Croatian Amor ‘Isa’

Score: 7.5/10

So much of Croatian Amor’s music, like that of collaborators Yves Tumor and Puce Mary and contemporaries like Arca and El Niño de Elche, is about finding beauty in what at first seems hideous. It sounds simple: disturb your listener with grotesque and abrasive stimuli—often both visual and auditory—to the point of repulsion, then comfort them with a big soppy cuddle. But it’s tough to get it right. Too much ugliness and your listener will be left holding their knees to their chest, rocking back and forth with eyes wide and teeth clenched; but too much loveliness and you risk sounding wan, dull, lame. 

Isa, the sixth album by Posh Isolation co-founder Loke Rahbek as Croatian Amor, finds the artist seeking the perfect balance once again: aiming at both disquieting the listener and making their hairs stand on end. Following 2016’s largely ambient Love Means Taking Action, Isa is comparatively crunchy, with more mechanical percussion mixed in among its choral floatiness. And while Love Means was like a salve at the end of some terrible trauma, Isa is more like a swan song at the end of the universe.

In fact, I’m told by the press release that the album is “a nauseating narrative of virtual communication and eschatological programming.” Don’t worry, I’ve looked it up: eschatology is concerned with death, judgment, and the end of the world. With all the ‘90s rave tributes going around, it’s nice to know that someone in electronic music is still looking to the future, even if it is looking quite bleak.

Choosing the bleak future as his setting, Rabek tells a story during Isa, making it far more suitable for start-to-finish listening than something you can get the gist of with a few tracks. Starting at the beginning, opener, “Towards Isa,” is a statement of bleak intent, building a hellish atmosphere around a metallic female voice who intones robotic nothings about angels and so on—more on her soon. Evoking a dusty post-apocalypse cluttered with blinking screens and holograms, it’s a suitably weird intro.

A building fog billows through “In Alarm Light” and most of “Point Reflex Blue” too, both claustrophobic and breathy. The latter wheezes, emitting the occasional bass grunt before bursting into an eery, alien dance section—an arresting synth riff plays above skittish breakbeats; before it’s done the track unveils a sequence of gleaming, porcelain chords, then fades. Weird? Yep. Beautiful? Also yep. So far so good.  

The album’s most beautiful moment comes early in “Siren Blur,” as Soho Rezanejad wails an ice-cold vocal, recalling Arca’s pop mutilations in its goose-pimpled intensity. Transience, the feeling that you’re hearing Rezanejad’s voice as though in a half-remembered dream, is very much part of the allure here, but in Isa’s case it slips away just a bit too quickly. I’d like to hear more of Rezanejad’s caterwauling, made a central attraction over a longer period á la Arca’s last album. 

Instead, Rezanejad’s voice—along with those of Yves Tumor, Alto Aria, Jonnine Standish, and CTM—does way more talking than singing, and is often pitched up or down into computerish anonymity. Perhaps it was deliberate, but obfuscating the identity behind each voice turns all the album’s featured artists into a kind of omniscient tannoy system. Its “lyrics,” all of which are spoken not sung, are even more impersonal. Among them are: “All angels meet again”; “One day I saw an entirely black airplane in the sky”; “In your iris there is a perfectly updated map of the city”; and “Vomits into water. Vomits into lap. Eyes water. Big pupils. Vomits into eye. A paradise bird, flapping its wings.” Read into it if you want, though if you ask me or any of my secondary school English teachers, there’s no right answer. 

Of course, the themes are uncertainty, insecurity, and apocalypse. These opaque utterances are designed to conjure all manner of eschatological images (am I using it right?) in the listener. Maybe you like the surreality, the ambiguity, the abstraction, but like a science fiction film that’s not quite bad enough to be ironic, it strikes me as just a bit naff. “Enhance photo, to reveal a picture of… bird, caught mid flight,” says the tannoy on “Into Salt.” Then: “Enhance again: the bird has a human face, screaming.” Indeed. It sounds like the future, but the future seems to sound quite a lot like a rubbish ‘80s B-movies. 

Then again, even the best William Gibson novels include stretches of tedious dialogue. And in spite of Isa’s verbal contrivances, its back end is brilliant. Underneath the vocals, you’ll notice a gorgeous two-note string melody gently seesawing throughout “Into Salt.” There’s more talking on “Eden 1.2,” but it’s backed by a beatless sandstorm, bass scuzz swirling with ambient celeste to wondrous effect. It crescendos on the sublime “In World Cell,” as Rezanejad talks about tunnel systems before finally singing again: “do you feel the way that I do?” she coos again and again over distant organ chords. All of the album’s final three tracks are majestic works of cyberpunk balladry. 

Succumbing to Croatian Amor’s narrative evocations for a moment, it feels like Isa’s final resolution carries a moral message: even in the year 3000, humans will still feel love. Or something. Whether I’ve got that right or not, what’s most striking is that the album really does tell a story. Its glorious conclusion arrives a little too soon, but it’s good enough to have you hitting rewind. Listen in a dark room, on headphones, and you’re likely to experience a few hairs-on-end moments. It’s ugly, yes, and sometimes contrived. But it’s beautiful too.

