Archive for the ‘ambient’ Category

Hemingway tour releases

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

Hemingway just completed a mini-tour of the NW with Mammifer, taking in Seattle, Portland and Eugene.  Now back in town, Demian Johnston has brought us copies of these two releases.  The first is “Live at the Josephine 2009“, a 15 minute CDR EP in a limited edition of 30 copies.  The sounds are heavy and brutal here with screaming vocals and seering guitars.  It’s not unlike what they did on the “Hutterites” EP on Debacle Records.  On the other hand, the C32 “Strange, How the Night Moves” is more glacial in its approach.  Heavy waves of sound make this more of a doom ambient release.  This one comes in a numbered edition of 50 copies, and is more polished than the CDR.  Together they make a nice pair contrasting different aspects of this duo’s sound.

CDs from Malaysia

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

Did you know there is an experimental music scene in Malaysia?  It’s pretty small still, but there are two labels that are putting out things on CD fairly regularly.  The most active is Herbal International run by Goh Lee Kwang, but the Xing-Wu label has also put several titles as well.  Both labels seem really keen to release European artists at the moment, especially ones from France.  In the most recent batch from Herbal are a double CD by Jean-Luc Guionnet, a collaborative disc by Eric La Casa and Cédric Peyronnet, and a reissue of the second Beequeen album.  Beequeen are a Dutch duo and create really nice ambient textures with minimal organic rhythms and “Time Waits for No One” is one of their better early works.  Cédric Peyronnet is better known as toy.bizarre and like his collaborator Eric La Casa is known for working field recordings into lovely compositions.  Their duet together is entitled “La Creuse” and finds them mapping a particular area in central France.  Eric La Casa was previously in a trio called Afflux, and one of the other members of this group was Jean-Luc Guionnet.  On his double CD “Non-Organic Bias” he presents three long works.  They focus on the organ which he plays in a very experimental way exploiting lone tones and silences with great dynamic effect.  These works would have sounded at home in Deutsche Grammophon’s Avant-Garde series of LPs.  Quite a different facet of Jean-Luc’s work is heard on the CD “Le Bruit Du Toit” where he plays saxophone.  This album released by Xing-Wu is a duet with original Fushitsusha drummer Seijiro Murayama.  Recorded at a temple in Japan, the two improvisations reveal a delicate attention to timbre and close listening to each other.  The third member of Afflux. Eric Cordier, is represented on another Xing-Wu disc called “Dispositif: Canal Saint Martin“.  Recorded in collaboration with Emmanuel Mieville, this disc takes another approach to field recordings as it is a real time composition made by placing 30 microphones around the Paris city hall and manipulating them via laptop triggered ’sonic objects’.  Although not French, Michael Northam and Seijiro Murayama met in France and Switzerland and slowly developed the album “Moriendo Renascor“.  A meeting of acousmatic composter and free improviser has resulted in a finely detailed meditation on small sounds and drones.  But that is not all from Xing-Wu as we also got the one release they have done featuring only Malaysian musicians.  “Shàng” presents the three artists who I believe to be behind the label. Each presents a very different work.  Tham Kar Mun is very minimal with sudden outbursts of sound and Yandsen presents solo improvised acoustic guitar.  However for me, the best track here is the 26 minute “Funeral” by Yeoh Yin Pin.  Based on a recording of a Chinese Taoist funeral ceremony, the sounds here are just magical and reason enough to own this disc.

new arrivals

Friday, July 10th, 2009

Cool new things on our shelves:

Ambient/Drone:

Taiga Remains / RV Paintings LP  (Blackest Rainbow Records)  $18  - lush organic soundscapes; w/Brian of Starving Weirdos

Wada, Yoshi  “Earth Horns With Electronic Drone”  CD  (EM Records)  $20  - 1st release of awesome 1974 drone piece

Doom Metal:

Bong / Quttinirpaaq LP  (Blackest Rainbow Records)  $18  - split of doom that sounds like early Skullflower, ltd 300

Grails  “Doomsdayer’s Holiday”  LP  (Temporary Residence Limited)  $18  - guest vocals by Alan Bishop (Sun City Girls)

Experimental:

Bjerga, Sindre & Horton, Robert  “Can’t Go Fast Enough To Get There Early”  CD  (Blackest Rainbow Records)  $17  - warm and fuzzy noise drones, ltd. 264

