Friday, 13 March 2020

Mark de Clive-Lowe ‎– Church Sessions (2019)

Genre: Electronic, Jazz, Funk / Soul
Format: FLAC
Label: World Galaxy Records

Tracklist:
01.   Kamau Daaood & Mark de Clive-Lowe - Invocation
02.   Mark de Clive-Lowe - Smoked Something
03.   Colectivo Arte & Manha - Mystic Brew
04.   John Robinson & Mark de Clive-Lowe - A.C.H.H.
05.   Colectivo Arte & Manha - Atlantic Journey
06.   Joy Jones & Mark de Clive-Lowe - Steps Ahead
07.   Stro Elliot, 14KT & Mark de Clive-Lowe - Part One
08.   Stro Elliot, 14KT & Mark de Clive-Lowe - Part Two
09.   Stro Elliot, 14KT & Mark de Clive-Lowe - Part Three
10.   Mark de Clive-Lowe - Blueberries
11.   Mark de Clive-Lowe - ESSS (Love the Space)
12.   Tommaso Cappellato - Ancient Prophecy
13.   Myele Manzanza, Mark de Clive-Lowe & Matt Dal Din - Montara

Earlier this year, revered musician Mark de Clive-Lowe took us on melodic journey through his ancestral timeline with stunning back-to-back releases, Heritage and Heritage II. Now the Japanese Kiwi simultaneously shifts gears and accomplishes a winning trifecta with his latest album, CHURCH Sessions 
The project is a celebration of his popular "Church" club parties, which began back in 2010. Described by MdCL as “equal parts jazz club, dance party and live remix experiment,” the events are world-renowned for featuring critically-acclaimed musicians along with phenomenal underground artists, working together to spin sonic gold with Mark at the helm. The magic has been captured on wax through the years with Church in 2014, followed by Church Remixed. With the party still going strong in its ninth year, the new collection is curated and produced by de Clive-Lowe along with contributions and collaborators from all around the world. 
Southern California griot Kamau Daáood sets the tone with the dramatic "Invocation" to open the record. Brooklyn rapper John Robinson delivers magnetic bars on "A.C.H.H.," while L.A. songstress Joy Jones offers swanky vocals on "Steps Ahead." Frequent collaborators Stro Elliot (who recently dropped his own new project) and 14KT are on hand to showcase a suite of beats, simply titled "Part One," Part Two" and "Part Three." On "Mystic Brew" and "Atlantic Journey," McDL premieres a new collective of Portuguese artists that he formed in Lisbon called Colectivo Arte & Manha. Ethio Cali members Todd Simon and Te’Amir create ethereal jazz-funk on "ESSS (Love the Space)" and Italian drummer/producer Tommaso Cappellato keeps us rhythmically spellbound on "Ancient Prophecy." Ending the set on a high note is a trio of New Zealand's finest, with drummer/producer Myele Manzanza and bassist Matt Dal Din joining de Clive-Lowe on a lovely reimagining of Bobby Hutcherson's “Montara. 
”While CHURCH Sessions isn't spiritual – not in the "traditional" sense, anyway – this transcendent project is definitely good for the soul. 
B. Cakes / SoulBounce

Material ‎– Seven Souls (1989)

Style: Breaks, Avantgarde, Spoken Word
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Triloka Records, Virgin

Tracklist:
1.   Ineffect
2.   Seven Souls
3.   Soul Killer
4.   The Western Lands
5.   Deliver
6.   Equation
7.   The End Of Words

Credits:
Bass, Acoustic Guitar, Tapes, Percussion – Bill Laswell
Drums, Synthesizer – Sly Dunbar
Guitars, Baglama, Coral Sitar, Synthesizer – Nicky Skopelitis
Keyboards – Jeff Bova
Mastered By – Howie Weinberg
Percussion – Aïyb Dieng
Violin – Shankar, Simon Shaheen
Voices – Fahiem Dandan, Foday Musa Suso, Rammellzee, William S. Burroughs
Producer – Bill Laswell, Material

Thursday, 12 March 2020

Kate Tempest ‎– The Book Of Traps And Lessons (2019)

Style: Spoken Word, Conscious, Poetry
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: American Recordings

Tracklist:
01.   Thirsty
02.   Keep Moving Don't Move
03.   Brown Eyed Man
04.   Three Sided Coin
05.   I Trap You
06.   All Humans Too Late
07.   Hold Your Own
08.   Lessons
09.   Firesmoke
10.   Holy Elixir
11.   People's Faces

Credits:
Backing Vocals – Assia Ghandir
Flute – Mr A R Harris
Synthesizer – Hinako Omori
Violin – Raven Rush
Drums – Kwake Bass
Percussion – Julian Sartorius
French Horn – Emily Reppun
Co-producer – Noah Goldstein
Synthesizer, Piano, Drums, Drum Programming, Guitar, Music By, Producer, Mixed By – Dan Carey
Vocals, Lyrics By, Written By – Kate Tempest

Telectu ‎– Belzebu (1983)

Style: Avantgarde, Experimental
Format: Vinyl + CD
Label: Hozulam

Tracklist:
1.   Rotas
2.   Opera
3.   Temet
4.   Arepo
5.   Sator

Credits:
Performer – Jorge Lima Barreto, Vitor Rua
Producer – Luis Carlos, Telectu

