on Monday 11 January 2010
A quick geeky post, here's my year in audio. Click on the images for a larger versions

2009 most listened to Artists:


2009 most listened to tracks:

on Sunday 10 January 2010
Picture: Josh Keyes

On a week when our country has been bought to an almost stand still by a few flakes of snow, I've wanted to do nothing else than stay in bed and keep warm, wrapped up in gorgeous drones. Sadly I have to work.

In the moments between being out the house the following artists have been of great comfort to my ears. Eluvium and one half of Opitope, Chihei Hatakeyama. The latters back catalogue has been on heavy rotation this weekend, his Under the Spire release, August, 3 tracks long, each engaging and yet humble enough to fade into the background without you ever forgetting that its still there. His 2006 Kranky album Minima Moralia still sounding as fresh and can be, given a few more listens a may force its way to becoming my favourite release of his, though it has some catching up to do with last years Room40 release, Saunter.

Of even greater surpise to me has been my rediscovery of Eluviums 2003 album, Lambent Material. My main love of Eluvium has been care of his Piano pieces, especially Prelude for Time Feelers and Radio Ballet from 2007's Copia. On Lambent Material his sound is much more indebted to the drone side, opener The Unfinished is reminiscent of Polmo Polpo at his very best, There Wasn't Anything carries echoes Godspeed at their quietest, however it's the closing pair that steal the show. The 15 and a half minutes of Zerthis Was a Shivering Human Image are quite possibly the best thing i have ever heard, perhaps an over exaggeration but give it a try and see for yourself. If you were even remotely impressed by Wixel's Briksdal of last year, then this will blow your mind, achingly simple, painfully beautiful.

What Boomkat Said About Eluvium - Lambent Material:
Lambent Material is the entirely appropriately named debut album by Matthew Cooper of Portland, Oregon. Under the guise Eluvium, Cooper went on to be responsible for some of the most graceful examples of contemporary ambient electronics of recent years, but this is where it all started. The album begins with 'The Unfinished', a track that mirrors the effortless drift of Stars Of The Lid at their most vivid, but there's a considerable chane of pace on the following piece, 'Under The Water It Glowed', which manages to retain the kind of suggested, implied melody of the first piece whilst using a less obfuscated sound palette of bright synth tones and wafts of guitar. Taking a far more organic route to the same end is 'There Wasn't Anything', a piece rich in breathy woodwind and distant, reverberating piano. The longest single track on the album is up next: 'Zerthis Was A Shivering Human Image' a fifteen-minute dirge propelled by biting digital distortion on a panoramic scale (it's rather reminiscent of Fennesz's 'Circassian' from his Venice album), which eventually lapses into the exquisite 'I Am So Much More Me That You Are Perfectly You', another of Cooper's more organic, transparent works, filled with clouds of electric piano and waves of static hiss. Excellent.

Chihei Hatakeyama - Towards A Tranquil Marsh


Chihei Hatakeyama - Under the sun from The River, currently available on Hibernate


NEW ALBUM Chihei Hatakeyama - The River What the Label Said




on Thursday 7 January 2010


I won't lie, i have been seriously distracted from pop music, you've probably already realised that by my extensive ambient list of last week. That being said it's hard to deny that there has still been some really great pop music released this year, not much of it revolutionary but pop music is pop music and it's great so why change it??

I wanted to try and add some mp3's but ran out of time. As always you can usually find a track or two on Hype Machine and Elbo, I'm also pretty sure every band in the world has a myspace and they're generally easy to stumble across via google. Purchase wise, Amazon, Norman or Boomkat should sort you out with this bunch.

Happy reading, listening, discovering etc etc etc.


1. God Help the Girl - Stills Ep
A return from Stuart Murdoch and a triumphant one too, anyone who thought he'd lost it was proved wrong, if not by the album then certainly by this fantastic and much overlooked ep. Stuart himself providing vocals on the jaunty second track He's a Loving Kind of Boy, full of Belle and Sebastian panache and an indie dancefloor recipe cooked to perfection. Stills and Baby's Just Waiting are gorgeous slow burners and The Psychiatrist Is In is again so perfectly Belle and Sebastian, the vocal phrases staccato and instantly memorable. A glorious EP not to be missed.


2. Fergus and Geronimo - Blind Muslim Girl
A wonderful pop single, garage greatness and begging to be played continuously come summer or winter.

What Soundsxp Said :
‘Blind Muslim Girl’ is another audacious pop tune approaching the greatness of ‘Harder Than It’s Ever Been’. It’s bubblegum-surf pop, a giddy hybrid of Jonathan Richman and the Ramones, and as perfect as pop music can get. ‘Powerful Lovin’ on the flip is gospel-garage music, accompanied by a charming toy organ sound, showing that Fergus & Geronimo are nothing if not versatile. Their records have been some of the sharpest highlights of the musical year.



3. Lacrosse - Bandages for the Heart
Following on from their 2007 debut and one of my favourite pop records ever, namely, This New Year Will Be For You And Me, Lacrosse delivered yet again, opening the album with two storming tracks, We are Kids and You Are Blind, proving beyond a doubt that this was a band that did not intend to slow down with their delivery of perfect, catchy pop.

There are a few slowies that are still growing on me but the aforementioned openers alongside I See a Brightness and It's Always Sunday Around Here ensured that this album would be played time and time again this year and next year too.

Lacrosse - I See A Brightness mp3


4. The Loves - Three
A band who have always had a place in my heart, and for good reason. Simon Love is some kind of time travelling beatnik genius who writes track after track of fantastic 60's esque garage pop classics. Where to start? The singles One-Two-Three and The Ex Gurlfriend had long since made huge impressions in my record collection. Add to that the awesome Ode to Coca Cola, Sweet Sister Delia and the wonderful stomping cover of You Don't Have To and you have on your hands yet another essential foot stomping, hand clapping, dancestastic release from the ever evolving but ever lovable and reliable Loves.



5. The Cave Weddings - Bring Your Love
Another exceptional 7" that found itself gaining heavy rotation on my turntable this year. A little bit Buddy Holly, a little bit Jonathan Richman, that is with a more perfect voice, dare i say. Delightful stuff.

What Odd Box Said :
Another day, another slice of American garage rock’n'roll. Yet another 7″ record on the increasingly amazing Hozac Records.

The Cave Weddings are a three piece from Albany, New York. But they could be from any town, any time. Especially a dead beat back water town circa 1966. This is a worthy successor to the 60’s sounds brought back into vogue by compilations like nuggets and pebbles. The Cave Weddings provided some driving guitar action on this two track 7″ single. ‘Bring Your Love’ kicks off proceedings and it’s a rollicking ride through 1960’s garage rock sound. The ‘B’ side ‘Let’s Drive’ keeps the 60’s vibe intact – but it hints at a 50’s rock’n'roll heart beating somewhere deep within The Cave Weddings.


6. The Drums - Summertime
Maybe the Drums Lets Go Surfing is this years answer to Young Folks with its instantly lovable whistled melody. Really great fun summertime music.


7. Summer Cats - Songs For Tuesdays
Reminiscent at times of Henry's Dress, for their fuzzy raggedy sounds, Comet Gain and just about anything else great that has happened in the last 30 years noisy indie pop wise. Super and Maybe Pile stand out, though the album as a whole is amazing. Would love these guys to come to the UK.


8. Cats on Fire - Our Temperance Movement
I've never liked The Smiths, that may however be the same as i've never liked the Beatles, cos i'm stubborn and have never let myself get to know them. Apparently Cats on Fire sound alot like The Smiths, the band that is, you arsonists!, and i like Cats on Fire alot. A very strong album with Tears in Your Cup being the cherry on top, one of my most played tracks in 2009.





9. Cheap Red - Cheap Red
Absolutely wonderful to hear something new from Stewart Anderson and Jen Turrell, even better to know that members of Kanda completed the line up of Cheap Red.

From the opening notes of the aptly entitled Let's Start a Riot, with all their Sanddollars charm, it's clear that this is going to be a treat. Unlucky in Love very reminiscent of Kanda with a cup full of Pipas thrown in for good effect. As you'd expect it's a little rough a round the edges but in my eyes all the better for it.



10. Cortney Tidwell - Boys
The Boomkittens waxed lyrical over this one, and rightly so, delicious and dizzying, a whirlwind of honey like pop.

