something deep inside that has to be exorcised. It’s not like a nasty thing, it’s just that you bring out everything you want to give to whoever you’re with to play alongside you. And because there are no boundaries or limits, anything can happen... which is a fantastic feeling. When you went to a TG or Suicide gig way back then, there was a feeling in the room that it was you lot against the world.” CARTER TUTTI VOID After Sleazy died, you spectacularly brought home his dream project of re-imagining Nico’s ‘Desertshore’. Do any of you have any long-standing personal favourite albums? Nik: “I have to say mine is Nico as well... ‘Chelsea Girl’ and ‘Desertshore’. I remember when I first heard the Velvet Underground when I was 11. I heard Nico’s voice and said, ‘Who’s that man singing?’. After that, I was really interested in the fact I thought it was a man’s voice and the feeling behind it.” Cosey: “The sense of control in her voice is amazing. There’s a kind of strength and vulnerability and a real honesty about her feelings. There was always a thing with me and Sleazy where we’d be trying to stamp the fact that I have validity whether I’m female or male. There was always that agenda going on. You must come across it with Factory Floor. There’s one girl in the band and if there’s a technical problem it’s ‘What have you done?’. I didn’t used to notice it, but it pisses me off now.” Nik: Cosey: “There’s an assumption that the man in the band is the technical one and does the work and is the boss. If only they knew!” “Our generation fought to do what we did. We put ourselves out there and got all the flak for doing that, but there comes a point where it’s an accepted thing and there’s not the knowledge or the understanding of how hard it was to get there. You shouldn’t have to put up with comments that are basically deep-rooted sexist and misogynistic, especially from alternative, anarchist type people.” After the success of ‘f (X)’, what’s next for Carter Tutti Void? Chris: “We’ve been recording the live shows and got some really good stuff, so we’ll do another album next year. We recorded the two nights we did at Oslo in London and they don’t sound anything like the album! We’re also doing a project we can’t talk about at the moment.” Nik: “The great thing I found in this project is it goes on its own natural path. We haven’t discussed what we’ll do next at all, have we?” Chris: “We don’t talk about it much, we just do it.” ‘f (X)’ is out now on Industrial Records Have you got your official Electronic Sound Music Club Tote Bag yet? ten q u id “It’s quite literally the best bag I’ve ever owned, and has helped make many of my dreams come true.” EVERYONE WHO’S EVER BOUGHT IT www.electronicsound.co.uk/shop GHOST BOX Making Dead Men Sing We’ve had 10 years of wonderful music and fabulous visuals from those genre-defining folk at GHOST BOX RECORDS and we’re popping corks with label co-founders Jim Jupp and Julian House to mark the occasion. Stand by for stuff about synths, sci-fi, Bagpuss, electromagnetic fields, alchemists, William Burroughs and haunted dancefloors Words: CARL GRIFFIN GHOST BOX And so the idea for Ghost Box began to take shape. Jim Jupp started building up his home studio, conducting early experiments for what would eventually become his musical offshoot, Belbury Poly. He found himself mainly drawn back to his old synths. Much of this material is readily accessible now, even the preposterously obscure stuff. But a decade ago, in the days before YouTube, a lot of it only survived as vague memories. “There was this perfect window to start our label, when the internet only really functioned as a means “I had a Yamaha CS-20M that I’d bought secondto open up possibilities,” notes House. “If you hand when I was about 15,” he says. “I’d gigged photograph something from a distance using a long heavily with it with one of my bands, but lens, everything condenses into a flat plane, but miraculously it still worked... more or less. I’ve since the reality of that scene is far more complex and had it repaired and spruced up. Despite its simplicity, detailed. I think memory can work in the same way.” it still gets regular use.” The concept of sound collages working together with Julian House was meanwhile thinking about how visual cut-ups was rooted in the inspiration House their new label might look. House is very much a took from William Burroughs and Brion Gysin’s latter-day Peter Saville, his distinctive work for the ‘The Third Mind’, a book he discovered while still Intro design agency, where he still plies his trade, at college. It was the first publication to showcase gracing many a discerning record collection. As well the technique that Burroughs and Gysin popularised as being the visual provider for the whole Ghost in the 1960s by taking text, cutting up the pages, Box roster, he’s designed sleeves for the likes of and then reconfiguring the segments to form new Stereolab, Broadcast, Primal Scream, The Prodigy, narratives. Burroughs then adapted this approach for Oasis, Doves and many more besides. film-making with director Antony Balch, whose 1966 short ‘The Cut-Ups’ has been hugely influential on For Ghost Box, House set out to create a visual House. palette that matched the peculiar musical otherworld that the label’s sound conjures. The idea And while the familiar graphic design discipline of of using a semi-subconscious pull of generationally applying brand consistency is present and strong shared cultural reference points that felt more than with House’s Ghost Box work, there is also a just an empty pastiche had been brewing since his characteristic wonkiness that separates it from undergraduate days at Central St Martins Art School anything else out there. in London. “Julian has always had very clear ideas about how We’re talking those jumbled up, half-remembered it could all look,” explains Jupp. “When we started, signifiers of four or five decades ago again – the 60s we just had a simple website as a way to knock jazz and 70s folk sounds, the snippets of incidental out a few hand-printed CDRs to a small number of TV music, the hazy scenes from entertainment like-minded people. Over those first few years, it shows and current affairs documentaries about seemed to grow organically into a legitimate record nuclear war and domestic industrial strife. And label. Which we never really intended to happen.” perhaps above all else, the post-war sci-fi novels and TV programmes that juxtaposed a very British and very mundane kind of provincial life with the fantastical. All of this goes into the Ghost Box mixing pot and the result is quite a potion. “The parochial stuff from the post-war period and how it’s overlaid with something either ancient and mysterious or extra-terrestrial and cosmic is a common thread for us,” agrees Jupp. “The weird impinging on the ordinary. It’s what Nigel Kneale and John Wyndham wrote about in ‘Quatermass’ and ‘The Day Of The Triffids’. It’s what a lot of ‘Doctor Who’ was about too.” JULIAN HOUSE Alongside his design work, there’s also Julian House’s music. He began his sonic adventures as a teenager playing around with the music programme on his ZX Spectrum. He’d spool the sounds he created to make C90 tapes, though more in the manner of a surrealist than a turntablist. These days, he’s the man behind the dislocated mosaic sound of The Focus Group. “Tape and film cut-ups always grabbed me,” says House. “Playing around with things in a way that you really shouldn’t, it’s like a form of magic. That’s the principle I’ve taken right through into The Focus Group. It all happens in a studio space, but it’s not something I could ever take out and play live.” As well as the strong current of surrealism that runs through The Focus Group’s output, it’s easy to forget that much of the label’s brand of electronic music is at its core psychedelic. “British psychedelia is a very big influence on us – and specifically its opposing forces,” admits House. “On one hand, it was debauched and transgressive, with all the reverb, effects pedals, synths and hallucinatory visuals, but then there were those naive, child-like pastoral elements too.” There are elements of folklore weaved into Ghost Box’s complex audio tapestry as well. ‘The Geography’ by Jupp’s Belbury Poly project, which appears on 2012’s ‘The Belbury Tales’ album, is a real beauty in that respect. “It’s about putting a fictional gloss on things that are well outside of any kind of academic sphere,” explains Jupp. “Julian and I grew up in South Wales and the landscapes – the Neolithic and Roman stuff – were all around us, but in terms of our experience and understanding of that, it came through oddball TV shows like ‘Children Of The Stones’. The same goes for the way that folk music was introduced into our lives. It wasn’t through listening earnestly to the Alan Lomax archive, it was through the folk music on programmes like ‘Play Away’ and ‘Bagpuss’. And whether or not there was a phoney aspect to it, that was all we knew because that was our culture in the 70s.” So what do you get when you put electronica and psychedelia and folk together? In an article written not long after Ghost Box started, respected music writer Simon Reynolds dubbed it “hauntology”. Everyone needs a lucky break along the way, of course, and having the early support of someone like Reynolds was a huge help to the label. “Oh, we’ve had lots of lucky breaks,” laughs Jupp. “But Simon Reynolds was certainly very positive about us in this big feature, which was in The Wire in around 2006. The article was about the idea of ‘hauntology’ as a music sub-genre based around a scene of sorts that included us and people like Moon Wiring Club, Jonny Trunk, The Caretaker and Mordant Music, all of whom were making this very distinctive British electronic music.” Reynolds had indeed nailed the unique Ghost Box approach and he brought home the point in his ‘Retromania’ book when discussing the significance of ‘Caermaen’, another Belbury Poly track. By sampling a 1908 barrel-recorded folk song and changing its pitch, tone and structure to create an entirely new melody, Reynolds declared that the Ghost Box boss had effectively “made a dead man sing a brand new song”. This notion of making dead men sing new songs neatly sums up what Jupp and House had seized upon when they started the label. And they knew that referencing specific residual aspects of their generation’s shared cultural history, however deeply buried they may be, would chime with similarly minded people. “We certainly thought people of our own generation would get it quicker,” agrees Jupp. “We weren’t trying to create something from a specific era and we didn’t just want to attract white British blokes in their 40s, though. If you’re undertaking any creative endeavour and you’ve got a set of references and a respect for the source material, I think anyone can get it.” These days, Ghost Box have a broad audience who clearly understand this strange, half-imagined creation that rings somehow true even if they didn’t experience it or remember it themselves. For those people, according to Jupp, Ghost Box “becomes an exotic otherworld they feel must have happened at some point”. JIM JUPP https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mHq767Fl26E | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=28IzZMGdxwE | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uq_hztHJCM4 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vv4tsUg7MLQ | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lPdzsDbwJDA | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VlXtD9CobcQ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rd08qDpBdbI | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QWx4KPcgyUY | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VlXtD9CobcQ things to watch GHOST BOX A HAUNTING WE WILL GO When Simon Reynolds used the term “hauntology” to describe the music scene developing around Ghost Box Records in the mid-2000s, he was co-opting a concept first explored by philosopher Jacques Derrida in his 1993 book, ‘Spectres Of Marx’, which concerns the ideas and themes of the past bleeding into or “haunting” the present. More recently, it’s become associated with the postmodern notion of disjointed temporality. Reynolds’ tag doesn’t half seem to cause problems, though. Maybe it’s the tendency for many commentators to come over all academic and excessively analytical when trying to grapple with a definition of the music sub-genre. Or maybe it’s the unhelpful links with black-clad, bat-inclined gothiness that has little to do with the primarily electronic sounds of the scene. Jim Jupp has mixed feelings about the tag, particularly where its gothic connotations might give people the wrong idea of where they’re coming from. “The word ‘hauntology’ sparks huge debate with bloggers and music journalists,” he says. “It certainly hasn’t done us any harm, but I’m not even really sure I know what it means. The debate often seems to miss out on the actual music and gets bogged down in semantics, so I decided I didn’t want to get involved. I’d rather talk about the type of synths I use than discuss Jacques Derrida.” So what do you get when you put electronica and psychedelia and folk together? In an article written not long after Ghost Box started, respected music writer Simon Reynolds dubbed it “hauntology”. Everyone needs a lucky break along the way, of course, and having the early support of someone like Reynolds was a huge help to the label. “Oh, we’ve had lots of lucky breaks,” laughs Jupp. “But Simon Reynolds was certainly very positive about us in this big feature, which was in The Wire in around 2006. The article was about the idea of ‘hauntology’ as a music sub-genre based around a scene of sorts that included us and people like Moon Wiring Club, Jonny Trunk, The Caretaker and Mordant Music, all of whom were making this very distinctive British electronic music.” Reynolds had indeed nailed the unique Ghost Box approach and he brought home the point in his ‘Retromania’ book when discussing the significance of ‘Caermaen’, another Belbury Poly track. By sampling a 1908 barrel-recorded folk song and changing its pitch, tone and structure to create an entirely new melody, Reynolds declared that the Ghost Box boss had effectively “made a dead man sing a brand new song”. This notion of making dead men sing new songs neatly sums up what Jupp and House had seized upon when they started the label. And they knew that referencing specific residual aspects of their generation’s shared cultural history, however deeply buried they may be, would chime with similarly minded people. “We certainly thought people of our own generation would get it quicker,” agrees Jupp. “We weren’t trying to create something from a specific era and we didn’t just want to attract white British blokes in their 40s, though. If you’re undertaking any creative endeavour and you’ve got a set of references and a respect for the source material, I think anyone can get it.” These days, Ghost Box have a broad audience who clearly understand this strange, half-imagined creation that rings somehow true even if they didn’t experience it or remember it themselves. For those people, according to Jupp, Ghost Box “becomes an exotic otherworld they feel must have happened at some point”. Ghost Box have a number of regular contributors and one of the most important of these is Jon Brooks, who records as The Advisory Circle and seems to have assumed the role of the label’s third wheel. International Year of Light 2015. The latter was composed on a harp played by laser beams, with a score based on the alchemical writings of philosopher and occultist Cornelius Agrippa. “Jon came to us really early on, when he was doing stuff for Lo Recordings as King Of Woolworths,” explains Jupp. “Someone at Lo mentioned Ghost Box to him and he immediately said to himself, ‘This is it! This is what I want to do’.” Mulholland is also putting the final touches to his next