Twitter Action

My internet-radio show, Kill the Head, “airs” every Friday, 5 to 7:o0 p.m. (eastern), on Asheville Free Media.

Here’s the playlist for 06.18.2010.

Post to Twitter

My internet-radio show, Kill the Head, “airs” every Friday, 5 to 7:30 p.m. (eastern), on Asheville Free Media.

Listen here

ARTIST SONG ALBUM LABEL
James Ferraro “Wired Tribe” > “Digital Gods” > “Subculture 2090” Citrac Arbor
unknown artist “Reagent” Impairment (twelve-inch) 1XA
Sigha “Untitled#2” Rawww EP (twelve-inch) Hotflush Recordings
Jilt Van Moorst “Sublimation Ritual” Sublimination EP Caravan Recordings
Michael Stearns “Toto, I’ve a Feeling We’re Not in Kansas Anymore!” Planetary Unfolding Continuum Montage
Oneohtrix Point Never “Laser to Laser” Rifts No Fun Productions
Can “Quantum Physics” Soon Over Babaluma Mute/Spoon
Cluster “Rote Riki” Zuckerzeit Brain
Iasos “Rainbow Canyon” Inter-Dimensional Music Unity
Embryo “Abdul Malek” We Keep On BASF
Charlemagne Palestine “Duo Strumming for Two Harpsichords” (third excerpt) Continuous Sound Forms (Golden 2) Alga Marghen
Water “I It’s Iron Have” self-titled (a.k.a. Too Many People Not Enough Jobs WW3 is Coming To Fix Us But Good We’re Fucked Give Up) Nauscopy
Niellerade Fallibilisthorstar “Vidd” Hålrum SNSE
Basic Channel “Radiance II” (edit) BCD Basic Channel
Traversable Wormhole “Universal Time” Traversable Wormhole Vol. 6 (twelve-inch) Traversable Wormhole
Demdike Stare “Ghostly Hardware” self-titled (twelve-inch) Demdike Stare
Mood music during talking breaks: Axolotl – self-titled CD (Psych-O-Path Records)

Post to Twitter

My internet-radio show, Kill the Head, “airs” every Friday, 5 to 7:30 p.m. (eastern), on Asheville Free Media.

Listen here

ARTIST SONG ALBUM LABEL
Daniel Bell “Bleep” Blip, Blurp, Bleep: The Music Of Daniel Bell Logistic Records
Emptyset “Beyond” self-titled Caravan Recordings
Alva Noto “m 07” Transform Mille Plateaux
Forcefield “Air Tube” Condominium n/a
Electricity featuring Fire Eater “Indlela Yababi” Extreme Music From Africa Susan Lawly
Madagascar – The Mahafaly (Festival Drumming) n/a African and Afro-American Drums Ethnic Folkways Library
Hiran Ny Tanoran Ny “Oay Lahy E” Mata La Pena: A Compilation of International Music Mississippi Records
Hum of the Druid “Raising the New Wing” “Raising the New Wing” / “Braided Industry” (twelve-inch) SNSE
The Skaters untitled (track three) Pavilionous Miracles Of Circular Facet Dice Chocolate Monk
Kousokuya “The Omen” Ray Night 1991-1992 — Live Forced Exposure
To Live and Shave in L.A. “Nor Swollen-Bellied Comet Blown” The Wigmaker in Eighteenth-Century Williamsburg Menlo Park Recordings
Thomas Brinkmann “Walk With Me” Walk With Me (twelve-inch) Curle
Deutsch Amerikanische Freundschaft “Osten Währt Am Längsten” Die Kleinen Und Die Bosen Human Wrechords
Xex “Snga” Group: Xex The Smack Shire
Aloa “Deutsche Begugnung” self-titled Offers Musik Produktion
Primitive Calculators “I Can’t Stop It” self-titled Slow Drama / Au Go Go
Thomas Fehlmann “Bienenkönigin” Honigpumpe Kompakt
Onur Özer “Traumbone” Kasmir Vakant
Female “Via Hate” Gayscene (twelve-inch split with Regis) Downwards
Mood music during talking breaks: Hive Mind – Sand Beasts CD (Chondritic Sound /  PACrec / Troniks)

Post to Twitter

My internet-radio show, Kill the Head, “airs” every Friday, 5 to 7 p.m. (eastern), on Asheville Free Media.