What Boomkat Said :
Courtney Tidwell's self-titled debut remains one of the most played records in our office ever, its bittersweet blend of sugary vocals and a deep sense of melancholy never failing to get a reaction from anyone who happens to be around when its played. This long awaited second album for City Slang should hopefully nudge her beyond her current status as one of the great underrated singer songwriters of her time - its just music made for recognition. The production is crisp and glossy but contained by Tidwell's remarkably evocative voice, a voice that somehow reminds us of The Sundays' Harriet Wheeler or Emiliana Torrini but with a sad, introspective edge. Opening track "Solid State" is just vast in scale, a sun-bleached, countrified ballad washed with sweeping strings and quite possibly the most astonishing vocal delivery from Tidwell yet. Recent single 'Watussi' is up next and changes tempo and colour with a perfectly judged Casio pop burner, complete with a super-addictive, propulsive chorus that you'll find impossible to stop humming after just a couple of listens. "Oslo" is an altogether more introspective number, evoking the memory of Hope Sandoval's incredible "Bavarian Fruit Bread" album with its widescreen, hushed tones - just beautiful music. Yes, it's smart and glossy, but something rings very true about this girl, and besides - anything that makes us think of the Sundays AND Hope Sandoval is an absolute winner in our book so we really couldn't recommend this album highly enough. Buy this album - it's just irresistibly lovely.


11. Micachu - Jewellery
Much hyped by the NME and deservedly so, a real special debut from the elf like Micachu, DIY pop, eccentric and inventive, something that seems to be lacking for the most parts on the pages of the aforementioned journal, a refreshing change.

What Drowned in Sound Said :
Her debut, Jewellery, - delayed from its original release date due to the band shifting label allegiances to Rough Trade – is bursting with leftfield yet accessible ideas that for once avoid mining the increasingly stripped-bare past for their cues. Though for all the talk in the press of this being a pop album, those in search of something fitting the classic verse-chorus-verse mould should beware. Outside of the melodic brilliance of early single ‘Golden Phone’, Jewellery subsists on a heavy diet of scattershot, deconstructed pop.

It may reek of graduate thesis on the page, but what actually transpires on ‘Calculator’ or the stuttering neurosis of ‘Just in Case’ is fractured yet shimmering pop music made for the 30-second attention span generation. Jewellery is, fundamentally, a constant case of musical leapfrog that boldly springs from gleaming melodies and found sounds to sudden rhythmic and stylistic shifts; often within the space of a single track. And it all stems from the brain of a sneering tomboy capable of sending most major label marketing departments running for the hills in screaming terror.

What do you get when you put it all together then? Thrillingly improbable pop made by a grade-A maverick. Three cheers to that.


12. The Long Lost - The Long Lost
It seems forever since i was first completely enthralled by this release. One to keep your hope in true love alive, Daedelus and wife cook up some truly beautiful pop, toy pianos and all, enchanting and charming scarcely give credit to the fairytale beauty of this collaboration.



13. Slow Club - Yeah So
Another band that's been charming our pants off for what seems like forever, he is the genius, she is annoying, but luckily when they embrace in song the results are near sublime.


14. Pastels / Tenniscoats - Two Sunsets
Another meeting of voices, this time the Pastels and Japanese underground legends, the lesser mans Maher Shalal Hash Baz, combined to make some delicate delicate pop music. Song for a Friend was one of those magic moments of the year. Spine tinglingly sparse and equally beautiful.



15. Dreamdate - Patience
Just wonderful, somewhere between Dear Nora, Tiger Trap and the Darling Buds, i think i've said enough.


16. Stolen Hearts - Heart Collector
A very recent discovery but this 3 track single has enough Shangri-La's in the first twenty seconds to guarentee its place in my heart forever, fantastic sixties girl pop, nothing new but still, this kind of pop is rarely done quite so well.

What Fire Escape Talking Said :
Their songs are full of chugging new wave bass, driving guitars and infectious 60s pop. Their favourite records may well be Blondie’s Parallel Lines, the Ramones’ debut album and Spector’s Philles classics.



17. Magic Kids - Good to Be
Garage Pop is rife or so it would seem, yet another great release was Magic Kids Good to Be, can't really put it any better than Boomkat did below. The B Side, Hey Boy being the real star, almost like they should make a musical based around it. Special stuff.

What Boomkat Said :
"Hey boy, where's your girlfriend? She needs your attention." So starts this luminous piece of pop architecture - the work of a bunch of Memphis based youngsters billing themselves as Magic Kids. The verses are sublime early '60s bubblegum with a faintly festive feel to them, but by the time the chorus kicks in, 'Hey Boy' becomes downright majestic, sounding like a pre-pubescent Roy Wood doing his best Phil Spector impersonation, arranging horns, tuned percussion and garagey clatter in a fashion that makes you wish Vivian Girls were more like this."


18. Dirty Projectors - Bitte Orca
If only for the quite wonderful accapella explosion half way through Remade Horizon, a special band taking pop to the next level.

What Boomkat Said :
I was beginning to lose hope, I really was. 2009 wasn't shaping up to be a great year for pop music; sure there have been good albums but there weren't many really 'defining' records. Animal Collective had hit us square in the chops with 'Merriweather Post Pavillion' but nobody else had raised their game to meet it - the world was lacking the run of albums it needed to make 2009 'great' rather than simply 'good'. That brings us to 'Bitte Orca', an album which might lack the fanfare of its Black Flag-influenced predecessor 'Rise Above' but delivers sonically on every imaginable level. The band have for me always been 'almost there'; their records have been inventive, original, daring and engrossing, but I haven't found myself going back time and time again. Something about the arrangements maybe stopped me from humming the tracks on the bus, but this is exactly what Dave Longstreth has addressed on 'Bitte Orca'. From the tantalizing first few seconds it's obvious that Longstreth has trimmed the fat without losing any of the creative pizzazz the band is known for; the tracks manage to amaze on a technical level but at their heart they're simple, sing-along pop songs, laden with hooks. It's all too easy to make musical mathematics boring or overly quirky but with 'Bitte Orca' we have balance and for every dangling 7/8 guitar part there's a heart-wrenching vocal line, every production flourish is balanced by pounding beats or heavenly harmonies. The band worried long-term fans when 'Stillness Is A Move' was released as the first single; the track is notable for not featuring Longstreth on vocals (sorry girls), but I find it was the perfect teaser for the album. The song is the definitive realisation of Longstreth's fascination with commercial R&B music - a style he's flirted with for years but until now never really got spot on. 'Stillness...' sounds like Longstreth's take on Aaliyah (RIP), with stuttering Timbaland-inspired basslines and sugary vocal harmonies toying with the senses. The only weakness is that there aren't more tracks like this - but that's hardly a criticism. Each track seems to excel in its respective style, and Longstreth battles with folk, blues and soul, wrapping everything in a hip indie sheen without losing sight of coherence. If you haven't come across Dirty Projectors before, don't worry. If you haven't heard Dirty Projectors before, it doesn't matter - 'Bitte Orca' is the pop album of the year, you won't want to miss out.



19. Bill Callahan - Too Many Birds
How could anyone resist "that" voice. Amazing as ever.

What Boomkat Said :
Bill Callahan's second post-Smog album is arguably a more solid and consistent affair than Woke On A Whaleheart's occasionally sunny, gospel-influenced sounds, harking back to the more authoritative, poetic works of earlier albums. The first line of 'Jim Cain' provides a great introduction: "I started out in search of ordinary things: how much of a tree bends in the wind?" It's a lyric that mirrors Callahan's uncomplicated yet enormously commanding voice, and a sentiment that hints at the kind of teasing enigma residing at the heart of his craft. For an ordinarily very wily, enigmatic artist, a moment of uncommon directness comes soon after: "I used to be darker, then I got lighter, then I got dark again" he intimates, seemingly laying plain his temperament during recent albums - and no doubt prompting many listeners out there to start thinking he's talking about his relationship with Joanna Newsom - yet there's always some doubt as to just how much we can really trust Callahan, and we always half-suspect he's smirking at us through that rich, Johnny Cash-like baritone. After announcing "I dreamed it was a dream that you were gone", lamenting the absence of a loved one, the beautiful 'Eid Ma Clack Shaw' becomes part Kubla Khan, part 'Tribute' by Tenacious D, with Callahan claiming to have later dreamed the "perfect song/It held all the answers" yet having scribbled it down the words read as gobbldigook. Rather than merely reporting this fact, Callahan goes on to transcribe and sing a nonsensical chorus full of meaningless words, though it's all delivered with the same seriousness and conviction heard everywhere else on the album. It's at once beautiful and strangely quite tragic, as if these were utterances from someone floundering hopelessly both in their relationships and their art. On the strength of this resolutely on-form album however, we can conclude that the latter, at least, is most certainly not true at all.


20. The Crayon Fields - All The Pleasures Of The World
We had the pleasure of playing with this band earlier in the year and even though i loved them i never really expected an album as good as this, very sixties sounding and very very good, less garagey than the majority of t60's influenced bands this year, instead more like the Zombies, sweet and harmonious, the opening track especially so.

What Austin Town Hall Said :

In a year that offered lots of mediocre albums, 2009 had so many new records that it was hard to digest them all in due time for reviews. Yet, I always intended to touch on this album, as I’ve loved The Crayon Fields since Animal Bells came out a few years back.

