Archive for the 'internet listening' Category

Phoning It In — BSR’s Call-In Live Performance Radio Program

Phoning It In is BSR/88.1FM’s (Providence, RI) quaint live performance call-in radio program — broadcasting for nearly three and a half years.  The programs’s 345 shows have featured an exhausting lineup of artists, from resptected genre luminaries like John Darnielle – The Mountain Goat’s affinity for lo-fidelity music (ala Nine Black Poppies or the The Coroner’s Gambit) is the allegedly the impetus for the program’s very existence — to microrelease cd and cassette experimental artists like (VxPxC) and Steven R. Smith.

“lo-fi is the right fi: dj talksonthephone calls up all your favorite musicians for live over-the-phone performances and awkward conversation.”

Phoning It In is a radio program whose flagship show is broadcast on 88.1fm BSR in Providence, RI (where it’s hosted by Gabe) and whose satellite show is broadcast on 88.1fm WMBR in Cambridge, MA (where it’s hosted by Nadav). You can listen to every single past show from both stations in the Archives. — about it

More interesting than the actual music performed, in many cases, are the awkward exchanges between host and guest.  For obvious reasons, the artist is in a difficult situation, juggling the phone for performances and scrambling after a set into playful banter.  Phone conversations between strangers are often awkward to begin with, but the circumstances magnify that effect. It’s this unexpected element that really captures the spirit of the lo-fidelity aesthetic, better than simple phone crackle or chopped sound-levels ever could.  Diane Cluck (myspace), the show’s latest guest, is the best example of that unexpected, disarming nature of the concept.

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Cluck’s performance is also notable for the new, developing material she shared.  Since her releases on Important Records (Oh Vanille/Ova Nil and Macy’s Day Bird / Black With Green Leaves), and 2006’s Monarcana, we’ve heard nothing new from Cluck.  I’ve only had a chance to listen to a few other shows, but have been throughly impressed thusfar.

Considering the show’s longevity, I expect plenty of my peers have been enjoying this show for some time.  Still, there may be people out there who don’t know about this show yet, and would could managed to get excited about Diane Cluck or Avarus exclusives.

recommendations – Diane Cluck, Micah Blue Smaldone, (VxPxC)Ilya MonosovTurner CodyMudboy & Yomul YukCaethuaLarkin GrimmNatural Snow BuildingsDialing InMatt Valentine & Erika ElderMarissa NadlerTara Jane ONeilExcepterJana HunterDaniel Higgs (Lungfish)AvarusElephant MicahJacob SmigelFursaxaDavenportMike TamburoCastanetsSteven R. Smith (Hala Strana)Daniel JohnstonThanksgiving (Adrian Orange)Mount EerieThe Mountain Goats

Ignatz live session at WFMU

Brian Turner broadcast a short eight minute Ignatz live session last week, recorded in the WFMU studios.  Tragically, I missed Ignatz playing live just last weekend in NYC.  Celebrate Psi’s Ignatz release, I Will Soothe My Eye To Feast It With A Sight of Beauty, is a favorite of mine.  Last year’s Quiet as Mice, though I haven’t been able to enjoy is as thoroughly, was certainly a highlight of 2007. Turner’s fellow WFMU dj Fabio (my favorite at the station) even selected the cassette release for his year-end best-of list.

Oddly enough, this FMU performance sounds unlike most of what I’ve heard from Ignatz.  Last year’s album, II, released on Kraak, is the best example of the sound Bram Devens developed for Ignatz (stream II & Ignatz @ last.fm).  Steven R. Smith and Stefan Neville/Pumice obsessives like myself likely found themselves instantly enamored with the dingy lo-fi Ignatz ditties.  This latest recording, completely instrumental, sounds to be a bit of a departure.  The long, speculative drone piece sounds more like a Peter Wright recording than what I expect from Ignatz.  Devens’ rubbery lo-fi vocals were always a highlight of his work, but are completely absent on this FMU session.

