Ben Rath is an experimental musician based out of Manchester, England, who specializes in dark, foreboding minimalist compositions which leave you feel unnerved while working on blog posts at three in the morning. He makes his recordings with the use of keyboards, piano, guitar and some slight effects. Really good listening.
Avant-Garde
[Music] Mamman Sani Abdoulaye – Unreleased Tapes 1981-1984
Dreamy, mellow, but not quite Kosmich Musik, this collection out of 1970s Niger was miles ahead of its contemporaries. It’s a shame it took so long for Mamman Sani to have his synth work available, but this charming LP was lovingly curated by the ever mighty Sahel Sounds.
[Music] Steve Jansen & Claudio Chianura – Kinoapparatom
It’s hard to believe this release was recorded 20 years ago, as it has a healthy freshness to the material. Former drummer of the new wave band Japan Steve Jansen collaborates with keyboardist Claudio Chianura and is ably supported by guitarist Roberto Zorzi and synth player Piero Chianura. The work is a collaboration where the quartet improvise to the Dziga Vertov film Man With A Movie Camera [German: Kinoapparatom], a classic of Soviet filmmaking.
In places, it sounds similar to Industrial noise; in others, like a more playful version of Rock-In-Opposition. It’s a solid release, though I wonder if there is live footage of this performance available.
[Music] Mecizand & Simulacross – Šljahtic Zavalnja, Abo Bełarus u Fantastyčnyh Apavjadannjah
This is an indescribably weird and wonderful combination of two bands, one from Russia, and one from Belarus. This split LP provides everything from electroacoustic music and noise to free jazz and improvisation here. Somehow, it just works.
From the bands’ record label, NoiseUp’s Bandcamp page:
Internet-label NoiseUp presents the collaboration of two experimental projects. Russian group of musician Mecizand was formed in the beginning of 10s and counts more than 10 album in its discography. Last two were released on NoiseUp. Their music varies between ritual and dark ambient, musique concrete and free jazz. Belarusian project Simulacross appeared on the experimental music map in 2002 and during the years of existence created different sound collages in percussion and improve industrial, noise and musique concrete. This album will be the debut collaboration of Simulacross and Mecizand. 10 new compositions are presented on the album made separately by every project and collaboration created by both. Part of the tracks is made with guest musician, among which you can find Belarusian folk-singer Irina Hlushets from the band Yagorava Gara, voice of Vladislav Novozhilov from Belarusian metal-band Gods Tower and bass of Pjotr Shkalenok from the retro-beat project Yatata. Also different musician playing of various musical instruments such as harp, flute, violin, organ, calimba, trombone and many others could be heard on the album. It tuned to be an explosive mixture of post-folk electroacoustic avant-garde with ritual atmosphere and percussion soundscapes. Fascinating experiments of Russian-Belarusian collaboration will be available for free download on January 29th on the official NoiseUp website and on the Bandcamp page of the label. The digital release will be followed by the physical cassette limited edition on the label Hvedrungrsmil Records. It will be out in the beginning of February. Noise the world!
Worth tracking down.
[Music] Jeff Gburek – Passages Into Beyond (for Joseph Jarman & Alvin Fielder)
We have the pleasure of announcing a new release by Jeff Gburek, an American composer living in Europe who should not be a stranger to readers of this blog. I consider him to be among the top five most important composers/improvisers living today, so each release is an event.
From Jeff’s Bandcamp notes:
Passages is the result of 2 live sessions, the second session over-dubbed onto the first, without any rehearsal, the only minor post-production changes I could make therefore where bits of localized compression here and there. I am both graced and doomed to be unable to alter the improvisational verities of the composition. Session one (1/16/19) consisted of, tympani, cymbal, piano, synthesizer, voice, shortwave radio noise tuned by theremin — the piano wires themselves being antennae and the transistor radio speakers also transmitting the piano strings sound, hence, the distortion you hear, which is deliberate, evocative of another medium, timbre and epoch — and as proof that this composition is improvisational: the cymbal used was a piece I found at the KM studio space and we just had to get it on, right there on the head of the old school Polish tympanic drum, goat-skin stretched over copper pot. The tracks were recorded one after another with the idea of becoming a spine for an album that I’d imagined as Passages for Joseph Jarman. What I did not know was that I would wake up and record the second session two days later (1/18/19) at the home studio on Bukowska, suddenly, without any time for much premeditation. Instruments for the overdub session: bluesky instrument, bass recorder, snare drum, voice, Bulgarian cow bells, Goa bells, aluminum homemade gamelan, pan-pipes, radiator, melodica, skin — with a bit of reverb on all that to create a magical Pranic shield against the trams and buses out the window just meters off. Not a trace of guitar in any of it.
