Tabs Out | Preorder Fabrica’s End-Of-Summer Batch

Preorder Fabrica’s End-Of-Summer Batch
8.17.14 by Mike Haley

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“Summer’s almost gone.”

That’s what it said in a recent email blast from Fabrica Records and, after confirming with a calendar, totally checks out. Another summer wasted. I didn’t experience a steamy summer romance, I didn’t find myself while backpacking through Europe, I didn’t even join forces with a rag-tag group of youths to save a camp from an evil corporation who wanted to bulldoze and build a parking garage. Ugh, what a waste.

The next line in the said email from Fabrica gave me summertime hope though.

“There are 4 new tapes containing new music by Parashi, KILT, Sindre Bjerga and Luciernaga/La Mancha del Pecado and they will be shipping before or by the second week of September.”

Huzzah! My bullshit summer can now be partially salvaged by some colossal sounds, all of which are preorderable right now. Curious experimentation from Norway’s Sindre Bjerga, live grumbles from the ALL CAPS trio of Bob Bellerue, Raven Chacon, and Sandor Finta known simply as KILT, Mike Parashi’s glorious sonic sputtering as Parashi, and industrial darkness split up and housed in 5″ x 5″ reel boxes. Let’s examine…

FAB033: SINDRE BJERGA “FUTURE JAZZ LOOPS” C60

FAB034: KILT “SHE’S GOT THE EVIL IN HER EAR” C60

FAB035: PARASHI “TOVARICH” C30

FAB036: LUCIERNAGA/LA MANCHA DEL PECADO SPLIT C30

All of these will be editions of 50 pro dubbed chrome tapes. Grabbing them right now is something that you should be doing. So do it here.

Tabs Out | Metaphysical Circuits Readies A New Batch

Metaphysical Circuits Readies A New Batch
7.31.14 by Mike Haley

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Metaphysical Circuits, the relatively young operation from Denmark, has developed quite the positive rep over the past year and a half. And not without good reason. Their nearly fifty release catalog boasts serious cosmic rigor from Guenter Schlienz, Homeowner, Nickolas Mohanna, and MICROFL▼RSCNCE and the splashy artwork wrapped around those sounds are a grandiose zone. Basically, when you hear that MetaCircs are readying a new batch, you listen up. And wouldn’t ya know it, MetaCircs are readying a new batch of four tapes.

The label posted the above pic on their social media networking wall days ago, offering a visual preview of things to come. Those things are rather gorgeous looking jammers from Strange Mountain, Ondness, a Gedane Zaken / Lero split, and TAKAHIRO MUKAI.

They say you’ll be able to grip these up “in a couple of weeks”. While ya wait for these mugs to get dubbed and whatnot, feel free to peruse the Metaphysical shop and listen to the mix below featuring some new and forthcoming sections from the label. Due to super silly licensing restrictions there is no tracklist. 🙁  Boo, Mixcloud. Boo.

Let’s get Metaphysical!

 

Tabs Out | Grandma Lo-Fi: The Basement Tapes Of Sigríður Níelsdóttir

Grandma Lo-Fi: The Basement Tapes Of Sigríður Níelsdóttir
7.28.14 by Mike Haley

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I’m always skeptical of stories like this. Unearthed demos someone bought at a yard sale of nameless Russians who built synthesizers out of old space shuttle parts and shit like that. Stuff that reeks of too-good-to-be-true Febreze. The tale here is about an Icelandic woman named Sigríður Níelsdóttir who, at the ripe old age of 70, began making home-recordings straight to cassette tapes. After seven years she had compiled a John-Olson-like amount of material. Over 600 songs of fanciful, odd, and beautiful music. Apparently the story seems to be true and managed to sneak under my radar. There was even a 2011 documentary made about her called Amma Lo-Fi (Grandma Lo-Fi).

21 tracks from Sigríður’s immense catalog were selected for a cassette, out now on Hornbuckle Records. The music, recorded from 2001 – 2004, ranges from simple, off-beat Casio’d melodies, to an eccentric blend of whimsical vocals and flowing harmonies, to minimal folky tunes that will make you wish you didn’t put Grandmom in that home (yes, you are a horrible person). Staying extremely true to the album name, and her circumstances, everything is submerged in lo-finess. Airy recordings, odd stop-and-starts, cut in’s of vacuum cleaners and pets. It all comes together in a perfect way. This hour+ cassette will serve you well as an introduction to an Icelandic cult figure and her dazzling back story (though I may be last to the party). And I swear to Christ, if I am being catfished I will lose my shit all over this place.