«Há vidas, e não das menos patéticas, que são uma longa e só hesitação. Consomem-se sem nunca arder», escreveu Eugénio de Andrade no catálogo de uma exposição dos anos 1970. Nesta altura, germinava no Porto um movimento cultural que contrariava o atraso cultural da cidade e do País e a história deste disco é, de certo modo, a história de duas pessoas que eram muito mais do que Portugal era na altura. 
Em 1982, Vítor Rua liderava os GNR e a banda estava confortavelmente instalada no pop-rock nacional. Jorge Lima Barreto foi para o Porto ido de Vinhais e depois para Lisboa, à procura de espaço para um pensamento inconformado e vanguardista. Conheceram-se através de Rui Reininho (com quem Lima Barreto gravou o LP “Anarband”). Rua, ainda nos GNR, mas já com uma vontade de experimentação, alimentada por Barreto, lidera a gravação de “Independança”, o primeiro álbum da banda, que é um disco arrojado para a sua época (em contexto europeu, que não só nacional). Numa sessão de improvisação (Rua, Megre, Reininho, Toli) gravam o tema emblemático desta edição: “Avarias”, com quase 30 minutos (ocupava integralmente o lado B do LP) é uma revolução no pop-rock e estragou os GNR; Rua queria continuar a explorar este filão, enquanto o resto do grupo hesitava em abandonar o “Portugal na CEE”. 
«Demitidos» os GNR (que continuarão sem ele, arrastando um processo legal), o então baixista forma os Telectu com Jorge Lima Barreto (o nome do grupo vem de um poema de Eugénio de Melo e Castro). O primeiro disco, “Ctu Telectu” (então em quarteto), deu continuidade à experiência de “Avarias”, com Toli (GNR) na bateria, Rua na guitarra, Lima Barreto no sintetizador e “Dr. Puto” na voz. Depois deste arranque que ainda pode ser referenciado no art-rock, os Telectu abandonam este modelo e partem para uma música diferente, na qual a electrónica desempenha um papel fundamental. Lima Barreto introduz o “minimal repetitivo”, que mais do que um neologismo é uma nova música minimal que reconhece que o “minimal” (termo inglês aplicado a Steve Reich, Philip Glass, etc.) não tem de ser repetitivo (La Monte Young, Terry Riley) e que o “repetitive” (termo francês) não é necessariamente minimal (Louis Andriessen, Arvo Pärt). 
“Belzebu” (1983), editado pela Cliché Música de Rui Pavão, introduz ao País uma música intelectualizada e feita de ciclos de repetições na guitarra e arpejos no sintetizador. Unidades electrónicas repetitivas (em estúdio, mudando frequentemente de tonalidade ao vivo) interceptam-se com sequências periódicas na guitarra. Os arpejos de sintetizador marcam uma música quase dançável e a guitarra de Rua constrói uma segunda voz que acrescenta uma melodia à estrutura repetitiva lançada pelo sintetizador. Assim, mais do que música, “Belzebu” é a invenção musicográfica que mescla os processos minimais criados no final da década de 1960 e desenvolvidos por Glass e Reich no final da de 70 com a improvisação e uma ideia vanguardista de jazz. Lima Barreto era dos poucos, na altura, que conheciam e defendiam os músicos que hoje mesmo os mais conservadores aplaudem: Keith Jarrett, Ornette Coleman, Albert Ayler, Sun Ra, etc. 
Este “Belzebu” é a primeira obra minimalista feita em Portugal. O disco resulta de aproximadamente 30 concertos em meio ano e de uma teorização de Jorge Lima Barreto. É, por isso, um trabalho muito sério, recorrendo à tecnologia mais avançada da altura (Roland Juno-6, Yamaha CS-30, Drumatix, Roland 808), tanto usada de forma sistemática (ensaiada e testada) ou livre (a marimba gravada numa improvisação enquanto JLB ouvia Ornette num “walkman”), numa interpretação vaga da ideia de minimal-jazz-rock. 
O público português é por vezes pequenino e, tal como Manoel de Oliveira será sempre lento e “chato”, os Telectu ficaram para sempre “minimais”, apesar de terem abandonado este caminho pouco tempo depois desse primeiro disco. Entretanto, o País cresceu e desenvolveu-se e há uma nova geração mais curiosa e capaz, para quem esta música, que na altura era tão avançada e estranha, soa agora serena e interessante. “Belzebu”, percebemo-lo hoje, 35 anos depois, é um dos mais importantes documentos da música electrónica e experimental portuguesa. Foi reeditado em CD pela AnAnAnA de Paulo Somsen, numa caixa de cortiça difícil de encontrar e cara. O vinil original começou a cavalgar preços no Discogs e hoje são precisos mais de 100 euros para o comprar, e a edição em CD também é raríssima. Assim, é com prazer que vemos chegar esta primeira reedição em vinil que dá nova vida a esta música e a disponibiliza a preços decentes para os ouvintes. 
Nota sobre o restauro áudio e visual para esta edição: «Esta reedição de Belzebu apresenta o LP como ele deveria ter saído na época: capa a preto-e-branco e o áudio com “brilho” (o original tem poucos agudos e está muito “embaciado”), sem perder “corpo”», explica Vítor Rua. As alterações na masterização foram feitas a partir das bobinas originais e realizadas no Dim Sum Studio por António Duarte, sob supervisão do músico. Foi ainda recuperado o “Separador Belzebu”, achado quase sem querer numa cassete e fornecido à parte, num CD, incluso com o vinil. Foi retirado o “reverb” à gravação, uma ideia do maestro Jorge Costa Pinto que nunca agradou ao grupo. Como refere Rua, esta reedição é, na realidade, a «edição original», no sentido de que é a que «cumpre todos os requisitos pretendidos pelos Telectu: do som à capa». 
O restauro gráfico digital foi feito a partir dos originais (capa, “labels” e “inner sleeve”) e com o cuidado de repor um revés da história: o original entregue por Melo e Castro era a preto-e-branco, mas no final do processo de impressão surgiu a ideia de introduzir uma cor de fundo. As limitações técnicas e os atrapalhos gráficos próprios de 1983 fizeram com que essa cor tivesse saído um cinzento-castanho-cor-de-burro-quando-foge. Assim, em conjunto com Vítor Rua, foi tomada a decisão de repor a intenção original, vítima de uma experimentação dos anos 80 que não correu bem.
Gonçalo Falcão / Jazz.pt