While recording this ritual of passage for Joseph Jarman, great ancestral spirit now, gradually re-enfolding the neighboring cosmos of my life as a lonely alien sometimes feeling soon to follow, the wings of Alvin Fielder became sensible in moments and thusly the whole wake became many-mansions in one. I kept walking through one portal into another, spanning visions and centuries of ghost, ochre & jade princesses, ancestor fox, lynx, radium ladies and seminole redwoods lifting arms. This will probably be epic or at best just another rehearsal. I fell to dreams several times during the mixdowns as if Ayahuma, the flower spirit of Amazonia descended on my member and dripped up with the proboscis of a black butterfly my pineal offerings. I learned who’s brother saved another one in the Spanish civil war and the reason behind was the unbound Romany who hid the weapons of the church warden. These dreams are not mine, I thought. But that’s rather presumptuous.
This is either a trip, an epic travail or fail but I release it because it’s timely, the recent passing of spirits, that command, for some reason, yes, I could ignore it. When Jarman died, here, when Fielder did, here, within me, there was no one around me to share this sense of loss with. How absurd, even cruel, to create something in the mind of another person, only to show them it’s gone, doesn’t exist. So I do the work for myself and you few who are listening and who may read this. I publish my soul even when among my peers I have few people who take my music seriously, who never read my posts or click on a link for whatever reasons of their own: I can’t buy your wonderful albums because I’m too poor, all these years and you think I’m ignoring you. I can’t praise what I can’t hear but maybe I should learn and I know you, the non-listener, make room, grant me silence, peace. You don’t need me and my music as much I need me to live and the music comes through me to tell me I have through this purpose become dedicated to the non-suicidal pact, against all the inhumane indifference, driving with a new engine. In the absence of culture in which I have communion with community, I find my trips on such dream Titanics that icebergs have not been able to reach. I play a chord and it flies with the winds. Some bees, somewhere over the horizon, move in the direction of the hands the flowers petals of sound waves tremble and extend. Love.
Every release from Gburek’s catalog is a deep, personal, and provocative. You can find his catalog here, via Bandcamp.
[Film] RIP Dušan Makavejev – Founder of the Black Wave and lifelong radical
Seeking Movies notes the passing of Yugoslavian Black Wave director Dušan Makavejev, who passed away yesterday at the age of 86. It was his film Love Affair, or the Case of the Missing Switchboard Operator (Serbo-Croatian: Ljubavni slučaj ili tragedija službenice P.T.T.) was my first introduction to Yugoslav film, and it provided what many critics see as the most iconic still of the genre, below.

[Music] Aisha Orazbayeva & Tim Etchells – Seeping Through
London-based Kazakh musician Aisha Orazbayeva has become one of my favorite active violinists.
She’s paired in this EP with Tim Etchells who adds spoken vocals, which work perfectly.
[Music] H. J. Ayala – Atmospheres
H. J. Ayala has been featured here before, providing some mightily atmospheric guitar playing. His current release has to be his darkest yet, however. The entrance to the album (appropriately titled “Entrada“) feels like the beginning of a horror movie with a proper budget. The tension is palpable.
It gets deeper in feel from then on. The whole of this album was made on guitars only, with effects being added after the recording. In fact, all the sounds come from the guitar in it self and the place where the microphone was settled.
Eerie listening, but very rewarding.
[Music] Benjamin Aït-Ali – Les Cinquantièmes Hurlants
Benjamin Aït-Ali is one of France’s heirs the the electroacoustic music mantle once held by the likes of Pierre Schaeffer and Pierre Henry.
