Saturday, July 16, 2011

REVIEW: Azalia Snail - "Celestial Respect" CD, 2011

Azalia Snail - Celestial Respect, 2011
Azalia Snail - Celestial Respect, 2011

AZALIA SNAIL
Celestial Respect CD, 2011
Silber Records
Raw and ethereal at the same time, two qualities long thought to be mutually exclusive. "Solar Riser" opens with multiple layers of vocal and keyboard drones. "Burnt Cookies" starts with a satisfyingly simple drum beat and builds into a sort of a gothic Rolling Stones full-band groove, disappearing behind a wall of echo. The songs are interspersed with keyboard and vocal passages which are themselves cloaked in slapback echo. "Fallen Down" is a straight, quiet passage near the end. The overall tone reminds me of the first couple of Jarboe solo albums I heard, and, like those, "Celestial Respect" is its own thing.
Ian C Stewart

NEWS: Dave Stafford's all-new Pureambient HD channel on YouTube

Dave Stafford's pureambientHD channel is up and running at last on YouTube - featuring all five of the available Dave Stafford Live Performance Videos in stunning HD video with the highest quality audio possible.

INTERVIEW: Shaun Sandor of Promute and Bicameral Mind

Shaun Sandor
Shaun Sandor


AUTOreverse #14, Summer 2011
Interview with
SHAUN SANDOR
of PROMUTE and BICAMERAL MIND
by Ian C Stewart

WHERE/HOW/WHEN DID YOU RECORD YOUR LATEST THING?
I recorded the most recent release - Portocal Sessions in the spring of 2011. It is on the Zeromoon Label as a net release, and hard copies for sale go to benefit the Sonic Circuits Festival in DC.

INTERVIEW: Graham Halliday aka Funkmeister G interviewed by Skot Schtikla

Funkmeister G
Funkmeister G
AUTOreverse #14, Summer 2011
FUNKMEISTER G aka
GRAHAM HALLIDAY
interview
by Skot Schtikla

Graham Halliday is mainly known in the recording guise of Funkmeister G.



Born in Ireland and then living in Perth, Western Australia for a few years, he is Sydney-based and has lived in just about every suburb of the 'inner west' since he was a kid. He produced Chunky Yet Funky zine in the 90's when I first came across him and some of my earliest memories of G are him calling me on the phone and then not really saying much except 'listen to this' and then he would play me everything from a dictaphone or tape deck old jazz, Sun Ra, Captain Beefheart to some of what I assumed to be his own noise recordings down the phone which with the old land-line would pretty much come across as 20 minutes of distorted fuzz!