Mount Vernon Arts Lab album, ‘A Spectre Over Albion’, which follows last year’s ‘Norwood Variations’. Featuring string quartets, choirs, musique concrete and spoken word, the record is slated for an early 2016 release and sounds as intriguing as its predecessor. Brooks has a background in music engineering and mastering, as well as being a composer and music producer, and he’s been integral to the development of the technical side of the label. “Jon has done an enormous amount in helping me get my head around music production,” continues Jupp. “He does all our mastering work and if we do something new we always run it past him first. He’ll give us a critique on the technicals, on the way a track sounds, and if it needs improving he’ll know how to do it. So he’s become part of the collective.” The word “collective” reinforces the feeling of something going on at Ghost Box that’s almost wilfully non-conformist. Some people talk about the label with a similar level of reverence to the way they used to talk about Factory – as a complete, idiosyncratically democratic identity. “The label itself is more important than the individual artists,” explains Jupp. “The label is what means the most to people. We all work fairly anonymously and we only work with people who understand that. So if someone comes along who has a load of photos of themselves on their record sleeve or on their press releases, they’re not really going to fit in with us.” Of course, Factory was never afraid to push the envelope in terms of releasing challenging and experimental material. The same is true of Ghost Box. Take Drew Mulholland’s recordings as Mount Vernon Arts Lab, for example. In his day job at Glasgow University, Mulholland holds the grand sounding position of Composer in Residence and Research Fellow in both the Schools of Geographical & Earth Studies and Physics & Astronomy. He’s just completed two new works, one for the University’s First World War commemorations, which took place in September, and another for the School of Physics & Astronomy to celebrate the “I’ve manipulated the sound of the Earth’s electromagnetic field, recorded with a VLF Receiver,” offers Mulholland. “I’ve also mixed in field recordings along with samples from some hypnotic regression therapy tapes I found in a charity shop.” All of which sounds definitively hauntological and points to the mutual attraction between Mullholland and Ghost Box. Jupp and House have cited Mount Vernon Arts Lab’s ‘The Séance At Hobs Lane’ album from 2001 as an influence on them wanting to start a label in the first place. And during his Glasgow University lectures and seminars, Mulholland frequently references Julian House’s work and occasionally screens his films and project artwork. “I love the Ghost Box aesthetic,” declares Mulholland. “I think the world that Jim and Julian have created is quite brilliant, but from my considered academic perspective I also believe Mr House to be the most talented and visionary graphic designer and filmmaker we have in Britain today.” Ghost Box’s 10th anniversary compilation album, ‘In A Moment… Ghost Box’, is out now IRMIN SCHMIDT ABOUT SCHMIDT With the imminent release of a bumper box set of his solo work, onetime Can man IRMIN SCHMIDT looks back over his illustrious career and talks about fleeing war-torn Berlin as a child, learning his trade under Stockhausen, and his sonic adventures in the worlds of classical music, experimental electronics, film soundtracks and fantasy operatics Words: KRIS NEEDS XXX SCHMIDT IRMIN “I actually just liked the idea of having all my work concentrated in one big box. It’s like when you’re a writer; there’s always the moment where your works are collected into one edition and available as one thing. It’s nice to have… and that’s it!” So Irmin Schmidt modestly describes the motivation behind his monumental new ‘Electro Violet’ collection, which presents six CDs covering all his solo albums, then another six drawn from his enormous catalogue of TV and film soundtracks, including a disc of previously unreleased tracks. As he says, it’s nice to have. But beyond that, this epic rollercoaster ride through over 30 years of projects confirms Irmin Schmidt as one of the leading avant-garde pioneers of the last century, an artist who can easily be placed next to his early mentors Stockhausen and Ligeti. Irmin’s shapeshifting work with Can occupied just 11 years out of the musical journey which started in the early 1960s and is still going on. Such was the magnitude of Can’s astonishing run of albums between 1969’s ‘Monster Movie’ and 1974’s ‘Soon Over Babaluma’ (after which technology impinged on their anarchic creative ethos and they diluted and fragmented during their last five years) that his solo work often fell under his old group’s vast shadow, especially when Can started to receive the kind of posthumous recognition afforded true innovators. Born in 1937, Irmin Schmidt’s formative years were spent acquiring a formal training in classical music. He attended the conservatorium in Dortmund and several other venerable establishments, before conducting various orchestras during the 60s. But he also studied composition on Karlheinz Stockhausen’s Courses for New Music in Cologne and under innovative composer Gyorgy Ligeti between 1957 and 1967, founding the Dortmund Ensemble for New Music in 1962. Crucially, then, Irmin moved in both old school classical and forward-thinking experimental circles from his early teenage years. He started composing soundtrack music when he was a student. “I was making music to short films from the beginning of my composing career, just for money when I was still a student,” he recalls, speaking on the phone from his home in Provence in the south of France. “Sometimes they were totally stupid, these kind of short documentaries or industry films, but I learned my craft like that. That was one part of my composing.” And let’s not forget that Can supplied the music for a number of movies, as heard on ‘Soundtracks’ in 1970. “We did quite a lot of nice film music, especially at the beginning, when we did ‘Deep End’ and some very famous German films. Then we were touring so we had no time for that, but soundtracks go through all of my life.” The story of Can, formed by Irmin Schmidt, fellow Stockhausen student Holger Czukay, guitarist Michael Karoli and drummer Jaki Liebezeit, has been well documented. For Irmin, it started with his revelatory trips to New York in 1966 and 1968, when he experienced The Velvet Underground and the Fluxus art movement, meeting key figures such as La Monte Young and, at the same time, being struck by the simple power of James Brown and The Stooges. Jimi Hendrix, one of America’s major electronic innovators, had a profound effect on Irmin, particularly the Woodstock assault on ‘The Star Spangled Banner’, a moment which defined the 1960s. “When I heard Hendrix’s ‘The Star Spangled Banner’ for the first time, it really stirred me,” he says. “It was an orchestral painting, but a solo on one guitar. It’s very emotional and full of a certain kind of expression. That’s what fascinated me in Hendrix, because what he was doing there, by the way he was playing the guitar, it was like a new instrument. And that’s what you try to aspire to as a composer. It was the same with Ligeti, who produced a new orchestra sound which had never been heard before, and Charlie Parker’s role in the modern saxophone. The sax was invented in 1840 or something and was especially used in classical music. It made very uninteresting sounds, but the moment Charlie Parker and the great jazz musicians started playing it, they turned it into the modern instrument. “It was the same for me with electronics. Modern music for me is Igor Stravinsky and Jimi Hendrix, because they made new sounds. The synthesiser, in effect, was not yet a real instrument, so you had to create it. And with Can, I created my own. The concept was mine, but despite my work with electronic music I’m helpless with the technical side itself, so I asked an electronics engineer to build my Alpha 77, then used a totally new idea of synthesising that can be played live. This concept gave the synthesiser a new aspect in the 1970s.” After the dissolution of Can in 1979, Irmin returned to composing soundtracks and simultaneously embarked on a solo career. The first album to bear his name was ‘Filmmusik’ in 1980, featuring his music for a movie called ‘Im Herzen Des Hurricane’, which he recorded with Swiss electronic composer and sax player Bruno Spoerri. The following year the partnership also produced Irmin’s first solo studio album, ‘Toy Planet’, one of that decade’s electronic milestones, which foreshadowed future strains such as techno as well as world music. While citing the warm, throaty contrast of Bruno’s sax as “one of the attractions for me to work with him”, Irmin underlines the importance of collaborators in his career. “I always like to work with people who can do something I can’t, or have more knowledge of something I don’t have knowledge of. Bruno is a jazz musician and he also knew more about electronics than I did. We met and talked about electronics and he had his own ideas, so we decided to make a record together. He had a studio in Zürich so we worked there together.” While elements from ‘Filmmusik’ appear in the soundtrack selection of ‘Electro Violet’, ‘Toy Planet’ is the first disc of the box set. After the synthetically resonating theme of ‘The Seven Game’, the title track looms as one of Irmin Schmidt’s most startling and groundbreaking pieces. Beatless and juddering, it shimmers and pulses with its own kaleidoscopic momentum. “On that piece, I used a sample,” explains Irmin, who was presaging sampling and the soon-to-arrive Fairlight. “I built a kind of choir and let more than 24 different loops run onto each other, which led to lots of strange sounds because of this overlaying. On ‘Toy Planet’, we used our two synthesisers in a new way, combining them with concrete sounds and sample techniques that, at the time, didn’t really exist. This was the result of overlaying loops of samples, which was a different way of making a piece of music.” Irmin cites his old teachers Stockhausen and Ligeti as pioneers of the techniques that he initially used in Can, helping to shape them into one of the seminal bands of the 1970s. “I owe a lot of my ideas about electronics to Stockhausen,” he explains. “I studied and worked with him, which was actually based on the fact I heard ‘Gesang Der Jünglinge’, his first big electronic piece, and was so affected by it that I wanted to learn more. Electronic music got its first real masterpiece with Stockhausen in the 50s and it was a big influence on me. “I was trained by a lot of great musicians, composers and conductors, but then I had the idea that only this music by Stockhausen and Ligeti was totally new in the 20th century. There was jazz, but here there was something in western culture that was a very different aspect of music. I had the idea that all this was new in music – seriously and genuinely new – so I wanted to bring it all together in what I was doing. Can did that and everything I’ve done ever since is the same idea from another angle.” IRMIN SCHMIDT XXX Irmin’s voracious quest for fresh sounds was the key element in his musical evolution after his formal training and the explorations of Can, as breathtakingly illustrated by the title track of ‘Toy Planet’ and the album’s equally startling ‘Rapido De Noir’. The latter is built on a recording of a steam train hurtling along the tracks, the locomotive surge and snakelike synth solo traversing the kind of sonic strata that came naturally to Irmin. Almost 35 years on, it still sounds like a supremely advanced piece of electronic music, even though it rides the rhythm of a now obsolete steam train and its initial inspiration came when he was fleeing wartime Berlin with his mother. “I was only five years old, but this childhood experience influenced me very much,” he recalls. “I was fascinated by my train trips and the monotonous rhythm of the trains and all the sounds around it seemed a kind of hallucinatory world. So I had the idea of using a rhythmic basis from a train. It doesn’t exist now, but until the 90s the train made this ‘didomp-didomp’ rhythm going over the tracks, so Bruno and I edited this basic rhythm by taking a real recording of a train and then I put my music over it. “I played the long solo on the Prophet 5, which never usually sounds like that. I used a distortion pedal for a guitar and a wah-wah pedal and other things to bring the Prophet 5 alive, because synthesiser sounds were very flat at that time. I played this solo live in one go using the pedals, which gave it special overtones. I also had little nails which I threw down onto a tiled floor and it made a very strange noise. I recorded that and transposed it higher, so it was covering the hiss and producing a new sound together with the hiss. “That’s typical of how I worked with Can and later with Bruno, just creating with concrete sounds. I’m not the inventor of this – Pierre Schaeffer, Pierre Henry and Stockhausen worked like this too. I was the next generation and, in a way, the next generation was using a kind of different approach to recording, using the tradition and working it into further adventures in sound.” After ‘Filmmusik Volume 2’ and other soundtrack work, including the 1983 German TV series ‘Rote Erde’, Irmin swung into another creative curve by teaming up with long-time Can supporter and affiliated wordsmith Duncan Fallowell, the English novelist and counter-culture commentator who had turned down an invitation to join Can when Damo Suzuki left in 1973. Fallowell’s lyrics took Irmin into exploring (and also singing) the songs on ‘Musk At Dusk’ in 1987 and ‘Impossible Holidays’ a few years later, which now sound like expansively reaching twin works, encompassing everything from convoluted Bowie-esque grandeur and Teutonic reggae to decadent German cellar bars of past times. Both of these albums are elevated by the unmistakable presence of Michael Karoli’s guitar and Jaki Liebezeit’s drums, inevitably recalling late period Can outings while spinning into the unknown, as on the sweeping epic ‘The Child In History’. ‘Impossible Holidays’ continues exploring queasy cafe atmospheres while adding a sexy new dimension with the buttfriendly bass of ‘Surprise’, the piano-splashed space-funk of ‘Shudder Of Love’, and the richly dark panoply of sax, accordion and castanets draping the lustrous ‘Time The Dreamkiller’. Maybe it’s how Can might have sounded if they’d continued along a linear path, unencumbered by pressures. “Michael and Jaki played on my solo records alongside many other musicians, but always in a way that the nucleus on these two records was actually us three. The difference to Can is that on these two records, I wrote the songs and they accepted playing them. There is still Can in it because of them. I mean, there are three Can members out of four!” XXX SCHMIDT IRMIN ‘Gormenghast Drift’, the haunting track which ends ‘Impossible Holidays’ was an evocative pointer to Irmin’s next major project, ‘Gormenghast’, a fantasy opera in collaboration again with Duncan Fallowell. It was Fallowell who introduced him to Mervyn Peake’s trilogy of novels concerning the supremely dysfunctional Groan family in the colossal Castle Gormenghast, including the heir Titus Groan, his doomed sister Fuchsia, the power-crazed psychopath Steerpike, the sadistic chef Swelter and the evil dwarf Barquentine. Irmin was inspired to write the music, while Fallowell wrote the libretto while living in Russia in the 90s. “I read the trilogy and a lot later this idea of an opera came into my head,” says Irmin. “That was an interesting challenge because every song in an opera or in a musical creates a character. You have to work hard to use the book’s characters to build a structure and put in the dramatic tension. When writing, you have to work very, very closely