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#Marta Sofia Honer
burlveneer-music · 8 months
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Ariel Kalma, Jeremiah Chiu & Marta Sofia Honer - The Closest Thing to Silence
In August 2022, Australia-based, French born fourth-world music legend Ariel Kalma was invited to participate in BBC Radio 3’s Late Junction series of special collaborations. The program pairs artists who have not previously worked together to create new music cooperatively. Kalma was quick to suggest working with two musicians whom he had never met – International Anthem recording artists Jeremiah Chiu & Marta Sofia Honer, whose critically-acclaimed duo debut 'Recordings from the Åland Islands' had been released just a few months earlier. An invitation was sent to Chiu and Honer, which was received with great enthusiasm, as Chiu had long been a fan of Kalma’s work, even citing him as a major influence on his approach to electronic music composition. The essential structure of the Late Junction collaboration was that the artists would work together to create around twenty minutes of music. They began passing music back and forth, some that Kalma had started, and some that Honer & Chiu had started, with each adding to or editing the track before returning it to the other. The music would only go back and forth a few times before being finalized. After meeting their twenty minute goal for the program (four pieces total), the three musicians were satisfied in what they would present and sent along their work to the producers of Late Junction. However, there was a nagging suspicion that this wasn’t the end of the story. There were several pieces that they had nearly completed but that weren’t sent for inclusion in the radio program, and there were many ideas for refining those pieces that had. With this in mind Kalma, Chiu and Honer agreed that they would continue to work together to try to push the music further. The freshly minted trio felt like there was much more to be said and more work to be done. The Late Junction program was broadcast in September of 2022. Simultaneously, Kalma, Chiu and Honer began expanding upon the music they had started for the purpose of the broadcast, working diligently on the music for several months. Their collective approach to this work was born in improvisation and realized via collage-based editing. The end result brings several distinct musical moments — recorded sometimes decades apart — into conversation with one another, forming new narratives from building blocks of old ones. There are snippets of improvised playing from each musician, edited together with recordings that Kalma had made in the 70s at GRM, and even moments of audio notes — like Kalma explaining his ideas — that would make it into the final mixes. Ultimately, the collection of music highlights the work of all three musicians, intertwining the contextual immersion heard on Chiu & Honer’s 'Recordings from the Åland Islands' with an intergenerational reverence for (and the undeniable presence of) Kalma’s decades-spanning body of work. It is work that has definitively enshrined him as one of the true, transcendent pioneers and sages of new age and fourth-world music. That reverence is affirmed by the album title chosen by the group — "The Closest Thing to Silence" — which is taken from a quote by Kalma included in a documentary by RVNG Intl (as part of their release of the 2014 compendium/retrospective An Evolutionary Music). Perhaps coincidental, Kalma’s quote was a slight modulation of a legendary ECM Records motto, as he said: “Music is the closest thing to silence.”  All Compositions by Ariel Kalma, Jeremiah Chiu, and Marta Sofia Honer. Design and layout by Will Work for Good & Some All None. Photography by Alejandro Ayala & Ama Kalma.
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altamontpt · 5 months
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Ariel Kalma, Jeremiah Chiu e Marta Sofia Honer - The Closest Thing to Silence (2024)
Lançado em fevereiro de 2024, The Closest Thing to Silence é o resultado da colaboração entre o compositor francês Ariel Kalma e a dupla de Jeremiah Chiu e Marta Honer.
Lançado em fevereiro de 2024, The Closest Thing to Silence é o resultado da colaboração entre o compositor francês Ariel Kalma e a dupla Jeremiah Chiu e Marta Honer. Tendo como base o improviso e a colagem, o álbum de estreia do trio incorpora vertentes de new age, ambiente, eletrónica e jazz, eloquentemente combinadas numa experiência ilusória e quase hipnótica. Mergulhar neste álbum é algo…
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sinceileftyoublog · 2 years
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32 (Technically 36) Albums We Loved That Happened To Come Out in 2022
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Cake image courtesy of Oren Ambarchi’s Shebang album art
As more music is being released than ever, it can be hard to pick out trends or even commonalities among our favorites. A post-pandemic world that saw a more full-fledged return to live music and in-person collaboration certainly influenced the records released last year, but from our eyes and ears, it was the artists that ignored physical boundaries, not taking for granted their ability to create, that put out the albums that moved us most. From “solo” records that were truly synergic to songs that work towards toppling the powers that be, innovative producers to stalwarts of indie rock, here are 32 (technically 36) albums that came out last year that we truly loved.
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700 Bliss - Nothing To Declare (Hyperdub) / Moor Mother - Jazz Codes (Anti-) 
Prolific poet and musician Camae Ayewa, who records as Moor Mother, released two more albums in 2022 that explored genres new and old. On Nothing To Declare, the debut LP from 700 Bliss, her project with DJ Haram, the two make a formidable team. Haram combines clattering beats with Moor Mother’s forceful delivery and incomparable flow, as the duo traverse techno, noise, and sound collage worlds. You’ve never heard Moor Mother in front of instrumentals like this, spitting words that are equal parts deftly serious and humorous. She pays tribute to choreographer and anthropologist Katherine Dunham on “Anthology”, declaring that Dunham “danced America on stage” over DJ Haram’s hard techno beat, a melding of tenets of Black music. On “Candace Parker”, which features breakbeats from Palestinian producer Muqata’a, Moor Mother laments, “They rape our mothers while y’all just record.” There’s an urgency to Nothing to Declare, manifested in Special Interest’s Alli Logout screaming, “I’m a motherfucking agitator!” on “Capitol” and Moor Mother’s cinematic lines about guerilla warfare against billionaires and imperialist overloads on the trap-inflected “Discipline”. Yet, even 700 Bliss know that they can be tongue-in-cheek, hilariously on interlude “Easyjet”, a facetious conversation featuring two people making fun of Moor Mother’s vocal tendencies and DJ Haram’s penchant for percussive chaos. It’s a welcome break on an album whose main question appears in the final track: “How much more can we take?”
