Pluie/Noir Interscapes 03
“Plant.æ”
Sound Mixed and Compiled by Shōen 荘園
Visual Interpretation by Max Binski
Soundcloud Link: https://soundcloud.com/pluie-noir/pluienoirinterscapes03
Welcome to the new Pluie/Noir podcast series, Interscapes. 8 years after our debut we decided to press the reboot button and return to our roots. With a new format and back to a regular monthly schedule, Pluie/Noir Interscapes will feature audio collages, mixes, live interviews and live recordings from P/N artists, friends, and other collectives we admire.
Because less is more, instead of the usual triptych format, this series will feature one single visual interpretation of the music by a graphic artist. The artwork will be available to purchase in poster format on our rebooted Bandcamp page very soon, with cassettes or CD-r of the mixes as a bonus.
For Interscapes 03 we welcome Shōen 荘園, the very talented French artist behind the upcoming album on PNEM04, with a visual interpretation by in-house designer & head honcho, Max Binski.
— Interview: Shōen 荘園
Hi Samy, such a pleasure to have you at P/N. How have you been?
I’m good. It’s nice to finally get out of quarantine and enjoy the beach, even though I did somehow enjoy this period due to the nice and calm atmosphere it provided me: it was nice the hear the birds singing for once, and I spent more time on digging music, creating and talking with the people that I love.
What is Shōen about?
Shoen was initially a joint project together with my mate Pazu, but he recently left the project so he could focus on both his law studies and his main music output, which is mostly dancefloor-oriented.
We choose this name for its meaning in Japanese. We thought that the deeds of ownership for the plots and the classification of agricultural land were a beautiful metaphor for music nowadays.
Is ambient music your main focus? Why?
In my opinion, its the perfect music style. There's an enormous feeling of freedom, and I feel it especially when DJ'ing ambient music: there's no bpm, just an overall tone to respect, and it's the best feeling in the world. But on the other hand, there's also less room for improvisation and demands mixes to be prepared extremely well.
Production-wise, creating ambient and experimental music is very different from producing something like micro-house (something I used to do a few years ago). Here this feeling of freedom is a bit harder to manage, especially when you want to reach specific results.
Locking a certain feeling to a loop is the easiest way to finish a track, but to achieve something nice,
arrangement and mixing require a lot of my attention. It's a totally different challenge. But there's also some degree of self-induced artistic pressure, taking into consideration how old this music style actually is and how many excellent musicians have and are exploring this genre, backed up by copious amounts of music theory knowledge. It keeps me humble, and constantly realizing that I still have a lot of hard work to do, every day.
Very cool DJs and producers surfaced over the past years. Huerco S, DJ Special Guest, Tau Contrib and Ulla Strauss come to mind. I think they are the future of the genre, showing the world that something extremely interesting is happening in the ambient scene.
You think the growing interest in ambient music is a natural response to the sociopolitical chaos we live in?
To be honest, I'm not really aware of how much the ambient music scene is growing because I'm totally lost in it. I'm not even sure how it was before, so my terms of comparison are low. But I do think people who have spent long periods in clubs and want to find something other than "boom boom" can find something soothing and contemplative in ambient.
Everybody is different. I know a lot of young people interested in ambient music because of its psychedelic and calm nature. I think everybody has a very specific relationship with this kind of music because it's not something you can hear everywhere. You do need to make your own research, find artists and labels on your own, explore the scene and see what agrees with your body, mind and soul. I secretly hope this music style will grow exponentially, as listening to it in a festival is a remarkably pleasant experience.
You are PNEM’s next release. What can you tell us about its creation, from the gear used to your narrative choices?
I arranged and produced this album in one week, and I think it was right when I was about to complete my modular rack at the time. My rack has already changed quite a bit since then so I don't really remember what I used for the album, but I did a lot of recordings with the modular. And the organelle!
I usually record a lot of stuff before doing arrangements. I'm recordings like, every day, maybe for a month. Then I dig into all of my samples and recordings and choose what I want to work with. There's definitely a lot of production and post-production on the computer: days of sampling and re-sampling.
Regarding musical narration itself, I have a particular focus. I mostly work instinctively, without pressure. I wanted to make an album and not "just one more song", so I had to dig into every facet of my personality, from the darkest to the brightest. I think you will hear this on the album.
Why, when and how did you record this podcast?
I recorded this mix one year ago, without any particular purpose. I had just found some tracks I thought could go along together in an interesting way. After a long meditation session, I felt ready and just recorded. I remember it was a hot summer afternoon so I had to open the windows and at some points, birds came to listen and sing over the mix. It was really a beautiful afternoon.