together, which Duncan and I did.” The work was first staged at Germany’s Wuppertal Opera House in 1998. Even listening to a full-blown opera, it’s still possible to discern that the composer and performer is Irmin Schmidt. “It was my magnum opus! Three hours of music! My idea from the beginning, and the founding of Can, was to bring in the classical music I grew up with. I’ve never wanted to give romantic harmonies a rock rhythm and that’s it. I think it’s a deeper kind of thing to use 20th century music in every aspect. You will find Bartók and Stravinsky and Ligeti and Stockhausen inside the music, just as you will also find Otis Redding and Frank Zappa and Miles Davis and John Coltrane. All this is great music created in the 20th century and, in my way of thinking, I brought it all together in a new way. “Every musician builds on a tradition and my tradition was, on one side, the classical tradition, in which I’m totally at home. But there was another tradition based in the music that came from Africa. It’s these different traditions which sort of made a whole in my head. What I didn’t want was just to use the classical influence, like having some romantic chords. It’s much more difficult and you can hear it in the opera. I’m using unusual 19th century chords in the aria of the cook, but the way I put them together is something new, with the melody and the rhythm. Put all together, it’s a totally new aspect of 20th and 21st century music.” The technical mastermind of the ‘Gormenghast’ opera was Irmin’s son-in-law Jono Podmore, who has been active in electronic music for over 20 years and gets up to glorious mischief on arcane kit with idiosyncratic analogue marauders Metamono. For years, he has also traded under the name Kumo and, after clicking with Irmin while working on the opera, the pair made ‘Masters Of Confusion’ (2001) and ‘Axolotl Eyes’ (2008) together. “Kumo co-produced the opera with me and he played an important role,” says Irmin. “He knew something I didn’t. He was a whole generation younger than me. I always like to work with people who give me a new dimension of music or sound or knowledge or whatever. Kumo is a fantastic rhythm programmer and sound engineer, and we were equally responsible for the music on the two albums we did. I like teamwork. When I started with Can, it was several composers working as Can, which itself became one composer consisting of four or five individuals.” Drawing material from shows in London, Holland and France, ‘Masters Of Confusion’ saw Jono underpin tracks such as ‘Goatfooted Balloonman’ and ‘Burning Straw In Sky’ with the sort of grooves then gripping electronic music, including trip hop and drum ’n’ bass, while a skipping house beat propels ‘Those Fuzzy Things (Out There)’. ‘Axolotl Eyes’ was meanwhile crafted out of extended jams recorded at Cologne’s Studio B and Irmin’s home studio, then edited in London with guests including avant jazz trumpeter Ian Dixon and singer Paul J Fredericks. All told, the Irmin-Kumo collaborations are a volatile, highly fruitful collision between two restless musical souls on an untainted mission into the beyond. ‘Electro Violet’ is released on Spoon/Mute on 20 November LLOYD COLE DIMEN If you still think of LLOYD COLE as a jangly popster, you’re in need of some re-education. His latest album, ‘1D’, follows on from his 2013 collaboration with krautrock pioneer Roedelius and finds him walking a fine line all the way to the future Words: JOOLS STONE Pictures: KIM FRANK XXX LLOYD COLE “THE MINUTE I SIT DOWN AND CONSCIOUSLY TRY TO ‘MAKE SOME MUSIC’, WELL, I REALLY DON’T LIKE THAT FEELING” What happens when successful pop stars withdraw from the spotlight? Do we expect to find them years later patiently sitting in the same little genre box we discovered them in, obediently doling out their hits to a devoted fan base? Despite being a huge admirer of his 80s and 90s work, I rather lost track of Lloyd Cole around the turn of the millennium, so I was more than a little surprised to hear of his recent adventures. Lloyd Cole shot to fame in 1984 with The Commotions, his Glasgow-based, Rickenbacker-toting band, and their debut album ‘Rattlesnakes’, enjoying a rash of jangly pop hits during the decade. After going solo in 1990, he maintained a reasonable profile, slipping comfortably into the role of acoustic songwriter elder statesman. Yet Cole’s latest album, ‘1D’ – subtitled ‘Electronics 2012-2014’ – has none of his trademark lyrical flair. There’s not a single literary or pop culture reference (no sign of Norman Mailer, Eva Marie Saint or even Sean Penn). Nor is there any evidence of his distinctive vocal style, since ‘1D’ marks a bold departure into challenging territory of generative music, a style that owes far less to Bob Dylan and Lou Reed than it does to Faust, Tangerine Dream and, crucially, one Hans-Joachim Roedelius of Cluster and Harmonia fame. This is not the first time that Cole has dipped his toe in these burbly waters. His electronic voyages date back to his 2001 ambient album ‘Plastic Wood’ and he collaborated with Roedelius on their ‘Selected Studies Volume One’ long-player in 2013. But fans of Cole’s earlier work might be surprised to learn that his love of the more experimental end of the musical spectrum pre-dates his own recording career by a decade or so. He traces it back to his passion for 1973’s ‘(No Pussyfooting)’ album, made with two reel-to-reel tape machines plus Brian Eno and Robert Fripp. It wasn’t until the 1990s that any sign of Cole’s penchant for electronics began to emerge in his own music, though. “I think it all started in 1993 with ‘Bad Vibes’, where I attempted to bridge my song-based material with more electronic music and weld it into one cohesive thing,” he explains. “It failed dismally and I decided to pursue the two strands as distinct projects. I went back to recording traditional songs for the next album but I still had a room full of synths, so I started to make some instrumental sketches and was careful not to think of them as potential songs, which was how I’d always worked before.” Does the way he thinks about a piece of music inevitably affect its eventual form, then? “Well, these things don’t even need to be songs or compositions, they can just be constructions,” he says. “And with generative music, who even composes this stuff anyway? I simply put the pieces in place and it outputs.” Lloyd Cole found his way into electronics almost by accident. His first forays came via early stabs at film compositions, which he describes as “living somewhere between Brian Eno and John Barry”. “Frustratingly, most of these film projects didn’t turn into paying jobs,” he says. “The competition’s so intense that nobody gets paid and I ended up with a bunch of material that I didn’t have any use for. So I decided to make a CD as a calling card to send out to music supervisors who might want to commission me.” The The’s Matt Johnson, who was working in the studio next door, and record producer Chris Hughes (aka Merrick of Adam & The Ants fame) helped advise Cole on what to do with his new sound reel. “Pretty much everyone I played it to said, ‘Well, it sounds like an album, you should just put it out’,” he continues. “And so that became ‘Plastic Wood’. A lot of it was made in real time, using an Oberheim Echoplex and recorded direct to DAT. I think that was when I first realised I enjoyed making this type of repetitive music.” ‘Plastic Wood’ caught the ear of Roedelius, who was sent the album by a mutual friend and liked it so much he promptly made his own overdubbed version of it, asking if Cole wanted to release it. The pair agreed to work on a fresh project instead, but it took another decade for ‘Selective Studies’ to come together. I can’t help thinking that the world of knobs, patches and intimidatingly vast banks of control panels must have initially seemed entirely alien to Cole. Wasn’t he worried that he needed a degree in electronic engineering to get to grips with the analogue universe? “Actually, I think you can make this music without really knowing what you’re doing at all,” he offers. “A lot of people take the approach of, ‘I’m just going to plug this into here and see what happens’. I started to assemble a modular synth for ‘Selected Studies’, which was as much about learning as it was composition. At least 75 per cent of the pieces came not from scenarios where I sat down with the intention of recording something, but when I was just playing around with things. I’d be reading about something in [modular synth guru] Allen Strange’s book and just try it out.” How different is the modular process from writing traditional rock songs? “To me, it’s very similar,” says Cole. “I write songs using tiny fragments based on things I hear or read and then I think, ‘That could become the spark for something beautiful’. I believe there’s something in Eno’s idea of making everyone change instruments on [David Bowie’s] ‘Boys Keep Swinging’. The best stuff you create is when you’re out of your element. “I have no formal musical training, I can’t always recognise a chord and sometimes I can’t even tell if it’s a major or minor, and I think that’s what appeals to me about modular. You don’t have a keyboard, so you can’t even tell what key you’re playing, and that can be a lovely way to work. You often don’t know the exact chords you’re playing, you just know what sounds right. I find the idea of music as a showcase for virtuosity is rather bad taste anyway. Once you’ve honed your chops, the skill lies in learning to underplay things.” Cole was attracted to the modular route partly as a way of escaping the ubiquitous drudgery of working with computers. And strangely, despite the potentially perplexing mass of wires, oscillators and filters, he sees this as a parallel to retreating into nature and spending time in a remote cabin in the woods with an acoustic guitar. “I think the reason I like working in modular is it keeps things pretty simple,” he says. “I can see my modulation patches, I can see everything that I’m doing because it’s there on the matrix. I’m comfortable working this way and, frankly, I don’t want to go back to any other type of synthesis.” One measure of how enmeshed Cole has become with the analogue world is the matterof-fact way he sometimes gets technical, talking at length about the role of binary logic LLOYD COLE WITH ROEDELIUS in programming modules to Pic: Camillo Roedelius create polyrhythms. He doesn’t take much encouragement to start tackling thorny topics such as the difficulties of tuning oscillators. ‘1D’ wouldn’t have happened were it not for Gunther at Bureau B Records nudging Lloyd Cole about the unused pieces he had left over from the ‘Selected Studies Volume One’ album. The recording process for ‘Selected Studies Volume One’ was surprisingly simple, with Cole and Roedelius sending each other around 15 segments of music. They each completed six pieces XXX LLOYD COLE and only one track had any further back and forth. Cole has spoken of the album’s recording process as “a type of circuit” and the way he refers to the collaborative process is equally cold and functional. “With ‘Selected Studies’, nobody except Roedelius and I knows who did what,” offers Cole. “But with ‘1D’, there’s nowhere to hide because it’s just me.” When it comes to modular collaborations, Cole’s work with Roedelius is clearly only the beginning. So is the modular community, with its enthusiast sites like the intriguinglynamed Muff Wiggler, a hotbed for this sort of meeting of minds? Is there an inherent openness to “modding culture” that you won’t find in traditional rock circles? “There is a whole subculture that’s very interesting,” says Cole. “But what I think is really exciting is that people are constantly coming up with new ideas for modules and new ways of making music. I’m working with an old friend to build my own module and there’s open source software which enables you to write codes to fine tune your modules and get the precise features you need.” Now that he’s fully got to grips with the modular way, can he see himself marrying electronics with his lyrical songwriting? “It’s not out of the question,” he replies. “I have been thinking that, 22 years after ‘Bad Vibes’, I might have another go at trying to bring the two together, but I haven’t committed to doing anything concrete yet. There’s an entire folder of pieces from these sessions that are ripe for some form of collaboration, so I’m hoping for the next record to take those and maybe work with five or six people, different voices working to one unified aesthetic, which would be mine. “I feel I really have to be constantly learning with modular stuff. The minute I sit down and consciously try to ‘make some music’, well, I really don’t like that feeling. I also tend to think, ‘Who needs another piece of music by me anyway?’, so it’s got to be something new. It’s the same with painters in a way. You don’t expect them to show you everything in their sketchbook, but they’ll keep on painting regardless.” Whether it’s an abstract expression or a new spin on Lloyd Cole’s classics of old, I reckon we’re poised for more masterworks in the future. ‘1D’ is out now on Bureau B NAME? While it may seem a little cryptic at first, the title ‘1D’ signposts the simplicity of the music on this album. “It’s not complex, it’s one-dimensional music, one idea per piece,” says Cole. “To be honest, some of the ideas are absolutely tiny. ‘One Voice’ is literally one synthesiser voice and that’s it. ‘Slight’ is the word I like to use to describe these songs, but that doesn’t necessarily imply something negative. I’m only interested in making beautiful pieces, even if they’re at bonsai scale.” Cole might have unburdened himself of lyric writing duties this time but there are other challenges to tackle, such as thinking up suitable titles for these instrumental tracks. One piece was originally titled ‘All ModCan’, after a Canadian modular synth manufacturer called Modcan, but he wasn’t convinced this intensely geeky private joke was funny enough. He went off googling for ring roads with interesting names, instead, leading him to ‘Ken-O’, named after the Ken O Expressway, which loops around Tokyo. OFF PISTE DAVID SYLVIAN In just a few short years, Japan graduated from being a boy band doing kitschy pastiches of David Bowie and the New York Dolls to crafting the sublimely atmospheric ‘Ghosts’, only for the band to implode at the height of their chart success. As the 80s progressed, Sylvian’s vocals matured into a rich Scott Walker-ish croon, while his solo albums became increasingly less song-orientated and less mainstream, eventually blossoming into full-blown, 20-minute-plus ambient compositions in collaboration with the likes of Harold Budd and Can’s Holger Czukay. Let’s see Zayn Malik take a bash at that. PADDY McALOON Prefab Sprout were always far more esoteric than their chart highlights would have you believe, with songs about Cold War chess matches and whisky priests, but it wasn’t until after their 80s heyday that their erudite songwriter showed his true experimental colours. Rendered temporarily blind and bedridden with a serious illness, McAloon became addicted to late night talk radio, which subsequently seeped into his 2003 solo album, ‘I Trawl The Megahertz’, a patchwork of spoken word and random recorded snippets layered over a mesmerising orchestral soundscape. FRANK TOVEY As Fad Gadget, Tovey carved out an impressively jagged niche in the early 80s, crafting sinewy synth classics dripping with austere menace such as ‘Back To Nature’ and ‘Ricky’s Hand’. But he enacted a staggering volte face in 1989, eschewing electronics and transforming himself into a folk protest singer on his ‘Tyranny And The Hired Hand’ album, which featured covers of traditional labour songs like ‘Sixteen Tons’ and ‘John Henry’. Sounding like a noirish Billy Bragg, the broad indifference meted out to this brave digression may have been the final straw for Tovey, who