Jazz Codes is Moor Mother’s second solo album for Anti-, a companion piece to last year’s great Black Encyclopedia of the Air. Like Nothing to Declare, it’s chock full of collaborators, but this time, Moor Mother plays the role of ethnomusicologist, juxtaposing rap, singing, and scholarly spoken word interludes to explore the history of jazz and its descendants. “Dance through the trials of my father,” Moor Mother raps on opener “UMZANSI”, where Mary Lattimore’s harp trickles below horns and footwork-esque drums. Interpolating free jazz and quiet storm R&B and referencing boom bap and juke, Jazz Codes, like the genre it’s named after, reveals new truths after every listen. Moor Mother’s “MEDITATION RAG” is somewhat of a mission statement, her wish to embed herself in “Sun Ra halo, CHAI Congo, Mississippi to East Texas,” in efforts to reclaim the Black music referenced on both this album and Nothing to Declare. Fatboi Sharif groans, “You took the blues away from me” on “BLUES AWAY”; the album’s thematic climax, “THOMAS STANLEY JAZZCODES OUTRO”, places the academic Stanley over an instrumental from Irreversible Entanglements. Jazz should become code for sex again, he posits, rendering something that was once abstract to be again physical and tangible. - Jordan Mainzer
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Bartees Strange - Farm to Table (4AD) 
Bartees Strange has had an exciting few years, and Farm to Table, the follow up to his excellent debut, only adds to the thrill of his ascent. Strange bends indie rock to fit the album’s vision, from the bright horns on “Heavy Heart” to the electronic flourishes of “Cosigns” and “Wretched” and even the mingling of home audio clips and the gentle fingerpicked guitar of “Black Gold”. Lyrically, the album wrestles with duality: of celebration and grief, home and touring, the comfort of family and the unknown of charting your own path. Strange takes what worked so well on Live Forever and digs deeper, continuing to show off his ability to world-build, which really is all you could want from an innovative artist. - Lauren Lederman
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Beyoncé - Renaissance (Parkwood Entertainment/Columbia)
“Renaissance, purportedly the first installment of a trilogy of albums, celebrates Black and LGBTQ+ music and the judgement-free zones they honor. Representative of Beyoncé’s state of mind during the pandemic, it exemplifies her self-love and desire to break free in a time of isolation. And of course, it’s full of braggadocio and skill with the research and credentials to back it up.”
Read the rest of our review here.
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Binker & Moses - Feeding the Machine (Gearbox)
“For their new album Feeding the Machine, the saxophone and drums duo of Binker Golding and Moses Boyd brought their live partner to the studio to add tape loops and electronics to the ingredient list. The result is a major sonic shift, feeding their improvisations through machines, Luthert’s modular synthesis reordering acoustic tracks and drums in a way that’s so distorted it doesn’t even sound acoustic. From the opening moments of ‘Asynchronous Intervals', though you recognize Golding’s saxophone, echoing loops clue you into the sea change. This is different, and it’s here to stay.”
Read the rest of our review here.
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Death Cab For Cutie - Asphalt Meadows (Atlantic)
It’s not that I had given up on Death Cab for Cutie. The stalwart indie rock band has been cranking out albums for years, but what was it about Asphalt Meadows that struck me more than their other recent releases? A five-minute, mostly spoken word track. “Foxglove Through the Clearcut” gives us the contemplative lyrics we come to expect from Benjamin Gibbard but packaged in a way that serves the slowly unfolding story until it reaches its guitar solo crescendo. And I realize that this is the element that’s drawn me back fully into Death Cab’s orbit. The album feels a little rougher around the edges, the guitar fuzzier in moments, not afraid to get a little sharp, which feels apt after the last few years. Asphalt Meadows captures a reflection of our recent post-lockdown history and the urgency of trying to make sense of where we go next. “Now it seems more than ever there’s no hands on lever,” Gibbard sings, a fitting statement on an album that isn’t afraid to dive into the unknown of our current moment. - LL
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Florist - Florist (Double Double Whammy)
“The idea of a person who has faced heartbreak or grief retreating to solitude to create art is oft-romanticized, perhaps to a fault. Emily Sprague has certainly created masterful albums by herself, whether the ambient music released under her own name or Emily Alone, a solo album released under the Florist moniker following her mother’s death and a move out west. But in June 2019, Sprague moved back to New York and rented a house in the Hudson Valley with the band’s original lineup: Jonnie Baker, Rick Spataro, and Felix Walworth. They’d spontaneously record their instruments beside their surrounding natural woods during a hot and rainy summer, the first time they’d ever recorded this way, for this long. The result is Florist’s latest self-titled record, a reinvention of sorts, and one that perhaps shows Sprague and the music listening public that great art can come out of reflecting on troubling times with a loving community by your side, too.”
Read the rest of our review here.
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Immanuel Wilkins - The 7th Hand (Blue Note)
“Wilkins’ lack of fear in not just challenging the listener but purposefully bypassing their understanding is what makes The 7th Hand a monumental album. His debut Omega was just as socially conscious, a record about the Black experience in America. But The 7th Hand breaks the rules while establishing some of its own. The first track, 'Emanation', ends in the middle of a vamp. Each track from then on out relates to the next by a triple meter, going down and then back up until the free 'Lift'; if, in Biblical terms, 6 represents man and human weakness, 7 represents divine intervention, a concept represented at first by an instrument and later by the freedom of the album’s final track.”
Read the rest of our review here.
