Out on Madrid's leading label for braindance, breakcore, acid, and experimental electronics, it marks a fearless new chapter in electronic music. Amidst a sea of mediocrity and plagiarism, I'm Not Here stands as a testament to the uniqueness of the Cornish Braindance scene, which has given rise to some of the greatest producers in electronic dance music. Here, Benjamin James demonstrates that he is the torchbearer of that legacy, delivering anthems for a world spiraling in self-alienation--where identity flickers between screens and silence.
Cerca:ri
- A1: Who Will Save Your Soul
- A2: Pieces Of You
- A3: Little Sister
- A4: Foolish Games
- A5: Near You Always
- B1: Painters
- B2: Morning Song
- B3: Adrian
- B4: I'm Sensitive
- C1: You Were Meant For Me
- C2: Don't
- C3: Daddy
- C4: Angel Standing By
- C5: Amen
- D1: Emily
- D2: Rocker Girl
- D3: Everything Breaks
- D4: Cold Song
- D5: Angel Needs A Ride
Feiern Sie 30 Jahre „Pieces of You“ mit dieser limitierten Pressung auf violettfarbenem Vinyl. Jewels legendäres Debütalbum enthält Hits wie „Who Will Save Your Soul“, „You Were Meant for Me“ und „Foolish
Games“, die die Ära prägen. Das Album, das rohe Emotionen mit poetischer Lyrik verbindet, bleibt eines
der meistverkauften Debüts aller Zeiten und ein prägendes Werk der Singer-Songwriter-Ära der 1990er
Jahre.
Seit Jewel vor 25 Jahren international bekannt wurde, hat sie sich mit 13 Studioalben und vier GRAMMY®-
Nominierungen zu einer charismatischen Live-Performerin und angesehenen Songwriterin entwickelt.
Unter Vertrag genommen noch bevor sie 19 Jahre alt war, verdankt sie dies ihren großen Mentoren Bob
Dylan und Neil Young, die sich die Zeit nahmen, sie als junge Künstlerin zu fördern und zu unterstützen.
„Pieces of You“ wurde 1995 veröffentlicht, aufgenommen in einem Studio auf Neil Youngs Ranch und mit
Youngs Begleitband, The Stray Gators. Das Album hielt sich zwei Jahre lang in den Billboard 200 Charts
(bis auf Platz 4) und brachte Top-10-Hits hervor, darunter die mit Platin ausgezeichnete Single „You Were
Meant for Me“, „Who Will Save Your Soul“ und „Foolish Games“. Danach veröffentlichte sie 12 weitere
Studioalben, während sie sich auch mit dem Schreiben und der Schauspielerei beschäftigte.
The Sator Arepo, or Sator Square, is an ancient word puzzle comprising five palindromes that's etched on various historical sites throughout the Western world. Its origins are unknown, but the square has long been thought to hold magical properties, used as a charm against illness and evil, to cure insanity or to determine whether someone was guilty of witchcraft. Self-styled "punk ethnomusicologist", acoustician and musician Julien Hairon uses this mystical symbol as the starting point for his debut Judgitzu album in an attempt to reconnect with his Celtic heritage, exploring how its hallowed messages might harmonize with contemporary Tanzanian dance music.Hairon has been traveling across the world for over a decade, collecting field recordings from countries such as Indonesia, Australia, Cambodia, China and Bangladesh, and presenting them on his Les Cartes Postales Sonores label, re-issuing any curious cassettes and CDs he came across on the PetPets' TAPES imprint. It was during this time that he became fascinated by rituals that involved spirits, prompting him to examine his own ancestry when he returned to Brittany. "Many artifacts in the landscape remain," Hairon explains, "and the power of spirits is still palpable." He represents this Celtic mysticism on 'Sator Arepo' with murky drones and magickal synth tones, using xenharmonic scales (tuning outside of standard 12-tone equal temperament) that reach back to the ancient world. These sounds are augmented with fast-paced, sci-fi rhythms informed by his time in Tanzania; "Singeli has contaminated me," admits the producer.The most astonishing example of this is 'Miracle', a thrusting soundsystem experiment that layers serpentine, bagpipe-esque electronic wails over extravagant clusters of blocky percussion. Driven by the frenetic 175BPM pulse that echoes through the streets of Dar Es Salaam - popularized globally by forward-thinking producers like Sisso, Duke and Jay Mitta - Hairon opens up a rare conversation, seeking to draw parallels between today's most urgent dance forms and the archaic rituals of antiquity. On 'Vitalimetre', Hairon drives his sonic palette into the red, harmonizing with Dutch hardstyle and gabber, and splaying distorted drones over maddeningly blown-out kicks and ratcheting percussion. 'L'or Des Fous' takes a more meditative route, prioritizing Hairon's eccentric tonality with expressive sheets of pitch-warped sound that ghost walk across energized, rattling beats.If you heard Hairon's last Judgitzu release 'Umeme / Kelele', described by Boomkat as "one of 2019's deadliest dancefloor sessions," then you'll know how mindboggling this material can be. And with 'Sator Arepo', the French producer deepens his reach, grasping a world that we've almost forgotten and juxtaposing it with a landscape most of us barely comprehend.