Wednesday, 11 March 2020

Sax On The Road ‎– Lisboas (2020)

Genre: Jazz, Reggae, Funk / Soul, Folk, World, & Country
Format: FLAC
Label: Zigur Artists

Tracklist:
01.   Amanhecer
02.   Peixe Fresco
03.   28 Prazeres
04.   Ponto de Passagem
05.   Lisgoa
06.   Hora de Ponta
07.   Deitados na Relva
08.   Tejo
09.   Combro Beat
10.   Hasta La Vista

No último capítulo da trilogia de Sax on the Road editada pela Zigur, espelham-se uma vez mais os muitos caminhos e possibilidades (musicais, mas não só) de António Ramos (aka Torré). 
Se até aqui os discos serviam como que uma súmula da vida passada do saxofonista - em músicas vívidas e carregadas de ginga com a urbe de Lisboa à cabeça, mas sempre contrabalançada com elementos sónicos que apontavam coordenadas que vão do norte de África ao Médio Oriente -, em "Lisboas" (gravado e composto por António Ramos) embarcamos numa espécie de stream of consciousness em tempo real da psique e vida de António Ramos. 
Deixada para trás a capital, "Lisboas" encontrou espaço para a serenidade e para a procura de uma nova linguagem: mais madura, mais meditativa, mais reflexiva sobre si mesma, sobre o que já passou e o que aí virá. Enfim, podemos dizer que estas músicas surgem alinhadas com um certo bucolismo como que em resposta direta à agitação da capital - mas sem nunca perder o balanço dançável de outros registos de Sax on the Road. 
"Lisboas" é assim o disco mais completo e simultaneamente mais pessoal do projecto. Mais uma vez ilustrado pela pena sempre certeira de José Smith Vargas – ele que deu corpo, forma e imagem a todos os capítulos de Sax on the Road até então -, este disco desponta com o saxofone no lugar de destaque habitual, mas – tal como as ilustrações de Smith - sempre permeável aos muitos mundos que vão existindo lá por fora.  
Bandcamp

Duke Ellington ‎– The Afro-Eurasian Eclipse (A Suite In Eight Parts) (1975)

Style: Afro-Cuban Jazz, Soul-Jazz, Big Band, Post Bop
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Original Jazz Classics

Tracklist:
1.   Chinoiserie
2.   Didjeridoo
3.   Afrique
4.   Acht O'Clock Rock
5.   Gong
6.   Tang
7.   True
8.   Hard Way

Credits:
Alto Saxophone, Clarinet – Russell Procope
Alto Saxophone, Clarinet, Flute – Norris Turney
Baritone Saxophone – Harry Carney
Bass – Joe Benjamin
Bass Trombone – Chuck Connors
Drums – Rufus Jones
Piano, Composed By – Duke Ellington
Tenor Saxophone – Harold Ashby, Paul Gonsalves
Trombone – Booty Wood, Malcolm Taylor
Trumpet – Cootie Williams, Eddie Preston, Mercer Ellington, Money Johnson

Tuesday, 10 March 2020

Christian Gaubert ‎– Last Exit (1979)

Genre: Funk / Soul
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: RCA Victor, Production Dessinée

Tracklist:
1.   It
2.   Man On A Wire
3.   Sweet And Fool Like A Child
4.   Going Ups And Coming Downsert
5.   Sweet Maryline
6.   Keep On ! Keep On
7.   We're Together
8.   Running Wave

Credits:
Arranged By – Christian Gaubert
Baritone Saxophone – Jean-Louis Chautemps, Romain Mayoral
Bass Guitar – Jannick Top
Drums – Dino Latore
Drums, Percussion – Jean Schultheis
Electric Guitar – Claude Engel, Raymond Gimenes
Fender Rhodes, Piano, Synthesizer – Christian Gaubert
Percussion – Marc Chantereau
Tenor Saxophone – Alain Hatot, Jean Pierre De Barba, Patrick Bourgoin
Trombone – Christian Guizien, Hamid Belhocine, Jacques Bolognesi
Trumpet – André Lidli, Freddy Hovsepian, Kako Bessot, Tony Brenes
Vocals – Last Exit
Producer – Carla Music, Monstros Music

Steve Spacek ‎– Houses (2020)