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Jeremiah Chiu & Marta Sofia Honer - Recordings from the Åland Islands (International Anthem)
“Independent of its context, the album is a pleasure to listen to, one that allows you to create your own associations with the sounds. Warbling synth harmonics, birdsong, and crunchy noises like a train in the rain pervade opener ‘In Åland Air’ (which features processing from Tortoise’s John McEntire). ‘On the Other Sea’ is reminiscent of Boards of Canada’s penchant for finding eerie atonality in otherwise beatific timbres, with its wind chimes, synths, and horns. ‘Rocky Passage’ creaks along, full of noises like hearing a woodpecker on a hike, unable to spot the bird cascading up and down its tree. The synth arpeggios on ‘By Foot By Sea’ sound, of course, like the up-and-down current of waves. But I find the album even more rewarding when you do know the stories behind the songs, the way the instruments try to emulate nature. Honer’s viola leads my favorite, ‘Snåcko’, a track named for the island next to Kumlinge, as keys circle in the background, purportedly inspired by the feeling of your eyes slowly adjusting to multi-colored moss in the forest of the island.”
Read “Press Record”, out interview with Chiu and Honer.
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Kevin Morby - This Is A Photograph (Dead Oceans)
“The last few years have given us a sense of perspective, perhaps even urgency when faced with the prospect of our own mortality. Yeah, it happens when you’re surrounded, whether in person or even just on the news, with so much death. For Kevin Morby, the illumination happened before the pandemic. His father collapsed at the dinner table and had to be rushed to the hospital in early 2020. Though his dad ended up okay, that night, in order to distract himself from worrying, he flipped through old family photos. He found a picture of his father, carefree and shirtless, sitting in the front yard. But it wasn’t just a photograph: It was a moment, captured, a document of hopes, moods, dreams, and fears at a point in time. Morby decided to travel to Memphis and chase some more ghosts. What resulted from that decision is This Is a Photograph, his best album yet.”
Read the rest of our review here.
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Lucrecia Dalt - ¡Ay! (RVNG Intl.)
Following incredible albums like 2018′s Anticlines and 2020′s No era s​ó​lida, Berlin-based experimental musician Lucrecia Dalt released her most thematically ambitious album to date with ¡Ay!, but you wouldn’t even know it. Recalling growing up in Colombia and, generally, the music of the Latin American diaspora, ¡Ay! is also a vague sci-fi story about an alien named Preta visiting Earth and trying to figure out humanity. Cleverly, as much as Dalt sings from Preta’s perspective, she puts us in the shoes of those traversing the unknown, and we spend most of the album simply marveling at the sounds entering our ears. Beautiful and strange, opener “No tiempo” features wind instruments in lockstep with percussion and Dalt’s singing. Lina Allemano’s muted trumpet Mickey Mouses with Edith Steyer’s clarinet on “La desmesura”. “Atemporal” sports warped, circus-like drums and horns. Independent of the album’s aims and context, ¡Ay! is an undoubtedly playful expression of Dalt’s musical language. She whispers, “No obedezco a tu verdad lineal” on “El Galatzó”, winking alongside Isabel Rößler‘s double bass, flute, synthesizers, and wooden stick bongos; “I don’t obey your linear truth,” goes the line in English, like if the aliens from Arrival learned how to play bolero. - JM
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Mary Halvorson - Amaryllis / Belladonna (Nonesuch)
In May, jazz composer and guitarist (and MacArthur Grant winner) Mary Halvorson released two albums that couldn’t sound more different, yet have tying threads in personnel and spirit. The first, Amaryllis, is a six-song suite for the largest ensemble for which Halvorson has ever written. Produced by Deerhoof’s John Dieterich, it features Patricia Brennan (vibraphone), Nick Dunston (bass), Tomas Fujiwara (drums), Jacob Garchik (trombone), and Adam O’Farrill (trumpet), as well as The Mivos String Quartet on three of the songs. “Night Shift” is slinky and sneaky, Halvorson’s arpeggiated guitar bubbling beneath a bed of bass, drum, vibes, and horns, Brennan and O’Farrill taking the song out with solos. Her and Dunston’s lines tangle with the horn section on the title track, propelled by Fujiwara’s forward-marching drums and melodies and countermelodies. The Mivos Quartet introduces “Side Effect” with string harmonics, previewing Brennan’s kickstarting vibraphones that send the band into a swaying, funky jam. Equally impressive are the songs that are groove-less and strange either partially or for their entirety, like the woozy “Anesthesia” and the squeaking, atonal “Hoodwink”.
It’s those experimental tunes that mirror Belladonna, five compositions written for Halvorson and the Mivos Quartet, representing another first for Halvorson: her first music written for a string quartet. Her parts improvised, the music is abstract and expansive, filled with contrast. On “Nodding Yellow”, the pulses of Halvorson’s electric guitar represent a stark difference with the lushness and pluckiness of the strings. She creates worlds of sound on “Moonburn” and “Flying Song”, with the expressive, upward bends of her chords. And on the stunning, 10-minute “Haunted Head”, the string parts take their turn one by one, washing over each other with varying degrees of dissonance and fluttering flourishes. A microcosm for both albums, the players are given space to take their own journey, but in tandem. - JM
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Matmos - Regards​/​Uk​ł​ony dla Bogus​ł​aw Schaeffer / The Soft Pink Truth - Is It Going To Get Any Deeper Than This? (Thrill Jockey)
You can always count on Drew Daniel to be adventurous. Making an album constructed from washing machine noises? Check. Asking 99 musicians to contribute to an album with anything they wanted, but it had to be at 99 bmp? You bet. Making dance covers of black metal songs? Absolutely. This year, two albums he released, one with Matmos and one his ever-burgeoning solo project The Soft Pink Truth, were again based on very specific concepts, toeing the line between asking abstract, academic questions and answering them with twisted good times. For Regards​/​Uk​ł​ony dla Bogus​ł​aw Schaeffer, Matmos were given access to the entire catalog of the Polish electronic artist after whom the album was named, encouraged to do whatever they wanted with it. With some trusted collaborators in hand, they bent the existing material into something entirely new, anti-ASMR anthems for the avant garde. Rubbery vocals, drippy synths, honking horns, and mousy strings allude to the work Schaeffer did for orchestras as much as his own strange worlds. Yet, Matmos don’t want us to listen for clues. “If All Things Were Turned to Smoke / Gdyby wszystko stało się dymem” takes harp and musique concrète from Schaeffer’s 1970 composition “Heraklitiana”. As electronics from Horse Lords’ Max Eilbacher and harp from Úna Monaghan layer on top of the source material, our desire to pick apart where the text ends and the composition begins leaps out the window.