You’re a hypnotherapist, how does this entangle with ambient music and it’s psychological effects?
Music is a vehicle for feelings and emotion, it also reflects on the energy fields that make your body feel certain things. These reflections are stronger on Tibetan bowls for example, but you can feel them on any music style. That’s what generates the so-called "goosebumps" effect when a song resonates with you.
This is a really complex question. I think I will answer it in more detail in an article for Rings of Neptune.
Short, medium and long term goals?
Collaborate and meet people involved in ambient and experimental music. Organise an ambient rave. I will continue to invite more DJs to my ambient experimental radio show called Cosmic Connexion. In the long term, Cosmic Connexion records should be born.
I will keep on meditating, and build my house in Aubrac which is a great area in France. Google it. And I'll keep producing every day of course, and release a new album, experiment further.
— Interview: Max Binski (aka Cleymoore)
Coming soon, as part of “The Chronicles of the Five Senses”, an immersive interview series curated by Rings of Neptune.
— Links:
https://soundcloud.com/shoenmusic
https://www.maxbinski.com
W: https://pluienoir.tumblr.com
M: info (at) pluienoir.com
0 notes
2020 Year In Review
This year once again I invited some friends and colleagues to reflect on 2020
JG Thirlwell
Composer
Foetus Xordox Manorexia Steroid Maximus Venture Bros Archer
www.foetus.org
2020 was a troubling and disturbing year.
I created a lot of music and experienced a lot of nights waking at 5am in a panic.
I deeply missed the sacred experience of being able to see live music.
In its absence of that I listened to a lot of music.
It was difficult to whittle down this list but here are a lot of albums I enjoyed in 2020, in no particular order.
Le Grand Sbam Furvent (Dur Et Doux)
John Elmquist’s HardArt Group I Own an Ion (900 Nurses)
Roly Porter Kistvaen (Subtext)
Liturgy Origin Of The Alimonies (YLYLCYN)
Clark Kiri Variations (Throttle)
Dai Kaht Dai Kaht I & II (Soleil Zeuhl)
Chromb Le livre des merveilles (Dur Et Doux)
Horse Lords The Common Task (Northern Spy)
Ecker & Meultzer Carbon (Subtext)
Insane Warrior Tendrils (RJ’s Electrical Connections)
Jeff Parker Suite For Max Brown (International Anthem)
Jacob Kirkegaard Opus Mors (Topos)
Tristan Perich Drift Multiply (Nonesuch)
Bec Plexus Sticklip (New Amsterdam)
Vak Budo (Soleil Zeuhl)
Merlin Nova BOO! (Bandcamp)
The The Muscle OST (Cineola)
Zombi 2020 (Relapse)
Regis Hidden In This Is The Light That You Miss (Downwards)
Rival Consoles Articulation (Erased Tapes)
Sarah Davachi Cantus, Descant (L.A.T.E.)
Sufjan Stevens The Ascension (Asthmatic Kitty)
Idles Ultra Mono (Partisan)
Daedelus The Bittereindeers (Brainfeeder)
Boris No (Bandcamp)
Aksak Maboul Figures / Un peu de l’ame des bandits / Onze Danses Pour Cobattre La Migraine (Crammed)
Noveller Arrow (Ba Da Bing)
Felicia Atkinson Everything Evaporate (Shelter Press)
Ital Tek Dream Boundary (Planet Mu)
Author and Punisher Beastland (Relapse)
Sparks A Steady Drip Drip Drip (BMG)
Corima Amatarasu (Soleil Zeuhl)
Code Orange Underneath (Roadrunner)
Deerhoof Future Teenage Cave Artists /Silly Symphonies / To Be Surrounded../ Love Lore(Joyful Noise)
Sote Moscels (Opal Tapes)
Run The Jewels RTJ4 (Jewel Runners)
Oranssi Pazuzu Mestarin Kynsi (Nuclear Blast)
Master Boot Record Floppy Disk Overdrive (Metal Blade)
Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith The Mosaic Of Transformation (Ghostly International) / Ears (Western Vinyl)
Michael Gordon Acquanetta (Cantelope)
Neom Arkana Temporis (Soleil Zeuhl)
Rian Treanor Ataxia / File Under UK Metaplasm (Planet Mu)
Helm Saturnalia (Alter)
Ivvvo doG (Halcyon Veil)
Robert Normandeau Figures (Empreintes Digitales)
Ben Vida Reducing The Tempo To Zero (Shelter Press)
Beatrice Dillon Workaround (Pan)
Dan Deacon Mystic Familiar (Domino)
Sea Oleena Weaving A Basket (Higher Plain Music)
Elysian Fields Transience Of Life (Ojet)
Rhapsody Symphony Of Enchanted Lands II - The Dark Secret (Magic Circle)