- A1: Édith Piaf - La Vie En Rose
- A2: Édith Piaf - Paris
- A3: Édith Piaf - J'm'en Fous Pas Mal
- A4: Édith Piaf - Plus Bleu Que Tes Yeux
- A5: Édith Piaf - L'homme À La Moto
- A6: Édith Piaf & Théo Sarapo - A Quoi Ca Sert L'amour ?
- A7: Édith Piaf - Hymne À L'amour
- B1: Édith Piaf - Les Amants De Paris
- B2: Édith Piaf - La Valse De L'amour
- B3: Édith Piaf - Le "Ça Ira
- B4: Édith Piaf - Cri Du Coeur
- B5: Édith Piaf & Les Compagnons De La Chanson - Les Trois C
- B6: Édith Piaf - L'accordéoniste
- B7: Édith Piaf - Padam, Padam
- C1: Edith Piaf - Sous Le Ciel De Paris
- C2: Édith Piaf - La Goualante Du Pauvre Jean
- C3: Édith Piaf - Autumn Leaves (Les Feuilles Mortes)
- C4: Édith Piaf - Mon Dieu
- C5: Édith Piaf - Exodus
- C6: Édith Piaf - Hymn To Love
- C7: Édith Piaf - La Foule
- D1: Édith Piaf - Mon Manège À Moi (Tu Me Fais Tourner La Tê
- D2: Édith Piaf - La Vie En Rose (English Version)
- D3: Édith Piaf - Tu Es Partout
- D4: Édith Piaf - Milord
- D5: Édith Piaf - Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien
- D6: Édith Piaf - Johnny, Tu N'es Pas Un Ange
- D7: Édith Piaf - Les Amants D'un Jour
Mit der exklusiven Doppelvinyl in zartem Pink erscheint eine Hommage an eine der größten Künstlerinnen Europas: Édith Piaf. Ihre Lieder sind nicht nur musikalische Meisterwerke, sondern auch emotionale Zeitdokumente, die Millionen Menschen berührt haben - in Frankreich, Deutschland und weit darüber hinaus. Geboren 1915 in Paris, wuchs Piaf unter schwierigen Umständen auf, sang auf den Straßen und wurde 1935 von einem Cabaret-Besitzer entdeckt. Ihr Spitzname "La Môme Piaf" - der kleine Spatz - wurde zum Symbol für ihre fragile Erscheinung und ihre kraftvolle Stimme. Ihre Musik war oft autobiografisch, geprägt von Liebe, Verlust und Hoffnung. Sie sang mit einer Intensität, die bis heute unter die Haut geht. Piaf wurde zur Nationalikone Frankreichs, besonders nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg. Ihre Lieder wie "La Vie en Rose", "Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien" oder "Hymne à l"Amour" wurden zu Hymnen einer Generation. Auch in Deutschland und Europa wurde sie gefeiert - als Stimme der Versöhnung, der Leidenschaft und der Menschlichkeit. Diese Vinyl-Edition vereint ihre größten Werke in einem liebevoll gestalteten Sammlerstück - ein Muss für Musikliebhaber und Kulturinteressierte.
Zum 30-jährigen Jubiläum legen Kreidler zwei ihrer frühesten Werke neu auf: RIVA (1994) und das unbetitelte Mini-Album (1995). Beide Veröffentlichungen waren lange vergriffen und erscheinen nun remastered in einer hochwertigen Edition auf Bureau B. Die Aufnahmen dokumentieren die Anfänge einer Band, die sich seitdem als feste Größe zwischen elektronischer Musik, Post-Rock und Avantgarde etabliert hat. Die Düsseldorfer Kunstakademie, das Umfeld von Ratinger Hof und Creamcheese, sowie die Nähe zu Bands wie Kraftwerk, NEU! oder DAF bildeten den kulturellen Nährboden. Kreidler entwickelten daraus ihren ganz eigenen Sound: hypnotisch, reduziert, elegant.