The Soft Pink Truth’s Is It Going To Get Any Deeper Than This? attempts to answer a much more obtuse question that was once posed by a woman at a club to one of Daniel’s DJ friends, and does so through the peaks and valleys of compositions and musical expressions of queer sexuality. The poolside funk of “Deeper” leads into the chirpy goth club music of “La Joie Devant La Mort”, Xiu Xiu’s Jamie Stewart building off of a sentence in French by philosopher and erotica author Georges Bataille. The song, and the album in general, is fun because of, not in spite of, how unabashedly dramatic it is. Wye Oak and Flock of Dimes’ Jenn Wasner gets her diva moment on “Wanna Know”, cooing, “I just really wanna know / Is it going to get any deeper than this?” over an earworm house instrumental. Nate Wooley’s muted trumpet buoys “Moodswing”, which opens with a champagne cork pop and later falls into broken glass. It’s a reminder that with every celebration comes the potential for shards, a reminder to live fully in the moment, to go deeper when you can. - JM
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MUNA - MUNA (Saddest Factory) 
MUNA has always had an uncanny ability to spur deep emotions in the compact form of a pop song, and their self-titled third release only gives them more room to expand their sound. Part of the band’s power comes from their celebration of queer joy and love, to unabashedly be themselves. If it’s heartbreak, they embrace it with a welcoming sincerity. A crush is giddy and unapologetic. “There’s nothing wrong with what I want,” vocalist Katie Gavin asserts. Their broader sound brings the band to new heights. The glitchy vocals of “Runner’s High” make the break-up song feel jagged in the way it feels to be dancing under a strobe light. The country-tinged pop of “Kind of Girl'' adds a soaring optimism to finding yourself. They’re the band that can get Phoebe Bridgers to embrace her pop side on the sparkling, joy-filled ode that’s “Silk Chiffon”. - LL
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Nilufer Yanya - PAINLESS (ATO) 
“Until you fall, it’s painless,” sings Nilufer Yanya on “shameless”, and it’s a through-line you can find over and over again on PAINLESS. Yanya explores different dimensions of heartbreak on the album, and each song unfolds into its own sonic world. “L/R”’s marching drum beat pairs perfectly with the almost staccato delivery of her lyrics as she rearranges sentence structure, which then evolves into the more intimate lush vocal of “Shameless”. The album is filled with moments like these, and Yanya perfectly constructs an album where each song offers something engaging and unexpected. - LL
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Nina Nastasia - Riderless Horse (Temporary Residence)
“Riderless Horse was produced by Nastasia, Steve Albini, and Greg Norman, recorded at a house in upstate New York. By the end, you realize it’s an empowering album for Nastasia; as much as she feels ‘sadness and guilt’ the process of writing and recording an acoustic album that features only her showed her how powerful she could be on her own.”
Read our preview of Nina Nastasia’s opening set for Mogwai at Metro.
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NNAMDÏ - Please Have A Seat (Secretly Canadian)
The thrill of a NNAMDÏ album is that you never know what you’re going to get, but you know it’s going to work. A polymath and Chicago music scene hero, NNAMDÏ’s latest album shows an artist who’s consistently upping his game. Constantly surprising, NNAMDÏi’s skill as a musician and lyricist means you know he’ll pull off any left-field flourish: intricate math rock guitar, gentle falsetto, frenetic percussion, and even the untamed instrumentals he explored on his album KRAZY KARL all appear here. Fans know this, and Please Have a Seat is a perfect introduction to any newcomers. Pull up a seat, get to know the album, and you’ll find yourself also asking: What can’t Nnamdi do? - LL
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Oren Ambarchi, Johan Berthling, & Andreas Werliin - Ghosted / Oren Ambarchi - Shebang (Drag City)
Prolific guitarist Oren Ambarchi released two records this year, one with bassist Johan Berthling and drummer Andreas Werliin, and a solo record. Ghosted, as we wrote when interviewing the trio earlier this year, is “comprised of four numerically titled tracks that build in different ways. ‘I’ sports a Latin groove, shaky percussion, and spindly bass, Ambarchi’s guitar adopting organ-like tones. ‘II’ is lighter in timbre and more spacious and minimal, its circular rhythms increasing in volume instead of in groove. ‘III’ is the longest track on the album at over 15 minutes, a mélange of sprawling guitar drone textures. And ‘IV’ is a spritely, to-the-point slow-paced jazz tune, with melancholy swirls of guitar and deep bass.”
Shebang, Ambarchi’s solo record, features contributions from Berthling as well as Chris Abrahams, BJ Cole, Sam Dunscombe, Jim O'Rourke, Julia Reidy, and Joe Talia. Like Quixotism and Hubris, it’s a single piece divided into movements, each person recording individually as Ambarchi fit their contributions together like a puzzle, giving each player a time to shine. Though Ambarchi himself introduces the piece with gorgeous, sparkly picking, he eventually gives way to the other constant throughout, Talia’s drumming. Making space for, in order, Dunscombe’s bass clarinet, Cole’s off-kilter pedal steel, Abrahams’ inimitable piano, Berthling’s steady upright bass, Reidy’s ping-ponging 12-string guitar, and O’Rourke’s sharp modular synths, Ambarchi’s always beneath the surface. Whether contrasting Cole’s textures with rubbery synths or Abrahams’ propulsive notes with synaptic blasts, Ambarchi reminds us of the celebratory nature of collaboration, even when you’re not in the same room. - JM
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Prince & The Revolution - Prince & The Revolution: Live (Remastered) (Legacy)
“Syracuse, New York, March 30th, 1985. Jim Boeheim would go on to coach many great Syracuse Orange men’s basketball teams in the Carrier Dome, but the best thing to ever appear there was on that night. Mere months after releasing Purple Rain, Prince decided to cut that album’s tour short so he could keep working on material. (If you’ve ever heard Sign O’ the Times, you know it was the right decision, not to mention Around the World in a Day and Parade.) But what a swan song he and The Revolution gave the Purple Rain tour. The remastered version of Prince & The Revolution: Live, released last month, shows the perfected live show of one of the greatest albums of all time.”