Duma Duma (Nyege Nyege)
Ulla Strauss Tumbling Towards a Wall / Seed (Bandcamp)
Honorable mentions
Carl Stone Stolen Car (Unseen Worlds) Nazar Guerilla (Hyperdub) Iwo Zaluski with the Children of Park Lane Primary School, Wembley The Remarkable Earth Making Machine (Trunk) Nahash Flowers Of The Revolution (SVBKVLT) Cindy Lee Whats Tonight To Eternity (Bandcamp) Insect Ark The Vanishing (Profound Lore) 33EMYBW Arthropods (SVBKVLT) Declan McKenna Zeroes (Tomplicated) Layma Azur Zeii (Bandcamp)
FILM TV
Succession
ZeroZeroZero
Escape at Dannemora
1917
Small Axe : Five films by Steve McQueen
Pirhanas
Monos
The Hater
Better Call Saul
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Drew Daniel
Matmos, The Soft Pink Truth
an alphabet of 2020 recordings
Arca “KiCk i”
BFTT “Intrusive / Obtrusive”
clipping. “Visions of Bodies Being Burned”
Duma “Duma”
Eilbacher, Max “Metabolist Meter (Foster, Cottin, Caetani and a Fly)”
Forbidden Colors “La Yeguada”
GILA “Energy Demonstration”
HiedraH Club de Baile “Bichote-K Bailable Vol. 2”
Ian Power “Maintenance Hums”
Jeff Carey “Index[off]”
Kassel Jaeger “Meith”
Laurie Anderson “Songs From the Bardo”
Mukqs “Water Levels”
Negativland “The World Will Decide”
O’Rourke, Jim “Shutting Down Here”
Perlesvaus “These Things Below with Those Above”
Quicksails “Blue Rise”
Rian Treanor “File Under UK Metaplasm”
Slikback “///”
Terminal Nation “Holocene Extinction”
Ulcerate “Stare Into Death and Be Still”
Various Artists “HAUS of ALTR”
William Tyler “New Vanitas”
Xyla “Ways”
Y A S H A “Summations”
:zoviet-france: “Châsse 2ᵉ”
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Sarah Lipstate (Noveller)
With all live performances canceled, this was truly the year of demo videos and home studio recording for me. These are 10 pieces of gear that came out in 2020 that helped keep me feeling creative and inspired during lockdown. In no particular order:
EHX Oceans 12 Dual Stereo Reverb - The Oceans 12 ticks all the boxes for what I’m looking for in a great soundscaping reverb. I used the Shimmer and Reverse algorithms in conjunction a lot when I was composing music for a film score.
Chase Bliss Audio Blooper - While I don’t actually own a Blooper, I had the pleasure of borrowing one from Mike of Baranik Guitars after NAMM this year. He made an incredible Blooper-inspired guitar and I was completely charmed by them both. Chase Bliss always delivers pedals that push me creatively and the Blooper truly hits the mark.
Cooper FX Arcades - I love everything Cooper FX has released to-date so the opportunity to access those sounds in one pedal via plug-in cartridges is just awesome.
SolidGoldFX NU-33 - I was asked to do a demo of this pedal for its release and ended up being really charmed by this box’s approach to lo-fi nostalgia. I’ve used it a lot for film scoring and highly recommend adding it to your collection.
Demedash Effects T-120 DLX V2 - I LOVE a good tape echo and the T-120 Deluxe V2 ranks up there with the best I’ve tried. This pedal made its way to me this Christmas and I look forward to making some beautiful sounds with it in the new year.
Hologram Electronics Microcosm - The Microcosm is one of those pedals where you should fully read the manual before diving in but once you put in that initial effort you’ve got a massively powerful tool on your hands. It does glitch like no other. Definitely worth the homework
Azzam Bells MP019 - I discovered this unique instrument through a post on Reverb’s IG page and immediately looked it up and ordered one. These experimental percussion instruments are hand-made in Italy and they’re as beautiful visually as they are sonically. I used it for bowed cymbal and daxophone sounds on a film score and it was absolutely haunting.
Echopark Dual Harmonic Boost 2 - I love the control you have over dialing in the perfect amount of grit with these dual boost circuits. I use it a lot as a textural tool when I’m laying down drones or bringing in big distorted swells. It’s one of the most versatile overdrives in my collection and I love that.
