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A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Puscifer. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése
A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Puscifer. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése

2020. november 10., kedd

"Men" #108 ALTER.NATION.MiX - weekly favtraX 10-11-2020

 ALTER.NATION #108


Mourn, Population II, Christian Kjellvander, Elvis Costello, Puscifer, Eels, Trees Speak, Nothing, Dope Body, Tobacco, The Flower Kings, Mary Halvorson's Code Girl,King Khan,

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"M e n"



Raw Spanish indie rockers inspired by Patti Smith and PJ Harvey who formed while the members were still in their teens.
Inspired by legendarily raw artists like Throwing Muses and Patti Smith, Barcelona's Mourn started forging their fearless sound while they were in their teens.

Mourn - Self Worth / Men
On 2018's vibrant Sorpresa Familia, Mourn celebrated the end of the label issues that hampered them from playing and promoting their music. However, they're still frustrated by plenty of other things -- capitalism, the patriarchy, relationships -- and on Self Worth, they tackle them head-on. Somehow, they sound even more liberated on these songs than they did on Sorpresa Familia. Self Worth is filled with big guitars and even bigger harmonies... New drummer Victor Álvarez Ridao is a worthy addition to the group, providing a whomping backbeat for the chaos the rest of the band unleashes... Knowing your value and demanding respect are some of the most punk things women can do, and on Self Worth, Mourn do both with fiery eloquence.


Québécois heavy psych power trio with a sprawling and muscular sound.
Hailing from Montreal, Population II are a heavy psych power trio with a sprawling and muscular sound that traverses blues, rock, and sludgy metal. 

Population II - A La O Terre /Attraction
The first album by Montreal psychedelic explorers Population II sounds like transmissions from various locales in outer space, the trio recording and transmitting the drifting nothingness of endless expanses punctuated by the impact of comets, the blinding flash of exploding stars, and the beauty of distant galaxies. Singing drummer Pierre-Luc Gratton, guitarist/organist Tristan Lacombe, and bassist Sébastien Provençal are well versed in all forms of psychedelia, and it wouldn't be surprising to find out they had impressive collections of jazz and prog records at home too... Regardless of which avenue the band pursues, Lacombe's guitar playing is a thing of wonder. He coaxes all manner of sounds out of his instrument, ranging from gentle fills to raging shards of noise; whatever the song requires, he delivers... As it is, À la Ô Terre is merely superb and vaults the band onto level footing with fellow travelers like Dungen and Osees, which is pretty good company to be in on your initial voyage.


This Swedish singer and songwriter was also founder and frontman for the Loosegoats.
A Swedish-born singer and songwriter whose style is rooted in the indie Americana tradition, Christian Kjellvander's songs are marked by his resonant baritone and a poignant, often haunting tone.
Christian Kjellvander - About Love and Loving AgainBaptist Lodge (The Galaxy)
Recorded mostly live with drummer Per Nordmark and keyboardist Pelle Andersson, both of whom also appeared on Christian Kjellvander's previous two albums, About Love and Loving Again takes an even darker, more involving turn than predecessor Wild Hxmans... About Love and Loving Again opens with pulsing distortion and chaotic drumming on "Baptist Lodge (The Galaxy)," a reference to the remote, converted chapel where Kjellvander wrote and recorded much of his prior solo work until a divorce that informs parts of the album. The track eventually hits a middling stride sketched out by brushed snare, with measure-marking bass drum, sustained guitar strums, and humming synths backing Kjellvander's deep-voiced, subtly melodic recollections, including "It was what it was/And is what it is/And you know, you know it ain't ever coming back." Like most of the entries here, it eventually grows in volume and expansiveness, including a guitar solo that says a lot with limited notes, before falling away to expose eerie synth shimmers (and building back up again)...


The most evocative, innovative, and gifted songwriter since Bob Dylan, with songs that offered highly personal takes on love and politics.

Elvis Costello - Hey Clockface / No Flag
Hey Clockface arrived quickly on the heels of Look Now, but where that 2018 album seemed constructed as classicist Elvis Costello, drawing upon his strengths as a melodicist and the muscle of his regular backing band the Imposters, this 2020 affair feels as if it was designed to surprise... The spell is broken in a flurry of gnarled guitars that usher in "No Flag," a transition that establishes how Hey Clockface doesn't follow any particular path... It shows Costello's mastery of mood and storytelling, the kind of skill he's acquired over the course of a long career, but the key to Hey Clockface is that these techniques are applied to a record that's as restless as anything Costello made in his younger days.