Isa LP is out now. 

Tracklisting

01. Towards Isa

02. In Alarm Light ft. Soho Rezanejad

03. Point Reflex Blue

04. Eden 1.1

05. Siren Blur

06. Dark Cut ft. Jonnie Standish

07. Into Salt ft. Alto Aria

08. Eden 1.2

09. In World Cell

Nauuda X Shahly “Speak Up”

Nauuda is the collaborative project of Jakob Eines (19) and Alex-André Aanonsen (18); together they’ve been producing music since 2014. Over the past four years, they have been working to find their own sound and have produced everything from hip-hop to house. The music is posted on Soundcloud, where the duo has growing fanbase. In support of their upcoming work, they’ve shared “Speak Up,” a previously unreleased collaboration with Shahly, available now to download via the button below or here for EU readers due to temporary GDPR restrictions. 

Dutch Duo Artefakt Launch Label with New EP

Dutch duo Artefakt will launch their own imprint, De Stijl, this February with their Far and Wide EP.

Robin Koek and Nick Lapien, who make up Artefakt, have become highly respected for their melancholic take on techno  since coming together in 2012, releasing on labels like Deep Sound Channel, Field Records, as well as numerous appearances on Delsin, which played host to their debut album, Kinship. De Stijl aims to deliver a fertile ground for further exploration of their sound, as well as providing a home to affiliated projects and close friends. 

The label begins with a versatile four track release called Far and Wide, followed by an outing from Rhine in June entitled Slaapstad, before Cyspe’s Unidentify Yourself concludes the year. 

Through curation of both music and the visual aspect we want to provide our audience with a new entry point to our work. We will use the label to explore some elements of our sound in more depth and also feature affiliated projects and organize events within the scope of the label.” — Artefakt

Tracklistings

Artefakt Ghost in the Machine EP (out Feb 2019)

01. Far and Wide

02. Ghost in the Machine 

03. Crystal Confessions 

04. Levity

Rhine Slaapstad EP (out June 2019)

01. Slaapstad

02. 1991

03. Study Of Madness 

04. Orinoco Basin

Cyspe Unidentify Yourself EP (out Oct 2019)

01. Unidentify Yourself 2. Violent Vertigo

03. Humantenna

04. Elysian Dwelling

Artefakt’s Far and Wide drops on De Stijl on February 18. 

Shrimpnose and K.Raydio to Release Collaborative Album via AntiFragile Music

On February 22, Shrimpnose and K.Raydio will release their collaborative debut album, …And The World Weeps, on New York-based label AntiFragile Music.

Brought together by universal circumstances, the duo used the album as a catharsis for the pain they experienced in hopes that the record can be catharsis for the listener at large. Shrimpnose produced, mixed, and mastered the entirety of the album with K.Raydio writing and performing the vocals. Their dynamic and analog driven sound centers around pensive songwriting and immersive layering, stripped down to its minimal parts in one moment and propulsive the next. The album features featuring Daedelus and Bobby Raps. 

Ahead of the release, the group has revealed new single “Cabernet.” Cascading waves of bass meld into the framework of ghostly melodies, a powerful kick drum, and hypnotic vocals, merging pop and the abstract as one. 

In tandem with the digital launch on February 22, Los Angeles indie label Dome of Doom will offer a limited edition clear cassette pressing. Listen to the new single “Cabernet” below and pre-order a copy of the cassette version here

Tracklisting

01. Longitude, Latitude

02. Cabernet

03. Bully

04. Fairytale

05. Good Grief

06. Molasses

07. Settle Down

08. Pins and Needles

09. Fall Away (feat. Bobby Raps & Daedelus)

 …And The World Weeps arrives February 22. 

Los Angeles’ Tsuruda Drops 20-Track Compilation

Tsuruda has revealed a new 20-track collection, titled Internet Slaps Vol. 2

Self-released on Bandcamp, the new compilation follows the Los Angeles producer’s Courtesy Family LP from October 2018, Unlimited Data. It’s also a follow-on from November 2017’s Internet Slaps Vol. 1, which dropped as a digital-only compilation in November 2017.

Tracks cover a large terrain, including experimental bass music, abstract beats, soulful hip-hop instrumentals, and more. 

A sampler mix of Internet Slaps Vol. 2 is below with stream/purchase of the comp here

Tracklisting

01. Crow

02. TFW you stand on the dj table [the final chapter]

03. I’m Still Here

04. Build A House 

05. Jefferson Park 

06. DC Boiz 

07. Shining Star 

08. Ode To Losco 

09. Bricks

10. Skeletons 

11. Devil Man

12. Horchata

13. TS 146

14. Apples

15. Taboo 

16. Money Gram

17. High Grade

18. M80 

19. FLX 

20. Baby Alien

Internet Slaps Vol. 2 is available now. 

Jinjé “No Luxury”

Jinjé will release his latest single via Messers. Kick & Drum Records on February 1.

