Cerca:surge v
- A1: Kristeen Young Feat. David Bowie– American Landfill; Engineer – Anthony Paul Lopez, Justin Raisen, Tony Visconti; Engineer
- A2: Lawrence Rothman Feat. Sasami– Take It To The Grave; Written-By – Lawrence Rothman, Soko Solinski*, Yves Rothman
- A3: The Aubreys– Getting Better (Otherwise); Written-By – Finn Wolfhard, Lawrence Rothman, Malcolm Craig
- B1: Courtney Love– Mother (Acoustic); Written-By – Courtney Love, Lawrence Rothman
- B2: Empress Of– Call Me (Acoustic); Mixed By – Yves Rothman; Written-By – Justin Raisen, Lawrence Rothman, Lorely Rodriguez, Yves Rothman
- B3: Dani Miller Of Surfbort*– Psychic Surgery; Written-By – Bosh Rothman*, Dani Miller, Lawrence Rothman, Yves Rothman
[a] A1 Kristeen Young feat. David Bowie– American Landfill; Engineer – Anthony Paul Lopez, Justin Raisen, Tony Visconti; Engineer [Additional Engineering], Producer [Vocal Production] – Ainjel Emme; Mixed By – Anthony Paul Lopez, Justin Raisen; Producer [Additional Production] – Anthony Paul Lopez, Jeremiah Raisen; Producer [Music Produced By] – Justin Raisen, Kristeen Young, Tony Visconti; Written-By – Kristeen Young
- A1: For The Love Of Life (Ending Theme Full Version) 04 21
- A2: Grain (Opening Theme) 01 26
- A3: Drift Mind 03 01
- A4: Part 02 00
- A5: Float Flower 02 22
- A6: Collage Man 01 39
- A7: Sweet Home 01 53
- A8: Gingerly 01 40
- A9: Nacht Tour 01 36
- A10: Xenia 01 36
- A11: Room 02 16
- B1: Idler Wheel 01 13
- B2: Bush 02 01
- B3: Drift 01 47
- B4: Rest 01 33
- B5: Sweeper 03 03
- B6: Be Lit Up 01 30
- B7: Decola 01 35
- B8: Mid Point 01 44
- B9: Twip 02 03
- B10: Red Line 01 42
- B11: Angel Hand 01 48
- B12: Make It Home 03 47
- C1: What Do I See 02 25
- C4: Hold On 01 24
- C5: Close Your Eyes 01 55
- C6: Our Destinations Calls 02 08
- C7: Right And Wrong 01 35
- C8: Cast Upon The Wind 01 45
- C9: Catch 01 47
- C10: You Are The Move You Mak 03 11
- D1: S’alright 01 35
- D2: Faith 02 16
- D3: Than One 03 59
- D4: Present 01 32
- D5: The More That I See 01 58
- D6: It’s A Long Way To Go 02 02
- D7: We’ll Be Waiting For The Night 03 48
- D8: Changes 01 55
- C2: The Seeds Of Time 04 26
- C3: Before You Go To Sleep 02 15
A young doctor on the verge of greatness finds his career and life shattered after choosing to treat two children rather than the town mayor. The deaths of one of the children are inexplicable. What if he had saved a monster?
Monster, the manga created by Naoki Urasawa, is an acclaimed psychological thriller that has been a huge critical and commercial success. The complex and gripping story, which follows the moral choices of a surgeon confronted with a serial killer he has saved, has attracted a wide international audience. Monster has won several awards and is regarded as one of Urasawa's major works, affirming her place as a master of suspense in the world of manga.
Kuniaki Haishima is a Japanese composer best known for creating the soundtrack to the anime Monster. In addition to his contribution to Monster, Haishima has also composed music for TV series (Terra Formars and S-CRY-ed) and films (Tokyo Tribe and Helter Skelter).
