Simiah & The Phantom Ensemble Detail Debut Album

Bristol’s Simiah & The Phantom Ensemble have announced their debut album, Connections, scheduled for February 15 release with KingUnderground

The trio comprises Simiah on MPC, Dan Somers on keys, and Craig Crofton on tenor/soprano saxophone. Across the 10-track LP, ’90s era hip-hop rhythms and samples are blanketed by soulful keys and poignant sax work. The  sound has been developed through a monthly residency at Bristol’s Gallimaufry bar where the band has improvised new material and fine-tuned ongoing compositions while welcoming special guests from the local jazz scene to sit in. 

Cover art design is by Rolling Drum Studios, and the release comes as  a limited red vinyl, edition of 100, and a standard black pressing. 

Tracklisting 

01. Intro

02. Earth Tone 

03. Movement Skit

04. Grit 

05. Skit

06. Coda

07. Flowing 

08. Spaces

09. Dragon Master

10. Jazzed Outro

Ahead of the album’s February 15 release, the trio has collaborated with Leon Nikoosimaitak for the illustrated music video, “Grit.” Check out the music video below and pre-order Connections here

Ricardo Villalobos, M.A.N.D.Y, SIT, and Sonja Moonear Added to SXM Festival

SXM Festival has announced its phase-two lineup.

SXM, which takes place on the Caribbean Island of Saint Martin/Sint Maarten from March 13 to 17, has added a world-class list of DJs to its already stellar lineup, including Ricardo Villalobos, Nicole Moudaber, John Acquaviva, Rebolledo, M.A.N.D.Y, Shaun Reeves, Blond:ish, Holmar, SIT, and Sonja Moonear, among others. 

They join previously announced acts Apollonia, Atish, Enzo Siraguza, Francesca Lombardo, Marco Carola, Guy Gerber, Audiofly, Fumiya Tanaka, Axel Boman, Be Svendsen (live), Marco Carola, Cristi Cons, DeWalta, Zip, Sammy Dee, Matthew Dekay, and Molly.

You can find tickets and more information on SXM here.

Premiere: Hear a Head-Spinning Electro Cut by Viers

Viers‘ latest EP, Lights Out, drops today on Let’s Play House.

Lights Out kicks off the year in a loud unabashed style for Viers and Let’s Play House, presenting a collection of warehouse weapons and sweaty dancefloor bombs. The four tracks on the EP, although aimed squarely at the floor, are wildly eclectic, ranging from brutalist techno to jacking big-room house and head-spinning electro—all four are riotous outings begging to be played on a huge soundsystem. 

The EP is out today and can be grabbed here, with “AFB” streaming in full via the player below, along with the tracklisting.

Tracklisting:

01. Lights Out

02. Dolphin Telephone

03. AFB

04. By Your Side

Blkmarket Music to Release Long-Lost Craig Richards Tracks

The fifth release on New York’s Blkmarket Music comes from Scumdolly, an obscure alias of Craig Richards, and features new remixes from Subb-an & Adam Shelton, Taimur & Alexander Gentil, and Rhadoo.

The original track,”Making Ends Meet,” dates back to the early 2000s but has never been released. It comes in two versions, breakbeat-oriented and the other four-to-the-floor, one of which surfaced in 2004 in mixed form as part of James Lavelle’s Global Underground 026: Romania mix CD. This release will be spread over two vinyls, each featuring one of the originals plus remixes.  

On vinyl one is “Making Ends Meet (Changing Room One)” with a twisted remix by Birmingham’s Subb-an & Adam Shelton. On vinyl two is “Making Ends Meet (Changing Room Two),” with remixes from Taimur & Alexander Gentil and then Rhadoo on the B2. 

Tracklisting

Making Ends Meet Part 1 

A. Making Ends Meet (Changing Room One) 

B. Making Ends Meet (Subb-an & Adam Shelton Remix) 

Making Ends Meet Part 2 

A1. Making Ends Meet (Changing Room Two) 

A2. Making Ends Meet (Taimur & Alexander Gentil Remix) 

B. Making Ends Meet (Rhadoo Remix)

Making Ends Meet is earmarked for late February/early March release.

Machinedrum & Jimmy Edgar Return as JETS

Machinedrum and Jimmy Edgar have have today shared a new single as JETS, a collaborative project founded in 2012 that has seen them release a series of EPs on their label, Ultramajic, as well as Leisure System.

“PLAY” sets an aggressive tone, putting a mutant spin on a boom-bap beat, laying the foundation for Mykki Bianco to sprawl out on his verse. 

JETS last released in 2015 with The Chants.

“PLAY” ft. Mykki Blanco is out now on Innovative Leisure

Machinedrum & Jimmy Edgar Return as JETS

Machinedrum and Jimmy Edgar have have today shared a new single as JETS, a collaborative project founded in 2012 that has seen them release a series of EPs on their label, Ultramajic, as well as Leisure System.

