Showing posts with label electronic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label electronic. Show all posts

Monday, 23 November 2015

SHARDS - SAD SAYONARA, GOODBYE

One of this year's most interesting new Scottish electronic bands Shards have returned with their third track Sad Sayonara, Goodbye (Errant Media) which is available as a free download from their Soundcloud page.

Shards continue their foray into the sound they have dubbed melancholitronica with Sad Sayonara, Goodbye and, to be honest, that's as good a name for this type of sound as any, Experimental, but with a pop twist, the song is a haunting track that builds and builds to a wonderful climax. As with Shards' previous two releases, Just To Get Something Started and Afterwards, Sad Sayonara, Goodbye has the ability to hook you in and keep you returning, time after time. As I said above, it's a free download too, so you really have to check it out.


Shards Sad Sayonara, Goodbye is releases on Errant Media and is available now as a free download

Errant Media Twitter https://twitter.com/errantmedia


Monday, 27 April 2015

SI MATTHEWS - TALES OF TEN WORLDS

Si Matthews' new album Tales Of Ten Worlds (Carpe Sonum Records released 9 February 2015) is a rather lovely collection of ambient experimental electronic music that takes you on a journey through a series of sonic landscapes. Named after a short story collection by Arthur C Clarke, the ten tracks, Worlds 1 to 10, really grab your attention and I'd certainly recommend this release to any fans of ambient or even electronic music in general. Follow Si on Twitter ( https://twitter.com/SiMaths) for more info and check out his Soundcloud page (https://soundcloud.com/si-matthews)  to hear some of this album and his other, equally enjoyable work.

Finally, you can listen to and buy the cd here https://carpesonum.bandcamp.com/album/tales-of-ten-worlds



Thursday, 22 January 2015

NEW BANDS 2015 - 3. FIONA SOE PAING

Ok, this is more what you'd call an artist rather than a band but you get the drift. Fiona Soe Paing is a Scottish/Burmese producer and vocalist who is based in Aberdeem. Thus far, she's released two e.p's, Songs From No Man's Land (June 2010) and Tower of Babel (Nov 2012) and she's shortly due to play at the Big Burns Supper Festival in Dumfries on January 23 (http://2014.bigburnssupper.com/alien-lullabies.php)


Both the e.p's are similar in style, though Tower of Babel is the standout of the two. Its mix of fractured electronics, samples and beats that bring to mind the darker parts of Kraftwerk's is tremendously impressive, no more so than on Daymoon Sun which is a great track. The other two tracks, Tower of Babel and Behrot are equally captivating and the whole e.p. really grabs you from the off. Go and grab both e.p's from Fiona's Bandcamp page today and delve in.

Fiona Soe Paing Bandcamp https://fionasoepaing.bandcamp.com/
Fiona Soe Paing Twitter https://twitter.com/FionaSoePaing
Fiona Soe Paing website http://www.fionasoepaing.co.uk/

Monday, 19 January 2015

NEW BANDS 2015 - 2. MALMO

Malmo are a Glasgow based band comprising Alex Milne, Frank MccFarlane and Will Adamson who produce electronic music that combines sparse beats with a lush cinematic feel that is something really rather lovely indeed. The band's Reverbnation page is your first port of call as there you'll find 5 tracks that you really want to hear.



Into My Heart combines sparse, tight Kraftwerk like rhythms with beautifully floating melodies, whilst The Bridge evokes Goldfrapp's lusher moments superbly, before the Behaviour era Pet Shop Boys feel of NY55 rounds off the selection of tracks perfectly. This is a intriguingly diverse set of songs that really grab you and let's hope there are many more to come

The band's Reverbnation page is here http://www.reverbnation.com/malmo4 and once you've checked that out find them on Facebook and Twitter too

Thursday, 13 November 2014

MACHINES IN HEAVEN - HINDU MILK EP

Hindu Milk is Machines In Heaven's first release since their outstanding debut album bordersbreakdown. Since that album came out, the band's reputation has grown and grown, so much so that the NME recently pointed them out as one to watch from Glasgow's impressive music scene. With the release of Hindu Milk (released 14 November on Hotgem), the band are surely destined to take a significant leap forward and it is only a matter of time until Machines In Heaven become a very important band, not only in the Scottish music world, but in the rest of the UK and beyond.