Style: Deep House, Experimental, Future Jazz
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Black Focus Records

Tracklist:
01.   Rawl Aredo
02.   Waiting 4 You
03.   Where We Go
04.   Tell Me
05.   African Dream
06.   Songlife
07.   Higher Place
08.   Single Stream
09.   Love 4 Nano
10.   Bright Eyes Rev (Bonus Track)
11.   Yu Used To Love Me (Bonus Track)
12.   Who Cares (Bonus Track)
13.   Child Insperation (Bonus Track)

Now doing it for burgeoning UK jazz and beats label Black Focus Records (Kamaal Williams), Spacek dishes up what he calls “a bunch of house riddims” in the distinctive style that he’s ploughed for over 20 years. But where his early band recordings with Spacek were elaborate studio affairs, in recent years he’s favoured a peripatetic mode of productions, making beats on his iPhone with apps that allow him to work organically and free-flowing, whenever he likes. 
As found on 2018’s ‘Natural Sci-Fi’ album, he continues to get great results from the instant iPhone method  of creation on ‘Houses’, trading on a classic brand of jazz-funk inspired dance music, but doing it with a tiny fraction of the kit used in the records he references. Its production values may not necessarily make for “club bangers”, but it does allow him to catch amn all-important vibe between the percolated shimmy of ‘Waiting 4 You’, the natty step of ‘Where We Go’ his sweetly off-kilter roller ‘Tell Me’, and the rude rag of ‘Love 4 Nano’, while lending an unusual, even surreal intimacy to the likes of his soulful downstroke ‘Single Stream’. 
Boomkat

Monday, 9 March 2020

Almanave ‎– Terra Magna [DEMO] (2020)

Style: Ethereal, Post Rock, Indie Pop, Electro
Format: FLAC
Label: Not on label

1.   O Fio Carnal
2.   Perfeito Mundo Irreal
3.   Morrer em Contraluz
4.   Canção do Engate
5.   Oxalá

Notes:
Almanave é um projecto musical oriundo da Póvoa de Varzim. Iniciado em 2019 tem por influências Sigur Rós, Mogwai, Radiohead, Massive Attack, Radio Macau, God Is An Astronaut.

Listen here

Material ‎– One Down (1982)

Style: Electro, Funk, Disco
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Elektra, Celluloid, Asylum Records, Birdsong

Tracklist:
1.   Take A Chance
2.   I'm The One
3.   Time Out
4.   Let Me Have It All
5.   Come Down
6.   Holding On
7.   Memories
8.   Don't Lose Control

Credits:
Bass, Effects – Bill Laswell
Sounds – Martin Bisi
Synths (Prophet 5, Oberheim OBXa), Roland Drum Machine, Vocoder, Tape, Percussion – Michael Beinhorn
Producer – Bill Laswell, Material, Michael Beinhorn

Sunday, 8 March 2020

Swans ‎– Leaving Meaning. (2019)

Style: Experimental
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Young God Records

Tracklist:
1-1.   Hums
1-2.   Annaline
1-3.   The Hanging Man
1-4.   Amnesia
1-5.   Leaving Meaning
1-6.   Sunfucker
2-1.   Cathedrals Of Heaven
2-2.   The Nub
2-3.   It's Coming It's Real
2-4.   Some New Things
2-5.   What Is This?
2-6.   My Phantom Limb

Credits:
Accordion, Harmonium – Cassis Staudt
Double Bass – Lloyd Swanton
Drums, Percussion – Tony Buck
Guitar – Norman Westberg
Guitar , Backing Vocals – Kristof Hahn
Guitar, Synth, Sounds – Ben Frost
Piano – Paul Wallfisch
Piano, Organ – Chris Abrahams
Sounds – Dana Schechter
Stroh Violin, Violin, Viola, Fiddle – Heather Trost
Lead Vocals – Baby Dee
Vocals – Saoirse Gira, Swan Gira
Chorus, Backing Vocals – Anna von Hausswolff, Maria Von Hausswolff
Percussion, Trumpet, Clarinet, Sounds, Bells, Vibraphone – Thor Harris
Drums, Percussion, Vibraphone, Keyboards, Synth, Backing Vocals – Larry Mullins
Santoor, Hihat, Fiddle, Accordion, Engineer – Jeremy Barnes
Electric Bass, Double Bass, Keyboards, Piano, Synth, Backing Vocals – Yoyo Roehm
Vocals, Guitar, Producer, Words By, Music By – Michael Gira