“PLAY” sets an aggressive tone, putting a mutant spin on a boom-bap beat, laying the foundation for Mykki Bianco to sprawl out on his verse. 

JETS last released in 2015 with The Chants.

“PLAY” ft. Mykki Blanco is out now on Innovative Leisure

James Blake ‘Assume Form’

Score: 6.5/10

What’s so good about James Blake? Few artists have done more to shape the last decade of music, few have spawned as many imitators, few have garnered such a range of A-list admirers and collaborators. But why? Maybe it’s that quivering choirboy voice of his on ballads like “Waves No Shores” and Joni Mitchell cover “A Case of You,” songs that make you want to pinch his little cheeks and take him home to your mum. Or perhaps it’s his taste for bass, for tunes that make you gurn, veritable bangers like “CMYK,” his remix of Mala’s “Changes,” and his Chance the Rapper collaboration, “Life Round Here.” 

Of course, it’s both. When Blake emerged roughly a decade ago, he turned heads by matching the heavy with the tender, winning fans among listeners of pop, dubstep, and everything in between. He was immensely likeable—loveable in fact. Invite to your wedding: he’ll play piano at the ceremony and DJ the get-down at the reception. A puller of heartstrings and a twiddler of knobs, he could make you cry or dance—sometimes in the same song. On Assume Form, his fourth studio album released just a week after its official announcement, he doesn’t really do either. 

In many ways, Blake epitomises a decade of hybridity in music; until his futuristic take on the singer-songwriter model, it would have been hard to imagine Sam Smith, FKA Twigs, or even Arca being received in such rapture. And yet although the mainstream is now dominated by such cross-genre combinations, today’s archetypal pop song resembles not the simplified beauty of “The Wilhelm Scream,” but rather an unrefined mulch of catholic influence ranging from rap to house to reggaeton—all of which swirl in the Assume Form mix. Is Blake now just another of his own impersonators? 

It’s hard to argue otherwise on the distinctly middlebrow “Barefoot In The Park,” a collaboration with breakout Spanish pop star Rosalía. The song’s refrain paints a quaint watercolour of Blake and his celebrity squeeze Jameela Jamil frolicking round a picnic on a summer’s day, looking beautiful. “Barefoot in the park,” he coos, before turning a dainty image of romance into one of gross public affection: “you start rubbing off on me.” Grimace. “Are You In Love?” is similarly moist, a contented yawn of a song that you can imagine Sampha recording then leaving on the cutting room floor. Ditto “Power On”: both sound like rip-offs of “Limit To Your Love.”

Then there are some songs which start off tepid, become lukewarm, and emit flickers of Blake’s usual brilliance. “Into The Red” pushes irritating lyrical themes about joint accounts and credit card debt, saved only by a gorgeous piano loop and skip-hopping beat. Similarly the opener and title track isn’t bad, but it actually becomes good in its second half, as a hard-to-decipher backing vocal—presumably Blake pitched up—rocks us peacefully back and forth. (Incidentally that chipmunk voice returns a few times, even offering something of a late reprieve to “Barefoot In The Park.”)

True to the present look of the pop charts, Assume Form is Blake’s most rap-leaning record to date. “Mile High,” featuring Travis Scott and hip-hop producer Metro Boomin, is a murky trap track, the darkest cut on the record. When its beat drops (and yes, there’s a snare on the three) it’s also the closest the album comes to a banger. That can’t be said of “Where’s the Catch,” featuring André 3000. Despite its minor key, the song is actually about snogging: “we kiss so long, we breathe through the nose.” Wince. In contrast to André’s caustic verse, Blake’s outpourings resemble another ostentatious expression of love to make onlookers squirm in their seats. Didn’t Blake used to sing about being sad? 

The artist spoke candidly about depression in an interview last year, and has emerged sounding incessantly satisfied with his life. And good for him. But Assume Form reminds me of a Bill Hicks routine which scorned contemporary pop music’s clean-cut cheer, instead willing musicians to “play with one hand and put a gun to their head with the other.” I’ll stop well short of wishing misery on our beloved crooner, but Blake’s fourth album is simply not as raw and compelling as his previous three, all of which were wrought with inner torment. 

It’s tempting to argue that Assume Form is almost a good album, offering sparks of magnificence without delivering on its promise. The argument largely stands up: take album closer “Lullaby For My Insomniac,” a subtly pleasant hymn which is begging for the kind of bass drop that made “Retrograde” so arresting. But actually Assume Form is almost a crap album, just not quite. And while it’s easy to criticise Blake’s chart-pandering forays into trap and pop, it is actually Assume Form’s most unashamed pop songs that rescue it from insufferable drabness.

“Can’t Believe The Way We Flow,” named after a sample from the Manhattans’ “It Feels So Good to Be Loved So Bad” (and thankfully not a Blake-Jamil rap duet), is oddly brilliant. With its refrain sung first in chipmunk falsetto and then in Blake baritone, it bears the stamp of Oneohtrix Point Never, who helped out on production. 