- Trees Come Down
- Back In Gehenna
- Darkcell
- Laura
- Power
- Laura (New Version)
- Secrets
- The Tower
- Returning To Gehenna (New Version)
- Power (Powered Up)
- Secrets (Cloak & Dagger Mix)
- The Tower (O'higgins Mix)
- Power (Power Surge Mix)
- Dawnrazor (Demo)
- Secrets (Demo)
- Power (Demo)
- Deeper (Deepest Dub)
Fields of the Nephilim"s debut Burning the Fields EP together with their Returning to Gehenna EP, all remastered. Not issued on CD for decades, packaged in the original red artwork. Plus, a bonus disc -remixes and demos from "85 & "97, also remastered. In a 6-panel 2CD package with sleeve notes, interview and unseen early photos by gothic commentator Mick Mercer. Not available on vinyl for over 20 years until the sold-out RSD24 version. Now packaged in the green sleeve artwork that came after the limited red version. Plus, a bonus disc - now on vinyl for later remixes and "85 & "97 demos, also remastered.
- A1: Protection (Radiation Ruling The Nation) (Radiation Ruling The Nation)
- A2: Karmacoma (Bumper Ball Dub)
- A3: Three (Trinity Dub)
- A4: Weather Storm (Cool Monsoon) (Cool Monsoon)
- B1: Sly (Eternal Feedback) (Eternal Feedback)
- B2: Better Things (Moving Dub)
- B3: Spying Glass (I Spy) (I Spy)
- B4: Heat Miser (Backward Sucking) (Backward Sucking)
Given Massive Attack's background, it was almost inevitable that they'd release a dub overhaul of one of their albums at one point. That time came in 1995, when British sound system legend Mad Professor - responsible for some of the greatest UK-made dub records of all time - put his distinctive twist on Protection. 21 years on, the set still sounds sublime: a radical translation that frequently bares only a passing resemblance to the Bristol band's original. It's packed with highlights, from the spaced-out, dub-house rework of "Spying Glass" ("I Spy"), to the ricocheting percussion hits and twinkling pianos of "Weather Storm (Cool Monsoon)", and creepy, delay-laden string surges of "Eternal Feedback (Sly)".
The cassette format SPCS1680 features "With Trampled by Turtles" on the A Side and last years 'White Roses, My God' SP1655 on the B Side! No one can help you build something beautiful quite like those who know you best. Alan Sparhawk knows this well. In his years in Low, he built decades of stirring music with his wife and lifelong creative partner Mimi Parker. In recent years, he has performed around Minnesota with his son Cyrus in DERECHO Rhythm Section, a funk band that also frequently features his daughter Hollis on vocals. There's an irreplaceable naturalism that comes with this kind of dynamic. Those who know you understand you. They love you. They want to help you bring your greatest passions to fruition. So it made sense that Sparhawk would turn to fellow Duluth musicians Trampled by Turtles to realize his latest record. As friends and mentees of Low's, taken under Sparhawk and Parker's wing from their earliest days as a bar band, Trampled by Turtles have performed with Sparhawk countless times over the years. The Duluth ties run deep: "There's a certain vibe that has to do with underdog syndrome, coming from a small town," Sparhawk muses. "Some of it is the weird grind and slackness that being at the mercy of Mother Nature puts in you. It humbles you." The two artists hold the kind of ironclad bond. Following Parker's passing in 2022, Trampled by Turtles invited Sparhawk to join them on tour to give him a space to be surrounded by friends. Occasionally, he would join them onstage. The outpouring of love was palpable every time they played together, a surge of warmth. When playing together is that powerful, why stop there? In winter, 2024, Sparhawk and Trampled by Turtles created With Trampled by Turtles, a record exactly as its name implies: Collective. Communal. Fraternal. Empathetic. A vessel for comfort, a reminder of the harmony that can exist when surrounded by those closest to you. Where White Roses, My God, Sparhawk's last album, plunged headfirst into electronica and radical vocal modulation, With Trampled by Turtles leans into the folk and bluegrass stylings of its backing band, Sparhawk's voice now completely unvarnished. With Trampled by Turtles is far more than just Alan Sparhawk and Trampled by Turtles. It's an affirmation of all the people who have been vital in Sparhawk's life and music, and an opportunity to hold each of their gifts into the light. It's producer Nat Harvie, who has been collaborating and performing with him for years. It's Sparhawk's daughter Hollis, who duets with her father on "Not Broken." And it's Mimi Parker, too: "Too High," "Princess Road Surgery," and "Not Broken" were all tracks she and Sparhawk had been working on in the last few years. These songs finally found a setting that stirringly commemorates them, bolstered by a full ensemble to make every note sing. Their presence is a kind of eternal connection to Parker, a way her musical grace will keep flourishing.