ARTIST SONG ALBUM LABEL
Federal Roosters (a.k.a. Lance Romance) “Bee Careful of Da Beez” Session on Devils Day (cassette) MassDist
The Wooden Cupboard “Spirits and Retribution” Animals Speak the Spirit Tongue Lattajjaa
Jeff Mills “To Protect And Obey” The Defender Axis
Viki untitled (track one) Triple X (cassette) Animal Disguise Recordings
Woozlebug “Swamp Gas Air Force” Mullicana Morning Frost Recordings
Men/Eject “Draw” I Hate the Pop Group Vertical Slum Records
The Goslings “Croatan” Grandeur of Hair Archive
Pontiak “Headless Conference” Maker Thrill Jockey
Ben Klock “Red Alert” Tracks From 07 Deeply Rooted House
Milton Bradley “Don’t Phonk” Dystopian Vision Do Not Resist The Beat!
Bass Patrol “Your Daddy Baby Got Beef” Your Daddy Baby Got Beef Joey Boy
n/a “Cpak Sa” Bass Etc. n/a
All Leather “Audios Mi Amoebas” Hung Like A Horse Dim Mak Records / Downtown Music
Enema Syringe “Jag Vill Bara Sla Dig” Visa Mig Vagen Till Mellringe 1986-1988 UFO Mongo
Meat Slicer “Boiled Alive” self-titled SNSE
Wrnlrd “Haxanic Stairway” Oneiromantical War Flingco Sound System
Razor “Violence Condoned” Shotgun Justice War On Music
Burnt By Sun “Beacon” Heart of Darkness Relapse
Septic Death “Negative Threat” A Time We’ll Remember Vol. 7 Lost And Found Records
Eloe Omoe “Shagreen” Marauders Animal Disguise Recordings
Slapp Happy “Me & Paravati” Acnalbasac Noom Recommended Records
Mood music during talking breaks: Thuja’s Pine Cone Temples (Strange Attractors Audio House)

Post to Twitter

(This record review originally appeared in Cleveland’s Scene magazine.)

emeraldsWhy name your disc Bullshit Boring Drone Band? Because Emeralds consists of three dudes who know they’re exploring the same sound that a zillion other bands are: the extended, free-form drone (think the Firestarter soundtrack, Eno’s Ambient series, or the modulating hum of your refrigerator… only really fuckin’ loud).

But Emeralds itself isn’t boring; its just starting to get its feet wet in experimental music. Employing guitar, synths, tapes, and electronics, the group produces crisp blue tones and serene washes of feedback. Played at low volume, this three-track disc could even lead new-age heads in meditation, which is kinda the problem. Live, Emeralds fortifies the pretty vibes with quaking, low frequencies, turning its gentle swoosh into dynamic, multilayered psychedelia. This means Emerald — much like Growing before it — needs to devise a recording method for bottling that live energy. It’s a challenge that this young and adventurous trio should be up for.

Post to Twitter

(This record review originally appeared in the SF Weekly.)

vodka-soapNo Bay Area outfit is more mind-fuck cozmic than the duo of Spencer Clark and James Ferraro, the Skaters. But regardless of just how out there among the stars and nebulae — or in here (as my index finger touches the space between my eyes) — their lo-fi psychedelic drones travel, the fact that Ferraro and Clark are physically creating them is the grounding force felt at the core of every single release (more than 20 since 2003). In contrast, when flying solo as Vodka Soap, Clark basically utilizes the same instrumentation and processes as that of the Skaters (voice, synths, tapes, percussion, and boom box), but he tends to erase his bodily presence from the recordings. This leaves Un Chand Pyramdelier’s kaleidoscopic phantoms of fog, crystal, and stained glass to meditatively reflect ‘n’ refract sound the way a soft breeze gently knocks about the chimes hanging from the neighbor’s tree. It’s some heady stuff for sure.

Post to Twitter

(This feature originally appeared in the SF Weekly.)

the-skaters“How do you think your individual sounds blend?” I ask Spencer Clark and James Ferraro as we sit facing one another in the cluttered living room of their flat at 25th and South Van Ness. All around us are precariously piled stacks of records, books, dusty video cameras, Radio Shack electronics, and current projects: mock-ups of upcoming cover art, half-finished collages, photographs, etc. This pad isn’t a home, it’s a workshop.

