Showing posts with label electronic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label electronic. Show all posts

03 September 2025

Rumpistol "Nebula" (2025)

Nebula
release date: May 13, 2025
format: digital (10 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,58]
producer: Jens Berents Christiansen
label: The Rust Music - nationality: Denmark


Studio album by Danish electronic act Rumpistol ['Space Gun'], a solo project name by Jens Berents Christiansen, which has survived for more than 2 decades as he released his self-titled debut album in 2003. Since the debut Rumpistol has released an abundance of records and Rumpistol has taken part in various collaboration projects, also counting the Danish experimental world music band Kalaha. Nebula may be regarded Rumpistol's ninth regular installation, and here Christiansen has made use of several featuring instrumentalists, which include: Sven Dam Meinild on flutes, EWI, clarinet & saxophone, Maria Jagd on violin & viola, Emil de Waal (from Kalaha) on drums, percussion & bowed metal, Helene Tungelund on Celtic harp, Anders Stig Møller on bass, and Anna Roemer on guitar.
Nebula is an instrumental album, which for me, shares bonds with early Trentemøller - the idm / micro-house elements but it's not 'just' echoing other artists' works, there're obvious original traits and facets from his early releases and it basically represents a style palette that isn't entirely electronic. Rumpistol has been engaged in various genres and styles throughout the years, and in this regeard Nebula showcases elements from space rock, ambient and the world of jazz, which are scattered and more or less heard on these quite different compositions. At times you will find similarities, or say: bits pointing at early electronic synthpop and ambient, but in essence it's only showcasing the strengths of Rumpistol as an orginal shapeshifter, who employs whatever is needed.
Needless say, as an instrumental work, it's music for attentive listening and then it really unfolds the more you listen to it. Given the short time I have known of this new album, I only suspect it will grow on me.
I like it, it's really good. And if you do not know the works of Rumpistol, I leave you to check it out. The act is an international secret of sorts, and I really enjoy albums like Mere rum (2005), Away (2014), After the Flood (2020), and Isola (2022).
Recommended.


16 March 2024

Chelsea Wolfe "She Reaches Out to She Reaches Out to She" (2024)

She Reaches Out to She Reaches Out to She
release date: Feb. 9, 2024
format: digital (10 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [2,95]
producer: Dave Sitek
label: Loma Vista - nationality: USA

Track highlights: 1. "Whispers in the Echo Chamber" - 3. "Everything Turns Blue" - 5. "The Liminal" - 6. "Eyes Like Nightshade" - 8. "Unseen World"

7th studio album by Chelsea Wolfe following Birth of Violence (Sep. 2019) is her first album on Loma Vista and it also introduces a certain change in producer-collaboration as most of her former releases were mostle made with co-composer Ben Chisholm, who remains as one her stable collaborators (since 2012) together with drummer Jess Gowrie and mastering engineer Heba Kadry (both since 2017).
A new producer and a new label doesn't mean much new, though. And despite the fact that Wolfe has been influenced by various styles, this new collection of songs still stand with feets buried in a darkwave arena. That said, Wolfe has often sought to colour her songs from new perspectives - with twists of electronica, stronger influnced by / or with the absense of industrial rock, and in that sense her new album doesn't appear as something entirely different. Wolfe belongs to the dark - no doubt about that, and she usually makes her songs with Chisholm - here credited as co-composer, keyboardist and for drum programming. And especially the drum aspect is what basically makes this a different breed than her (brighter) 2019-album. Drums are up-front, energetic pulsating, and attract attention on an album that takes Wolfe back on an industrial, electronic path of dark colours.
The album has mostly been met by acclaim as an original output from an innovative artist, who never seem to walk on already known paths. To me, it doesn't quite invite me in, and I think my reluctant stance has to do with the incoherency I find on the album. It's both strongly electronic with synths and programming providing a new side-step to her darkwave tones, and at the same time it bonds with industrial rock - it wants to be 'hard', and then Wolfe has makes attempts pop-imagery, nicely placed hooks of sweetness, which makes it difficult to digest. It's like, she tries too hard to make her music grandiose and by that she unfortunately also loses contact with authenticity. Is it a spicy treat, or, just a light dessert? I dunno!! And the different flavours do not meet one another that well, I think. And ultimately, Wolfe has been better.
[ 😮allmusic.com 4,5 / 5, Exclaim! 4 / 5, Pitchfork 7,6 / 10, Uncut 3,5 / 5, 👉PopMatters 3 / 5 stars ]

20 December 2023

OMD "Bauhaus Staircase" (2023)

Bauhaus Staircase
release date: Oct. 27, 2023
format: digital (12 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,55]
producer: OMD
label: 100% Records / White Noise - nationality: England, UK


