Saturday 22 December 2012

My late top ten


Here's my Top 10 records of the year:


1.Spaceghostpurrp: Mysterious Phonk/BMW
2.Rome: Die Aesthetik der Herrschaftsfreiheit (all three?)
3.Robert Hood: Motor (Nighttime World 3)
4.Young Smoke: Space Zone
5.Virtual Information Desk: Contemporary Sappho
6.Raime: Quarter Turns Over a Living Line
7.Ariel Pink: Mature Themes
8.Vessel: Order of Noise
9.Guided by Voices: Let's Go Eat the Factory
10.Hype Williams: Black is Beautiful

Rome's 3 part Die Aesthetik der Herrschaftsfreiheit, an evocative folk-noir sequence that mixed industrial textures, musique concrete and Nick Cave-style balladry with a concept involving 19th century European freedom fighters; the whole thing was ambitious, deeply romantic and highly moving but, sadly, spread across 3 separate albums (not discs, albums) which diluted the impact somewhat as no one release summed the whole thing up. Nonetheless, taken as a whole, it's a powerful body of work and one of the most richly enjoyable audio experiences I've had all year: thanks to Totem Records in Wien, Austria for giving me the heavy tip on this one, it paid off!

Shout-outs to MJ Linckoln, Vatican Shadow, :Wumpscut: and Royal-T, all of whom have been firm fixtures of my listening this year but who, for various reasons, don't cut into the top 10. MJ Linckoln is probably because I've digested so many EPs and albums at once and all the 'best bits' don't occur on one release; not to mention that one of my hands-down faves this year has been Malibu Locals Only Matterhorn pt2 but, for some reason, I found it difficult to squeeze it into the top 10.

SGP has taken up most of my listening this year; Rvidxr Klvn's Greatest Hits (nearly my #1) and BLXCK SMVRF's Mortal Kombat III were key texts while Mysterious Phonk was a great, gloomy rap record that, although totally lacking in fun and not quite heavy, kept going around my head and tempting me back. Furthermore, just when I began to question SGP's bars (you know, when you listen to a rapper so much you begin to pick holes in their flow), the fucker drops Black Man's Wealth for free, like the other day! A brilliant half-way house between Phonk's clean(er), considered tracks and God of Black's scuzzy fizzle (which, in spite of their brilliance, were annoyingly under-mastered).


New Dreams Ltd was a surprise entry for me as it was an album I found myself revisiting more and more. It pretty much kick started my fascination with vaporwave (despite already making Replicas and Far Side Virtual my no. 1s from previous years). I didn't realise how important it had been this year when I checked popped it on the other day and discovered I knew the thing really well (as in, 'this next track is that one with the weird sax, I love that!' or when I knew when a sample would stutter/chop).

How to choose which of the three GBV albums to 'top 10'. Class Clown Spots a UFO is possibly the better record, but Let's Go Eat the Factory was the one I obsessed over and listened to the most (because it was the first, maybe). One of my favourite lyrics of the year has to be from The Head:

"We have found/what appears to be the head/of the operation...but we've not yet found the body"

Slightly annoyed that there's not been any grime albums worth cherishing this year. Royal-T's came close, a brilliant package of grime and bass styles which featured my favourite track of the year: Cruel to be kind feat P Money. An intense, punkish grime-house monster that caused me to dance stupider than ever before in a variety of places: a) on the way to work b) Motion c) my front room d) my classroom e) The Exchange and f) Blue Mountain. Very difficult not to rave to the drop, wherever you are. Only problem with it was that much of it appeared to be genre-experiments or dull features -I didn't see Royal-T indulging in his strengths, y'know, like if they'd collected up his 12"s to date and then put the best tracks from Rinse Presents... in as the filler...that's be a fucking sick grime album, without any girly features.

Wiley did release Evolve or be Extinct, a fine album that sadly overstretched itself with sketches and a few quality, but ultimately toothless and indulgent, concept-songs e.g. Skankin'. Kylea's excellent Step Freestyles is around #12 on my list (I may have to extend it to Top 20 now...), chiefly down to his freestyle over Preditah's Circles. God almighty: choon, etc.

No black metal caught my ear, sadly, as Burzum's two efforts, Umskipitar and From the Depths o of Darkness were confusingly obtuse and a misguided re-recording of older standards respectively. The overall effect was a little unsatisfying because I really liked Umpskipitar but didn't find myself going back to it to explore further; no moments of revelation or ecstasy. Similarly, there was nothing new about the re-recordings of the earlier pre-incarceration material. It felt like a cash in, event though I suspect it was a genuine gesture. I doubt he cares anyway. I did get a few LPs in the genre but, meh, maybe it wasn't my year for such styles.

