Dragons of Zynth: Cosmic Rockers

Fraternal twin brothers Aku and Akwetey Orraca-Tetteh are used to working on their own personal wavelength. “When we play, we find these special moments where everything comes together,” says Aku. “That’s our strength and our foundation. We’re pretty much in each other’s heads.”

It’s some very coveted headspace, based on the gushing reactions the twins’ band, Dragons of Zynth, has received this year. At a string of shows, including a lauded South by Southwest appearance, the outfit stunned onlookers, unleashing snarling, dub-driven experimental rock that was hypnotic yet driving, filled with textures not merely heard but felt. That they sport the occasional shock of neon-green hair or retro-futuristic shades straight out of the Bambaataa collection further caused critics to apply contorted descriptions to the Brooklyn band. Are they Afrotek? Synthy stoner rock? Otherworldly kin to TV on the Radio?

“We make autophysiopsychic music,” says Aku. “‘Auto’ being self and the soul, ‘physio’ being the physical manifestation of the psychic. It’s this mind-body-soul truth. It’s our own style, something for us.”

The Dragons’ story began when the twins, born to Ghanaian immigrants in the Bronx and raised in Cleveland, studied music together at Amherst College in Massachusetts under iconoclastic jazzman Yusef Lateef. A gentle soul who coined the phrase “autophysiopsychic,” Lateef helped Aku pass a music-production class he was about to fail, and helped the duo look beyond genre boundaries to find their own sense of style.

“[Lateef]’s a jazz musician, but he doesn’t call it jazz,” Aku explains. “You write ‘jazz’ on a paper in his class and a C is automatically the highest grade you can get.”

After graduating in 2002, the brothers moved to Brooklyn and began making music. Their first collaboration was “War Lover,” a “heart-breaking manifesto” by Akwetey that eventually became the first Dragons of Zynth track. The band has subsequently endeared itself in avant-garde indie circles. A member of Beirut contributed a saxophone sample, which was looped backwards and grafted onto the explosive track “Get Off.” The group has worked with Massive Attack on a handful of songs, and TV on the Radio’s Dave Sitek–who became a cheerleader for the group after hearing early demos–contributed production work to the band’s debut Coronation Thieves (Gigantic Music).

While often mentioned in the same breath as TV on the Radio, Dragons of Zynth–and its loose, sometimes haunting transmissions–definitely stands on its own. “Once the album comes out, you’ll see we’re coming from a similar place [as TV on the Radio],” says Aku, “but it’s very different.”

Robert Wyatt Comicopera

Prickly British art-rock singer/songwriter Robert Wyatt remains one of the unsung talents of our time, largely because Wyatt has shown zero interest in music-industry success. Like his music–which has never fit comfortably into any particular category–the former Soft Machine drummer, paralyzed from the waist down for over 30 years, has proved unpredictable, devoting himself to politics and music equally. Comicopera, loosely characterized as an eclectic arrangement of symphonic folk compositions, spans at least three different languages and vocally unfolds from different characters. Brian Eno helps out here, but don’t expect anything pop: “Mob Rule” shows Wyatt in his signature falsetto, delivering a quiet, psychedelic hymnal for social change and peace. Long live crazy fools everywhere.

Shape of Broad Minds Craft of the Lost Art

Revelatory releases from the alt-rap universe have been few and far between recently, making the arrival of Shape of Broad Minds’ eye-opening debut, Craft of the Lost Art, all the more welcome. A multiregional “supergroup” of sorts led by Jneiro Jarel (in all likelihood, you’ve never heard of the other guys), SOBM flips a spaced-out jazzy aesthetic that at various points recalls Digable Planets, Antipop Consortium, and J Dilla. While MCs Rocque Wun, Panama Black, Jawaad, and Jarel (who also appears as his alias, Dr. Who Dat?) deliver solid verses all around, the true revelation is Jarel’s inventive leftfield beatwork, which demonstrates a marked improvement upon previous (solo) releases like Three Piece Puzzle and Dr. Who Dat’s Beat Journey. Here’s hoping the sound put forth by these Broad Minds really is the shape of things to come, and not an exercise in a lost art.