Conrad, Tony & Olson, Tovah  “Let There Be Music”  LP  (Tovinator)  $15  - ltd 200, instantly sold out from the label, one side only

Ichiyanagi, Toshi  “Electronic Field”  CD  (Omega Point)  $26  - wild electronics from Yoko Ono’s first husband

Master Musicians of Bukkake  “The Visible Sign of the Invisible Order”  CD  (Abduction)  $14  - “outsider ceremonial folk masterpiece” w/SCG members

Mechanical Children  “I Rise To Cover All”  LP  (Blackest Rainbow Records)  $18  - good industrial noise from Jazzfinger members, ltd 300

Minami, Hiroaki  “Obscure Tape Music of Japan Vol. 10: Electronic Symphony No. 1″  CD  (Edition Omega Point)  $26  - unreleased cosmic analog sounds from ‘76, ltd 500

Moha!  “Jeff Carey’s MoHa!”  7″  (Rune Grammofon)  $7  - white vinyl, 500 copies, different mixes of both tracks

Nurse With Wound  “The Surveillance Lounge”  CD  (Dirter Promotions)  $17  - back to the creaky disturbing sounds of old

Starving Weirdos  “B/P/M Series 1″  LP  (Blackest Rainbow Records)  $20  - piano based experimental like earlier NWW, ltd 500

Tomutonttu CD  (Fonal)  $17  - Kemialliset Ystävät guy, re of OOP Beta Lactam LP

Tomutonttu CD  (Fonal)  $17  - Kemialliset Ystävät guy, re of OOP Ultra Eczema LP

Jazz/Improv:

Sun Ra featuring Pharoah Sanders & Black Harold  “Live at Judson Hall”  CD  (ESP Disk)  $14  - ultra rare private press LP + 45 min unreleased material

Rock:

Alvarius B. CD  (Abduction)  $14  - solo wooden guitar by Sun City Girls’ Alan Bishop

Deas, Cam  “My Guitar Is Alive And It’s Singing”  LP  (Blackest Rainbow Records)  $18  - gorgeous solo acoustic guitar, ltd 300

Deas, Cam / Spoono  “Greetings from the Isle of Man”  LP  (Blackest Rainbow Records)  $18  - gorgeous solo acoustic guitar, ltd 350

Death In June  “The World That Summer”  CD  (NER)  $17  - reissue of goth double LP from ‘86 w/David Tibet

Grouper  “Dragging A Dead Deer Up A Hill”  LP  (IOG)  $16  - ethereal folky songs with dream production, orange vinyl

Hawkwind  “Space Ritual”  2 x CD  (EMI)  $17  - monster space rock w/pre-Motorhead Lemmy

Inner Space, The  “Agilok & Blubbo OST”  CD  (Wah Wah Records)  $20  - early unreleased pre-Can recordings

Neung Phak  “Fucking USA”  7”  (Abduction)  $9  - great cover of Korean anti-American rock tune, ltd 300

Ong Ong  “5″  magazine & CDR  (Ong Ong Press)  $8  - CDR with private press rarities

Rose, Jack & Black Twig Pickers, The  LP  (Klang Industries)  $19

Sun City Girls  “Jacks Creek”  CD  (Abduction)  $16  - reissue of 1995 LP, absolutely off the wall!!!

Sun City Girls  “Napoleon & Josephine (Singles Volume 2)”  CD  (Abduction)  $16  - the weird volume with theatrical pieces

Walker, Peter  “Rainy Day Raga”  LP  (Harte Recordings)  $16  - lovely mixture of Indian raga & American folk from 1966

World:

Mayet, Hisham  “Palace of the Winds”  DVD  (Sublime Frequencies)  $20  - guitars in Morocco!  limited edition of 1000 copies

Souleyman, Omar  “Dabke 2020: Folk & Pop Sounds of Syria”  CD  (Sublime Frequencies)  $14  - fantastic Arabic pop music that really moves

Various  “1970’s Algerian Proto-Rai Underground”  CD  (Sublime Frequencies)  $16  - infectious Algerian music from extremely rare 7’s

