Tabs Out | Years Of In-Store Kmart Cassettes Archived For Some Reason

Years Of In-Store Kmart Cassettes Archived For Some Reason
10.10.15 by Mike Haley

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In the 80’s and 90’s the in-store music and commercials pumped through the speakers at Kmart, under the name Kmart Radio (KMRT), were actually cassette tapes played on repeat. New cassettes were shipped to stores every month (eventually weekly) and, like all the other garbage at Kmart, were supposed to be tossed in the trash. For whatever reason, ex-Kmart employee Mark Davis saved 50-some of those cassettes. Mark goes into detail about them in this pretty awesome YouTube Video:

He describes it as a “strange collection”, which is pretty damn accurate. Now, 20 years later, he’s uploaded that strange collection to Archive.org. If you wanna jam some muzak, pharmacy commercials from 1989, or maybe you are simply a fucking weirdo, you can check out all the recordings here.

Tabs Out | MMMOOONNNOOO – The Act in Between

MMMOOONNNOOO – The Act in Between
10.7.15 by Jacob DeRaadt

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Industrial techno is a genre spawned by the later-era work of acts like Cabaret Voltaire and Belgian EBM outfits like Front 242. Techno and industrial share a bloodlink of cold rhythms reflecting the mechanized, organized chaos that the urban cosmopolis exudes. This sonic virus has reached a meager popularity in certain pockets of the United States underground in recent years (due to the influence of taste-makers like Hospital Productions and Ascetic House), but has been a full-fledged movement much longer in Europe and parts of Asia. This one-man project from Lisbon, Portugal’s second release shows a further progression of his debut album, “Zorn Gottes” on ANVL Records in 2014. According to the artist, the release was an anticipation and reaction to his trip to Tokyo to perform at the Red Bull Music Academy last year.

There’s a great variety of approaches presented during the course nine songs spanning 35 minutes. “Lost Recollections” has some hypnotic elements approaching the feel of forced record loops, while “Decay Movement” creates a shimmering distorted drone field for the ear to take a leisurely walk in. Gorgeous, stark emptiness of the more ambient passages are contrasted with terse rhythms, like a much more minimal version of Human Particle’s abstract, dubby movements. “Preliminary Functions” has crisp, digital clicks calling to mind elements of Pan Sonic’s catalog. All of the tracks have a vaguely episodic feel, like transitioning from various forms of public transit at a disorienting pace.

This is a delicate, thoughtful collection of vignettes from a newer project. It has so much focus and drive that it bears a greater depth of detail upon each listen. I’ve listened through it at least a dozen times at this point, and it just keeps getting better. What really ties this release together is the sense of foreboding, futurist melancholy permeating both sides of its varied moods and textures. Horrible band name, exceptional release.

MMMOOONNNOOO’s The Act in Between is available in an edition of 100 copies from the Phinery sister label Speaker Footage.

Tabs Out | Q&A With Bob Bucko Jr

Q&A With Bob Bucko Jr
10.6.15 by Scott Scholz

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When folks riff on the midwest as flyover country, with flat, straight roads and seemingly unending fields of corn, I can’t help but fall into defensive mode. Only in my head, of course—we Midwesterners avoid confrontation. But the truth is that our scenes are tight, and everybody puts in their share of work to keep things moving. That work often comes through in the music, both figuratively in terms of deep roots and attention to detail, and literally by way of wild, varied collaborations.

Among the Great Plains states, Iowa has been home to especially remarkable music, shows and labels in recent years, and Dubuque’s Bob Bucko Jr has contributed abundantly in all of those areas. This has been an especially busy year for BBJr releases, including his 3rd LP on Captcha Records, a retrospective compilation disc on Iowa’s Nova Labs, new tapes on Tymbal, Warm Gospel, and Analog Masters, and great collabs like Sex Funeral, Boyle/Bucko, and Venereal Crush. An uncompromising musician, label head of the deliriously diverse Personal Archives, and critic/advocate for music across the region, BBJr still finds time for regular tours that spread the Hawkeye love. I caught up with Bob on the final leg of his fall tour a couple of weeks ago for an update on his own work and his take on the Iowa cassette scene.

 
How’s your latest tour going?