“Grandma Lo-Fi: The Basement Tapes Of Sigríður Níelsdóttir” was made in an edition of 200 copies and available for $7.00 plus shipping from Hornbuckle’s site. Sample a snippet of all the tracks below.

Tabs Out | A Whole Mess Of Andrew

A Whole Mess Of Andrew
7.21.14 by Mike Haley

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I’m not banging out mix tapes today like I was in my roaring 20’s. Those were some wild times, man. Staying up past 9:00, listening to records, drinking alcoholic refreshments by the several. I was like the James St. James of dubbing. Shit was super intense. One thing I’d love to do while making said mixes was to give them a theme. Fancying it to be a bona fide genius concept, I (on more than one occasion) put together cassettes called “Black & Blue” with a touch of Sabbath, Dice, and Flag on one side and some stuff like Cheer, Öyster Cult, and Ridge Rangers on the other. In retrospect not the most creative undertaking, but it definitely yielded me three or four extremely similar C60s. I recently rediscovered the cover, sans cassette, for a 40-artist burner I made on 1/31/03 called “Party Animals” with The Jesus Lizard, Bunny Brains, Pig Destroyer, Wolf Eyes, and, for whatever reason, White Lion. The point here is me gusta a good theme.

It would seem Rainbow Bridge is in the same camp, or at least was last month when they released the hour and a half comp “Potpourri Of Andrew”; A collection of 20 experimental-heads all of which had parents who chose the name Andrew or Andy for them. The misfit group of weirdo musicians include Tiger Hatchery’s Andrew Scott Young, Evil Moisture (Andy Bolus), Andrew Chadwick (aka Ironing), Andy Borsz of Slasher Risk, Gaybomb (Andrew Barranca), noise mainstay, and the man behind Panicsville, Andy Ortmann, Andrew Weathers, DumpsterScore CEO Andrew Quitter, and(y) more.

The comp opens up decently chill with the laid-back clank, jangle, and scrape of Andrew Scott Young’s fingers and bow on upright bass and finishes out with three minutes of Andy O’Sullivan’s patented harsh-as-fuck Goat material. The 18 jams between them  moon-bounce from Andrew Weathers’ acoustic guitar clarity to Andrew James MacKelvie’s berserk electronic splatter, but unarguably reside in a total noise zone. Possibly the definitive guide to Andrew and Andys in the world of experimental sounds, at least until Volume Two drops with Dr Dre’s power electronics debut (he’s an Andre but it counts).

“Potpourri Of Andrew” is limited to 50 copies, with some classic 8th grade notebook artwork, from the Rainbow Bridge bandcamp. Nosh up the entire serving of A-bones below.

Tabs Out | Fresh from the Gutter: The “Rotten Contingent” Comp

Fresh from the Gutter: The “Rotten Contingent” Comp
7.17.14 by Ian Franklin

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I enjoy a good compilation.  Throw some cheese over some chips, add in a little lettuce, tomato, beans, and guacamole and you got yourself a nice compilation.  Bolognese has got to be one of the tightest comps ever put together.  Big fan of the comp.

And lucky for us, compilations come in all shapes and flavors.  On New York based Fieldwork’s first comp, the label’s 5th release, they showcase a filthy smorgasbord of some of NYC’s finest in the noise/industrial/PE department.  “Rotten Contingent” is a C40 of disgustingly brutal and unforgiving concrete fantasies and decrepit attitude, scooped fresh from the gutter.

Arbiter’s “Inimical Temptations” leads Side A off with a fury of squealed and restrained wails, drifting uneasily like a drunk down a crowded street.  Dizzying and unsettling, Arbiter weaves a dense image of a dark, urban landscape, aptly setting the mood from the get go. Leading straight into the second track begins “The Courage as a species To Die” from :M:.  Hissing static mixed with old found sounds conjures a disjointed memory of distant pain.  Dreamlike and terrifying is about all I can say. Mixed with death squeals and mid-level contact static, Swollen Organs delivers aggressive and painful lyrics for distorted voice.  Not only are the vocals executed with amazing force and hate, Swollen Organs has a perfect awareness for spatial placement and crafts a fantastically complex creation of inner turmoil spread out across a harsh temporal wasteland. On “Suicide Barge”, Penchant takes billowing static blow out and layers it on top of a fragmented bed of bass synth.  Never becoming the focal point nor completely fading away, it drifts with the thick static and flows over everything like dirt through rainy street gutters.