Gift Tapes

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

Well, we missed the first batch, but we are on track with the second batch of releases from Gift Tapes.  Run by Jason Anderson of Brother Raven, this Seattle label is putting out quality electronic music in limited numbers on cassette only.  All three new titles come in double-sided full color covers with nice labels and are C20s.  First up is the new Brother Raven entitled “A Sound Like Wailing Winter Winds Is Heard“.  If you read this blog, you’ve find a recent reference to a concert they played alongside Magneticring, Pete Swanson and Zaïmph.  On that night, the duo  had their analog gear out and brought back memories of the numerous releases of electronic music on Sky Records from back in the 1970’s and 1980’s.  For those of you who didn’t grow up with those around, I should explain that they put out LPs of gentle, melodic synthesizer music with experimental flourishes.  The best known examples from their catalog would be Cluster and the first four albums by Asmus Tietchens.  The emphasis here is drifting off into soundworlds, not the sequencer driven drivel of post-Krautrock Tangerine Dream.  It is an area that seems to be getting explored more lately by the likes of James Ferraro from The Skaters and others.  Brother Raven really nails the cosmic aspects of this stuff though.  It seems to the big release in this batch, as “A Sound Like Wailing Winter Winds Is Heard” is limited to 80 copies (and comes with a bonus, gift-wrapped microcassette), while the other two are in editions of only 50 copies.  Not that this should suggest these other two are any lesser.  “Early To Rise” by Jeremiah Walker carries on in a similar vein albeit with longer tracks that are more of carpet of dreamy sound similar to early Popol Vuh.  Really meditative and mystical, perhaps my favorite of the trio. The final new release is by Million Mists and is called “Spaeship” (not “Spaceship”).  The most experimental in this set, this tape features a more aleatoric atmosphere on “Crab Pulser” mixing sounds evocative of radio transmissions from distant stellar bodies with the long slow synth sounds you might expect from a sci-fi movie about those regions.  It is an interesting contrast as Million Mists is the solo project of Jamie Potter, half of Brother Raven and a former member of Bonus.  All in all not a bad moment over the course of three release and the style of music makes the 10 minutes of each side stretch onto infinity in the good way.

recent notable items

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

Actually, this is stuff that came in last week, but it’s been so busy around here I haven’t found time to write about them until now.

Ashtray Navigations “Monocycle American” LP - Super stupid tiny edition of 99 copies on multicolored vinyl with a paste-on cover as one might expect from the highly collectable Qbico label.  I guess that is better than the original edition of only 50 copies on CDR, but not by much.  For bettr or worse, the music on this single-sided LP is actually quite impressive heavy psychedelic electronics.  Probably one of the best Ashtray Nav things I have heard in a long time.

Aidan Baker “Gathering Blue” 2 x LP - Limited edition of 444 copies in a heavy gatefold sleeve, out of which 294 are pressed on mottled peacock blue vinyl which we got one copy of.  Featured among the original compositions is a cover of Joy Division’s “24 Hours”.

Laurie Scott Baker “Gracility” 2 x CD - Unreleased archival recordings from 1969-1975 of graphic scores and text pieces.  Baker was an early friend of Cornelius Cardew’s and was in the Scratch Orchestra as well a performer in Hair and with Alex Harvey, Robert Wyatt and Manfred Mann.  According to the liner note, he and John Paul Jones were the ones that got EMS to make their famous suitcase synthesizer.  This collection documents his experimental work and it is quite impressive!  The title track is a mass of sound like the early AMM recordings, and no wonder as joining Baker are Keith Rowe, Derek Bailey and Gavin Bryars.  Following this is a lovely 6 minute piece for solo soprano sax performed in 1975 by none other than Evan Paker.  Taking up the above referenced EMS Synthi VC3, along with bass guitar and plenty of tape echo, Baker is joined for the 51 minute “Bass Chants & Cues” by John Tilbury (AMM) on organ and Jamie Muir (King Crimson) on drums and vocals as captured in 1972.  It’s a stunning work of minimalism with rock freak out energy.  Closing the set is “Circle Piece” performed by the legendary and rarely recorded Scratch Orchestra (here featuring Andy McKay, Christopher Hobbs, John White, Michael Parsons and many other) back in 1970.  Given who is performing here, it is no wonder that the music came out so great.  Since this really doesn’t have any US distribution, I ordered these directly from the label in UK.  We got three copies and they are all spoke for at the moment.  So why even mention it?  Well, if anyone else wants to pick up a copy of this, we will order more.  So let us know if you’d like to get one of these.

