Tresor Records announces the first-ever reissue of Drexciya’s Fusion Flats 12” vinyl, including remixes from Detroit’s Octave One, Kaotic Spatial Rhythms and 043 Chaos.
Originally released in the wake of Drexciya’s seminal 1999 Tresor debut album 'Neptune’s Lair', this release marks its long-awaited return and first appearance on digital platforms. The remastered edition contains the original extended version of Fusion Flats and features new artwork by Detroit-based contemporary artist Matthew Angelo Harrison, whose reimagined covers continue to shape the Drexciya reissue series.
25 years later, Fusion Flats returns to the constellation of Drexciya’s Tresor works, connecting their debut full-length to further explorations that continue to inspire generations.
Cerca:sha
Downwards present Alexander Tucker in metamorphosis from psych folk to techgnostic bard, aided by notable guests – Justin K Broadrick, Regis, Phew, Karl D’Silva, JJOWDY, and Elvin Brandhi – in a quest for disordered convention and new thrills. One up to Tucker’s outings for Alter and The Tapeworm, and spiritual successor to his »Nonexistant« trio on Downwards, »Clear Vortex Chamber« is an enigmatic take on the brownfield edgelands where the eldritch intersects electronic heck. Decades of work spread between hardcore punk, psych rock, folk, and drone — including work with Stephen O’Malley (Ginnungap) and Neil Campbell (Astral Social Club, ESP Kinetic) — feed forward into this album’s unsteady machine rhythms and cranky junkyard atonalities, where Tucker panel-beats aspects of his previous sound with a newfound industrial thrust and cyber-punky lust that suits him dead well.
A crafty example of how to mutate without losing sight of yourself, the album’s eight parts feel like a cyborg patching itself into modernity. On opener »Udug« Tucker’s signature falsetto peals from a A Scanner Darkly-style scramble suit of stereo-strobing electronics, setting a melodramatic, neo-gothic tension that riddles the album thru the knotted, fractured industrial dancehall bullishness of »Mallets« with Yeah You’s feral gob Elvin Brandhi, via a pair of standout »Fedbck« parts with Tucker’s personal idol, Justin K Broadrick (Godflesh, Jesu, and the rest), featuring the Brum deity’s claw-handed riffs and howl on the first, and smeared with Karl D’Silva’s brass in its noctilucent second part.
Regis also proves a staunch foil for the album’s most robust, club-ready cut »Zona«, hammered out from buzzing metallic drums and monotone bass drones, and pitting his severed vox against Tucker’s own androgynous harmonies to recall aspects of The Ephemeron Loop via British Murder Boys, whilst scene legend, Can and Ryuichi Sakamoto spar Phew (aka Aunt Sally) ideally tempers the flow in a relatively soothing »Sansu«, sharing more cyber-romantic, recombinant sentiments with the channelling of Robert Wyatt gone Funk Bruxaria on »Folded«.
Barac and Alex Font deliver a mesmerizing 2x12" – four deep, transcendent tracks that blur the lines between rhythm and ritual. This is music carved from emotion and space, where minimalism meets soul, and every detail breathes intention. The sonic quality is exceptional – raw yet refined, warm yet weightless. A meditative pulse runs through it all, inviting the listener inward.
Each cut is a journey, crafted with precision and soul, rich in atmosphere and unmistakable in identity. This collaboration isn't just a meeting of minds – it’s a shared vision, etched into wax. A record that doesn’t shout, but resonates. Timeless and essential. Almost 30 min Playtime, 180g 2x12inch, Fullcover print.
Parisian mainstay Leonard Perret, better known as Le Loup, signs a new 12” for Dancefloor Rituals, channeling the raw, old school traditions that have long informed his work. A fixture of the city’s underground, his collaborations with Chris Carrier and ongoing curation of his own Shadow Play imprint have positioned him at the intersection of heritage and forward motion. This latest release distills that ethos into stripped-back, hypnotic grooves and precision-crafted dancefloor tools that nod to the past while keeping their gaze firmly on the future.
We are very pleased to share with you our fourth vinyl release: “Volvió el minimal, dicen los Content Creators” (FYC008) by Santiago Uribe.
An EP that confronts the current relationship between the world of electronic music and social media.
