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All too often something will arrive in the post with next to no information, the CD will be home made and the music will sound horrible. Occasionally something shows up with nearly no information but it sounds great. EA are from Poland and the disc that arrived is indeed difficult to decipher titles or record label. Thankfully, a plop into the computer brings up the CDDB entry. Although the entries of the database can be completely wrong, I'm gonna trust it this time.Each track is noted as an improvisation - the music is quite free-form dark electronic, yet it's much more interesting than much of the electronic stuff oozing from German Macintosh powerbooks. Perhaps the reason being is that this trio consists of a guitarist/bassist/violinist, an electronician devoted to field recordings and sound samplings along with a laptop fucker (for f/x and noise generating purposes). Their approach to music is to capture the moment without multitracks, overdubs or synthesizers. The sound includes (but is not limited to) all-ecompassing deep droning pulses, thunderous earth moving rumbles, foreground sounds perfectly treated to identify them separate from the otherness, and spoken samples (in Polish perhaps?) Nothing on this disc is too flat and the movements evolve and change over time, whipping up charming frenzied aural gems and quelling down, returning to the heavy low roar. While they look for distribution outside of Europe, their music can be obtained allegedly at www.terra.pl/ea, although I'm still trying to figure out the interface, myself.
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- Albums and Singles
I've reached the decision that Broadcast shine much brighter on their single and EP releases than their full-length albums. This year's The Sound Made By People has been overshadowed by the group's release of the four extended-play singles that have surrounded the release.
 
The latest single features five all-new tracks which span about 20 minutes. There's a certain balance contained herein between distorted noise and pretty melodies, apparent on many of the single releases yet missing from the album.
On Extended Play Two, Broadcast do indeed let loose and show us what they're made of. If their albums were half as daring and captivating as their singles, I would be a greater fan. For now, I'll stick with the singles.
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Alison Goldfrapp has graced albums from Tricky,Orbital and Add N to (x), now teamed up with Will Gregory (a young filmscore enthusiast), John Parish (PJ Harvey) and Adrian Utley(Portishead), a debut CD has been released through Mute. With the aboveroster it's hard to get away from Portishead or film score comparisons,but Goldfrapp owes more inspiration from 40s jazz singers combined witha film noir enthusiasm. Open the CD and images strike up Twin Peakseeriness mixed with breathtaking natural beauty. The music can bedescribed somewhat like that, deep rich sounds with Alison's tendervoice (and whistling) gently layered on the top, echoing voices frombeyond the final resting points of some of the mid-20th Century's bestloved jazz singers. Gothic-jazz? Portis-Peaks? Franken-Sushi? Now I'mgetting giddy.
samples:
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- Christopher Anderson
- Albums and Singles
Each track as catchy and slightly off center as thenext, all of them single worthy or better. I had heard the song "TheMermaids Hotel" a few weeks back on a local college radio station andhave been humming the tune ever since, after only hearing it once. Nowafter scoring the full record, i'm about as happy as a kid at Christmasthat the whole album is as good, or better (I'll admit, some of theirpast records have been hit and miss). Even better yet, they're touringthe states, fulfilling my wish to see them before i die. It's thesimple things in life, you know.
samples:
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This music wasessentially the foundation of American minimalism (and influential uponthe subsequently influential Velvet Underground) and has until now gonelargely unheard and unreleased due to credit/ownership conflicts.Recorded live at Young and Zazeela's NYC loft on April 25th, 1965, "Dayof Niagra" is a single 31 minute piece that is unfortunately presentedhere in poor sound quality due to it being derived from amulti-generation tape. This is one reason Young was opposed to it'srelease by Table of the Elements. Cale and Conrad dominate with thecontinuos dueling drones of their respective viola and violin, so muchso that Maclise's hand percussion and Young and Zazeela's vocals areinaudible or inconsequential. The sound is tinny, dissonant and gratingwith a few recorder drop outs and it all comes to a mysteriously butmercifully abrupt end. The result, at least on this disc, is neitherdreamy or mesmerizing or even very interesting. The insert offers onlya very brief group bio and a few quotes from Cale and Conrad, which isvery disappointing considering all that could and should be said.Despite the intriguing and pioneering concepts being explored and thewelcome attempt to document a bit of musical history, one has to wonderif releasing inferior quality packages such as this one does anyone anygood. Hopefully Young will present better quality recordings for futurerelease so myself and others may make a more informed judgment on thismusic ...
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- Mark Weddle
- Albums and Singles
The 60+ year oldCzukay has been busy as of late with a 2 disc live collaboration withDr. Walker of Air Liquide and 2 solo studio albums, all for the U.S.based Tone Casualties label. "La Luna" (The Moon, subtitled 'anelectronic night ceremony') is a single 47 minute piece recorded livein the studio in 1996. Czukay uses his extensive cut-up skills to laydown a murky, Ovel-esque loop foundation to which he adds a metronomelike beat and sporadic fills, sonic textures, voices and the like. 18minutes later most everything drops out then it slowly rebuilds withglass bottle like percussion and waves of ambient sound and we're backon track by the 23rd minute. By the 30th minute it all drops off againand the vocals / spoken words of U-She debut with lines such as "laluna ... goddess of the moon". The 38th to 42nd minutes are the mostactive with percussion and noise stuff and the final few minutes bringit all to a close in a beat absent cloud. That's a long 47 minutes. I'mthoroughly unimpressed and utterly disappointed, especially consideringCzukay's background. Most of the sounds are generic and dull and whilethe piece as a whole does change over time, it fails to progress ordevelop much and remains lifeless. The lunar themes just seem sillyhere unlike, say, those of recent Coil records. "La Luna" simplydoesn't have the magic. And Tone Casualties - please, I'm begging you -hire someone with a sense of design to handle the artwork for futureinserts.
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