14th studio album by Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark - the fourth since the band's reformation in 2006, follows six full years after The Punishment of Luxury (Sep. 2017). As all the band's four studio albums of the new Millennium, the album production is credited the band and most tracks are written and composed by Andy McCluskey and Paul Humphreys with the former taking the strongest role as songwriter - business as usual. The band hasn't exactly lived without exchanging members and the line-up with the two founding members McCluskey and Humpreys alongside keyboardist Martin Cooper are now on their fourth consecutive album together, whereas drummer Stuart Kershaw, who took part in the writing of five tracks on Liberator (1993), debuted on the 2017 album.
Bauhaus Staircase not only continues where the band left us in 2017 but basically adopts the sound they have stuck to since the reformation and the release of History of Modern (2010), and the title referencing the German art school pretty much sums up what kind of legacy they aim for - and they do know how it connotates an early electronic European tradition, which implies both Jean-Michel Jarre and Kraftwerk. The album cover reflects the same perspective, as we've seen it with their four most recent albums. From the Pacific Age (1986) to Universal (1996) OMD found themselves - if not on a downward spiral, then at least on a negative trend, where they seemed to be caught on the wrong foot, searching of a proper style, which ultimately had McCluskey dissolve the band in '96. After the reunion, however, the band acts very determined to stick to a simple synth-pop founded on synths, drums, and melodic uptempo tunes that somehow all incorporate some of the characteristics of the band's earliest years. Since 2008 they have released live-versions of their most popular albums and been on tours only performing the albums Dazzle Ships and Architecture & Morality, and they have released the live album Access All Areas (2015) dedicated to hits of their heydays.
I feel somewhat undecided on this as I sense much reproduction and not much new, and then on the other hand I acknowledge that they really understand their own strengths and keep to these in a predictable, yet also quite charming way. My first impression was basically a complete rejection, and I thought it was game over. And again, I have to hand it to McCluskey & Co. as they know how to keep the torch alive.
Recommended.
[ Mojo, PopMatters, Record Collector, Uncut 4 / 5, Clash 4,5 / 5 stars ]

16 November 2023

Evigby "John Tonic & metalhjertet" (2023)

John Tonic & metalhjertet
release date: May 19, 2023
format: digital (18 x File, MP3)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,77]
producer: Freddy Konfeddy et al.
label: Kosmokrator Records- nationality: Denmark

Track highlights: 2. "Sult" - 3. "Sober sæbeopera" - 5. "Skejs Kejser" - 6. "Pop Pop" - 8. "Flex" - 9. "Metalhjertet" - 10. "Narkosalg" - 12. "Mordersang" - 13. "Fra den sunkne bys slimede gader rejser den dekadente titan Mest Mefisto sig" - 14. "Phallos" - 16. "Enten eller" - 17. "Far"

Studio album debut by Danish hiphop and rap-collective Evigby led by songwriter and lead vocalist Laurits von Undall, who previously released released music under the name of John Tonic. The album is in essence a conceptual album blending what appears as sci-fi storytelling put in a contemporary setting with focus on social awareness. It's by no means a traditional Danish hiphop or rap outing and it seems more directly inspired by various US hiphop and rap artists without being mere copy. The lyrics are all held in Danish, and the music is hard to narrow in, but lyrics and music put together, really makes this an original cocktail. The music is first and foremost built on hiphop and it's electronically founded but there's nevertheless also a strong will to experiment with traditional instrumentation, which provides a refreshing mix of styles, although, the strong vocal performance never suggest anything but hiphop. Laurits showcases a natural ear for rap flow and rhyming, yet there's still focus on the aspect of storytelling. Some songs are executed via a mature sense for what works melodically and from a musical perspective, other songs are more one-dimensionally structured around the lyrical side. The narrative is centrered on John Tonic and his hood, their experiences with drugs and (easy) money, John's connection to the underworld, and then on another level the narrative reveals John's aspirations as well as parts of his upbringing and adolescence.
With John Tonic & metalhjertet, Evigby provides us with a refreshing new take on a Danish hiphop tradition, which expands boundaries with a new mix of styles. Ultimately, this collection of songs and the conceptual idea also points to what purpose it serves to put Evigby in any genre category - to cite Louis Armstrong freely: "there's no such thing as style - there's only good or bad!" And to tell you the truth: this ain't bad at all! What's a real shame though, is the local and national radio stations' near complete neglect to play what matters instead of playing what some powerful labels and a few distributors think people oughta listen to. Another thing restricting a more solid distribution of the music by Evigby is the fact that the album has not been released for download or in any physical format. The album exists only on Splotify, on bApple Music, and on Soundcloud, but it's really a recommended listen and one of this year's most exciting Danish releases.
[ Gaffa.dk 4 / 6 stars ]

10 November 2023

The Streets "The Darker the Shadow the Brighter the Light" (2023)

The Darker the Shadow the Brighter the Light
release date: Oct. 13, 2023
format: digital (15 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,64]
producer: Mike Skinner
label: Rhino UK - nationality: England, UK