“Mirrorball” made the list of our Top 50 songs of 2009, and it still draws a lot of power, months after it first hit our ears. Singer Geoff O’ Connor has a real breathy vocal projection (like a pop whisperer), one that will recall Colin Bluntstone of The Zombies for many listeners…it’s just one of the many touchstones for the group.

One thing that differentiates the characterstics on All the Pleasures of the World from Animal Bells is that there seems to be a little bit of darkness lingering beneath each of the songs. On Animal Bells, you had songs like “Living So Well,” which were full of sunny beach pop and gang vocal effects, but this doesn’t fit here. On the album’s title track, amidst singing of pleasures, O’ Connor seems sort of resigned to see the pleasures, though not necessarily take part in them. Perhaps the extra layering of instruments has made a more dense soundscape from which the band took off this round (some of the best being from the solid bass work). Just a guess.

When one comes across songs like “Celebrate” you can see how a Clientele reference might creep up in a review, but you might also note that the similarites are existant, yet polarizing. Where The Clientele often feels extremely cold, and their melodies have a sense of brooding danger, The Crayon Fields put a little bit of energy into their artistry. By this I really mean one thing: The Clientele gives you foggy melodies; The Crayon Fields blow the fog away with a touch of beach-side sunshine.

You’ll also find a lot of the guitar-work of Glaswegians Belle and Sebastian lying beneath this album. You can almost pick up on the homage being given in songs such as “Disappear” where there is a hint of swing and sway to the general atmospheric creation. It’s not a bad thing to highlight, as I’m a fan of the former band, which also probably shows why I’m a huge fan of the latter. Really, is there any ground for originality nowadays?

So, here I am, a few months after the release, though you will still find it hard to get a hold of All the Pleasures of the World in the U.S. Be that as it may, you’ll do yourself, and the dollar, justice if you go out to your local hotspot and purchase the latest from The Crayon Fields, and the last one while you’re at it.

on Saturday 2 January 2010

pics: http://www.alexrobbins.co.uk/

And so yet another year passes and for me probably the richest year so far music wise, so much so that i've had to divide my list this year into two, first up my top 30 favourite Ambient/ Exprimental/ Noise/ Drone releases and an indie pop one to follow at some point.

There has been release after release of quality experimental music this year, more than one could ever digest, even Leyland Kirbys three CD epic was too much fmy attention span to cope with let alone the plethora of great ambience that we have been blessed with this year.

I could easily have made this up to 50 and have quite possibly just not had chance to hear a number of fantastic albums, as was the case last year, some of my favourite albums of 2008 were either not heard until mid 2009 or didn't hit me until well after the end of 2008, not least Grouper's Dragging a Dead Dear Up A Hill and Jacaszek's Treny alongside pop discoveries Hot Lava and the Okmoniks. It goes without say that from my list last year The Fun Years would now probably be battling for first place alongside the aforementioned Grouper.

Our 2008 Top Ten:

1. Yasushi Yoshida - Little Grace (Noble)

2. Aus - Antwarps (Preco)
3. Cantaloup - On a Hill Not Far Away (Aerotone)
4. The Fun Years - Baby It's Cold Outside (Barge)
5. Flica - Windvane & Window (Mu-Nest)
6. David Beans - The Loss & Recovery EP (Self Released)
7. The Research - The Old Terminal (This Is Fake Diy)
8. Dianogah - Qhnnnl (Southern)
9. A-fei - Nympheas
10. Iglomat - Iglomat

For full list see here, 2007, 2006

So here it is, as mentioned an indie pop list will follow at some point, below though are my favourite 30 Ambient/ Exprimental/ Noise/ Drone releases of 2009, i've included EP's as often these can stretch in length to almost an hour.

I'm sure you all know how can "try before you buy" as ever though i'd encourage you to buy where possible, Boomkat, Norman Records & Smallfish should suit your needs. I've included links for the net release albums, Phantom Channel and Resting Bell are well worth generally checking out, they have spoilt us with fantastic releases all year round. And by all means check out the Under the Spire label who for me just pipped Phantom Channel for my favourite label of the year...just. Also worth a mention is Wixels 12 Records in 12 Months. I've not heard them all but would recommend Norway and Clouds if nothing else.
1. BvDub - A Prayer to False Gods / We Were the Sun (Quietis)
A joint first place for the same man Mr Brock Van Wey who stole my heart mid way through the year with his epic ambient dub soundscapes that carried all the magic of Julianna Barwick and Jacaszek wrapped in the crackles and warm blanmkets of the Fun Years welcoming drones with a spinkling of dub echoes. Both albums are awesome, We Were the Sun being the more critically acclaimed of the pair.

What Boomkat Said :
Brock Van Wey has amassed a quietly rabid following for his muted output on the Quietus label. These recordings remain separate to his dancefloor productions for Meanwhile and Styrax, instead exploring beautifully tempered zones of twilight ambient and drifting electronica comparable to his peers like Stephen Hitchell and Rod Modell. As the label states in its manifesto it's "...music that represents their true voice... not just that which they feel others will accept", meaning Quietus music is lovingly crafted with a personal touch, made to communicate with the few who understand it, as opposed to the masses who either don't, or are too cynical to fall for its charms. Aside from the final track, each composition has a lengthy average time of 15 minutes, giving Van Wey space to calmly develop majestic cloud-like structures of droning synth tones with hazy washes of reverbed harps on 'It Mattered Once', or billowing dub chords stretched to the horizon on 'You Will Know Where To Find Me'. 'Live To See The Day' is guided by the cinematic reverie of composers like Harold Budd, and the ebb and flow of 'Time Will Tell' will appeal to anyone familiar with Eno. As ever, these copies are in very short supply and once they're gone... Gorgeous.


2. Animal Hopsital - Memory (Barge)
I'd toyed with the idea of investing time into Animal Hospital, i was aware as some may well not be that the aforementioned band are not as twee as they sound and in fact one of a million recommendations last.fm had thrown my way care of my obsession with the Fun Years and other "drone"/"soundscape" types. Some intrigue, some disappoint, as always there will be a hundred poor/ average artists to every great one whatever the genre. Animal Hospital on first impression fall very much into the latter class, mesmerizingly brilliant and refreshingly innovative. Not afraid to drag songs past the fifteen minute mark, but not needlessly as bands of the instrumental variety have a habit of doing. Each note is gently pulled into the realms of sound with care and finesse, sieved to ensure that only quality comes through and the odd bit of experimentation, chilli and chocolate, peanut butter and jam, things that shouldn't work but do and in a more than pleasant manner. Note 5 mins 39 seconds into the glorious His Belly Burst, the guitars out of place, out of tune and yet fitting in like they'd been born to be there. 2 minutes into 2nd anniversary the guitars enter again, two notches too high on the amp, yet the contrast works perfectly.

The closing track Memory swells and ebbs and flows in a way not achieved quite so elegantly since Johann Johannssonns IDM Manual album, a quite beautiful discovery.

What Boomkat Said:
The people behind Brooklyn's Barge imprint have clearly spent the last six months trying to work out how to follow up last year's jaw-dropping "Baby, It's Cold Inside" album from the oddly monikered 'The Fun Years', one of the most satisfying and immersive releases of the year. Their response? Why they've only gone and produced this astonishing, multi-layered epic from Kevin Micka, aka Animal Hospital. "Memory" is a record that engages with familiar techniques and proceeds to completely f*ck with the programme. The album starts with a shimmering duet for music box and guitar, laying the foundations for what's to follow. Except things don't quite develop in the manner you might expect if you're into this sort of delicate, engrossing home listening, "His Belly Burst" is up next and slowly evolves from the sound of a mournful, solitary Cello (beautifully played by Jonah Sacks), to a rumbling, droney, sometimes distorted mass of sound that brings to mind the post-post-rock of, say, the Constellation label, or Mogwai's quiet/loud blueprints but with a completely unfamiliar backbone shaped by electronic, experimental and classical traditions. By the time "2nd Anniversary" sweeps in it becomes hard to really identify what sort of album you're listening to, finding yourself in the presence of distilled, affected guitar noises that lie somewhere between late, treated John Fahey and Neil Young's amazing soundtrack for the film "Dead Man" - the dissonance at once jarring and deeply moving. In turn, "A Safe Place" sounds like a cross between Oval, Tortoise, Mika Vainio and Radiohead, rearranging and rewiring human sounds inside reverberating bass and malfunctioning electronics before Micka's voice resonates through the sparse elements to ground the music in a deep, mournful clearing. Fuelled by coffee and heartache and recorded in an old bank, an antiquated movie theater lobby, and various apartments around Virginia and Cape Cod, It's left to the 17 minute title track to close the album with perhaps its most astonishing and heart-wrenching segement. The opening once again seems indebted to Tortoise, but the unusual, wordless vocal layering introduces entirely different dimensions. 8 minutes in and things become quietly colossal, merging sweeping strings, twangy, edgy drops with extraordinary arrangements that keep you at once transfixed and disturbed. And that's the thing about this amazing album - it has all these different, wildly incompatible ideas that somehow come together and merge into eachother, making use of electronic devices, shelves of effects, delay units, as well as shiny guitar tones, vocal washes, and dramatic build-ups that create a unique sound you're unlikely to come across again despite all the familiar elements squeezed in. It's the realisation of one man's messed up vision, held together by things that shouldnt work but somehow really do. Just awesome.