Read the rest of our review here.
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Quelle Chris - DEATHFAME (Mello Music Group)
On the surface, if albums like Everything’s Fine and Guns put Detroit rapper Quelle Chris on the map, DEATHFAME seems more casually great. That’s because it’s also his most reflective, one that considers his place with in the rap game and the pros and cons of success. Throughout the record, he mourns the music industry’s exploitative tendency to capitalize on rappers’ talents after they’ve passed away. “You can keep your feast and wine / I just want my peace of mind,” he raps on the soulful and slow “Alive Ain’t Always Living”. The atonal production mirrors Chris’ unease and mixed feelings towards a career in rap as he grows older, like the music box creepiness of the title track and the metallic drums and synth loops of “Excuse My Back”. Because Chris’ delivery is laid back and his words verbose, he’s often pigeonholed with conscious rap, something he addresses on highlight “King In Black”: “Listing me next to these Yo Gabba Gabba emcess / And these old stone age-ass ‘yabba-dabba’ emcees.” (Funny enough, with his different vocal inflections, Chris reminds me of the late, great MF Doom multiple times throughout DEATHFAME, an ironic twist considering the album’s main concerns.) Still, from his words of wisdom on “So Tired You Can’t Stop Dreaming” (“If heaven’s got a ghetto, hell’s got a resort”) to his remarkable vocal about-face on depressive piano ballad “How Could You Love Something Like Me?”, Chris proves once again that with his versatility and talent, he very well shouldn’t be taken for granted while he’s still here to bless us with his rhymes. - JM
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Rosalia - MOTOMAMI (Columbia)
“‘La ambición, delirio de grandez’ sings Rosalía on a cover of Justo Betancourt’s ‘Delirio de Grandeza”’ from her incredible third album MOTOMAMI. Meaning ‘Ambition, delusions of grandeur”’ in English, the phrase is appropriate for a song on an album full of similarly wild ones. To Rosalía, delusions of grandeur and ambition are one in the same, all part of a constantly transformational aesthetic. The Spanish folkloric singer-songwriter turned pop star, a woman who has been charged with appropriating Romani culture with her remixed flamenco, has actually done her research and then some. On MOTOMAMI, she fully delves into a further cultural melting pot. Jazz rubs elbows with reggaetón. Bachata, propulsive champeta, and dembow songs are triple decker sandwiched between Burial-sampling electronica, piano ballads, and deconstructed club music. When she throws in a sample of ‘Delirious’ by Vistoso Bosses and Soulja Boy at the end of ‘DELIRIO DE GRANDEZA’, you can’t imagine the original tune without it.”
Read the rest of our review here.
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Sarathy Korwar - Kalak (The Leaf Label)
London-based drummer, composer, and producer Sarathy Korwar, the mind behind such inspired jazz fusion records like Day To Day and More Arriving, has released his self-described Indo-futurist manifesto, and perhaps his magnum opus. Based on a rhythm and symbol he projected on the walls during recording that was the basis for improvisation, Kalak is a percussive, circular album that puts you in a trance. With often-wordless vocals, rhythmic woodwinds, deep bass drums, and zippy synths, Korwar and his band bridge the gap between Indian classical music and Western dance. “Utopia Is A Colonial Project” is a skittering rave-up. “Back In The Day, Things Were Not Always Simpler” loops vocals from Noni-Mouse with wobbly instrumentals and shruti boxes, like an acid house drum raga. “Remember Begum Rokheya”, dedicated to the Bengali feminist author, sides Magnus Mehta’s hand-claps with saxophone lines and chanted vocals in polyrhythmic harmony, complex in structure but clear in feeling. As Kalak thumps and shuffles along, Korwar’s tablas and drumming in general constantly remind us where the music comes from. - JM
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S.G. Goodman - Teeth Marks (Verve Forecast)
S.G. Goodman continues to explore the intersections of love, life, and survival in southern small towns, and does so on Teeth Marks in such vivid detail. The intimacy of her storytelling brings each track into a clear picture, the specificity working in tandem with universal feelings. It surfaces immediately in the title track through the lasting mark of a bite, sweet or sinister. One of my favorite moments of the album is around the midpoint, when the ghostly acapella of “You Were Someone I Loved” rolls seamlessly into the slinky fire of “Work Until I Die”. The latter simmers, providing a beat to groove to while damning the culture of work that only feeds a “company’s holy name”. - LL
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Soul Glo - Diaspora Problems (Epitaph)
“The album is chock full of existential weight; as a Black person suffering from sometimes debilitating mental illness, Jordan thinks about death a lot, referencing both state-sanctioned violence and suicidal ideation. The idea that his music might never come out, or come out posthumously in a way that the white hegemonic music industry can profit off of it, is a frighteningly real one. It makes Diaspora Problems a difficult, but ultimately essential and especially urgent listen.”
Read the rest of our review here.