6th studio album by The Streets following nearly 13 years after Computers and Blues (Feb. 2011) and most recently the mixtape album None of Us Are Getting Out of This Life Alive (Jul. 2020) is a warm welcome back to one of Britain's most charismatic hip hop artists of the new millennium. All tracks except the title track, co-composed with Virginia Liston, are composed, written, arranged, produced and mixed by Skinner himself. Actually, the album appears to have been made on the basis of a full-length feature film (baring the same title) written by Skinner over nearly a full decade, and which has also premiered by now. Compared to his 2020 mixtape album this one doesn't include a long list of featuring artists, although Kevin Mark Trail contributes with vocals on seven tracks (he also performed on the 2002 debut as well as on the 2011 album by The Streets), Robert Harvey (of The Music, The D.O.T., Kasabian) features on two, and Laura Vane on one.
More than a decade has passed by, and Skinner has been involved in other projects, so I guess you would expect one of two scenarios: The Streets would take up the batton in a predicted pace and with the inclusion of Skinner's ear for hooks and samples - just like we've come to know him - or, you'd see him from a new perspective utilizing his time with other music projects to expand the musical universe of his most famous brain child. And Skinner only remains true to the spirit, the sound and the soundscape of The Streets, as he simply appears to move forward from whatever position he left his project in. That both makes it very comfortable without having to adjust to a new-found sound and at the same time a tee bit old-school. It does sound like music that should've been released a decade earlier, but then: so what? It wasn't! First and foremost it's nice to have him back in this role, and The Darker the Shadow... won't disturb anyones impression of this project, though I guess some would've wished more progression. Comparing with his fifth studio album I think the most aparent difference is a reluctance to over-arrange songs and stick to some kind of simplicity. The album runs for a total of 47 minutes, and all songs vary little in running time - going from 2:10 to 3:54 minutes they're all composed within a strict matrice of A, B, and C pieces held together with a bridge or two with extremely tight compository differences. That said, he still throws in samples and various stylistic inputs to colour and to make it a digestible treat. The skills remain intact. Some tracks stick out but as a whole it does feel a bit like going through the motions by replicating, duplicating, and by reminding us of his earlier beats. It's not that it doesn't work, 'cause it adds to the repertoire - there's. just. not. a lot. of. new. strengths. being revealed here. Aaaand that said, what really works here is Skinner's artistic approach with words, sentences - i.e. his rhyming to music. That's intact, or perfectly intact actually, and then it doesn't make things worse that you actually have some living experience. His gift in telling everyday life in the context of themes is point on - and we've missed that.
It's nice, it's good, and it's nearly great. Perhaps the biggest accomplishment is that the album actually feels like a real The Streets album to be referred to and compared with the five previvious studio albums. It may not be one of his three best but it comes close.
Recommended.
[ allmusic.com, Uncut, Mojo 4 / 5, Gaffa.dk 4 / 6, Pitchfork, Record Collector, NME 3 / 5 stars ]

16 October 2023

M.I.A. "MATA" (2022)

MATA
release date: Oct. 14, 2022
format: digital (13 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,65]
producer: various
label: Island Records - nationality: England, UK


6th studio album by M.I.A. following six years after AIM (Sep. 2016) is M.I.A.'s first album to only be issued in digital format. AIM had initially been released as her final studio album but the desire to release new material made her change her decision. MATA is a typical M.I.A. title - instead of refering to an individual, the title is an ironic pun hinted at the change of the name of Facebook to Meta. Furthermore, the front cover depicts a Christian cross in the writing of MATA in vertical letters, and M.I.A. has been outspoken in finding a meaningful life after turning to Christianity, and then, when pronounced in 'working-class' British, 'MATA' becomes 'matter' - meaning this is the / what 'MATA[r]'s. The album consists of thirteen tracks of which none is longer than 3:36 minutes and three tracks are below two minutes making it a relative short full-length album with a total running time under 33 minutes.
MATA is in many ways a typical album from M.I.A. with lyrics touching on social and political awareness. It's music about her role, about being parents, and about living at a current age where global issues demand our full attention.
M.I.A. is confrontatory in her very approach, and that has made her both extremely unpopular but also the opposite, and she's been perfectly aware of this from the very beginning of her career. The song "Popular" says everything about being just that, and that's just very much the very essence of her narrative. "F.I.A.S.O.M. Pt. 1" and "F.I.A.S.O.M. Pt. 2" are other neat examples of her gift with words to elaborate on issues of concern. Here, it's an abbreviation for 'Freedom Is A State Of Mind' ('whatcha gonna do with mine?'), which she uses to deal with exactly what it implies, and at the same time it cleverly refers to being 'Fearsome'. She speaks her mind of the things that she encounters - there's no hiding behind a public image or a media persona, and at the same time, that also reveals her conflicts of trying to be herself in a world where the media image is out of your own control. She rides along, reacts to issues and accusations and no matter what always find herself in the middle of a conflict she never asked for. And the fact that she never writes a song just to make it sound like a good hook or rhyme, but starts off by having something on her mind, and then makes a song about it incorporating rhymes, hooks, and beats is something extremely rare these days.
Anyway, MATA is another fine album from M.I.A., although, its not really among her absolute best, but in this case, much less will do, 'cause she's always right there in the midst of war zones reporting about actual human issues and not really caring about being [TaylorSwift-Reehannah-and-the-like-radio-friendly]-pop-ulaaar!
Recommended.
[ allmusic.com, Slant Magazine 4 / 5 stars ]

04 October 2023

Blanck Mass "The Rig (Prime Video Original Series Soundtrack)" (2023)

The Rig (Prime Video Original Series Soundtrack)
(soundtrack)
release date: Jan. 6, 2023
format: digital (33 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,62]
producer: Blanck Mass
label: Invada Records - nationality: England, UK