Tour has been going well. Every night has at least one aspect that makes it memorable, validates the entire foolish enterprise. Some nights have boasted full rooms, others remarkably sympathetic small audiences. Sometimes I sell a bunch of merch, sometimes the payout is just enough to cover gas to the next town. Sometimes neither of those things happen. But there is something inherently uplifting about the kindness of strangers, the hospitality I’ve received everywhere I’ve gone.

The musicians I’ve played with have been great. I’ve had the fortune to play with old friends, as well as be exposed to some phenomenal new (to me) artists. I am lucky in a way to straddle the fence between multiple genres and scenes – it allows me to experience a lot of different approaches to underground/DIY aesthetics, and provides a diverse sample of bands across the country. No two shows, or days, are ever remotely the same.

This is my 4th solo tour, and 6th overall, in the past two years, and I never tire of nor cease to be amazed by the small, tight circuit of creative people I get to call friends. It may sound a bit hokey, a bit idealistic – and it is – but it is also a truth that gets me through the mundanities of my daily life back home.

You’ve released a lot of your own work through your cassette label Personal Archives—what’s the early history of the label coming together?

The name Personal Archives is a bad joke. Some time early in the trajectory of making my private home recordings public, someone asked me what label I was on. I laughed and said, “Personal Archives.” At the time, the thought of being associated with a label, whether it was in the traditional indie model I grew up on – Touch & Go, Amphetamine Reptile, etc. – or a person with a printer and a logo, seemed beyond my reach. I guess you could say I lacked imagination, since that’s all it takes.

I think an important thing that reminded me, to paraphrase d. Boon, that our endeavors are what we make them to be, was working with Randy Carter’s label, Dubuque Strange Music Society. In our sleepy town of 60,000, Randy was regularly hosting house shows in a very residential neighborhood, featuring all sorts of freak sounds. He was releasing CD-rs and tapes in super-limited runs with unique, handmade art. This seems old hat now, and was the norm to me in the mid ‘90s, but it was affirming to know this most grass roots way of networking and collaborating with other creative people across the country (and world) was alive and viable.

Randy released some of my earliest solo stuff as a 3” CD-r and cassette. Not too long after, I put out the first Personal Archives release, sometime in 2011. The first 3 releases were scattershot, snapshots of different aspects of my home recording.

The name obviously suggests that Personal Archives started as a place to document your own work, but you’re way beyond the vanity label gig now. When/how did you start to focus on albums by other artists in the PA discography? Was it a gradual process or more of a conscious thing?

In the spring of 2012, following a (literally) crippling injury, I concentrated on the label as it stands today. Early releases featured my involvement in some way, either as solo releases, splits, or groups I was affiliated with. Over time, while I continue to release my own work, the label has come to focus on other artists, people I support professionally and personally. The idea is to provide a platform, however small, to highlight and validate sounds that may have otherwise been overlooked. Early on, there was a focus on Iowa artists. This soon expanded to regional, and then national and international, musicians. Basically, as my peer group grew, I had more friends in different places I wanted to support.

In addition to cassettes, you’ve done some CDr and lathe-cut releases—is there any kind of process for choosing formats? And what are some of your favorite albums on Personal Archives?

There isn’t a singular unifying aesthetic to the label other than supporting friends who make music I love. Though there is a strong representation by noise acts – itself a genre term open to varied interpretation – I have put out all kinds of stuff, from pop and folk to punk and psych. Also, though cassettes are the main format I utilize, I am not a purist. I’ve put out a few 7” lathes – I’m very proud of the Ixnay EP (a single-sided hand-screened record) and the Curt Oren single (with hand-painted covers by Curt and his pals). Some other personal Personal Archives favorites include Mahler Haze’s Counterfactual CD-r, the second Bean Snack tape, Nora Petran’s Vice President, and the sprawling new Wilmoth Axel 2xC60. The Floating Cave C54 holds a special place in my memories – it was my first collaboration with Drew Bissell (Venereal Crush/ex-Aseethe), and the first time I played guitar after severing the tendons in my left hand. I’m also proud of the Bongo Crimes compilation, which was the 50th PA release, because it highlights the unified randomness of the label – everything from harsh noise to free improv to my buddy rattling stream-of-consciousness rhymes to Commodore 64 themes. I am humbled to have had any hand in so much great music.

Your own work has been featured through a number of other cassette labels over the years…give us a quick pathway through your discography for folks who might be interested in lending their ears to your musical journey.