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The B side begins with H.C.O.D.‘s “Zealous Specula” featuring a dizzying cascade of gritty distortion and grime.  Furious electronic currents spew in all directions and spiral out of control.  Stifled chokes are audible briefly before sinking back below the blistering ash. Venerence’s “Death March” begins with a brisk bpm of pulsating synth drone adding swells of rising fuzzy synth current around the edges.  Metallic swashes overflow and rise until suddenly giving out to nothing and silence.  Flowing in slowly behind it is Aischrolatreia with “Persecution Apparatus”, a grey melodic drone with flashes of warbled percussion, moving in a circulatory reverie.  The only time on the comp that a major melodic interval is present and it’s a nice end cap to a demonstration of the disgusting and miserable environment the other tracks of the compilation portray.  However, this also eventually shifts into a darker, and sinister minor chord drone before fading into nothing, conjuring images of the unending suffering yet to come.

Housed in a black shell with labels for both sides, the 4 panel double j-card folds out nicely into a poster with artist and track titles displayed alongside cut up collages of mysterious doorways and claustrophobic industrial spaces.  “Rotten Contingent” is a fantastically dark compilation of some insanely good NYC artists doing amazing things with distortion, static, and darkness.  One of my favorite releases of the year so far and a good sign of things to come from Fieldwork.

Stream cuts from all the tracks below and hit up the label’s website to grip a copy.

Tabs Out | From Aughts Unknown

From Aughts Unknown
7.11.14 by Mike Haley

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They say “less is more”. Of course, they also say “go big or go home” and “if you can’t run with the big dogs, you’d better stay on the porch”, but those don’t really apply here. In this selfie-infused culture exists Aught. An entity that has released cassettes by Elizabethan Collar and, as of today, Topdown Dialectic. Packaging-wise both tapes are pretty much as minimal as it gets; Totally clear, screwless tapes with artist names and label insignia imprinted in white, housed in clear 4″x5″ poly bags. No inserts are included. No track listing, gear list, or who/what/where’s at all. The complete opposite of “HEY, FUCKING LOOK AT ME ON VACATION!!”. Just a tape in a bag, bro.

The examples of little consistent details in cassette packaging roll thick. You got the drips of paint on Fag Tapes’ cases, the duct tape on RRR’s recycled series, NNA’s folded circles on all their Jcards, yada yada yada. We could be here all day listing them off. But while aesthetic themes exist abound, that reasoning does not apply for Aught. They didn’t go the über-clear route because they thought it looked cool, which it does. They did it to, as they put it, “narrow the scope of engagement” in order to “limit the contextual elements that inform one’s engagement with a piece in order to provide a direct channel to a sensory experience”. So basically – listen to this. To make sure you don’t go judging the book by it’s cover Aught is revoking your access to a cover. Are you about to dive into 50 Shades of Grey or One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish? The only way to find out is the play button. Basically Aught is a spoiler free zone, existing with the intention of immersing listeners in as pure and organic of a listening sesh as possible. They go as far as Batmanning their identities as to not taint the waters one iota.

I conducted an “interview” with the someone(s) or something(s) behind Aught. To not stray far from their covert motif we kept it to a single word question / single word answer style.