3. Sufjan Stevens - Run Rabbit Run (Asthmatic Kitty)
A real delight to hear the Osso string players re-arrangement of Sufjan Stevens debut album, reminiscent of David Axelrod at times and of course The String Orchestra, a wonderful surprise for anyone just expecting another 20 plus song Sufjan epic.

What we Said

What Boomkat Said:
I'd kind of lumped Sufjan Stevens in with the Devendra Banhart crowd and in some ways maybe that is fair, on others it’s purely coincidental and probably quite a n a l of me to do so. I fell out with Devendra, so to speak, when i saw him at ATP, around the time of Cripple Crow, when he was prancing around thinking that he was Jesus and singing about little boys. I place him alongside Herman Dune in that it's clear that he has talent but he is far too self obsessed for me to have any time for the said talent.

Sufjan had kind of made his way there in my mind, maybe it was his idea to make an album about every state, and the fact that the first had over 20 songs on and the second had a whole album of surplus tracks, either way i think i was wrong to dismiss him and welcome him back with open arms, although he is pushing all the wrong buttons with me again, releasing two albums prior to his new one, i'm yet to hear the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway one but i will openly admit to being completely won over by the reworking of his debut(?) album Enjoy Your Rabbit, entitled Run Rabbit Run and amazingly packaged:

Quote: Run Rabbit Run is not a new Sufjan Stevens album exactly, and neither is it about John Updike. Instead, it is a version of Stevens' 2001 album Enjoy Your Rabbit, reimagined for the New York string quartet Osso (who provided the strings for Illinoise). Originally commissioned by Bryce Dessner for his Music Now Festival, Stevens, Dessner, and the Osso quarted decided that they needed to document this music on a physical format. The songs, rewritten for strings by such composers as Michael Atkinson and Nico Muhly, among others, comprise a song cycle about the Chinese Zodiac.

Having not heard the original i can't comment on how true it is to that but i can confirm that this is plain beautiful stuff, like Dirty Three and Esmerine at their most accesible and quite possibly a contender for album of the year in my humble opinion. Beautiful string based "post-rock" or maybe "instumental" would be more apt. A delight for the ears.
Early Sufjan Stevens album Enjoy Your Rabbit finds itself reinterpreted and transformed by Osso, a collection of string players who have toured not only as part of Sufjan's band but as supporting players to other Asthmatic Kitty stars such as DM Stith and My Brightest Diamond. The modern classical tone means that this record is a perfect fit with that other recent Sufjan-related release, BQE, which revealed the full extent of the Michigan songwriter's orchestral ambitions. These arrangements (by the likes of Nico Muhly, Michael Atkinson, Rob Moose and Olivier Manchon) reveal Stevens' composerly abilities in great detail, rattling through the animals of the Chinese zodiac ('Year Of The Ox', 'Year Of The Rooster', 'Year Of The Snake' and so on) in glorious fashion. You certainly don't have to be familiar with the original to appreciate the musical endeavour on show here either: Run Rabbit Run is a great listen in its own right.


4. Loren Dent - Anthropology Vol. 1 (Infraction)
I love albums in which you can completely lose yourself in, the swells seeping into your mind, wrapping you up in a blanket and leaving you totally oblivious to everything around you. Loren Dents Anthropology Vol.1 is such an album, spine chillingly beautiful. I can only really echo the words of norman records below, a fantastic album.

What Norman Records Said:
BEHOLD! An offering from the ambient gods of Infraction. Dust off thine finest goblet, pour from your favorite bottle, remove thy clothes and be pure. Get back to nature and absorb the wonder of pure ambient beauty and message from the heavens that is Loren Dent's 'Anthropology Vol.1'. From the moment I hit play and shiver at the beauty of the intro I realize I'm destined to experience a journey into myself and the wonder of life. The tones here are profoundly uplifting (although there are some darker moments of uncertainty) and moving in a way I am simply unable to articulate. Sadly I'm no "Ambient Shakespeare" but I will say that this is like a soundtrack to life itself, one of joy, love, fear, pain, loss, grieving, euphoria and one which transcends time. Emotions that are integral to the human spirit, despite the age/time in which it exists, be it a modern or an ancient world. This stuff is deep, DEEP material. At one point I was almost reduced to tears, as I felt like I was the only living thing on the planet and felt very lonely... Man the power of music, the sound of those strings. Loren Dent is an extremely gifted artist to the point where it almost feels like there has been a divine hand in the creation of his sound world. His wondrous layers of sound are rich and constantly evolving, always emotional and hypnotic. His tools are both analogue and digital and his use of both is a joy to behold. For any ambient music lover that may have been disillusioned lately and possibly feels that the genre has been reduced to mere simple drones, then I'm fairly sure this will restore their faith in the genre. This deserves a prestigious place in the hearts and minds of all music lovers. To reference particular tracks, for me would be a pointless exercise as this really serves as a complete work... However... To accompany the CD is a USB stick of out-takes from the album which contains 36 tracks of which I've merely scratched the surface. It's a super stylish object in screen printed tin and only 100 of these were created. Flooring stuff all round and if you want to avoid disappointment on the USB stick I would urge you to act quickly. AMAZING STUFF!


5. herzog - first summer and the running dream (Resting Bell) download
Again this year the net labels have treated us to some delights, Herzog a.k.a Bill Bawden delivered the First Summer EP with devastating effect, drones and distant pianos combined magically, not least on the closing 11 minutes of the strangely entitled lately i've been dreaming of drinking sound from a fountain, pushing the experimentation one step further, some may find the icy interference an annoyance but for me it only magnifies the icy beauty. A real delight.

What the label Said :
Resting Bell is really happy to welcome herzog, a.k.a. Bill Bawden and his latest EP “first summer and the running dream”. Bill’s previous releases on Serein were the first netaudio-works I got in touch with. And you also might know him from his fantastic release on 12rec. So what an honour to do a herzog-release here on Resting Bell.

“first summer and the running dream” contains 5 tracks with a complete duration of 30 minutes. Compared to his earlier works “first summer…“ has a more droning, a bit distorted character. The sounds are layered very softly and sublime to a very harmonic composition. The overall mood is quite laid-back with noisy, distorted splinters. The noisy elements are getting stronger to the end of the EP but it leaves still a very harmonic picture.

For me a perfect soundtrack of the season. Watching raindrops on the window and feeling wind in the hair.


6. Taylor Deupree - Weather and Worn (12k)
An absolute delight, impossible to get bored of, for those awaiting a new Fun Years album let this tide you over until that glorious day arrives.

What We Said

What Boomkat Said:
Marking major departures both for 12k and its owner, Taylor Deupree, this 7" is the label's inaugural vinyl release (the first in a forthcoming series on the format) and a clear step away from digital music for the renowned microsound exponent. These two pieces came about from pottering around on a rainy day with some loop pedals and a collection of instruments including acoustic guitar, kalimba, and bells. Deupree explains: "Pixel, one of my cats, was sleeping next to me as I began to create a warm bed of drones and small noises in an attempt to warm the room and my spirits." As it so happens, the cat in question does actually contribute to these pieces, lending a wheezy snore to the music, immediately bringing to mind the reposeful feel of a Bagpuss episode coming to a close. Deupree's instrumental contributions are incredibly restrained, typically focusing on the minutiae of the timbres involved, only snatching at suggestions of melody rather than going all out for conventional musical cogency. If any single constituent is the primary focal point for this music its the deep, thick atmospheric hiss that permeates every fibre of the clear vinyl onto which its pressed. You can most assuredly hear a difference between this music and Deupree's main thread of work (for a great recent example of which you can take a listen to the new digital issue of his Sea Last composition), but almost regardless of the subject matter or content of a recording his instincts seem to be hardwired into looking beyond the surface of any sound he works with, and so it should come as no surprise that despite spurning digital tools in favour of realtime and organic means, for this vinyl outing the infinitesimally detailed musical approach remains firmly grounded within the established, beautifully abstract Taylor Deupree soundworld - and that should be regarded as a very good thing indeed.