Odd brilliance makes “I’ll Come Too” another highlight. In the vein of Prince’s “When You Were Mine” (and Frank Ocean’s “Self Control”), Blake coos cheekily about snuggling in between two lovers, simply because he’s “in that kind of mood.” It’s sung in a lilting melody that you can imagine being whistled in an old Western. I know, right: cringe? The same could be said about “Don’t Miss It” and its iPhone notes lyric video—it’s ‘playing from the heart’ for the Snapchat generation, but both songs have me listening repeatedly. 

It’s partly thanks to Blake that the hybridised pop on Assume Form is nowhere near as remarkable as it once would have been. It’s an inconsistent album, indicating an artist who was once at the vanguard of a new sound becoming just one voice among many others like it. No longer the singer-songwriter of the future, he’s now simply a modern writer of songs. Thankfully, as shown in glimpses here, he’s still pretty good at it.

Tracklisting

01. Assume Form

02. Mile High (featuring Travis Scott & Metro Boomin)

03. Tell Them (featuring Moses Sumney, Metro Boomin)

04. Into The Red

05. Barefoot In The Park (featuring Rosalía)

06. Can’t Believe The Way We Flow

07. Are You In Love?

08. Where’s The Catch? (featuring André 3000)

09. I’ll Come Too

10. Power On

11. Don’t Miss It

12. Lullaby For My Insomniac

Assume Form is out now via Republic Records. 

David Behrman Vinyl Reissue Next on Lovely Music

On February 1, Lovely Music will release a vinyl reissue of David Behrman‘s minimal electronic LP from 1978, On The Other Ocean

The music across album was recorded at the Center for Contemporary Music, Mills College, Oakland, California on September 18, 1977 and the Electronic Music Studio, State University of New York at Albany on June 9, 1977. 

The opening piece is an improvisation featuring flutist Maggi Payne and bassoonist Arthur Stidfole, performing long harmonious tones that activate electronic pitch-sensing circuits connected to the interrupt line and input ports of a Kim-1 microcomputer. As the label describes, “The relationship between the two musicians and the computer is an interactive one, with the computer changing the electronically-produced harmonies in response to what the musicians play, and the musicians influenced in their improvising by what the computer does. The recording is of a live performance.” 

The second track, “Figuring In A Clearing,” features cellist David Gibson, adding a dynamic and complex set of passages that display the range of the Kim-1 microcomputer’s response to the cello’s timbre and movement. 

Upon release in 1978, On The Other Ocean was a first of its kind in methodology and served as Behrman’s debut album, advancing the pathways electronic music was headed during the ’70s. The 180gram vinyl reissue of On The Other Ocean can be pre-ordered from Forced Exposure

I’ve been engaged for many years in an exploration of ways to make music and intermedia installations in which software and electronic devices interact with human performers. I’ve wanted to make works that have personalities, which remain distinct and recognizable, yet are open to surprising changes that can come about when they are performed or exhibited.” — David Behrman

Tracklisting

01. On The Other Ocean

02. Figure In A Clearing

On The Other Ocean LP lands February 1. 

Photo credit: Pat Kelly

Matmos to Release New Album Crafted Entirely from Sounds Sourced from Plastic Objects

March 15 will mark the release of Matmos‘ new album with Thrill Jockey, Plastic Anniversary

The album is a follow-up to 2016’s Ultimate Care II, on which all the sounds were generated by a washing machine, and celebrates Drew Daniel and M.C. Schmidt’s 25th anniversary. It was created using “sounds derived from plastic objects,” and features Greg Saunier, Mitchell Brown, Harry Walker, Jon Leidecker, Brooks Kossover, Eric Holdhusen, Jeremy Carnagey, Port Nugent, Bret Allen, Ethan Potthoff, Wyatt Scott, and Montana’s Whitefish Highschool Bulldogs.  Thrill Jockey has pressed up a pink and green mashup reground vinyl that’s available as a mail order exclusive. 

In advance of the release, Thrill Jockey has revealed the first single, “Silicone Gel Implant,” featuring Greg Saunier of Deerhoof on plastic percussion, with Brooks Kossover adding PVC pan-flute. Drew Daniel uses a silicone gel breast implant, with M.C.Schmidt playing plastic flutes. 

Tracklisting

01. Breaking Bread

02. The Crying Pill

03. Interior With Billiard Balls & Synthetic Fat

04. Extending The Plastisphere to GJ237b

05. Silicone Gel Implant

06. Plastic Anniversary

07. Thermoplastic Riot Shield

08. Fanfare for Polyethylene Waste Containers

09. The Singing Tube

10. Collapse of the Fourth Kingdom

11. Plastisphere

Plastic Anniversary LP lands March 15, with pre-orders here and a stream of “Silicone Gel Implant” below. 

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