giovedì 28 giugno 2018

Night Verses - From the Gallery of Sleep (2018)


Dopo avere dato un po' di ossigeno alla scena post hardcore con l'osannato album del 2016 Into the Vanishing Light, i Night Verses hanno perso a fine 2017 il fondamentale apporto del vocalist Douglas Robinson che tanto aveva caratterizzato il loro sound. Un colpo che credo avrebbe messo in crisi chiunque altro, ma i tre membri rimasti Nick DePirro (chitarra), Reilly Herrera (basso) e Aric Improta (batteria) si sono rimboccati le maniche senza neanche pensarci e nel giro di qualche mese (gennaio per la precisione) hanno pubblicato tre pezzi strumentali nell'EP Copper Wasp, da considerarsi comunque una preview dell'album From the Gallery of Sleep in uscita domani.

Con From the Gallery of Sleep i tre superstiti ritornano alle loro origini quando ancora suonavano post rock strumentale sotto il nome di The Sound Archives, ma lo fanno con una potenza e una intensità di rara efficacia. Praticamente i Night Verses si reinventano un sound tra post metal bellico e psichedelia con partiture math rock che si insinuano tra l'estatica visione ancestrale dei Tool e Pink Floyd e l'aggressività post hardcore 2.0. L'album assume un'originalità tutta particolare che lo porta oltre il post rock: le tessiture sonore raramente si ripropongono con le stesse modalità di modo che il loro flusso possa costantemente regalare nuove prospettive, mentre gli esaltanti numeri di virtuosismo sono funzionali all'insieme, compatto come non mai. Sicuramente uno degli album più riusciti e sorprendenti di quest'anno.



martedì 19 giugno 2018

Le migliori uscite di metà anno


Allora, facendo una veloce analisi di questa prima metà del 2018 diciamo subito che l'anno è iniziato bene ma che negli ultimi mesi si è un po' impantanato a livello di produzioni, non che ne siano uscite poche, anzi, ma di interessante si trova veramente poco.

Parlando più chiaramente, in questo momento sembra di essere entrati in una specie di stallo musicale dove l'abbondanza di proposte ha assunto dei connotati talmente uniformi da risultare difficoltoso riuscire a trovare qualcosa che emerga e si distingua nella moltitudine di tag che ormai si autoimprigionano in un cliché prevedibile.

E' tutto un ripetersi di stilemi talmente tirati al limite che ormai per ascoltare qualcosa di interessante bisogna rivolgersi altrove. Ripiegare su indie rock, electro pop e synthwave è stata la mia reazione personale (ad esempio ho attualmente in heavy rotation Saved dei Now, Now), ecco perché ultimamente questo blog ha avuto un'anattività meno presente del solito: semplicemente mancano gli stimoli. A tastare il polso della situazione non pare che da qui a fine anno siano previste delle ulteriori uscite sensazionali, ma staremo a vedere, può sempre esserci la sorpresa nascosta dietro l'angolo.

Intanto godetevi un piccolo riassunto dei primi sei mesi che in questo caso, a differenza del "best of" di fine anno, è assolutamente ordinato in modo casuale. Naturalmente sono solo mie proposte e in quanto tali le consiglio perché credo che in alcuni casi la qualità sia molto superiore a ciò che si sente attualmente in giro.