7. Aidan Baker & thisquietarmy - A Picture of A Picture (killer Pimp)
I tend to ignore more and more anything that Aidan Baker does, not because he's bad but generally because like Machinefabreik and perhaps Peter Broderick to some extent, there is just too much output by the guy. Fortunatley his collaboration with Tim Hecker last year proved that he does know how to collaborate well and having already been hugely impressed by thisquietarmy this was a release not to be missed.
Sadly this seems to have been ignored by most but those who give it a try will be richly rewarded by the low end brilliance that this pair have cooked up.

What Foxy Digitalis Said:
Aiden Baker and Thisquietarmy's Eric Quach reconvene on this follow up to their first EP together, "Orange." Rather than relay tracks back and forth through the mail however, this time the duo made a point of working the material out live, with little to no overdubbing involved. What results is a symbiotic approach to drone that is concerned as much with forward momentum as it is with textural elements. Lasting an hour, the disc's four tracks each represent a logical exploration of one element of the unit's sound. The opening "Imagistic Continuity" glistens as the duo's guitars intersect in slow motion iridescence. Combining equal parts Fripp & Eno with an undercurrent of noisier influence, the piece transforms itself continuously as it radiates outward from its opening. The following "Loss of Perspective" immediately inverts itself however, slipping inward as it delves deep into some cavernous patterns of thick, folk strums and cresting tonal waves. There is a proggy, constructive element here that separates the material from your usual drone act, as it manifests itself more closely to a live composition than an overtly drone-oriented work. The result is some of the moodiest drone one is likely to come across, as harmonic progressions drive a dirge-like theme above the crystalline shards intermingling below. The work even begins to take on an almost club-like vibe, with a certain brooding trance feel not so far off from the same forest-of-the-mind traversed by Gas. "Negative Space" once more looks outward, as trickling notes delay and decay around one another, building into a tall cloud of sound whose intricacies are endless and immersive. Each movement, no matter how decisive, is swept into the cyclical center, only to be seen again when another revolution has completed itself. The addition of an amorphous bass line adds to the club feel, pulsing and bobbing in the light of night. Not that this is dance music whatsoever, though maybe the emerald green world of more mysterious creatures believe otherwise. The closing "Horizon Line," the longest work here at 20-minutes, only deepens the nighttime atmospherics of the rest of the disc, albeit in a far more haunting, even sinister, vein. Deepening the blackness, the piece moves through vast swarms of sinuous mental lines whose construction treads on the right side of a fine line between ambient/drone atmospherics and clichéd movie mood setting. Yet the duo exudes such clarity of vision that it is hard to not be swept up in the grandiose nature of the pieces. One for summer nights and firefly fights. 8/10 - Henry Smith, Foxy Digitalis


8. Wixel - Norway (net release) download
The opener Briksdal being a perfect lesson in the meeting of acoustic instruments, noise and nature sets up Norway as the best of Wixels 12 releases this year. Feet walking through snow, cold winds blowing, waves lapping, it doesn't get much better.

What We Said:
Four lovely tracks of ambience mixing to fine effect, especially on the opener Briksdal, tidal washes, gentle plucking, footprints in the snow and finally Interference of the most delightful, detuned radio type. Each track comes with its own picture, Track 4, Ramberg, a gorgeous sunrise, which in reality could not have been more aft, the early morning bird call mixed into the
slow swelling loveliness that ensues after 3 minutes or so.

Jotunheimen seemlessly abridges Briksdal and continues along all muffled and windy.

One not to be missed.


9. Mika Vainio - Vandal (Raster Noton)
I've had mixed opinions over Mika Vainio, end of year lists have been raving over his Black Telephone of Matter album which to me is very difficult listening. I'm more than glad that i stumbled over this fantastic EP first. Vandal follows the lead of RHK and Grista Lichtenberger in the Raster Noton series, blistering and often brutal techno like Ben Frost if he didn't have the power to hold himself back, awesome stuff.

What Boomkat Said:
We're struggling to contain our excitement over the latest in Raster Noton's Unun series, following essential excursions from Aoki Takamasa, NHK and Grischa Lichtenberger with four tracks of absolutely immense nasty beats and techno reductions from Mika Vainio! It's fully acknowledged that we have a man-crush on this producer, but it's totally justified when he gives out analog brutalism of this variety. There's a definite theme of northern-European destruction going on with this 12" with titles like 'Vandals' and 'Goths' connecting the downright rotten noise aesthetic to the notoriously fierce tribes of northern and central Europe. Three of the tracks opt for hiphop breakbeats and slower tempos similar to the NHK release, before bludgeoning the rhythms with extreme noise-force, but the standout for many will be 'Barbarians'. To our knowledge it's the first 4/4 techno track he's made for nearly 10 years, taking cues from the arrangements of tuff Chicago patterns before eroding them with a caustic noise substance to sound like a nightmarish Marcel Dettmann. F*cking A+ - DO NOT MISS!!!!


10. Chihei Hatakeyama - Saunter (Room40)
Much like Loren Dent, Chihei Hatakeyama managed to perfect the ambient drone sound, whilst not creating anything new, he managed to hit all the right spots on the lovely Saunter, released a label that had a very special year, this perhaps being the pinnacle of it.

What Boomkat Said:
Although the title might intimate a certain amount of nonchalance, this magnificent new album from Tokyo-based electronic composer Chihei Hatakeyama (the second to be released since his excellent Kranky debut Minima Moralia) sounds far from casual. Every fibre of this sonic tapestry has been fastidiously and thoughtfully arranged into position, instilling the music with a depth that can be appreciated both on close inspection and as a warm, auditory duvet to hide yourself away in - comparisons to Taylor Deupree's Northern wouldn't be untoward. Hatekeyama has declared that Saunter is his musical interpretation of the monochromatic Chinese painting style Sansui-Ga (which is presumably also mirrored in the sleeve photography), and further to that, it's an album that sets out to interpret landscape, nature and the encroachment of winter. It's very easy to make these sorts of evocative, abstractly associative statements, but an entirely different proposition when it comes to substantiating them. Hatakeyama's album might just be one of those rare works that truly does offer an emotional springboard into some figurative sonic universe though. It transcends both the customary micro-drone categorizations and the purely decorative allusions of run-of-the-mill ambient music. Take 'Small Pond' as an example of Hatakeyama's modus operandi: it's a glorious little thing, and a wonderfully impressionistic portrait of its subject matter; Hatakeyama lays out a shimmering surface of tonal sustain dotted with flickers of guitar, all encased in immersive rainy timbres. At one point you hear a figure walk across the scene from left to right, trudging through puddles in a brilliantly tactile and physically rendered fashion. Within four minutes the piece really does set the scene for a rainy day spent by a surface of water - which may seem like a fairly unremarkable achievement, but when you consider this is done predominantly by employing musical suggestion and metaphor over matter-of-fact Chris Watson levels of scrutiny, it's actually rather special.


11. Ekca Liena - Orb Night (Phantom Channel) download
Another artist with seemingly endless releases this year, each one brilliant but sadly too many for me to fully digest. One that stood out though, which i expected from the second i realised it was via the impecable Phantom Channel net label was Orb Night four tracks of twinkling magic with dark droning undertones, maybe a contender for a soundtrack to Tim Burtons adaptation of Alice in Wonderland, truly wonderful stuff.

What we Said

What the label Said:
Ekca Liena, the work of the prodigious Dan Mackenzie, created quite a stir with his monumental debut ‘Slow Music For Rapid Eye Movement’. Issued via the excellent Dead Pilot Records, this record was a stunning collision of monolithic drones, volcanic guitar and cascading ambient soundscaping, that led those in the know to draw comparisons with Stars of the Lid, Tim Hecker, Fennesz and even Mogwai. One critic even labeled it as ‘..a piece of music that may alter your perception of the word epic’.

Mackenzie has not rested on his laurels; as well as founding drone outfit Plurals he has been busy recording new material for both Dead Pilot and Under the Spire Records, while remastering ‘Slow Music…’ for a wider release. Phantom Channel has also commissioned a piece from Mackenzie, entitled 'Orb Night', and is delighted to welcome his Ekca Liena project into our blossoming roster.


12. OUS MAL - Viime Talvi (Under the Spire)
Yet again Under the Spire delivered the goods with this enchanting release by Fins Ous Mal, reminiscent of Colleen and Hannu, twinkles wrapped in fireside crackles...delicious.

