Spool’s Out Radio #112: Artificial Incantations
https://www.mixcloud.com/spools-out-radio/spools-out-radio-112-artificial-incantations/
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Spool’s Out Radio #112: Artificial Incantations
https://www.mixcloud.com/spools-out-radio/spools-out-radio-112-artificial-incantations/
Hear my dulcet tones on Spool's Out review of the year, introducing a track by Beige Palace, from their tape "Gravel Time", which was one of my personal faves in 2016
Broshuda was the invited guest on the excellent Spools Out show on Resonance FM last night. Stream it up top.
Broshuda's 'Heatmap' features in the latest Spools Out transmission on the ever wonderful Resonance FM.
Tristan Bath rewinds 2014 to look at the the increasing popularity and creativity of the cassette release, and picks his favourite label and a selection of essential releases. Plus a mix!
Threes and Will & Huerequeque - Blue Thirteen (Blue Tapes)
Estonia's a country renowned for its natural beauty and picturesque cityscapes, and yet Threes and Will & Huerequeque capture the all-encompassing encroachment of the drab city, playing looping metropolitan mantras that gratingly struggle to overpower the monotony of their surroundings, over which they're powerless. 'Ikh Khüree' (an old name for Ulan Bator) explodes from whispering echo effects and emergent drones in to a doomy head banging drone fest with a psychedelic twist in the phasing guitars. The opening solo track from Huerequeque, 'Homöopaatiline epopöa' (homeopathic epic), lives up to its title with spiralling layers of noisy healing vibes, hovering above a monstrous monolithic drum chug, reflecting the ten minute closing solo track from Threes & Will, which unravels a perverted guitar noise jam over a mid-tempo drum beat. Blue Tapes rightfully name check Skullflower in their description of Blue Thirteen, as the bountifully theatrical noise rock of Matt Bower's guitar tempests and Stuart Dennison's epic percussive clatter are close aesthetic relatives. Skullflower's music dealt with terrestrial terrors though, and there's something of the celestial in Blue Thirteen's colossal noise. The colour-tinted psychedelic touches to Threes and Will & Huerequeque's noise thrust open the doors to the astral plane, like the pained ecstasy of an ancient Chinese torture victim, kept conscious by intravenously adminsistered opium. Unlucky for some? Not by any stretch of the imagination.
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