[Music] Juhani Silvola – Post​-​Biological Wildlife


Norwegian composer Juhani Silvola is the heir of the French electroacoustic music tradition, and he has managed to update the sound while maintaining its spirit.  According to his biography, “Juhani’s music often explores themes circling post-humanism, nature and virtual reality, questioning the role of humanity in the near future, and painting varied scenarios without exclusively condemning or glorifying the techno-futuristic vision.”  We’re in for a bleak future, folks.

Post​-​Biological Wildlife is his latest album, released on his own Eighth Nerve Audio.

[Music] Steve Roach – Structures From Silence


If I recall correctly, it was Audion Magazine’s review section, a wealth of information for a person who had little access to either electronic music, New Age, or what would eventually be called ambient music, which introduced me to the work of Steve Roach.

In fact, this was the first Roach album I had the pleasure of buying. 30 years later, it still sounds fresh, and Steve is still releasing amazing material, and special thanks is due to Projekt Records for keeping his work in print.

[Music] mcthfg – Korean Dub, Volume One

Though credited to Korean composer mcthfg, this release is actually a compilation featuring three of South Korea’s finest dub technicians. From the Bandcamp site:

South Korea has a vibrant, amazing group of underground artists, and this album is dedicated to them.

Tengger is Itta (Indian Harmonium, Voice and Toys) and Marqido (Synthesizer)
tengger.net

mdbrkn
mdbrkn.bandcamp.com

Kuang Program is Taehyun Choi
www.kuangprogram.net

[Music] Various Artists – V Miracle: Music for Oceans


Belarusian record label Ezhevika Records had a very impressive 2018, coming up with impressive release after impressive release of all sorts of electronic music and electropop, as they call it.

Their latest release is a compilation of indietronica, future beats and other hard-to-describe genres put together for a record whose profits will be given to SeaLegacy, a non-profit society for ocean conservation.

Learn more at www.sealegacy.org

[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

[Music] Various Artists – Ocean of Sound – The 3rd Annual Report Volumes I & II

Words fail to describe just how important Raffaele Pezzella’s contribution to dark ambient music is. He has singlehandedly curated compilations from artists as far away as Russia, Iceland, Iran and seemingly all points in-between while concentrating on his own venerable work. These two compilations house 229 tracks covering the best of the bleakest, blackest ambient available at the moment!

[Music] Сезон Дождей ‎/ Rainy Season – Возвращение / Return

Сезон Дождей ‎(Rainy Season) were a Lithuanian avant-progressive band from around 1992. The first time I had come across their music was while working at Aron’s Records in Los Angeles. It came in as a promo, but as I had no Internet access, I was unable to find any information on the band. Thankfully, through the wonders of Youtube, we have information on this album at least:

Artist: Сезон Дождей ‎/ Rainy Season

Album: Возвращение / Return

Year: 1992

Genre: Progressive Rock, Space Rock, Ambient

Country: Lithuania

Label / Catalogue: Lituanus / RGM 7006

Line-up:

Максим Пшеничный / Maxim Pshenichny – guitar, bass, voice, Yamaha DX100 & Korg M1 synthesizers
Алексей Петров / Alexei Petrov – percussion, drums, wood box, glockenspiel, triangle
+
Алексей Зубарев / Alexei Zubarev – flute (A1), slide guitar (A2), pizzicato (track B1a), rhythm guitar (A1, A2 & B1b)
Максим Кузнецов / Maxim Kuznetsov – lead guitar (B1b)
Ринальда / Rinalda – voice (B1a)

Tracklist:

A1 Запахи Леcа / Scents Of A Forest 0:00
A2 К чиcтой воде / Towards A Clear Water 7:00
B1 Красная ночь / Red Night 21:19
– a) Часть 1 / Part 1
– b) Часть 2 / Part 2