Through four compositions, the work unfolds with sonic rawness and radical abstraction, challenging both the dominant aesthetic and the logic of accelerated consumption.
There is a new artist from Japan followed by the name Kakeru who is giving his Shaw Cuts debut with ãRaw CourageÒ, telling the story of an emperor besieged by an army who then entrusts his child to the Black Dragon Clan heading off to a dangerous journey.
An attempt to usurp the Ming Emperor's throne by the sinister martial artist simply known as ãold monster" and his armies results in most of the palace being massacred. ãQuagmireÒ and its vibrant percussive pattern carried by a heavy broken kick and a driving bassline help the emperorÕs infant son to escape and put in care of the Black Dragon Clan.
En route they are attacked by government forces but rescued by two knights. They prove to be a valuable addition to the party in subsequent encounters with their pursuers. ãMirror ForestÒ and its laid-back atmosphere, mysterious vocal snatches and shining pads carried by an expressive drum pattern help the travellers parrying every sneaky attack on their journey.
Trying to head to the White Dragon Clan in order to seek for help, the squad has to masquerade and take several battles, always protecting the baby in tow. The razor-sharp percussions, corrosive bass and thrashing kick of ãSwayingÒ tremendously supports the warriors in each fight.
Finally they make it to the temple of the White Dragons where they show their Black Dragon seal as a sign of solidarity. But all of a sudden the mood changes. ãBroken BubblesÒ and its menacing atmosphere built up by a monstrous sub bass, reduced but impactful drums and subtle synth elements underline the potential threat. Did they walk into a trap? Is there enough energy left for one big fight? Raw courage is vital now.
In between the folds of ceremony and commonality lies a perennial spring of musical expression.
A statement along the time continuum, or a testament to the resilient resourcefulness embedded in that truth, forms the philosophical approach of this album – the first outing of Dídac.
Studying an extensive archive of instruments, artifacts, and field recordings at the Musée d’ethnographie de Genève—a space steeped in folkloric gesture – Dídac encountered a cosmos of liturgical music and folk song. Anchored in reverance for tradition and transformation alike, this album navigates the old-world Mediterranean lore through a post-modern ambient lens, threading drone, gentle rhythm, electroacoustic textures and the crude tactility of archival material into one woven tapestry.
Under the guidance of Dr. Madeleine Leclair, Dídac was invited to work within one of the world’s most extensive ethno- musicological archives—L’AIMP. In the saturated basements and tape-lined backrooms of the museum, he submerged himself in the sounds of ritual and rural life: wax cylinders from the Eastern Mediterranean, tapes of liturgical hymn, the worn edges of communal song.
In a makeshift studio on the fourth floor of the museum, he sifted through the hours of material he collected, gradually discovering that the archive was no static source – It did not dictate; rather, it served as a companion—offering not answers, but questions. Not a beaten track, but a cluster of sonic clues and riddles. Samples do appear occasionally, tenderly interwoven into the dialogue of the songs. In Dídac’s self-titled debut, the past is not worn as ornament or kitsch; it is listened to and responded to. The museum, its archives, and the visit to Geneva became a foundational culisse of sorts, igniting a myriad of rough cuts and improvisational outtakes.
Dídac, or Diego Ocejo Muñoz, was born in Madrid in 1994 to a family of both Catalan and Castilian origin.
Brought up in a religious household, the influence of the Catholic Church innately shaped the social fabric, schooling and daily life. This lingering dominance led the adolescent Diego into a path of rejection of everything sacramental, promptly resorting to subversion in the shape of grafitti, skateboarding and underground music. Only later in life, after a rigorous venture as an acid and electro producer, the Church re-emerged before him in new light, invoking a deep fascination for its mysticism, iconography and choral tradition.
Spain in general and Catalonia in particular, has long served as a crossroads of the eastern–western Mediterranean continuum, with many of its cultures sharing aspects of way of life and ceremony. At the MEG, Diego found himself puzzled with this realization, resulting in a sonic amalgamation that reaches farther away from the rugged mountains of Catalonia than you might perceive at first encounter.
The deeply embedded memory of rite and public ceremony, religious hymn and landscape—sieved through the undercurrent of personal re-emergence, forms the emotional topography of this album. The record does not trace this landscape; it inhabits it. Its repetitive mysticism and ambient, wide-eyed gaze could possibly evoke (perhaps redundant) comparisons to artists such as Dimitris Petsetakis, or Popol Vuh’s late 70’s cinema scores.