Soundtrack album by Blanck Mass (aka Benjamin John Power) following the release of several interesting releases, including his new-found role as official member of Editors and his first album with the band being EBM (Sep. 2022), and his own most recent soundtrack to Sam Collins' documentary about British football legend Paul 'Gazza' Gascoigne released as Gazza (Original Score) (Nov. 2022), which again followed the acclaimed soundtrack Ted K (Original Score) (Mar. 2022), Blanck Mass' musical score to a 2021 Tony Stone historical drama about the so-called 'Unabomber' (the music to the film being released a year later). The most recent studio album credited Blanck Mass is In Ferneaux (Feb. 2021).
"The Rig" is a science fiction thriller television series in 6 episodes created by David Macpherson for Amazon Prime Video directed by John Strickland, and it's the first Amazon Original to be filmed entirely in Scotland. The soundtrack to the series has been issued as a digital album rwith a total running time at more than 72 minutes by Invada Records on its bandcamp profile and as a double vinyl issue.
Normally, soundtracks are a difficult genre - sometimes the animated visuals are a highly missing part, at other times the result is just too varied, and rarely, I think, they work perfectly in their own right, and in this case, it luckily happens to be one of the rare examples. Blanck Mass has made a strong soundtrack that truly makes you want to watch the series - if not only just to experience an audio-visual dimension of this work. Nonetheless, The Rig... is a fine soundtrack.

24 September 2023

John Frusciante ": I I ." (2023)

: I I .
release date: Feb. 3, 2023
format: digital (10 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,46]
producer: John Frusciante
label: Avenue 66 - nationality: USA

Track highlights: 1. "Golpin" - 2. "MK 2.1" - 3. "Pyn" - 6. "Clank" - 9. "Sluice" - 10. "Firpln"

12th studio album by John Frusciante following Maya (Oct. 2020). The album is released on the German sublabel Avenue 66 to US parent label Acid Test on whose bandcamp site the album is available. The album has been released in two different versions: a 2 lp seven track vinyl issue titled . I : (pronounced 'one') and a 10 track digital version, sold as a double cd or as digital download [this] pronounced 'two' and called : I I . . The two albums are regarded by some as his 12th and 13th albums since they have rather distinct track listings, although, I think, you could argue they are only different versions. The shorter vinyl issue may also be found in a digital version [!] via bandcamp but it still comes without the vinyl only track ("OFD") making it a 6 track album. Frusciante has explained the different versions due to the limitations in the recording process from digital masters to the vinyl format - some sounds were simply not possible to record on vinyl, and then the running orders are also quite different.
: I I . is really something else from Frusciante, although, he has been experimenting with electronica over more than a decade, this new album is far from what you could describe as Frusciante's take on 90s idm, acid house, or break beat. Instead, this time he has succesfully composed his own mix of electronic music. Stylewise, it may not be groundbreaking material but Frusciante really explores some kind of sound frontier. At times, you may think it's only white noise or some kind of abstract, experimental electronica. And yes, but it's also more than just that. It's also music from someone who wants to challenge our perception of music - and that alone makes it an interesting album. The more I listen to it, the more I discover, and also: the more I enjoy it. It's definitely not background music for dinner at home or at a restaurant, but more like the kind of music you would listen to with your antennas tuned in.
A small recommendation.
[ allmusic.com 3 / 5 stars ]


cover . I : ('One')


21 May 2023

John Cale "Mercy" (2023)

Mercy
release date: Jan. 20, 2023
format: digital (12 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,74]
producer: John Cale, Nita Scott
label: Double Six / Domino - nationality: Wales, UK

Track highlights: 1. "Mercy" (feat. Laurel Halo) - 2. "Marilyn Monroe's Legs (Beauty Elsewhere)" (feat. Actress) - 3. "Noise of You" - 6. "Moonstruck (Nico's Song)" - 8. "Night Crawling" - 9. "Not the End of the World" - 11. "I Know You're Happy" (feat. Tei Shi)

17th (or so?) studio album by John Cale following M:FANS (2016) - which by many isn't really considered an actual new album as it's a redrawing of songs from Music for a New Society from 1982, although, from my perspective it's still a new album containing newly re-arranged songs. A new studio album doesn't necessarily mean new compositions; however, his last to feauture newly written material was Shifty Adventures in Nookie Wood (2012).
Cale was 80 years old when he recorded this album, and you could ask yourself if his high age would show on this album - it doesn't! Actually, the album is a most wonderful combo of soft art rock, singer / songwriter and subtle but noticeable electronica. Several tracks are collaborations - the most prominent artist is probably Weyes Blood (on "Story of Blood"). For the moment, I just feel that is one of the weak songs here, but you can't really put a finger on anyone's contribution that lifts this from Cave's shoulders. Through and through, it's the successful product in the spirit of the artist himself.
The album has been met by positive reviews, and I must confess that it strikes me as one of his better and more coherent studio albums. Since the relase, Cale has been on a world tour with the new album.
The album is still new to me - I rate it just under 3,75, but it might just grow stronger during the following months.
Highly recommended.
[ 👍Pitchfork 7,8 / 10, Mojo 4 / 5, Uncut 4,5 / 5 stars ]

30 April 2023

Everything but the Girl "Fuse" (2023)

Fuse
release date: Apr. 21, 2023
format: vinyl (LTD. green vinyl) + digital (10 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,80]
producer: EBTG
label: Buzzin' Fly / Virgin Music / Verve - nationality: England, UK

Track highlights: 1. "Nothing Left to Lose" (4,5 / 5) - 3. "Caution to the Wind" - 4. "When You Mess Up" - 6. "No One Knows We're Dancing" - 7. "Lost" (4 / 5) - 8. "Forever" - 10. "Karaoke"