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Special Interest - Endure (Rough Trade)
Shedding some of the musical ferocity of their last album, Special Interest’s Endure captures the same energy and push against capitalism and corruption with pop, disco, and house flourishes. Endure’s songs make you want to both strut and smash something, harnessing the power in both actions. Vocalist Alli Logout makes it clear on the stunning “(Herman’s) House”: “No question, the solution / Always the same conclusion / Burn it down to build it again”. - LL
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Sudan Archives - Natural Brown Prom Queen (Stones Throw)
“Natural Brown Prom Queen, the incredible second album from R&B singer-songwriter and violinist Sudan Archives, is a remarkably loose affair. Brittney Denise Parks is able to achieve the same level of academic thoughtfulness she did on her stunning debut Athena while expanding her sonic personality and avoiding definition. The songs on Natural Brown Prom Queen are often brief, dense layers of sound and feeling.”
Read the rest of our review of Sudan Archives’ live stream from earlier this year.
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SZA - SOS (Top Dawg Entertainment/RCA)
“Sure, there are moments of bleakness on SOS, like on ‘Used’, where SZA shares she’s essentially used to feeling used, the amount of death she’s experienced in her personal life and witnessed along with the world making her numb to exploitation. When she sings, ‘My pussy precedes me,’ on ‘Blind’, it’s a flex, but it’s also delivered with a sigh, as if this is all that there is. But the more she lets her voice soar, the closer she gets to self-acceptance, if not self-actualization. She bends around the skitter of the hi hats and the whirring synths on the subtly thrilling ‘Notice Me’. Her flow is better than it’s ever been on ‘Blind’; the pitch-shifted melisma of the title in the chorus sounds like she’s traversing the page as well as the scales, showing what she can be in one fell swoop. Most impressive is how effortlessly SZA fronts rock instrumentals, whether the pop punk bursts of ‘F2F’ or the ‘Fade Into You’-esque strumming of ‘Nobody Gets Me’.”
Read the rest of our review here.
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Tanya Tagaq - Tongues (Six Shooter) 
“You can’t have our tongues,” declares Canadian Inuk throat singer Tanya Tagaq on the title track to Tongues, her most fully realized album to date. Produced by Saul Williams and mixed by Gonjasufi, its uncomfortable atonal instrumentals--synth hues, pummeling drums, pulsating bass, unraveling strings--match the ferocity and intensity of Tagaq’s words. The record centers around the legacy of residential schools and the violence of colonialism in the past and the present; in context of Canadian authorities’ repeated discoveries of unmarked graves of Indigenous children at the site of these schools, Tongues is sadly prescient and ever-relevant. When Tagaq sings, “You can’t have our tongues,” she’s talking about bodily autonomy and her desire to reclaim the Inuktitut language for herself and her community. As someone who attended a residential school and was the victim of abuse, Tagaq uses Tongues as both a personal journey, touching on themes of trauma, self-love, and self-forgiveness, and a paean to the strength of the Inuk people. “Eat your morals,” she directs at white vegans who call out Indigenous people for eating meat on “In Me”. On “Colonizer”, her vocal intonations are looped as if they’re all-encompassing; “Oh, you’re guilty,” she sings sweetly, lulling the listener in before making you realize she’s talking about present-day Canadians, too. “Touch my children / And my teeth welcome your windpipe,” she shudders on industrial techno jam “Teeth Agape”, a rebuke of the contemporary day foster care system that’s essentially an extension of residential schools. And the emotional climax of Tongues is also its sweetest song, “Earth Monster”, written for her daughter Naia over 10 years ago but not recorded till now. The song reclaims the idea of monstrosity as both loving tenderly while remaining ready to fight, a concise encapsulation of Tagaq’s essential ethos. - JM
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The Wonder Years - The Hum Goes On Forever (Hopeless)
There’s a reason The Wonder Years have endured and built such a devoted audience, and part of that is due to the lyrics of Dan Campbell. The Hum Goes on Forever is what happens when the pop punk genre grows with its band. Tackling new fatherhood and the world shift that is your thirties, Hum provides the familiarity of massive choruses with lyrics that continue to explore the depths of depression, love, and ultimately hope. “I’ve never been so afraid of failing at anything,” Campbell sings on “Wyatt’s Song”, a song for his son. “Well, I’m gonna go, start to dig, plant the seed, keep the birds away / Gonna grow you a place safer than this.” This theme of not just being a first-time parent but of looking towards the light in the dark runs through the entire album. It surfaces again in a lovely parallel on “Laura & the Beehive”, an ode to his grandmother and parental figures everywhere, perfectly capturing an image of unconditional love in only a few minutes. Pop punk can be a tricky genre, but there’s a reason The Wonder Years have continued to succeed. - LL
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Tomberlin - i don't know who needs to hear this... (Saddle Creek)
Tomberlin’s latest album encapsulates the sound of change, of new beginnings and the constant questions that come with finding yourself. “I don’t know who needs to hear this,” she sings on the title track, “Sometimes it’s good to sing your feelings.” She displays the joy and hope that comes with self-discovery, and the delicate nature of the album’s sound reflects that. There is both a fragility and power in those moments, a gentleness we should allow ourselves, it seems to say. Tomberlin still beautifully tackles questions of the self, wrestling with relationships and the tenets of religion, but it feels lighter on IDKWNTHT, both in her voice and music. It’s less of a wrestle, perhaps, and more of a gentle contemplation. - LL
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Various Artists - Summer of Soul (...Or When The Revolution Could Not Be Televised) [OST] (Legacy)
“If Questlove’s documentary is one of the best and arguably the most important concert film ever made, you could argue that its soundtrack is a worthwhile bonus. But as an accessible introduction to a once forgotten moment in cultural history, its widespread potential is nothing short of powerful, its aura nothing short of awe-inducing.”
Read the rest of our review here.