In 2017, Michael Gira dissolved Swans, putting an end to its most stable configuration in 35 years of the post-punk brutalists’ on-again, off-again existence. It wasn’t the first time that Gira had started over. He first did it in 1997, after a 15-year stretch of constant evolution in which Swans grew from atonal bloodlust worshippers (Filth) to blissed-out neo-folkies (The Burning World) to self-flagellating maximalists (The Great Annihilator). Titling the band’s posthumous 1998 live album Swans Are Dead was Gira’s way of laying a boulder on the lid of the tomb—at least until 2010, when, after a decade at the helm of his psych-folk project Angels of Light, he rolled back the stone and brought Swans back to life. 
Now, on his first Swans album since 2016’s The Glowing Man, Gira has reshuffled the deck once again. Players from throughout his various projects’ histories have rejoined him here, including several of Angels of Light’s core members (Christoph Hahn, Dana Schechter, Cassis Staudt, Larry Mullins) and pretty much the entire recent Swans lineup. As has frequently been the case over the years, Gira has swelled the group’s ranks with guest players: organist Anna von Hausswolff and her sister Maria; noise musician Ben Frost; shock-headed former street harpist and neo-cabaret singer Baby Dee; Australian improvising trio the Necks. (The latter, praised for their minimalistic attention to detail, make for an unexpected fit: When it comes to sustaining a single repetitive groove for endurance-testing lengths, the Necks are the pianissimo yin to Swans’ pile-driving yang.) 
The chief difference between the recently departed Swans and their reincarnation here boils down mainly to method. Where heavy touring turned Swans’ 2010-2017 incarnation into something like a living, breathing organism—in which the band’s pummeling, long-form concert performances informed the shape of successive studio recordings, and vice versa—for Leaving Meaning Gira returned to his role as a producer, ringleader, and foreman, laying down basic tracks on his own and then inviting his contributors to fill in the blanks as they best saw fit.

Sonically, the album backs away from the dirge-rock rave-ups that defined the group’s last four albums. That’s a welcome development: By The Glowing Man, a record that often seemed intent upon dwarfing the horizon itself, they were running out of new things to say on such a scale. Leaving Meaning is shorter and simpler. Where Swans’ last three albums were all two-hour behemoths, this one clocks in at a relatively manageable 93 minutes, and only one song breaks the 12-minute mark—a significant departure from their recent habit of digging in for 20 or 30 minutes at a time. 
The new record is sweeter, too, shifting its focus from raging catharsis to eye-widening beauty. Instead of the hammer-on-anvil force of recent albums, the largely acoustic palette leans toward plucked strings, brushed percussion, and sighing choirs. At least two songs are in an uncharacteristically chipper major key, and one of them (the radiant “What Is This?”) summons a sparkling beatitude reminiscent of Cocteau Twins’ Heaven or Las Vegas. 
The gorgeous title track is a highlight. It’s one of two featuring the Necks’ ruminative piano-and-contrabass improvisations, and while Gira’s songwriting gravitates toward his usual contradictions (“I can be it/But not feel it/I can steal it/But not keep it/I can break it/But not heal it”), he sounds uncharacteristically calm, purring like an old cat in a bookstore window. He’s as charismatic a ranter as they come, but to hear him so sedate makes for a nice change. 
“Amnesia,” which first appeared in radically different form on 1992’s Love of Life, here becomes a fingerpicked ambient waltz for strings, tympani, and choir. And when he digs into the barrel-chested depths of his register on songs like the tender, elegiac “Annaline,” he evokes the kind of weary tragedy endemic to sad drunks and wastrels. As a lyricist, Gira has always conveyed an irreparable brokenness, and in songs like this one—“Let’s burn in a fire/Let’s clean what is true” he groans—he embodies the image of a fallen man. (Rape allegations against Gira—denied by him, but never retracted by his accuser—will forever draw an uncomfortable shadow beneath Gira’s portraits of repentant sinners.) 
It’s not all so gentle or so gossamer. “The Hanging Man” and “Some New Things” both reprise the pounding rave-ups of the band’s recent records and live shows, while the overdubbed chants and chain-gang rhythm of the closing “My Phantom Limb” recall the agonies of the Greed/Holy Money years. And as always, the apocalypse hangs heavy over songs braided from the strands of Gira’s holy trinity: sex, death, and the infinite. The lyrical themes here are all familiar by now: Lovers claw at each other, seeking self-annihilation. Salvation is an illusion. Negation is the only certainty. 
“The Nub,” the other song with the Necks’ at its center, seems at first to be about sexual pleasure. But as it drifts and droops, and Baby Dee sings of krill, bleached fluid, and putrefying flesh, the song comes to resemble an audio portrait of a whale fall. Scavengers may feed on the decomposing meat for months; the skeleton then becomes a source of sustenance to mussels, clams, and microbes for years or even decades to come. Whether or not it’s what Gira had in mind, this ruined, rotting grandeur is a fitting metaphor for Swans’ ongoing body of work. Swans died so that new life may flourish. 
Philip Sherburne / Pitchfork

Swans ‎– What Is This? (2019)

Genre: Acousitc/Rock
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Young God Records

01.   Leaving Meaning
02.   The Hanging Man
03.   Amnesia
04.   The Nub
05.   Cathedrals Of Heaven
06.   Sunfucke
07.   What Is This?
08.   My Phantom Limb 1
09.   Annaline
10.   It's Coming And It's Real

Credits:
Acoustic Guitar, Voice – Michael Gira

William Onyeabor ‎– Atomic Bomb (1978)

Genre: Electronic, Funk / Soul
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Luaka Bop, Wilfilms Records

Tracklist:
A1.   Beautiful Baby
A2.   Better Change Your Mind
B1.   Atomic Bomb
B2.   Shame
B3.   I Need You All Life

Credits:
Backing Band – Wilfilms Resident Band
Composed By, Written-By, Arranged By, Sleeve Notes, Producer – William Onyeabor

Saturday, 7 March 2020

Aural Exciters ‎– Spooks In Space (1979)

Genre: Funk/Soul
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Ze Records, P-Vine Records