Though Personal Archives initially existed as a repository for my solo recordings, I’ve been fortunate to work with a lot of great labels over the years. The first tape, Self Esteem Hand Jive, was released through Randy Carter’s DSMS label in 2010, I think. I did a split with Devin Dart in 2012 on his now-dormant Felt Cat imprint (Devin is now putting out stuff as Skymongrel Recordings). That same year, Captcha Records released How To Fuck All Your Coworkers In One Sitting. Captcha put out my first LP the year prior, and, following some positive press, How to Fuck… was released on vinyl, in a truncated version, in 2013. This summer, Tymbal Tapes released If You Have a Door, Leave It Open. I’ve also worked with some cool new Iowa labels, like 5CM Recordings, Warm Gospel, and Nova Labs.

You’ve been a significant figure in the Iowa scene for a long time, a “noise veteran,” as someone just called you on this tour. It seems like the Iowa scene is full of exciting music these days, but it’s also unusually unified, with lots of labels working together, community and statewide compilations and festivals like Zeitgeist, that sort of thing. Tell us about some of the cool projects happening in Iowa right now that you’re involved with, or that deserve some attention.

There’s a lot happening in Iowa right now, beneath the surface, as well as in the semi-mainstream. Labels like Maximum Ames are going the traditional route of promotion and whatnot, but doing it well. Sump Pump Records, which focuses on vinyl, brings a ‘90s indie/punk aesthetic to things, which really appeals to me. Mortville Noise continues to operate well beneath Iowa’s radar, while at the same time attracting rabid fans around the world.

Obviously what’s most interesting to me right now are the slew of cassette labels that have sprung up over the past five years: Warm Gospel, The Centipede Farm, 5CM, Workerbee Records, Breaching Static, and a bunch of others that escape my memory at the moment, as well as Jay Schleidt’s long-running Lation collective. Each sort of have their niche, but are not bogged down in anything doctrinaire. There is a lot of mutual admiration and support.

I suppose what’s unique in our ‘scene’ is that it doesn’t have the hallmarks of a scene – there is a lot of humility and interdependence. I guess you could chalk it up to ‘midwest nice’ or whatever, but I think a big component of our mutualism lies in not taking any of this for granted – not too long ago, there did not exist the opportunities there are now. We all know what it’s like to grow up devoid of culture. In our networking, we’ve discovered we are not alone in being the weirdo that records strange sounds in his/her bedroom, that these expressions are valid, and to be celebrated. There’s no room for attitudes and egos.

There are some obvious antecedents to this in Iowa, most notably Shawn Reed’s Night People label, which operated out of Iowa City throughout the early oughts. For the most part, though, the present situation with experimental/noise/whatever music in Iowa traces to 2011 or so. Trent Reis (JUXWL), Trey Reis (Warm Gospel Tapes, Skyscraper, Kamrar), Chuck Hoffman (The Centipede Farm and a million projects) strike me as some prime early movers in all this – between them, and a solid handful of others, I’m sure, the groundwork was laid for the Zeitgeist fests (the fifth of which is happening in Des Moines on October 24) and the All Iowa Noise Insurgency (AINI), which has alternately been everything from a facebook page to a zine to a double cassette compilation.

Most of the labels and artists involved with the AINI are based in and around Des Moines and Ames, which are smack in the center of the state. There are also pockets of great stuff happening in smaller towns as well – the house shows in Muscatine are crazy, Fairfield (home of the Maharishi University) has a surprising amount of cool bands for its size, and the college towns of Iowa City and Cedar Falls are always solid.

How about in your part of Iowa? Dubuque is a pretty long haul away from Iowa City and Des Moines, but it seems like you’re keeping things interesting out there, too.

Dubuque is a bit more off the beaten path. We are situated on the Mississippi River, bordering Wisconsin and Illinois. We’re an hour from the nearest interstate, so it’s easy for us to get lost in the shuffle. Often I feel like we’re somewhat forgotten when it comes to coverage of Iowa music. In most respects, though, I enjoy being off the grid, as it were.

Despite our relative anonymity, there is a lot going on under the surface here. Again, there is no ‘scene’ here, but there is a solid group of like-minded people doing a variety of creative things, working against the flow. I work for an arts nonprofit, the Dubuque Area Arts Collective, that pushes against the milquetoast establishment in the city, and, more importantly, promotes and mentors young artists and musicians.