11th studio album following Temperamental by more than 23 years!!! Yes! The waiting game is over - it's finally here! I received this the day after its official release. And it still feels a bit early to hand a 'fixed' grade, and I may change it over the following months. The album has quite naturally been met by positive response. Alone the wait secures this a decent response, though, it's damn nice that not all artists wait that long in between albums. Both Tracey Thorn and Ben Watt have released solo albums since what was until now seen as their final album as a duo, and they have both experienced some artistic success, although, their key brand is EBTG.
Now, if the cover art doesn't exactly look and feel like an EBTG album, the music surely does. In every possible way this is an album for people who love this duo - for what their legacy means. It appears to combine [the fuse?] almost all their stylistic variations from jazzy bits, a great deal of sophisti-pop and parts of their late electronic period. In that way, it doesn't bring about something extraordinary or introduce us to a new move. Where Walking Wounded (1996) was a major step into electronic clubland and Temperamental (1999) kicked in doors to new combinations, this one takes off as a more gentle kind. Not that EBTG has ever been 'hard' or extreme, it's obvious to point to a maturity, when in fact it's probably more the result of a condensed expression - highlighting many of the styles they have been involved with. Or: at least these are my personal initial thoughts 'cause they really sound like EBTG without hitting a copy / paste function.
"Nothing Left to Lose" is a monster of a song that brings to mind the very best from their late period, but again, it's not a copy but something that brings the band into a new era. It's really wonderful to have another album from this highly influential duo. Watt knows about colouring the mix and Thorn... well, she just blows you over with her enchanting vocal. Strong as ever. Again. I already love it!
Highly recommended.
[ 👉allmusic.com, Mojo, NME 4 / 5, Pitchfork 7,7 / 10, Clash 4,5 / 5 stars ]

17 April 2023

Scatterbrain "Strip the Future" (1983), single

Strip the Future, 12'' single
release date: 1983
format: vinyl (neu 80-4405)
[single rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,32]
producer: Scatterbrain
label: Neuland Tonträger - nationality: Denmark

Tracklist: A) "Strip the Future" - - B) 1. "Diversity" - 2. "Angry Young Men"

Single release by Danish experimental electro-synth and synth rock band Scatterbrain following the release of the album Keep Dancing (Aug. 1981). The line-up has been expanded with keyboardists Jesper Ranum, who took part in the follow-up tour of the album release, and also with Michael Kastrup Hansen. For this recording, also Henrik Heigren and Anders Brill (from Kliche) contribute.
The single was originally released in '82 as a 7'' single on Irmgardz... with this 12'' single consisting of new recordings and new arrangements made for the German market. After this, the line-up changed again with Ranum leaving the band, and drummer Gorm Ravn-Jonsen (later in Gangway) was shortly a new member, then Anders Brill was promoted to new stable drummer togeher with Torben Kirkholt (of Næste Uges TV), and as the band then released its final album Mountains Go Rhythmic (1984) this was made with actual drummers, thus representing a change of sound, which in essence was what would later be labeled as industrial rock, and in that regard the band has as an important part in shaping new stylistic foundation somewhere in the outskirts of new wave and synthpop.

15 March 2023

Scatterbrain "Keep Dancing" (1981)

Keep Dancing
[debut]
release date: Aug. 1981
format: vinyl (IRMG 3) / digital (10 x File, FLAC) (2005 remaster)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,68]
producer: Scatterbrain, Anders Lind
label: Irmgardz... / Glorious Records - nationality: Denmark


Studio album debut by Danish band Scatterbrain originally released on Irmgardz... The band here consists of founding members Jesper Siberg on vocals, keyboards & electronic percussion, Hilmer Hassig on guitars & synths, Jens Erik Mose on bass & synths, and Morten Torp on vocals & synths. Despite only releasing two albums, Scatterbrain has quite a substantial legacy in Danish music history, where the band stands as forerunners and as the first actual synth-rock band coming out on the punk rock scene.
In retrospect, the band appears influenced by Joy division and to what was perceived as a growing art punk scene at the time counting artist like Magazine, Visage, Gary Numan, and Ultravox and apart from these musical contemporaries it also seems that artists like King Crimson, Brian Eno, and Kraftwerk should be included amongst the band's natural sources of inspiration. This also include inspiration from artistic ideas of visual arts and authors, and Scatterbrain build on cold war politics and a de-humanisation of society, which is also reflected in some of the aforementioned artists' music (with bonds to David Bowie and Lou Reed) and also a similar starting point of contemporary Danish author Michael Strunge and his poetry, e.g. "Skrigerne" (1980) and "Vi folder drømmens faner ud" (1981).
Keep Dancing came out to positive reviews but the band and its music didn't attract a wider audience and Scatterbrain was first and foremost a cult-like band. In retrospect, however, Keep dancing and the band's second album Mountains Go Rhythmic (1984) both stands as highly original releases with the debut as an album that has found status as a cornerstone in modern Danish rock-history.
At the time, I came across the debut and I kept an illegal copy of the record, which I both found challenging but also quite fascinating and unforgettable, although, I also saw it as strange and too experimental for my liking. Many years later, as of 2023, I got hold of the original vinyl issue, and it's definitely an album to know of.
Recommended.