The delicate lines between the sacred and the secular – between memory and re-invention – serve as a cipher to understanding this album in its entirety. Titles like Malpàs Mines or Pantocrator’s Portal Outro nudge toward a folkloric and devotional bedrock—places where labor and spirituality coexist, where names preserve both dust and veneration.
Nevertheless, this is far from mere nostalgia. It is a reclamation — singing alongside the spirits of the past, nurturing what still hums beneath the soil. It is an intimate reflection on tradition, rebellion, adolescence, ceremony and fantasy – a pastoral contemplation on what once was and what is to be.
- A1: Neon Pulse
- A2: Rapture In Blue W/ Cecile Believe
- A3: Haze W/ Ellie
- A4: A Silent Shadow W/ Bdrmm
- B1: New Life W/ Yunè Pinku
- B2: Greasy Off The Racing Line W/ Alison Mosshart
- B3: Until The Moon Starts Shaking
- C1: The Ghost Of Her Smile W/ Julie Dawson
- C2: Disturb Me W/ Yeule
- C3: In Keeping (Soon We'll Be Dust) W/ Walter Schreifels
- C4: Tremor
- D1: A Memory Wrapped In Paper And Smoke
- D2: I Feel You W/ Art School Girlfriend
Black Vinyl[27,94 €]
Tremor erscheint zu einem Zeitpunkt, an dem Averys Arbeitspensum für Außenstehende kolossal erscheint. Als Produzent, DJ, Musiker und Remixer, der ständig mit anderen zusammenarbeitet, hat er kürzlich DRONE:NODRONE von The Cure neu interpretiert, wofür er allgemeine Anerkennung erhielt. Seine Arbeit als eines von drei Mitgliedern von Demise of Love (eine Gruppe, die gemeinsam mit Ghost Culture und Working Men’s Club gegründet wurde) liefert derzeit den Soundtrack für die verschwommenen, undurchsichtigen Ränder der Tanzflächen auf der ganzen Welt. Das Album ist Averys erste Veröffentlichung bei Domino.
Die Platte ist voller unerwarteter Kollaborationen, darunter: Yeule, Art School Girlfriend, Ryan von bdrmm, Yune Pinku, Cécile Believe, Walter Schreifels von Rival Schools, Julie von New Dad und Alison Mosshart. „Tremor” wurde teilweise von David Wrench und teilweise vom legendären Alan Moulder gemischt. Es ist ein Breitwand-Album, auf dem sich Daniel mehr denn je auf Instrumentierung stützt und diese Klänge mit seiner charakteristischen, dunklen, techno-ähnlichen Produktion ergänzt. Es gibt wunderschöne melodische Parts, große elektronische Hits, härtere Grunge-Parts und wunderschöne Ambient-Momente, die einen wieder zur Ruhe kommen lassen.
- 1: Vivere Distaccati
- 2: Trasmissione
- 3: Decadente
- 4: Tarantola
- 5: Non Passerò A Trovarti
- 6: Ho Paura
- 7: Chiang Mai
- 8: Nelle Vene
- 9: Lavoro Troppo
- 10: Festa Di Compleanno
Hailing from Raw Culture, Anna Funk Damage returns with his third release on the Roman label, delivering a record as fierce as it is intimate. Tarantola was born out of a winter suspended between contrasting emotions – melancholy, anger, love, confusion – distilled into a sound that transforms personal fragility into collective energy. There’s no pursuit of perfection here, but rather an urgency running through the veins, taking shape across supersonic punk, wave, ambient and industrial.
Each track is an emotional fragment, a bite that leaves its mark: from the electric tension of Vivere Distaccati to the feverish rush of Trasmissione, from the rawness of Decadente to the hypnotic title track Tarantola, which embodies the beating heart of the album. Side B unfolds into more nocturnal and intimate landscapes, from Chiang Mai to the disenchanted sincerity of Lavoro Troppo, closing with a party that carries the bittersweet taste of reality.
Tarantola is a journey into the chaos of human emotions, an album that doesn’t just narrate but pulls you deep into its sonic labyrinth, giving noise back its vulnerable yet powerful soul.