An offshoot of the DAAC is Ruix. Ruix has existed in some form since 2011, when it began as a print zine. It’s gone through several permutations over the years, and I feel like we’ve finally arrived at the aesthetic we were initially aiming for. We recently published our seventh issue, with another on the way this winter.

Most importantly, Ruix operates as a collective – a core group of us share the responsibilities and burdens of doing this magnificently futile thing. Besides the zine, we have a podcast, in which we interview musicians and artists with ties to the area, as well as a weekly blog. We host regular shows in the basement of our art gallery – they are basically house shows with a good PA, a real DIY vibe. The Ruix name is also attached to several recordings featuring members of the collective, including Venereal Crush, a five-piece drone/free improv group I play with.

What’s next on the horizon for new BBJr projects and Personal Archives?

As this fall tour wraps up, I am starting to book the next run. Venereal Crush is going to go out for a week or so in January, and Sex Funeral, a duo with Des Moines drummer Matthew Crowe and myself, is planning on going out for a bit in March. I’ll most likely do another solo tour in May – looking to go south and see some friends in New Orleans. I’m considering bringing a road partner this time around – I’ve logged around 17,000 miles the past two years, doing all the driving, and everything else, by myself. I really enjoy being able to get in my head on the long drives, to see the country in a leisurely way. It’s strangely reassuring to know that I’m responsible for everything that happens, good or bad, at least within the miniscule locus of control one actually possesses in such endeavors.

I’m also continuing to record new stuff, and have an album in the can I’m hoping someone will pick up on in the coming year. My new LP on Captcha Records just came out, and I hope to get that into some people’s ears. As for Personal Archives, I have some upcoming releases from Mahler Haze, Different Planets, and Dead Man’s Lifestyle on deck. The label is about 80 releases in, and though I’m not putting stuff out at the frantic pace I was a couple years ago, I’d like to think I’m supplanting that with a bit more quality control in terms of sound quality and packaging.

I’d imagine PA will go on for as long as my friends and myself are making sounds. My little tag for the label is, “it’s in your head, between your ears.” I will always be fascinated by the creative process. It’s true alchemy – we create things out of thin air where nothing stood before. What’s not to dig in that?

Tabs Out | No Rent Noise Hotline

No Rent Noise Hotline
10.5.15 by Mike Haley

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Any schmuck with a decent Wifi signal can set up a Bandcamp or Soundcloud page for their label. But it takes a special kind of schmuck, one with gumption, to set up a hotline that can be called to stream upcoming releases. Introducing the No Rent Noise Hotline. What is the No Rent Noise Hotline you ask? It’s a toll-free number where one can check out mega lo-fi samples of upcoming NOISE from Jason Crumer’s resurrected No Rent imprint. Much like the They Might Be Giants Dial-A-Song hotline or the DJ Jazzy Jeff & Fresh Prince rap hotline of years past, you only need to dial the number, followed by the extension, and BAM. You’re streaming the way our ancestors used to do it, before HTML was discovered.

The number?

(641) 715-3900, extension 590622#

Currently on the hotline is side A of an upcoming Shredded Nerve cassette. What’s next? Who knows. No Rent has tapes by Damion Romero, Dromez, Sapphogeist, Reverse Baptism, and others on deck, so maybe one of those. Check out the Now Playing page and call, call, CALL!

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Tabs Out | Q&A With Robert & Leopold

Q&A With Robert & Leopold
10.2.15 by Bobby Power

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Founded only a half a decade ago, Robert & Leopold is a boutique cassette imprint owned and operated by Ryan Martin, a Brooklyn-based musician who co-runs the Dais imprint and records under a slew of hypnotic, sublimely intense aliases (Copley Medal, Death Houses, Hanel Koeck) and collaborations (DeTrop, On A Clear Day, York Factory Complaint). Following a double-dose of deeply confounding, subtly unsettling releases (Løt.te’s Private Shell and On a Clear Day’s Photo 51), we caught up with Martin to chart the label’s beginnings, the balance of Martin’s split effort between R&L and Dais, and a few of Martin’s most beloved cassette labels, both past and present.

 

Robert & Leopold’s first release came in 2010 with a tape by Maurizio Bianchi– a hell of a way to launch. Can you talk about the beginnings of the label and how that first release came together?