The Reign of Kindo - Happy However After



Aviations - The Light Years



HAGO - HAGO



Perfect Beings - Vier


Weedpecker - III



PinioL - Bran Coucou



Omhouse - Eye to Eye



Blanko Basnet - Ocean Meets the Animal



Now, Now - Saved



Vitamin Sun - For You, Out of You



Kawri's Whisper - Belle Epoque




Typhoon - Offerings



Hidden Hospitals - Liars



Not a Good Sign - Icebound



Author - IIFOIIC



Spirit Fingers - Spirit Fingers


Dream the Electric Sleep - The Giants Newground


TesseracT - Sonder


Good Tiger - We Will All Be Gone



Field Music - Open Here


CHVRCHES - Love is Dead


 Oh Malô - Young Orchard, vol.1



Nowe - Nowe



Black Neon District - Standing Waves



Snail Mail - Lush



Mile Marker Zero - Fifth Row

lunedì 18 giugno 2018

echolyn - ...and Every Blossom (1993/2018) 25-Year Anniversary


Esattamente 25 anni fa, il 18 giugno del 1993, gli echolyn pubblicarono l'EP acustico di quattro tracce ...and Every Blossom. In un certo senso questo piccolo album è sempre stato l'oggetto più oscuro e introvabile della loro discografia e di conseguenza il meno noto. Pubblicato originariamente in un'edizione limitata mai ristampata, i suoi quattro brani furono recuperati e remixati nel 2002 per il box set A Little Nonsense: Now and Then, ma altrimenti non c'è stato più modo di recuperarlo in maniera separata. Forse è anche per questo che oggi, allo scoccare del suo venticinquesimo anniversario, la band ha deciso di rendere l'EP disponibile per la prima volta attraverso Bandcamp. La versione qui presente è quella remixata del box set che differisce per alcuni accorgimenti e "rimaneggiature" da quella originale del 1993, soprattutto nel brano Ballet for a Marsh, dove la linea melodica vocale di Ray Weston subisce leggere variazioni.

Come ci fanno sapere gli echolyn nei loro commenti ...and Every Blossom nasce all'apice di un periodo pieno di soddisfazioni, con il crescente successo indipendente avuto grazie a Suffocating the Bloom e prima di imbarcarsi nella registrazione della pietra miliare As the World sotto l'egida di sua maestà Sony. Proprio per staccare la spina e prendersi una pausa da opere più impegnative arriva l'idea di celebrare l'ottimismo portato dalla fine primavera e l'inizio dell'estate con un pugno di canzoni dalla prospettiva più "modesta", acustica e bucolica, coadiuvati dall'aiuto di alcuni amici della Germantown Academy ai violini, strumenti a fiato e la piccola voce di Sarah Jane Sharkey, 6 anni, ad introdurre ogni brano come a simbolizzare l'innocenza perduta.

Il concept profondo di ...and Every Blossom è infatti strettamente legato anche al significato di Suffocating the Bloom poiché entrambi vogliono rappresentare la fine della giovinezza, spiegando come le infrastrutture che la società ci pone d'avanti nella nostra crescita (lavoro, religione, famiglia, ecc.) soffocano gradualmente la spensieratezza e l'idealismo legato ad essa. Inutile aggiungere che i pezzi raccolti nell'EP sono quattro gioielli di arrangiamento e capolavori di contrappunti e melodie sospese tra folk e chamber music. Un piccolo diamante perso nel tempo e ritrovato dopo 25 anni.




Tom Hyatt

"Blossom" was a marked change in direction and a deliberate understatement in reply to "Suff". We also wanted to capture our feelings during that slim period of the year when spring and summer merge into a perfect paradise of optimism for the coming summer. This album is particularly special in that it occurred at a time when were happily naive and falling into, what we saw as, a bright future.

Ray Weston

We had been pushing hard for about 4 years, writing, gigging, promoting, making movies, and putting our own light show together - slowly growing, building a fan base, a business, our machine. Releasing "Suffocating" in November of 1992 was big for us. It was more - more flowers, people, and costumes. I wrote in my journal after that release party that, "it was good to be the kings." Over the next few months we kept the machine moving forward. We were making new contacts, playing new cities, going back to our old haunts reasserting our brand of rock.

It had been a heavy 4 years. After the winter of 1993 we were finally starting to see our hard work pay off. Our collective mood was to write something acoustic and light-hearted to celebrate both our success and the fact that spring had sprung. On the actual writing and recording of "…and Every Blossom" I have only a snapshot in my head. I'm sitting in the balcony in the auditorium of Germantown Academy. The band was working on Blue and Sand while I worked on the words. Those words turned out ok. The original words for Ballet for a Marsh however did not stand the test of time. I stole from myself to make the song stronger. We changed the approach from a "Mallard and Swan" to "Man and Woman." The former was definitely less hooky. It was a time for celebration for sure. In less than a month after "Blossom" was released representatives from Sony were in our studio to talk the talk. That's my story and I'm sticking to it.