Fender Parallel Universe Series Volume II Maverick Dorado - I was smitten with the Maverick Dorado when I first saw it at NAMM. It has a lot of the specs that I look for in a guitar and the body shape with the Mystic Pine finish just blew me away. I hope that I get to use it live soon.
Polyeffects Beebo - The Beebo is one of those pedals that I genuinely feel is smarter than I am. It’s like an entire computer in one small touchscreen box. I can’t claim to have mastered using it yet but the sounds that I have managed to get out of it so far have been brilliant. I’m looking forward to spending more time with this box in 2021
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HELM 2020 REVIEW
Let's get the bad stuff out the way first, 2020 was undoubtedly an awful year. I'm still not sure how to really respond to seeing a global pandemic bring the capital to its knees and everything I love and hold dear to a grinding halt. Our government fucked it's response, putting profit before people and killing tens of thousands. The Labour Party descended into farce with the newly elected leader Sir Keith revealing himself as a bland centrist with no opposition or ideas. On a personal level it sucked not being able to travel or see my friends in different parts of the world - or even the same country - who I am starting to miss a lot. However, I was fortunate enough to get through the year with my sanity intact. Music, art and culture once again being my main positive. I think I listened to more music than I have in any year ever. I read more books than I have done since I was a teenager probably. I also re-discovered the joys of walking long distances and am extremely thankful for living near a lot of incredible green spaces: Epping Forest, Walthamstow Wetlands, Walthamstow Marshes, Wanstead Park, Wanstead Flats...
Music. My favourite albums of the year.
Oranssi Pazuzu - Mestarin kynsi
Wetware - Flail
Raspberry Bulbs - Before The Age Of Mirrors
Necrot - Mortal
Rope Sect - The Great Flood
Private World - Aleph
Oneohtrix Point Never - Magic Oneohtrix Point Never
Pyrrhon - Abcess Time
CS+Kreme - Snoopy
Speaker Music - Black Nationalist Sonic Weaponry
Drew McDowall - Agalma
Regis - Hidden In This Is The Light That You Miss
Nazar - Guerilla
Zoviet France - Russian Heterodoxical Songs (and all the ZF reissues!!)
Triple Negative - God Bless the Death Drive
Permission - Organised People Suffer
Actress - Karma & Desire
Acolytes - Stress II
The Gerogerigegege - >(decrescendo)
Chubby & The Gang - Speed Kills
Flora Yin-Wong - Holy Palm
Eiko Ishibashi - Hyakki Yagyo
The The - See Without Being Seen
Prurient - Casablanca Flamethrower
Henning Christiansen - L’essere Umano Errabando La Voce Errabando
Subdued - Over The Hills And Far Away
Rian Treanor - File Under UK Metaplasm
Komare - The Sense Of Hearing
Shredded Nerve - Acts Of Betrayal
Jesu - Terminus
Autechre - SIGN
Hey Colossus - Dances / Curses
Sparkle Division - To Feel Embraced
Mark Harwood - A Perfect Punctual Paradise Under My Own Name
Still House Plants - Fast Edit
The Bug & Dis Fig - In Blue
Kommand - Terrorscape
Haus Arafna - Asche
Khthoniik Cerviiks - Æequiizoiikum
Worm - Gloomlord
Kraus - A Golden Brain
Faceless Burial - Speciation
A shout-out to Jon Abby's AMPLIFY series on Bandcamp / Facebook, which I contributed a new piece of music to.
A shout out to the labels where most of the music I listened to seemed to come from:
The Trilogy Tapes
Iron Bonehead
Penultimate Press
Dais
La Vida Es Un Mus
Gigs. Despite live music being destroyed in 2020 I still saw a few unforgettable performances at the beginning of the year.
Graham Lambkin @ The ICA, London
Puce Mary / JFK @ The Glove That Fits, London
Demilich @ Finnfest, The Garage, London
Container / PC World / National Unrest @ Venue MOT, London
S.H.I.T / Asid / Chubby & The Gang @ Static Shock Festival, ExFed, London
Books I enjoyed. Most not published this year, but all read in 2020.
Joe Kennedy - Authentocrats
David Balzer - Curationism
Tom Mills - BBC: The Myth Of A Public Service
Simon Morris - Consumer Guide: Special Edition
Luke Turner - Out Of The Woods
Various - Bad News For Labour
Mike Wendling - Alt-Right
Baited Area issues 1 & 2.
Film. Three good films I saw this year which I hadn't before.
Suspiria (Remake)
Midsommar
Cannibal Holocaust
Podcasts. I listened to a lot of these whilst walking.