Free Universe follows up their highly acclaimed debut release with Impromptu Adventure, a three-track collaborative EP between Brooklyn-based label founder Gee Dee and one of the leading names in German electronic music, Roman Flügel.
The three-track EP, recorded in Brooklyn over the course of three days, perfectly captures the duo’s unique, evolving, and boundary-pushing style. “Trip Or Trap” opens with a punchy, psychedelic groove that immediately pulls listeners into the jour- ney. “Cosmetics” lifts the energy even higher with playful piano flourishes and an acidic bass line that’s a surefire crowd-pleas-er. Finally, the title track, “Impromptu Adventure”, brings the project to a close with a high-energy, acid-driven rip that leaves a lasting impression on DJs and dancers alike.
Drawing from over three decades in electronic music, DJ Rame (one third of the acclaimed Italian Pastaboys team) showcases his House Music expertise with this genre-blending original EP on Memento Records, going right back to the roots of club culture.
Title track Life 3 starts off with a dreamy pad intro and New York-house inspired piano chords, setting the mood for the dance floor and suddenly exploding into a bouncy, tension-and-release energetic swing, trippy percussions and rubberized synth rhythms.
Toyholic’s infectious bassline and syncopated beats match retro-futuristic synths and acid melodies, while Niwa’s faster pace and robotic vocal samples are drenched in 80s Electro Disco moods.
Stone Garden rounds off the release with a breakbeat groove, vintage analog sounds and mesmerizing stop-and-gos.
A visceral ode to the free spirit of the early warehouse parties that came to define an era of revolutionary music, these 4 tracks are one part raw emotion, one part contemporary sonic innovation.
- A1: Displacement (Kmru Rework) Feat Kmru
- A2: Reprisal (Penelope Trappes Rework) Feat Penelope Trappes
- A3: Empire Systems (Kevin Richard Martin Rework - Iced Mix) Feat Kevin Richard Martin
- B1: Ausencia (Mabe Fratti Hiatus Rework) Mabe Fratti
- B2: Persistence (Abul Mogard Rework)Feat Abul Mogard
- B3: Secretly Wishing For Rain (William Basinski & Gary Thomas Wright Rework)
A decade after its release, A Fragile Geography returns transformed. This limited edition cassette accompanies the AFG10 anniversary reissue, offering an inspired re-envisioning of Rafael Anton Irisarri’s landmark compositions. Reworks presents distinctive readings of these pieces, with each artist leaving their personal mark on the material. The titles remain unchanged, with the sole exception of “Hiatus,” reborn here as “Ausencia.” Together, these reimaginings extend the emotional cartography of the album into new terrains.
KMRU reframes “Displacement” with expansive, glimmering layers that open into meditative ambient landscapes. Nairobi born and Berlin based, he is known for morphing field recordings into vivid aural experiences, often capturing the texture of footsteps, foliage, and distant city life and weaving them into contemplative soundscapes. In this version he introduces subtle new sounds, including stringlike synths that trace and heighten the piece’s emotional arc. The result invites close listening, offering enveloping tones where the organic and the synthetic gently collide and flow.
Penelope Trappes renders “Reprisal” as a voice-led invocation of the delicate and the intimate. Her wistful vocals bloom with fragile sorrow, rising over shimmering strands of strings to create a sound world at once sacred and shadowed. She is adept at channeling inherited grief into music that is transcendent and otherworldly. The interplay of her voice, the strings, and her use of space and depth draws those qualities into Irisarri’s orbit, imbuing “Reprisal” with the same spiritual weight and clarity that define her most powerful work.
Kevin Richard Martin (a.k.a. The Bug) transforms “Empire Systems” into a cavernous “Iced Mix,” driven by polyrhythmic double bass motifs and sculpted from subterranean pressure and negative space. Known for pushing sound to its physical limits, Martin brings the stark intensity of his dub and noise infused practice into Irisarri’s architecture. The track seethes with harmonic distortion and erupts in white noise rhythms, its brooding low end depth and icy reverberant textures amplifying the tension. Vulnerability and force are set in stark relief, as silences feel as heavy as the bursts of sound themselves. The result is a stark study in atmosphere, restraint and impact, reframed through Martin’s singular lens of sonic mass and low end intensity.
