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Patrick Shiroishi - Descension
Thin Wrist
2020
75 Dollar Bill — I Was Real (Thin Wrist)
I Was Real by 75 Dollar Bill
75 Dollar Bill’s potent blend of juke-joint boogie, Sahel shredding, stern NYC minimalism, and experimental wonkery reached an apotheosis on Wood/Metal/Plastic/Pattern/Rhythm/Rock, four slabs of art-school party jams that were as groovy, jagged, heavy, hard, soft, abrasive, smooth, austere and warm as sandstone. Their new LP, the sprawling I Was Real, doesn’t add anything to the sound they perfected on W/M/P/P/R/R. Rather, I Was Real deconstructs, re-examines and re-assembles it. It’s a career summary, victory lap and puzzle box from of one of America’s most interesting bands.
I Was Real’s biggest surprises are formal and structural, not sonic. Nearly every prior permutation of 75 Dollar Bill, from guitar/percussion duo to septet appears on I Was Real, and their studio-as-instrument experiments have become more refined. Captivating opener “Every Last Coffee or Tea,” (a wonderful full band re-recording of a track from their first cassette) segues into “C. OR. T.- Verso,” three minutes of scraping noise constructed from the “Every Last Coffee or Tea” intro. Another one: the suite of “I. New New II. The Worm III. Like Laundry,” where a slinky guitar/double bass number is swallowed up in its prime by a taut drone whose tonal center shifts imperceptibly over the course of four minutes before fading into the moody guitar/percussion duet “Like Laundry” (not to be confused with “Like Like Laundry,” another early piece). Best of these experiments is “WZN#3-Verso,” which consists of roiling, rumbling viola, violin, Casio, guitar, saxophone and bass recorded as overdubs for the closing track, “WZN#3” (another re-recording), but left to fend for themselves.
Hoodies are life 💀💀
All I know is the dance in my head
Sean Rawls (che già conosciamo per Masters of the Hemisphere, Je Suis France, Still Flyin' e Go Public) lancia un nuovo progetto solista chiamato Thin Wrist.Il primo singolo è già fuori, ascolta "121":
https://unblogallaradio.blogspot.com/2026/02/all-i-know-is-dance-in-my-head.html 🎸
Frantz Loriot — While Whirling (Thin Wrist)
Photo by Philippe Pierre
While Whirling by Frantz Loriot
There’s something very precise about Frantz Loriot’s solo music. What you hear is all there is to hear, which is one person playing a few sounds you expect and many you do not on a viola. It is not programmatic music; there’s no story about Peter and the Wolf or a war between two nations or the emotional anguish that one person suffers when their partner is taken away to fight that war.
Still, it takes place within a series of contexts, beginning with the way it is presented. The physical manifestation of While Whirling is an exactingly produced vinyl record packaged in a striking sleeve that has both glossy and matte finishes. The sleeve looks like a collage, but it is not. It is a mass produced, unified image that is the product of multiple processes, and if you take the sleeve to be a statement made about the music, then you might start wondering what processes resulted in Loriot playing what he played when he played it.
Patrick Shiroishi — Descension (Thin Wrist)
Photo by Brian Griffith
Descension by Patrick Shiroishi
On June 28, 1965, John Coltrane convened a big band unlike any big band that had come before it. The piece that they recorded that day, Ascension, looked resolutely ahead to new freedoms and possibilities, some of which musicians are still dealing with today.
You might remember that November 2016 was a month of reckoning for many Americans, and saxophonist Patrick Shiroishi was one of them. As the nation’s racial antipathy amped up, resonating with intensifying xenophobia around the globe, he delved into his family’s personal history with dispossession and imprisonment. His paternal grandparents had met in Tule Lake Isolation Center, a vast camp in far northeastern California which at peak capacity held 120,000 Japanese-Americans. While he researched, an electoral sufficiency of the country’s population embraced the presidential candidate that championed said antipathy. On November 24, 2016, Shiroishi played a solo concert in which he thought about those things that had happened and were happening, and communicated those thoughts in a language that had been honed by John Coltrane (among many others) on albums like Ascension (among many others). Some of the music from that concert became Descension.