We Don't Talk About The Weather
Novara Media Tysky Sour & Novara FM
Grounded with Louis Theroux
System of Systems
Red Scare loveline episodes
Suite 212
NOISEXTRA
Social Discipline
CONTAIN
TV.
Didn't watch a huge amount and what I did was mostly trash. For some reason I rewatched both series' of This Life, a British drama from the late 90's about a group of young professionals house sharing and navigating their careers. Very cringey and has aged terribly, but it was perversely fascinating to revisit something from that time in the age of the pandemic. Following on from this I binge watched the entire series of Industry which was entertaining enough. A programme about a bunch of horny bankers with what felt like a confused ideology behind it. It seemed stuck between trying to criticise and glorify the culture around the industry, but also protect the industry itself from outside criticism by portraying anyone who may oppose as an insufferable wanker. Currently halfway through Succession which is OK. The Murdoch documentaries on the BBC were excellent and a rare respite from their descent into client journalism.
Thanks to anyone who listened to my music this year also. Best wishes to you all for 2021.
Luke Younger
http://hhelmm.com | http://alter.bandcamp.com
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Elliott Sharp
composer
1. My Nr. 1 lesson: patience. Whether it's bouncing through 30 seconds of severe turbulence at 39000 feet or slogging through 30 minutes of a interminable piece of concert music, one attribute I've tried to develop is the ability to see past the discrete and awaited ending, the exact framing of the immediate process, but put it into the context of a larger time frame. I've found that this year more than all others has demanded it. Breathing helps...
2. Books: revisiting old favorites from the realm of Thomas Pynchon and Philip K. Dick (both especially relevant), digging into John Lomax's portrait of Jelly Roll Morton, the works of Colson Whitehead, random things off of the shelf…
3. Composing: with touring off the table, I focused on that which needed to be written, some requested and commissioned, some spontaneously springing forth. Composing requires that one open the windows wide to the world, which at this moment brought in grief, terror, uncertainty, anxiety, visions of plague and pestilence and incipient fascism. Okay, now shut the window and get to work! How to process, translate, transform? The work can be a comfortable and obsessive cocoon once one learns to handle the radioactive materials and put them into the creativity reactor.
4. Beans! We have long been a fan in our house of the wide world of legumes but this year brought two stars to the front: the black bean and the red lentil. The black bean commands the lofty peaks but the seemingly infinite variations of dal surround it. Ginger, garlic, turmeric, smoked paprika, cayenne, onions, and olive oil form the basis then imagination builds.
5. Online teaching substituted for my canceled conduction of workshops in the Pyrenees Mountains of France. Between the participants and myself, we built a temporary but very congenial space online to share concepts and music. In addition, private lessons brought conversation and music with new friends in Germany, Italy, California, Australia, Illinois, Denmark, Pennsylvania, Spain, Florida, Brazil.
6. What started out as "stress baking" (before I even had heard of the term) soon became a frequent practice that yielded very edible results. The twins preferred the sweeter forays into banana bread and chocolate cake. I tried to find a balance between tried-and-true techniques and experiments in texture and taste with yeasted pumpernickels, multi-grains, and seed breads.
7. While not the same as performing 'live ', online gigs proved that it was possible to generate a surprising amount of adrenaline even without the pheromonal handshaking of a room filled with receptive ears. As a corollary, online recording collaborations with friends worldwide proved to be inspiring and a suitable substrate for sonic experimentation, exploration of new instruments, tunings, effects programming, structures. In these realms, shout-outs to Helene Breschand, Mike Cooper, Henry Kaiser, Tracie Morris, Mikel Banks, Dougie Bowne, Payton McDonald, Billy Martin, Colin Stetson, Jim O'Rourke, Scott Amendola, Roberto Zorzi, Jason Hoopes, Eric Mingus, Melanie Dyer, Dave Hofstra, Don McKenzie, Sergio Sorrentino, Veniero Rizzardi, Taylor Ho Bynum, Scott Fields, Bachir Attar, Karl Bruckmaier, Robbie Lee, Matthew Evan Taylor, Matteo Liberatore, Al Kaatz, David Barratt, Jessica Hallock, Kolin Zeinikov, Robbie Lee, Jeremy Nesse, James Ilgenfritz, Sergio Armaroli, Steve Piccolo, Sandy Ewen, David Weinstein, Jim Whittemore, Chris Vine, Werner Puntigam, William Schimmel.
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Daniel O’Sullivan
(Grumbling Fur, Guapo, Miasma & the Carousel of Headless Horses, Ulver, Sunn O))), Æthenor, Laniakea, Miracle, Mothlite, and This Is Not This Heat.)