Tracklist:
1.   Spooks In Space
2.   (He's A) Marathon Runner
3.   Goin' To A Showdown
4.   Maladie D'Amour
5.   Emile (Night Rate)
5.   Spooks In Space (Disco Mix)

Credits:
Drums – Jimmy Young
Guitar – Ken Mazur
Horns – James Chance, Tom Malone
Piano, Organ – Carlos Franzetti, Richie Vetter
Synthesizer – Al Wentz
Vibraphone – Andy Hernandez
Violin – Walter Steading
Vocals – Chris Wiltshire, Taana Gardner
Vocals, Drums – Ron Rogers
Engineer, Producer, Guitar – Bob Blank

Friday, 6 March 2020

Material ‎– Temporary Music - Compilation (1980)

Genre: Electronic, Jazz, Rock
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Celluloid, Retless Records

Tracklist:
01.   O. A. O.
02.   White Man
03.   On Sadism
04.   Process/ Motion
05.   Discourse
06.   Slow Murder
07.   Secret Life
08.   Reduction
09.   Heritage
10.   Dark Things
11.   Detached
12.   Ciquiri

Credits:
Bass – Bill Laswell
Drums, Guitar – Fred Maher
Guitar – Cliff Cultreri
Keyboards – Michael Beinhorn
Producer – Giorgio Gomelsky, Martin Bisi, Material

Thursday, 5 March 2020

Sarathy Korwar ‎– More Arriving (2019)

Genre: Electronic, Hip Hop, Jazz, Folk, World, & Country
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Leaf

Tracklist:
1.   Sarathy Korwar ft. MC Mawali - Mumbay
2.   Sarathy Korwar - Jallaad
3.   Sarathy Korwar ft. Delhi Sultanate & Prabh - Deep Coolie
4.   Sarathy Korwar ft. Zia Ahmed & Aditya Prakash - Bol
5.   Sarathy Korwar ft. Zia Ahmed - Mango
6.   Sarathy Korwar ft. TRAP POJU & Mirande - City Of Words
7.   Sarathy Korwar ft. Mirande - Good Ol' Vilayati
8.   Sarathy Korwar ft. Deepak - Unnikrishnan

Credits:
Producer – Sarathy Korwar

In dusty old legends, the tabla came into being when a thirteenth century Sufi disciple sawed a pakhawaj (two-headed drum) in half. Sarathy Korwar has delved deeper into history than that by recording the music of the Sidis, descendants of African tribes who came to India in the seventh century. The results of this bore fruit on his album Day To Day (Ninja Tune, 2016) with ambient sonics flitting among the field work. A devout student of the tabla, Korwar later released the live effort My East Is Your West (Gearbox, 2018) whilst finalising the meticulous More Arriving. 
Phrases both oral and musical make an impact, as Korwar deploys the peppiness of rap alongside the digital folklore of his modern and classical roots. Korwar adapts his own interaction where needed, using hand shapes and strokes to offer a range of resonant and subdued sounds. Despite the urban dramas that unfold here the tabla lends a natural presence, like tappings on a hollow log, or the knockings of forest creatures. 
If these clattering spirituals show one thing, it is that devotion can be expressed in many ways. The essence of each track is non-violent, but their delivery is fully loaded. There's little relaxing or late-night about More Arriving. It comes from the seething south London jazz scene of ravers, groovers and movers, also known to Sons of Kemet, Nubya Garcia and Tenderlonious among others. 
Opening cut "Mumbay" bursts from the traps with a street procession of slinky sax and drums. Bombay-born rapper MC Mawali enters the fray making rapid puns on the colonial term Bombay, versus the Indian nationalist name Mumbai: "Mumbai ya Bombay/Mala kai farak nahi" ("Mumbai or Bombay/Doesn't make a difference to me"), he hisses, setting the tone for an album of skirmishes. Korwar's percussion is in overdrive here, conjuring the hustle and bustle of every sidewalk he has known. 
"Jallaad" is a brief and pungent snapshot of street life, then "Coolie" brings a patois rap about Indian slave labourers who took the cannabis seed to Jamaica. Jagged brass and a quick dance beat celebrate the heroic lives of everyday people, whilst the words cock a sneer at those in power: "Cocaine run by the CIA/Opium smuggling run the same way/East India Company they came up in this way." 
London playwright Zia Ahmed stars on "Bol" and intones a solemn poetry slam over warming harmonium. Like the murmurings of a troubled sleeper, his thoughts echo against an ecstatic chorus and percussed thrashings in the finale. Ahmed appears again for the sardonic "Mango," another piece that revels in sharp word play: "Man go into bar/ And bar man go, Why the long mango?" Further in, the commentary shifts tone to a reggae-like directness of social concerns— there's even a soccer manager included—as Korwar finds vocal inflections in his tabla's pitch and patter. 
Verbals are mostly banished for "City Of Words," an instrumental where Chris Williams's simple sax melodies infer something exquisite, whilst Indian classical singer Mirande calls out sensually. She returns on "Good Ol' Vilayati," another wry title with roots in Hindi slang and colonial posturing. Mirande's dazzling improv might be scat, might be ancient text, but is energising if near exhausting to reckon with. Prominent writer Deepak Unnikrishnan guests on closing cut "Pravasis" to ponder the immigrant's lot over haunted strumming, to which Korwar adds an ominous touch. 
If the album reaches a stark conclusion it also nags us to consider our basic humanity. Despite a contentious subtext, the whole breadth of existence is deemed worth fighting for on More Arriving. Korwar's use of the imagination on reality is where his real genius lies.

