Category Archives: Music Reviews

Ghedalia Tazartes – 1996 – Une Eclipse Totale du Soleil. Taste the strange.

Ghédalia Tazartès is a French musician born in 1947. Although, initially, his work is rooted in the legacy Ladino (his family is from the Jewish Community of Turkey), Ghédalia Tazartès is an unclassifiable artist, primarily instinctive and free, and has been described as being in the making of the music rather than in the theory […]

Hearing Metal 1 – Michael Pisaro connects with the Source

In the notes that accompany the first of the Hearing Metal series by Michael Pisaro, the claim is made that the work is one of intense collaboration between composer and performer. Pisaro writes: The piece evolved as Greg made test recordings based on my suggestions and then sent them to me. AS it happened we […]

Glaxo Babies – Nine months to the Disco

I’ve gone a little mainstream in my listening pleasures in the last couple of nights.  Its been an intense listening period as I’ve prepared some reviews and I do like to unwind with some old favourites, my disdain for sound colonization not withstanding. Glazxo Babies have been high on the rotation with a little Nick […]

Twig Harper – Twig Harper Hanson Records

Twig Harper is one of the solid suns around which the various planets rotate that make up the noise band Nautical Almanac along with Carly Ptak.  They’re from Baltimore Maryland and stay true to a strong passion for electronic experimentation and the harsher end of the sound spectrum. With a truly bizarre history (check a condensed version out […]

Wire’s 100 Records that set the world on fire while no one was listening. 86 – 90

Impossible not to get excited about this portion from Wire’s list.  We’re well into the 1990’s now, and yet as with so many albums on this list, no respect is paid by these great artists to context. Here is music that picks and pulls from many different traditions and ages, leaving us with a taste […]

Maajun – French prog 70’s style with a tiny bit of everything else.

Oh Prog – how I love thee.  Let me count the ways! I’m not completely sure why I love prog rock so much – it may be the drama and the glam – it may be the undisguised theatrics – who knows? It’s probably my generation – I love this post “rock n’ roll” ethic […]

Mune – Claire Bergerault and Jean-Luc Guionnet use sound against the signifier.

In the journey through sound as a signifier, interruptions to existing symbols are (as anyone who reads this blog regularly knows) considered by myself the most interesting art being practised today. I review a lot of experimental music albums on this site, and will continue to do so, because I think the creative work being done to […]

Wire’s 100 Records that set the world on fire while no one was listening. 81 – 85

The overlaying theme of todays little additives is experimental – but where these guys took that is not into the now rather clichéd world the previous decades of beloved records were taking them. Sure Royal Trux (sigh) had the free jazz undertones, Conlon Nancarrow has electronica sourcings, Fingers say thanks to soul, and if you […]

László Dubrovay – “A² “/ Oscillations Nos. 1-3

László Dubrovay is a Hungarian composer, born in Budapest on 23 March 1943. Laszlo Dubrovay attended the Bela Bartok Conservatory and the Academy of Music, graduating in 1966. His professors of composition were Istvan Szelenyi, Ferenc Szabo and Imre Vincze. On a scholarship of the Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst (DAAD),he continued his studies in West Germany between 1972 and […]

Wire’s 100 Records that set the world on fire while no one was listening. 76 – 80

The point of the Wire’s 100 Records that set the world on fire while no one was listening is that no one was listening and several of the folk on today’s segement of the list have become “huge-after-the-fact”.  Arthur Russell was virtually discoverd after his death, his influence being spread over and throughout the music […]