Couverture de Playlist 07.06.26

Playlist 07.06.26

Playlist 07.06.26

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From experimental dub to spoken word with electronics, processed percussion, dub techno mutations and more… LISTEN AGAIN for a good time. Stream on demand from fbi.radio, podcast here. Lee “Scratch” Perry & Mouse on Mars – Spatialee [Domino/Bandcamp] Lee “Scratch” Perry & Mouse on Mars – Yayaya [Domino/Bandcamp] Any collaboration with dub originator Lee “Scratch” Perry is going to come with a story – and especially one that happened very shortly before he passed away. When it’s the legendary German electronic duo Mouse on Mars, that goes double – and story there is, which you can read at this album’s own dedicated website. MoM have always skated the boundary between cerebrally exploratory and crowd-pleasingly accessible, and they’ve swum from bloopy electronica to postrock, punk to techno. On Spatial, No Problem. they’ve comfortably found a place that incorporates the sounds and signifiers of roots reggae and dub with their own electronic tendencies. There are great horn arrangements, dub effects, and a lot of Scratchian vocals, both general chatter and songs. By all accounts, Perry brought objects, sounds and lots of ideas to the sessions, and it does sound like a collaboration and not just Perry’s distinctive voice slapped on to the band’s tracks. Honestly, it’s the most engaging thing I’ve heard from Mouse on Mars in ages, and while there have been at least four releases I’ve heard claiming to be Lee Perry’s last recordings, if this is the one, it’s a perfectly zany and delightful way to sign off! Sandy Chamoun – Wa و [Ruptured/Bandcamp] Sandy Chamoun – Shahed شاهد [Ruptured/Bandcamp] Beirut’s Sandy Chamoun is a founding member of the great Lebanese supergroup SANAM, whose second album Sametou Sawtan سمعت صوتاً was released on Montréal’s Constellation Records last year to great acclaim, and the experimental trio Ghadr. In both groups, Chamoun often uses lyrics from Arabic poets and folk songs, but on her new album Sawt El Doumouh صوت الدموع (The Sound of Tears), her own lyrics write of the experience of living during the genocide in Gaza and Israel’s invasion of Lebanon (neither of which have in any sense ended – don’t turn your eyes away). Despite the sound of tears, Chamoun’s album imagines ways to find light & hope, and you can hear that in the way her voice rises over heavy percussion and electronics. Beautiful. Jungstötter – Tag 10 [Unguarded/Unguarded Bandcamp/Jungstötter Bandcamp] Jungstötter – Elastic (Avenue) [Unguarded/Unguarded Bandcamp/Jungstötter Bandcamp] Fabian Altstötter’s solo project Jungstötter began with 2019’s Love Is, but I only came across him with the incredible One Star album in 2023. Alstötter’s vocal delivery recalls the likes of David Sylvian and Scott Walker, richly sung and emotive, with production that can also be seen to call back to those artists’ dedication to experimention. A lot of this new album is very sparse, but there is electronic processing undercutting the organic sounds, there are field recordings floating through, and some angular sounds on guitar and electronics. It’s quite beautiful, as is his earlier work, very much worth following up. BAG – ‘Oumuamua [Phantom Limb/Bandcamp] BAG – Floor Phlegm Hue [Phantom Limb/Bandcamp] UK’s Phantom Limb is a very gregarious label (among other things), supporting experimental music of all colours. London duo (or is it trio?) BAG combine the hallucinatory spoken word of Canadian artist/poet Jody DeSchutter and the swooping, grinding electronics of Daniel Allison, joined by “auxiliary member” Angèle David-Guillou (French composer and longtime member of the much-missed Piano Magic) on various instruments. The drums of Iggor Cavalera (ex-Sepultura drummer and one half of PETBRICK) feature all over the record, which was produced by his wife, the multi-talented Laima Leyton. Frequently intense & unpredictable, this album’s a real trip. BAG join a strange cohort of spoken word-driven bands of late, such as Dry Cleaning and Egg Meat, doing extremely odd things with the use of non-melodic voice, or not usually melodic. I’m not sure there’s anything in common between groups like these either, except that they don’t have much in common with much else out there. A good way to be. Naná Rizinni – The Right Side of the Escalator [Naná Rizinni Bandcamp] Naná Rizinni – Under the Quiet [Naná Rizinni Bandcamp] São Paulo drummer & composer Naná Rizinni bases herself in London now, and has released a number of solo albums and collaborations. Her new album Epiblast was written & co-produced with saxophonist Mark Cake, whose multitracked horns are all over the record. Despite Rizinni’s Brazilian origins & jazz training, her brilliant & very versatile drumming is often led into experimental electronics and synths, approaching almost postrock, minimalist composition and more. Don’t miss it! Medium + SIMM ...
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