Previous to Robert & Leopold, I was loosely helping my friend Lou Caldarola with his label, Period Tapes. I was involved in the first few release but decided to do my own solo imprint that was at a more steady pace and would allow me to release my own music on a regular basis. My first releases on R&L were a tape by Maurizio Bianchi, whom I became friendly with through Dais, and a tape by my band York Factory Complaint. Both of those received a great response so I just kept going with it for the past few years. It’s mainly an extension of myself outside of Dais to release things that would be too “left-field” for Dais, but that I am a huge fan of on a personal level. The whole label is just a self-focused realization of things that I love and admire in art & music.

You also co-run Dais with Gibby Miller, and while R&L and Dais are quite different, there is some overlap in aesthetic and sound. How do you keep the two projects separate, and what’s the hardest hurdle there?

There is a bit of overlap simply because both labels release works by artists who are friends, so you will see a lot of the same names pop up in some incarnation within both labels. Part of me is in Dais and the rest of my reflection can be glimpsed in R&L. Dais is a real full-time, semi-professional (ha!) kind of entity, R&L is just a personal project I take on when I have some down time or have some recordings of my own I’d like to get out quickly. Both pair well together but are different enough that they stay out of each others hair.

It seems like you put out an average of 10 tapes a year. Do you handle everything, from design to packaging and mailing?

I’ve slowed it down slightly this past year only because of lack of free time, but that sounds about right. It all depends on the release. I’ve designed / created artwork for quite a few release but sometimes the artist wants to handle that aspect. I would like to get ambitious on packaging sometime in the near future, do something memorable and tactile but it has to be the right fit to pull it off in a tasteful way. Past all of that, it’s just me doing everything!

R&L just released an LP by On A Clear Day, your project with David Grant. Was this the first time you’d thought about doing an LP on R&L?

The thought had crossed my mind in the past of doing vinyl, but like anything it’s always a cost issue. This album was a special “baby” of mine and David, so we felt it was worth taking the dive into the financial black hole that is vinyl production to see that this album we made was released on the proper format but still retain it’s niche sensibility.

What’s your demo or submission policy?

Right now, it’s just been that I don’t take demos or submissions. I’ve only put out one release that was done by a stranger cold calling me with a demo submission.That was the Kosmonaut tape I did 3 years ago. He caught me at the right moment and sent me some really incredible music that was in the style of a lot of things I was listening to at that time. Anything else was either my own work, releases by friends or me reaching out to artists that I truly admired personally.

You’ve accomplished quite a bit on both Dais and R&L. Do you have any dream projects or past projects that never happened?

Quite a few actually! I won’t name the projects that were declined by the artists when approached. As for stuff I’d like to do, I have lists of releases that I would eventually like to make happen. Best to keep that list to myself though, better for surprises of the future.

Who are some of your favorite tape labels, past and/or present?

Favorite past tape labels… Where do I begin?! Grafika Airlines, Exart, Insane Music, Sound of Pig, Broken Flag, Audiofile, Jim Tapes, Inner-X-Musick, Kubus, Ding-Dong….I could sit here all day naming of old tapes labels that I gush over their discographies.

Present: Vitrine, Ascetic House, Chondritic Sound, Hanson, Fag Tapes, House of Alchemy, Goat-Eater Arts are a small fraction of labels that I pick up titles from regularly, that’s just what I’ve been listening to lately.

 