“We are reacting to each other’s projections of our inner images,” Ferraro replies, skipping lightly over his words, as if he’s not quite comfortable with the language he’s using. A couple of his fingers playfully twist a small patch of his Afro.

Like me, Ferraro grew up in a low-income home in upstate New York, is of Italian descent, and wears a battered brown corduroy sports coat. Unlike me, he is half African-American. Ferraro continues, “Spencer will have something in his mind, and it manifests itself in the sound that he’s making. So my images are getting affected by his images. We are reacting off each other’s projection.”

“We are both reacting off ourselves,” Clark anxiously adds. Tall, skinny, and full of nervous energy, Clark (who apologized for wearing dirty pants because pants his size are difficult to find and he only owns three pairs) is always anxious and always up for good conversation. “We are both kind of playing separately, but there are two parts to it. We are both very much involved in our own universes, but our own universes have been shaped by each other. And even if that wasn’t the case, we still have two levels of reactions: the ones with ourselves and then with each other.”

Over the past three years, since meeting at an all-day improvisational noise jam when they both called San Diego home, Ferraro and Clark have developed, as you can plainly read, an intuitive, radically abstruse language when talking about their music and visual art, informed, in parts, by mysticism and surrealism, in which subjective states of mind and the objective world are intentionally confused to the extent that both fuse into a single, undivided whole.

“With music, as I try to do with visual art,” Clark lays out, exhibiting an honest passion for his artwork, “I try to create these phenomena that exist in this world and in an imaginary world at the same time.” Clark, who is an academically trained photographer, will go on to mention his favorite artist, the Chilean surrealist Roberto Matta, saying, “He was an architect, and he started to think about the inside and the outside at the same time.”

As the duo known as the Skaters and as solo artists, Ferraro and Clark, who are flat broke and currently without phone or Internet service, spend most of their days and late nights not working but huddled in their bedrooms jamming, obsessively exploring through the use of nontraditional instrumentation and the creation of abstract sound “the inside and the outside at the same time,” and in the process experiencing what Ferraro calls “private imaginations.”

The end result is not what you would expect — i.e., a pretentious, painfully dry avant-garde free-noise. Quite the opposite, it’s a totally out there, vocal-dominated psychedelia, based, structurally speaking, on the open-ended drone heard in industrial music, minimalism, experimental electronics, folk, world music, and free jazz. And, like the best free jazz — the early, fiery stuff: Trane, Ayler, Sanders — the Skaters’ noise-drenched cosmic soul is driven by their need to, in the words of Ferraro, “grasp something that is beyond what you can verbalize.”

“I experienced a ton of academic music that is uncomfortable for people to play,” Clark tells me, recalling the time he spent living in Germany, just after graduating from college. “The musicians were uncomfortable and the crowd was uncomfortable. I remember coming back and wanting to do something different. I wanted music to be something expressive. At the same time, I heard recordings by Archie Shepp and John Coltrane. It was very inspiring music.”

***

Clark and Ferraro record their jams onto cassettes (sometimes old, warped cassettes found in a box on the streets), which they then turn into CD-Rs or even more cassettes. Either way, their releases, featuring lo-fi, black-and-white collage work for cover art, are ultralimited artifacts. No more than maybe 100 exist of each release.

Making up for this scarcity, Ferraro and Clark have produced, just within the past 18 months, no fewer than nine CD-Rs, seven cassettes, and one LP either as the Skaters or as solo artists. For the latter, Ferraro employs several aliases: the Wooden Cupboard, Teohihuacan, Newage Panther Mystique, Acideagle. Vodka Soap is Clark’s lone pseudonym. The Skaters’ profound fascination with the metaphysical as well as altered states of being pervades these cryptic nomenclatures, but is reflected in the titles of their group and solo efforts even more so: Crowned Purple Gowns, Mountain of Signs, Animals Speak the Spirit Tongue, Pavilinous Miracles of Circular Facet Dice (pictured above left), and Reactionary Meditations Within the Chandelier of Our Head.

Despite digesting all these titles — some more than others — I am still in the dark regarding the Skaters’ actual recording process, which is one of their music’s key intrigues. At no point do these swirling dreamscapes offer the listener a peek behind the curtain. Their origins are forever obscured, giving them a shadowy air, as well as prompting me to ask Ferraro to please tip the Skaters’ hand.