- Burying Luck
- Ice Monster
- Knights
- White Mystery
- Dr. L'ling
- Part 2
- Throwin' Shapes
- When We Escape
- Double Vision Quest
- Lotus
Following the success of Highly Refined Pirates' forward-thinking guitar gymnastics and Menos El Oso's groundbreaking glitch rock, Seattle's premier pop revisionists Minus The Bear dug into some of rock music's most ostentatious years for inspiration for their 2007 album, Planet of Ice. The title alone conjures images of Yes's Relayer album art, and the influence of the elder statesmen's symphonic scope can be felt throughout Planet of Ice's lush and intricate arrangements. You can also hear the band channel the ominous instrumental interplay of Lamb-era Genesis on "Dr. L'Ling", the deceptively savvy musicianship and pristine production of Steely Dan on "White Mystery", and the tightrope walk between ethereal space and pre-metal riffage of Pink Floyd's "Echoes" on "Lotus". Not that Minus The Bear completely abandoned their earlier style_elements of Menos El Oso's sample-driven technique can be heard on the lead single "Knights". But the heart of the song ultimately belongs to the haunting Fripp-esque guitar lines spliced between verses. After being out of print on record since 2010, Suicide Squeeze is proud to reintroduce Planet of Ice's creative marriage of classic motifs and modern musical wizardry with a vinyl remaster courtesy of Bernie Grundman.
- Intro
- Slanted
- Happiness
- Rain
- K.i.s.s
- Islands
- Bars And Bbqs
- Discern
- Look Pt 1
- Look Pt 2
- Don't
- Sacrifice
- Fear Of Death
- Still Watching (Bonus Track)
Shad hat sich eine Karriere als einer der beständigsten und vielseitigsten Hip-Hop-Künstler Kanadas aufgebaut. Seit 2005 erntet er kritischen und kommerziellen Erfolg, gewann den Juno Award für die beste Rap-Aufnahme für sein 2010 erschienenes Album TSOL und wurde fünf Mal für den Polaris Prize nominiert. Aber er ist noch lange nicht am Ziel. Mit seinem siebten Album Start Anew thematisiert Shad unsere kollektive Zurückhaltung, unsere Komfortzone zu verlassen, und greift dabei auf seinen typischen Witz und seine zum Nachdenken anregenden Texte zurück. ,Der Neuanfang, dieses positive, frische neue Leben, ist zum Greifen nah", sagt er. ,Aber oft liegt es auf der anderen Seite eines Risikos oder sogar eines Verlustes." In seiner bewegten Karriere hat sich Shad als Radiomoderator (CBCs ,q"), Fernsehmoderator (die mit dem Peabody- und Emmy-Award ausgezeichnete Netflix-Dokumentarserie ,Hip Hop Evolution"), New-Wave-Sänger-Alter-Ego (Your Boy Tony Braxton) und nun als akademischer Professor an der University of Toronto und Laurier einen Namen gemacht. ist die zentrale Prämisse von Start Anew eine, die Shad selbst von ganzem Herzen angenommen hat und die eine sozialbewusste Trilogie vervollständigt, die 2018 mit A Story About A War und 2021 mit TAO begann. Mit Kollaborationen mit Jon Kabongo, Raz Fresco und Phoenix Pagliacci aus Toronto sowie Chantae Cann aus Atlanta und dem Underground-Urgestein Homeboy Sandman aus Queens, NY, thematisiert Start Anew soziale Ungleichheit und die innere Stärke, um erfolgreich zu sein, sowie Shads charakteristische witzige und perspektivische Lyrik in wichtigen Tracks wie ,Happiness", ,K.I.S.S." und ,Bars and BBQs". " ,Musikalisch hatte ich diesmal das Bedürfnis, etwas zu schaffen, das einfach und angenehm für die Ohren ist und sich gut anhören lässt", sagt Shad. Mit einem musikalischen Ansatz, der an die verspielte Soulfulness seiner frühen Veröffentlichungen erinnert, ist Start Anew erfrischend und unapologetisch direkt und steht im Einklang mit Shads fortwährender Mission, Liebe, Weisheit und Hoffnung zu verbreiten, um persönliche und gesellschaftliche Veränderungen anzuregen.