R&L discography to date
(R&L058) Løt.te “Private Shell”
(R&L057) On A Clear Day “Photo 51”
(R&L056) DeTrop “Man, Woman, & Beast”
(R&L055) David First “The AM Radio Band”
(R&L054) Hanel Koeck “Rosendale Open”
(R&L053) No Intention “+B”
(R&L052) Death Houses “Duty Roach in Millions”
(R&L051) Maurizio Bianchi & Ryan Martin “As Strong As Death Is”
(R&L050) Bob Bellerue “Fine Phenomena”
(R&L049) Further Reductions “s/t”
(R&L048) Copley Medal “Sabbath”
(R&L047) Ryan Martin & Anthony Mangicapra “Golden Hazrat”
(R&L046) Hoor-paar-Kraat “Live at the Brooklyn Fashion League”
(R&L045) Climax Denial “Anxiety Rituals”
(R&L044) EMP “Era II”
(R&L043) Believer/Law “Contrition”
(R&L042) Anla Courtis & Richard Francis “Aucklantida”
(R&L041) Drowning the Virgin Silence “Head Cleaner”
(R&L040) Stone Baby “Debris”
(R&L039) Kösmonaut “Geist”
(R&L038) Death Houses “…All but the Crimson Light Remained”
(R&L037) Âmes Sanglantes “Have You Come Here to Torment Us Before the Time?”
(R&L036) Aaron Dilloway “Tractor Cuts”
(R&L035) Leif Elggren “Sleepwalking”
(R&L034) Hanel Koeck “Francis Bloom, His Mistress & The Dullard”
(R&L033) Hanel Koeck “Piano Music”
(R&L032) Future Blondes “Live at Libertine Social Club 7/9/12”
(R&L031) Chris Brokaw “Tidal Mud”
(R&L030) Hoor-paar-Kraat “In Your Absence”
(R&L029) Letha Rodman Melchior / Tretetam “Moon Mountain”
(R&L028) DeTrop “Con Rit”
(R&L027) Hidden Tooth “July 18, 2012”
(R&L026) Black Leather Jesus “Even Deeper”
(R&L025) These Feathers Have Plumes “Hegira”
(R&L024) Genetic Infantryman & Ryan Martin “Live 12-23-2011”
(R&L023) Rust Worship “Optimistic”
(R&L022) York Factory Complaint “Sufferings”
(R&L021) York Factory Complaint “Live Document ’09-’10”
(R&L020) Femminielli “Sprezzatura”
(R&L019) Jazkamer “Failed State of Mind”
(R&L018) Exhumed Corpse “Mortem Obire”
(R&L017) Kama Rupa “City of Caesars”
(R&L016) Sudden Infant “The Wicked Mothers”
(R&L015) Lasse Marhaug “Angelica 2011/05/20”
(R&L014) DeTrop “Apart From The Dutch Administrators, There Seemed To Be Only About A Dozen Whiteskins Living In Bali”
(R&L013) K2 “IsopDoping”
(R&L012) DeTrop “Rewards of Faith”
(R&L011) Pipeline Alpha “Demons and Dances”
(R&L010) Chapels “That Incorrigible Death’s-Head”
(R&L009) Werewolf Jerusalem “Carnal Violence”
(R&L008) Scorpio & Glass “Eight Days for Trifecta”
(R&L007) York Factory Complaint “Will & Testament”
(R&L006) Knights of Timbre “Rite of Noise”
(R&L005) Bleak Race “Communication Breakdown”
(R&L004) Future Blondes “Vila’gok 2”
(R&L003) Hoor-paar-Kraat “Elbow Drops Effortlessly”
(R&L002) York Factory Complaint “Sentiment”
(R&L001) Maurizio Bianchi “Violichte”

Tabs Out | Jon Mueller – A Magnetic Center

Jon Mueller – A Magnetic Center
9.30.15 by Scott Scholz

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You might have heard the well-deserved hype for Death Blues over the last few years, a multi-disciplinary project headed by percussionist/composer Jon Mueller which reached its planned finale with last autumn’s Ensemble LP/book. Ever looking forward, Mueller marked its release with a 25+ city solo tour of the US and Canada, workshopping a new set of material. Appearing with only a handmade Arabic bass drum, a microphone, and a looping pedal, he proceeded to turn a series of unassuming neighborhood bars into some of the most primal percussion liturgies this side of Z’EV.

The material from that tour has been meticulously distilled into a weighty pair of pieces just released though Mueller’s Rhythmplex imprint. “A Magnetic Center” uses a persistent, minimal bass drum foundation, over which wordless vocals are looped into massive aggregations of voices, alternately speaking over one another and coming together into powerful chorale fragments. The A-side uses simple eighth notes on the drum, leaving room for what seem like hundreds of voices to gradually overtake the mix before collapsing into an ominous drone. On the B-side, the drums are busier, and the vocals huddle themselves into archetypal 2-measure melodies that feel like an eccentric world music that somehow accounts for the entire world.