Tabs Out: Name?
/\\: n/a
Tabs Out: Why?
/\\: Inevitable
Tabs Out: Where?
/\\: Diffuse
Tabs Out: Tapes?
/\\: Direct
Tabs Out: Bags?
/\\: Neutral
Tabs Out: Aesthetic?
/\\: Contained
Tabs Out: Always?
/\\: Unlikely
Tabs Out: Change?
/\\: Permutation
Tabs Out: To?
/\\: n/a
Tabs Out: Anonymity?
/\\: Clean
Tabs Out: Focus?
/\\: Imperative
Tabs Out: First?
/\\: EB.C
Tabs Out: Sounds?
/\\: Placements
Tabs Out: You?
/\\: Clear
Tabs Out: Clearly?
/\\: No
Tabs Out: Second?
/\\: TD.D
Tabs Out: Describe.
/\\: Systems
Tabs Out: Details?
/\\: Results
Tabs Out: Next?
/\\: De Leon
Tabs Out: Who?
/\\: n/a
Tabs Out: Tape?
/\\: Same
Tabs Out: Secrecy?
/\\: Focus
Tabs Out: On?
/\\: Listening
Tabs Out: Format?
/\\: Consistency
Tabs Out: Data?
/\\: Unmediated
Tabs Out: Unmeditated?
/\\: No
Tabs Out: Ephemera?
/\\: Hyper-mediated
Tabs Out: Reason?
/\\: Scope
Tabs Out: Digital?
/\\: Scope
Tabs Out: Objective?
/\\: Cohesion
Tabs Out: Future?
/\\: Permutation
Tabs Out: Hint?
/\\: August
Tabs Out: Month?
/\\: Yes
Tabs Out: Thanks
/\\: Ditto

Learn something? Probably not. But the following is what’s actually important…

Their first release from June by Elizabethan Collar is a C26 that plays with engaging, throbbing synth rhythms. Hollow flickers that exist on the same minimal plane as the label. Who is Elizabethan Collar? *shrugs* I don’t think I’m supposed to know, and I like that.

Available today is their second release. A C20 by another occupant of parts unknown, Topdown Dialectic. A solid delivery of gritty, technoish thumpers alongside a rippling of slurred noise and a weird, choppy, almost hip-hop rapport.

A tight start for an interesting endeavor. Classy tapes for sure, but will one have a more focused experience due to Aught’s efforts? Will their choices draw MORE attention to random minutia and make idiots with blogs talk about shit like how many screws the cassettes have? You’ll have to figure that one out for yourself. I’m not your fucking father, sport.

You can purchase both tapes for $7 each through Aught’s Bandcamp.

Tabs Out | ((Cave))’s June Batch

((Cave))’s June Batch
7.10.14 by Jamie Orlando

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Charles Barabé has been on my radar for a bit after listening to some albums on his label La Cohu and hearing his fantastic solo work on episode 44 of some cassette podcast.  All of his La Cohu tapes are sold out, and assumably they sell out fast, so I was thrilled when he announced that he was releasing a new tape on ((Cave)) Recordings.  As I usually do when checking out a label that is new to me, I try to grab their newest batch:

Charles Barabé – Adieu Fantôme C30
Charles is masterful at creating strange soundscapes and doesn’t fail to deliver here.  Amidst a tapestry of tortured oscillators and overall cacophony, there are tastefully interspersed samples of orchestras, opera singers, strange middle-eastern-sounding guitars, organs, french spoken word, gregorian chants, buzzing bees, bells and some butt-scratching.  Well, I think it’s someone scratching their butt, butt I could be wrong.  One of the most impressive things about this tape is that the transitions are so seamless.  As you listen you get lost, and can’t remember how you ended up where you are.  There is also quite a bit of variety in dynamics, so the fact that he can make you not notice things are changing is, well … noteworthy.  Are you taking notes?  Glad I picked up this tape, and you should pick one up too if it’s still available.

Brian Beaudry & Gianluca Favaron – s/t C36
This is an album of interesting textures.  You’re not going to find many musical notes on this album, and may even have a hard time finding guitar tabs on the internet for it…. Hold on, let me check …. *three years later* …. nope … nothing.  On the A Side, Gianluca does field recordings and Brian does electronics.  On the B Side they switch roles.  It’s an interesting concept.   Furtherly, to tickle your musical earbuds, both sides are quite different.

The A Side, to me, represents the land.  Lots of deep sub bass drones with power electronics type sounds overtop, such as drills, hair clippers and overall rustling.  Yes, a lot of rustling to be found here, which may or may not be aforementioned butt-scratching.   As a contrast, there is also the pleasant blowing of leaves and birds chirping in some of the more relaxing and serene moments.

Flip the tape over and you get a full-on underwater adventure.  You start off in a submarine deep under the sea, exiting the submarine in your metallic diving suit.  Suddenly, something goes awry.  Clanking and crashing.  You feel very claustrophobic.  But don’t worry.  Your partner exits the sub and is able to repair your suit.  That was a relief!  Finally you do some exploring and come across a fleet of robot fish from the future.  This musical journey is pretty special and unique, so if minimal soundscape stuff is your cup of tea, grip this tape and listen to it while drinking a cup of tea.