- Intro
- Slanted
- Happiness
- Rain
- K.i.s.s
- Islands
- Bars And Bbqs
- Discern
- Look Pt 1
- Look Pt 2
- Don't
- Sacrifice
- Fear Of Death
- Still Watching (Bonus Track)
Shad hat sich eine Karriere als einer der beständigsten und vielseitigsten Hip-Hop-Künstler Kanadas aufgebaut. Seit 2005 erntet er kritischen und kommerziellen Erfolg, gewann den Juno Award für die beste Rap-Aufnahme für sein 2010 erschienenes Album TSOL und wurde fünf Mal für den Polaris Prize nominiert. Aber er ist noch lange nicht am Ziel. Mit seinem siebten Album Start Anew thematisiert Shad unsere kollektive Zurückhaltung, unsere Komfortzone zu verlassen, und greift dabei auf seinen typischen Witz und seine zum Nachdenken anregenden Texte zurück. ,Der Neuanfang, dieses positive, frische neue Leben, ist zum Greifen nah", sagt er. ,Aber oft liegt es auf der anderen Seite eines Risikos oder sogar eines Verlustes." In seiner bewegten Karriere hat sich Shad als Radiomoderator (CBCs ,q"), Fernsehmoderator (die mit dem Peabody- und Emmy-Award ausgezeichnete Netflix-Dokumentarserie ,Hip Hop Evolution"), New-Wave-Sänger-Alter-Ego (Your Boy Tony Braxton) und nun als akademischer Professor an der University of Toronto und Laurier einen Namen gemacht. ist die zentrale Prämisse von Start Anew eine, die Shad selbst von ganzem Herzen angenommen hat und die eine sozialbewusste Trilogie vervollständigt, die 2018 mit A Story About A War und 2021 mit TAO begann. Mit Kollaborationen mit Jon Kabongo, Raz Fresco und Phoenix Pagliacci aus Toronto sowie Chantae Cann aus Atlanta und dem Underground-Urgestein Homeboy Sandman aus Queens, NY, thematisiert Start Anew soziale Ungleichheit und die innere Stärke, um erfolgreich zu sein, sowie Shads charakteristische witzige und perspektivische Lyrik in wichtigen Tracks wie ,Happiness", ,K.I.S.S." und ,Bars and BBQs". " ,Musikalisch hatte ich diesmal das Bedürfnis, etwas zu schaffen, das einfach und angenehm für die Ohren ist und sich gut anhören lässt", sagt Shad. Mit einem musikalischen Ansatz, der an die verspielte Soulfulness seiner frühen Veröffentlichungen erinnert, ist Start Anew erfrischend und unapologetisch direkt und steht im Einklang mit Shads fortwährender Mission, Liebe, Weisheit und Hoffnung zu verbreiten, um persönliche und gesellschaftliche Veränderungen anzuregen.
- A1: Signal And Sign
- A2: Apply Some Pressure
- A3: Graffiti
- A4: Postcard Of A Painting
- A5: Going Missing
- A6: I Want You To Stay
- B7: Laimassol
- B1: The Coast Is Always Changing
- B2: The Night I Lost My Head
- B3: Once, A Glimpse
- B4: Now I'm All Over The Shop
- B5: Acrobat
- B6: Kiss You Better
- C1: A19
- C2: Isolation
- C3: My Life In Reverse
- C4: Fear Of Falling
- C5: I Want You To Leave
- C6: A Year Of Doubt
- C7: Trial And Error
- D1: Stray Talk
- D2: Hammer Horror
- D3 0: Apply Some Pressure (Original Demo Version)
- D4 1: Graffiti (Original Demo Version)
- D5: Once, A Glimpse (Original Demo Version)
- E1: Wasteland
- E2: Limassol (First Avenue Demo)
- E3: The Coast Is Always Changing (Dilston Road Demo)
- E4: Signal And Sign (Gravity Shack Session)
- E5: Apply Some Pressure (Gravity Shack Session)
- E6: Going Missing (Gravity Shack Session)
- F1: Surrender (Bbc 6 Music Tom Robinson Session)
- F2: Postcard Of A Painting (Dilston Road Demo)
- F3: The Night I Lost My Head (Dilston Road Demo)
- F4: Now I'm All Over The Shop (John Marley Centre Demo)
- F5: Kiss You Better (Bbc Radio 2 Janice Long Session)
- F6: I Want You To Stay (Field Music/J Xaverre Mix)
Zum 20-jährigen Jubiläum erscheint A Certain Trigger gemeinsam mit der 2006er B-Sides- und Demo-Compilation Missing Songs als hochwertige 2LP auf schwarzem Vinyl im Gatefold-Cover. Die Zusammenstellung enthält seltene B-Seiten und Demo-Aufnahmen aus den UK-Singles dieser Ära und wird ergänzt durch ein beidseitig bedrucktes, farbiges 60 × 90 cm Poster auf luxuriösem Kunstdruckpapier. Ein Sammlerstück für alle Fans des energiegeladenen Indie-Rock-Sounds von Maxïmo Park.