Chris Buzby

 "...and Every Blossom" was a time, place, and space in our lives as a band where we were riding a torrent of success from the recent release of "Suffocating the Bloom" in the fall of 1992. Subsequently, our creative juices were churning-out new music faster than we could control. Collectively we decided it would be great to write something fresh, acoustic, and spring-like to capture the moment of song-inception. We also knew it would showcase a very different side and style to our writing process, as most of our "electric" songs often started acoustically on piano and/or guitar ~ a side of our songs and songwriting process our fans/listeners rarely got to hear, see, or experience.

To prepare for the Germantown Academy recording sessions (GA was my HS Alma Mater and where I was currently teaching High School Band/Chorus & Music Theory as we were writing this album) I remember sitting in my parents living room at my great-grandmother's Wurlitzer spinet piano (handed down to my grandmother, then handed down to my mother and then used by my brothers and I for piano lessons, all from age 5 throughout high school) with Brett sitting on a chair next to me with his acoustic guitar, writing and finalizing the chord progressions, melodies and arrangements to what would become "Blossom's" 4 tracks. Once the basic tracks were complete I started scoring saxophone and string parts for my colleague Dainis (multiple winds) and student strings (Jeffrey, Nancy) and winds (Evan, Dorothy and Alex) to play and record at the GA sessions. We used GA's large auditorium for the recording process to capture the acoustics of a large concert hall (450+ seats) - allowing me to also play and record my piano parts on the 9 ft. Baldwin baby grand piano that resided in that space. As a young arranger and composer, fresh out of college, I distinctly remember both the joy and frustrating challenge of hearing parts in my head that were often harder than the instrumentalists could play, and needing to take multiple takes and attempts to record them - occasionally even rewriting parts on-the-spot so the original musical ideas could still speak in the way they were intended, adding to the overall multi-layered textural concept of the album. That type of "learning on the fly" as a composer/arranger absolutely helped me cut-my-teeth for the arrangements I would eventually write for the "As the World" sessions - with a Sony recording budget that allowed us access to members of the Nashville Symphony, featured prominently on the album tracks "Always the Same," "Entry 11-19-93" and "Never the Same." Great lessons learned, indeed.

The 4 acoustic songs on "Blossom," to my ears, are perfect examples of how most echolyn songs are created: organic, textured and rhythmic, with strong melodies and often complex harmonic structures. All 4 also spontaneously capture how we came to, and continue to, craft and create a style of music as a band that is all our own.

While I love all 4 tracks on this release, the two tracks I still have the softest-spot for are "Ballet For A Marsh" with its churning polyrhythmic percussion track behind the sparse song orchestration and "Blue and Sand," one of Ray's finest moments as a vocalist, IMHO.

On this, our 25-year anniversary of this EP release, I hope you'll join us in celebrating the gift of music that keeps on giving by indulging in and cranking-up these uniquely beautiful songs ~ welcoming the summer season back into our lives, more once more.

Greg Kull ...and Every Blossom.

An important time for us as a gang. With "Suffocating" released around Thanksgiving, we slid into the holidays satisfied but hungry, probably pondering the new year, 1993. A lot of acts were presenting themselves acoustically about then, and although this trend may not have significantly influenced echolyn to be a bit more "basic", it did put us in step with the unplugged revolution. I think "Blossom" showcases the band's songwriting ability, great melodies, harmonies, and some interesting sounds, e.g. more "winds, wood and wire". I remember being in a position, entering 1993, where we felt we could pick our venue, our date, and set goals that would help us grow, prosper, and maybe get somewhere. I have fond memories of working at Germantown Academy. I was sculpting then, and still painting. The artwork for "Blossom" was quite simple but meaningful. Whenever I am low, or worried, I envision a hill, a sunny hill, one with a bunny on it. I put that hill, with a child's hand, on the cover.