- A1: My Lowville (2025 Remaster) 10 54
- A2: Auto Show Day Of The Dead (2025 Remaster) 07 11
- A3: Fucking Milwaukee's Been Hesher Forever (Part 1) (2025 Remaster) 03 50
- B1: Fucking Milwaukee's Been Hesher Forever (Part2) (2025 Remaster) 05 34
- B2: Re We're Again Buried Under (2025 Remaster) 07:026
- B3: The Surge Is Working (2025 Remaster) 08 14
'the fun years', comprised of multi-instrumentalists Ben Recht and Isaac Sparks, have been making music together since the turn of the century, producing intriguing interrogations of ambient, drone, post-rock, and turntablism. Originally released in 2008 on the now-defunct Barge Recordings, 'baby it’s cold inside' is perhaps the high watermark of their discography. Equally concerned with microtonal nuance and harmonic intensity, it is both a product of its time and something well past it. The chief protagonist is surely the turntable, deployed to create woolly, evocative loops from unidentifiable source material that recall, at times, the work of Philip Jeck or Jan Jelinek—churning, roiling, hissing, atrophied textures further articulated with nuanced processing and buoyed by baritone guitar drones and anti-riffing.
The title of opener "my lowville" feels like a wink to the famed slowcore duo, with spare post-rock motifs hovering in a dusty ether, slowly consumed by distorted washes of rich, harmonic sound. One of the most satisfying aspects of the album is that despite the recumbent nature of most of their sound design choices and compositional proclivities, Recht and Sparks are loath to sit still. "auto show of the dead" is a serpentine piano/guitar exploration full of subtle detail, preceding the immaculately titled "fucking milwaukee’s been hesher forever," in which the tactile delights of clicks+cuts are liberated from the laboratory and allowed to slum it in the world of tape gunk and '90s plate reverb. Later, "re: we’re again buried under" presents an inky black ambience that feels truly expansive and almost overwhelming, and closer “The Surge is Working” tears apart an anthemic shoegaze dirge at the seams, leaving only billowing filtered noise and negative space in its wake.
Presented here with a brilliant remaster by LUPO, 'baby it’s cold Inside should be considered alongside records like Belong’s October Language and Polmo Polpo’s Like Hearts Swelling—an arresting early aughts ambient marvel that warrants ongoing investigation.
A faithful police dog and his human police officer owner are injured together on the job, triggering a harebrained but life-saving surgery that fuses the two of them together,
and Dog Man is born. DreamWorks Animation’s adaptation of Dav Pilkey’s New York Times bestselling literary phenomenon is directed by Emmy winner Peter Hastings
(The Epic Tales of Captain Underpants, Kung Fu Panda: Legends of Awesomeness), and stars the voice talents of Pete Davidson, Lil Rel Howery, Isla Fisher, Poppy Liu,
Emmy nominee Stephen Root, Billy Boyd and Emmy and Golden Globe winner Ricky Gervais.
Dog Man composer Tom Howe has scored over 100 projects for film and television, including Ted Lasso, Shrinking, Daisy Jones and the Six, and The Great British Bake-Off.