Music
Richard Youngs - Ein Klein Nein
Alabaster DePlume - Instrumentals
Hildegard von Bingen - O Nobilissima Viriditas
Francisco de Penalosa - Missa Ave Maria Peregrina
Carlo Gesualdo - Responsoria 1611
Dirty Projectors - Five EPs
Sonic Boom - All Things Being Equal
Brother Peter Broderick - Blackberry
Richard Horowitz - Eros Of Arabia
Duncan Trussell Family Hour
Cocteau Twins in the bath
Books/comics
Alexander Tucker - Entity Reunion II
Derek Jarman - Chroma
Stephen Harrod Buhner - Plant Intelligence and the Imaginal Realm
The Penguin Book Of Irish Poetry - edited by Patrick Crotty
The Gospel Of Ramakrishna - translated by Swami Nikhilananda
Lucretius - De Rerum Natura
Plotinus - Enneads
Ram Dass - Grist For The Mill
Lisa Brown - Phantom Twin
Other
Fasting / meditation / macrodosing
Walks in freshly coppiced woodland (for the smell mainly).
Plants / Foraging / Growing
Traditional ferments
Douglas Sirk movies
Mandolorian
Writing songs on the piano
Rediscovery of Kenneth Graham via my kids
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Karl O’Connor (Regis)
01.Wolfgang Press - Unremembered, Remembered
02. Klara Lewis - Ingrid Live at Fylkingen
03. Jesu - Terminus
04. Dave Ball - Leeds Poly Demos 1979
05. Edwin Pouncey - Rated Sav X (the Savage Pencil Skratchbook)
06. The Bug - In Blue
07. New Order - Power,Corruption and Lies ( Writing Sessions )
08. JG Thirlwell and Simon Steensland - Oscillospira
09. FM Einheit and Andreas Ammer - Hammerschlag
10. Thurston Moore - By The Fire
11. Body Stuff - Body Stuff 3
12. Ann M Hogan - Honeysuckle Burials
13. Rob Halford - Confess (Autobiography)
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Caleb Braaten (Sacred Bones Records)
Shirley Collins Hearts Ease
Dehd Flowers Of Devotion
Duma Duma
Bob Dylan Rough and Rowdy Ways
Green-House Six Songs for Invisible Gardens
John Jeffery Passage
Drew McDowall Agalma
Sweeping Promises Hunger For a Way Out
Colter Wall Western Swing & Waltzes and Other Punchy Songs
Woods Strange to Explain
My Favorite 90’s Nostalgia Movie Rewatches
Colors
Ghost Dog
Menace II Society
The Player
Rounders
Safe
Starship Troopers
Trees Lounge
Vampires
Waiting For Guffman
Most Culturally Bankrupt Year : 1997
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Charlie Looker
(composer, Psalm Zero, Extra Life, Seaven Teares)
Ten Things That Didn’t Happen in 2020
1. I didn’t write a ton of new music. Don’t get me wrong, I wrote some. I always do. But mostly I focused on my new YouTube channel, essays, and on getting old recordings released. I haven’t even been working a day-job so I thought I was going to write my next Ring Cycle, but I really didn’t find Covid inspiring.
2. Trump wasn’t re-elected. Cool.
3. I didn’t lose anyone to Covid. I am, of course, profoundly grateful for this. But I feel pretty embarrassed remembering group-texting ten friends in March, “We are all going to see a loved one die. Every single one of us. Don’t kid yourselves”. I can get hysterical, and that was somewhat irresponsible of me.
4. No revolution happened. I don’t mean to be smug or cynical, or to belittle anyone’s participation in the protests. But, as far as I can tell, nothing happened in 2020 that promises to reduce police brutality or human suffering of any kind. We’ll see. That burning Minneapolis police station was exciting to watch at the time, if only on an aesthetic level.
5. I have a stack of unread books I bought this year, just staring at me, with nary a crease among them. These include:
Adorno and Horkheimer, The Dialectic of Enlightenment (looks amazing, but I haven’t touched it)
Marx, Grundrisse (it’s 1000 pages for fuck’s sake. Amazon also accidentally sent me two copies, and its double presence in the stack is just comical)
Reza Negarestani, Intelligence and Spirit (the first 15 pages blew my mind, then my mind blew it off)
6. I didn’t settle into living in LA. I moved here six months before Covid and I was just starting to cultivate some friendships and play shows. This was quashed and I still feel like I still live in New York. I still barely know the layout of the city here.
7. No brand-new buzzy musical artists burst onto the scene, that I can recall. No new hyped micro-genre of the moment. There was just no way for there to be a hot new trend. I’d say that was refreshing, but it wasn’t.