On Side B, Mabe Fratti opens with a cinematic, dreamlike, Lynchian reimagining of “Hiatus” in her native Spanish (“Ausencia”). She threads cello and voice so wondrously that her rendering feels at once hauntingly beautiful and disquieting. Emotionally charged melodies shift in unexpected directions, while her soft, intimate vocals hover above Irisarri’s brooding synth textures. Fratti’s gift for blending experimental and avant pop sensibilities with visceral, emotionally powerful expression shines resplendently here. She gives voice to Irisarri’s reflections on the passage of time and his growing desire to reconnect with his familial roots.
Abul Mogard stretches “Persistence” into a vast drone elegy. A master of patient sound sculpting, Mogard layers evolving waves of analog synths into a dense shroud that radiates its own internal light. Gradual surges of tone and subtle harmonic shifts emphasize the piece’s endurance and inevitability. Irisarri’s original composition, in Mogard's hands, becomes a rumination on time’s unrelenting flow. Melancholy and transcendence coexist in equal measure in this engulfing, cathartic rework.
William Basinski and Gary Thomas Wright close the cycle with a spectral version of “Secretly Wishing for Rain.” Basinski’s field recordings of Reseda rainfall and birdsong, which open and close the rework, add a personal touch and evoke the imagined sound of a grainy film reel flickering to life. The piece suspends Irisarri’s yearning for the Pacific Northwest, lodging it hazily between memory, place and an unreachable dream. It feels like a fading recollection, half forgotten and half felt. A final gesture that dissolves the album into vapor, leaving the listener adrift in its lingering afterglow.
Mastered with great care by Stephan Mathieu and featuring a remixed version of the original artwork by Daniel Castrejón, this edition refracts the language of the original through new prisms. Less a return than a passage, across time, across interpretation, into uncharted emotional realms.
- 01: Jésus Abrego& Leopoldo Picazo - Á Lupita
- 02: Rita Villa - Czardas
- 03: Maximiano Rosales - A María, La Del Cielo
- 04: Quinteto Jordá - El Amor Es La Vida
- 05: Unknown Speaker - Episodio Historico Batalla Del 5 De Mayo
- 06: Rafael Herrera Robinson - Las Horas De Luto
- 07: Ismael Magana - Te Amo!
- 08: Sra Modesta Zamudio - La Carcajada De Cupid
- 09: Rafael Herrera Robinson - Jarabe Tapatio
- 10: Rafael Herrera Robinson &Amp; Leopoldo Picazo - Macario Romero
- 11: J Morales & Cortazar - Los Amores De Un Charro
- 12: Octaviano Yañez - Una Noche De Alegria
- 13: Banda De La Policía De Mexico - Hilda
- 14: Felipe Llera - El Amigo
- 15: Rafael Herrera Robinson & Leopoldo Picazo - La Paloma Azul
- 16: Rafael Herrera Robinson - Un Recuerdo A Mi Madre
- 17: Jesús Abrego & Leopoldo Picazo - Á Juanita
- 18: Rosete, Camacho & Two Unknown Singers - Agua, Azucarillos Y Aguardiente
- 19: Rita Villa - Bagatelle
- 20: Juan De Dios Peza - Mi Padre
Badboy garage is the order of the night on this latest drop from the unstoppable Instinct label. It's a split EP between Isgwan and Trustee, and the offer kicks off with the low slung swagger and warped bass of 'Right Tehn' complete with gun-finger synths and nawty vocals. Trustee then steps up with some expertly crafted jungle breaks turned 2-stepping beats on 'Watch Dat' with mad low energy wobbles. His 'Shuffle N' Step' is another lip-curling and rude as you like bit of filthy garage, 'Feel Me' (feat Tanya George) is a more emotive sound thanks to the buttery r&b vocal hooks and 'Work Set' shuts down with bumping low-end pressure.