Ala Vjiior – Detours & Details C20

Usually when I see tapes that are jet-black and short, my assumption is that it’s going to be über-harsh.  Ala holds it back a bit kicking off the A Side with subtle loops, undulating drones, and pleasant sax and vibes, climaxing into a heavy bass grind.  The B Side is jazzy in some parts, spacey in others, but overall never really becomes too harsh.  Not that there’s anything wrong with it.  EVERYONE loves harsh noise, and everything on the internet is true?  The tape is short enough to leave you wanting more.  I’ll be interested in checking out some more of this guy’s stuff, and his bandcamp page has plenty.

All three tapes are pro-dubbed, editions of 50 copies, and currently available from the label (along with more samples). Definitely check out this new batch on ((Cave)) Recordings, and also check out Charles’s very own label La Cohu, which has a ton… err metric ton (*Canadian measurement) of great recordings.

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Tabs Out Cassette Podcast | Introducing The Tabs Out Cassette Hotline

Introducing The Tabs Out Cassette Hotline
7.1.14 by Tabs Out

HOTLINE

We at Tabs Out know this whole internet thing is a total fad. You may be getting your LinkedIn invites and Nigerian Prince communiqué through email today, but the wave of communication we’ll be riding into the future is the telephone call. That is why we are launching the Tabs Out Cassette Hotline. A 24 hours a day / 7 days a week service where you can give us a call with all of your cassette-related concerns and questions. Can’t figure out which side is the A side? CALL US! Neighbor’s dog eat your tapes? CALL US! Involved in a car accident (in a vehicle that has a tape deck)? Call 911, but  first CALL US! Our operators are probably not standing by, but you can always leave a message and we’ll address your issue on a future episode.

“What’s the number” you ask?

480-TABS-OUT

“Say it again?!”

480-TABS-OUT!!

“One more time!!!!”

480-TABS-OUT!!!!!

“You couldn’t get 420-TABS-OUT???”

No… We couldn’t 🙁

CALL TODAY!!!!

Tabs Out Cassette Podcast | Get Chill With Warm Gospel

Get Chill With Warm Gospel
6.23.14 by Mike Haley

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Labels in the Cassetaverse® pop up like Panera joints in shopping centers, every day a new one opening it’s doors to serve up steaming bowls of Low-Fat Cream of Magnetic Tape. Even with the massive amount of tasty jams that show up at Tabs Out HQ, it’s impossible to know all that is out there. Case in point: Warm Gospel Tapes. This Iowa-by-way-of-Portland imprint has been doing their own unique thing for around three years now, totes unbeknownst to me. That all changed when a bread bowl filled with some of their latest high-quality ingredients found it’s way into my mitts.

My assumption that Warm Gospel was one of them newfangled labels hooking up their first batch was pretty much shot when I noticed the catalog numbers of the six cassettes, 25 – 30. Text from a typewriter was used on the spine, shell sticker, and for the inside liner notes on all the Jcards. And being a sucker for such thing I tossed one of em in the deck for a listen. That one being the dugoutcanoe / Juxwl split C42. The two artists, both also from Iowa, poured an awesome scattering of frantic, mangled, twitchy electronics. Not sure what got played next, but I definitely went through a sesh of the entire bundle. A pleasurable zone indeed. The healing properties of second-hand loops from Kamrar. Groovy head scratching/nodding samples and beats on Skyscraper’s “K & L”. More eccentric cut up’s on “Townie” by DJ DJ TANNER. Tireless sax ripping from Curt Oren. And an array of deep level experimentation on the “Moon Moan Hymnal” C22 by SEEZUREFACE. The entire batch ripped, but I still had no clue who was presenting me with such delights. Like the intrigued boy detective I am, I took to the internet to achieve a higher level of W.G.K. (Warm Gospel Knowledge).

The discography had some names I was familiar with (ie: loads of DJ DJ TANNER, Lockbox, and Moultrigger) and a few to be discovered. So skipping through their Bandcamp I went. Twas pleasurable zone II. To gain access to the next W.G.K. level I emailed Mr Trey Reis, head of operations, with a few quick questions.

You release a good deal of DJ DJ TANNER material. I was assuming that may be you??
I put out my solo material as Skyscraper. DJ DJ TANNER is a friend of mine who deserves some credit for finding great musicians who might potentially be interested in doing a tape for the label. He and I are the ones who do the Kamrar stuff.