Brett Kull 

Twenty-five years is a blink, a blur, and a poignantly big chunk of one's life. Here are a few twenty-five year-old memories related to "Blossom."

Echolyn was growing in popularity very quickly in 1993. We had become a damn good live force the year before and were still getting better because of the variety and amount of shows we were playing. We started getting recognition from beyond of our home state and better yet our country because of our stage intensity - as well as the positive reviews of our two preceding albums (from 1991 and 1992). We all seemed to be operating with a mission, pistons firing. My brother Greg was getting press and gigs for us while expanding our network of industry connections. We all hung out and worked together in about as good a harmony as six people can - come to think of it, three of us lived together back then! We saw a lot of each other! Our designed snowball effect was building and the six of us were making a push to see how far it could go.

I remember in early 93 having a sense of songwriting momentum from the previous album - "Suffocating the Bloom". I personally wanted a slight detour from what I knew would become our 4th album - "As the World." I knew we would get to that album at some point (the songs were already starting) but thought it would serve that music and our creativity to try something short, spontaneous, and different before diving into another full-length project. I wanted an aside moment to pause from where we were heading. That aside was "…and Every Blossom." It should be pointed out that the in the months leading up to and following this project we were playing gigs four to eight times a month and rehearsing constantly to stay sharp. We only slowed down during the actual recording process in May of that year. I know Greg and I saw each other every day working on various goals. It was non-stop!

Back to the music - I had four acoustic guitar ideas/fragments that I had been noodling with for awhile and wanted to try a different approach to not only the recording, but also the writing and arranging. I talked to Chris and he and I, through a series of sessions, started ironing out ideas. If I remember correctly we quickly fleshed out the tunes during these sessions. We worked on the songs at his parent's house, he on his childhood piano, and me sitting next to him with my old acoustic guitar. Ray, did you come over while we were working? I forget. Besides piano and acoustic guitar we wanted to augment the songs with other instruments, i.e., better strings (failing miserably IMHO on our previous album) as well as a horn/woodwind section. The whole process for writing, recording, and releasing the album was very fast and not overwrought - just a couple months total. I had lyrical ideas for two of the songs

Track my acoustic guitar parts to some sort of tempo if needed (no drums) Record piano, strings, horns, etc at Germantown Academy Add bass and minimal percussion Record vocals Mix album I used my 16-track tape machine for all of this. The new updated mixes (available since 2002) have been mixed directly from the original tapes. For me, the recordings mark the first time I started to finally record better sounds (given what I had). The songs themselves are singularly unique. They are different than what we were doing at that time- and even now they stand alone. When I hear these tunes they feel as if I'm visiting another place and time, yet like home. They are harmonically rich and always moving somewhere else. My lyrics are naïve, my lead voice still not my own, my creativity still not refined, but all - unabashedly - a process and progress for me. Chris does a lovely job with the string, horn, and woodwind arrangements. Just perfect. Tom's fretless bass ideas add a nice touch of tonal ambiguity and uniqueness.

The album came out on June 18th. We played the Chestnut Cabaret in Philadelphia to celebrate. It was an excellent show that I remember to this day. Interestingly at this show we also played songs that would eventually be on our next album. "As the World." The ideas were indeed flowing that year (all of "As the World" and "Blossom" were written in 1993). Less than a month after the June 18th release party we did a showcase for Sony Music at our studio (July 7th) and were offered a recording contract that would ironically be our penultimate moment while simultaneously marking the beginning of a slow disintegration of the idyllic efforts driving that stage of our lives. Weird huh?

1993 was really the Roman candle salute and last fanfare marking our DIY four-year unified effort to win the world. It was our "off to the front and over the top" moment! Everything changed after that year. We had many amazing adventures in 1994 and 95 but never to the unadulterated grand idea of 1993. Maybe we grew up, lost our naivety, or idealism? I don't know. After 93 I felt like we had lost something in order to win the war.

