- A1: Everybody Wants To Rule The World
- A2: Shout
- A3: I Love You But I'm Lost
- A4: Mad World
- B1: Sowing The Seeds Of Love
- B2: Advice For The Young At Heart
- B3: Head Over Heels
- B4: Woman In Chains (With Oleta Adams)
- C1: Change
- C2: Stay
- C3: Pale Shelter
- C4: Mothers Talk
- D1: Break It Down Again
- D2: I Believe
- D3: Raoul & The Kings Of Spain
- D4: Closest Thing To Heaven
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Drawing influences from Doom, Psychedelia, Post- Metal, and Grunge, Burial Clouds' well crafted songwriting is ambitious in sonic scope. Heavy without being cliche, complex without falling into self-indulgence and epic without pretension.
Burial Clouds were originally an instrumental band, but have recently been joined on vocals by actor/ musician Michael Malarkey (Vampire Diaries, Project Blue Book). With this addition the band have reached a new level of expansiveness through Malarkey's crooning blues-esque vocals and blistering screams.
After more than a decade of non-stop touring, acclaimed Austin songwriting duo, Kelsey Wilson and Alexander Beggins, quietly stopped touring as Wild Child. Headed in different sonic directions, the pair didn't know if they would ever make another Wild Child record. Then, what felt like the "end of the world" brought them back together. Pandemic lockdowns closed stages and drained bank accounts. As artists from all backgrounds took their shows to the internet, Wild Child was no different. Wilson and Beggins got together to practice for a series of online performances for devout fans, and within 30 minutes they wrote the first single for what would accidentally become Wild Child's fifth album, End of the World. Mixed by Matt Pence (Jason Isbell, Elle King) and including contributions from guitarist Charlie Wiles (Paul Cauthen, John Moreland, Orville Peck), End of The World sees the pair find catharsis in art amid compound disasters. As Wilson describes it, "I just started signing about things that were freaking me out. Wearing a mask for a year. Global warming. There's no heat, no water. It was like a dirge to begin with. But by the end we were all screaming and laughing that, yes, this might be the end of the world, but we're all together right now, making music in my living room by candlelight. It's all OK."
- A1: Mr Blue Sky
- A2: Evil Woman
- A3: Don't Bring Me Down
- A4: Sweet Talkin' Woman
- A5: Shine A Little Love
- B1: Turn To Stone
- B2: The Diary Of Horace Wimp
- B3: Confusion
- B4: Hold On Tight
- B5: Livin' Thing
- C1: Telephone Line
- C2: All Over The World
- C3: Wild West Hero
- C4: Showdown
- C5: Ma-Ma-Ma Belle
- D1: Xanadu
- D2: Rockaria!
- D3: Strange Magic
- D4: Alright
- D5: Rock "N" Roll Is King
- A1: Que Beleza
- A2: Let's Have A Ball Tonight
- A3: O Caminho Do Bem
- B1: Ela Partiu
- B2: Quer Queria, Quer Nao Queria
- B3: Brother Father Mother Sister
- B4: Do Leme Ao Pontal
- C1: Nobody Can Live Forever
- C2: I Don't Care
- C3: Bom Senso
- C4: Where Is My Other Half
- C5: Over Again
- D1: The Dance Is Over
- D2: You Don't Know What I Know
- D3: Rational Culture
Great retrospective on this Brazilian artists work!
A fifteen track survey of Maia's 1970s recordings, completely remastered, commemorating what would have been the Brazilian musical legend's 70th birthday on September 28. The release is the fourth in the label's World Psychedelic Classics series, known for unearthing long neglected masterworks by Os Mutantes, Shuggie Otis, and one of the first compilations of African psychedelia and funk
GRAPH embarks on a search for sound beyond trends within electronic music. The focus is on sound and rhythmic structures that are constructed and deconstructed with the help of digital musical instruments and effects. The focus here is on the attempt to create a living, organic "soundspace".
On their seventh album, GRAPH work with vocals for the first time in their 17-year history, and the result is astonishing! The track "Mad World (astonished)" is a cover version of the Tears For Fears classic, dressed in GRAPH-typical electronic garb and produced atmospherically dense. With "Instabil", GRAPH present one more completely newly produced and extremely danceable track. The whole thing is rounded off with a remix of "Instabil" by Bob Humid. Stunning, astonishing, allways unconventional and very Düsseldorf!
Elza Soares’ 34th studio album and her first to feature previously unrecorded material exclusively composed for her. Over a sprawl of distorted guitars, squalling horns, taught strings and electronic shards, samba is savaged by rock ‘n’ roll, free-jazz, noise and other experimental music forms as Elza tackles the burning issues of 21st century Brazil: racism, domestic violence, sex and drug addiction.