Gareth Thompson / All About Jazz

Material ‎– Memory Serves (1981)

Genre: Electronic, Jazz, Funk / Soul
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: CBS/Sony, Celluloid, Elektra Musician

Tracklist:
1.   Memory Serves
2.   Disappearing
3.   Upriver
4.   Metal Test
5.   Conform To The Rhythm
6.   Unauthorized
7.   Square Dance
8.   Silent Land
9.   For A Few Dollars More

Credits:
Violin – Billy Bang
Alto Saxophone – Henry Threadgill
Bass – Bill Laswell
Cornet – Olu Dara
Drums – Anton Fier
Drums, Percussion – Charles K. Noyes
Guitar – Henry Kaiser, Robert Musso, Sonny Sharrock
Guitar, Violin, Xylophone – Fred Frith
Percussion – Daniel Ponce
Trombone – George Lewis
Turntables – Grand Mixer D.S.T.
Synthesizer, Tapee, Electronics, Guitar, Drums, Voice – Michael Beinhorn
Producer – Material

Wednesday, 4 March 2020

The Lilac Time ‎– The Lilac Time (1987)

Style: Folk Rock, Alternative Rock
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Fontana, Mercury, Swordfish Records

Tracklist:
01.   Return To Yesterday
02.   Rockland
03.   You've Got To Love
04.   And The Ship Sails On
05.   Love Becomes A Savage
06.   Together
07.   Black Velvet
08.   Too Sooner Later Than Better
09.   The Road To Happiness
10.   Trumpets From Montparnasse
11.   Gone For A Burton
12.   Railway Bazaar

Credits:
Producer – Bob Lamb, The Lilac Time
Written-By – The Lilac Time

Gil Scott-Heron, Makaya McCraven ‎– We’re New Again (A Reimagining By Makaya McCraven) (2020)

Style: Soul-Jazz
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: XL Recordings

Tracklist:
01.   Special Tribute (Broken Home Pt.1)
02.   I’m New Here
03.   Running
04.   Blessed Parents
05.   New York Is Killing Me
06.   The Patch (Broken Home Pt.2)
07.   People Of The Light
08.   Being Blessed
09.   Where Did The Night Go
10.   Lily Scott (Broken Home Pt.3)
11.   I’ll Take Care Of You
12.   I’ve Been Me
13.   This Can't Be Real
14.   Piano Player
15.   The Crutch
16.   Guided (Broken Home Pt.4)
17.   Certain Bad Things
18.   Me And The Devil

Credits:
Piano – Gil Scott-Heron
Vocals – Gil Scott-Heron
Written-By – Gil Scott-Heron
Created By, Producer – Makaya McCraven

Gil Scott-Heron’s final album, 2010’s I’m New Here, was a moving but unfinished statement from an important but overlooked artist. By the mid-’00s, the writer, poet, and singer had a long and storied career behind him, with more than a dozen albums of word-dense soul and R&B, two novels, and one phrase, “The Revolution Will Not Be Televised,” taken from his song of the same name, that echoed through culture and became more famous than he would ever be. He was a crucial voice of protest who deeply influenced black music across genres—hip-hop especially—but he hadn’t done much in a while. His last LP had been released more than a decade earlier. In the years between, he’d had drug problems, which led to health problems and legal problems, including an extended stretch incarcerated at Riker’s Island. A lot of people had forgotten about Scott-Heron, but Richard Russell, who founded the label XL, remembered, and he got in touch 
.
Scott-Heron wasn’t in a place where he could offer much creative input, but Russell persuaded him to make a record, a little at a time, and he built I’m New Here from fragments. In a New Yorker profile of Scott-Heron that ran six months after the album’s release, the writer and singer, then 61, said that he didn’t think of the album as his creation. “This is Richard’s CD,” he told Alec Wilkinson. “My only knowledge when I got to the studio was how he seemed to have wanted this for a long time. You’re in a position to have somebody do something that they really want to do, and it was not something that would hurt me or damage me—why not? All the dreams you show up in are not your own.” 
A decade later, the songs, poems, and conversational snippets Scott-Heron recorded with Russell are showing up in another dream, this one imagined by Chicago drummer and producer Makaya McCraven. It’s the second album-length reworking of the I’m New Here material, following Jamie xx’s 2011 collection We’re New Here, but this one feels definitive. Though Jamie xx assembled a fantastic record, one thick with hypnotic samples and irresistible beats, We’re New Again brings us closer to Scott-Heron’s world. 
Working with his regular circle of collaborators, many of whom have made highly regarded albums of their own in recent years (Jeff Parker on guitar, Brandee Younger on harp, Junius Paul on bass, Ben Lamar Gay on instruments and percussion), McCraven brings Scott-Heron’s work down to earth and situates it in a milieu the elder artist would have recognized. With arrangements that move between dirty blues, angelic spiritual jazz, and free-form drumming, McCraven has created a kind of survey of 20th-century black music that doesn’t draw undue attention to itself, one in which every piece fits together.