The eclectic solo project of Tool and a Perfect Circle frontman Maynard James Keenan...
To close out the decade, Keenan revived both A Perfect Circle and Tool, which kept him busy into 2020. That year, along with longtime collaborators Carina Round and Mat Mitchell, Puscifer issued their fourth long-player, Existential Reckoning.

Puscifer - Existential ReckoningApocalyptical
Amidst societal strife and global pandemic, Maynard James Keenan returns with the most personal and human of his three main bands, reviving Puscifer with the group's fourth official full-length, Existential Reckoning. As the title suggests, this time things are more serious than usual and the core trio of Keenan, Carina Round, and Mat Mitchell crafted a politically charged takedown of the state of the world circa 2020... Drowning in dread, frustration, and anxiety, the journey falls between Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross' introspective film scores and something that could soundtrack The X-Files in another dimension. The band also pepper the effort with touches of Bowie's spaced-out glam, Kraftwerk's robotic detachment, and Reznor and Ross' work as Nine Inch Nails and How to Destroy Angels... As the beat pulses with mechanical precision and the bass slinks along, Keenan and Round trade vocals over a slowly building buzz that eventually bleeds into the album's central concept, "Apocalyptical." Atop guitar groove and industrial percussion, Keenan growls, "Be damned, dumb.../Go on, moron, ignore the evidence," morphing into a twisted dystopian version of a Willy Wonka Oompa Loompa. Without mincing words, he calls out a populace that's content with manipulation and disinformation, ignoring facts and reality to its own detriment...


Eclectic and eccentric pop music with flashes of rock and electronics, the brainchild of songwriter Mark Oliver Everett (aka E).

Eels - Earth to DoraAre You Fucking Your Ex
Mark Oliver Everett, the man who is the benevolent despot behind the Eels, is not adverse to change, and after the cool electronic surfaces and nervous lyrical viewpoint of 2018's The Deconstruction, he decided to take things in a different direction for his 13th album, 2020's Earth to Dora. By Everett's standards, Earth to Dora sounds optimistic, or at least he seems reasonably content most of the time, which is pretty impressive given the dour, edgy tone of much of his music... Of course, Everett probably isn't capable of making an album that's devoid of dark thoughts, and between the uncomfortable jealousy of "Are You Fucking Your Ex,"... For the Eels, those are not emotions to dismiss offhand. In an era of malaise, Eels are contrary enough to take a shot at feeling good, and Earth to Dora is well-written and imaginatively produced pop for grown-ups that reminds us Mark Oliver Everett is crazy enough to try anything once -- even feeling OK for a while.


Instrumental post-rock project that channels Cluster, This Heat, and Bitches Brew-era Miles Davis in their fragmented experiments.  Tucson, Arizona band Trees Speak looked to '70s Krautrock, synth drone, soundtrack music, and Bitches Brew-era Miles Davis for inspiration when putting together their dizzying experiments with electronics and song deconstruction.
Trees Speak - Shadow Forms / Tear Kisser
Trees Speak’s new album ‘Shadow Forms’ is a blend of 1970s German electronic and ‘motorik’ Krautrock instrumentals (think Harmonia, Can, Cluster, Popul Vuh, Neu!), haunting and powerful 1960s & 1970s soundtracks (think Italian prog-rock Goblin and John Carpenter horror movies, Morricone and existential John Barry spy movies), together with a New Nork no wave electronic synth and guitar analogue DIY-ness (think Suicide, anything on Soul Jazz’s New York Noise series or Eno's New York No Wave)!
...
Trees Speak are Daniel Martin Diaz and Damian Diaz from Tucson, Arizona and their music often draws on the cosmic night-time magic of Arizona’s natural desert landscapes. ‘Trees Speak’ relates to the idea of future technologies storing information and data in trees and plants - using them as hard drives – and the idea that Trees communicate collectively.


Gorgeous, intense, shoegaze and noise rock hybrid from former Horror Show member Dominic Palermo.
With a sound that splits the difference between heavy metal darkness and shimmering shoegaze beauty, the Philadelphia band Nothing revolves around the songs and vision of Domenic Palermo.