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Wet Leg - Wet Leg (Domino)
“In fact, most of the songs on Wet Leg are more interesting than ‘Chaise Lounge’, as cheeky as it is. ‘Wet Dream’ is an immediate highlight, a tune based on Teasdale’s experiences of her ex texting her post-breakup telling her he was dreaming of her. Call-and-response cheerleader chants and limber, four-on-the-floor drums turn into a hilarious scene poking fun at softbois. ‘You climb onto the bonnet and you’re licking the windscreen / I’ve never seen anything so obscene,’ deadpans Teasdale. Drummer Henry Holmes’ backing vocals effectively make him the male character in this absurd nightmare. ‘Piece Of Shit’ is another aesthetic outlier, relatively speaking, a scraping loud-quiet-loud jam that sees Teasdale gnash her teeth at her ex. ‘You’re like a piece of shit,’ she states, before being unexpectedly literal: ‘You either sink or float.’ And then there’s closer ‘Too Late Now’, which perhaps hints at a new direction for the band, a dream pop beauty with echoing drums and tremolo hazy guitars.”
Read the rest of our review here.
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Whatever the Weather - Whatever the Weather (Ghostly International)
With albums like For You And I and Reflection, British producer Loraine James has proven to be one of the most exciting new IDM-adjacent artists of the past few years. In the spring of 2022, just in time with sudden shifts in temperature, James decided to debut her side project Whatever the Weather, emphasizing keyboard improvisation, vocal experimentation, and ambient textures over the club music she had mastered prior. Similar to the fickle nature of weather, the songs on Whatever the Weather--each titled to mirror a different literal temperature--abruptly change moods and approaches while reflecting on divergent influences. A lonely synth line and glacial techno beats comprise “0°C”, while “10°C” juxtaposes cold electric piano, layered on top of itself, with chirpy synths, almost like the sound of birds hatching after a long winter. “6°C” and “30°C” sport James’ clever emo inspiration, the twinkles on the former recalling cascading guitars on an American Football song, her vocals on the latter channeling the breathiness of Deftones’ Chino Moreno. And when the synths on “36°C” become wrapped in an overarching sense of melancholic summertime sadness, you can’t help but look back at the entirety of Whatever the Weather and remember that the outside world, like yourself, is ever-changing. -JM
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Jeremiah Chiu - In Electric Time
I was a big fan of Jeremiah Chiu and Marta Sofia Honer's Recordings from the Åland Islands, so I was excited to hear whatever Chiu cooked up next. In Electric Time does not disappoint in the the slightest. It's a fully improvised modular synth fantasia, filled with beauty and light. Playful and flowing at times, deep and mysterious at others. Chiu has a great sense of rhythm and melody, following the sound where it takes him. And hey, he's currently on tour with Mary Lattimore ... see you at the Denver show!
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nonesuchrecords · 2 years
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Makaya McCraven performs "Dream Another," from his album In These Times, live at public records in Brooklyn in a new video from the set on his new Hi-Res Qobuz-exclusive EP, International Anthem @ Public Records (Volume 3).
Filmed live at on September 19, McCraven, on drums, is joined by Junius Paul on bass guitar, Brandee Younger on harp, De'Sean Jones on tenor sax, flute, and EWI, Lia Kohl on cello, Marta Sofia Honer on viola, Macie Stewart on violin, and Zara Zaharieva on violin.
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se-pictures · 1 month
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Coming Soon, our latest short film "Pleiades" featuring the song "In Åland Air" by Jeremiah Chiu and Marta Sofia Honer.
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theam-cjsw · 2 months
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The AM: July 29, 2024
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2024 has been a fantastic year for music so far. This week's episode takes a stroll through 30+ albums released in the first half of the year, from ambient to jazz and psychedelica—check out the rest of the list in the full blog post at Wander Lines.
This is also the last AM with Peter at the helm for the next month. Syf from Acheulean Age and Emily R from Greenhouse will be filling in for August, so you'll be in good hands. Enjoy and see you in September.
Listen at cjsw.com or use the embeds below.
Hour One:
A Treasure Chest Ariel Kalma, Jeremiah Chiu, Marta Sofia Honer • The Closest Thing to Silence
Get Some Rest Ezra Feinberg, featuring Mary Lattimore • Soft Power
Matsutaké Caméra • Caméra
Cutting and Layering Osmanthus • Between Seasons
Insecurities Shabaka, featuring Moses Sumney • Perceive Its Beauty, Acknowledge Its Grace
Burnt Likshen Ayal Senior • Ora
Poeira Sam Gendel, Fabiano do Nascimento • The Room
On the Surface Bilal Nasser • How Can We Say Nothing
The Quarrel Geotic • The Anchorite
Flatland Buildings and Food • Echo the Field
Theme for Feeling Drunk and Cool Easy Idiot • Stock Music II
Cyclotron Temporal Waves • Temporal Waves
Hour Two:
Peace Piece Organic Pulse Ensemble • Zither Suite
Distance Learner Fuubutsushi • Meridians
Gloaming Way Circles Around the Sun, Mikaela Davis • After Sunrise
Bebaynetu The Sorcerers • I Too Am A Stranger
Floating on a Moment Beth Gibbons • Lives Outgrown
Lost in the Woods (Paranoia) Project Gemini • Colours & Light
No Mast Loving • Any Light
How Can I Possibly Sleep When There is Music (a response to Ryōkan Taigu) Luka Kuplowsky • How Can I Possibly Sleep When There is Music
Lugar Lau Ro • Cabana
Overwhelmed and Unprepared Unessential Oils • Unessential Oils
the wildflowers are upon us OHMA • On Loving Earth
Hour Three:
What's It Going to Take Cindy Lee • Diamond Jubilee
Fly! Little Black Thing Yu Ching • The Crystal Hum
Moon Retep Folo, Dorothy Moskowitz • Afterlife Album
Rue du Repos Bibi Club • Feu de garde
Hex Jon McKiel • Hex
Distant Dream Magic Fig • Magic Fig
Crushed Velvet Molly Lewis, featuring Thee Sacred Souls • On the Lips
Better Hate Jessica Pratt • Here in the Pitch
Bot for Teacher Eye of Newt • Stay in Your Lane EP
Cold Water In My Tea ROY • Spoons for the World
Fields of Grass / 9 Is the End (It's Over) Psychic Temple • Doggie Paddlin’ Thru The Cosmic Consciousness
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parkerbombshell · 5 months
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Strange Harvest Apr 14
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Strange Harvest 9pm EST bombshellradio.com Archival Shows available on bombshellradiopodcasts.com Strange Harvest  (9-10pm EST) offers up that once a month trawl of new issues and reissues from some cultish, emerging and generally underrated acts. If you want the chance to drop names into “what are you listening to?” conversations that’ll make you sound like you’re ahead of the game, we’d like an hour of your time, here: https://bombshellradio.com/   #newmusic #independentradio #newrelease2024     English Teacher: The World’s Biggest Paving Slab Mildlife: Yourself The Tygers of Pan Tang: Bad Times The Slits: Ping Pong Affair Robert Wyatt: Born Again Cretin Red Red: Spoonful Ill Considered: Jellyfish Not Me But Us: When we See Ariel Kalma, Jeremiah Chiu & Marta Sofia Honer: A Treasure Chest Sunlit: Back Conchur White: Swirling Violets Delta Saxophone Quartet: Transmission Dexter Gordon Quartet: Didn’t We?     Read the full article
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soundsonrepeat · 7 months
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noloveforned · 8 months
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tune into wlur from 8pm until midnight tonight for this week's episode of no love for ned with artists new (including another @nerf-cat request!) and old. as always, you can stream last week's show on mixcloud if you'd like to catch up!