McCraven is both a player and a collagist, splicing together long jams and improvisations into structured pieces. Everything on his records feels close—you hear the instruments more than the rooms they’re recorded in, which can make individual parts sound simultaneously machine-like and deeply funky. He likes compression and uses it artfully, and his beats radiate force and muscle. They’re like a layer of armor behind which his more subtle and delicate musical ideas can develop and grow. 
On We’re New Again, McCraven takes Scott-Heron’s primary themes from his sessions with Russell—what it means to live in fear, the idea of home, how we confront our mortality, the mysterious and transformative power of familial love—and channels them into a concept record. His sources speak to his big-picture ambitions. Via samples, he incorporates music played by both of his parents—his father Stephen McCraven, a drummer, worked with Archie Shepp, the Last Poets, and many others, and his mother, Ágnes Zsigmondi, is a singer—to connect this music to his own history, reinforcing the album’s central concerns of place and lineage. 
The work Scott-Heron recorded for I’m New Here was connected to his memoir, The Last Holiday, which he’d been tinkering with for years and was published the year after his death. The book finds Scott-Heron making history—he was one of the first black students to integrate white schools in Tennessee, and its final sections focus on his desire, alongside Stevie Wonder, to make Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday a national holiday—but many of its most moving passages are simpler scenes drawn from his childhood. And many of these detail his relationships with his mother and grandmother. 
Even if they didn’t read the memoir, fans of I’m New Here know his grandmother’s name, Lily Scott, because Scott-Heron mentions her in the track “On Coming From a Broken Home.” It’s a piece about not just her love but also the ways a seemingly dysfunctional family can provide all the emotional nourishment a kid might need. McCraven splits “On Coming From a Broken Home” into four parts, ensuring that its words are never far from our minds. “But Lily Scott was absolutely not your mail-order, room-service, typecast, black grandmother,” Scott-Heron speaks, adding later, “I loved her from the absolute marrow of my bones/And we was holdin’ on.” 
McCraven finds a different setting for each section of the poem—the album-opening part one is floating and spacey, part two is a throbbing acoustic blues drone, part three emits the glow of ’70s AM radio, and part four has percussive textures from West Africa—and that eclecticism carries through the rest of the record. “Running,” a powerful incantation about the desire to keep moving even when you know nothing will change, is driven by a propulsive drum break. McCraven turns “New York Is Killing Me” into a dense piano arrangement that sounds like an early-’60s Blue Note recording, with a layer of voices from the Harlem Gospel Choir on the “Lord Have Mercy on Me” refrain that underscores its connection to soul-jazz. 
The record’s cover songs are, in their own way, just as autobiographical. Bill Callahan’s “I’m New Here” suggests scenes from Scott-Heron’s itinerant life. Its narrator is both confident and vulnerable, taking in his surroundings and feeling reborn but also aware that he’ll need human communication to make it through. McCraven gives it his most relaxed and gentle arrangement, as if the hopeful chorus, “No matter how far wrong you’ve gone, you can always turn around,” might actually be true. The exceedingly spare rendition of “I’ll Take Care of You,” by R&B singer Brook Benton, could be an expression of a desire that Scott-Heron could never quite manifest, to be someone else’s place of safety. And Robert Johnson’s “Me and the Devil,” featuring a horn sample from one of McCraven’s father’s recordings, is a dark anthem for a man whose demons were never far behind. 
Early on, Scott-Heron wrote songs about alcoholism (“The Bottle”) and drugs (“Home Is Where the Hatred Is”), but “The Crutch,” which McCraven backs with a filthy electrified blues vamp, feels especially autobiographical. The song is about heroin (“His eyes half-closed revealed his world of nod/A world of lonely men and no love, no god”) but as the harrowing New Yorker profile made clear, by the time Scott-Heron recorded it, he was addicted to crack cocaine. His words and songs showed compassion for addicts and framed chemicals as a way to cope with pain and loneliness. They also turned the concept of “home” found elsewhere on the album inside-out—sometimes, a place of salvation becomes one of torment. The ability to live with such contradictions and give them life with his words is part of what made Scott-Heron’s work special, and McCraven’s music inhabits that complicated space and keeps its sharp edges intact. It’s odd to draw lessons about survival from someone in trouble who is facing the end, but that’s another paradox the album negotiates. McCraven helps us feel it: For a little longer, anyway, Gil Scott-Heron was still here, and he was holding on. 
Mark Richardson / Pitchfork

Shuggie Otis ‎– Inspiration Information (1978) (2007 Reissue)

Style: Psychedelic, Funk, Soul
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Luka Bop

Tracklist:
01.   Inspiration Information
02.   Island Letter
03.   Sparkle City
04.   Aht Uh Mi Hed
05.   Happy House
06.   Rainy Day
07.   XL-30
08.   Pling!
09.   Not Available
10.   Strawberry Letter 23
11.   Sweet Thang
12.   Ice Cold Daydream
13.   Freedom Flight

Credits:
Producer – Johnny Otis
Compiled By – Paul Heck
French Horn – Jeff Martinez
Harp – Carol Robbins
Saxophone, Flute – Jack Kelso
Trombone – Doug Wintz, Jim Prindle
Trumpet – Curt Sletten, Ron Robbins
Strings – B. Porter, B. Asher, D. Jones, J. Parker, L. Rosen, M. Zeavin, N. Roth, S. Boone, T. Ziegler
Arranged By, Vocals, Backing Vocals, Guitars, Bass, Organ, Piano, Drums, Bells, Vibraphone – Shuggie Otis