Nothing - Great Dismal / Ask the Rust
Nothing burst onto the shoegaze and metal scene with the brilliant Guilty of Everything, an album that perfectly juxtaposed the swooning nowhereness of the former with the pounding immediacy of the latter. It was such a perfect debut that the band struggled a bit to figure out exactly where to go from there. After a record that was too slick and melodic (Tired of Tomorrow) and one that set them back on the right track but neglected the metal side of the equation (Dance on the Blacktop), on 2020's The Great Dismal, they finally get the balance just right...


Noisy mesh of post-punk and dance rock from this Baltimore quartet.
A frenzied convergence of post-punk danceability and noise rock abrasiveness, Dope Body's sound straddles that fine line between a tightly packed dancefloor and a mosh pit.
... Crack a Light is by some counts the group's fourth proper studio album, and pushes their danceable art rock in new directions while keeping explosive energy at the center of every track. Album opener "Curve" blasts out of the gates with some familiar elements of the band's signature sound, with distorted bass, red-lined guitar, swaggering vocals, and hyperactive drumming all congealing into three minutes of tightly controlled chaos. ..It's one of the most exciting, complex, and captivating statements yet from a band already notorious for their electrifying turbulence.


Black Moth Super Rainbow member making similarly weird and warped synth-based music.
The frontman of psychedelic/electronic indie pop outfit Black Moth Super Rainbow, enigmatic Pennsylvania-based artist Tobacco casts summery spells with analog synths and tape machines.
... The track doesn't appear on subsequent full-length Hot, Wet & Sassy, but the album clearly takes the sparkling perfection and wide-eyed, fantasy-like optimism of '80s pop as a primary inspiration, even if the songs themselves are laced with grimy distortion and filled with self-loathing lyrics... This mood is quickly upset by the mutant talkbox groove of "Babysitter," which sports a Trent Reznor cameo and intentionally creepy lyrics, flitting between sleazy horror and odd displays of tenderness... Simultaneously one of Tobacco's most difficult and most accessible records, Hot, Wet & Sassy might seem contradictory, but it makes a strange sort of sense in the context of his catalog, and he manages to make his grotesque vision of pop music work.


Longstanding, innovative prog rock band from Sweden led by guitarist and composer Roine Stolt.
RetropolisSweden played a crucial part in the progressive rock revival of the 1990s, but amid dark-sounding King Crimson-influenced bands like Anekdoten and Anglagard, the positive-thinking Yes-enlightened act the Flower Kings felt almost out of place.
The Flower Kings - Islands / Serpentine
The COVID-19 pandemic has and will continue to inspire art of all stripes for years to come. Touring musicians have been forced to reckon with a situation that challenges their livelihoods and their ability to collaborate. The Flower Kings respond directly with Islands, a 90-minute, 21-song double album whose theme is isolation, loss, and the fear of disconnection. It is adorned with a "floating islands" cover painting from Roger Dean... "Serpentine" melds hoary prog and Zappa-esque fusion with a soulful soprano sax appearance from guest Rob Townsend... Its bright, warm production and inspired performances contradict the dire global circumstances surrounding its creation, rendering it all the more remarkable.


Hard-picking, harmonically advanced, nimble and swooping electric guitarist, a unique stylist among 21st century Brooklyn avant jazzers.
Mary Halvorson is a guitarist, ensemble leader, and composer who continually pushes against established musical categories with a signature instrumental sound and an aesthetic that evolves with each album and musical configuration.

Mary Halvorson's Code Girl - Artlessly Falling / Walls and Roses
Artlessly Falling is the second album by Mary Halvorson's Code Girl. Its core remains Halvorson on guitar; Tomas Fujiwara on drums; Amirtha Kidambi on vocals, and Michael Formanek on bass. Trumpeter Adam O'Farrill replaces Ambrose Akinmusire, and Maria Grand is added on tenor saxophone and voice. The date also includes three vocal cameos by Robert Wyatt... While "Walls and Roses" is introduced by Fujiwara's cymbals and Halvorson's fingerpicking under Wyatt's vocal; it erupts in under a minute as the guitarist unleashes distorted shredding. Kidambi calms her on the second stanza, but Halvorson shakes loose here, and between each succeeding exchanged stanza, as Fujiwara and Formanek brace her screaming lead lines...This remarkable album cannot be quantified, only experienced. Mary Halvorson's Code Girl are so mercurial in method and content -- and mystifying in execution -- they actually deserve their own genre.