retired from recording a few years later. TOKYO’S 5G SYNTH EMPORIUM SYNTHESISER DAVE READERS’ SYNTHS NYBORG SYNTH REVIEW FAB FILTER PRO REVIEW TECH JAPA SEC SYNTHE SANCT AN’S CRET ESISER TUARY TECH POWER This year marks the 25th anniversary of one of the most exciting synthesiser shops on the planet. We popped into Tokyo’s 5G synth emporium to celebrate, but we forgot to take a birthday cake Words and Pictures: MARK ROLAND You wouldn’t know it was there if you just passed by. There’s no sign, no window of goodies tempting you in, nothing to alert you to the existence of one of the most outrageous collections of vintage synths you’re likely to encounter. But tucked away in an anonymous building in Tokyo’s Harajuku district, the buzzing centre of Tokyo’s hyper-intense youth culture scene, is a shop called 5G and this year it celebrates 25 years in the business of buying, restoring, and selling vintage synthesisers. It’s quite a place. It’s on the fourth floor. You have to get in a little lift to get up there. The doors open on every floor, revealing various small businesses and shops, and people shuffle in and out, oblivious to the synthesiser wonderland that awaits. When the lift doors opened for our visit, we thought maybe the place had closed down. All we could see was a scrappy corridor, a few cardboard boxes, tatty carpet, all bathed in silence like an abandoned office block… but then we turned a corner and there was the door. And behind the door was synthesiser nirvana. ON Stepping inside is a slightly nerve-wracking moment; with the quiet reverential atmosphere it’s like a place of worship, which in many ways, it is. It demands awed respect. The shop’s owner, Makato Miyosawa, is used to hearing gasps of surprise and delight from new visitors. “They walk around with their mouths open, saying, ‘I don’t believe it!’,” he laughs. The first thing you see is the wall of shiny new modular. The shop is the official Japanese distributor and stockist for the German synth stalwart Doepfer (along with several modular manufacturers like Tiptop and Mutable), and they’re all on display. Slotted in beside it, half-hidden and shoved there for lack of space, is another huge rack of modular. It looks old, it might be Moog, it’s difficult to tell, because gazing around the room is blowing our minds. Synths are racked from floor to way over head height along every wall, and in an island in the middle of the shop, creating a narrow circuit of synth-lined passageways. Some are in glass cases, some are leaning up on their sides jammed into spare spaces between racks. There are synths behind synths, on top of synths and between synths. There are cardboard boxes which, in all likelihood, contain synths. Behind the glass counter (in which are displayed more synths) a couple of engineers are quietly tinkering with yet more synths on their workbenches. The only noise in the place is Kraftwerk’s ‘Radio-Activity’ album on the shop’s hi-fi, playing at low volume, which is occasionally punctuated by an engineer running up and down the keyboard of a synth he’s testing, listening out for wonky oscillators. Makato is no stranger to visitors from all around the world: well-known musicians regularly turn up when they’re on tour in Japan, making their pilgrimage. Aphex Twin, Jeff Mills, Boys Noize, Orbital, 808 State, John Frusciante of Red Hot Chili Peppers, The Chemical Brothers, Mike Paradinas and Richard Barbieri have all visited the shop over the last 25 years. “It’s nice to have lots of people from around the world visiting us,” says the quietly spoken and polite Makato. “But I’d rather these machines would stay in Japan, really. Once they’ve gone out of the country, that’s it, we’ll never see them again.” Still, a good number of them made it to Japan from other countries in the first place, like the vast amount of Sequential Circuits Prophet 5s and Minimoogs that TECH are piled up all over the place. And 5G is the official distributor of the Dave Smith’s new gear, including the sough-after Prophet 6. There are quite few ARPs knocking about (Odysseys, a Quadra, a Solina) and there’s also a good showing of EMS gear from the UK, including a VCS3 and the very rare EMS Polysynthi, with its five panels of primary colours, a brave attempt to rethink panel design for the post-punk era that was, unfortunately, doomed. There’s no price label, so I ask Makato how much it is. “If it doesn’t have a price on it,” he says, “it’s either not for sale, or we’re not sure how much to charge for it. Some of them are so rare, they are difficult to price.” There is also an EMS/Rehberg Synthi Logik on show. It wasn’t priced when we visited, but it is on their website now, yours for a mere 800,000 yen. That’s around £4,500. Not bad for a single VCO synth that comes in its own suitcase and was originally intended to be mauled by school kids. More than a few of those were probably mouldering in school storage rooms until they were cleared out and dumped in the 1980s. Oh, for a time machine. As you’d expect, Japanese gear is very well represented. I’ve never seen so many Korg MS-20s in one place. There’s also a load of Yamaha CS-15s and 30s, at least three Roland Jupiter-8s, a clutch of Super Jupiters, a couple of Jupiter-6s (no Jupiter-4s, though, just as well, we might not have been able to resist) and many elderly Korg 800DVs from 1974. So of all the synths that have come and gone we wonder which is Makato’s favourite. His answer comes back pretty quickly. “The Roland SH-101,” he says. “That was the popular synth when I was very young, so I like it for that reason. I think Roland got everything right with that synth. It’s small, powerful and looks great.” We couldn’t make the same choice. There are synths in 5G we’ve never seen in the flesh before, much less heard, like the Buchla Electric Music Box, which is a new recreation of the Buchla Music Easel, but is still an exotic and rarely seen beast. By the time you’ve slavered over a EML 500, or a VCS3, or the glass case stuffed with Roland System 100 modules, or Moog modular units, you start to get pretty blasé about a Roland SH-101. We left the shop reluctantly. If we’d stayed in there for much longer, the company credit card may have taken an unexpected bashing, and then we’d have had a slight extra baggage issue at the airport. But it’s somehow comforting to know that 5G exists, taking care of sick synths as they get older and sending them back out into the world, fixed up and ready to be loved by new owners who, we hope, will treat them with the care and respect they deserve. In the end we only spent about £10, on a CD the shop sells called ‘A Cat On Modular’ by Masayasu Tsuboguchi. It’s pretty good, but it’s not a Roland SH-2. 5G is at Le Ponte Bldg 4F, 1-14-2 Jingumae, Shibuya-ku, Tokyo. Opening hours are 12.00-20.00, they’re closed on Tuesday. Find them online at www.fiveg.net watch the video www.youtube.com/embed/EuDOFciG5Us XXX TECH SYNTH ESISER DAVE Synthesiser Dave’s shed is sort of like one of those homes for distressed hedgehogs. People find a poorly hedgehog under a bush, or on the hard shoulder of a motorway, take it home and put in a cardboard box with a blanket and some cat food, and then they call Mrs Tiggywinkles, hoping they’ll come and take the flea-ridden spiny wormeater off their hands. That, in some ways, is what happened with this Siel DK 80. Its owner phoned Synthesiser Dave and asked him to come and collect it for mending and, on discovering it might cost about £25 to bring it back to life, offered to sell it to Dave for a tenner. The Italian synth manufacturer Siel (Societa Industrie Elettroniche) made this peculiar synth in 1985, not long before they gave up the ghost, and it was a sort of a response to the Korg Poly 800, which Dave didn’t like at all. But Dave rather likes this. watch the video www.youtube.com/embed/31euo_cLWz8 SUBSCRIBE TO ELECTRONIC SOUND AND GET A FREE LIMITED EDITION SEVEN-INCH SINGLE BY WOLFGANG FLÜR AND JACK DANGERS www.electronicsound.co.uk/subscribe to find out more XXX TECH READERS’ SYNTHS Has your synth got a story to tell? Tell us all about it – email [email protected] with ‘Readers’ Synths’ as the subject line ROLAND SH-1 Owner: Michael Vallone Where: Allentown, Pennsylvania, USA Year purchased: 1995 Amount paid: A Hagstrom guitar (with $100 cashback!) “I acquired my Roland SH-1 from a local pawn shop sometime in 1995. It was hiding on a shelf in incredible condition and awaiting adoption. It had been sitting there for some time and I don’t think they really knew what to do with it; they were much more interested in guitars. So I took in my old Hagstrom and made a deal. They gave me the SH-1 plus $100! I walked out the door laughing. “I was just forming The Tara Experiment around that time and wanted to expand my synth arsenal to start making the Radiophonic sounds I heard in my head. Straight off, this synth struck me as very beautiful and more than adequate as far as functionality goes. I remembered Chris Carter and Vince Clarke using it early in their careers, so I had a reference of some sort. I felt it was perfect for making experimental electronic music. Moreover, I already owned a wonderful Roland SH-101 so I was familiar with the layout and the idea of pairing them together to form a larger system was very attractive. It was a great move because I was really able to expand my sound immensely. “Although the Roland SH-1 and SH-101 are similar synths, the filters are a bit different as well as a few individual functions. I use both heavily to this day, but there is just something very special about the sound of the SH-1. It fits into the mix so well every time. There is a graininess to the sound that I just love too. The filter can get quite raspy at times as well. Processing noise or anything via the external input is a real plus. I also use it to control my modular system via CV and quite often run one of the VCO outs from the modular to the external in of the SH-1 to fatten its sound. “Secretly I think I like the fact that it isn’t a very popular or sought after synth. I’m all about having an original sound with my music and the Roland SH-1 delivers in spades. There are endless possibilities within its sound palette. The fact that there are two different envelopes is another added advantage. This feature puts it a bit closer to its sibling the SH-5. Now if only it had a second VCO... Another useful feature is the HP filter; I don’t always use it, but it is nice to have for certain sounds and the processing of noise. “As one of Roland’s first small mono synths, I think they did a marvellous job: it’s truly an obscure classic.” TECH XXX NYBORG-24 Analogue Solutions Back to analogue, but certainly not back to basics with this cute and compact monosynth Words: MARK ROLAND Analogue Solutions tags itself as a maker of “boutique electronic instruments”, which is a nice way to think of their very desirable gear. The Telemark and Leipzig synth ranges, for example, have the kind of aesthetic and sound designed to appeal to lovers of not just analogue synths, but the era they sprang from, with all that Cold War paranoia and German ingenuity. There’s also their big analogue sequencer, Megacity, which forces users to take different paths to create patterns, reconnecting with the hands-on relationship that is lost in the DAW world of ultimate choice. Analogue Solutions’ gear is for people who like to free themselves from the computer screen and work without the endless and sometimes paralysing choices of today’s computer studio environments. The Nyborg-24 is the latest offering from this fascinating company. There is also a Nyborg-12, the difference being in the filter. The 24 is Moog-like, while the 12 is more akin to the Oberheim SEM. The Oberheim SEM is probably the most obvious antecedent to the Nyborg, being a standalone synth with no keyboard. The SEM was designed in the 1970s to connect to another synth to fatten the sound, and then Oberheim built them into their own keyboard versions with two-, four- and eight-voice variations. You can daisy-chain two Nyborgs together, or with optional software, up to four. Given how fat and fabulous this unit sounds on its own, a four-unit version is something we’d like to play around with. On the inside, it’s similar to the Telemark and shares many of the same circuits. The key point about these synths’ innards, which the company is keen to stress, is that they are pure analogue; nothing is locked down with a CPU (with the exception of MIDI/CV), which means the unpredictability of analogue, that makes so many vintage 1970s synths sound unique, is very much present and correct. It’s a subtle distinction, and if it doesn’t mean much to you, then, well, it just isn’t that important. But if you’re the kind of person who knows it when you hear it, then you’ll certainly hear it when you start messing around with the Nyborg. What did we like about the Nyborg? Well, first up, the great ergonomics; the angle is perfect. You’re not going to hit a button by accident and it’s designed for physical movement. You want to get involved with it, its large knobs entice you into tweaking and experimenting, to reach out and adjust in midflow. And those adjustments can be pretty tiny physically, but they have big sonic implications. If you don’t like the default upright look the Nyborg can be reconfigured to sit in a rack, or to be horizontal. A screwdriver is all you need, and a kit for rack mounting. You can add wooden sides too if you fancy it, which would be pretty handsome. The fact that you can’t store any patches might be anathema to some, but again, it encourages invention and improvisation, allowing you to lift out of comfortable habits that result in the same old sound. If when you approach an instrument, you’re never quite sure what’s going to happen, the unexpected results can lead to fresh ideas coming thick and fast. It can be quite exhilarating. The Nyborg-24 is easy to use, quite intuitive, you’ll get some great sounds straight away. It helps you to understand the signal paths of analogue synthesis without needing to get involved with patching (if that floats your boat, go for the Telemark). The sub oscillator is lovely and adds some real beef when required, but you can’t have sub oscillator fatness and noise, you have to choose between the two. This is a unit that takes time to warm up, and while that’s not exactly a benefit there’s something nice about having to treat it with respect for its truly analogue nature. And maybe you need to warm up to it too. It’s a kind of halfway house between a modular and a synth. It’s hardwired behind the faceplate, so there’s no patching capabilities, but the feeling of having an upright standalone unit with no keyboard could well serve you as a gentle introduction to the sense of working with modular if it’s not something you’re familiar with, and reconnect you with your analogue roots. Nyborg-24, RRP £499 from Analogue Solutions TECH PRO-C 2 FabFilter The Pro-C gets a makeover… Now more gluey, with a gooey GUI! Words: LUKE SANGER FabFilter have released a major update to their Pro-C compressor plug-in. It’s actually a complete overhaul, hence it’s worthy for its own review. FabFilter have carved out a loyal fan base of users in a seemingly crowded market of software processors. Every DAW these days comes complete with its own plethora of EQs, filters and dynamic processors, so why buy more? Well, the attraction of FabFilter products is that they have released a complete toolbox of commonly used processors at an affordable price, and have nailed the balance of ease-ofuse with great sound, something not always present with DAW bundled plug-ins. The Pro-C 2 adds five new compression types, covering different scenarios like vocal processing, mastering and modern EDM “pumping”. Also introduced are new features like lookahead, range, hold, side-chain EQ, a quite brilliant oversampling option and possibly the best user interface I’ve seen in a processor plug-in. The interface is