This music is maybe felt even more than heard: the whole tape hovers around 35 minutes, but A Magnetic Center is a time-distorting experience that will probably leave several hours of your life unaccounted for. Tell it to the judge. And considering the name of this piece, this is a perfect jam to present on tape. The packaging compliments the ceremonial vibes, too: a pro-dubbed tape is nested in a heavy cardstock jacket with a photo-mounted embossed cover pattern, and the whole thing is wrapped inside silver foil paper and sealed with a black dot sticker. The edition of 100 is going fast, so grip whilst thou canst beholdest.

Tabs Out | New Batch – Eiderdown

New Batch – Eiderdown
9.22.15 by Mike Haley

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When Eiderdown talks, you listen. Ya got it, kid? And not just because I’m telling you to. Because you almost HAVE to. First off, it’s damn near impossible to miss their eye-zesting artwork (done proper by Max Clotfelter) silk screened on the Jcards. If you’re a dumbbell so far ahead of your time that the screaming illustrations don’t knock you on your fanny, then just open your ears!! Open em wiiiiiiide. The zones go all the way to the bone. The latest duo of gems from the Seattle operation are from Zeta One and Woven Skull.

On “DreamSnake II” Zeta One performs a mystical sweep, like a UFO scanning an occult ceremony from just above the tree line. A glowing aura inflates from Dawn Aquarius’ magnetic voice, guitar, and synth. Echoed chants spiral in a conjuring manner through smoke and fog, making her sounds alluring and patient. Think Woodsist style fire circle with a little bit of dark magic sprinkled in. Haunting, memorable vibes.

On their “Emissions From Sun Bleached Brains” C30, Woven Skull goes on a scenic trip through hills of folky freakness and valleys of mic’d room psych sessions. The trio play off of each other, but don’t shy away from tangents, during some lengthy, airy tribal rhythms and occasional clamor. For the most part “Emissions” is mega chill. And if getting mega chill with Woven Skull isn’t enough for your picky sensibilities, there is a song called Stoned, Teenage, Listening to Tangerine Dream (part 2). If that doesn’t do it for ya, then I can’t help you. Nobody can help you.

If you get down with witchcraft, weed, (boxed) wine, and wisdom, then grip up these tapes from Eiderdown now. Both are editions of 100.

Tabs Out | Shedding – Plod & Play Vol.1

Shedding – Plod & Play Vol.1
9.21.15 by Mike Haley

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“Plod & Play Vol.1” is one of those recordings that doesn’t need to do a lot to do a lot. Does that make sense? I guess what I’m trying to say here is that Shedding, real name Mr. Connor Bell from Louisville, KY,  takes an extremely gentle approach to tinkering, with a process that seems to blend conscious efforts with happy accidents. He goes minimal, but never meanders. He has fun.

There’s an excellent use of sparseness, weirdness, and beauty over the course of these dozen tracks. Shedding often sends the listener down an ooey-gooey slip-n-slide of squishes and gurgling tones, like on the second track, Lhaze Too. Here, seemingly random synth gulps rattle into each other like introverts navigating Walmart on a Black Friday. The nervous dance can be concerning, but it’s fun to watch. And in the end they all make it to the check out line alive. On the last track of side A, Kiss (one of the longer cuts at just four minutes), Bell offers up one of his condensed dream sequences. Unlike the more fidgety moments on the tape, Kiss focuses more on thick foggy floor sounds and the allure of vivid blinking.

The B side of “Plod” (this was all recorded between 2002-2005 & 2011) is a bit more focused. Patterns begin to emerge, oscillators still croak and jitter, but with more of a purpose. Maybe more direction? The track Abend is a pretty sweet example of that. Melodies fade from wet to dry, rich vapors sweep in the background. A nice warm hug from tonality and randomness. Even with that focus, you’ll still get the feeling that everything is stream-of-thought. And I like that. Connor Bell had some excellent thoughts to share.

The artwork for this, and the other releases from City State Tapes, is pretty damn superb. You can pick up “Plod & Play Vol.1”, made in an edition of 50 copies, now. Please do so.

Tabs Out | 2015 Goldrush Companion Cassette

2015 Goldrush Companion Cassette
9.17.15 by Mike Haley

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The 5th consecutive Goldrush Music Festival will take place this weekend, September 18th and 19th, in Denver, CO with a cast of outsider artisans including Yoni Wolf, Lawrence EnglishTara Jane O’NeilGuardian Alien, and Pictureplane. For the 4th year a cassette compilation has been put together to guide ya through the roster’s diverse array of genres and talent.