From his work with mid-'90s underground garage bands to his work with Mark Sultan, King Khan gained a reputation as a wild and dangerous frontman
... Khan took a detour into jazz-inspired music on 2020's The Infinite Ones, which included appearances by longtime Sun Ra sidemen Marshall Allen and Knoel Scott, as well as John Convertino and Martin Wenk of Calexico.

King Khan - The Infinite Ones Theme Of Yahya
...The song "Theme of Yahya" was a song I wrote for Yahya El Majid who played for many years with the Arkestra. I met Yahya in 2005 during my first meeting with the Arkestra. He shared many stories with me about the teachings of Sun Ra, the discipline he learned from him, and the many adventures he had all over the world travelling with the Arkestra. He told me these tales while playing a chinese harp, jamming to the sounds of Tuvaan Throat Singers, while burning a large amount of frankincense and myrrh. When I recorded the song I had four harps panned in stereo to form a sonic flower. When Yahya heard the track he telephoned me and told me that he was really moved by the piece and was proud of me. Yahya had been struggling for years with cancer and sadly passed away late August, 2020. I did not realize that my tribute to him would become a requiem, and it means the world to me that he was able to hear his tribute before he left the planet...

Mourn, Population II, Christian Kjellvander,  Elvis Costello, Puscifer, Eels, Trees Speak, Nothing, Dope Body, Tobacco, The Flower Kings, Mary Halvorson's Code Girl, King Khan,



2020. május 10., vasárnap

"The Day The Politicians Died" > 085 ALTER.NATION weekly favtraX 10-05-2020

ALTER.NATION #85
The Magnetic Fields, Puscifer, Beauty Pill, Fiona Apple, Jehnny Beth, Aaron Parks, Chip Wickham, El Michels Affair, Modern Studies, Cass McCombs, Mark Lanegan, Masaki Batoh

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"The Day The Politicians Died"




Cabaret meets indie rock in the one-man-band known as singer-songwriter Stephin Merritt. The Magnetic Fields may be a bona fide band, but in most essential respects they are the project of studio wunderkind Stephin Merritt, who writes, produces, and (generally) sings all of the material. Merritt also plays many of the instruments, concocting a sort of indie pop-synth rock.
The Magnetic Fields - The Day The Politicians Died
As Pitchfork reports, Merritt recorded Quickies with all of his longtime Magnetic Fields bandmates — Sam Davol, Claudia Gonson, Shirley Simms, John Woo — as well as regular collaborators Daniel Handler, Chris Ewen, and Pinky Weitzman.
Lead single “The Day The Politicians Died” is a lovely and plangent two-minute piano ballad with a Claudia Gonson vocal. It imagines a hypothetical day in which all of our lawmakers suddenly left this mortal plane: “Billions laughed and no one cried the day the politicians died/ Celebrations spread worldwide the day the politicians died. Its video sets the song to ancient footage of victory celebrations.


While one might imagine Maynard James Keenan would have enough going on to keep him busy as a frontman with the groups Tool and A Perfect Circle, in 2007 he decided to record an album under yet another name: Puscifer.
Puscifer - Apocalyptical
Keenan’s Puscifer project has a new single called “Apocalyptical” out in the world, and they’re promising a new album, the follow-up to 2015’s Money Shot, coming this fall.
“Apocalyptical” is a tense, shivery synth-rocker that just sort of eats away at you over five and a half minutes. Over chilly bleeps and barely-there guitar, Keenan sings at the very top of his register, sharing vocals with bandmate Carina Round. The two of them deliver timely lyrics about watching the world end in front of you: “Go on, moron, ignore the evidence/ skid in to armageddon/ Tango apocalyptical.”


Genre-defying experimental pop band centered around songwriter and recording engineer Chad Clark. Originally formed from the ashes of angular D.C. punk band Smart Went Crazy, Beauty Pill transformed over the years from a post-rock band with unconventional instrumentation into a genre-defying project shaped around the songwriting and conceptual ideas of founding member Chad Clark. 
Beauty Pill - Please AdvisePardon Our Dust
...One of the first noticeable changes is the addition of new singer Erin Nelson, whose laser-guided vocals open the album's first song, "Pardon Our Dust." It's a jittery and nervous-feeling tune, and the combination of Nelson's bright vocals and steady horn lines provide a foil for the claustrophobic drums and electronics that make up the song's rhythmic core. It's the kind of contradictory arrangement that Beauty Pill have been perfecting since their earliest days, and Nelson's monotone vocal delivery is appropriately at odds with the paranoid lyrical content...