Format: 2LP schwarzes Vinyl, Gatefold, inkl. beidseitigem Farbposter (60 × 90 cm)
- Shadow Work
- Over My Dead Body
- Death Of An Artist
- Corpse Pose
- The Apparition
- Reaper
- In Memoriam
- Omen Of Misfortune
- Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
- Contrecoeur
- Fallen Ones
- 01: Two Former Friends (Original)
- 02: Dance Of The Silver Beetles (Original)
- 03: Miniature White Deer (Original)
- 04: All The Goodbyes (You Tried To Defer)
- 05: Regretful Polar Bear (Original)
- 06: Anxious Shadow Puppets (Original)
- 07: Failed Space Walk (Original)
- 08: Devils (Original)
- 09: A Leopard With No Spots (Original)
- 10: Abandoned Boy (Left In Charge Of The Family Business)
- 11: Metal Mosquitos (Original)
- 12: A Cat Left To His Own Devices (Original)
- 13: Well-Heeled Human Driftwood (Original)
- 14: Flamingo With Bandaged Neck (Original)
Chris Menist pares his sound right back for A book of imaginary beings, his fourth Awkward Corners outing with a project of electronic and abstracted global grooves. Experimenting with simple melodies and uncluttered arrangements, as well as taking inspiration from the Borges' short stories alluded to in the title, the project took shape in the early part of 2025, in the shorter days and dark evenings of January.
The initial challenge was to knock a basic track into shape each evening after work, then refine it later. There's a melancholy in the air in late winter, compounded by the creeping threat of national and geopolitical instability. Ulla, Natural Information Society, Jabu, Torso and Dawuna formed some of the background soundtrack as each tune took shape.
The track titles came after sitting with the sounds for a while, giving shape to images of people, creatures and their stories for a book that is yet to be written.
Two former friends sets the tone for the album perfectly as a minimal electronic piece with a slowly simmering synth bassline underpinning the groove whilst the trademark Awkward sound of the Shahi Baaja enters drenched in effects. It's the first demonstration of Chris' unique ability to create a world from apparently very little.
Dance of the silver beetles is completely unique in that we can hear chopped up Illimba samples seemingly playing backwards and forewords sometimes alone, sometimes together in duet with Chris' conga rhythms. Add to that a more conventional Illimba melody and added shaker percussion and you have one of A book of imaginary beings most curious chapters.
Anxious shadow puppets is closer to the Awkward Corners sound from previous albums as electronic pulses move around the arrangement with the urgency that the track title suggests. Chris' percussive roots move to the fore with the congas that tie down the Paradise Bangkok Molam International Band's sound. Here, the bassline is more playful and works together with one of Chris' many African Illimbas.
Fans of Chris' adventures on his Roland 808 will dig A leopard with no spots, although the minimal mood continues to flow through on this track. The lolloping, but hard-hitting rhythm track provides the grounding for strange and twisting feedback-sounding tones to work the soundscape.
Abandoned boy (left in charge of the family business) is Awkward Corners at his atmospheric best. Drift off to the sublime sounds of Chris exploring the Shahi Baaja, whilst a soft, repetitive synth line and abstracted pads give the listener that feeling of meditation and peace.
Flamingo with bandaged neck is A book of imaginary beings' perfect coda and is exclusively Shahi Baaja draped in reverbs and delays. It feels like the resolution and the closing of a book that – as of yet – remains unwritten.