This particular piece, dedicated to the sea, of all things, was performed at the SIME Festival in April of 2018. The piece was prepared the year before, inspired by events that led up to the passing of his father.
[Music] The Sensational Guitars of Dan and Dale – Batman and Robin
I defer to weird music historian Irwin Chusid’s notes on this rather magnificent Sun Ra-related release:
This is not a Sun Ra album, nor does it sound like a Sun Ra album—but Sun Ra and various members of his Arkestra are on it. This 1966 budget-label project was an attempt by producer Tom Wilson (1931–1978) to cash in on the Batman craze launched by the popular superhero comic book-turned-TV series.
“The Sensational Guitars of Dan and Dale” were not a real group—it was a marquee name for a rotating cast of session pros earning rent money by playing on hastily recorded albums intended to turn quick bucks on various musical and cultural fashions. There are at least 20 “Dan & Dale” albums listed at Discogs, most issued on the Diplomat label. To the best of anyone’s knowledge, there were no musicians named Dan or Dale involved. In fact, few, if any, musicians have been identified from any D&D projects—”Batman” being a notable exception, and for good reason.
Wilson had produced Sun Ra’s first LP, Jazz by Sun Ra, in 1957 for Wilson’s short-lived (but legendary) Cambridge-based Transition label. After Ra relocated from Chicago to New York in 1961, Wilson contacted Sunny, booked him in a Newark NJ studio, and produced The Futuristic Sounds of Sun Ra, issued in 1962 on Savoy.
The Batman project occurred after Wilson’s resignation from a staff producer position at Columbia Records, where he helmed albums by Bob Dylan, Simon & Garfunkel, Eddie Harris, Herbie Mann, and others. By 1966, Wilson had begun selling his services to the highest bidder as a freelancer, and produced many historic projects for MGM-Verve, including the first two albums by the Mothers of Invention, the first two Velvet Underground releases, and albums by Nico, Hugh Masekela, Eric Burdon and the Animals, and others. (More info:ProducerTomWilson.com).
Despite the Batman album’s notoriety among Ra collectors and cognoscenti, Sun Ra was not originally slated to play on it. His involvement was purely circumstantial.
Wilson had invited members of The Blues Project to play on the session. According to the band’s keyboardist, Al Kooper, the group wasn’t told in advance about the “Batman” theme—they were just hired to show up, play, and get paid. Blues Project guitarists Danny Kalb and Steve Katz, bassist Andy Kulberg, and drummer Roy Blumenfeld turned up. But Kooper declined. The gig coincided with his father’s 50th birthday party, which Kooper didn’t want to miss. So Wilson had to find an organist to replace Kooper.
Sun Ra was Al Kooper’s replacement. Sunny brought along Arkestra saxophonists John Gilmore and Pat Patrick, and several other session pros also appeared on the date.
Kooper has long been listed as having performed on this album. But he ain’t on it. I interviewed him several times in 2017 and he was insistent about this. Furthermore, Kooper says he never met Sun Ra.
As for the music, it’s fun, but hardly groundbreaking. The Earthly Recordings of Sun Ra, by Robert L. Campbell and Christopher Trent, offers this critical assessment: “Except for the Batman theme, nearly all of the music on this album was plundered from various sources. ‘Batman’s Batmorang’ uses the slow movement of Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony; ‘Penguin’s Umbrella’ takes over Chopin’s A-flat Polonaise; ‘Batman and Robin Swing’ is based on the love theme from Tchaikovsky’s Romeo and Juliet; and ‘Batmobile Wheels’ makes do with Bach’s Minuet in G, already recycled as [‘A Lover’s Concerto’] by the Toys. ‘The Riddler’s Retreat’ lifts its guitar licks from ‘She Loves You’ by the Beatles.”
This album has been bootlegged countless times over the decades. As long as we’re cataloging Sun Ra’s discography on Bandcamp, we figured we’d offer a Batman bootleg too. We claim no rights in the recordings or the compositions. In Sun Ra’s monumental catalog, the Batman album is a mere footnote.
— Irwin Chusid