Monthly Recommendations: January 2020

Spine Readers – Recorded Instruments

Spine Readers coalesced through the dismemberment of the great prog band Illogicians, which is already a promising start, if you ask me! Then, the band’s new hive mind decided to experiment with various song structures and ideas, going experimental with the progressive rock genre. The result is an astonishing album of genre-hopping madness that doesn’t take itself seriously at all!

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Ekmeles – A Howl, that Was Also a Prayer (New Focus)

What a mind-blowing record this is! The Ekmeles vocal ensemble recorded commissioned works by microtonal aficionados and contemporary classical composers Taylor Brook and Christopher Trapani as well as Erin Gee, who explores the boundaries of vocal technique and corporeal rhythm. The visions of the three composers come into life on this album, and it’s as beautiful to music explorers as it’s repulsive to others. A truly fantastic phenomenon!

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Jeremy Rose and the Earshift Orchestra – Iron in the Blood (Earshift)

Iron in the Blood is a musical adaptation of Robert Hughes’s The Fatal Shore, which describes the horror of Australia’s inception. As such, the orchestral suite is harrowing and poignant in a myriad ways. Especially efficient are the spoken word passages exposing to us listeners the seed of every particular composition: what they represent, what they hope to convey. Moreover, not only is it an incredibly enthralling experience, it doubles as a marvellous educational capsule on the history of Australia, for those unfamiliar with it.

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16-17 – Phantom Limb (Trost)

Phantom Limb stems from an instrumental recording from 1995 of Naked City-esque noise jazz, to which was superposed a vocal recording in 2018! The result is something that’s at the same time straight out of the nineties and right at home in the twenties’ contemporary music scene. It’s noisy, it’s aggressive, it’s hectic, and it’s all the more beautiful for it!

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Victory over the Sun – A Tessitura of Transfiguration

A Tessitura of Transfiguration is the latest effort from Portland-based avant-garde black metal artist Victory over the Sun. The album’s intricate compositions truly shine among those of other bands of the genre, and make for an enthralling time where your interest is piqued and maintained all throughout. Fantastic album!

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Tiny Planet – Tiny Planet

Nothing kicks off the year quite like a Panzerballett-lite! While the compositions on the Seattle band’s self-titled debut aren’t near as intellectually strenuous as the jazz-metal legends’ albums, it shows a great deal of promise and more than enough music wankery to have your fill. Amidst the various humorous and light-hearted songs even lies a well-known jazz standard mashup as Panzerballett covers, or reinterpretations. It’s a really fun album that’s only too short (yes, even the deluxe version!)

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Abacaxi – 2

Abacaxi is an experimental trio from Paris playing noisy improvised pieces blurring the lines between jazz and rock. On their second release, we get seven tracks hopping from drone, noise, and minimalism to hectic percussive jazz and highly distorted and dissonant rock music. Not for the faint of hearts, but, if you’re reading this, you’re probably not.

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Nero di Marte – Immoto (Season of Mist)

Italy’s Nero di Marte is finally back, long after their idolized sophomore, Derivae. Immoto is a stellar follow-up, crushingly heavy and atmospheric, it embarks you on a long, dark, and twisted journey filled with terrors. I couldn’t ask for more!

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Starfruit – Wild West Combat

Starfruit is an avant-garde pop music band from Texas that includes a lot of cool people, including saxophonist Garrett Wingfield, who we already covered for his Octopod project. Wild West Combat is highly energetic and eclectic, it’s weird and frightening, perhaps a little exhausting, but that’s all that makes it unique and fun and truly out there.

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On February 2 2020, this entry was posted.