“Because Dog Man doesn’t talk and I wanted to capture his high energy, I incorporated hand-clapping percussion, vocal layering of dog pants and mouth trumpets.
I recorded all of these mad mouth sounds myself in the studio. And as a contrast to Dog Man, the police chief and action cues are accompanied by wah-wah guitars, sax and afro flute.
It’s like Bullet meets Shaft, blending elements of Lalo Schifrin and Isaac Hayes. This thread of classic ̛60s and ̓70s crime thrillers is woven throughout the score.” Tom Howe
Eleven is a magic number in many cultures, for us maybe it is… or not, anyway our eleventh release is going to be something special with vinyl again as the main format after some only digital releases.
The man in charge of production duties is well known for crafting merciless techno exercises all over the place, RNGD is not a newcomer at all, his roots come from the late nineties and you can somehow feel that into his modern tunes.
These four cuts have a strong link with the classic Birmingham school, Regis,
Downwards, Female, Surgeon… but with a personal and unique twist.
Direct Source is a clear example of what I mentioned before, a few elements are enough to make the funk happen: a solid sequence, proper drums and a hypnotic arrangement.
Same approach on 037, proper neural funk with basic elements administered properly. B side opens with Degradation, again with the same mantra, anabolic, gymnastic and physical.
To close the release Diabólica, providing the mental slice of the pie with the
occasional pad and vocal samples but yet energetic and direct to the floor.
This is the true spirit of techno, don’t be fooled for the new trends. Timeless is the word here.
Text by Luis Rozalén / Hd Substance
Canadian bowed guitarist and multi-instrumentalist C. Diab announces his fifth album Imerro, out February 16th, and presents the trip-infused lead single 'Lunar Barge'.
(Real name) Caton Diab creates soundscapes that evoke the spectacular wilderness of his childhood home in northern Vancouver Island. Incorporating experimental textures, folk overtones and tape manipulations, C. Diab uniquely finds the unseen spaces in-between, and fittingly dubs his creations "post-classical grunge". Imerro explores new sonic realms and is the culmination of a sound world that Diab has built up since the critically acclaimed 'No Perfect Wave' (2016, Injazero) and subsequent releases 'Exit Rumination' (2018), 'White Whale' (2020) and 'In Love & Fracture' (2021). The Wire calls it "ambient music in the best sense - music for living, which can be both non-invasive and immersive...epic"
Imerro was recorded in late July and August of 2021 at Risque Disque Studio in Cedar, BC, during the summer's unprecedented second "heat dome", which saw temperatures soaring to over 40 degrees. Recorded with regular collaborator and engineer Jonathan Paul Stewart, the pair journeyed by boat to the studio to a place with minimal distraction with a plan of "simple ecstatic improvisation." Diab explains: "I wanted to place myself in a space for creation with little thematic pretence, with the belief that music 'shows its face' as you move along. I would pick up an instrument, whether I had experience playing it or not, and make a sound. If it wanted to be played, it would play."
Mucha, AKA Amanda Butterworth presents a stunning double header for Frequency Domain's tenth birthday release. But when up against one of the most thoughtful, precise, yet loose and rave inducing producers in the history of synthesisers, there was only ever going to be one opening point being made here. Surgeon's remix is typically essential for any techno fan. So while the original 'Skin' is this patient, rhythmic but beat-less slice of post- (or pre-)club stuff, full of ecstasy moods and comedown overtures, Surgeon's take refocuses us on the repetitive vocal patterns and slaps a wonderful compelling broken kick underneath to create a proper dancefloor builder. B-side 'You Make Me Go Under' goes for a neo-Bjork style IDM leaning piece, which then gets a moody, apocalyptic Datassette cut to top off an exceptionally strong package. Buy it. Buy it now.