The new single, “No Luxury,” continues a purple patch for Jinjé, following his recent outing on Ostgut Ton, “Big Skies,” which was, arguably, the highlight cut on nd_baumecker’s recent Panorama Bar 07 mix. “No Luxury” features Jinjé’s hallmarks, namely driving dancefloor rhythms and deep, emotive synth lines. On the b-side, “Backseat Roller” is, as the name suggests, a rolling peak-time cut with swing and swagger.

As a precursor to the release, Messers. Kick & Drum Records has offered up “No Luxury” for free download until the single’s official release, available via WeTransfer below. The single can be picked up on February 1 via Bandcamp

Due to issues regarding the GDPR, EU readers can download the track here.

Blockhead’s ‘Uncle Tony’s Coloring Book’ LP Set for Repress via Detroit’s Young Heavy Souls

Blockhead’s classic LP Uncle Tony’s Coloring Book has received a limited edition red and blue 2LP pressing on Detroit-based label Young Heavy Souls. The original release in 2007 was on CD formats only, updated with a digital rendition in 2015 and a first-time standard black vinyl in 2017. 

The release, Blockhead’s third full-length, fuses dynamic concoctions of hip-hop, electronic, and the abstract, and features DJ Signify on turntables, Damien Paris on guitars, electronics, synthesizer, and co-productions, and Andrew Totolos on the drums. The entire album was recorded and mixed at Ape Sauce Studios in Brooklyn, New York, with original artwork across the cover, inner gatefold, and jackets by Owen Brozman. 

Also released this year is Blockhead’s new hip-hop focused album Free Sweatpants, featuring Open Mike Eagle, Armand Hammer, Homeboy Sandman, Aesop Rock, and more. 

The new colored vinyl print of Uncle Tony’s Coloring Book can be ordered directly from Young Heavy Souls.

Tracklisting

01. Coloring Book

02. The Strain

03. Grape Nuts and Chalk Sauce

04. Duke of Hazzard

05. Squirmy Worm

06. Put Down Your Dream Journal and Dance

07. The Hucklebuck Slice

08. Not So OK Corral

09. Do the Tron

10. Get Your Regal On

11. Cheer Up, You’re Not Dead Yet

12 Trailer Love

13. NYC Bounce 

Sydney Group Tangents Share Trippy New Video

Tangents have released a new music video for “Lake George,” the opening track from their New Bodies LP, out now via Temporary Residence Limited

All shooting for the video occurred at Lake George, a vast stretch of land located between Sydney and Canberra. Once devoid of water, it began to fill in 2016, drastically transforming the location. The video picks up the Sydney band’s theme of meditations on powerful local places. 

For the video, the idea was to present the atmosphere and space of Lake George, reflected in the track. The visual effects are time delays applied as a smooth map across vertical or horizontal lines of pixels. The processing parallels the types of digital warping that happens in the second half of the track. In the music it blurs the boundary between live and manipulated, in the video realm there is nothing really comparable to this kind of musical ambiguity, so the parallel is to apply simple warping and distortions that mirror and augment the movement already there.” — Tangents

Tracklisting, New Bodies

01. Lake George

02. Terracotta

03. Arteries

04. Immersion

05. Gone To Ground

06. Swells Under Tito

07. Oort Cloud

08. Lake George

09. Terracotta

10. Arteries

11. Immersion

12. Gone To Ground

13. Swells Under Tito

14. Oort Cloud

New Bodies LP is out now, with “Lake George” streaming below. 

Antonio Pepe “Drip Texted” (KAN3DA Remix)

Earlier this month, Italian label Loose Records released the debut solo EP from Antonio Pepe, titled Drip Texted.

Comprised of two originals and a remix by KAN3DA, Drip Texted followed a string of well-received releases on Loose Records by artists such as Uto Karem, Spektre, and Joseph Capriati, among others. Musically, Pepe delivers a rolling sci-fi techno cut (“Drip Texted”) and a dark and twisted warehouse outing (“X Possibilities”) for his originals, with KAN3DA going down a deep and precise electro direction on the remix.

Drip Texted is out now and can be picked up here, with KAN3DA’s remix available as a free download via WeTransfer below.

Due to issues regarding the GDPR, EU readers can download the track here.

Toy Tonics to Release Reworks Compilation of Rare German New Wave and Disco Punk

Toy Tonics has announced a new compilation of reworked German new wave funk and disco punk from the late ’70s and early ’80s.

Titled Munk presents Teutonik Disaster, the compilation features reworks of eight tracks that originally resurfaced on the original Teutonik Disaster compilation on Gomma Records—Gomma was the label that Munk started 15 years ago before Toy Tonics. On the new compilation, Toy Tonics label heads Munk and Kapote subtly rework and edit the tracks to more modern club frameworks “geared towards today’s post-techno and post-deep house dancefloors.”

Munk presents Teutonik Disaster is set to drop on March 15. Ahead of the release, Toy Tonics has shared the first taste of the compilation in Die Chefs’ “Frauenkörper,” available to stream via the player below.

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