Sir Richard Bishop “The Freak of Araby” LP or CD - Rick’s latest is truly fantastic.  He’s gone electric and added a backing back and channels his Lebanese roots through a collection of originals and Arabic covers.  This is one that will reach out even to those simple minded folks who think that “Torch of the Mystics” was Sun City Girls’ only decent record.  He played last night at the Crocodile and it was stunning in person.   We’ve got this one on both LP and CD.

Burning Star Core “Challenger” LP - Hailed by many as C. Spencer Yeh’s best work, this album was originally released on both LP and CD by Hospital Productions, and like everything that label puts out went out of print.  Thankfully reissued by Plastic Records.

Cornelius Cardew “Treatise” LP - Pages from the masterwork of graphic scores performed by one of Cardew’s closest friends Keith Rowe (ex-AMM) and Oren Ambarchi (Sunn0))))).

Cobalt “Eater of Birds” CD - Blackened war metal from Colorado.  This is their 2007 album which we got along with restock of their latest “Gin”.  Like many Profound Lore releases, this one has a guest appearance by Jarboe of Swans.  Driving with some nice acoustic tracks.

Current 93 “Aleph At Hallucinatory Mountain” CD - Three years in the making, this album shows some of the influence of all the metal bands that David Tibet has been working with recently (Sigh, Skitliv, Aethenor).  The sound is heavier and doomier matching Tibet’s apocalyptic lyrics.  As usual there is a rather star studded cast with James Blackshaw, William Breeze, Ossian Brown, John Contreras, Baby Dee, Andria Degens, Sasha Grey, Andrew Liles, Alex Neilson, Steven Stapleton, Andrew W.K., and perhaps mostly strangely of all, Rickie Lee Jones.  It’s a regular priced CD but includes a fat booklet of lyrics and photos, plus a poster of fans that put up money for the album in advance.

Aaron Dilloway “Chain Shot / Execution Dock” LP - The ex-Wolf Eyes guy who runs the Hanson label provides one of his strongest moments on this LP of noise loops.  It will have you thinking it is stuck in a lock groove until it actually evolves into something else.

Eat Skull “Wild and Inside” CD - It’s lo-fi and rough, but oh so catchy and melodic.  Pop music for people who require a slightly dirtier sound.

FM3 “Buddha Machine II” soundbox - They are back, everyone’s favorite self contained drone machine.  They are really cool and the new one has pitch bend on it.

Guru Guru “UFO” CD - Restocked yet again, this an essential Krautrock recording.  Originally released in 1970 by the wonderful Ohr label, this unreleased some heavy psychdelic sounds.  Track titles like “Der LSD-Marsch” and “Next Time See You At The Dalai Lhama” should tell a lot.  Sadly, original Guru Guru bass player Uli Trepte passed away earlier this year.

Hospitals “Hairdryer Peace” CD - Take some members of Eat Skull, and their sound, and totally blow it out with distortion and you have this.

Koenjihyakkei “Nivraym” CD
- RIO [Rock in Opposition] is not dead!  Tatsuya Yoshida of Ruins and Acid Mothers Temple leads this group in some intense progressive rock that recalls Zeuhl, Henry Cow and the like.

Les Rallizes Denudes “Yodo-Go-A-Go-Go” CD - Legendary, but almost impossible to hear as they released so little in their time, some artifacts of Les Rallizes Denudes have been appearing in recent years.  Unfortunately they tend to disappear just as fast often.  This 70 minute CD (not a CDR like many others by this group) collects primal psych-rock from the groups activitity between 1967-1982.

Ghérasim Luca “Two Poems” LP
- Like Tristan Tzara and Isidore Isou, Gherasim Luca came from Romania to create strange art.  Mostly known as a poet, Luca recorded these two works in the early 1970’s and I don’t think they were released before.  Made in the Swedish EMS studios, Luca layers his voice to create charming works of sound poetry.  This is much more facinating that the double CD of work released by Editions José Corti some years back.

Malkuth “Sefirah Gevurah” LP
- Second album from this NYC black metal trio which features members of No Neck Blues Band.  Like their debut, this one is on Hospital Productions and of course instantly sold out from them.

Paul Metzger “Anamnestic Tincture” LP - Strings with a serious bent, as Metzger builds his own variations on the banjo and acoustic guitar, but he still plays them with finger picking skill.  Rob Millis commented that Paul’s set was one of the most outstanding opening acts on the recent Sir Richard Bishop tour.