Two years after releasing the acclaimed Crash Recoil, Anthony Child aka Surgeon returns to Tresor with new LP, Shell~Wave. Retaining the minimal equipment list and studio-version-of-live-show-sets approach of the previous album in order to focus on the work itself, Shell~Wave is a deeply personal document of both where Surgeon is and has been, converging three decades of experience with a continued curiosity in the untested.
“To make this project, I had to dig really deep in terms of what my relationship was to techno; I’ve been involved with it for a really long time and there’s a lot about it I feel dislocated from, so I had to really think hard about what techno is to me. I often get asked “what is techno to you?” but I can’t answer that with words; this album is the answer.” From the complex, twisting track Infinite Eye to the caustic Soul Fire, the eight tracks that make up the body of the album are single-take explorations of the vast, hard yet minimal techno Child is synonymous with.
Neatly dividing the record in two, the emotional centre of the record comes in the form of Dying, a vibrating, beatless piece that with a mantra-like vocal loop steeped in reverberating effects. Further echoes of dub production appear throughout the record as tracks like Divine Shadow, and Empty Cloud have an almost ever-present mist of reverberation, driven by the appearance of a new delay unit in the equipment list; while much of the philosophy of Crash Recoil’s creation is present, the process and the instruments have changed as Child again switches up his approach to studio work.
This insistence on trying novel techniques doesn’t preclude returning to old ones, as this use of modern digital machines with live, hands-on takes that are as inspired by 60s producer Joe Meek and 70s reggae as they are by this year’s synthesiser expos.
“For me, it’s an interesting experience returning to old techniques again after 30 years. I’m always exploring and finding myself back at the beginning. Connecting the present with the past.”
This philosophy of ‘time travel’ is inherent to the music itself as the synchronised loops repeat while the delay and effects branch out, forming unique eddies; distinct quantum moments within the circular whole; the future leaking through the spaces between the sounds. All of the concepts on the album are perfectly communicated through the painting by Taiwanese artist Jazz Szu-Ying Chen which suggests the movement of water, sound waves, and the chitinous shells of sea creatures.
Verdure – Timeless Wave
With ’Timeless Wave’ Verdure releases an overwhelming acidic tidal force of a track.
A 9 min long epic multi layered surge across various territories and morphing along the way, starting out at 145 bpm and picking up velocity in the course, details whizzing by in unsuspected clarity.
Verdure is featured on his own full release on Violent Cases 031 VC031 .
Six Ou Sept & L Art Cène – Cap Nord
Darkness is moving over the surface of the watery deep at ’Cap Nord’. Acid lines cut thru the black liquid with sharp fins. Then a long break...is it the swan song of whales or the intercom of AI reapers? The end or a new beginning? When the Acid fades the Tekno kicks in. 150 bpm is the pace. Both long intro and bold beatless interlude create DJ options.
Too Old Boyz – Darkettony
Too Old Boyz are back in town and they are not in the mood for fooling around. It’s getting dark, better check your rear. The lights are flickering and you can’t get off this train. 40 tons rolling through Gotham at 145 bpm.
Too Old Boyz are Tommers and Introspective Views. Check out their ’Danger Is Sauce For Prayers‘ EP on Violent Cases 022. [VC022] and their Rodenwald - Tauchstation Remix on Endless Night 2 [ENNI2].
With another awe inspiring custom artwork by Darkam. Mastered by Pozek in Vienna.
- A1: Love To All Doulas! 03 52
- A2: Some Rest For The Midwives . . . 07 19
- A3: Real Vital Organs 03 57
- A4: Surges, Expansions 02 43
- A5: In Appreciation Of Chico Hamilton's Vast Influence On The West Coast Sound 02 44
- B1: Birthworkers Magic, And How We Get Hear . . . 07 21
- B2: This "I" Was Not 02 37
- B3: Placenta, Nourishment, New Home, The Galaxy 09 03
- C1: Carla's Beads 01 51
- C2: Moonlight Watsu In Dub 04 34
- C3: Generous Pelvis 04 26
- C4: Bi-Location 09 08
- D1: Play Kerri Chandler's Rain" 17 32
black 2x12"[28,15 €]
Placenta is the fourth collection of broadly imaginative and highly collaborative Carlos Niño & Friends music released on International Anthem since 2021. But perhaps more notably for the zeitgeist of today, it is the first new music to be released by Carlos Niño & Friends following the November 2023 release of André 3000’s New Blue Sun – an album which Carlos produced alongside André, while co-writing, performing, and co-mixing every song. The announcement of Placenta also comes while Carlos is in the middle of tours with André to support New Blue Sun, where Carlos wields an immense presence as music director, bandleader, and percussionist, and performs alongside many of the same musicians that are present on his recent & Friends albums, including this new one.