a real pleasure to use, with fully animated level and knee graphics and super accurate level monitoring. The plug-in itself can be resized up to full screen, which is ideal for surgical mastering tasks. The sound, as with their previous products, is beautifully modern and transparent, however the different compression algorithms do impart their own character, as you would expect. To be honest it’s difficult to find a flaw with the Pro-C 2. I suppose if you were looking for particular vintage compressor emulation, then there might be more suitable options out there, but for a slick, modern sounding compressor, with an interface that properly utilises the technology at its disposal, the Pro-C 2 is hard to beat. FabFilter Pro-C 2 for Mac and Windows, RRP £114 ALBUM REVIEWS ALBUM REVIEWS quality. From the moment the weeping strings open up on first track ‘Hard Bastards’ to the last notes of the glorious pop-fuelled piano-led closer ‘Fighting For?’, this is one heck of a record. On board for desk duties is young British producer, Fred, and musical heavyweights Four Tet, Adrian Sherwood and With You, the latest pseudonym of Switch, dance producer extraordinaire most notable for his work with MIA. ROOTS MANUVA Bleeds BIG DADA Rodney Smith returns with album number six. Any good? Let’s not ask silly questions, eh? One minute and 45 seconds in and Roots Manuva has already dropped the C-bomb. Twice. It’s not that Rodney Smith strikes you as a man needing to shock, but he can’t half grab your attention. Since he served up 1999’s breathtaking debut ‘Brand New Second Hand’, Roots Manuva has rewritten the book not only on UK hip hop, but on being a British independent artist in general. Where to start? The Four Tet rubdown on ‘Facety 2:11’ is the sort of thing that’d have Fatboy Slim reaching for the phone to offer remix duties, while Switch lends a proper dancefloor rumble to ‘One Thing’ and adds a weight to ‘Crying’, a joyous piece of work that drops some killer reggae pimping keys right at the end. But the big wins come out of the On-U Sound Castle, Ramsgate, courtesy of Adrian Sherwood, who brings Doug Wimbish and Skip McDonald along for the ride. Lest we forget, Wimbish and McDonald cut their teeth in the Sugarhill Records house band and went on to become Tackhead. Righto. So among the half a dozen or so cuts straight outta Ramsgate, we get the very special ‘Don’t Breathe Out’, which unfurls a corking sample of Barry White’s ‘Honey Please, Can’t Ya See’. Expertly wrangled by Sherwood and Fred, the swirling, plumped up chorus is as satisfying as anything you’ll hear this year. Or last year. Or the year before. When Rodney claims that in an “egocentric jest of daring to do things in the tradition of Jesus, I’m ready to bleed for the artform”, he is only half joking. He may not quite be Jesus, but every last ounce of everything is squeezed out for this near-masterpiece. Oh, and let’s not forget ‘Cargo’, which he says is his stadium song because, well, you never know what might come up in the future. Like ‘Cargo’ says, the “original blueprint / don’t need tweaking”. The reason? ‘Bleeds’ is just one show-stopper after another after another. All these years down the line and Roots Manuva is still waiting for everyone else to catch up. NEIL MASON There’s something more than a bit special about Rodney. That he’s stuck with his label, Big Dada, when surely to goodness bigger and richer imprints must have come a-knocking speaks volumes. Then there’s his trade. That unmistakable deep, warm rumble of a voice, the flow, his compelling, richly detailed storytelling and often glorious turn of phrase. But this is not a man content to wax lyrical over some beats. This is, always has been, the full-blown craft of songwriting. ‘Bleeds’ is so much more than what Rodney describes as the “inane rambling of my classic Manuva-scape ranting bars”. You just can’t argue with this level of Pic: Shamil Tanna happened to be Mouse On Mars, fellow Düsseldorf travellers in the world of electronic music. ‘Eloquence’ boasts a raft of international talent all happily contributing: Jack Dangers of Meat Beat Manifesto; Bon Harris of Nitzer Ebb; Maki Nomiya of Pizzicato 5; Marc Almond’s keyboard player Anni Hogan; Mexico’s Ramon Amezcua, aka Bostich. They’re all students of the Kraftwerk school in one way or another, and the result is a patchwork of electronic music, some rebooting Kraftwerk’s clean and fastidious approach, others moving into less familiar territory. WOLFGANG FLÜR Eloquence – Complete Works CHERRY RED A collection of international electropop from former Kraftwerk drummer and full-time Musik Soldat The opener, ‘I Was A Robot’, is a slick example of the former, an autobiographical jaunt through Flür’s life in Kraftwerk, and ’Cover Girl’, an updating of Kraftwerk’s ‘The Model’, is another. Flür describes the album as electropop and the likes of the perky ‘Blue Spark’ and ‘On The Beam’ (with Maki Nomiya of Pizzicato 5) certainly have a stamp of international pop about them. ‘Staying In The Shadow’, the collaboration with Jack Dangers of Meat Beat Manifesto, is an unsettling and fictional journey into the psyche of a troubled soul, far darker and experimental, while ‘Moda Makina’ brings a mariachi flavour to proceedings. You sense an understandable struggle in the presentation of his own work, between the necessary distancing from his former band, and the reality of his own ebullient creative personality. And as such, ‘Eloquence’ isn’t Kraftwerk-lite, but a solidly realised album that is both fun and engaging. It’s pulled together from disparate sources, and sounds like it, but the potential for Flür to produce a more focused work that straddles his literary bent and electronic melody making is an enticing prospect. He will never escape the “ex-Kraftwerk” tag, but why would he want to? MARK ROLAND These days, one-time Kraftwerk member Wolfgang Flür traverses the globe, playing his solo ‘Musik Soldat’ shows, getting into some alarming scrapes every now and then, but always thriving on his interactions with musicians and other creative types along the way. And so the sleeve of ‘Eloquence’, subtitled ‘Complete Works’, features Flür’s own Halliburton suitcase, bought during his Kraftwerk days, a symbol of international travel, while the title is a reference perhaps to the fact that Wolfgang sees himself first and foremost as a storyteller. The album, then, might be best understood as a series of short stories, some true, some fiction, some in between, spun by an itinerant ex-robot on the hoof. By his own admission, Flür was never a songwriter. His post-Kraftwerk releases, like 1997’s ‘Time Pie’ as Yamo, and this, his first solo album, have relied on collaborators to realise his musical ideas. The trick is to choose your collaborations carefully. With Yamo, his electronic pals Pic: Tom Steinseifer ALBUM REVIEWS LUKE VIBERT Bizarster PLANET MU Multi-faceted electronica pioneer once again sets aside the pseudonyms Cornish-raised maverick Luke Vibert has operated under a bewildering array of pseudonyms, from Wagon Christ for his more chilled out funk adventures to Plug and Amen Andrews for his drum ’n’ bass and jungle manoeuvres. His debut EP for Mo’ Wax, 1995’s ‘A Polished Solid’, was the first time he used his real name and since dropping the ‘Big Soup’ album for the label in 1997, he’s chalked up seven Vibert full-lengths for stables as impressive as Ninja Tune, Warp and Mike Paradinas’ Planet Mu. Apart from making it easier to keep track of his prolific output, bringing his work under one banner has another even more important advantage. It offers him the freedom to mix and match styles and tinker at their edges and it’s that sense of freedom which means his records just keep getting better and better. From the gentle, witty hip hop of ‘Knockout’ at the opening of this release, to the Pac-Man-sampling, dancehalldrenched jungle tearout ‘Don’t Fuck Around’ at its close, Vibert may play havoc with the genre classifications, but his offering is consistent and consistently ace at that. Whatever he comes up with is always witty and playful, both in terms of the array of inventive vocal samples and the quirky twists the music itself takes, and it is always coaxed along by fresh, infectious beats. What’s particularly refreshing is that where others in the electronica field go to great lengths to seem big and clever, Vibert puts the same amount of effort into making his tracks inclusive and accessible. Take ‘War’, for example, which lands slap bang in the middle of ‘Bizarster’. It has hip hop at its heart, with a cymbal smashing beat that will no doubt bring comparisons with DJ Shadow to bear. As it builds though he introduces warm swathes of brass and tinkling vibes that beautifully offset the more aggressive rabble rousing of the war-declaring MCs. It’s highly original without making a big deal out of it. It’s sonically uncompromising, but easy on the ear and sure to get heads nodding and feet heading toward the dancefloor. ‘Manalog’ – as you’ll have noticed, he’s as fond of a pun as a Sun headline writer – and ‘L Tronic’ have more of an acid influence, the former evoking the choppy rhythms of early 90s techno, the latter looking back even earlier to the bold synth basslines of Chicago house. But in each case, again, there’s no pofaced attempt to be authentic as these elements are combined with a sense of percussive swing and lively stoned fun that is entirely his own. Likewise, ‘Ghetto Blast Ya’ takes on the cliches of rave’s early days and lovingly sculpts something utterly modern from its charging Amen breaks, spinbacks, stabs and sirens. ‘Officer’s Club’, meanwhile, is probably the simplest moment here, an unfettered disco groove lightly embellished with frisky keyboards and intertwining vocal lines. It’s probably unfair to pick out highlights as ‘Bizarster’ is more than a sum of its parts. It’s rich in variety but consistent in its inventive, joyous tone. Aphex Twin might be the household name, but those who really know their West Country electronica inside out will be just as excited by the arrival of a new Vibert album as anything Richard James has to offer. BEN WILLMOTT stringing up his home studio with a web of patch cables all in an effort to get the sounds just right. The result is a selection of tracks augmented by live players that traverses styles carefully, with no suggestion that Shepherd simply wanted to throw the kitchen sink at the studio to show off his knowledge of musical genres. FLOATING POINTS Elaenia PLUTO A ridiculously accomplished debut album named after a bird you’ve never heard of The elaenia is a curious little bird common across South America, but one that is often incorrectly identified because of the existence of no less than 18 sub-species, many of which look more or less the same. Accurate identification requires a degree of patience, persistence and a keen ear, because when all else fails, it’s each sub-species’ unique call that finally reveals which one is which. Naming his debut Floating Points fulllength after this elusive avian seems to typify Sam Shepherd’s well-read nature and his idiosyncratic approach to music. A crazily well-educated guy, the 29-year-old Londoner has an IQ that’s probably as high as the number of records he owns, and takes the same amount of care over his studies as he does his approach to making music. This project was some five years in the making and involved hunting down rare synths just to add brief moments of texture, building equipment and This is, first and foremost, electronic music, but it is also soulful, recalling the instrumental stretches on Marvin Gaye’s ‘What’s Going On’ while at the same time the Fender Rhodes-y stabs and vamps on ‘For Marmish’ have an echo of Joe Zawinul and Chick Corea’s work on Miles Davis’ more extreme electric jazz moments. That this set also takes in funky breaks, Autechre-style wonkiness and thrillingly fizzy synth arpeggios might seem hugely incoherent, but somehow it all hangs together perfectly. Possibly once again nodding to the bird that gave this release its title, ‘Elaenia’ also incorporates moments of languid Latin rhythms, a warm, summery vibe that adds a further rich dimension to the seven pieces here. The entire spread of musical innovation on display is best exemplified by the three-part minor symphony ‘Silhouettes (I, II & III)’, a 10-minute opus that contains so much detail it doesn’t sound the same twice – shuffling jazz kit work, shards of synths, loose keyboard riffs, mournful strings, noir angles and so on. It might seem monumentally epic and ridiculously overwrought, but one suspects that Shepherd probably composed this in his head while writing his PhD thesis in neuroscience. Records like this that cover so much ground in such an effortlessly causal manner don’t come along very often. When they do, they often represent the high-water mark of an artist’s creative endeavours, after which everything else pales in comparison. If ‘Elaenia’ is just one tentative step on the road for Shepherd, what he could be capable of a few albums further into his career will be worth waiting patiently for. MAT SMITH ALBUM REVIEWS book about French composers as being a “clumsy but subtle technician”, which is about as perfect a description you could come up with for his late 20th and early 21st century acolytes, of which Foxx is certainly one. JOHN FOXX/ HAROLD BUDD/ RUBEN GARCIA Nighthawks JOHN FOXX & HAROLD BUDD Satie was a man ahead of his time. His manuscripts would sometimes have further instructions scrawled in red ink: “Light as an egg”, or “Work it out for yourself”; esoteric thought-bombs that would later seem not out of place in the art of Yoko Ono. Another note told the performer to repeat the piece 840 times, which would take about 19 hours if obeyed, something La Monte Young would later actually do with his mid-1960s ‘Dream House’ pieces in New York. Satie also wrote he only ate food that was white, while necking vast amount of red wine, reminiscent of David Bowie’s cocaine, milk and red peppers diet of his Thin White Duke phase. Selected reissues of ambient collaborations from the House of Foxx Satie remained an outsider for most of his life, an eccentric outlier on the fringes of the mainstream while taking potshots at it. He published his own magazine, which was often a vehicle for regular slaggings of eminent music critics he didn’t like. He was, in many ways, a proto-art rocker; clever, thoughtful, playful and constantly looking to upset the status quo. The influence of Erik Satie surrounds these three CDs like a weather system and informs the work of everyone involved here. Satie is the grandaddy of ambient music. He was producing spacious and spare piano pieces in Paris around the end of the 19th to the early 20th century, which are remarkable not just for their beauty, but for how startlingly modern they still sound. They’ve even survived the indignity of being famous in the 1980s for soundtracking chocolate bar adverts. John Foxx first heard Satie in 1966. “I was at art school,” he says. “A girl I was in class with played ‘Gymnopédies’ on the lecture piano one afternoon. I remember the scene exactly – old Victorian art school, doors open to a long avenue of trees. River beyond. Summer glistening outside. I was very young and everything seemed magical and infinitely promising. Completely captivated in a moment of stillness and wonder. Everything followed from that single moment.” Satie was an organiser of sound and called himself a “phonometrician” (measurer of sounds) rather than a musician. In 1911, he was described in a Foxx describes himself as Harold Budd’s apprentice on these recordings, and what else can you do with a master of ambient piano like Harold Budd? It’s Translucence/Drift Music METAMATIC difficult to unpick the contributions each made to these lovely recordings (pianist Ruben Garcia was the junior partner of the trio, starting his recording career in the early 1990s) and there is no point. They each unfurl slowly, enveloping the atmosphere just as Satie did. If I had to pick a favourite, it might be the utterly gorgeous ‘Drift Music’ disc, but each of the three is a thing of beauty, their characters gradually revealing themselves on repeated listenings. This is music that will last forever, ageless and metaphysical, an aural musical presence that somehow transfers a solitary memory of a British art school in the 1960s, and of Belle Époque Paris, directly into the listener’s consciousness. Quite an achievement. MARK ROLAND After sloughing off the poor reception to their debut long-player, Clarke and Bell hit their stride with the understated hit ‘Sometimes’ and saw that success continue largely unhindered through a quartet of albums – ‘The Circus’ (1987), ‘The Innocents’ (1988), ‘Wild!’ (1989) and Clarke’s analogue renaissance, the wonder-filled ‘Chorus’ (1991). ERASURE Always – The Very Best Of Erasure MUTE Another ‘Best Of’, another chance to appreciate the 30-year Bell/ Clarke legacy all over again The story goes that 30 years ago, on 23 March 1985, a shy young singer and Judy Garland fan called Andy Bell auditioned to be part of a new, as-yet-unnamed Vince Clarke musical project. By then Clarke had quit one band (Depeche Mode), dissolved his second (Yazoo), set up a mostly-overlooked label (Reset) and started a series of one-off singles that delivered as many misfires as it did hits before he axed that as well. For Bell, the opportunity to audition had an element of risk about it given Clarke’s limited recent success. But sometimes things just have a habit of working out. In Bell, the 36th singer that Clarke had seen that fateful day, he found a partner who was able to take the limelight and let him get on with what he had always done best: writing electronic music with some of the most simple, arresting melodies in the business. Meanwhile, Bell brought a sense of soul, drama and showmanship to a collaboration that has lasted to this day. Despite scoring their only UK Number One single with the ‘ABBA-esque’ EP in 1992, Erasure’s success suddenly foundered. ‘Always’, from 1993’s Martyn Ware-produced ‘I Say I Say I Say’, and the track that gives this career-spanning compilation its name, felt for a while like the pinnacle of their success. After that, it seemed as if Erasure had become a fan’s band and a mere pop footnote. A brisk climb up Peter Gabriel’s ‘Solsbury Hill’ for the career-reinvigorating 2003 covers album, ‘Other People’s Songs’, acted as a springboard for reminding the listening public that Vince and Andy were still alive, well and just as capable of bashing out pop gems as they ever were. Fast forward and 2014’s slick ‘The Violet Flame’ showed them to be in rude health on the cusp of their fourth decade. For this compilation, there’s an inevitable weighting toward their early period successes and recent returns to form barely get a look-in. The release is rounded out with two discs of remixes you’ve probably already heard – at least it will save you from having to dust off the vinyl originals – along with a largely pointless new version of ‘Sometimes’, but such is life with one-size-fits-no-one collections. ‘Always – The Very Best Of Erasure’ apparently presages a whole host of 30th anniversary remasters, events and as-yet unannounced happenings. Unless you’re a die-hard fan with money to burn, you don’t need any of that, or even this collection. Just listen to the timeless wonders of ‘A Little Respect’, ‘Stop!’, ‘Chorus’, ‘Sometimes’, or countless others from the Erasure back catalogue not surveyed here and you’ll be pleasantly reminded of this unlikely duo’s enduring status as synthpop royalty. MAT SMITH Pic: Richard Haughton ALBUM REVIEWS Half of the 14 tracks here are named after TV masts, the other half are less directly about the masts and more around the subject. Like ‘Pages From Ceefax’, that early text-based information interface with its agonisingly slow load times, football results, weather, breaking news and cheap holidays. There’s also ‘Testcard Bossanova’ and ‘Programmes For Schools Follow Shortly’, which will stir memories in anyone who grew up in the 1960s or 1970s when we’d sit in front of the school telly waiting for the BBC broadcast to start, while the teacher snuck out for fag and perused the sports pages of the newspaper. ALPHA SEVEN Great TV Masts Of The UK SOFACOM Retro ambient trip hop explores the psychogeography of elderly communication technology. As you do… ‘Great TV Masts Of The UK’ is an electronic concept album, bound together very literally by TV masts of the UK. Just how great they actually are is debatable, but in the same way people find themselves ensnared in esoteric research of bygone technologies, so Pete Roberts, aka Alpha Seven, has fixated on TV masts and the analogue signals they once beamed across the nation. This nostalgia of the futurist is a strangely strong current in contemporary culture. Maybe Kraftwerk started it. Blame them. You can also hold them responsible for the track ‘Emley Moor’, which has a riff strongly reminiscent of ‘Tour De France’, but adds a guitar motif for a kind of melancholy Chris Isaak feel. The mast itself collapsed in 1969, victim of entirely unexpected stress failures caused by ice build up on the mast itself and the guy wires. The collapse sliced a church in half and left the north of England without ITV and BBC2 for several days. And there you were thinking TV masts were dull. ‘Great TV Masts Of The UK’, then, is a project built from fragmented memories of growing up in the UK, having strange testcard images beamed at you by the TV channels when they weren’t broadcasting any actual content. That idea is, in itself, a novel one in these times of 24-hour access to all the content you can eat, via whatever device you happen to favour. And so it’s fitting that the sonic template for this project is also a retro flavour, namely trip hop. The album is infused with the loping sound of beats manipulated to dozy bpms in a sampler, slightly lo-res for that authentic grit. And in the same way trip hop gained much of its uncanny familiarity from the use of samples, so ‘Great TV Masts Of The UK’ keeps jogging the memory with melody you seem to recognise, only for it to pass, leaving an impression of itself that gradually fades like the white dot on the cathode ray tube when you reached to switch the TV set off and sat back to hear the ticking of cooling vacuum tubes and inhaled the familiar smell of burning dust on hot components. All faded memories now. And the music? It’s lovely. MARK ROLAND pulse with the beat of the dancefloor as shimmer with its possibilities. Drums don’t figure large; instead the album’s heartbeat is a bass synth that bears the listener away on any number on little fluffy clouds. Think the shoegazey stylings of ‘On My Own’ by Ulrich Schnauss for comparison. COMA This Side Of Paradise KOMPAKT Album number two from the Cologne duo is a startlingly wellcrafted pop-house hybrid Dovetailing neatly with Kompakt’s styled-up and laidback ethos, Coma’s duo of Georg Conrad and Marius Bubat specialise in the kind of meticulously crafted tech-house that’s equally at home in a club, commute or even your local floatation tank. Their 2013 debut, ‘In Technicolour’, didn’t always hang together – an issue they overcome with almost insouciant ease here – but it demonstrated an understanding for the lush and narcotic possibilities of their chosen furrow. DJs the calibre of John Digweed and Sasha duly stocked their CD wallets, hard drives etc. It’s tempting to say that on this second outing Coma perfect the formula. In fact, they don’t quite perfect it, but they come very close. Here is a record that during its admirably concise 46-minutes flirts outrageously with perfection. Rare is it for a set to slip down so easily, or be so moreish. Things begin in tremendous style with ‘Borderline’. Like the rest of ‘This Side Of Paradise’, ‘Borderline’ doesn’t so much Oh, but what’s this? The second track, ‘Lora’, couldn’t be more of a mood killer if it was wearing a onesie and wanted to talk about kitchen appliances. It is, as they say, “nice enough”, but its chief problem is that by employing Hot Chipstyle vocals and a Hot Chip-trademarked “annoying squeaky bit” it sounds way too much like… Hot Chip. Which is never a good thing. Even so, Coma are forgiven that minor infraction – and neither will we linger long on the decision to release it as the lead single – because the rest of their work here is just so damn beautiful. Besides, ‘Lora’ is swiftly followed by one of the set’s strongest moments, ‘The Wind’, with frequent collaborator Dillon lending gorgeous vocals to a luxuriant pop triumph guaranteed to soothe any hangover or attack of the blue meanies. From here things only get better, each track a mini-masterpiece, each a progression from the last. And if the first half of ‘This Side Of Paradise’ concentrates largely on finely honed club ballads, then the next section leads us away from all that hushed ennui to the dancefloor. The bpms rise on ‘Pinguin Power’ and we feel the first stirrings of euphoria. Again on ‘Poor Knight’, when perhaps if we weren’t so blissfully opiated our hands might even reach for the lasers. If you’re of the belief that an album’s close should be its most masterful moment, a rousing distillation of all that has gone before, then you won’t be disappointed by ‘Happiness’. A triumph then. If you’re pining for the sorely missed Telefon Tel Aviv, if you’re wondering about the next Ulrich Schnauss or Gui Boratto, then here it is. ‘This Side Of Paradise’ isn’t quite perfection, no. But it’s as near as makes no difference. ANDREW HOLMES ALBUM REVIEWS Kevorkian, Laurent Garnier, Bob Sinclar. I’ll stop now shall I? ST GERMAIN ST GERMAIN PARLOPHONE FRANCE Ludovic Navarre makes long awaited return with something of a curveball Frenchman Ludovic Navarre is almost a mythical creature, such is the sparsity of his St Germain output. Three albums in 20 years is not exactly prolific, but when two of those records are ‘Boulevard’ and ‘Tourist’, you can almost forgive the tardiness. You don’t hear much from him interview-wise either. His English is as shoddy as our French... and as anyone who has conducted a chat through an interpreter knows, life really is too short. So for the most part, his music has been left to do the talking. Back in 1995, the FCom-released ‘Boulevard’ didn’t so much talk as stand on a table and shout loudly while waving its arms about. The thrill was instant, but hard to explain. At the time, deep house was something of a bestkept secret and by rights any music that melts jazz and blues into a rumbling pot of downtempo house music sounds like a bridge too far. But it worked because it’s precisely, uniquely, the sort of groove that no one else ploughs quite like the French. Think Motorbass, Cassius, Daft Punk, Justice, François Which brings us to this, St Germain’s eponymous third long-player. Sure, the trademark deep house moves are very much still present, but in comes a very heavy African influence. Recorded with Malian musicians, the album features traditional instruments such as the kora, the balafon and the n’goni, alongside guitars, pianos, saxophones and, of course, loops, beats, locked down grooves and late-night bass. As Navarre’s people say, it all follows “a secret formula only St Germain could concoct”. Yup. Most folk woudn’t even dream of it, let alone do it. So does it work? It’s not a difficult listen. Many a time it has wafted across the office without complaint, which is rare. It would no doubt go about its business as the background soundtrack to sundowners the world over pretty efficiently. But it’s so much more than toe-tapping wallpaper. At eight tracks, it neatly splits into a record of two halves. Side A, tracks one to four, are gentle-gentle, and then there’s side B, where it all kicks up a gear. From opener ‘Real Blues’ featuring the voice of the late blueser Lightnin’ Hopkins intoning he’ll “come back home” over some wild African percussion to the intricate noodles of ‘Hanky Panky’ (is that a kora solo I hear?), the first half is very, very mellow. The second half is when night falls. The piano tinkle, jazz sax-infused ‘Family Tree’ sees the sun safely to bed before morphing halfway through its eight minutes into a sleek floorfiller. ‘How Dare You’ is all tribal chanting meets deep south blues over some serious 21st century moves, while ‘Mary L’ kicks up a dark, glitchy low rumble and when that beat kicks in... this is a house music like you’ve never heard before. So what if it took Navarre, what, 15 years? So what if he takes him another 15 years for the next one. This is delightfully quirky, stirringly soulful stuff. When our French friends are involved, we wouldn’t want it any other way. NEIL MASON era that should not be consigned entirely to history. LUKE HAINES British Nuclear Bunkers CHERRY RED Unhinged maverick returns with a Dadaist hauntology riff on the Kling Klang sound Since responding to an ad in longgone music weekly Sounds and joining indie outfit The Servants back in the late 80s, he’s served his time has Luke Haines. Never a careerist, even when the opportunity arose with 90s Britpop band The Auteurs, his often contrary and confrontational music is his art for its own sake. And it feels safe to assume that he will continue to chase his muse for the rest of his days. And for that, all hail. ‘British Nuclear Bunkers’ is an opportune and prescient meditation on one of Britain’s most disconcerting roomfilling elephants. Occasionally echoing the foggy half-remembered analogue nostalgia of Ghost Box acts like Belbury Poly, this long-player will resonate keenly with the 40-somethings who recall being somewhat freaked out by the 80s nuclear threat. Although instead of evoking any audiological ghosts specific to the time, Haines channels early Kraftwerk (‘Radio-Activity’ in particular) to summon the chilling spirit of the period and perhaps to remind us of an The album’s somewhat paranoid and occasionally unsettling tone is set with opener ‘This Is The BBC’, an authentic sounding radio broadcast that coldly advises a nuclear strike is imminent. It’s affecting stuff and forces the listener to consider the potential scenario. Which is a laugh then. Well actually, in a way it is – albeit a grimly black-humoured one. Haines is poking us with his rhythm stick here, laughing through his unkempt ’tache in his guise as electro-Situationist and thought-provocateur. “The bunkers are still there, you idiots!” he seems to be shouting. “Wake up!”