A true legend of Brazilian music Elza has an incredible musical oeuvre that stretches back over seven decades mixing samba with jazz, soul, funk, hip hop and electronica. Her life-story is a rags-to-riches-to-rags rollercoaster of triumphs and tragedies that has made her a voice for Brazil’s repressed female, black, gay and working-class populations.
In 1974, a brash young designer called Augustus Kerry Taylor had an idea. He'd gather together the hottest musicians in Ghana and record an album of the heaviest and funkiest sounds coming out of America. And this time, he wouldn't just design the cover, like he'd done with Fela Kuti, he'd even release it on his new label, Emporium, as well. Local Accra legends Joe Wellington, Jagger Botchway, Leslie Addy, Officer Toro, Oko Ringo, Soldier and Steve answered the call. They were christened the Kelenkye Band and gelled immediately. Moving World, is a funky, disparate album that exudes a rare warmth, enthusiasm and togetherness. 'Moving World' and 'Brotherhood of Man' are hard, grinding funk. 'Jungle Music' has a more soulful groove. There's also a bit of reggae, 'Dracula Dance', and old-skool highlife, 'Wale Tobite'. Accra's leading DJ, Charlie Sam, declared his mind 'well and truly boggled.' The Kelenkye Band never recorded another album. Augustus Kerry Taylor shut down Emporium and went back to designing album covers. But in Moving World they delivered a perfect moment of funk alchemy that has rightly become the Holy Grail of 70's Ghanian groove. - Peter Moore / Licensed by the bandleaders and songwriters of the album, Joe Wellington and Jagger Botchway.
Ray Mono steps up for the fourth release on Birmingham-based imprint TRMNL, with Meander boss DeWalta accompanying on remix duties.
With an increasing number of global shows across Europe, Australia, and North and South America, UK-based DJ/producer Ray Mono is crafting his warm and rich sound in one that is steadily becoming his own. Fresh from music on MOXY MUZIK, Politics Of Dancing, LOCUS, and hedZup Records, he makes his first appearance on TRMNL Records with a trio of slick groove-led cuts spanning minimal and house spheres, backed by a hazy and warping late-hours roller provided by DeWalta to close the show.
DJ Support:
Jamie Jones
Archie Hamilton
Raresh
Joseph Capriati
Franky Rizardo
IULY.B
Jean Pierre
Sakro
Ben Jones
- A1: A Kiss For The Whole World X
- A2: (Pls) Set Me On Fire (Pls)
- A3: It Hurts
- A4: Leap Into The Lightning
- A5: Feed Your Soul
- A6: Dead Wood
- B1: Jailbreak
- B2: Bloodshot
- B3: Bloodshot (Coda) (Coda)
- B4: Goldfish
- B5: Giant Pacific Octopus (I Don't Know You Anymore) (I Don't Know You Anymore)
- B6: Giant Pacific Octopus Swirling Off Into Infinity
As some of you may know, Alice Coltrane was a legendary pianist, composer, spiritual leader, and the wife of John Coltrane, the most venerated and influential saxophonist in the history of jazz. In 1967, four years after meeting John, he died of liver cancer, leaving Alice a widow with four small children. Bereft of her soul mate, Alice suffered sleepless nights and severe weight loss. At her worst, she weighed only 95 pounds. She had hallucinations in which trees spoke, various beings existed on astral planes, and the sounds of “a planetary ether” spun through her brain, knocking her into a frightening unconsciousness.
The critical event of this period was not that Alice fell into the nadir of her existence, but rather that she experienced tapas, a vital period of trial. These tapas (a Sanskrit term she used to describe her suffering) helped prepare Alice for the spiritual ally she found in Swami Satchidananda, an Indian guru, with whom Alice made her first trip to India. On her second trip there, Alice had a revelation instructing her to abandon the secular life and become a spiritual teacher in the Hindu tradition – so she moved out West – eventually opening the Shanti Anantam Ashram on 47 acres she’d bought in Agoura Hills, California.
- A1: A Kiss For The Whole World
- A2: (Pls) Set Me On Fire (Pls)
- A3: It Hurts
- A4: Leap Into The Lightning
- A5: Feed Your Soul
- A6: Dead Wood
- B1: Jailbreak
- B2: Bloodshot
- B3: Bloodshot (Coda)
- B4: Goldfish ~
- B5: Giant Pacific Octopus (I Don't Know You Anymore) (I Don't Know You Anymore)
- B6: Giant Pacific Octopus Swirling Off Into Infinity




