Of course, there’s no better place to experiment and modify your sound than on the road and during radio live sessions.  Svarte Greiner, Elegi and Peter Wright are the best comparisons to this live recording I can conjure at the moment.  Ambient leanings, and creepy atmospherics could be an exciting addition to Devens formula.  I look forward to seeing whether his experimentation here is featured on a future proper release.


WFMU’s Brian Turner from 6/10/2008
(popup/8min)

photo courtesy of flickr user wsogmm, used under CC license

(h/t kraak)

Everyone loves handouts; Room40 & For Barry Ray’s John Chantler do it right

Falling for a new artist or label, some uncovered nook of the DIY microlabel and avant world, can be a really exciting and rewarding experience in the DIY/microlabel/avant universe. Little is more frustrating then, when exploring these new and relatively unworn tracts of musical pasture, to find everything of interest already long out of print, with one of the 10 numbered discs available only at ebay, selling with a reserve price of three pints of human blood.  Just as frustrating can be the complete absence of sampler material at certain labels.  Fortunately, a growing number of avant and microlabel pioneers are finally hopping onto the internet’s world wide web, merging onto the information superhighway (pictured below) and providing abundant sampler material to anxious music consumers.

world wide web

For Barry Ray’s John Chantler has been utilizing last.fm’s streaming tools and label pages to great effect.  While their handmade tour cdr, Gabriella Says, was limited to only 42 copies and has long since sold out, John was thoughtful enough to upload the entire recording for streaming through last.fm.  As if that wasn’t enough, it seems FBR’s latest gorgeous ambient full length, New Days, is also available in its entirety streaming on last.fm, included alongside the bulk of Room40’s recent catalog.

For Barry Ray promo

Several other smaller artists appear to be following Room40’s splendid example, offering large portions of their newest releases for streaming at the site.  Wouter van Veldhoven’s latest, a playful, creaking, spindle of sunny, ambient sound entitled ‘four simple songs for five dead bumblebees‘, is another recent addition to a swelling catalog of albums already available for preview at last.fm.

With any luck, last.fm’s splendid streaming tools should end the myspace monopoly over those small labels & bands looking for free bandwidth and easy access to fans.  Hopefully, last.fm’s developers will recognize the site’s potential for artists and labels, and start providing RSS feeds of some sort for new album offerings, updates, and tour information.  The sooner I can swear off the rotting corpse that is myspace — along with its bloated, laggy design, its eye-bleeding ugliness, its dependable tackiness — the better.
For Barry RayGabriella Says

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Blaastaal; Experimental Collage Radio

SMASH WITH A TREE totaal, by Bert Lezy

No matter how much of my time I sink into musical explorations, no matter how exhaustive my searches, I always stumble across new musical territory on occasion that reminds me just how much wonderful music I’m regularly missing. Thanks to a brief, but stupendously helpful posting at the K-RAA-K blog a few weeks ago, I’ve sailed straight into some new territory, an impressive expanse of previously unexplored musical terra icognita called Blaastaal. Blaastaal is Belgian duo Mik Prims and Bert Lezy’s monthly experimental, tape-fueled, kitchy radio broadcast/podcast. Generally (and it’s difficult to generalize), blaastaal sounds like surrealist musical painting in pointillism. From a distance, the show takes the impression of a colorful cacophonous mess, contradictory elements residing comfortably side-by-side. Up close, the layers of sound gain more clarity, drones, found sound, samples and analog burrs festooning a colorful and consistently mysterious core playlist (I hardly recognize a handful of names from each show). It’s difficult, usually impossible, to say with any certainty whether you’re experiencing a musician’s offering untouched, or soaked, stained and tainted in layers of tape-manipulated reinvention.

Describing music is usually as constructive as blowing on a cup of steaming lava, so I’ve thrown together a quick mp3 mix highlighting some favorite moments from recent shows. The static you’ll hear periodically divides the selections, serving as a sort of audio ellipsis. I assure you I’m doing little justice to the show, and it could only really be fully appreciated as originally presented, but alas, here is the sample nonetheless:

 
icon for podpress  blaastaal (excerpts from 12nov & 29gokto) [13:02m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (172)

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