Fire Engines Hungry Beat

There are many opinions on why early ’80s Scotland produced so many of the best British post-punk bands, and they mostly center around one fact: no one gave a shit about Liverpool or Leeds, never mind the mad Scots, allowing bands like Edinburgh’s no-wave geniuses Fire Engines to flourish unhindered. Hungry Beat offers their entire, tiny discography on one disc, and shows a band both more danceable and sonically radical than better-known contemporaries like Orange Juice. Songs like “Big Gold Dream” are practically a blueprint for the trebly rock of Art Brut and Franz Ferdinand, without the social lubrication: This is post-punk, as likely to throw you down a flight of stairs as snog you backstage.

The Rapture “The Sound (Max Pask Horrorshow Mix)”

Vinyl-only imprint Throne of Blood laces the populace with a track from its forthcoming The Sound Remixes release. Here, Manthraxx Records’ Max Pask takes The Rapture’s disco-punk anthem on a cosmic journey up to the stars and back down to the dancefloor.

The Rapture – The Sound (Max Pask Horrorshow Mix)

Growing Signs to The Social Registry

It seems seems that the droney ambient realm has experienced a creative output boost of late, with exclusive live performances and records from the likes of Oren Ambarchi, Sunn 0))), The Burial Chamber Trio, and a heap of other non-Southern Lord-affiliated acts. Now New York’s iconoclastic duo Growing is adding to the population boom with upcoming records for its new label home–The Social Registry. While not exactly a surprise signing–as the band did play The the imprint’s 4th anniversary festival in August–it’s officially game on.

Already with an extensive catalog filled with releases on labels like Kranky and Troubleman Unlimited under their belts, the kings of kaleidoscopic guitar work are prepping their newest 7” as part of The Social Registry’s monthly “Social Club” singles series on December 4, followed by a mini-album entitled Lateral, set to drop January 22. Will these two new offerings deviate from the band’s atmospheric and ethereal blueprint? If track names like “Swell,” “After Glow,” and “Horizon Drift” are any indication, I think not.

Photo of Growing by Noel Von Harmonson.

Lateral Tracklisting
1. Swell
2. First Contact
3. Lateral
4. After Glow

The Social Club Nº 8 Tracklisting
1. Disconfirm
2. Horizon Drift

Animal Collective, Thievery Corporation, Cornelius on Darfur Compilation

If anyone knows how to deliver a disc of quality tunes and simultaneously educate the populace about global conflict, it’s Waxploitation. Causes 1: Darfur is not the first time the label has curated a compilation that raises funds and awareness about the Darfur conflict, but it has upped the ante, so to speak, by commissioning a slew of artists to contribute rare and exclusive material to the project. Among those participating are Animal Collective, Black Keys, Thievery Corporation, and Bloc Party.

The compilation will be available for 90 days on iTunes, as well as in the form of a limited edition CD, which you can currently sign up to pre-order. 100% of the proceeds to go Doctors Without Borders, Human Rights Watch, and Oxfam America.

waxploitation.com/signup

Tracklisting (In Alphabetical Order)
-Animal Collective “Safer” (Exclusive Live Version)
-Black Keys “Stay All Night” (Exclusive Chulahoma Session)
-Bloc Party “Rhododendrons”
-Bright Eyes “Coat Check Dream Song” Exclusive Live Version
-Cornelius “Wataridori” (Exclusive Piano Version)
-David Sylvian “Late Night Shopping” (Exclusive Chris Vrenna Remix)
-Death Cab for a Cutie “World Shut Your Mouth” (Rare Julian Cope Cover)
-(International) Noise Conspiracy “Washington Bullets”
-The Cure “The Walk” (Exclusive Live Version)
-The Shins “Turn Me On” (Exclusive Clint Mansell Remix)
-Spoon “Rhythm & Soul” (Exclusive Middle Version
-Teargas & Plateglass “One Day Across the Valley”
-Thievery Corporation “Passing the Stars”
-Travis “Gimme Some Truth” (Exclusive John Lennon Cover)

The Rapture Remixed on New Throne of Blood Comp

For all of the kids sick of hearing The Rapture‘s “House of Jealous Lovers,” worry no more. Our friends at the vinyl-only imprint Throne of Blood (managed by James Friedman and The Rapture themselves) have bestowed XLR8R with an exclusive track from the The Sound Remixes. Due out November 26, the newest addition to the TOB remix collection finds Manthraxx Records’ Max Pask turning out an otherwise disco-punk anthem into a cosmic journey to the stars. Feel the heat of Pask’s “Horrorshow Mix” and get floored. Like what you hear? Check out the WAYUH Remixes featuring Simian Mobile Disco and Claude VonStroke.

Download “The Sound (Max Pask Horrorshow Mix)”

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