- A1: The Burning Bright Light (The Multitudes Cannot Contain Me)
- A2: A Brass Planet (Cigarette Break In The Airlock)
- A3: Subspace Lab Fiend (The Duplicitous End Of Already Nothing Nowhere Time)
- B1: Hermes Majesty 3 0 Firmware Safe Injection Site (Or How I Learned To Love The Demiurge)
- B2: Avant Jawn (Dissection In The Technoverse)
"The Burning Bright Light" is a mind-meld between improvisation trio "Dromedaries" (saxophonist Keir Neuringer of Irreversible Entanglements, Shayna Dulberger on double bass, and percussionist Julius Masri) and sci-fi writer/vocalist "Alexoteric" (Alex Smith), evoking epic sci-fi cinemascapes, vocabulary- and reference-rich underground writing, the liberatory jazz tradition, and playful avant-garde experimentation.
Recorded in a single high-voltage burst of cosmic collaboration on an October afternoon at Philadelphia's Rittenhouse Soundworks, "The Burning Bright Light" is a sonic document like no other. A mind-meld between improvisation trio »Dromedaries« and sci-fi writer/vocalist "Alexoteric" (Alex Smith), the album emerges organically on a foundation of speculative fiction, free jazz interaction, avant-garde textures, and freestyle refrains.
- A1: Goin` To San Diego (Feat Bob Dylan, David Amram, Perry Robinson, Happy Traum, Jon Sholle, Surya, Moruga, Peter Orlovsky & Anne Waldman)
- A2: Vomit Express (Feat Bob Dylan, David Amram, Perry Robinson, Happy Traum, Jon Sholle, Surya, Moruga, Peter Orlovsky & Anne Waldman)
- A3: Jimmy Berman (Gay Lib Rag)
- A4: Ny Youth Call Annunciation (Feat Arthur Russell, Jon Sholle, David Mansfield & Steven Taylor)
- A5: Cia Dope Calypso (Feat Arthur Russell, Jon Sholle, David Mansfield & Steven Taylor)
- B1: Put Down Yr Cigarette Rag (Feat Arthur Russell, Jon Sholle, David Mansfield&Steven Taylor)
- B2: Sickness Blues (Feat Arthur Russell, Jon Sholle, David Mansfield& Steven Taylor)
- B3: Broken Bone Blues (Feat Arthur Russell, Jon Sholle, David Mansfield&Steven Taylor)
- B4: Stay Away From The White House (Feat Arthur Russell, Jon Sholle, David Mansfield & Steven Taylor)
- B5: Hard On Blues (Feat Arthur Russell, Jon Sholle, David Mansfield & Steven Taylor)
- B6: Guru Blues (Feat Arthur Russell, Jon Sholle, David Mansfield&Steven Taylor)
- C1: Everybody Sing (Feat Arthur Russell, Jon Sholle, David Mansfield & Steven Taylor)
- C2: Gospel Noble Truths (Feat Arthur Russell, Jon Sholle, David Mansfield & Steven Taylor)
- C3: Bus Ride Ballad To Suva (Feat Arthur Russell, Jon Sholle, Steven Taylor & David Amram)
- C4: Prayer Blues - 1972 (Feat Arthur Russell, Jon Sholle, Steven Taylor & David Amram)
- C5: Love Forgiven (Feat Arthur Russell, Jon Sholle, Steven Taylor & David Amram)
- C6: Father Death Blues (Feat Arthur Russell, Jon Sholle, Steven Taylor & David Amram)
- D1: Dope Fiend Blues (Feat Arthur Russell, Jon Sholle, Steven Taylor & Avid Amram)
- D2: Tyger (Feat Arthur Russell, Jon Sholle, Steven Taylor & David Amram)
- D3: You Are My Dildo (Peter Orlovsky)
- D4: Old Pond (Arthur Russell, Jon Sholle, Steven Taylor, David Amram)
- D5: No Reason (Feat Arthur Russell, Jon Sholle, Steven Taylor & David Amram)
- D6: My Pretty Rose Tree (Feat Arthur Russell, Jon Sholle, Steven Taylor & David Amram)
- D7: Capitol Air (Feat Arthur Russell, Jon Sholle, Steven Taylor & David Amram)
"Rags, Ballads & Harmonium Songs. Chanteys, Come-All-Ye's, Aborigine Song Sticks. Gospel, Improvisations, Renaissance Lyrics, Blake Hymns, Bluegrass, Hillbilly Riffs, Country & Western, 50's R&B, Dirty Dozens & New Wave"
Allen Ginsberg's recorded opus gets its first ever full vinyl reissue on a gatefold double vinyl LP replete with photography by Robert Frank. Containing studio-recorded performances that he wrote, performed and taped in sessions taking place between 1971 and 1981 - featuring Bob Dylan, Arthur Russell, Anne Waldman, David Mansfield, Perry Robinson, David Amram and many other friends and contemporaries.