8. Tyson’s return was not awesome. Two minute rounds, ended in a draw. I’ve been getting way into boxing this past year. This fight was a bummer. I’m looking forward to Mayweather vs Logan Paul (LOL) because we know it’s comedy ahead of time.
9. For three weeks in July, I didn’t do a single thing other than watch street fight compilations on YouTube and Worldstar. That’s just grim.
10. There were no school shootings in March. Apparently, this was the first March with no school shootings since 2002. Not a single 7th grader got a hand job in March either. I cannot begin to imagine what it’s like to be a kid now.
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Chuck Bettis
https://chuckbettis.com
Other People's Music released this year:
Coil "Musick to Play in the Dark" (Dais)
Duma "s/t" (Nyege Nyege Tapes)
Twig Harper "External Boundless Prison/ in 4 parts EP" (self-release)
I.P.Y. (Ikue Mori, Phew, YoshimiO) "I.P.Y." (Tzadik)
Kill Alters "A2B2 Live Stream 11/13/2020" (self-release)
Krallice "Mass Cathexis" (self-release)
Lust$ickPuppy "Cosmic Brownie" (self-release)
Doug McKechnie "San Francisco Moog: 1968-72" (VG+ Records)
Merlin Nova "Boo!" (self-release)
Omrb "Milandthriust, The Graths of Mersh" (self-release)
Akio Suzuki & Aki Onda "gi n ga" (self-release)
Yoth Iria "Under His Sway" (Repulsive Echo)
Wetware "Flail" (Dais)
My own music released this year:
collaborations
Chatter Blip "Microcosmopolitan" (Contour Editions)
Matmos "The Consuming Flame: Open Exercises in Group Form" (Thrill Jockey)
Reverse Bullets "Dreampop Dsyphoria" (self-release)
Snake Union "live at Roulette" (self-release)
Snake Union w/ Hisham Bharoocha, Bonnie Jones, Heejin Jang, Matthew Regula "Three Arrows" (Rat Route)
Thomas Dimuzio "Balance" (Gench Music)
YoshimiO & Chuck Bettis "Live at the Stone" (Living Myth)
solo
Chuck Bettis "Arc of Enlghtenment" (Living Myth)
Chuck Bettis "Motion Parallax" (Living Myth)
compilation
Various Artist "Polished Turds Vol.1" (Granpa)
Music Books read this year
"Intermediary Spaces" by Eliane Radigue/Julia Eckhardt (Umland)
"Ennio Morricone In His Own Words" by Ennio Morricone/Alessandro De Rosa (Oxford University Press)
"Free Jazz In Japan: A Personal History" by Soejima Teruto (Public Bath Press)
"Rumors of Noizu: Hijokaidan and the Road to 2nd Damascus" by Kato David Hopkins (Public Bath Press)
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Maya Hardinge
(musician / artist)
list of things i liked this year
first ever solo road trip through new mexico and Texas right before lockdown
experiencing manhattan with no cars on the road . having a car to escape in to nature. (which i craved so much)
walks and bike rides with friends… FRIENDS!
The web site ‘workaway’ that helped me feel that there were options for escape.
playing games weekly on zoom during lock down
teaching yoga weekly on zoom.
Witnessing and being part of the BLM protests.
witnessing and being part of the demise of T
sitting on my couch at 6am drinking a cup of tea, appreciating my apt.
making time to meditate.
halloween without tourists .
some music I’ve bought and/or enjoyed this year
Elvis Perkins-Black Coat Daughter
Patricia Kokett -Soi soi
Henning Christiansen - OP201
Bryce Hackford- Safe
Svitlana Nianio and Oleksander - Snayesh yak? rozkazhy
Brannten schnure - Sommer im Pfirsichhain
Killing Joke - Nighttime
David Shea - Tower of mirrors
Shakey - Shakey
Woodford halse tapes
Coil - Musick to play in the dark
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BJ Nilsen
sound artist / composer
Work 2020
Despite Covid 19 lots of things actually did happen.
In Feburary I visited the only active nuclear plant in The Nederlands as part of my "Expanded Field Recording” project together with SML. In March revisited the Acousmonium at the Elevate Festival in Graz with an additional trip deep inside the Schlossberg recording old mining trains. In March and April I did two daily recording projects “Pending and Auditory Scenes” - both of Amsterdam during lockdown. In May did my first Zoom field recording workshop with the CAMP project. In June & July two research trips in Waldviertel, Austria with Franz Pomassl. In August recorded bells and organs in 10 different churches around Amsterdam for Jacob Lekkerkerker. In September recorded Kali Malone at the Orgelpark in Amsterdam. Performed at Heart of Noise Festival in Innsbruck and A4 in Bratislava. Also went ice-skating for first time in 20? Years. In November and December I travelled to Jeju island to record field recordings for a project by Femke Herregraven for the Gwangju Biennale, commissioned for 2021.
