Tabs Out | Marsha Fisher – Psychic Architecture

Marsha Fisher – Psychic Architecture

12.19.22 by Matty McPherson

Marsha Fisher is a star when it comes to concocting a junker’s delight. Her general caliber for unwieldy culling of the cream of the crop of the remains of analog detritus and ancient pre-recorded debris had given her music a colossal range. There’s fragments of unnerved drone and unkempt glitch that mend with outright new age new noise inversions. So it makes sense that she’s teamed up with the esteemed The Taperoom for a new round of devilish, unwound tape shenanigans on Psychic Architecture.

Psychic Architecture is a continuing expansion of Fisher’s fascination with loops, collages, and abrasive textures that a word like surreal doesn’t quite do justice towards. It really is a simple sonic set-up: Fisher loops and warps a particular phrase for a track and see the results that follow. Her production though is key to the success of these loops. They work to dramatically untethered the loops from original contexts so that they feels routinized like a flat dimensionless pancakes. It gives the tape this feeling of watching a mechanic object undergo surgery in a blnak, empty room–echoing and lashing until it either croaks or sprouts back to life. If the blurbs and repetition of a phrase’s prime intention aren’t completely rendered meaningless (and a few certainly are not), then what remains functions as a battle-scarred visage of a future. Over the hi-fi my parents walked in and pondered why it sounded like a damaged recording r2-d2 may have had stored on his lil’ data drive. That is really quite a succinct way of viewing Psychic Architecture–at least its opening half.

For fractured calcified fragments of melody happen to display themselves across the noise of side 2. “New Moon” wails out fuzzy bits of abrasion that almost make quarter notes into a melody! “Libra”’s recorder whistle and argle-bargle-gargle of that phrase “Libra” become a dadaist sketch; it segues perfectly with the followup sashaying noise serenade, “Fig Wasp,” which you would swear the voices on “Libra” was saying the whole time! “Zircon” might just be the climax and head bounty of the tape, a 6+ minute excursion of generator noise and black lagoon creature wails that quietly lulls you towards a trance as certain musical scales are introduced. Closer “Nuclear Family” almost invokes domestic bliss as much as warbled n’ wonky aquatic noise that drowns the entire concept into oblivion. A tantalizing way to go out for a lovely noise release.

Psychic Architecture is available as a limited cassette from the Tapeworm’s Bandcamp and online distro pages.

Tabs Out | Odd Person – Myths of the Crystal Plateau

Odd Person – Myths of the Crystal Plateau

12.16.22 by Ryan Masteller

Imagine wandering through the archives of a college anthropology department, through row after row of meticulously documented cultural items, a vast library of every societal branch of human history, the deep knowledge crackling like electricity in every dust mote you inhale, and stumbling upon some battered, unmarked canisters of reel-to-reel tapes that look to be older than the actual history of reel-to-reel tapes … What in the gall-darn heck is on those tapes? Of course you just have to know – you just HAVE to – so you grab a stack, shove everything in your Jansport, and try to look inconspicuous as you make your way past the skeleton crew of academics cataloging and researching god-knows-what. Maybe your obvious don’t-mind-me whistling will fool them; maybe it won’t. Your lab partner stares at you in disbelief as you exit.

This is essentially – no EXACTLY what happened to August Traeger as he acquired the source material for “Myths of the Crystal Plateau.”

[Again, please refer all legal inquiries to Delaware Dan LLC. This whole thing is probably a mix of libel, slander, and copyright infringement.]

You may know August better as Odd Person (I sure do!), and what Odd Person’s done is indeed what I’ve described: mined anthropological reel-to-reel documentation and crafted it into a cool AF aural experience that melds source material with field recordings and other accoutrements and presents it as a “lost record” of a disappeared civilization. Or not! I can’t be sure of the veracity of that claim, but it sure sounds like what August ended up doing. Whatever the tale’s truthfulness (and hey, it may be the exact frickin thing that happened), it sure as heck plays like a lost field recording, gussied up and sampled and what have you until it suits the Odd Person lifestyle brand. More laid back than a German Army jawn but equally curious about life beyond the American usual, “Myths of the Crystal Plateau” generates snapshots and snippets of unbelievable (to the homebody) lifestyles and practices, both sacred and profane records of non-Western activity that demand further attention and meditation. How on earth are any of us going to connect with one another if we don’t understand where that “another” comes from?

In the end, Odd Person injects these compositions with energy and vigor, populating these created visions with clear and ritual intention. Everything is presented with an ear for the adventurous, for the unknown, for the arcane – yet everything comes to us fully formed and rightfully organized into ingestible packages, allowing us – the inexperienced, the culturally louche – to encounter something we wouldn’t have necessarily gone out of our way for. Probably sad that that’s the case. But Odd Person presents us with what should be shoved in our face in a not-shoved-in-our-face way, and I am only shoving it in my own face out of shame of not being a better and in general more respectful person – bottom line is I love this tape, and I want you to love it too, and thanks to Odd Person for having the ear to concoct something like this in the first place.

Fifty copies on Nonlocal Research! Currently sold the heck out!

Tabs Out | Matt LaJoie – Mother Hum

Matt LaJoie – Mother Hum

12.14.22 by Ryan Masteller

Hey kids, align your friggin’ chakras and resonate your “Om’s” with intention, because Matt LaJoie is back in the hizzy! As if he ever left, right? All that Flower Room stuff that he puts out and curates, the Starbirthed, the Herbcraft – the dude has been tripping the light fantastic for the past twenty years, which is basically an entire career (or half of one; I should know), and coalescing psychic harmony in steady outbursts of celestial sound in an effort to singlehandedly bring about everlasting peace on this planet. Has he succeeded? Heck no. But we enjoy the bejeezus out of him trying, whether we deserve that enjoyment or not (most of us don’t).

Ol’ Matty La-J’s tapped into something on this one though – boy has he. “Mother Hum” is the reverberating waveforms of the natural auras of this planet, the implied “Nature” following “Mother” as obvious as the truths beamed into and captured by your third eye. The “Hum,” of course, is the essential vibration given off by Nature, the resounding frequency a penetrating and restorative force manifest in sound. All Matt has to do is hook up a bunch of effects pedals, plug his guitar into the heart of existence, and zone out to the cosmos. The effect is akin to observing a supernova in slo-mo from a distance of light-years.

Over four glistening numbers, “Mother Hum” connects every living soul on the planet to each other, binding them in a protective spiritual sheath and weaving the magic of the spheres into their very DNA. Whether or not this permanently takes or dissipates after the tape’s forty minutes is for other experts to determine, your yogis and your shamans and your experimental physics doctorates. They’re the ones with the instruments to measure, they’re the ones that will have to tell us whether or not “Mother Hum” actually worked. I myself tend to fall under the “skeptic” category, but I’m the one listening to this thing, and it’s hard for me to doubt it. 

Matt LaJoie took a break from Flower Room and released this bad boy on Distant Bloom, an incredible choice if you ask me. Edition of 76.