What Boomkat Said:
Even if it wasn't for the song titles you'd still be able to tell this record was Finnish. Like all that country's finest musical exports, be they Hannu or Paavoharju, Ous Mal's recordings carry a certain grainy lo-fi charm, sounding like some gnarled old 78 you might find in an enchanted attic. Vinyl crackle, weird old field recordings and weathered instrumental sequences all come together to make beautiful collages on tracks like 'Meidän Piha', which comes laced with faded string samples, glockenspiel melodies, wispy voices and the tolling of bells from a distant church. The glistening ambience of 'Tähdet' persists with the magic-realist sense of wonderment, sounding a bit like a haunted version of The Avalanches as it makes way for the equally ethereal strains of 'Tumma'. By the time you arrive at closing track 'Ukkonen' (whose curious sonic profile seems to shift from a spectral sea chantey into a demonic ice cream van) you'll be totally hooked on this record's creaky, tuneful and endearingly decrepit constitution. Highly enjoyable Scandinavian lo-fi melodicism from the ascendant Under The Spire imprint


13. Brian Harnetty & Bonnie "Prince" Billy - Silent City
A surprise inclusion maybe, but Brian Harnettys collaboration with Bonnie Prince Billy was a truly wonderful exercise mixing samples, bluegrass and some fantastic keys and breakbeats. The second half of the album, from the title track to the end are particularly magical.


14. Hannu - Harhailua (Kesh)
Hannu's Worms in my Piano has long since been a favourite of mine, his two releases this year took forever to touch me, Hintergarten has still not home, Harhailua though has pulled through, perhaps the icy weather has helped.

Harhailua twinkles like Colleen or a more rough around the edges Amiina even Múm on the glitchy Hakolahti. Although Finnish this release is a sure fire recommendation for all those Icelandophiles out there. Delightfully wintery.

What Boomkat Said:
Hannu's sublime debut album 'Worms In My Piano' tapped into a rich vein of delicately abstract electronic music spearheaded by the likes of Colleen and Hannu's compatriots on Fonal - most notably Es, whose rough-edged loops and folksy otherness found a kindred spirit. This new album for the excellent Kesh label takes the agenda a step further into loveliness, embracing harps, glockenspiels, and all manner of frost-dappled samples, evoking a wintry wonderland filmed in Super-8, full of grains and vintage production quirks. It's often the simplicity of these arrangements that makes them so successful: the combination of mysterious field recordings and elegaic horns on 'Kautta Aikan' brings to mind the haunted songs of Lau Nau or perhaps even Mùm at their best, while 'Masseudun Tulevaisuus' is an unruly patchwork combining scratchy instrumental snippets - like a Lucky Pierre album conceived in Moominvalley. Taking the music in a slightly different direction, 'Hyyris' and 'Hakolahti' embrace electronic beats, but retain that endearingly decrepit sound that characterises the rest of the album, perhaps recalling Kim Hiorthoy's early homespun emissions. An absolutely gorgeous and atmospheric assemblage of electronic songs that's sure to find great resonance in the snowy climes of this February, a massive recommendation.



15. drafted by minotaurs - aversion therapy (Infraction)
A regular listen for the last six months, Drafted By Minotaurs perfected the practice of dragging each note out, squeezing out its full beauty and resisting the temptation to fall into full on white noise.

What the label Said:
Drafted by Minotaurs mainstays are guitarist Ryan Wilson and Ian Fulcher, who contributes trumpet and glockenspiel. Meanwhile members of a floating cast chip in with added textures from cello and violin. Opener "Blueprints for Sunbuilding" spools out a hail of plucked and bowed strings, webs of sound solidifying then melting into steely flow, stall set out somewhere around cultivated Constellation post-rockeries, a mood and sound that may feel familiar to those acquainted with the new backwoods chamberisms and neo-folk drone of UK cottage industrialites such as Richard Skelton (aka A Broken Consort/Clouwbeck) and Seasons (Pre-din). "Sault Locks" proposes cyclical patterns of stringed things that seem to hover shyly apart, before swarming to swell and billow over the listener - not so much a Storm of Drones as a squall of tones. "Skin the Night and Fog," a more veiled sister of the previous pluckings and bowings, plays out a psych-infused dream sequence. These three tracks forming Side A work with their own distinct harmonic and textural patterns, while seeming like movements of something overarching. Miasmic minor chord tidal flow abounds, the music's motion determined by languorous bow-strokes, its textures by warm-prickly needles of guitar pizzicatos. Side B's single extended track, "Sunday's Morning Ghost," is wrought from similar materials, but aspires to more transcendant levels, led by the celestial harmonics of Fulcher's treated trumpet. It takes on atavistic echoes redolent of some distant Miles Davis or Jon Hassell blowback, as if viewing In a Silent Way through a post-Kosmische kaleidoscope, or channeled through Eno/Budd cathedrals to meet today's psych-drone and ambient trajectories. Overall, Aversion Therapy thrives on such productive tensions between genres and eras, as it does between live and recorded, spontaneous and pre-structured, making for engaging, at times thrillingly psychotropic, listening." - alan lockett


16. Molly Berg + Stephen Vitiello - The Gorilla Variations (12k)
Its sometimes the case that the leftovers surpass the main meal, like the cold beef you have with chips and mint sauce the day after the roast, or the cold pizza from the night before. Or like one of your mothers meals when she cooks like she's still cooking for five growing children, often the leftovers are just too good to throw away.

In the case of Molly Berg + Stephen Vitiello came together for a soundtrack project commissioned by Brazilian video artist Eder Santos, whose video portrait of a lonely, zoo-dwelling gorilla (named Idi Amin) was the starting point. Although only a three-minute piece was required of the duo, they improvised their way through forty minutes of guitar, clarinet, vocals, field recording and electronics, the results of which then became the basis for this charming and beguiling album.

Organic and whimsical this album enchants from beginning to end, combining the beauty of the dusky forest sounds with slow burning drones. Highly recommended.

What Boomkat Said :
Followers of electronic music should already be acquainted with the distinguished output of musician and sound artist Stephen Vitiello. His work has previously been published via labels such as Sub Rosa, while sound installations have been exhibited at the Whitney Biennial. Add to this collaborations with Machinefabriek and Lawrence English and Vitiello's CV reads very nicely indeed. Molly Berg comes from a very different background, having previously appeared on recordings by Cracker and Magnolia Electric Co. songwriter Jason Molina. The two Virginia-based artists came together for a soundtrack project commissioned by Brazilian video artist Eder Santos, whose video portrait of a lonely, zoo-dwelling gorilla (named Idi Amin) was the starting point. Although only a three-minute piece was required of the duo, they improvised their way through forty minutes of guitar, clarinet, vocals, field recording and electronics, the results of which then became the basis for this charming and beguiling album. The sound field on The Gorilla Variations carries an enormous amount of depth, with each piece representing a finely tuned balance of instrumentation, processing and sounds from the natural world. Above all else this is an approachably musical album, casting electroacoustics in a wholly accessible light - the pieces each take their different instrumental focuses and delve into collaged composition, playing melody against acousmatic timbre for a sonically gratifying intertwining of song structure and soundscape. Highly recommended.


17. Sleeping Me - Lamenter (Phantom Channel) download
Another dreamy, heavenly release from Phantom Channel, it'll send you to sleep...in a good way.

What the label Said:
Thick, melancholic and evocatively haunting soundscapes created entirely by guitar, the music of Sleeping Me employs a balance of delicacy, power and gentle reverb to present an affecting sound that's resplendent in its warmth and fiery beauty. 'Lamenter', closely following stunning debut full-length 'Cradlesongs' on celebrated Australian imprint Hidden Shoal, proves that Sleeping Me's sound finds peace in even the most heartbreaking of circumstances, rarely has the devil's instrument of choice sounded so heavenly.


18. Tiago Sousa - Insonia (Humming Conch)
Beautiful piano work, reminiscent of Rachels or Eluviums timeless Prelude for Time Feelers, especially lovely on the title track.

What Boomkat Said:
Another one of those incredible records that appears out of nowhere and absolutely floors us - housed in a sublime vinyl edition printed up in an extremely limited run - fans of Nils Frahm, Peter Broderick, Rachels, Max Richter or The Necks - DO NOT MISS!!!!!* The Humming Conch label introduced itself earlier this year with the wonderful Celer release Capri and now continues to impress and raise its stock with this new limited edition vinyl pressing from the mysterious Tiago Sousa, who teams up with drummer (and co-producer) João Correia and clarinetist Ricardo Ribeiro. Sousa assumes the lead roles: he's the composer, guitarist, organist and pianist, fashioning a delicate and utterly sublime sequence of instrumentals, each captured via recordings made "in a small bedroom at Barreiro"and mastered by none other than 12k's Taylor Deupree. Insónia is Sousa's fourth record and draws upon his accumulated knowledge of classical, experimental and popular forms, all blended into a single suite of compositions. 'Movimento' opens the album exchanging forlorn sounding piano motifs with downbeat strung guitar passages that will leave you gasping for breath. The latter half of the A-side is especially strong, drawing to a close with unaccompanied recordings 'Reflexo' and 'Insónia'. The title track in particular is just exceptionally beautiful, a piano solo that might be the most accomplished, well-made piece of its kind since Gonzales turned his hand to the format five years ago. You can hear the influence of Satie, or even Chopin's Nocturnes at work here, and Sousa's poised, expressive performance is quite magical. Insonia feels more modern, and somehow, more mature than the main thread of classical-styled records that have come our way this year. It's all too easy for countless Max Richter-ites to assume the language of classical music - to dress themselves up in its vestiges - without actually engaging with its disciplines and heritage on a level that goes beyond the surface, but Sousa and his cohorts never try to be anything they're not and instead revel in the strange fusion of influences that produced this record. Illustrating this is the switch between 'Insónia', a very restrained composition that's very much in the romantic classical idiom, and 'Folha Caduca', which paints an entirely different picture, creating something thats lodged between the supreme post-rock styled eloquence of Rachel's and the avant-jazz experiments of The Necks. 'Surrealismo Impressionista' reaches even further out towards the margins with organ and clarinet drones, toying with suspenseful mimimalism while the piano's mournful, emotive qualities continue to draw your ear. There are only a very small number of this amazing record pressed up for the world, we urge you to grab one while it's still in circulation.