Did lots of gardening, released two tapes “Call it Philips, Eindoven” and “Zomer 2020” with Sigtryggur Berg Sigmarsson.
NOW! Looking forward to 2021.
http://bjnilsen.info
https://soundcloud.com/bjnilsen/sets/auditory-scenes-amsterdam
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Vicki Bennett
(People Like Us)
Negativland - True False https://negativland.com/products/truefalse-cd (this came out last year but is so THIS year)
Bob Dylan - Rough and Rowdy Ways https://www.bobdylan.com/albums/rough-and-rowdy-ways/
The Soft Pink Truth - We from Shall We Go On Sinning So That Grace May Increase https://thesoftpinktruth.bandcamp.com/album/shall-we-go-on-sinning-so-that-grace-may-increase
Carl Stone - Stolen Car https://unseenworlds.bandcamp.com/album/stolen-car
Porest - Sedimental Gurney https://porest.bandcamp.com/album/sedimental-gurney
Matmos - The Consuming Flame: Open Exercises in Group Form https://matmos.bandcamp.com/album/the-consuming-flame-open-exercises-in-group-form
Domenique Dumont - Miniatures De Auto Rhythm https://antinoterecordings.bandcamp.com/album/atn044-domenique-dumont-miniatures-de-auto-rhythm
The The - See Without Being Seen https://www.thethe.com/product/see-without-being-seen-cd/
Ciggy de la Noche - Hold Tight HMRC https://soundcloud.com/ciggydelanoche/hold-tight-hmrc
Neil Cicierega - Mouth Dreams http://www.neilcic.com/mouthdreams/
and my details:
http://peoplelikeus.org/
https://peoplelikeus-vickibennett.bandcamp.com/
pic: http://peoplelikeus.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Welcome-Abroad-promo3-2-scaled.jpg
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DJ Food
Music -
Type 303 - Sticky Disco / Analogue Acidbath 7" (45 Live)
The British Space Group - The Ley of the Land CD (Wyrd Britain)
Squarepusher - Be Up A Hello LP / Warp 10 NTS mix (Warp)
dgoHn - Undesignated Proximate (Modern Love)
LF58 - Alterazione LP (Astral Industries)
Robert Fripp - Music For Quiet Moments series (DGM)
Run The Jewels - RTJ4 (BMG)
Simf Onyx - Magenta Skyline / The Unresolved 7" (Delights)
Luke Vibert - Modern Rave LP (Hypercolour)
JG Thirlwell & Simon Steensland - Oscillospira (Ipecac)
Aural Design - Looking & Seeing 7" / DL (Russian Library)
Luke Vibert - Rave Hop (Hypercolour)
Clipping. with Christopher Fleeger - Double Live (Sub Pop)
APAT - Terry Riley's 'In C' performed on Modular Synthesizer (YouTube)
Field Lines Cartographer - The Spectral Isle LP (Castles In Space)
Jane Weaver - The Revolution of Super Visions single (Fire Records)
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard - K.G. LP (Flightless)
Humanoid - Hed-Set - forthcoming on (De:tuned)
Film / TV -
Inside No.9 (BBC)
What We Do In The Shadows Season 2 (Netflix)
Tales From The Loop (Amazon)
Keith Haring - Street Art Boy (BBC)
John Was Trying To Contact Aliens (Netflix)
The Social Dilemma (Netflix)
The Mandalorian (Season 2) (Disney+)
Long Hot Summers - The Style Council documentary (Sky Arts)
Zappa (Alex Winter)
Books / Comics / Magazines
Confessions of a Bookseller - Shaun Bythell (Profile books)
The Often Wrong - Farel Dalrymple (Image Comics)
Edwin Pouncey - Rated SavX (Strange Attractor Press)
Jeffrey Lewis - Fuff (all issues - really late to the party on this one)
Rian Hughes - XX - A Novel, Graphic (Picador)
Cosey Fanni Tutti - Art, Sex, Music (Faber)
Caza - Kris Kool (Passenger Press)
Dan Lish - Egostrip Vol.1
Electronic Sound magazine
Decorum - Jonathan Hickman & Mike Huddleston (Image)
John Higgs - Stranger Than We Can Imagine
Simon Halfon - Cover To Cover (Nemperor)
Very few exhibitions or shows this year for obvious reasons
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