Acclaimed performer whose angst-ridden, piano-based songs represented a new stage in the female singer/songwriter movement.
Fiona Apple - Cosmonauts
The refrain that grounds her, ironically, is one that envisions the greatest of heights. “You and I will be like a couple of cosmonauts/Except with way more gravity than when we started off,” she murmurs, her intonation rising innocently at the end of each line. As the song charges towards its conclusion, Apple uses this chorus as a launchpad for a scorched-earth outpouring of emotion. Her repetition of the final refrain—“started off!”—builds to a throat-shredding scream before sinking to a hushed whisper and a contemplative hum. What’s left is the impression that she has pushed every fiber of her being through a juicer, gathered the shredded pulp into her hands, and offered it to the world. And that is a real gesture of love.


Best known as the compelling vocalist for Savages, Jehnny Beth is the performing name of French musician Camille Berthomier.
Jehnny Beth - Heroine
Savages frontwoman Jehnny Beth was supposed to release her debut solo album on Friday. That’s not happening anymore. Thanks to the coronavirus pandemic, To Love Is To Live has been delayed until June.
"When I think of this song, I think of Romy from the xx strangling my neck with her hands in the studio. She was trying to get me out of my shell lyrically, and there was so much resistance in me she lost her patience. The song was originally called “Heroism,” but I wasn’t happy because it was too generic. Flood was the first one to suggest to say “Heroine” instead of “Heroism.” Then I remember Johnny Hostile late at night in my hotel room in London saying “I don’t understand who you are singing about. Who is the Heroine? You ARE the Heroine.” The next morning, I arrived early in the studio and recorded my vocals adding “to be” to the chorus line: “All I want is TO BE a heroine.” Flood entered the studio at that moment and jumped in the air giving me the thumbs up through the window. I guess I’m telling this story because sometimes we look around for role models, and examples to follow, without realising that the answer can be hidden inside of us. I was afraid to be the Heroine of the song, but it took all the people around me to get me there."


Pianist Aaron Parks established himself as a presence on the American jazz scene via his membership in Terrence Blanchard's band. Eastern modalities, and atmospheric indie rock. Comfortable with the pyrotechnics of post-bop as well as sparse, sculpted, questioning tone poems and lithe melodies both minimal and maximal,
Aaron Parks - Little Big II: Dreams of a Mechanical Man / My Mistake
...Little Big II: Dreams of a Mechanical Man, though also a sequel to its immediate predecessor, opens up the group's intimate, synergistic communication to reflect the multi-lingual persona of a band making music in the moment... The quartet -- Parks on piano and keys, Greg Tuohey on guitar, David Ginyard on bass, and Tommy Crane on drums -- explore and cultivate a musical aesthetic. Little Big marry creative and improvised music to the groove-centered elements of electronica, indie pop, neo-psychedelia, and prog, but avoid the "fusion" trap entirely by weaving the various textures, influences, and colors into an original, holistic musical language... Their music comfortably transcends genre boundaries, and the quartet's sovereignty has been developed to the point where they can break the confines of primacy in any composition to discover its identity. When all is said and done, the album is simply an accurate reflection of the band's own persona.


Jazz saxophonist, flutist, producer, and composer who made his solo debut at 42 after his previous career in Manchester house and hip-hop scenes. Roger "Chip" Wickham is a saxophonist/flutist producer/composer who resides in Madrid, Doha in Qatar, and the U.K. His vintage-influenced, open, warm brand of modal jazz weaves together the great expansive traditions of the '60s and '70s...
Chip Wickham - Blue to Red / Double Cross
The title of British jazzman Chip Wickham's third long-player refers to one of his greatest fears: That climate change will cause our blue and verdant earth to become a red desert like the planet Mars... Wickham leaves his saxophones in their cases in favor of his flutes. The Coltrane reference may be sketched into his compositions, but it takes on physical characteristics through the playing of harpist Amanda Whiting who, like Wickham, is an alumnus of Matthew Halsall's Gondwana Orchestra. The other sidemen include session boss Dan Goldman on keys, drummer Jon Scott (Sons of Kemet), bassist Simon Houghton (Fingathing), and percussionist Rick Weedon (Mr. Scruff)... "Double Cross" is gritty and fast, with Goldman's Rhodes and synths both soloing and painting a fat, heavy, funky backdrop. Scott's snare and hi-hat breaks, and a propulsive shuffle delivers a dramatic Headhunters vibe in the backbeat. Wickham's solo sounds filthy, visceral, swinging, and soulful (think Jeremy Steig)...


