2.17.23 by Ryan Masteller
Tabs Out | Dane Law – Blue Forty-Six
Dane Law – Blue Forty-Six
2.17.23 by Ryan Masteller

I’m kind of a goofball. I know, I know, that probably comes as a surprise to most of you reading this. But seriously, I like to have fun sometimes, I like to take trips, vacations, all that good stuff. But if you think I’m the kind to pack swimsuits and boogie boards and beach chairs and volleyballs into the old family vehicle and head on down the shore for week of fun in the sun, you’re sadly, possibly fatally if you’re not careful, mistaken. You see, I’m the kind of fellow who prefers the colder climes, especially in the offseason – the remoter the region, the better. I’m all about bundling up and experiencing the sheer environment, the terrain, the place. I want to FEEL where I am, and by that I don’t mean the sun beating down on some crowded Jersey oceanside tourist trap in July. I want to breathe it in, become one with it. Gimme Alaska, or, heck, gimme ANTARCTICA for cryin’ out loud LOL – that’s where I want to go.
I think Dane Law has a hankering for Earth’s southernmost continent as well, and his sparse arrangements – sampled and processed acoustic guitar – complement the loneliness of outpost life in the few livable spots to be found there. There’s McMurdo Station overlooking McMurdo Sound, an inlet that’s apparently the southernmost navigable waterway in the world. Just don’t try to traverse it in the wintertime! (Seriously, it freezes, and winter in Antarctica is in June, July, and August, so don’t be fooled into thinking it’s warm down there.) There’s Mount Hope, part of Eternity Range on the Antarctic Peninsula. There are ice shelves and frozen wastes. Shackleton and Mackintosh and the other explorer folk would recognize the references in all these song titles! They’d probably feel a sense of deep emotion and nostalgia too (or maybe trauma – those early expeditions were tough ones).
The minimal accompaniment is beautiful in its composition, but you’ll never believe how Dane Law got there! He recorded individual notes from an acoustic guitar and then sampled them on a computer, and from these he composed gentle, spindly sculptures that freeze rigid in the unending wind blowing off the Antarctic ocean. These intricate, crystalline sound structures are as delicate as they are resonant, and they sparkle in the cold sun as if they’re infinitely fresh and sonorant. Breathing while listening fills my lungs with ice, and the cloud formations of my breath plume into my heated suburban home as if physics were a mere suggestion. I am out there, goggles down, hood up, ready for anything. Vacation, owned!
Well yeah, this is a pro-dubbed C40 in maltese cross-style packaging with all-over onbody printing. What the hell else would it be? Out now on Blue Tapes!
2.16.23 by Matty McPherson
Tabs Out | OPLA – GTI
OPLA – GTI
2.16.23 by Matty McPherson

About a year ago I contracted the first in a trilogy of food poisoning adventures that marred the year 2022. There is no fondness or nostalgia for these days, just a buttered-up sense of apathy. This first incident was noteworthy in that it seemed to correspond to the time when the family’s Bosch dishwater did what all mid-00s bosch dishwasher are prone to doing: catching fire and (almost) causing an irreversible damage to the current state of affairs. It crackled and coughed up a black lung when it caught fire that night, creating a raw carnal smell that still echoes a year on; I still find myself in that catatonic food poison shock scarred by the noise. Although I’m not certain I really miss the old Bosch now that we have the new Bosch, nor if that this story has anything to do with the latest release from Polish-based Pointless Geometry cassette label, OPLA’s GTI.
Well maybe the C34 is having these memories run amok again because of the sound palette. Hubert Zemler (drummer/free improvisor/compser) and Piotr Bukowski’s (guitarist/composer/film score enthusiast) work as OPLA is supposed to be a “reinterpretation of traditional Polish dances”; if you’re a regional music head then you’ll likely raise a hearty glass towards the oberek phrases and tripartite metros embellished within this electronic sound of plastics. In other words, yes the “folk music” here sounds akin to the family’s Bosch giving up the ghost during that fateful terminal dishwasher cycle. Over the course of 6 tracks, Zemler and Bukowski marry the abstract to these patterns and movement, both finding a rigidity flourishing as well as a space for the eerie.
There are, in other words, two logics at play. Take a cut like LOP for instance. On one hand there is an arpeggio that moves akin to a 16-bit platformer that gives the piece its core. Yet, on top of that palette are the percussion “booms” and “clanks” that appear on their own logic and with the sharp crash akin to what a synthesizer afforded Keith Levine on PiL’s Careering. Meanwhile, FAX bleeps and bloops as jagged guitar glides over and improvises a heart to this movement. YPN’s one cantankerous synth loop fences against guitar jitters and hi-hat debris that swings uptempo and flourishes with curiosity. RAM is about the only cut that strips back the electronics to present rudimentary loops and clanks akin to a dusty folk sound.
These kind of patterns–deep listening synths and hyperrealist POPS–that give GTI its deftness and a gripping listenability. It begets a dance music, but the context it comes from has been warped through mechanization and industrialization. What’s left of those Polish dances is akin to showing up to the ballroom at 3AM instead of 3PM; all that’s left is a low drone of an HVAC and a scratchy karaoke machine no one loved enough to return and get their deposit back for. The spaces between become something new, akin to washer cycles and daily alerts flowing like ephemera. OPLA might be capturing a modern tension as much as expanding a regional sound into electronics to find a new truth of sorts within the routinization such tools offer. What I do know though, is that it won’t catch fire and suddenly explode on me. At least I hope not.
Tapes Sold Out at the Pointless Geometry Bandcamp!
Little Baby Tendencies – Bad Things
2.14.23 by Zach Mitchell