. The title track is all slow-paced forbode and radioactive Korg menace and owes much to early Kling Klang. The drama continues with ‘Camden Borough Control’ and its Geiger counter clicks and harsh synth squalls. But just as you begin to wonder whether this is all going to be too much like hard work, ‘Test Card Forever’ introduces lightness and a certain Radiophonic incidental jauntiness. It’s not all baleful darkness that proceeds, although ‘Cold Field Morning Bliss’ has a plodding metronomic uncertainty, which perhaps aims to remind us to enjoy each new dawn while there’s chance… ‘Bunker Funker’ soundtracks the subterranean Saturday night with a welcome electro-funkiness that bounces along like an old video game. It skronks primitive acid lines and choppy synth handclaps in a nod to Phuture, which is repeated elsewhere with danceable charm. Standout ‘Pussywillow (Kids Song)’ marks the high point of the album with its titular children’s choir-sung refrain that conjures a circular, ritualistic dance taking place in some brutalist-utilitarian communal square, post-WW3. The theme is echoed in closer ‘New Pagan Sun’: “We are under the ground / We are under the hum” sings Haines in his nasal, wintry tones, hopeful that the new order is taking shape deep underground. CARL GRIFFIN ALBUM REVIEWS the stark electronic tone paintings he had introduced as Levantis the previous year on a four-track EP called ‘Believe’ (on beautifully obscure operation The Trilogy Tapes, lining up with names such as Bee Mask, Dog Lady and Preggy Peggy & The Lazy Baby Makers). In some perverse way, ‘Romantic Psychology 1’ could be seen as a kind of demonic echo of his European namesake’s deep sea emissions; new age given a stark urban rinse, but much more than just background music. KRIS NEEDS LEVANTIS Romantic Psychology 1 TECHNICOLOUR Actress iconoclast Darren J Cunningham gives shadowy alter ego whole album Not to be confused with the samenamed veteran European producer responsible for new age classics such as ‘The Sound Of Dolphins’, the first album from Ninja Tune’s recently established vinyl imprint actually harbours the first extended work from the alter ego of Darren J Cunningham, better known as Actress. Hailing from Wolverhampton and launching his Werkdiscs label in 2004 with an Actress single called ‘No Tricks’, Cunningham established his new label with his debut long-player, ‘Hazyville’, in 2008; 2010’s acclaimed follow-up, ‘Splazsh’, appeared on Honest Jon’s, who also released ‘RIP’ two years later. Cunningham has also released a string of singles and EPs, including ‘Machine And Voice’ for Nonplus, ‘Ghosts Have a Heaven’ for Prime Numbers and several for Werkdiscs/Ninja Tune. After 2014’s ‘Ghettoville’ for Werkdiscs/ Ninja Tune, Cunningham took a break from Actress’ outsider house and minimal glitchy technoscapes to further explore But for his first full-length excursion as Levantis, Cunningham follows the maiden 12-inch voyages from names such as Legowelt, Hieroglyphic Being, Florian Kupfer, Kutmah and BNJMN that have established Technicolour as a brightly diverse new imprint. It could be his most introspective work to date and certainly benefits from being released on wax, starting with the deep black sleeve, which includes artwork insert by Eve Ackroyd (the black-on-black death’s head image is a ringer for The Velvet Underground’s ‘White Light White Heat’). The skeletal, billowing resonance and sustained micro-frequencies of the sound were made to be broadcast through the warmth, depth and extra textures of vinyl, while the presentation positions it as an evocative art object. Cunningham says that ‘Romantic Psychology 1’ is inspired by “nigredo and possession of the shadow”. In alchemy, ‘nigredo’ (blackness) means decomposition, the alchemists believing that, on the journey to the philosopher’s stone, all ingredients had to be cooked into a uniform black matter before they could progress. In psychology, the word is a metaphor for “the dark night of the soul”. Cunningham’s mission here seems to be reducing his sound to its dark shadow, invaded by occasional strafes of invading light, which sets the basic template on opening tracks ‘Exploding Boxes’ and ‘Red Blocks’. Rolling slowly as clouds against a mountain, the resonant, subtly morphing tones are pinched by skeletal rhythmic scratches, dipping to subterranean levels of whale flatulence that re-imagine the time-space continuum for the rest of the side. By side two’s ‘Colour’, delicate beat suggestions have joined the misty sonic globules, like music filtering in from the bubble next door. flirted with straight-up rock and funk bands before turning to electronica in his 20s. Formerly of Bordeaux, but now based in London, Russell has slowly but surely been building up a back catalogue of exemplary remixes and original productions, roadtesting them at DJ and live shows across the capital. The horror movie bass of ‘You Freak’ was featured in a mix by Hawtin himself and other cuts have surfaced on labels such as Multi Vitamins, Adjunct, Telegraph and Lebensfreude, but ‘Force’ is his first fulllength studio effort. SEBASTIAN RUSSELL Force FENOU Finally, the first ever full-length from one of dance music’s most innovative disciples The eerie throb of 21st century minimal house and glitchy techno is a sound that has seemingly conquered dancefloors the world over. From its roots as a minority pursuit beloved of a handful of electronica geeks and hardcore trainspotters, it now packs out clubs in Ibiza, London, Berlin and New York sending thousands into delirious states with little more than the woosh of a hihat and the muffled rumble of a squelchy bassline. It’s made heroes out of DJs and producers – from long-term champions such as Richie Hawtin and Sven Väth to more recent newcomers – but especially those who are both. For it’s not good enough these days to just spin other people’s records; your DJ appearances need that extra zip, that je ne sais quoi only the super-secret mash-up that you finished in the early hours of last Tuesday can bring. Sebastian Russell is certainly one of those sonic polymaths. Indeed, he’s been a guitarist since the age of 10 and has Opener ‘Pourpre’ sets the tone straight from the off, with a nagging tinkling riff that snakes over a dubby bassline, before going through the gears to lead single ‘Free Fall’ and its incessant micro-techno groove and analogue synth hooks. This is what Russell is all about: melodies to the fore, lashings of beats and bass and some judicious sampling all thrown into the pot. It’s a potent mix that steers clear of the creative cul-de-sac that some minimal techno seems to have disappeared up of late. Elsewhere, the gothic ‘Death Song’ thuds along to a quite thunderous kick drum and a Morse code hook that spells out “M-I-N-I-M-A-L” (probably) while the Detroit sensibilities of ‘Flirt’ elevate the mood with the sort of sci-fi cyber-funk beloved in Michigan. There are more obtuse moments too, clearly meant for home listening; check out ‘Légèreté’ and ‘Shark’ that both bubble along to offkilter melodies and sideways beats. ‘Force’ is an impressive debut and over 11 sharply produced tracks Russell has not put a foot wrong. It exudes quality, care and attention and showcases a keen ear for the unusual while keeping sights firmly fixed on your local nitespot. If you’ve been anywhere near a minimal house dancefloor in recent times, you’ve almost certainly danced to one of Russell’s tunes. Now’s the chance to get your rave on in the comfort of your own home. KIERAN WYATT ALBUM REVIEWS IRMLER & EINHEIT Bestandteil KLANGBAD Series of Faustian pacts between the organ experimentalist and assorted percussionists continues Last year’s ‘Flut’ collaboration between Faust founder Hans-Joachim Irmler and Can’s metronomic forager Jaki Liebezeit was one of the albums of 2015, invoking ancient ritual catharsis as the former’s keyboards duelled with the latter’s featherlight pulses like astral entities locked in the same time warp. It was the latest out-of-body miracle to be spawned in the Faust studio as part of Irmler’s ongoing mission to explore matching keyboards with different percussionists, which had previously brought him together with Gudrun Gut and Christian Wolfarth. For this set, Irmler chose FM Einheit, who has been known recently for his collaborations with Diamanda Galás, Mona Mur, Andreas Ammer and Ulrike Haage (although he started in the late 70s with punk outfits such as Palais Schaumberg). Many remember Einheit as a founder member of the fearsome Einstürzende Neubauten, infamously extracting rhythms from his custom- made metal instruments or tools such as road-drills. When I saw him in action in the early 80s, he practically reduced an LA stage to flaming matchwood with his latest power toy. After leaving Neubauten in the mid-90s, Einheit worked on film soundtracks and then formed Gry with Danish singer Gry Bagøien. bass-spring resonance and disembodied chorale shards, sometimes sculpting something approaching a hip hop beat (if heard filtering up from the bowels of another planet). ‘The Taking’ is built from snippets of theatrical recordings made by Einheit, including brass, strings and voices, inspiring Irmler into queasy overdrive. In 2009, Einheit teamed up with Irmler for ‘No Apologies’, which almost seems like a skeletal proto-type for the cauldron unleashed by the pair here as they explore mating Irmler’s organ with an instrument of Einheit’s own invention, the bass-spring, and various found sounds. ‘Bestandteil’ is actually edited down from eight two-day jams conducted between 2012 and 2015. Honing such a monstrous bulk of material into a single CD must have been a monumental endeavour, but Irmler and Einheit have emerged with a work that is quite startling in the unearthly resonance and aural whirlpools they spark up between them. While the sounds can get savage and almost impenetrably dense, tracks such as ‘Treat’, or the sepulchral calm of the intro to ‘Streetlife’, introduce floatation tank-like weightlessness as the organ takes a rest from howling at the super blood moon and Einheit pulls back the throttle on his arsenal of counter-tones. It’s rather like a good film introducing some calm to make the storm more effective, while Einheit’s skilfully sculpted rhythms make sure the album retains a semblance of groove. The droning intro static of ‘Reset’ paves the way for ‘Brooks’, which sees Irmler kick his organ into searing exclamations that rage like electrocuted Medusa locks before settling into stretches of uneasy calm. Meanwhile, Einheit sends out shadowy pulses constructed from The set finishes with a reprise of ‘Brooks’, obviously another section of that particular jam, with both participants – and the listener – by now locked into the almost demonic alchemy crackling between them, long unbound by earthly restraints. If ‘Bestandteil’ is anything to judge by, hopefully Irmler’s series will continue to fly and fly. KRIS NEEDS HANS-JOACHIM IRMLER coming from electronica’s most unlikely protagonists. EVERYTHING BUT THE GIRL Walking Wounded Temperamental EDSEL RECORDS Reissue double bill stands as a testament to the vibrancy of 90s electronic music scenes Who’d have thought that melancholy 80s indie singer-songwriter duo Everything But The Girl would become darlings of 90s club culture? It really was about as improbable as Morrissey embracing Detroit techno, but it only took one record to turn around their whole oeuvre for good. That record was the Todd Terry remix of 1994’s ‘Missing’, which ended up selling three million copies and going Top Five in the UK and the US. It was when Ben Watt started going to the nascent drum ’n’ bass clubs Speed and Metalheadz that the band’s fate was sealed. A whole new sound for Everything But The Girl was born and the two resulting albums – 1996’s ‘Walking Wounded’ and 1999’s ‘Temperamental’ – represent the high watermark of club music in the 90s, an astounding and optimistic era of sonic innovation. The reissue of these two albums only serves to compound what a golden era it was, especially ‘Walking Wounded’ is undoubtedly the stronger of the pair and anyone who enjoyed the bittersweet lost-on-thedancefloor mournfulness meets propulsive house beats of Todd Terry’s ‘Missing’ remix will relish ‘Wrong’ with the similar sentiments of longing gliding over kinetic chubby house chords and beats. The title track, co-written and co-produced with Spring Heel Jack, features the same chemistry: Tracey Thorn’s yearning vocal opining love lost and found intertwined with a spangled constellation of beats. It’s no surprise that with their new found immersion in the drum ’n’ bass and house scenes they lined up some stellar remixing talent including Photek and Dillinja, Mood 2 Swing and Deep Dish, names with real insider cachet. ‘Temperamental’ suffers by comparison with ‘Walking Wounded’. It just hasn’t got the same melodic focus and fortitude. Where ‘Walking Wounded’ and its associated mixes still feel fresh, the opener of ‘Temperamental’, ‘Five Fathoms’, just sounds like the sort of generic house music you tend to hear in the background at the hairdressers. It’s too languid and unfocussed, like they’ve taken the successful formula of ‘Missing’ and diluted it too much. The title track itself is a little catchier and more defined, more of a disco stomper with Thorn’s falsetto giving it that authentic mirrorball sound, but otherwise the album comes across as a seamless segue of rather bland house. The vocals are still beguiling, but the production is just too polished and polite for its own good. It’s not a bad album, it’s just not as strikingly good as ‘Walking Wounded’, which had all the enthusiasm for new genres experienced afresh. Yet again with ‘Temperamental’ they lined up some A-list remixers. Kenny Dope and Fabio manage to create more alluring versions than the originals. My favourite is former Strictly Rhythm golden boys Wamdue Project who create atmospheric drifting deep house magic out of the title cut. Of the two, ‘Walking Wounded’ is definitely worth having in your collection, ‘Temperamental’ perhaps only if you’re a fanatic for the remixers. BETHAN COLE ALBUM REVIEWS he was about as far out of the orbit of ‘Merz’ as it was possible to get. And then in 2013 he released ‘No Compass Will Find Home’, again acoustically driven, but later that year he hooked up experimental drummer and sound artist Julian Sartorius to record the album again, this time as purely drum and vocal renditions. It’s an extraordinary piece of work by any standard. He’s an interesting chap is Conrad. Raised in Dorset, his folks lived in Outer Mongolia when ‘Merz’ was released and these days he calls Bern in the Swiss Alps home. MERZ Thinking Like A Mountain ACCIDENTAL Mauled by the music industry in the 90s, Conrad Lambert serves up impressive sixth album For a while back there, Merz were the next big thing. The “back there” was 1999 and Merz’s eponymous debut album was partying like it. Awash with major label big bucks, Conrad Lambert was heralded as an unique talent, reviews for ‘Merz’ glowed and then, well, nothing. “I’m not an urban kid so my music’s not going to turn out like urban electronic music does,” he explained when I met him for a chat around his debut release. “I think a lot of my music is a blend of the country mixed with six lanes of traffic. My environments have kind of merged.” Which is fascinating when you hear ‘Thinking Like A Mountain’, album number six, which finds Matthew Herbert and Maas’ Ewan Pearson at the controls. Interesting that he talked about his environments merging all that time ago, because that’s precisely how ‘Thinking Like A Mountain’ sounds. It starts with the experimental 12-minute plus ‘Shrug’. Almost pastoral, it creaks and whispers, melody leaks out, repetitive refrains come and go. More song-writerly cuts follow, the gentle pop of ‘Oblivion’, the tiptoeing ‘Absence’, before we hit a step change for the closing trio. ‘Serene’ sees the set fair burst to life, a rolling bassline, the bright tinkle of a beat, while ‘Ten Gorgeous Blocks’ is a squelching, hectic headspinner that melts down into a splendidly noisy sequenced romp. It’s followed by the closing electronic swell and plinky plonks of ‘Mercy’, a track that slowly turns to just a warm strumming guitar and Conrad’s distinctive warble, before it ends, just stops almost without you noticing. And there you are, sat in the silence for a while like it’s part of the record. And here’s the thing. If you flip the tracklisting and listen from the last track to the first, it sounds like an entirely different musical journey. Which is pretty clever stuff. But then this is Merz. While he won’t be setting the world alight, we’re glad to have him around and we’ll always be happy to warm our hands on his bright sparks. NEIL MASON ‘Merz’ was a pretty astonishing record for the time. Conrad’s voice was wild, the throaty yelp of a wild cat, the songs straddled rock, dance, folk, soul, electro (see ‘CC Concious’ if you need a sample). But no one was exactly killed in the rush and, as was traditional in such circumstances, next big things that weren’t got flushed down the tubes chop chop. Rather pleasingly, Conrad bounced back up on the excellent Grönland label in 2005 with ‘Loveheart’, a gentle, affecting record that sounded as battered and bruised as he probably was from the whole experience. Essentially a folk album (as was the 2008 follow-up wanderlust outing ‘Moi Et Mon Camion’) Pic: Stéphanie Meylan NAYTRONIX Mister Divine CITY SLANG Life on the road provides the inspiration for Nate Brenner’s restless second album You have to love side projects. It’s impossible not to think about bands schlepping around the world in tour buses, each member plugged into their MacBook, writing their own music rather than talking to one another, just pushing sounds around a glowing screen in the early hours of a hazy morning. In recent years, the proliferation of such electronic side projects has provided validation that technology facilitates creativity in hugely unprecedented ways, while also confirming that life on the road with your bandmates must be pretty dull. By day, Nate Brenner is the bassist in tUnE-yArDs, a unit who seem to have as much disregard for conventional capitalisation as they do musical norms. It’s therefore no surprise that Brenner’s second full-length as Naytronix has a wandering, wonky vibe to it. Conceived and written while touring the world with his main band, ‘Mister Divine’ captures that jaded mood of endless roads, identikit hotel rooms and sleep-wrecking time zone shifts; periods of quiet introspection, inchoate possibilities and troubled dreams. Though written in near isolation, ‘Mister Divine’ was executed in a traditional studio environment, Brenner hacking through his musical sketchbook with producer Mark Allen-Piccolo to craft nine discrete songs from a slew of ideas and notions, adding percussion, horns and guitar embellishments to the tracks. The layered arrangements make for a set of rapid, almost hyperactive switches of style suggesting the wild flicker of Brenner’s creative spark in the genesis of these songs. This is the work of a musical magpie stealing shiny things from any available nest and hoarding them for future use. In Naytronix’s case, the prize jewel is the imperfect, unpolished quality of Brenner’s voice. It adds a human dimension to these songs – a trembling, melancholy tint that offsets any restlessness in the music. The work of cult Nigerian musician William Onyeabor was a source of inspiration for Brenner, and this manifests itself in some of the funkier excursions such as ‘Dream’ or the Yeasayeresque ‘Shadow’. On the title track, the loose quality clashes with a feeling of skittishness and a constantly shifting sound world of bleeps, soulfulness and downbeat jazz guitar licks that can’t be pinned down. Elsewhere, you hear axe-shredding guitar work and summery licks blended with false beats that would make Autechre smile (‘Starting Over’) or glitchy synths and lucid Motown molasses bass with wistful vocals (‘Back In Time’; the dreamy ‘I Don’t Remember’). The maudlin centrepiece of the album is ‘The Wall’, which finds Brenner presenting the same clipped horn-filled textures as St Vincent’s 2012 collaboration with Onyeabor champion David Byrne. That ‘Mister Divine’ creates meaningful coherence out of so many diverse inputs is both testament to the sheer boredom and endless frustration of the touring lifestyle, and a credit to Brenner’s sharp ear for structure and sonic interplay. With results like this we can only hope it’s not too long before he gets himself back on that tour bus. MAT SMITH Pic: Ginger Fierstein ALBUM REVIEWS The interplay between their two frontmen – the earnest preaching tones of Chuck D and the diametrically opposed Flavor Flav, the court jester of proceedings – is key to their appeal of course. Admittedly they’ve had nearly 30 years to perfect it, but the verbal sparring is effortless and breathtaking, even on lesser known album tracks like ‘Night Of The Living Baseheads’ and the thunderous rampage of the underrated 1991 single, ‘Shut Em Down’. PUBLIC ENEMY Live From Metropolis Studios UNIVERSAL An intimate live recording from the undisputed champions of hip hop With the exception of Kraftwerk, who are without doubt the closest thing electronica has to its own Beatles, it’s hard to think of a band with a bigger influence on electronic music than Public Enemy. Their dense, intense, multilayered productions shaped the dance genres that came after them – from the sample explosion of Coldcut and M/A/ R/R/S to rave, jungle, drum ’n’ bass, trip hop and big beat – even more than the hip hop they paved the way for. Now in their mid-50s, they don’t tour quite as often as they did, but studiowise they have never let up, in recent times delivering new albums every couple of years. ‘Live From Metropolis Studios’ is, as the titles suggests, a live offering but having been recorded at the London studio in front of just 125 extremely lucky punters, it has an unusually intimate feel. Not that Public Enemy have gone soft on us and cracked open the acoustic guitars for an ‘MTV Unplugged’-style pedestrian stroll through their finest moments. Not at all. Over the 21 track selection here they prove they’re just as capable of whipping up a blistering intensity as ever. But equally important is the music: the powerful sound of crackly breakbeats, rough-cut samples and dexterous scratching. A million people – probably literally – have aped their style since, but no one can do it quite like this. The chunky sax that blazes its way through ‘Show Em Watcha Got’, the brutally simple two-note Buffalo Springfield sample that underpins ‘He Got Game’, the lively breakbeat on ‘Can’t Do Nuttin’ For Ya Man’, which could easily have been made yesterday… They’re all executed with a character and irresistible grooviness that shows little sign of deserting them yet. As you’d expect, a hefty portion of the tracklisting is devoted to the stonecold classics culled from their first three records, ‘Yo! Bum Rush The Show’, ‘It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back’ and ‘Fear Of A Black Planet’. It’s an impressive bedrock of anthems, from early singles ‘Bring The Noise’ and ‘Rebel Without A Pause’ to ‘911 Is A Joke’, ‘Fight The Power’ and ‘Don’t Believe The Hype’, all celebrated in their full glory here. But there’s also plenty here to suggest it might be worth looking up a few of their more recent offerings that may have passed you by. For example, the 2013 double whammy of ‘Hoover Music’, which pits Rage Against The Machine-style riffing against their trademark funkiness, or the block party exuberance of ‘I Shall Not Be Moved’. All in all, ‘Live From Metropolis Studios’ is a fitting testament to a band who changed music forever in so many ways, and have refused to sell out or compromise ever since. Respect is due. BEN WILLMOTT ZEUS B HELD Logic Of Coincidence LES DISQUES DU CRÉPUSCULE Journeyman German producer puts a Schrödinger’s cat among the pigeons Despite a career spanning five decades, German electronic composer and soundscapist Zeus B Held (Bernd Held) is not exactly a household name, but his production credits add up to an impressive role-call of the bleeperarti, encompassing the likes of Gary Numan and John Foxx, alongside post punk luminaries such as Spear Of Destiny, Pete Wylie and… erm, Transvision Vamp. Yet there can’t be too many instrumental concept albums devoted to philosophical and mathematical ideas of chance, so it falls to the recently revived seminal Belgian new wave label Les Disques Du Crépuscule to dish up this deliciously off-kilter piece of existential muzak. Les Disques, a kinda Factory Records for the Low Countries co-founded by the late Annik Honoré, have long championed wilfully uncommercial curates’ eggs in the past, including the poetry of Richard Jobson and the long post-Josef K career of Paul Haig, so clearly Zeus is in capable hands here. At turns loungy, spooky and ambient, Held’s production chops are very much in evidence. Everything is rendered with striking clarity and brightness. Bells ping and ball bearings ripple along creaky floors with a preternaturally vivid sheen. There are wafts of Air and Four Tet and an unabashed intellectualism combined with musical playfulness reminiscent of Momus. At points it recalls the gallows humour behind the ‘Portal’ video game, where a sadistic robot tortures its human quarry with a series of mindbending gravity puzzles. Any recording with track titles featuring words that get your Google finger itching earns instant brownie points and this had us looking up all sorts, including “Sisyphus” (‘Chaos In Sisyphus’) and “Tyche” (‘Five Beats On Tyche’). Despite the lofty title and concept there’s evidently a mischievous wit at large, as demonstrated by the irresistible vocodered nocturnal jazz funk of ‘Sho Pen How Air’ along with the Metal Mickey boogie of ‘Kant Can’t Dance’ that recalls Saint Etienne in their mid-90s floorfilling pomp. ‘Kepos Garden’ sounds like it could have been composed for Douglas Adams’ ‘The Restaurant At The End Of The Universe’ and would comfortably hold its own on a Café Del Mar compilation, while ‘Stay Epicure’ has more than a whiff of early Human League with its queasily doomladen chords. Half of the album is given over to more abstract soundscapes and there’s such an impressive range of textures and swatches on display that at times it begins to sound more like a demo for synth manufacturers than a cohesive work. The coup de grâce of ‘Logic Of Coincidence’ is undoubtedly the opening track, ‘The Glass Dice Bead Man’, and its companion piece ‘Surrender Your Soul’, both of which feature Luke Rhinehart reading from his cult 1970s novel (and Held’s favourite book), ‘The Dice Man’, over an urgent, quasi-classical march. Which, unlike most self-help, feels strangely invigorating. If a lift shaft falls through a wormhole in space would anyone hear it? Who knows, but if they do there’s a good chance this is how it will sound. JOOLS STONE XXX ALBUM REVIEWS Colder were an 80s throwback act. Albums ‘Again’ and ‘Heat’ didn’t exactly set the world alight, but were impressive in their steadfast adherence to the signature sound. Tan, meanwhile, spent the intervening years opening a design studio – a very cool one, you imagine – while the time away has allowed Colder’s reputation to ferment nicely making this something of an anticipated return. COLDER Many Colours BATAILLE Ladies and gentlemen, pray turn up your collars, sigh and stare wistfully off into the distance… Those who fought the electroclash wars at the turn of the millennium will no doubt remember Colder. Frenchman Marc Nguyen Tan’s alter ego was first spotted keeping company with the likes of Four Tet and LCD Soundsystem on Trevor Jackson’s Output label, a breeding ground for the then-hip young genres on the street: electroclash, the post-punk renaissance and chillwave with its lo-fi electronics and “way too cool to feel” vocal delivery. As with LCD Soundsystem, Colder were lumped in with all three. If anybody could match James Murphy’s masterpiece of ennui, ‘Losing My Edge’, for sheer jaded elegance then it would be Colder, whose icy analogue synths and dislocated vocal delivery automatically marked them out not just as a scenesters’ band, but an 80s revival scenesters’ band at that. Never mind that you can trace the origins of chillwave past ‘Being Boiled’ and ‘Warm Leatherette’ to Suicide, Silver Apples, and even White Noise in 1969, What’s changed? Not a lot. Tan is still dragging hard on a Gauloises in the middle of an existential but oh-so stylish crisis and there’s still enough musical space to accommodate an Ikea. Nevertheless, as well as an added complexity to the music (the use of piano chords throughout is particularly effective), there is a more mature and – incredibly – an even more introspective sound to ‘Many Colours’. Tan’s delivery has changed too. Previously he sounded like Genesis P-Orridge, now he’s gone the full Ian Curtis; except, that is, on ‘Stationery Remote Anger’, when he sounds like Ralf Hütter with the song’s funereal tale of airborne dread making the most of Tan’s talent for lyrical imagery. A guest appearance from French dream pop singer Owlle on the highlight, ‘Midnight Fever’, proves a turning point after which the tracks seem to loosen their shoulders, relatively speaking. Colder reveals new tricks, vocal melodies co-exist with spacious synth and new sounds appear, only to be bent and twisted out of shape. ‘Your Kind’ promises to take us out on a rousing note, but then along comes ‘Silence’, a mournful ballad worthy of the if-onlyIan-had-lived Joy Division that exists in your head. By rights this 39-minute wallow in malaise should be a chore. And certainly it seems like one at first. But if you can forget that it’s 2015, the year of the short-attention span, and spend a bit of quality time with it what emerges is a layered and strangely addictive release. ‘Many Colours’ is Colder’s best yet and without doubt the year’s premier chillwave-revival record. ANDREW HOLMES of choice. If his material to date had seemed somewhat disparate, there’s a real cohesion here. Everything sounds hewn from the same piece of stone (although we’ll see that this can also be a weakness). FAZE MIYAKE Faze Miyake RINSE Hotly tipped producer reshapes grime template and turns in ice-cold debut See that stylish chap on the cover? That would be Faze Miyake. Faze is usually referred to as a grime producer, and not without reason – his ties with the scene run deep. His 2011 breakthrough, ‘Take Off’, took grime’s sound palette and injected a hefty dose of stateside swagger, finding inspiration in the new hip hop capitals of Atlanta and Chicago. He’s also part of the sizeable Londonbased Family Tree crew, home to MCs like MIK and Merky ACE. But Faze’s remit is much broader, and while this self-titled debut album pulls a fair few buckets from the grime well, it makes more sense as an untethered satellite floating between various bass-heavy genres. Originally slated for release in the summer of 2013, Faze has taken his time here and it shows. None of the tracks are particularly intricate, but the textures are perfectly rendered, the product of intense attention to detail. It’s a record that operates at more of a plateau than a series of crowdpleasing peaks, although it functions just as well in the club as in your vehicle Five of the 11 tracks here are blessed with vocals. ‘None of That Stuff’ is a clear standout, with the whole of Family Tree turning up to spit bars, verses stacking up against each other over a menacing instrumental. Otherwise, the songs are all female-led (which is great for what’s nominally a grime record). Little Simz – enjoying something of a moment right now – completely bodies ‘The Nest’ with the kind of casually accomplished performance that results from true confidence on the mic. Elsewhere, it’s a thrill to hear Chicago rapper Sasha Go Hard on ‘Below Me’, and I can only hope collaborations like this one lead to more cross-pollination between grime and US hip hop. For the most part, the instrumentals are pretty strong; they don’t feel like bridging tracks, nor do they seem empty without a vocalist. ‘Burciaga’ is the pick of the bunch – propulsive yet restrained and built around a whiny little G-funk figure. If there’s a problem with the album, it’s the format. Taken as individual tracks, there’s little in the way of weak material. As a front-toback listen however, it’s too repetitive. It needs more songs like ‘What U Say’, where Izzy Brooks’ voice is given room to sparkle over dubstep-laced production that would fit right in on a Katy B record. It’s far from the best thing here, but it feels especially welcome after a run of samey instrumentals. With a bit more variety, this could have been one of the records of the year. As it stands, the album drags a little towards the end, despite the intelligent sequencing. It’s clear that Faze is a talented producer, with the ability to conjure up imagery and atmosphere as well as make club bangers. Hopefully next time round he’ll discover how to make the long-player format work to his strengths. For now, there’s more than enough to cherry-pick from. COSMO GODFREE XXX Subscribe to Electronic Sound LESS THAN £3 PER ISSUE FREE 7" SINGLE PLUS FREE MUSIC DOWNLOADS www.electronicsound.co.uk/subscribe to find out more