“At first, I was doing more textures. Now it’s more just vocals,” is all I get from the guy as he leans back in his chair cradling a bottle of wine between his legs. He may appear aloof, but he’s not. Ferraro, whose huge prankster smile reveals a missing tooth, loves to goof around and is generous to boot. (This is his wine I’m drinking.) However, a part of him always seems to be elsewhere; as he says later in the night, “It’s important for me to be in a very imaginative world. I just kind of enjoy being in that world by myself.” Ferraro’s “imaginative world” fully reveals itself in his solo work. On the Wooden Cupboard’s Boiling the Animal in the Sky, for example, the Skaters’ typical use of writhing feedback is downgraded to a warble ‘n’ buzz, which Ferraro enlists as a backdrop for his tribal, Velvet Underground-like percussion, chiming guitar, and choked, on-the-verge-of-weeping doo-wop falsetto. Stringing together scraps of simple folk melodies, Ferraro sounds like a child who, in the dead of night, is seized with ecstatic tension because his mind has stumbled upon something that just totally overwhelms his being. He wants to scream, but he can’t for fear he’ll wake up his parents.

As for Clark: “I first got a keyboard, but I didn’t like it,” he offers. Of the two, it’s Clark who is more traditionally articulate, as well as more conceptual in his thinking, which makes sense after listening to a copy of his Shadow-watcher Levitations cassette, a chilly industrial free-blues. “So I went to Wal-Mart and got a karaoke machine,” he continues. “With that I thought I could create feedback with the microphone. Then I started to try and match up my voice with the tones, because I am always trying to confuse two different things, two different sounds, and try to make them one.”

I caught a glimpse of that karaoke machine earlier tonight, when I walked past the first bedroom just off the hallway. It was surrounded by an assortment of half-broken gear strewn across the floor: wires, microphones, a battered guitar, thrift-store hand percussion, and a boombox (which I believe is what these two musicians use for recording their music).

The chaotic setup looked essentially like the Skaters’ live array. Kneeling like Muslims praying toward Mecca, Ferraro and Clark, with their backs to the audience, cup their microphones so closely to their mouths they might as well be eating them. This produces distortion, which the Skaters manipulate through breath control and a range of primal wails and spiritual ululations, in effect creating an organically undulating wall of fuzz. And if this starts building into something “truly glorious” (as Ferraro puts it), then both the Skaters’ asses begin gently dry-humping in rhythm, as if Wilhelm Reich’s orgone energy is bubbling up through their respective bodies (which it probably is). However, Clark is adamant to point out that the full-bodied, ritualistic jams heard at the Skaters’ performances are a different beast from the sounds captured on their cassettes.

“I don’t want recordings of our live shows,” Clark states, growing steadily more animated. He was dead tired when I arrived, but now he’s ready for a beer at the Phone Booth, which is just around the corner from here. “There is a very specific sound that James and I are interested in having. It’s a tape sound. If someone were to mike us properly and capture the space between the sounds, then that would conflict with what we are going for. We want the tape heavily submerged in the sound where there are confusing things happening.”

“We don’t want it recorded pristinely,” Ferraro echoes, adding an alchemical flavor to his explanation. “The tape is a good way of obscuring that and making something that sounds like a landscape in your mind. That’s pretty much why we’ve decided to record on tape.”

I usually find gear talk to be a total bore, but the Skaters’ utterly unique manipulation of the sloppy imperfections intrinsic to their battered instrumentation, cassette “technology,” and shoddy boombox allows them to dissolve Clark’s “space between the sounds” (i.e., reality perceived as an objective, three-dimensional space). Their wailing vocals, sparse percussion, and accompanying tape hiss jell, transforming into these soulful psychedelic soundscapes, which are startlingly accurate sonic representations of the dreamy existences the Skaters have developed through an incessant roaming of the imagination and exploration of “the inside and the outside at the same time” on a daily basis.

“We don’t look at this stuff too musically,” Clark reveals, looking over at Ferraro. “This is more like experience.”

“I think a lot of folks make music just to make music,” Ferraro offers. “That’s fine. But I’m not into it. I prefer making music that’s grasping for something that is indescribable.