Tri-Angle label were, this year, fantastic in every way. All releases were intriguing, beautiful and challenging. Holy Other's dense and seductively mournful album Held was a highlight (probably my #15), as was the so-early-in-the-year-he-spoilt-his-chances disc from Balam Acab. However, Bristol boy Vessel takes the Tri-Angle prize for me. Order of Noise is airily spacious, grimly human and imbued with such a deftness of hand with regards to style (something not shared by the other Tri-Anglers) and technique as to allow the record to appeal to listeners on the level of a bass-y ghost-rave classic and skeletal Surgeon-esque dub-techno LP (similar-ish to his terrific Breaking the Frame LP). Slippery and elusive, this was one of the year's best UK records for me.

Sunday 2 December 2012

Malibu Locals Only

Matterhorn pt 2

Malibu Locals Only isn't a new moniker from Sean M. Petell, just a reactivation of the guise he used to release a collection of New Age tracks earlier this year on the lovely Politesse split We Rusticated Earth. Others tracks from this period, best found here and on the 2012 Living Room Visions compilation which also features MJ Linckoln's Doug Prishpreed (titled after a sports reporter), weren't tied to a dedicated MLO album or EP but seemed to trickle out over a 4 month period.
MATTERHORN, Pt. 2 cover art

Only one track has reappeared on MLO's debut-proper on Sunup Recordings, the sublime and dreamy Sunday Drive into Sunset, opening with clip-clop horse hooves and fireside guitar that degenerates into serene drones which chime and unfold gradually, more like descending bliss than the forward motion of motor travel, when sleeps begins to drip-drip itself over your eyes and the flames settle to dozy embers.  

The tape opens with a masterful 11-minute suite, Nayru; Farore, Din a dusky, crackling keyboard drift set across gently rattling tins or pans that calmly circle the implied campfire. This arrangement, keyboards over found or concrete layers (usually water trickling/running, the shuffling of people, crackles), forms the backbone of the album with the playing endearingly patchy -the enjoyment of the player and the value of the task is evident, even if their hands pause or miss the odd note.

This is the key element that I spoke of/looked forward to in my earlier post about vaporwave artists developing: actual playing. Who'd have though it? Real instruments and musicianship isn't really my thing (I sympathise with OF's Jasper when he says "...rapping's stupid and it's hard"), I can live without them and am rarely impressed by virtuosity -give me a well-programmed piece of electronic music any day; skill's overrated.
However, here, the conceptual message (implied my Petell and inferred, correctly or otherwise, by me) is that the found-sound/ready-made collage/cut-up/loop of eccojams, vaporwave compositions has run its course. Aesthetic lessons have been learned, audiences garnered and collectives formed, but now this progress needs to be harnessed and deployed rather than allowed to drift endlessly (and fruitlessly) on like, well, an eccojam. 

Matterhorn pt 2 has something playfully real about it, whether it's the choo-choo and clatter of a train that opens and trundles throughout Albert Rosenfield or the aforementioned environmental elemental soundscapes, this recording appears to reject the Second Life, pre-rendered Internet artificiality that was/is so fetishised in vaporwave. Refreshingly so, too, as real flesh and blood playing has never felt so welcome to me; this is the webwave equivalent of going acoustic, of switching off the wi-fi for the night.

I'm persevering with my webwave tag, by the way, because it allows me to keep track of a bundle of developments that shared some origins or overlaps at one point, be it Seapunk, Eccojam, vaporwave, distroid (arf!) or the Hypnogogic Pop and New Age revivals of last year.

Overall, Matterhorn pt 2 isn't the most exciting release from Petell but is an important palette cleanser, a vital road sign forward for an artist whose grip of musical concepts isn't bound by style, genre or even tools used. Whereas we've become insulated and acclimatised to the schmaltzy-cheese that's gleefully (even perversely) referenced/deployed by many webwave artists (New Dreams Ltd, Uncle Dan Lopatin and Mr Ferraro chiefly responsible), this release is easier on the noise-fan's ear on account of the concrete backdrop, fewer excuses needed for passers-by or family members ("...why're you listening to this? I thought you were into weird music..."), while retaining more authentic versions of the emotions and atmospheres these New Age and Muzaks of old were only able to artificially imply.

A very successful release and worth your time (and $! Get the tape!).  