This year’s comp is a 22-track, 80-minute marathon kicked off with some calm, reflective experimentation by Brooklyn’s Baby Birds Don’t Drink Milk. The material then sways through a catalog of moods, from the shoegazey chillness of Landing to heady guitar drone from AMULETS, before Tara Jane O’Neil wraps up side A with a gorgeously gushing unreleased cut.

Side B is equally stacked. Denver locals Bang Play blitz a standout track of crazy free jazz early on that leads into a grip of lo-fi, stoked-on-Elliott-Smith pop from Austin, TX artist More Eaze. The comp (well, I guess the fest itself) is full of that sort of heavy juxtaposition. Why?’s Yoni Wolf right before a dream pop take on Lucinda Williams’s “Passionate Kisses” performed by Lisa Prank (brilliant moniker btw). Straight up rock giving way to randomly dispensed oscillations. It’s a smooth taste test and a killer attack on stagnation.

Eye candy for the 2015 Goldrush Companion Cassette was executed by the always great Tiny Little Hammers. You can pick up one of the 300 copies a few ways: Free with 2-day passes to the fest, for $5 at the fest, or for $7 through Planted Tapes if you can’t make it out to Denver.

Side A
1. Baby Birds Don’t Drink Milk – Little Village [0:00]
2. Bollywood Life – White Wall [5:39]
3. Landing – Glow [9:40]
4. Guardian Alien – female masturbation music [13:41]
5. American Culture – My Teeth are Sharp [18:03]
6. AMULETS – NIHILISM ON 1-10 [19:36]
7. Benoît Pioulard – Needless to Say [27:40]
8. Crown Larks – Pt. 4: Satrap [30:38]
9. déCollage – Friendlings [35:33]
10. Tara Jane O’Neil – Kelly [39:16]

Side B
1. Lawrence English – Coda for a Fading Tide [0:00] 2. Bang Play – Push it Slow [2:53] 3. More Eaze – Amicable Detentes [4:41] 4. braeyden jae – A Joy of Hell [7:10] 5. dugout canoe – (‘-‘) [11:39] 6. Yoni Wolf – Rifle Eyes [23:35] 7. Lisa Prank – Passionate Kisses [25:44] 8. Make-Overs – Post Show Hissy Fit [27:49] 9. John Chantler – A New Power [31:04] 10. Nevada Greene – A Love of Irrelevant Mind [35:20] 11. The Space Lady – Who We Are is a Key [38:18]

Tabs Out | Christian Mirande – Fear Of Flying

Christian Mirande – Fear Of Flying
9.16.15 by Jacob DeRaadt

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Christian Mirande is a new sound artist from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Some cursory research revealed that he’s a pilot in training for the United States Air Force, thus the ironic title of this release. However, there’s a clear vision presented here on this cassette that is undeniable.

The use of stereo delay and organic sounds in varying acoustic environments really works as an audio diary of travelling. The listener begins to question the situation in which they’ve been placed. Juxtapositions of textures both brittle and soft, up close and far away. Gentle tones glide into an airplane runway. An interruption of small rocks tumbling around plastic containers. There’s also an impressive use of silence, and near-silent passages. Great transitions on this one: Gradual shifts as well as sudden jolts into a new landscape. No sound lasts longer than a minute or two, which lends itself to a vaguely episodic feel. There seems to be almost varying biases to the field recordings. Again, I’m not sure if the artist is utilizing analog or digital gear in this process, but ultimately the mystery of the recording process has this listener mystified.

“Pierced Steel/Heron” shows signs of layering various sounds to make a complex narrative. We’re not talking classic-era music concrete here but the fashion in which the elements crawl in and out of the ether are sublime. “Com Cycle” stood out as the strongest work on this cassette. Brief bursts of juxtaposing dark matter colliding in the recesses of an old mind. One of my favorite elements is ever-present here: The sound of empty rooms with some mistaken ambient sonic event happening outside the window. The edge of perception degrades, the rust belt of the magnetic tape reel rolls to reveal a subtle intention.

This careful assemblage of field recordings is essential for anyone longing to hear more sonic detritus in the vein of Jason Lescalleet, Justin Meyer’s earlier eponymous works for tape, or Jeph Jerman’s more sparse works.

“Fear Of Flying” is available from Mistake By The Lake in an edition of 35 copies.