Tabs Out | Constellation Tatsu – Winter 2022 Batch


Constellation Tatsu – Winter 2022 Batch

2.5.22 by Matty McPherson

Wow. We were only FOUR days into the year before Constellation Tatsu, the most “lawful good” ambient tape label, decided to hit the triple tape batch button. Now I’ve been behind on my C.Tatsu releases, although my eyes quickly lit up at this batch for one reason or another. The trio they’ve assembled maybe carry a little more swagger than usual? I couldn’t say. But onwards to the batch.

Julia Gjertsen & Nico Rosenberg – Paisajes Imaginarios

We love a good tape loop, don’t we folks? Preferably one set for the witching hour battle with the reaper, as much as when you need to turn the garage into your own full-fledged chillout room. Julia and Nico, an ocean separated from each other, have become remote collaborators over the past two years. Paisajes Imaginarios follows 2020’s Distant Fields, chipping back at the previous EPs emphasis on mending classical styles and digital ambience for greater focus on the piano as an ambient stalwart. The 8 compositions are fluid, relaxed distillations of this MO at work. Sometimes it leans towards the graceful and somber (Anillos & Atlantis), while at other moments there’s a bubbly jubilance piping through (Gaura).

Soshi Takeda – Same Place, Another Time

I’d be lying if I didn’t say I’m kinda shocked that this one exists so soon after the 100% Silk excursion from last fall, Floating Mountains. It was here where I was introduced to Takeda’s world of 90s electronic gear that begets slick, vapor-tinged house for the ambient; the limits indeed led to a pretty limitless dreamland. That release had a real notable bass presence that Same Place, Another Time ebbs more conservatively within its six compositions. Tracks are slower, a little more spread thin, with the synths and drums slowly shrugging along. Even if its not as forceful though, there’s still a wistful want to nod your head and reflect. Takeda alluded to the tape being used to conjure “photographs and magazines of locations that have been lost with the passage of time;” although methinks it is still a lost N64 cartridge first and foremost. “Analog Photograph” and the title track are strong sonic showcases here of this more limited approach.

Alex Albrecht – Resolve

The bass I’d been savoring arrives here on Alex Albrecht’s Resolve. Over six pieces, Albrecht tinkers with quiet, improvisational ambient and field recordings. Low-level listening at its finest, casually acting as a parallel summation of the three tapes in this batch’s finest sounds. It’s not a full-fledged seamless listen, although its pacing is genuinely organic, begetting sparse spaces that you don’t just wander through as much as eavesdrop through like an airy mist. In the tape’s strongest moment, on “The Chamber”, Albrecht achieves a campfire-esque dub, laying down rattling drum patterns that skip like stones.

3 Tape Batch with Downloads and Sticker shipping from Constellation Tatsu right now!

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Tabs Out | Little Prince Sigrid – My Ghost’s Boundaries Are My Horizon

Little Prince Sigrid – My Ghost’s Boundaries Are My Horizon

2.1.22 by Matty McPherson

The Torrey Pines are sick around the neighborhood. There’s a tree bug that’s going around and will undoubtedly lead to a lot of tree trimming this year. No one to my knowledge seems alarmed by the browning and pilfering piles of pine needles amassing around us. Our trees are fortunately cared for in this time of crisis, but that doesn’t mean one won’t fall or a branch won’t suddenly impact the disc golf hole we set up in the barren orchard (Tabs Out West Coast HQ is perpetually stricken by drought). Public displays of grief over the friendly giants as well seems to be at a trickle; this sucks because it causes a nine-car alarm in my mind that I can’t shake. Change is coming and I’m not privy to it.

It’s why I take my silent grieving towards a tape as private as Little Prince Sigrid’s My Ghost’s Boundaries Are My Horizon, the latest dispatch from the venerable Katuktu Collective. LPS may not be a tape enthusiast household name currently, but her C40 could render her one such. Her six song tape is a compilation of droney organ noises, bolstered up by a sparse astral drum here or ambient horn or wind instrumental beamed in from another dimension there. She sings and contemplates over these instrumentals in a fashion akin to a lullaby. Everything feels made for contemplating and finding your way to a smile.

Sometimes that makes for tracks like “Milky Weather” or “Cloudy and Opaque”, which stretches her droney, harmonic delivery into a tangible hand stretching itself out towards you. Yet, those are the short ends of a tape that opens with a ten-minute mantra entitled “Grief Lessons” and includes a ten-minute sparse, “Untitled” exploration. It’s a leap of faith that could glue you to your headphones and have you humming and harmonizing to that drone and Little Prince Sigrid’s earnest “come on” spirit. If the previous tracks were a hand, this is a full on arm. “Untitled” meanwhile shimmers as a mediation, reminding me of the immediacy of those darn trees…

First edition of 50 copies, 25 on red glitter shells and 25 on blue/green glitter shells at the Katuktu Collective Bandcamp

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Tabs Out | Bitchin Bajas – Switched On Ra

Bitchin Bajas – Switched On Ra

1.24.22 by Matty McPherson

There may be no other trio that quite embellishes the synthesizer like the Bitchin Bajas (seriously, take a look at that list – posted below for posterity). Cooper, Rob, and Daniel haven’t exactly been MIA since Bajas Fresh, their 2017 release that studiously tinkered and refined the sound until it unfurled into the crispest of loops. They make solo albums on Astral Spirits, go fill in for Tirzah at p4kfest, and sometimes get to hang out and craft pop ditties with Haley Fohr or handle production (scary stuff) for Bill Nace. They still love a good tape release, whether that’s through the research & development of a CUTS self-release or returning to Drag City with this here Switched On Ra.

Whether or not Switched On Ra is a stealth response aimed at rectifying Barack Obama’s failure to put Sunwatchers’ own Sun Ra tribute (Ptah, The El Daoud) on his 2019 playlist may be too hard to call. In fact, it might just be more a continuation of Bajas Fresh’s own Sun Ra tribute, Angels and Demons at Play, which reimagined the fickle, jazz piece as a steamy jungle odyssey; an arrangement true to the spirit of its source as much as the Bajas own lineage. Plus, you have the reference to Wendy Carlos’ own analog synthesizer wondries, so there’s a lot we need to consider here. Also, it was all recorded on “8-track ½” [tape] @ 15 IPS across June of 2021,” in case you are a nerd and love to know just how the lads do it.

Yet, with all of this as a possible MO in mind, Switched On Ra still has that immediacy of an old pal. It’s at once warm, jubilant Bajas, just with a level of macroscopic tingly majesty dedicated to these Sun Ra compositions; it’s specially electroshocked at times! As a result, expect less classic Bajas looping, with more an emphasis on odyssey-oriented listening imbued. Where this sound is going is maybe still towards giant vast cosmos–or potentially a land of interlocking, gravity-ambivalent spiral staircases that function like a jungle gym. The anomalous sounds that each Sun Ra tribute provides here is its own zonal bazaar and good golly. I just want to be there harmonizing in a vocoder with ‘em. In fact, as I clank this out, I suppose I’m kinda entranced watching the left and right levels on the hi-fi trying to force myself there. You should try that too.

Tapes available at the Bitchin Bajas Bandcamp Page. A portion of the proceeds for Switched On Ra will be donated to The Prison + Neighborhood Arts/Education Project.

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