Nurse With Wound “Spiral Insana” CD - Out of print for some years, this is a brand new CD edition of NWW’s 1986 LP for Torso in Holland.  Apparently it was one of their better selling records, a fact which Steve blammed on it being advertised along with Torso’s titles by The Residents.  This one has lots of short tracks which contribute to the ongoing soundscape of the album and I always thought it was one of their better albums. Guests on this one include Robert Haigh (Sema) and David Jackman (Organum).

Omar Souleyman “Highway To Hassake: Folk & Pop Sounds of Syria” 2 x LP - Sublime Frequencies vinyl - blink and you will miss it.  We did secure a few copies of this already out of print reissue of Omar’s wonderful first CD.  The man and his band have the Arabic groove like no one else.  They just completed a tour of Europe which apparently blew some minds. According to Alan Bishop, Omar declared himself to be better than 60 Jamacans at the Sonar Festival in Spain.

Spiral Joy Band “Little Sparrow” CD - From the ashes of Pelt has come Spiral Joy Band.  While Jack Rose has head off into finger picking territory, Mike Gangloff and Pelt engineer Mikel Dimmick choose to explore the drone in more depth.  It’s not a pleasant soft drone though, but one with a lot of scrape and harsh tones closer to early Organum  or Tony Conrad.  On this album, the quartet play fiddle, gong, singing bowls, harmonium, sruti, spiral cymbal, crash cymbal, crank whistle, flute, bells, and stickbanjo.

Starving Weirdos “Into An Energy” CD - Another impressive act on the American noise scene, Starving Weirdos have delivered a great album here.  It’s noisy but pulled back and drony.  It reminds me of some of the early Voice of Eye recordings, if anyone remembers them.

Sun Araw “Boat Trip” 12″ - Bloody hell, this is a 45 RPM 12″ single priced about the same as an LP.  It is at least 9 minutes per side however, and the music is really stunning.  Originally released as a 3″ CDR in an edition of 50 copies, it is nice the music is actually available to a wider public.  I thought Cameron Stallones’ other Sun Araw records were good, but this one really stands out.  It’s got a kind of intensionally murky sound which the label describes as “some hidden soundtrack to Donkey Kong warp-whistling straight into Ayahuasca Country.”  Maybe the rhythms in here make for the Donkey Kong reference, but the beautiful guitar work remininscent of early Skullflower is what really pushes this combination of sounds into the strasosphere for me.

Tecumseh “Crossing Divides” LP - I wasn’t sure if we would get this one back in again, as they only made 384 copies, but here it is again.  This Portland trio is one of the better doom / drone acts going right now and shares one member with Trees.  I saw them live with Troum and Nadja last year and found their almost unmoving sound to be quiet pleasing.

Throbbing Gristle “The Third Mind Movements” CD - New CD made for their recent tour of Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago and New York in April of this year.  I stunned Pete Swanson, Marcia Bassett and myself by playing this and discovering it actually sounds quite contemporary, like it could be Emeralds or some one like that.  It’s more electronic and not so much of Gen’s vocals.

V:28 “NonAnthropogenic” and “SoulSavior” CDs - Pounding industrial metal from Norway which has been proving rather popular with our customers.  Kind of neat to see some old names from the Cold Meat Industry label (Deutsch Nepal and raison d’être) make guest appearances on “SoulSavior”.

Whisper Room “Birch White” CD - Aidan Baker of Nadja features in this new rock trio exploring droney territory.

John Wiese & C. Spencer Yeh “Live in Nottingham” LP - I would guess by sales that people around here are familiar with noise man Wiese and certainly know C. Spencer Yeh’s Burning Star Core.  This is a pretty solid noise set from England released in an edition of 330 copies in a lovely cover with concrete poetry inspired artwork.  Released by Spencer’s ‘bootleg’ What The…? Records label.

YaHoWah 13 “Magnificence in the Memory” LP - The second of what could be 11 volumes of unreleased archival material by this religious / psych group that at one time ran a vegetarian restaurant in L.A. and featured Sky Saxon of The Seeds.  Their privately pressed LPs were long the stuff of legend and were inspiration for Byron Coley’s choice of label and store name.  YaHoWah 13 have been getting a lot of attention in recent years as a number of their original LPs have been reissued, there has been a book and movie about them, and they have reformed and toured, although without founder and leader Father Yod, who died in a hanggliding accident in Hawaii long ago.  Drag City previously released a rather tepid album credited to Children of the Sixth Root Race, which was a Yahowa off shoot and in my opinion not very inspired Christian rock.  “Magnificence in the Memory” however was assembled by Dave Nuss of The No-Neck Blues Band and features some awesome psych jams with Father Yod leading.  Recorded in the prime era of 1972-73, this material really takes off and is the kind of lost psych that people hope for with these kind of reissues.