What is the experimental scene like in Iowa? Are there many other noise/weirdo projects/bands, cassette labels, or gigs out there?
Iowa is interesting. Some of the best/strangest/most interesting things I have ever seen are from Iowa or surrounding states of the Midwest. I’m not sure what it is about the Heartland that draws it out of people. There is this tendency to think that the best music in the US comes from the coasts, which is kind of true, but I think that experimental music rarely ever draws much attention and it is incredibly difficult to see any kind of success crafting those kinds of sounds

On the coast, there are a lot of people willing to check out your music, so it is easier to garner attention for what you are doing if it is something more approachable, which experimental music historically isn’t. The thing about Iowa is that there just aren’t very many people here interested in much music outside of what you might hear on the radio. I know a lot of people making pop or electronic music that would sell out shows in some venues on the coasts, and I watch them play it to crowds of 10 or 20 people here in Iowa.

That being the case, there is basically no hope for drawing people to these noise shows, which is absolutely fine with us. Our audience is comprised almost entirely of other experimental musicians, which gives us the leeway to do whatever the fuck we want musically/visually/conceptually/etc.etc.etc. It’s like a marketplace of ideas with tapes as currency, and every show is entirely unique.

The biggest example of this is the Zeitgeist festival that my brother (who does music as Juxwl) puts on every year. It’s just this huge day of experimental and electronic music from the area and it continually rules every time he does it. The most recent featured Katrina Stonehart, which is the project of Drew Gibson who runs the Solid Melts label, and then this legendary Minneapolis noise band Cock ESP headlined the whole thing. We were all so stoked on that, and they just kind of emailed me about it out of the blue. They played all of twelve minutes or so and really blew everyone away. We’re going to try and continue to pull bigger acts for future festivals. I’ve got some names in mind that I think we could realistically pull as Zeitgeist continues to grow.

Regarding other labels and projects, there is a group on the eastern border of the state, specifically around the Dubuque area that rules. I guess if I had to pick a kind of landmark for it, I would point out Bob Bucko Jr. and his Personal Archives label. That dude is the most prolific experimental musician making music right now, and he’s incredibly supportive and always doing collaborations. Boar is another dude from that area, and I honestly believe that project is the best harsh noise project currently active.

Chuck Hoffman and his Centipede Farm label from Des Moines have also been a huge inspiration for me. That guy has his head in a whole different level of experimental music, and he’s always putting out tapes or otherwise supporting and promoting amazing music that I have never even heard of. He also makes music as Distant Trains, which just takes each tape in an entirely different direction.

Further proof of the reach those guys have and their belief in collaboration can be found by looking at the releases from both the Personal Archives and Centipede Farm labels, as well as my list of Warm Gospel releases. So much overlap in so many different ways. Even just doing split tapes with artists I would have otherwise never thought to combine on one tape.

Do you focus on releasing mostly local stuff?
I have done a lot of local releases so far. This is primarily because I found there to be a large number of local electronic and experimental bands to be generally under-represented, especially within the medium of cassette tapes. I’ve also done a few tapes from some Michigan artists and there’s a Lockbox tape in there, and that kid is from Colorado and makes music that is the physical embodiment of the Internet, I think. He just had a tape come out on Hausu Mountain. He deserves all the attention he’s received for what he’s doing.

I’m hoping to branch out with the next batch and get some things from further out. That DJ DJ TANNER dude and I have been in contact with some 404 beat artists from other countries that we are hoping to lock in for a batch release sometime at the end of summer. We’ve both been really obsessed with the glitchy/repurposed nature of that kind of music. It’s present in the samples we both use, and even seems to manifest itself physically sometimes with the label, like when I’m digging cardboard boxes out of the trash at work to cut up and send tapes out in, or finding interesting scraps of paper to send out with the tapes. Sometimes when I’m sending out tapes, it kind of feels like I’ve stuffed an unglued collage into the envelope for the person to receive.

Do you use an actual type writer, as opposed to a font, for your artwork?
Yeah. Just this crappy old Sears typewriter I found at a thrift store. It came in a case with 6 or 7 extra ink ribbons, so I’m planning on getting a lot of mileage out of this thing. I really like the faded look of the typewriter font and how parts of some letters are almost entirely lost. I really love that worn look, which is represented in a lot of the cover art as well, which tend to be repurposed, old photographs of one kind or another. But originally I just liked using the typewriter for adding letters and words over physical collages I was making, which is otherwise not possible without scanning it into a computer.

