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Luke Vibert, "Amen Andrews vs Spac Hand Luke"

In the face of diminishing returns from his midtempo/ downtempo releases for Warp, Ninja Tune, and Planet Mu, Luke Vibert's latest for Rephlex showcases his boldest material this century, suggesting that there may yet be some more good ideas up this maturing musician's rumpled sleeve.

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10237 Hits

Isabelle Antena, "On a Warm Summer Night (Tous mes Caprices)" / "L'Alphabet du Plaisir"

These two albums by Isabelle Antena show how easy it is for an artist to lose everything that makes them interesting. On a Warm Summer Night (Tous mes Caprices) is an artifact from a time best forgotten while L’Alphabet du Plaisir, the 'best of' compilation, also contains a lot of stinkers but also enough good pieces that show that Antena wasn’t always crap.
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8250 Hits

Robert Pollard, "Normal Happiness"

Robert Pollard’s second solo album of 2006 is a mixed bag of pop gems and forgettable tunes that betray an inconsistency of effort. While it’s the sort of thing I expect from one of his numerous side projects, that one of his so-called major releases is so scattershot can only be considered a disappointment.

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7323 Hits

Mahogany, "Connectivity!"

Gearheads can be counted on to make a fantastic sounding record, however, unfortunately it is commonly difficult for gearheads to compose compelling enough songs to turn a good album into something fantastic enough to match the production.
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10788 Hits

To Live and Shave in L.A., "Horóscopo: Sanatorio de Molière"

Pretentious art projects fail mostly on one level: they pretend that their conceits alone will win them accolades. The title of this recording and the description it has on Blossoming Noise's Web site refer to Jean Baptiste Poquelin Molière and a comedy he wrote that was censored from public performance for a period of time. While it doesn't sound very intriguing to me to begin with, the time travel crap added doesn't help, nor does the relatively lame music.
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12812 Hits

Failing Lights, "Black Breath"

Mike Connolly’s Failing Lights project has been pretty hit-and-miss to date, maybe more miss than hit if truth be told. Some of the material’s been known to sit in a bleak rut for ten minutes at a time, gathering little more than bedsores and buboes. This is a much more active and interesting listen, taking the wrecked ambient avenue into more together territory.

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10332 Hits

Park Attack, "Half Past Human"

Armed with dissonant guitars and disheveled rhythms, Glasgow’s Park Attack stagger from the murk to spread discord at every opportunity on this incendiary album.
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6395 Hits

Boduf Songs, "Lion Devours the Sun"

The cover art of Mathew Sweet's second Boduf Songs release for Kranky hints that this could be a sequel. The design is of a similar style, but the flowers and people of the old Victorian prints are replaced with more foreboding images.  Follow a trail of bread crumbs down a shadowy path into the woods depicted on the cover, and there's that scary thrill of being enveloped by trees, not knowing what will be encountered.  The air is so fresh, the ground so soft, but once inside, there are serpents, flies, and poison.
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7212 Hits

American Band, "American Band's First Album"

I think I'll be forgiven if the first thing that came to my mind when receiving this album was Grand Funk Railroad. Such an association may seem inconsequential, but given titles like "First Time in Heels" and "Terrified," it's hard to imagine the band's name doesn't speak of the members' (perhaps twisted and cynical) attitudes and dispositions.
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9322 Hits

This Song Is a Mess But So Am I, "Marble Mouth"

This latest EP from Freddie Ruppert, aka This Song Is a Mess But So Am I, is captivating from the beginning with its deconstructed beats, rants, and an abundance of distortion thrown in every direction.

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11423 Hits

Animal Collective, "Hollinndagain"

I thought I was in for an exciting trip with the first few minutes of this reissue. "I See You Pan" has a fascinating sound: like popcorn popping but all the kernels are made of stainless steel. It is noise but in a quiet and dynamic way. Alas my enjoyment of things wasn’t to last when the vocals and organ arrive.
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7264 Hits

Joanna Newsom, "Ys"

Joanna Newsom has abandoned the constraints of pop framework and has created a masterpiece for voice, harp, and orchestra. Ys consists of only five songs yet they stretch between seven and 17 minutes, all of which are extensive fairytales without choruses, refrains, and rarely a repeating motive.
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12353 Hits

"Imaginational Anthem Volume Two"

Not only can a Various Artist collection succeed thematically, but it can shine due to a curator's impeccable taste, and Imaginational Anthem 2 is a nearly flawless collection. Whereas the first volume featured acoustic guitarists from the past and present, this volume seems more forward-looking, slightly more focused on the newer guitarists who have their future stretching out in front of them.
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6797 Hits

"See You On the Moon: Songs for Kids of All Ages"

I strongly feel that Various Artist compilations are both fun and useful but it's always good to have some kind of underlying theme.  This one succeeds in concept, and a fantastic concept it is, but the contents end up taking it down a few notches.
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7570 Hits

"Four Studies for a Human Portrait: Tribute to Francis Bacon"

As tribute albums go, one dedicated to a painter is not something I’ve encountered before. Being a fan of Francis Bacon, I was very excited to hear this album but alas half of it is useless. The other half though is great although only one of the four tracks really nails the feeling that I get from looking at one of Bacon’s paintings.
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7176 Hits

Merzbow, "F.I.D."

Every time I think I’m done with Merzbow he releases an album that grabs me by the face and screams “LISTEN TO ME!” F.I.D. (standing for Fur Is Dead) is one of those albums. It is powerful and burly but surprisingly not as brain drilling as usual. The chaos normally unleashed is instead channelled into a droning, pulsing muscle. This is one of the most exciting Merzbow releases I’ve heard yet.
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8420 Hits

Fence Kitchen, "Beading the Rook"

Tim Harbeson’s debut as Fence Kitchen is a collection of recordings that originally accompanied both marionette and dance performances. Eerie and sly, these songs could just as easily be coming from the cracked windows of a carnival fun house.
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9129 Hits

Lycia, "The Burning Circle and Then Dust"

Silbur Records is reissuing some remastered versions of old Lycia records.  I don't think I would have had the taste for them in the mid '90s, and the intervening decade and extra knob-twiddling hasn't changed that.
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10025 Hits

Jandek, "Glasgow Monday"

You can either be wowed by the fact that this is his first piano/vocal LP in a series of 54 LPs, or by the fact that this is one of the outstanding releases of the year; this should be a compulsory listen either way. It’s unfortunate that the Jandek myth has swollen to such a ridiculous size that it’s coming between people wanting to hear the music. Those cranky elitist fucks that obsess over their reclusive prodigious artist are going to shit the bed over this double CD.

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10150 Hits

Bibio, "Hand Cranked"

Bibio's second release on Mush is a looped daydream of the English and Welsh countryside. It is a fluid affair with acoustic guitar, manipulated field recording, sparingly used fipple flutes and piano, tiny scraps of found sound, and—in a new departure for him—singing. As pleasingly blurred as a half-developed photograph or a landscape painting smudged by spots of rain, I only wish the elements of treatment and decay went further.
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7220 Hits