Various “Open Strings” 2 x CD - Very cool collection of 78 sides from Egypt, Iran, Iraq and Turkey recorded in the 1920’s with a second disc of modern responses.  The 78s are obviously very swell and have been restored wonderful. I had my reservations about the second disc, especially in this pairing, but discovered it to be very strong.  I knew Sir Richard Bishop would be good, but there are also great tracks by Michael Flower, MV & EE, Six Organs of Admittance and Paul Metzger.

As should be obvious, this is only a fragment of recent arrivals, and there is plenty more I could write about, but there is more to do than blog here at the shop.

- Eric Lanzillotta

Jesse Paul Miller: SE Asia & the sounds of vinyl

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

We’ve rounded out our selection of privately published CDRs by Jesse Paul Miller.  Actually one of the three titles we just got is a DVD-R titled “Ambient Thailand and Laos” which he describes as “static one-perspective videos (”pillow shot” style) made in 19 locations thailand and laos january / february 2005“.  Beautiful scenes of South East Asia and what better way to compliment that than with “Luk Thung & Molam LP Archive Vol. 1“?  A selection of tracks from Thai vinyl picked up on his travels, this CDR is a fantastic collection of pop music unknown to western ears.  What makes it even better is the cover collage featuring many album covers in miniature.  This disc sounds great and keeps all the vinyl noise intact.  And if you like vinyl noise, definitely check out “Taemgip Mahkram and Eilrahc Rekrap“.  This is a slightly older JPM title packaged in a fantastic sleeve that apes the classic Folkway LP design.  Here the sounds are thick with scratches and pops making the backwards music sound even more ancient.  As before, these are all numbered editions of either 30 or 40 copies, so don’t hestitate to snap these up.  The previous batch certainly found its fan and has people excited about these discs (which is why we are sold out of several earlier titles).

Matt Shoemaker

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

Matt Shoemaker grew up over on Mercer Island and has lived in the Seattle area his entire life.  That’s all about to change as his better half is going to grad school in San Francisco and they are moving in August.  I’ve known Matt for a long time as he used to be a regular customer at the Anomalous Records shop on Capital Hill back in the mid-1990’s.  We’ve become good friends and played music together many times.  In his free time, Matt has devoted himself to creation of beautiful sound worlds.  First released on bernhard günter’s trente oiseaux label in the early part of this decade, Matt’s solo works have found a steadily building fan base leading to more releases around the world.  Matt has brought us a few of these latest releases for the shop.  The oldest is 2008’s “Mutable Depth“, a 3″ CD released on the French label Ferns.  Using only ice as source material Matt created a 20 minute work exploring aural textures.  Following this have come two full length releases in rapid succession.  In May, the Belgian CDR label Mystery Sea released “The Sunken Plethora Consumes All“.  Limited to only 120 copies in full color package, this disc blends field recordings with rich ambient sounds.  In June this was followed by “Erosion of the Analogous Eye” on Jim Haynes’ Helen Scarsdale Agency label.  Here the sounds play out more delicately.  “Sunken Plethora” has deep washes of sound whereas “Erosion” strikes me as more of a composed work with highs and lows.  Though in a slightly larger edition, “Erosion” is limited to only 300 copies due to the unique artwork on each cover.  Matt has been one of Seattle’s silent masters, playing out rarely.  He will be playing at least one last show at the Chapel Performance Space on July 18th.  And of course there will be more releases, such as the limited edition picture disc coming from Elevator Bath.

Crystal Hell Pool

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

One of the joys of this shop is getting to discover all the great local music coming out these days.  Yesterday we got a CDR by Crystal Hell Pool.  The b&w cover photo shows a snowy scene on a mountain side where the few trees disappear into mist - not unlikely taken somewhere near here.  The music inside fits it as the soft waves of sound seem not to have definite edges and merely wash over.  It’s soft, gentle and mysterious for most of these 10 untitled tracks.  The third track stands out as piano sounds come to the foreground, nonetheless with the same soft focus as the rest of the disc.  Here a fragment repeats and overlaps itself delicately.  Even this comes across very restrained making the rest of the album sound even more subdued.