A selection of what were arguably "demos" for this record were originally recorded by the legendary Harry Smith at his apartment in the Chelsea Hotel in the early 70s, and this would later appear on Folkways as First Blues: Rags, Ballads & Harmonium Songs.
Sit, you sit down
Breathe when you breathe
Lie down, you lie down
Walk where you walk
Talk when you talk
Cry when you cry
Lie down, you lie down
Die when you die credits
Issued under license from the Allen Ginsberg estate. With thanks for Peter Hale, Peter Wright & John Allen.
c 03: Jimmy Berman (Gay Lib Rag) feat. Bob Dylan, David Amram, Perry Robinson, Happy Traum, Jon Sholle, Surya, Moruga, Peter Orlovsky & Anne Waldman
Born 2 Be Free continues its good early work with another dose of UKG old skool magic. It comes from the label head Azaad, whose previous drops have all sold out in quick time, and this one will likely do the same such is its magnetic appeal. The Londoner opens up with 'Caliente' and rides on bumpy drums with some turbo-charged stabs injecting the heat. 'Feel It' bobble along with cute chords brings a balmy feel next to whispered vocals and low slung bass for maximum lip curl. 'I Want You' brings another timeless vibe with its neon pads and cuddly, immersive atmosphere then the Az Gets Deep mix sets down with some extra depth and drive.
Shadows fold into colour. Memory dissolves into noise. You brush up against the walls of the mind. Touch is soft as breath. On ‘B side’, Areliz Ramos follows her work’s current into its more “fantastic and elusive… and even romantic” side; a place where fantasy loosens the bolts of reality and memory, and emotion is alluringly refracted into musical collages and loose-strung compositions. Across the album, voices drift in and out of an intimate space, while pensive guitar lines stumble and bloom like scribbled unresolved notes in a diary. Beneath its icy, often chaotic surface, ‘B side’ radiates a deep sense of joy and fragility. Ramos sketches out an entire world by free association, collaging notions and echoing quiet thoughts into deeply honest snapshots of daydreams.
Areliz Ramos is a Peruvian producer living in London, recognized for an evocative palette weaving lo-fi and downtempo threads into dreamlike, abstract emo narratives. While her debut ‘Frío’ (Where to Now?), orbited around homesickness and estrangement, ‘B side’ embraces imperfection, incorporating her guitar (named "Frank"), pedals, synthesizers, and her own vocal textures for the first time, privileging emotional immediacy over technical precision. The creative process behind this album reflects a conscious decision to let go, loosen control, let intuition lead, and engage her own ‘B’ side.
Rather than constructing a safe haven from hardship, Ramos offers a cracked mirror, staring right at it, embracing that vulnerability. The gentle and beautiful ‘B side’ explores fleeting satisfaction, or the elusive comfort sitting just out of sight.
Mister Water Wet returns to Soda Gong with "Things Gone and Things Here Still," an album that radically expands the project’s purview while preserving the homespun warmth and oblique tactility that have long defined Iggy Romeu’s work. Where earlier records tilted toward the dusty swing of sample-based beatcraft or spectral minimalist jazz, here Romeu opens the frame to a more ensemble-minded approach, inviting a stellar cast of supporting musicians, including SG alumni Memotone and K. Freund, into the fold.
The result is an album that feels both broader and more intimate, with live instrumentation such as piano, strings, and reeds woven into MWW’s signature lattice of hand percussion, production sleights, and slippery time signatures. Acoustic and electronic textures bend toward each other like plants angling for the same light: bowed strings blur into vaporous pads, brushed drums scatter under riffing guitars, a horn phrase lingers in the same space as a cracked cassette loop.
A tension between decay and presence - the “things gone” and the “things here still” - runs throughout the record. At times, the music evokes a chamber session refracted through waterlogged tape; at others, it recalls the afterimage of a hip-hop instrumental slowed into an oneiric haze. In the world of MWW, memory functions less as nostalgia and more as a living fabric - mutable and resonant. "Things Gone and Things Here Still" finds Iggy Romeu at his most expansive, offering up a generous record of open spaces and porous boundaries.
Mr Thing : "Quick story and some background on the 45 of mine that Koco posted yesterday in his stories, some of you know about this but here’s the whole scoop!