The e.p. itself is a real progression from their debut album. Whereas bordersbreakdown mixed acoustic sounds with waves of noise and pummeling bass, all five tracks here have a cleaner more focused sound and at points are genuine pop songs. The choice of Edge Of The Middle as the e.p's opener is a clever one as it acts like a transition from bordersbreakdown to the new songs, taking the controlled noise chaos of the album, in this instance some Aphex Twin like breaks, and mixing it with some wonderful electronics. It's a great start to the e.p. and really sets the scene. Track 2 is the title track of the e.p. and is one of two absolute blow your mind standout tracks here. Hindu Milk comes across like a Kraftwerk gone pop, mixing the clean electronics of Computer World with a lead melody that is pure syntpop genius. As if that's not enough, at 2 mins 32 seconds in you're hit with some vocodered vocals that are simultaneously uplifting and heartbreaking. It's a stupendously good track and you simply have to hear it. 



Next up is Voodoo Mechanics, which it is no exaggeration to say, has the electronic pulse of Depeche Mode at their Violator peak. As you're no doubt aware from 90% of the content of this blog, there is a certain Depeche bias at play here but, genuinely, and please go and listen if you don't believe me, Voodoo Mechanics shares its' DNA with Violator and given that Violator is the single greatest thing in the history of music, that is no bad thing at all. Throw in the New Order style, or dare I say latter day Depeche style guitars towards the end and you have something very special indeed.

If Hindu Milk is Kraftwerk go pop, the track 4 Feel Slow is Machines In Heaven go pop. It's bloody marvellous and deserves to be a solid gold chart smash pop fans. Starting off with more wonderfully crisp electronics, a pusling bassline and what sounds like a distorted version of Chopsticks, the track builds and builds before Davey's vocals are unleashed and you're transported to Planet Synthpop, which is a very nice place to be. This, I think, is a first for Machines In Heaven as most of their vocals to date have been through a vocoder but the use of Davey's vocals here really enhance the track. It's available as a free download prior to the e.p's release and I urge you to get it. When electronic music of this quality is produced, it would be foolish not to listen in.

The final track on the e.p. is another wonderful electronic piece called Holy Particles which twists and turns through its' seven minutes building from an almost ambient start to the sort of track Orbital did back in the days when they were untouchable. It's great and you can already see being a star track at tents full of people at next year's festivals. 



I could obviously have saved you a good bit of time if my review has just said "The new Machines In Heaven e.p. Hindu Milk is unbelievably good and you have to buy it" but what would be the point in that? This is music so good that you want to listen to it, tell people how good it is, then listen to it again and again. I'm trying not to going over the score, but this is genuinely some of the best electronic music I've heard in a long time. The Machines have gone pop and in doing so, the Machines have won. Give in to them now.

Go here for a free download of Feel Slow http://www.redbullstudios.com/london/recordings/feel-slow

Tuesday, 14 October 2014

CARIBOU - OUR LOVE

Dan Snaith a.k.a Caribou is back with a brand new album that is surely one of the electronic albums of the year. Our Love, the fourth album released under the Caribou name, beeps, bleeps, pulses and twitches in all the right places, making it a wholly engrossing listen from start to finish. The album carries on in a similar vein to 2010's excellent Swim, but it feels far more personal than that release. These are songs of love and longing with lyrics that are tinged with regret, all enveloped in warm sounding but clinical synths and the crispest of beats.



Silver (listen below) is a standout track and a perfect example of the album's theme. Over a beautiful arpeggiated baseline and an almost queasy sounding sample, Snaith sings of losing a loved one to the arms of another in a sad falsetto ("I wish I'd never met you/It doesn't mean I can't get over you"). This is extremely personal music, which can be a rare thing in the electronic field, and that mix of the personal and electronics permeates the album. All I Ever Need is a minimal track with a distinct R&B feel in places which again tugs at the heartstrings ("My next love will be the best I ever had"), Second Chance a detuned version of a downbeat love song and Your Love Will Set You Free an atmospheric album closer which dreams of the person you loved but let go.



Our Love is an exploration of the end of a relationship masked in some of the most inventive electronic music you'll hear at the moment. Experimental and, at times, testing, it's an album that deserves a couple of plays. Once you do that, you'll fall in love with it.