12 March 2023

Gorillaz "Cracker Island" (2023)

Cracker Island
release date: Feb. 23, 2023
format: digital (10 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,65]
producer: Gorillaz and Greg Kurstin
label: Parlophone / Warner - nationality: England, UK

Track highlights: 1. "Cracker Island" (feat. Thundercat) - 2. "Oil" (feat. Stevie Nicks) - 3. "The Tired Influencer" - 4. "Silent Running" (feat. Adeleye Omotayo) - 7. "Tarantula" (feat. Bad Bunny) - 9. "Skinny Ape"

8th studio album under the Gorillaz alias, Damon Albarn once again finds time and room to continue his virtual albeit quite succesful band whenever he's not consuming time with The Good, The Bad & The Queen, or producing stuff for Blur, or he's doing solo projects. The majority of the songs are credited Albarn and new producer Greg Kurstin, but as has become the usual working process, several tracks are co-written with various others. On this it's primarily artists of hip hop and rap. Also, longtime associate Remi Kabaka Jr. is co-producer on four tracks and co-composer on track #8, which also feature Puerto Rican rapper Bad Bunny (aka Benito Martinez). Track #1 feature Thundercat (aka Stephen Bruner), track #5 feature both Tame Impala and Bootie Brown - the latter first featured on a Gorillaz' single on the track "Dirty Harry" on the band's second album, and then the album also feature two major artists: Stevie Nicks on vocals exclusively on track #2 and Beck (aka Beck Hansen), also as co-composer, on the end track.
Albarn just never seems to disappoint. In contemporary popular music he acts like a fish in water. Whatever he's involved in comes out as right on current parameters for music in tune with what's being asked for. He's no entertainer in a traditional sence, but he certainly knows how to produce entertaining music. At a first listen I thought this one - for once - wasn't quite there, on the spot. But after a few spins, I have to confess, there's absolutely nothing wrong with Cracker Island. It's funky, and it's danceable and entertaining as f...., and thanks to the decision not to dwell on an earlier will to write and compose with various artists from (too) diverse genres and styles, the album is with aid from Remi and Kurstin the experience of one whole rather than a compilation of sorts - as his nonetheless great predecessor Song Machine, Season One - Strange Timez from 2020.
The album has found its way to the top of the British albums chart and has generally been well-received internationally.
Highly recommended.
[ allmusic.com, Clash, NME, 👍The Guardian 4 / 5, PopMatters 4,5 / 5, 👎Pitchfork 6,5 / 10 stars ]

12 November 2022

Editors "EBM" (2022)

EBM
release date: Sep. 22, 2022
format: digital (11 x File, FLAC) (Deluxe)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,85]
producer: Blanck Mass, Justin Lockey, Elliott Williams
label: Play It Again Sam - nationality: England, UK

Track highlights: 1. "Heart Attack" (4 / 5) - 2. "Picturesque" - 3. "Karma Climb" - 4. "Kiss" - 6. "Strawberry Lemonade" - 7. "Vibe" - 8. "Educate"

7th studio album by Editors follows 4½ years after Violence (Mar. 2018), an album that lacked some of the coherency they showed on The Weight of Your Love from 2013. Since their sixth album Benjamin John Power has become a new member, and he is heard all over an album that fixates the band on an electronic path. Power is also known as Blank Mass and that's also how he's credited here. The album title thus refering to 'Editors Blanck Mass'. Powers played a vital part on the predecessor but the band didn't find the way to utilise Powers' contributions back then and instead ended up with tracks pointing here and there and with an album that seemed unfocused. One year after the release of Violence Editors released The Blanck Mass Sessions containing the initial recordings by Blanck Mass, which led to the album versions, and those early recordings contain some ideas that were ultimately lost on the final album. You could argue they were stronger electronically-founded, which only reflect how the band had to digest the input from Power before realising that he actually laid out a new musical direction for the band to follow.
With Banck Mass aboard Editors comes out as a revitalised band. They make the songs by Tom Smith work on top of an electronic base that gives room for bass and synths and the result is surprisingly good. Blanck Mass is noticeable all over the album, but together they are in positive synergy.
Undoubtedly, this new electronic style will challenge some of the old post-punk revivalists, and although I really enjoyed their initial albums, I like this new constellation!
[ allmusic.com, Record Collector 4 / 5 stars ]

15 August 2022

Marie Key "Lys finale" (2022)

Lys finale
release date: Feb. 11, 2022
format: digital (10 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,78]
producer: Bremer / McCoy
label: Sony Music - nationality: Denmark

Track highlights: 1. "Vinter" - 2. "Tænk" - 5. "Lys finale" (4 / 5) - 6. "Stille måne" - 7. "Verden" - 10. "Festen"

6th studio album by Marie Key following the album Marie Key (2020) saw Key in an attempt to take up the success from her first three solo albums with producer Andreas 'Maskinen' Sommer, and although the album produced a small single hit with "True Love", the album wasn't part of top-40.
Lys finale is easily her most quiet album to date. It's produced by contemporary Danish jazz-duo Bremer / McCoy (bassist Jonathan Bremer and pianist Morten McCoy), and all tracks are co-composed and arranged by the duo, and the end-result is far from the art pop and synthpop-fused predecessors. Stylewise, this might go as indie pop with a strong touch of jazz pop, and most tracks have near minimalist arrangements where bass and a delicate keyboard often are only instruments backing Key's vocal, which is accentuated strongly.
A first listen had me think it was daring and far from expected but I quickly found it a quite strong release. It's not filled with hit material or sing-a-long choruses, and it's primarily the most stripped down songs that work the best - and it's Key's delicate narration that really lifts the album, which then also calls for a native audience, as all songs are in Danish.
This is imho, Key's second best album to date and thus highly recommended.
[ Berlingske 5 / 6, Politiken 3 / 6 stars ]