"Blossom" is our acme moment of idealism, romance, and youthful exuberance from our first phase as a band. I hear it in the music and words. I listen to Ray's lyrics on Blue and Sand. There is a real optimism witnessing the potential of spring and summer…and our band, "To reach, to grow as high as elephant's eye." I think that sums up and crystallizes what we reached for and how we felt that year. At my age now, thinking of 1993 and the music we wrote puts a smile on my face and yet makes me sort of sad. I guess the cliché to use would be bitter sweet? So it goes.

venerdì 15 giugno 2018

Tricot live @ Audiotree


Le tricot, attualmente in tour negli Stati Uniti con i Chon, TTNG e Polyphia, sono appena passate dagli studi Audiotree per una sessione live che potete gustare di seguito.

domenica 10 giugno 2018

Phi Yaan-Zek - Reality Is My Play Thing (2018)


Da oltre venti anni anni il chitarrista inglese Phi Yaan-Zek produce album come solista e collabora con una vastità di colleghi tra cui Mike Keneally, Ron "Bumblefoot" Thal, Marco Minnemann, Bryan Beller, Andy Edwards, Steve Lawson e Lalle Larsson. Con alcuni di questi nomi (soprattutto Minnemann) ha realizzato in passato sette CD e quest'ultimo doppio Reality Is My Play Thing si può dire rappresenti il culmine del percorso di Phi Yaan-Zek, presentando oltretutto una line-up da sogno con Minnemann alla batteria, Mike Keneally e Lalle Larsson (Karmakanic, Anderson/Stolt) alle tastiere e Bryan Beller al basso.

Naturalmente su Reality Is My Play Thing ritroviamo l'eccentrica verve di Frank Zappa, del british pop e post punk non convenzionale di XTC e Cardiacs, nonché i trademark della prog fusion di Keneally, Steve Vai e altre delizie psichedeliche nascoste o spalmate con cura nel lungo arco delle 36 tracce delle quali è composto. Il fatto che sia un album così corposo è stato dettato anche dalla sua gestazione che si è protratta per undici anni ed infine registrato tra l'Inghilterra e la California. Reality Is My Play Thing è in uscita il 21 giugno ma la prima metà, che si concentra su canzoni pop jazz, può essere già fruita attraverso Bandcamp, mentre la seconda parte è per lo più strumentale, anche se in tutto il disco non mancano intricate parti soliste e di gruppo che talvolta ricordano i folli collage di matrice kenealliana.





http://www.pyzmusic.com/

martedì 5 giugno 2018

Altprogcore June discoveries


Dore Mear Beon è lo pseudonimo musicale sotto il quale si cela Andrew Sagriff che con il secondo album A Commending Paean for the Forgotten Henrietta Swan Leavitt firma una prova matura di math rock progressivo e post rock ad impianto chitarristico. Molto efficace.



Gli irlandesi Umbra sono invece dediti ad un jazz rock progressivo sotto la guida del chitarrista Chris Guilfoyle. Il quintetto si avvale anche di sax soprano e tenore che in qualche passaggio più sperimentale può far venire alla mente i Roller Trio.



La storica band giapponese di zeuhl fusion Koenjihyakkei sta per pubblicare Dhorimviskha Digest, primo album in studio dopo tredici anni di silenzio attraverso la Skin Graft Records che nel frattempo ha pensato bene di rendere disponibile l'ultima fatica Angherr Shisspa (2005) su Bandcamp.



Il gruppo math rock (anche se è una definizione approssimativa) haisuinonasa è attivo ormai dal 2004, ma come capita per delle proposte così lontane dalle nostre latitudini è una scoperta piuttosto recente. Fin dal primo EP la band ha dimostrato una costante crescita e particolarità nello sviluppare uno stile che oltrepassa i generi.



Infine dal Messico la gradevole proposta dei DJ Perro, musica strumentale molto solare che si snoda tra fusion e math rock.