Awkward Corners is Chris Menist, a musician, DJ and writer. It started life as a small project in Islamabad, where Chris was living at the time. Initial recordings were made with local musicians in Pakistan and then subsequently in Thailand. This culminated in the Sweet Decay LP that came out on Finders Keepers' Disposable Music in 2014, and in turn led to a limited tape release on Boomkat/Reel Torque of original compositions and re-edits of Thai 45s the same year. Chris released – Dislocation Songs – his second LP proper with Shapes of Rhythm in May 2020, collaborating on many of the tracks with award-winning performer Sarathy Korwar. The LP was picked up by many radio stations including NTS, Resonance FM, BBC 6 Music, Balamii and many more. It made Tom Ravenscroft's LPs of 2020. Amateur Dramatics, Chris' second LP arrived just a year later in 2021 and was a more ambitious project featuring more jazz-focussed compositions and featuring Tamar Osborn and Kitty Whitelaw. Shortly after that came another pivot with the heavier, dancefloor-friendly EP Somebody Somewhere. Somebody Somewhere is Dancing in a Field brought the House (yes House!) vibes, whilst Hector Plimmer turned in a remix of No Words in the same club mood.
As one of NTS Radio's longest-standing presenters, Chris continues to hold down the Paradise Bangkok show. Playing drums and percussion since he was a kid, Chris is the percussionist for The Paradise Bangkok Molam International Band as well as co-founding the record label of the same name. Chris has curated compilations for labels such as Finders Keepers, Soundway and Dust-To-Digital. He has been featured on the Boiler Room, Vinyl Factory Collections, played at the Four Tet curated Nuits Sonores festival, and has put together an edition of Volumes which featured unreleased Awkward Corners compositions.
[d] 04: All the Goodbyes (You Tried to Defer) [Original]
[j] 10: Abandoned Boy (Left in Charge of the Family Business) [Original]
- A1: No Worth No Cost
- A2: Always Lovers
- A3: Hopeless In A Trance
- A4: Cash Money
- A5: I've Seen His Face Before
- A6: Gallows Smile
- B1: A Message From The Aching Sky
- B2: Coroner Of The State
- B3: Claim Of Vanity
- B4: Prayer Of Baphomet
- B5: Death Sentence
- B6: Hash Angel
Cindy Lee is the brainchild of singer/guitarist Patrick Flegel. While some may know Flegel from his time spent in Canadian experimental indie band Women, Cindy Lee has spent the past four years crafting songs that push and pull in opposing directions - from tales of tragedy laced with haywire distortion to moments of breathtaking beauty. On Malenkost, Flegel combines everything that makes Cindy Lee so essential: heart-wrenching romantic pleas, rough shards of noise and twilit ballads. Featuring the lo-fi pop single "A Message From The Aching Sky," Malenkost sounds like Deerhunter playing The Supremes or vice versa.
- Paris 1942
- Hex
- Headhunter
- Radar
- Damon
- Ancient Time Foretold
- Animale
- Move Out Of Wichita
- Catherine
- Life Is A Killer
- Conversation With My Girlfriend
- Voodoo Blues
- Pontius Pilate
- Lions Paw
- Boy From The North Country
- Fossil In My Pants
- What I Think I Mean
- Lisa's Whip
- Southwind
Difficult as it may be to imagine, there was a time when Sun City Girls did not exist. Prior to the Bishop brothers teaming up with drummer/shaman Charlie Gocher to form SCG's classic trio lineup, there were various ad-hoc assemblages of local Phoenix-area freaks and weirdos – groups which existed only long enough to play a single gig, open mic or house party before disbanding without a trace. Hatched from this milieu was Paris 1942, a short-lived band formed by guitarist Jesse Srogoncik that included Alan Bishop, Richard Bishop and former Velvet Underground drummer Maureen Tucker.
Paris 1942 would play only four shows in as many months, but between April and August of 1982, the band would gather several times a week in Tucker's living room, where the group feverishly wrote and rehearsed with a kind of quotidian discipline. While P42 didn't release anything during their brief tenure, a 7" EP and LP (both self-titled) surreptitiously surfaced on the Majora label in the mid to late '90s. Until now, those two titles – as well as an appearance on Placebo's Amuck comp in late '82 – would be the only documented evidence that this improbable, serendipitous and magnificent band ever existed.