14 August 2022

Blanck Mass "Ted K (Original Score)" (OST) (2022)

Ted K (Original Score) (soundtrack)
release date: Mar. 18, 2022
format: digital (19 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,64]
producer: Blanck Mass
label: Sacred Bones Records - nationality: England, UK

Track highlights: 2. "Montana (Main Theme)" - 5. "Revenge" - 7. "Greyhound"

Soundtrack album by Blanck Mass following the release of the live album Mind Killer (May 2021, transmissioned Apr. 2020 during the COVID19-lockdown) and the studio album In Ferneaux (Feb. 2021). The album (issued via the label's bandcamp profile) shares title with the Tony Scott film about the actual Unabomber (sic) Ted Kaczynski, and it's the second full-length soundtrack album credited Blanck Mass, who first scored Nick Rowland’s acclaimed Calm With Horses (OST) from 2020.
The soundtrack here is yet another fascinating work by Benjamin John Power, who simply seems to continously expand musical barriers whenever he produces a new album - be it as solo artist, as new central member of alt. rock act Editors, or when setting the tone for a full-length feature film. The album doesn't provide us with a long list of single hits, but works as a whole. Blanck Mass displays a nice balance of various intense sensations between good and evil - there's always an underlying current of something intruiging, something luring, and various amounts of... desperation.
Ted K (Original Score) works nicely on its own terms and only makes you interested in seing Tony Scott's film.
Recommended.

24 June 2022

Kalaha "Hahaha" (2014) (live)

Hahaha
(live) [debut]
release date: Sep. 1, 2014
format: digital (9 x File, FLAC) (RUMPLP016)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,52]
producer: Troels Bech Jessen (sound engineer)
label: Rump Recordings - nationality: Denmark

Tracklist: 1. "Spejderrobot" - 2. "Allahabad" - 3. "Assymetriader" - 4. "K-Sounds" - 5. "Ellas Drager" - 6. "Amar" - 7. "Klap" - 8. "Amnesia" - 9. "Atacama"

Debut album by Danish electronic experimental quartet Kalaha is the live recordings stemming from Red Roof Jam, at the rooftop of DGI Byen, Copenhagen at STRØM [Festival], on Aug. 15, 2013. Kalaha is a colourful act made up by the two, primarily, jazz instrumentalists, drummer Emil De Waal and guitarist Niclas Knudsen [here nicknamed 'Ibrahim Electric') together with the two electronic musicians Rumpistol (aka Jens Berent Cristiansen) and Spejderrobot (aka Michael Elkjær). Together, they explore a combo of jazz and electronica with obvious inspiration from world music and afro beat, and on this debut, they showcase their talent for improvs based on music stemming from each of the members own back catalogue.
Giving the musicians' various starting points and the fact that these compositions are all improvs, Hahaha works surprisingly well - basically showcasing how musical talent will perservere regardless the form, and then of course: both jazz and electronica are genres that include an experimental approach per se.
Kalaha would later release the actual studio album debut Masala in 2016 and the band is definitely worth checking out with Hahaha standing as a promising start that later would be consolidated with a series of studio releases. Mystafa (Mar. 2021) appears to be their most recent album.


20 May 2022

Trentemøller "Memoria" (2022)

Memoria
release date: Feb. 11, 2022
format: digital (14 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,82]
producer: Anders Trentemøller
label: In My Room - nationality: Denmark


6th studio album from Anders Trentemøller follows 2½ years after the fine Obverse (Sep. 2019) and the album has been launched by a series of official videoes - firstly by "In the Gloaming" and later by "All Too Soon", "Dead or Alive", "No More Kissing in the Rain", and "Like a Daydream".
The album is highlighted via its melodic universe, although, the album is quite untraditional from the hands of Trentemøller as a predominantly vocal-founded album. Stylewise, it's more predictable situated in the outskirts of the 80s and 90s nostalgia linked with his very own electronic homeland. Memoria is the sound of shoegaze / dreampop à la Slowdive and Mazzy Star with drops of Robert Smith (The Cure) guitarwork as heard on the Disintegration-era mixed with Robin Guthrie (Cocteau Twins) reverb, and in this manner he sort of continues where Obverse ended, and simultaneously he applies something new. The big difference is that the 2019-release appeared more introspective and closed on progressive instrumental variations, whereas Memoria lurks on the verge of darkness - at times jumpping straight out into the daylight floating away on light tones of Robin Guthrie-inspired loops. And just that may be the newest 'trend' from Mr. Trentemøller - that instead of finding inspiration from the murky corners of the post-punk-era, he now adds a synthpop-soundscape from other areas and by doing so, he also creates a distinct cocktail of his own. On this, Trentemøller has made use of the two Danish guitarists Silas Tinglef and Lisbet Fritze, with the latter also featuring on vocal. The end product is a more coherent collection of compositions compared to what Trentemøller normally ends up with. It's a new touch with which he combines a pervasive flair for micro house and synthwave that ultimately displays his so far best studio album to date.
Highly recommended.
[ Gaffa.dk, musicOMH, PopMatters 4 / 5 stars ]

12 March 2022

Jon Hopkins "Music for Psychedelic Therapy" (2021)