Placenta is announced on the 1st solar return of Moss Niño, of whom Carlos and his partner Annelise are Earth parents. Their experience of pregnancy, labor and delivery were all profoundly impactful for Carlos. Becoming a father again (a whole 25 years after the birth of Azul Niño, who has become a regular artistic collaborator for Carlos) he felt total Inspiration for this set of recordings, and hence it is perhaps the most conceptually-grounded Carlos Niño & Friends album we've yet to present–fully connected to the spirit of family, birth, and "how we get here."
In Niño’s words, Placenta is “dedicated to Mothers, Children, Babies, Aunties, Doulas, Midwives, Birthworkers...,” and a short list of track titles includes: "Love to all Doulas!," "Some Rest for the Midwives," "Real Vital Organs," and "Generous Pelvis." The centerpiece of the album, the sprawling "Placenta, Nourishment, New Home, The Galaxy," is an unbelievably vivid immersion in the sonic architecture of Niño's memory-scape...like being present in his energy field...or being present in a birthing room, or maybe even being born yourself. And it just might be the most powerful, unique piece of music Niño has ever created.
Featured artists on Placenta, in order of their entry on the album, include: Nate Mercereau, Jamire Williams, Sam Gendel, Jamael Dean, Dexter Story, Brandon Eugene Owens, Maia, André 3000, Jesse Peterson, Ariel Kalma, Surya Botofasina, Annelise, Haize Hawke, Aaron Shaw, Devin Daniels, Tiffany de Leon, Michael Bolger, Michael Alvidrez, Moss, Iasos, Photay, Deantoni Parks, Adam Rudolph, Andres Renteria, and Cavana Lee.
Blue & White Galaxy Vinyl[30,04 €]
Tuneful, feedback- slathered surges like "Half Way Fine" and "Spright" feel as
comfortable as a beaten-up pair of Chuck Taylors, introducing dramatic dynamic
shifts and savvy melodic change- ups to keep you on your toes. You may not
always be able to make out Hartlett's lyrics amid the cyclonic fuzz, but the
despondence and disillusionment in his voice always cut through loud and clear.
And when he can't quite find the right words, he and fellow guitarist Morgan Luzzi
unleash that simmering angst through nonverbal means, like the roiling guitar
tsunami that brings the hazy-headed "Baby Alligator" to a cataclysmic close.
Stuart Berman, Pitchfork
- A1: Free Speech For The Dumb
- A2: It's Electric
- A3: Sabbra Cadabra
- A4: Turn The Page
- B1: Die, Die My Darling
- B2: Loverman
- B3: Mercyful Fate
- C1: Astronomy
- C2: Whiskey In The Jar
- C3: Tuesday's Gone
- C4: More I See
- D1: Helpless
- D2: Small Hours
- D3: Wait
- D4: Crash Course In Brain Surgery
- D5: Last Caress/Green Hell
- E1: Am I Evil?
- E2: Blitzkrieg
- E3: Breadfan
- E4: Prince
- E5: Stone Cold Crazy
- F1: So What
- F2: Killing Time
- F3: Overkill
- F4: Damage Case
- F5: Stone Dead Forever
- F6: Too Late Too Late




