no love for ned on wlur – february 2nd, 2024 from 8-10pm
artist // track // album // label jeanines // tilt in your eye // each day 7" // slumberland soup assistants // boys with plants // mummy what are flowers for? cassette // mangel love child // cigarette ash // okay? // homestead essential logic // wake up // john peel session on february 21st, 1979 10" // precious billiam // i got a girl (and she's got a problem with you) // jump to 3d 7" ep // discos de muerte / cow tool the serfs // the dice man will become // half eaten by dogs // trouble in mind exwhite // fomo // this is future // spared flesh cold cream // cactus wife // cold cream ii // (self-released) watery love // face the door // decorative feeding // in the red blues lawyer // our divide // sight gags on the radio 7" ep // dark entries j mascis // can’t believe we're here // what do we do now // sub pop the paranoid style // the ballad of pertinent information (turn it on) // the interrogator // bar/none ramona and the holy smokes // i want you to be my man // i want you to be my man - single // (self-released) matthew "doc" dunn // fantastic light // fantastic light // cosmic range barbara morgenstern // zwischen den stühlen // in anderem licht // staatsakt sigur rós // hoppípolla // takk // geffen ariel kalma, jeremiah chiu and marta sofia honer // ten hour wave // the closest thing to silence // international anthem jessica ackerley, kevin cheli and gahlord dewald // silently // submerging silently cassette // cacophonous revival francisco mela and zoh amba // causa y efecto // causa y efecto, volume two // 577 pan afrikan peoples arkestra // nation rising // sixty years // the village mourning [a] blkstar featuring dragonchild // jack johnson // mourning [a] blkstar in boston live // (self-released) theravada and zoomo // sus tain // waste management // rrc music co. jamila woods featuring peter cottontale // thermostat // water made us // jagjaguwar corinne bailey rae // red horse // black rainbows // thirty tigers surya botofasina, nate mercereau and carlos niño // so much love // subtle movements // leaving shira small // lights gleam lonely // the line of time and the plane of now // numero group jad fair and samuel locke ward // boys don't cry // the same cured hair as you- a tribute to the cure cassette // almost halloween time corvair // tenseless // bound to be // paper walls lavender blush // jealousy // there's nothing inside your heart ep // shelflife silver biplanes // uas 29396 // a moment in the sun // where it's at is where you are cheerbleederz // my condolences // even in jest // alcopop!
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juzjuz · 2 years
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Listen/purchase: Recordings from the Åland Islands by Jeremiah Chiu & Marta Sofia Honer
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anothersoftvoid · 2 years
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Listen/purchase: Voices by Jeremiah Chiu & Marta Sofia Honer
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sonmelier · 2 years
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40. Jeremiah Chiu & Marta Sofia Honer | Recordings from the Åland Islands
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🇺🇸 Etats-Unis | International Anthem Recording Co. | 42 minutes | 11 morceaux 
"Recordings from the Åland Islands" est un album collaboratif entre les musiciens Jeremiah Chiu et Marta Sofia Honer. Le duo a parfaitement su capturer la beauté naturelle, l’atmosphère unique régnant sur le petit archipel (🇦🇽) enchâssé entre la Suède et la Finlande. Guitare acoustique, piano, violoncelle mais également nappes électroniques dessinent ensemble des paysages contemplatifs, d’autant plus suggestifs qu’ils embarquent en leur sein des fragments d’enregistrements de terrain.
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twistedsoulmusic · 2 years
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Jeremiah Chiu & Marta Sofia Honer - "Snåcko"
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thedaysofdisorder · 2 years
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In Åland Air -  Jeremiah Chiu and Marta Sofia Honer Recordings from the Åland Islands, 2022
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nonesuchrecords · 2 years
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Makaya McCraven has released a Hi-Res live EP, International Anthem @ Public Records (Volume 3), available exclusively on Qobuz. You can hear it here.
The set was recorded live at Brooklyn's public records September 19, for which McCraven assembled a unique ensemble with a string quartet to perform special arrangements of songs from his new album, In These Times. "It was really fun doing pared down versions of these songs in such an intimate space," McCraven says, "especially with so many close friends and family in the house."
McCraven, on drums, is joined by Junius Paul on bass guitar, Brandee Younger on harp, De'Sean Jones on tenor sax, flute, and EWI, Lia Kohl on cello, Marta Sofia Honer on viola, Macie Stewart on violin, and Zara Zaharieva on violin.
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