Music for Psychedelic Therapy
release date: Nov. 12, 2021
format: digital (9 x File, FLAC) (WIG458D)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,86]
producer: Jon Hopkins
label: Domino - nationality: England, UK

Tracklist: 1. "Welcome" (feat. 7RAYS) - 2. "Tayos Caves, Ecuador i" - 3. "Tayos Caves, Ecuador ii" - 4. "Tayos Caves, Ecuador iii" - 5. "Love Flows Over Us in Prismatic Waves" - 6. "Deep in the Glowing Heart" - 7. "Ascending, Dawn Sky" (feat. 7RAYS) - 8. "Arriving" (feat. 7RAYS) - 9. "Sit Around the Fire" (feat. Ram Dass & East Forest)

6th studio album by Jon Hopkins following 3½ years after Singularity (May 2018). The album contains nine tracks with a total running time exceeding 63 minutes, and it contains collaborations with 7RAYS, East Forest, and it builds on teachings (and the voice of) the late Ram Dass. Bearing in mind that East Forest is the alias for American electronic ambient artist Trevor Oswalt, who experiments with music for 'inner voyages', and that the late Ram Dass (aka Richard Alpert) was an American spiritual teacher and yoga guru, you may get the picture of this album, which also happens to come out after a pandemic and extensive lockdowns.
Where his 2013 breakthrough album showed everyone he was a master of progressive dance-oriented break grooves, his 2018 album proved to be a trip into deep space, this new one is again something entirely different. It's still an electronic release, but other than being instrumentally founded it's another kind of journey we're invited on. Singularity had some ambient feel to it, and that trend goes more full blown with this- and when comparing to his 2013 album, it mostly leaves you with the impression of being made by a different artist. The title Music for Psychedelic Therapy literally says everything you need to know. The music here is meant for what it proclaims. Hopkins has taken his fascination for transcendal meditation and mindfulness into his work in a new way, and the album comes out as an instrument, or a manifestation for inner journeys.
I normally don't fancy ambient or trance that much, and that's to put it nicely, but this deserves anyone's attention. It's hard to pin out highlights as the whole album is like one organism. I can only imagine how powerful it would be submerged into this while meditating. I think, I need to give it a try. The album may be his closest to some of the ideas behind Eno's music, but this is just so much better.
Highly recommended.
[ allmusic.com 3,5 / 5, Pitchfork 7,4 / 10, Mojo, 👍PopMatters 4 / 5, Clash, Exclaim! 4,5 / 5, 👎The Guardian 3 / 5 stars ]

18 February 2022

Lisa Gerrard & Jules Maxwell "Burn" (2021)

Burn
release date: May 7, 2021
format: digital (7 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [4,04]
producer: James Chapman
label: Atlantic Curve - nationality: Australia / Northern Ireland, UK


Collaborative project between Australian Lisa Gerrard and Northern Irishman Jules Maxwell, with the latter acting as live keyboardist on several occasions in Gerrard and Brendan Perry's duo project Dead Can Dance after their reformation in 2012. The album has a duration of only 35 minutes and consists of seven compositions with running lengths from four to six minutes. Gerrard alone is credited five tracks, while two tracks (#2 and #3) are composed by Gerrard and Maxwell in collaboration.
Musically, it's neo-classical with influence from darkwave, world music, and with hints from electronica, just as it has been the case with other works by Gerrard, e.g. The Silver Tree (2006) and which has charachterised releases by Dead Can Dance. Burn is, however, something else. The rhythm sections are shaped solely by programming or by bass and synth-bass with Gerrard singing on all tracks in an unknown or indistinct language - her very own metaphysical language, where her voice only functions on an instrumental level. That said, it's quite a sonorous, distinctive, and powerful instrument Gerrard possesses. She blends her alto voice beautifully in and out of progressive rhythmic loops and occasionally swings her vocal up into higher spheres clothed in mysticism of the East and sometimes with a well-developed technique taken from the scene of opera. Multi-instrumentalist Jules Maxwell adds rhythm, electronics, synth-bass, and grandiosity in appropriate measure and otherwise lets the music unfold in beautiful harmony with Gerrard as guiding instrumentalist.
It's original, beautiful, unpretentious, and yet wide-ranging. Since the early eighties, Gerrard has been responsible for strong original releases with Dead Can Dance - together with Hans Zimmer, she created the musical counterpart to the cinematic side of "Gladiator" (2000), and she has generally become an acclaimed soundtrack composer for a long series of films starting with soundtracks under the name Dead Can Dance back in '89 for the film "El niño de la luna" (aka "Moon Child" - not released as a soundtrack until 2019). They gained more recognition with their music for Ron Fricke's remarkable "Baraka" (1992), after which they released several soundtracks. As soloist, Gerrard first collaborated with Pieter Bourke on the music for "The Insider" by Michael Mann in 1999, and most recently in 2017 she and Peter Orr stood behind the soundtrack to "2:22" by Paul Currie. Gerrard has been nominated for dozens of international awards and she has received around 10 major awards for her work as a composer.
Burn is a certified gem of an album that should find wider recognition. Highly recommended!
[ Gaffa.dk 5 / 6 stars ]

2021 Favourite releases: 1. Mogwai As the Love Continues - 2. Thåström Dom som skiner - 3. Lisa Gerrard &
Jules Maxwell Burn