19. Klumpes Ahmad - In Bed We Trust (HellosQuare Recordings)
Triosk's Adrian Klumpes and 12k's Shoeb Ahmad come together to produce some fine drones and piano pieces, the last two tracks Credit and Refinance and Others Dreams are particular highlights on another fantastic collaboration

What the label Said:
Adrian Klumpes ('Be Still' - The Leaf Label and formerly of Triosk) and hellosQuare's Shoeb Ahmad come together as a duo tracing their way through minimal composition, bathed in electronic noise and analogue systems to bring us ten pieces of shimmering beauty, loop studies and kosmische drone.


20. Ben Frost - By the Throat (Bedroom Community)
I still stand by my claim that Ben Frosts predeccesor to By The Throat, Theory of Machines is the best there is when it comes to the Noise/Experimental genre. On By The Throat the formula is modified slightly, more songs and more exprerimentation. The brutality remains and is stupidly effective on probably the best opening track to any album this year, the wonderfully harsh Killshot. Elsewhere Híbakúsja stands out, maybe not as good as Theory of Machines but still an excellent album.

What Boomkat Said:
Ben Frost's 2007 album Theory Of Machines caused quite a stir within the electronic music community, shattering genre conventions with its deft conflation of intensely dark metal, academic electroacoustics and blissful, drone-weaving modern classical touches. By The Throat takes these same principles and develops them into something altogether grander. This is an album of contradictions: during the opening piece 'Killshot', you'll be exposed to music that's both viscerally hard on the ears and achingly beautiful, combining gracefully cinematic dulcimer melodies and mesmeric swells of noise that swirl amid a sea of nerve-shredding electronics. The track segues into a dirge of howling wolves with 'The Carpathians', a piece of doom-laden menace that competes with the grimmest moments of SunnO))) or KTL in terms of intensity. We're only a couple of tracks in so far, but already this is shaping up to be pretty special. Despite opening with a tuneful flurry of string plucks, 'Hibakusja' soon reveals a darker side, collapsing into a horrifying mess of respiratory unpleasantness, as if soundtracking a drowning man trying to keep afloat - the field recordings of someone desperately drawing breath take on a creepily emotive timbre once immersed in serrated noise signals and melancholy string arpeggios. This is no easy ride, yet despite the disturbing undercurrents and horror soundtrack tactics this album never ceases to sound beautiful. Co-produced by Frost and the dependably excellent Valgeir Sigursson, By The Throat also owes some of its sonic prowess to contributions from Amiina, The Arcade Fire's Jeremy Gara and fellow Bedroom Community star Nico Muhly. This formidable and far-reaching body of work might be one of 2009's most singularly impressive listening experiences, and very likely the only record you'll hear this year whose repertoire consists of both luscious classical chamber compositions and the hunting calls of killer whales... A very high recommendation.


21.He Can Jog - Etudes (Distance Recordings) download
I'd prevviously discovered He Can Jog via a blog, who posted the excellent Virtual EP, six short tracks of experimental IDM, i'd kept meaning to see if there were any releases, eventually i stumbled over this on the Net Label Distance Recordings and what a pleasant surprise it was, just three tracks, one spanning to almost half an hour and another almost making twenty minutes. The music remains fresh and interesting in a way that much music over ten minutes struggles. Attention is kept as the pieces progress, flittering and twinkling through electronic disturbance and best of all it's available right now for your consumption. A very special artist indeed.

What the label Said :
Following on from his successful 'Middlemarch' album released on Audiobulb Records, Brooklyn based artist Erik Schoster brings us these richly textured live improvisations with processed sine waves, and micro-cassette field recordings. These were culled from the rehearsal sessions leading up to his show at the Zeitgeist Multi-disciplinary Arts Center, in New Orleans last year.

22. Set in Sand - Remembering Everything Seams Together (Abandon Buildings)
I know very little about Set in Sand other than they make loveable, playful electronica mixed with nosiey drones.

What the label Said:
A new 5 song instrumental EP from Set in Sand, leaning in a more ambient direction than earlier work. This album’s abundant textures and wormy melodies are a one of a kind musical experience, great for ears seeking a listen that is only divisible by itself.


23. James Blackshaw - The Glass Bead Game (Young God)
In a year when James Blackshaws crown may well have been stolen by Alexander Turnquist, James more than rose to the challenge with yet another gorgeous album, straying even further from his guitar to mix quite beautifully pianos and strings in a most welcoming manner. Reliably exceptional.

What Boomkat Said:
Freshly signed to Michael Gira's Young God Records, James Blackshaw returns with another step forwards in his creative evolution, marking a further inclination towards broader composition than ever before. No longer does it really seem fitting to describe Blackshaw as a mere guitarist; given the advanced instrumental range on show here, you'd have to think about categorizing this man alongisde the Peter Brodericks and Max Richters of this world, With pieces like 'Fix' and 'Arc' Blackshaw reveals a whole new side to his talent, laying on strings and piano, setting aside his principal instrument of choice. Twelve-string fans needn't concern themselves however, this is an album that features an abundance of Blackshaw's signature playing style, and a recording like 'Cross' brilliantly combines the virtuosic ragas on which he made his name with unexpected elements such as a string arrangement and perhaps most unpredictably, a choral component. Imperiously good stuff from a great talent.



24. Brock Van Wey - White Clouds Drift On And On (Basic Channel)
A busy year for Brock Van Wey, more ambient dubbiness from the man behind BvDub, this time a pallindromatical album reinterpreted on the second disc by Intrusion. The Intrusion half really steals the show, the closing trilogy is simply epic.

What Boomkat Said:
Ahhh yes, the one so many of you have been waiting for. Brock Van Wey's productions have been gently lapping at the edge of the dub techno consciousness for the last couple of years with cherished releases on a host of premier outlets, including his own wonderful Quietus imprint. His dancefloor productions have appealed to heady listeners as much as the dancers, but it's those lush ambient compositions for Shoreless and Echospace that have set him apart from the rest of the crowd. Steve Hitchell found a soulmate in Brock's mindwashing style and paired his album of cloud-drift tones with a remix set of his own, adding extra instrumentation and rhythmic elements on a further disc of Intrusion remixes for this echospace release. Van Wey's disc of original tracks is designed for strictly horizontal listening, covering acres of ambient space with sighing strings, layered guitars and cotton coated synth pads in thrall to classic ambient electronica from the likes of Eno, Hans-Joakim Roedelius or Gas but with a forlorn spirit of its own making. Simplicity and subtlety are key here and Van Wey is master of both disciplines. Hitchell's efforts on the second disc remain faithful to Van Wey's vision, conjuring deeply hypnotic soundscapes with broad brushstrokes of ambience and reclined atmospherics, with the notable difference of pulsing waves of tidal bass and organic tape delay probing further into the ether. Fans of both artists will be thoroughly overjoyed by this supple mind massage, you really are in for treat...


25.The Gentlemen Losers - Dustland (City Centre Offices)
Arguably a simple album, but an excellently executed one at that, Farandole and album closer Pebble Beach where two of the most exceptional pieces of "straightforward" instrumental guitar compositions heard this year.