Post to Twitter

(These are my contributions to the East Bay Express’ best-local-albums-of-2005 feature.)

The Skygreen Leopards
Life and Love in Sparrow’s Meadow

Not since Sir Douglas Quintet’s Mendocino or David Crosby’s If Only I Could Remember My Name has a Bay Area group released a perfect soundtrack for getting high and getting lost in nature. Life and Love in Sparrow’s Meadow is folksy, drunk-on-nature psych-pop sending me into the same woozy haze as a Sunday spent traversing Mount Diablo, which is why my mind was totally blown when I first heard Leopards vocalist Glenn Donaldson croon, in a choked, time-halting falsetto, Sunday on Mount Diablo…
(Jagjaguwar)

Inca Ore
Inca Ore

For most of ’05, Eva Saelens (aka Inca Ore) resided at Grandma’s House, an Oakland warehouse and performance space full of underground freaks, wherein she recorded two vocal-based “noise” discs that collected multilayered, indie/New-Age vocal meditations. Now the first disc, Brute Nature vs. Wild Magic, was cool, but the second self-titled offering is truly epic: a droning exploration of how the human voice can be crafted to sound like all kinds of purring machinery.
(Collective JYRK)

The Wooden Cupboard
Boiling the Animal in the Sky

To choose a single disc from the handful released this year by the Skaters (as well as the SF duo’s interrelated side projects) is nigh impossible. But if you insist, the Wooden Cupboard is the solo tag for Skater-man James Ferraro, and Boiling the Animal in the Sky is his Eastern-flavored, static-soaked dream wherein the trembling white noise of the Velvet Underground melts into the sacred soul of Curtis Mayfield.
(Pseudo Arcana)

Post to Twitter

(This record review originally appeared in the SF Weekly.)

ferraroI keep thinking this disc is some old, warped cassette of ritualistic worship music created by an esoteric California fertility cult that spent the mid-’70s organically fusing classical Indian ragas, the solemn chants of a Tibetan tantric choir, Velvet Underground-inspired experimentation with lo-fi tape hiss, and ghostly, falsetto-rich doo-wop balladry from the mid-’50s. However! I do know who made this sublime batch of cosmic soul-noise — the Wooden Cupboard (a pseudonym employed by James Ferraro, Mission denizen and one-half of the psych-noise duo the Skaters). From what I’ve learned, Ferraro enters his bedroom with a tattered array of gear (guitar, minisynth, microphone, tapes, hand-held percussion, four-track recorder, etc.) and, after several hours, exits feeling rather stunned — coming down from what can be described as an “ecstatic spiritual state.” Now, I have no idea if you and I possess spirits, but I can tell you that the droning ululations of Ferraro do, indeed, speak to that side of me I would label “religious.” This is religious music — strange, gloriously shimmering religious music — proof that pop, underground noise, and Eastern mysticism can be fused into a profoundly meditative listening experience.

Post to Twitter

(This record review originally appeared in the SF Weekly.)

the-skatersAs a tool for deep-sonic exploration, the human voice doesn’t see much action these days. Sure, it’s one of the last human confections still sweetening up most pop music (indie and mainstream). But for musicians operating on American culture’s more expressively extreme outer fringes, the human voice typically plays a supporting role (at best) to electronics, guitars, laptops, etc. Renegades, however, are always out there. Take S.F. duo (sometimes trio) the Skaters. Within their universe of sound, the human voice is the omnipresent life force powering EVERYTHING. Of course, it’s a realization hard-earned for the listener, because this LP, Dark Rye Bread, is as statically charged — with walls of droning feedback and crackling distortion — as just about any electronic-noise freakout extant. However, reckless noise this isn’t, not by a long shot. After several concentrated listenings, these six pieces for voice mutate into brilliant sunbursts dispersing waves of shamanic howls, cat-horny ululations, and reverberating growls that, through the Skaters’ thoughtful use of controlled breathing, fuse with squealing minisynths and rattling hand percussion. This ecstatic cacophony might sound as loud as industrial music, but it’s also as profoundly moving and archetypal as Lorca’s duende echoing through the mountains of Andalusia.

Post to Twitter

© 2010 Justin F. Farrar Suffusion WordPress theme by Sayontan Sinha

Twitter links powered by Tweet This v1.7.1, a WordPress plugin for Twitter.