While those expecting P42's music to sound like a tantalizing combination of Sun City Girls' iconoclastic hoodoo havoc and the Velvets' primal drug-chug certainly won't be disappointed, Paris 1942 more often than not transcends even these nearly impossible expectations. Srogoncik's songs, in particular, are a revelation, displaying as much in common with the exuberant raunch of The Gun Club and the chapbook punk of Peter Laughner as they do any of the more obvious touchstones.
The group's foresight to document and capture this meeting of musical minds – a meeting as unlikely as it was short-lived – provides a missing link between the Velvets and the Voidoids, between the Dead Boys and the Dead C, between ESP-Disk' and DNA. Far more than a historical curiosity, Paris 1942 provides a fresh perspective on an embryonic and sadly vanishing US underground. It is music that blinks at the past and anticipates a thousand possible futures.
– James Toth (excerpt from the liner notes)
- A1: Riot Radio
- A2: A Different Age
- A3: Train To Nowhere
- A4: Red Light
- A5: We Get Low
- A6: Ghostfaced Killer
- B1: Loaded Gun
- B2: Control This
- B3: Soul Survivor
- B4: Nationwide
- B5: Horizontal
- B6: The Last Resort
- B7: You're Not The Law
- C1: Too Much Tv Dub
- C2: Invader Dub
- C3: D-60 Fights The Evil Force
- C4: No Control Dub
- C5: Tower Block Dub
- D1: Cns Lazer Attack D-60
- D2: Police Radio Dub
- D3: Flight Mission Dub
- D4: No Good Town Dub
- D5: Game Over
The Dead 60s seminal self-titled album gets a timely Deluxe edition reissue on Vinyl for its 20th Anniversary, on Deltasonic Records
“Back in the day, punk and dub weren’t just sharing space—they were smashing into each other headfirst. Late '70s Britain was a pressure cooker, and for kids like me, growing up between Brixton’s bass bins and the chaos of King’s Road, that collision was everything. Jamaican sound system culture met punk’s raw spirit in a haze of smoke, sweat, and feedback. It wasn’t about genre—it was about energy. Identity. Defiance. so when The Dead 60s came along, post-Britpop and post-bullshit, it felt like someone had dusted off the blueprint and run it through a battered old tape echo. These weren’t just lads with good taste—they understood the assignment. They took the DNA of two rebel cultures and mutated it into something that could stand tall in the 21st century. Dub-soaked, punk-fuelled, dripping with that Liverpool attitude. I remember first hearing them and thinking—yeah, here we go again. Not in a retro way, but in a real way. Guitars that cut like sirens in the night. Basslines fat and warm, straight out the Channel One playbook. Lyrics that painted the grey corners of Britain like CCTV poetry. It was the sound of youth under pressure. The sound of not fitting in—and not wanting to.
Their debut album dropped in 2005, and it hit like a flare in the dark. “Riot Radio” was a pirate broadcast from the concrete frontlines. “Control This” swaggered with menace and reverb. It was like someone opened a time capsule from the punky-reggae party and rewired it for a new generation.
Now, with this 20th anniversary vinyl reissue—complete with the full dub companion produced by Central Nervous System—we get to hear the bones and blood of it all. The dub versions pull the tracks apart and let the ghosts speak. Reverb, delay, space—it’s not just production, it’s meditation. Revolution slowed down to a heartbeat. It’s music that makes you move and think. What they’ve done here is more than remix a record—they’ve revealed its soul. That’s what dub does when it’s done right. And The Dead 60s, they got that. They weren’t tourists in the culture—they were students of it, shaped by it, and ultimately, contributors to the legacy. Liverpool’s long had a love affair with Jamaican music—you can hear it in the streets if you’re really listening. The Dead 60s tapped into that lineage, but they brought their own thing to the table. Punk's fire. Dub’s depth. Ska’s bounce. All filtered through a Northern lens and blasted out like protest graffiti. This 20th anniversary reissue ain’t about nostalgia. It’s a reminder. A celebration. A call to arms. Music like this doesn’t belong in a museum—it belongs on a system, shaking walls and waking minds. Crate diggers, completists, young punks, old heads—this one's for all of you.
So put it on and turn it up. Let the punk edge sharpen your thoughts, and the dub shake your bones ‘cos this isn’t just a reissue - it’s resistance on wax.....”




