Saturday 1 December 2012

MJ Linckoln and the webwavers (# optional)

MJ Linckoln
Linckoln Premiere cover art
Wading through and chewing over the below webwave compilation (the snappily titled 
:​:​:​:​:​蒸気​:​:​:​:​:) yielded much treasure but, as with compilations as expansive and bewildering in diversity as this (RVIDXR KLVN's Greatest Hits comes to mind), the iPod star rating comes into its own as a sorting tool: 'avoids' are given 1, excellence recognised with a 5 and songs of note, intrigue or requiring further research get a 4; 2 and 3 aren't used.

One of my webwave 5 star champions, MJ Linckoln, has a decent and recommended discography available for free through bandcamp on Sunup Recordings. My personal favourite is the Matterhorn pt 1 EP, containing some fine, suffocatingly slurred eccojams named after American celebrities, their names oblique and mysterious to me.

Elsewhere, with the Now that's what I call Music! vol 2 EP (credited to マイケル·ジョーダンLINCKOLN, Japanese for Michael Jordon or 'MJ'), we're treated to a earnest chopped n' ecco'd showcase, smearing and mystifying classics from Enya and Berlin -the Enya track in question (from 'Memory of Trees') was one of my first CD purchases as a young boy, so hearing it again for the first time in about a decade was neatly nostalgic and the first personal fluttering connection I've made with a track from this genre, what with other chopped/screwed/slowed/throwed/eccojammed/skrewed songs being relatively easy to identify by sound or by tag.
A certain admirable balance is achieved between a pop-musik black mass and dadaist joke, deadly serious exploration and tongue-in-cheek irony; the revealing chorus for many songs acting as punchline. Just when you're noddingly up to your ears in reverb, appreciating the disorientating slab of sound that churns, heaves and seems to struggle to breath out its own colossally wheezing chords, drums falling in a heavy stumble, the whole avant-garde noisescape is revealed to be Take My Breath Away by Berlin (if you don't catch the telltale bass melody, that is, which my wife didn't: when the chorus came, so did the guffaws).

The effect is one of deconstruction, conceptually as well as sonically. Like a dadaist ready-made, Daniel Lopatin's genre-defining Nobody's Here (as Chuck Person) took a terminally uncool music faux pas and turned it into a cutting edge, highly influential webwave 'masterpiece'. Playing with the giants of pop, simply slowing them, altering their tone and introducing some choice cutting and a dose of sub-aqueous reverb, is close to the 21st Century Internet equivalent of scrawling R. Mutt across them.

Yet, despite this gnawing feeling of 'am I listening to great/nearly great art or am I the butt of someone dicking about on Audacity's joke?' (which does fade), I'm utterly in thrall of MJ's work and that of his contemporaries and peers (Internet Club, $PL$H ¢LUB 7, Mediafired and just about anyone on the :​:​:​:​:​蒸気​:​:​:​:​: compilation ['vapour', in Japanese, badaway]) because, on one level, they appear to have quickly exhausted the possibilities of this technique and so, being evidently creative and productive minds, I want to know what they'll turn to next.

Already, since I began typing this, Matternhorn pt 2 has appeared on the Sunup Recordings bandcamp (although credited to 'Malibu Locals Only', an alias of Sean Petell of MJ, named after a small, violent gang from Malibu, the MLO) which is a more expansive creature, more indebted to sun-kissed drone, psychedelia and has more composed, cleaner feel. A wonderful tape, I'm thrilled to hear this maturation of style and purpose occur so quickly.

Although a fan of chopped and screwed, I'd never immersed myself in the blurry, aqueous, sensory-deprivation to any great extent, merely listening and enjoying albums as sonic curiosities rather than distinct pieces of work, such as the 'purple' versions of my favourite hip-hop artists. My first exposure to the style came through Hype Williams, of Hippos in Tanks association, with their drained, dreamy slo-mo bass music that held me in thrall for most of last year. Since then, I've casually sought out examples where the technique is applied, strategically and alongside other tricks n' tools, rather than expressed in pure form. Apart from Salem, who I feel sort of cheated despite being ahead of the (wider) game, I wasn't wholly satisfied.

MJ Linckoln, despite facing the initial blurry danger of blurring into the previous blurry-eccojam, has managed to keep my attention with his overall thematic content: the naming conventions of releases after famous American cars -from where the name derives, albeit with a kinky additional K -the curious reference to Michael Jordon and aforementioned American B-listers used as track titles (Art Garfunkel being the A-grade exception, maybe) tie the whole thing up into a neat, not too flashy, not too ironic, not too drained of substance package.

I'm still devouring the releases, trying to make time to consolidate them in my mind alongside other releases in the wider-genre, but hope to revisit MJ with a solid release review and verdict/discussion.