Around the time Biz Markie’s second album was coming out Westwood used to play Tribute To Scratching Part 2 using all Jackson’s/Michael Jackson samples - absolutely amazing but never came out for obvious reasons. Fast forward a few years and I’m doing my debut set on the show and I asked about it and if I could get a copy - he was very cool about it but said he couldn’t let me have it, which was fair enough, although he DID play it on the show when it aired when he interviewed me. Fast forward a bit more and the Hot Chillin’ 12” comes out and even that is what sounds like a radio rip pressed on the record.
An’archives presents Kagome Kagome, the first collaboration between France’s Delphine Dora and Japan’s Ayami Suzuki. Curious listeners might know Dora from the string of lovely, idiosyncratic albums she’s released over the past two decades, most recently for labels like Modern Love, Morc and Recital; she’s also worked with the likes of Michel Henritzi and Sophie Cooper. Suzuki’s performances, predominantly for voice, place her within a tradition of Japanese improvised music – see the music she’s made with artists such as Takashi Masubuchi, TOMO and Leo Okagawa – but her approach also takes in folk song, ambience and claustrophobic drone.
On Kagome Kagome, Dora and Suzuki play to their many strengths: a gentle, free-willed folksiness; long, aerated drone constructs; ghostly, time-warping explorations for voice. They met on Dora’s May 2024 tour of Japan, though they’d been in touch beforehand, with Dora proposing the collaboration to Suzuki, developed around “concepts of ‘otherworldliness’ and ‘impermanence’,” the latter says, “and explored the relationship between ‘the invisible’ and sound in Japanese culture – a common interest we share.”
They recorded across several days that month, with the sessions for Kagome Kagome taking place in Kanumi, in Tochigi prefecture, at a space named Center. “I was particularly looking forward to seeing Delphine encounter the vintage 104-year-old harmonium from Nippon Gakki Seizo Co. that had just been repaired at Center,” Suzuki recalls. “It was as if the harmonium had been waiting for Delphine to draw sound from it. I felt it was a beautiful relationship where they could guide each other.”
Indeed, there’s something channelled about the music that Dora and Suzuki made together in the session that constitutes Kagome Kagome. Dora’s harmonium might be the spine of the album, but Suzuki’s free- floating voice, and gaseous, muddied banks of electronics, wrap around the wheezing, ancient tonality of the harmonium beautifully – they, too, sound as though they were just waiting to be willed out of the daytime air. Their voices nestle together beautifully – “when we sang together in a tunnel,” Suzuki says, “there were times when we sang the exact same melody without planning. It happened so naturally that the boundaries between us became blurred.”
And that title? It’s drawn from a Japanese children’s song, and the song titles themselves constitute the song’s lyrics, in alternating Japanese (Romanized) and French language. Urban legend connects the song “Kagome Kagome” to the Nikko Toshogu Shrine, nearby Center, that Suzuki and Dora visited while they were in Kanumi. “The mysterious lyrics of ‘Kagome Kagome’ and its puzzle-like connection to Nikko Toshogu were a perfect fit for this mysterious album,” Suzuki reflects, “which I think has its own kind of puzzle-like elements.”
A deep album of prayer and magic, of divination and ritual, Kagome Kagome’s sense of serious play, its rich beauty, feels somehow dislocated from our time. If you’ve ever enjoyed the music of Nico, Kendra Smith, Charalambides, or other channelers of ghostly mystery, its eerie otherness will, somehow, feel oddly familiar.
