Tabs Out Cassette Podcast | Three Shits From Digital Natives

Three Shits From Digital Natives
4.20.14 by Mike Haley

digitalnatives_large

After almost ten years as a label, releasing 149 cosmic specimens, Jeffry Astin’s Housecraft label has delivered it’s 150th stuffed-crust slice. A three hour (!!!) beast of a triple cassette by Astin’s seductive-as-sin-sample project Digital Natives. The triple serving is dished out on clear shell tapes packaged in those extra extra EXTRA tall norelco cases, which are, without a doubt, so fucking baller it hurts your guts. Each cassette is etched with hash marks so you know what’s what.

The triple C60, titled “Three Shits To The Wind” (like “three sheets to the wind”, but with poop), is limited to 50 copies and has been ambiguously described as such:

“The Vimy flies again. She backs in among them. Wrought in silver and now exercised exclusively in ceremonies, getting a grip. Inside, as I arrive a patented fly-wheel and one-way clutch closed test track. It’s a tad slower than a Porsche but at dinnertime he sits on the floor with his family and eats rice and meat with his fingers. It’s a race beside the race.”

I slung the above into Google Translate, going from zoner to English, but didn’t get very far. Just be prepared to get bathed in a foam of funk/pop/soul snippets looped, gooped, and glazed for 180 minutes (plus flip/tape change time). I”m aware of zero sound samples for this mug online, so here’s a taste of his C42 on Space Slave.

Word on the streets is that this tape is exclusively available from Tomentosa at a $21 price point. Click here to grab while supplies last.

 

……. And since it’s 4/20 here is this video:

44thumb4.18.14: Episode #44

After much delay episode #44 is up. Mics came unplugged, we called the pizza joint we go to over an argument about sauce placement, and played tapes by Black Unicorn, Broken Key, Charles Barabé, Negative Energy, Blackhoods, Yom San, Symbol, Tlön, Ghost Dudes, Endless Bummer, Mads Emil Nielsen, Zaimph & Yek Koo, Reebok Occult, Sugarm, and Matt Boettke. [Play] [Download – right click/save]

pnr_thumb4.18.14: Poet Named Revolver – Meets Gruesome

Ian Franklin illustrates the benefits of pulling a quick grip on No Kings 50th release. [Check It Out]

Tabs Out Cassette Podcast | Poet Named Revolver – Meets Gruesome

Poet Named Revolver – Meets Gruesome
4.18.14 by Ian Franklin

nokings large

The newest release from No Kings Records, the labels 50th, is “Meets Gruesome” from Poet Named Revolver, a band consisting of Steve Molyneux, Lee Noble, TJ Richards, and Caleb Steelman. A band since broken up but survived in this reissue of sorts from a batch of 50 that came out on Nailbat in 2008. No Kings gives it a fresh facelift with a pro-dubbed edition of 100 imprinted tapes with 2-color risograph printing and hand painted flourishes providing an excellent visual accompaniment. More on that later.

These jams are so good. Just want to get that out of the way first. I wouldn’t know how to categorize these tunes in a way that would have people nodding in confirmation and connecting the musical frames of reference of my insider knowledge; cause I don’t have that knowledge. But what I do know is that this is an excellent collection of loose but finely structured outpourings of emotion. Occupying a back-road ease and stripped down instrumentation these Appalachian infused, mathy folk, country hand dipped tunes bristle and shine with forlorn exuberance. Like admiring the beautifully sunny day slowly passing away from you. A red sun setting through the dense recollections of the day’s disappointments.

nokingstape

The main instruments suggest a somewhat traditional setup with guitars, bass, and drums but also include flashes of banjo and mandolin, multiple textures of electric guitar, harmonica, accordion, and screaming voices. Vocal harmonies emerge at the most satisfactory times. Rhythm changes develop naturally and spontaneously bloom into longer passages of post-rock type voyaging, eventually reducing back to the common theme of slow and staggering mid-tempo bounce. These songs are catchy in a sticks to your ribs kind of way.

Now to the packaging and artwork. This is the first No Kings release I’ve owned personally but I’ve seen and admired their artwork for a long time. I can only assume for others as well but they really hit a home run with “Meets Gruesome”. Printed with 2 color risograph, a method that uses different ink than a traditional copier and makes use of a master stencil which is rolled onto pages at a very fast rate, the j-card feels like no other one I’ve seen. Blue hazy photos of the band are laid out in perfect balance to the blue text, all with a background of pink dots. Topped of with a hand painted gouache orange circle, the total attention to detail does not go unnoticed. They even included a separate thank you card with the same orange gouache from the cover; an A+ in my book.

Stream tracks below and grab the tape from No Kings and get lost in your mid-afternoon reveries.