Led by Leon Michels, a flexible R&B-rooted band mixing groove-oriented jazz, soul, funk, rocksteady, Afrobeat, and hip-hop.
El Michels Affair - Adult Themes / Kill The Lights
Big Crown Records is proud to present Adult Themes, the latest full length offering from El Michels Affair. This album takes the band’s “Cinematic Soul” aesthetic literally and sends the listener on a journey through a whirlwind of moods and energies... Adult Themes marks the long awaited, highly anticipated return to an album of original compositions from El Michels Affair.


Scottish quartet Modern Studies unite pastoral chamber pop and folk with a gently experimental approach. Incorporating lush harmonies, jazz-tinged rhythms, and subtle electronics...
Modern Studies - The Weight of the Sun / Back to the City
...Toning down both their folk roots and orchestral ambitions, Modern Studies' third set, Weight of the Sun, fuses a gentle rock mystique with burbling synth flourishes and a touch of light psychedelia. That the band originally coalesced around an antique harmonium and other eclectic folk instrumentation makes their journey toward a more common rock format somewhat ironic, though, as on each of their releases, they bring something special to the table... Emily Scott (vocals, keys) and Rob St. John (vocals, guitar) weave their peculiar tandem vocals around a slow-building wash of electric guitars, synths, and a warm rhythmic pulse...


An eclectic singer/songwriter with a haunting voice who balances emotional richness, awareness, and wry demeanor in his lyrics, Cass McCombs negotiates styles including Americana, Baroque pop, psychedelia, and sprawling jam band folk-rock, among others, in his music.
Cass McCombs - The Wine Of Lebanon
Cass McCombs, one of our greatest songwriters, likes to move in mystery. McCombs stays off of social media and generally seems to shy away from any and all spotlights, so whenever he pops up with anything new, it’s a surprise. Last year, McCombs released Tip Of The Sphere, his most recent album.
“The Wine Of Lebanon,” McCombs’ new song, is a supremely relaxed and breezy number. It’s full of strings and hazy guitars, and it unfolds at a lazy, unhurried pace. McCombs sings in mythic terms in his usual bemused croon, and it’s hard to say, after the first few listens, what he’s talking about.


The frontman for Screaming Trees who went on to a fascinating solo career marked by an acoustic tone and dark, folk- and blues-inspired songwriting.
Mark Lanegan - Straight Songs of SorrowBallad of a Dying Rover
...As befits a largely autobiographical collection of songs that looks back over his whole life, the music shifts through the variety of genres Lanegan has experimented with... Sometimes memories and myth get tangled up together. The dark-as-midnight ‘Ballad of a Dying Rover’, which features Led Zeppelin’s John Paul Jones on Mellotron, eerily recalls Lead Belly’s ‘Where Did You Sleep Last Night?’. Cobain and Lanegan recorded the song together, and Lanegan included it on his first solo album ‘The Winding Sheet’...


Masaki Batoh was both a founding member and spiritual leader of the experimental Japanese band Ghost, and a provocative solo artist.
Masaki Batoh - Smile Jesus Loves You! / Speculum
Batoh is back! Solo again after last fall’s new Silence album, the Japanese psychedelic guru makes some solo cuts, with others featuring Ghost and Silence family members, including free drumming legend of Fushitsusha and early Ghost, Hiroyuki Usui. In all-analog production, Batoh decries the existential opacity of our latter-day faith, drawing from the traditions of all countries, fused into new music for this century.
The Magnetic Fields, Puscifer, Beauty Pill, Fiona Apple, Jehnny Beth, Aaron Parks, Chip Wickham, El Michels Affair, Modern Studies, Cass McCombs, Mark Lanegan, Masaki Batoh