The Flight & TEKE::TEKE & Thunderdrum feat. Tiggs
Assassin's Creed Shadows - Soundtrack Collection LP 4x12"
- A1: Assassin's Creed Shadows - Original Score Von The Flight - Shadows Main Theme
- A2: Welcome To Kyoto
- A3: The Long Shadow Of Oda Nobunaga
- A4: The Fujibayashi Legacy
- A5: Morning Training
- A6: Auntie Matsu
- A7: Becoming A Shadow
- A8: What's Been Hidden
- B1: Tomiko
- B2: Steel And Shadows
- B3: Into The Shadows
- B4: Naoe Attacks
- B5: Death Of A Legend
- B6: An Assembly Of Enemies
- B7: Rise Of Yasuke
- C1: An Oath Fulfilled
- C2: Master Sorin
- C3: Sacred Ground
- C4: A Song Of Remembrance
- C5: Bamboo Grove
- C6: Masked Enemies
- C7: The Incident
- D1: Busy Streets
- D2: Code Of The Sword
- D3: A Moment Of Sweetness
- D4: Chasing Demons
- D5: Akechi Mitsuhide
- D6: Matters Of The Heart
- D7: Yasuke's Past
- E1: Assassin's Creed Shadows - Kage No Iro Von Teke::teke - Ezio's Family Shadows Version
- E2: Kurutta Hono
- E3: Mienai Iro
- E4: Toku
- F1: Kage No Koe
- F2: Michi
- F3: Mizukagami
- G1: Assassin's Creed Shadows - Ukombozi Von Thunderdrum Ft. Tiggs Da Author - Nguvu Ni Umoja (Shadow's Theme)
- G2: Mwanajeshi
- G3: Ukombozi - Part I
- G4: Ukombozi - Part Ii
- H1: Hadithi
- H2: Chinja
- H3: Jenga Jenga
- H4: Ukombozi - Gameversion
- 44 Tracks aus dem Open-World-RPG-Actionspiel von 2025
- Enthält drei Alben, die auch separat erhältlich sind:
Original Score (2LP) von The Flight
Kage No Iro (1LP) von TEKE::TEKE
UKOMBOZI (1LP) von Thunderdrum ft. Tiggs Da Author
- Artwork von Ubisoft, Maya Kuroki und Nathan Sam Long
Ubisoft und Laced Records haben ihre Zusammenarbeit erneuert, um die Musik von Assassin's Creed Shadows auf Vinyl zu veröffentlichen.
In Assassin's Creed Shadows werden die Spieler:innen in die reiche Kulisse des feudalen Japans versetzt. Der Soundtrack verwendet sowohl traditionelle Instrumente als auch verspielte moderne Produktionstechniken, die auf die Zeitperiode und die Sci-Fi-Themen der auf Zeitreisen basierenden Serie verweisen.
Das Komponisten-Duo The Flight (Joe Henson und Alexis Smith) kehrt zur Assassin's-Creed-Reihe zurück, um die düstere Originalmusik für das Spiel zu liefern. Das Duo hat mit japanischen Meisterspielern zusammengearbeitet, um eine subtile und suggestive Musik zu schaffen, die von weitläufigen Aussichten bis hin zu nervenzerreißender Spannung und explosiver Action reicht.
Die Spieler erleben die Geschichte durch zwei Charaktere: die Shinobi-Assassine Naoe und den Samurai Yasuke. Um der Geschichte jedes Charakters eine eigene klangliche Handschrift zu verleihen, hat Ubisoft mit einigen außergewöhnlichen Künstlern zusammengearbeitet.
So verleiht die japanisch-kanadische Band TEKE::TEKE der verstohlenen Naoe ihre eindrucksvollen "Needle Drop"-Momente und liefert außerdem eine einzigartige Interpretation von Jesper Kyds kultigem Serienthema "Ezio's Family". Ihre Surf- und Psych-Rock-Einflüsse erinnern an kultige Tarantino-Soundtracks.
Das Produktionsteam Thunderdrum (Alex Cameron Ward, Félix Rebaud-Sauer und Hugo Brijs) arbeitete mit dem britisch-tansanischen Sänger Tiggs Da Author zusammen, um die Geschichte des Samurai Yasuke zum Leben zu erwecken. Dabei verschmelzen Morricone-Gitarren, ostafrikanische Rhythmen und japanische Flöten mit Texten in Suaheli.
Next up on Luke Slater's Mote-Evolver is Primal Instinct co-founder Chlär with the 'Topography' EP. It follows his debut album, 'The Architects of Shadows', which came out on Primal Instinct at the tail end of 2024, and sees the Swiss-bom, Germany-based artist deliver four more tracks of unmistakable, dance-floor-primed Chlär sound.
Chlär's 'Topography' EP embraces Mote-Evolver's tradition of deeper groove Techno with finesse, seeing 'Altitude' kick off proceedings as a heads-down slice of hypnotism featuring can't-miss Techno rhythm while otherworldly creatures add to the atmosphere. 'Serac' then delves even further, its effective bassline welded together with subtle sequences before we flip the record around for 'Lamin', a track rife with ghostly dub chords and remnants of a vocal sample. Closing out the trip is 'Phantom Grid', a clap riding its groove as it builds the intensity, dropping the pressure with hammering kickdrums and excellent, warped percussion for another lose-yourself club offering from the ever-promising Chlär.




