What Boomkat Said:
A most welcome, if somewhat overdue second album from Finnish duo The Gentleman Losers, whose eponymous debut set hearts aflutter in the summer of 2006. That first LP's blend of dreamlike faux-vintage instrumentals is carried over to this new set of songs, but there there's a noticeably heightened sense of depth to the writing on Dustland. At first the muffled, anachronistic tone of the album might be likened to the sort of thing Bibio albums encroach upon, but 'Silver Water Ripples' takes us into much more naturalistic, organic terrain, with the ensuing 'Echoing Green' building upon this, suggesting both Colleen's delicately spun loop structures and Vincent Gallo's enduringly brilliant When album. A couple of tracks later, 'Bonetown Boys' finds the band at their very best, calling back into service that creaky old breakbeat from the last album while supplying a quivering blend of instrumentation that sounds like some imaginary Western soundtrack being played out on an old Victrola. Much of the album plays out without any drums, but when a beat does kick in (as on the sublime closing shot, 'Pebble Beach') it melts into the valve-powered heart of the record, adding muscle without breaking the illusion of this music being something dug up many moons ago. Another highlight worth bringing to your attention is 'Farandole', which evokes a '70s horror movie without relying on the schlock and awe of Goblin-style prog synths. The chiming harpsichord melody twinkles spookily through a mesh of lapsteel, rhodes piano and sparse, twanging basslines. It's incredibly lovely, and importantly never really sounds like its been forcibly made to sound aged and weathered; it just does. Similarly cinematic, the blissful, fogged out warble on 'Lullaby Of Dustland' sounds like a Angelo Badalamenti score captured on a decayed 78 - another filtered elegy from a band who specialise in making their music sound like something from a romanticised past. Highly recommended.


26. Tomasz Bednarczyk - Let's Make Better Mistakes Tomorrow (12k)
Released on the almost godly experimental label 12k comes the third album from the awesomely named Pole Tomasz Bednarczyk. Arriving around the time fellow 12k label mates Pillowdriver and Seaworthy were receiving massive praise for their guitar drones and experiments Tomasz for me seemed to fade into the background, its only with more recent listens that i've realised quite how wrong i was to do let that happen. Let's Make Better Mistakes Tomorrow is a delicate affair that very rarely strays from single notes left to their own devices, expanding and sustaining amongst glitches and vinyl crackle, some would say its drone by numbers and i wouldn't argue, it is however, very well done.

What Boomkat Said :
After establishing his considerable talent on Room40 with the two albums Painting Sky Together and Summer Feelings, Polish electronic composer Tomasz Bednarczyk arrives at 12K with this wonderful new release. Recent entries into the 12K discography have made heavy use of conventional instrumentation - the Pillowdiver and Seaworthy releases taking guitar compositions as their starting point. Bednarczyk's new outing follows suit to some extent, utilising guitar and piano over the course of its ten tracks, but in this instance the instruments are far more deeply encoded within the Pole's electroacoustic soundworld. Stylistically you might pick up on influences from the likes of Stephan Mathieu, Tim Hecker and Janek Schaefer as the album unfolds; Bednarczyk pieces together electronically modified tones, environmental recordings and the kind of sonic artifacts you'd associate with the recording and playback processes (vinyl crackle, glitches etc) resulting in some spine-tinglingly effective moments. After a first half dominated by strident, often very crystalline electroacoustic threads, the album reaches a watershed at 'The Sketch', which features piano by Triosk's Adrian Klumpes and field recording by Sawako. The previously very outward-looking sonic landscape becomes introspective, embracing the sleepy grandeur of 'Kyoto' and the somnolent whirring of 'Little Spring' before arriving at the album's final destination, 'Night'. This last piece is another crackle-laden composition, this time calling upon a slow and wistful bass melody that loops its way towards a well-earned full-stop. Once its forty-three minutes are up, Let's Make Better Mistakes Tomorrow has proven itself to be an uncommonly well-rounded album, filled with ebullient micro-melodies and soulful textural exchanges - it's up there with the very best of 12K's releases in 2009. Although still very young, Bednarczyk has added to his reputation considerably with this brilliant disc.


27. Kelpe - Cambio Weschel (DC Recordings)
Kelpe's debut, Sea Inside Body is one of those timelessly great electonica records, one of those that Warp wished they'd released, one of those albums that comes with a sticker full of great reviews from every magazine under the sun. Cambio Weschel may not quite follow in its steps but it is business as usual, and maybe even funked up to the next level. Those who have become bored of electro since the NME's sudden interest will be more than happy with the deep pulses and grooves especially on The Blankout Agreenment and Close Cup Headroom. Boards of Canada in dance mood.

What Boomkat Said:
One of DC Recordings most popular artists returns with his third album for the label, combining funked IDM electronics and hiphop with a heavy touch of cosmic krautrock. Recent single 'The Blankout Agreement' gets matters underway with loaded hiphop drums and wheezing synth tones, before Voice Of The Seven Woods drummer Chris Walmsley makes an appearance with tumbling psilocybic rhythms mangled with Kelpe's electronics on 'Closed Cup Headroom'. 'Eye Candy Bath' takes a moment to relax into droning sitar-alike synthlines and tabla percussion with electro bass, while 'Wind In The Windows' and 'Caution Site' are comparable to the dainty vintage electronics of Ghost Box's Advisory Circle. For the bass fiends 'Low Frequency Fumble' makes a nod in the direction of Dubstep, sounding like a psyched-out Bass Clef, while 'Microscope Contents' could be a disco version of Harmonic 313. A joyfully colorful and enjoyable listen.


28. Dirac - Emphasis (Spekk)
Originally avoided this like the plague as a number of reviews mentioned that horrible word, "Jazz", however this is complete with delciate smoky crackles and as has only just occured to me via the medium of Last Fm, is very reminiscent of the quieter parts of Godspeed. In the first instance i think it will appeal more to the Fun Years types over Post Rock fans. Highly Recommended.

What Boomkat Said :
Viennese trio Dirac are made up of Peter Kutin, Daniel Lercher and Florian Kindlinger, who are all active participants in Austria's more experimental musical circles, working in the fields of sound installation and live electronics. Emphasis falls into the latter category, and is a shining example of what can be achieved by electroacoustic free improvisation. The album opens in a slow and ambiguous fashion, taking on a minimal, soaring feel during 'This Is Your 4am Wake-Up Call', which ticks in an Oval-inspired, skipping-like fashion. It's a rather gentle exercise, but a cooly meditative introduction to the sort of sounds that'll be explored in greater depth during what's yet to come. 'Augarten' is a lowercase affair, creaking, crackling and occasionally emitting loose, disloated notes from guitar and piano. It's quiet and relies on your close attention, but its marriage of musicianly understatement and sheer otherness rewards your full engagement. Next, 'Bantu' offers a more confirmedly musical piece, glistening with processed tuned percussion and woozy, elongated tones that take on a curiously jazzy feel. The final entry, 'A Rest In Tension' is a more simplified composition, embracing the kind of organically derived drone sounds you'd hear on a Tape or Mountains record. Recommended.



29. Voder - Ísland (Distance Recordings) download
Another fantastic piece of net label droney crackliness :) look out for a new release on Phantom Channel in the new year.

What the label Said:
Voder is Brighton, UK based musician Paul Nadin. This album is inspired by a recent trip to Iceland. Each track is an aural description of the various locations which he visited and made field recordings of; utilising dense resonant drones, creeping walls of noise and contemplative melodies to create a stunning album which we're pleased to have as part of the Distance catalogue.


30.Noveller - Paint on the Shadows (No Fun)
An excellent display of double neck guitar experimentation stretched over three wonderous tracks, female too.

What the label Said:
Mystery hides in the shadows, dreaming of colors that don't yet exist. Noveller is Sarah Lipstate. She is a young musician and filmmaker currently living in Bushwick, Brooklyn. When she is not busy working on Noveller music or making films she also plays guitar in the band Parts & Labor. Paint on the Shadows is her overdue debut LP full of beautiful floating guitar lines, breathtaking soundscapes and precise sculptures of spiraling sound created by Sarah using double-neck guitar, a tape player, and various electronic manipulations. Sitting comfortably between some of the most well done 'avant-garde' music and the new generation of new sound masters we have been bringing you lately. These are studio tracks recorded by Colin Martson and produced by Sarah Lipstate and Carlos Giffoni. Limited to 350 copies. Artwork by Caroline Contillo.

Honourable Mentions:
Caboladies - Crowded Out Memory
scott tuma & mike weis - taradiddle
Candy Claws - Two Airships/Exploder Falls - download
Christopher Hipgrave - Day
Clorinde - The Creative Listener
Clouwbeck - Wolfrahm
Color Cassette - Forever Sparrow
Elm - Nemcatacoa
Evan Miller - Transfigurations on Lap-Steel Guitar
Ian Hawgood - Before I Let The Sunshine Rot - download
Julianna Barwick - Florine
Last Days - The Safety Of The North
Lawrence English - A Colour For Autumn
Nathan Fake - Hard Islands
Nils Frahm - Wintermusik
Phill Niblock - Touch Strings
Rafael Anton Irisarri - Hopes and Past Desires
Small Color - In Light
Stephan Mathieu - The Key To The Kingdom
Talvihorros - Some Ambulance
The Field - Yesterday and Today
Tim Hecker - An Imaginary Country
Tom White - A Well-Known Phrase
Whitetree - Cloudland
Wixel - Clouds