Got anything planned for future releases?
Too much stuff is in talks and not necessarily confirmed yet, so I don’t want to mention any of that, but I may do a mid-summer batch with some Skyscraper beat stuff and probably another DJ DJ TANNER tape, as that dude has something like 12 hours of material yet to be relea$ed. Also, this collaboration with this guy Dave who does Moulttrigger. The project is called Fornjot and he just sent me the files for it, and that tape is going to rule when it comes out. Hopefully I can get all of that in the works soon. The Sony duplicator I used for the first 30 releases finally quit on me, so I bought this Kenwood duplicator and it kind of already sucks, but I’m figuring out the adjustments for it and getting it to work after a few weeks of dubbing and re-dubbing stuff. But just before I sat down to answer these questions, I got an email back from a dude on craigslist about buying a nice Sony duplicator that is one model newer than my previous one, and I think I’m scoring it for $20, so that’s awesome, because doing this stuff isn’t cheap and the god damn post office just upped their rates by another quarter, which seems to have become a yearly thing. Fuckers.

 

Tabs Out Cassette Podcast | June Duo From Eiderdown

June Duo From Eiderdown 
6.17.14 by Mike Haley

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These two cassette dropped out of the Eiderdown womb a couple of weeks ago but are just now being funneled by my pinnae, a two week delay I would rather not have occurred. Because hot damn, they are both serious sense-massages. Standard output for Eiderdown, the Seattle based bringers of excitement, who have proved themselves time after time to be a proverbial Midas of magnetic tape. Dig into their back catalog for confirmation.

“Distant Realities” by New Forest streams a coarse procession of dismal beauty for 40 minutes. Gently growing through a demonstration of delicacy and corrosion. Half High’s “Calling Nina” is a C30 in obvious running for multiple ‘best of’ lists. This shit is bonkers on multiple levels. The demanding synths, high pursuit rhythms, and nutso details of the recording sesh itself will shove those goosebumps to the outer crust of your skin. (details in the label write up below w/ full streams)

The sci-fi/comic book artwork was once again penned out by Max Clotfelter, who nails it every time. Again, dig into Eiderdown’s back catalog for confirmation. Two color silk screening on light blue stock of pod plants in a lantern room and a blindfolded glop monster slave with his dangle flowing in the breeze. Sound weird? It should. Because it looks even weirder. Professional dubbies, imprinted on both sides, edition of 100. Shall we partake?

“Over at least a decade, Levi Berner has assumed many musical disguises as he haunts the hills of the Pacific Northwest. Algiers, Vexations, and Diseased Visions are but just a few of his recording names visible just above the waterline. His latest nom de guerre, NEW FOREST, sees Berner embracing his ongoing pursuit of the beauty in decay but also heads into more subtle textural arenas. Waves of granular hiss purr around your body as your senses adjust to new unnatural surroundings. When you recalibrate, a new field of sound wraps around your legs, pulling you further into the static bog. Its comforting and suffocating at the same time, a sound of both alien flora and psycho-topographic maps of the caves in the minds eye. Get lost.”

Lucy Cliche and Matthew Hopkins are denizens of Sydney, Australia, formerly of Naked On The Vague, the Bowles, Knitted Abyss, and a kitchens sink worth of other tantalizing musical endeavors. As HALF HIGH, the two have taken everything they know about creep mood and midnight tones and used that arcane knowledge to open an audio gateway into ghostly realms.
“Calling Nina” was recorded live in a performance space where the paranormal branch of the Australian Secret Service had once conducted seances to contact the spirit of a Russian psychic (Nina Kulagina). Twelve mysterious deaths later, the agents declared the space haunted and gave up the ghost.
This live recording of HALF HIGH was their attempt to not only perhaps establish contact but also to generate a collaboration with the spectral energy of the room. The results are powerful. Synths toll as weary bells, disembodied voices beckon from the the corners of the room, and a vague sense of unease and revelation hangs in every second of this recording. Listen up: the sounds of “Calling Nina” are still echoing down the halls of the afterlife as we speak.

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Don’t be a dumb bell. Nobody likes a dumb bell. Go grip these up NOW through the Bandcamp linkage above.