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As we bid adieu to the site layout that has served us very (very) well for the past four years, there's a few things to look forward to... feature :: by Brad Rose
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Since the mid-nineties, composer/guitarist Ernesto Diaz-Infante has been releasing some of the most boldly unclassifiable and uncompromising music that spans an unbelievably wide range of sounds. Though having studied modern composition in college, Diaz-Infante’s work, particularly in his various collaborations, often taps into the same no-mind realm of free jazz and modern noise. Much of this has come out on his own Pax Recordings, a label “dedicated to the documentation, perservation, and contagion of music from the margins of our culture and psyches”. Ernesto provided some thoughtful responses to our questions about his music and his label... feature :: by David Perron
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Horaflora is San Francisco-based musician Raub Roy. My first encounter with Horaflora came on the Resipiscent records release, “Ralph White and the Horaflora Sound System,” which impressed me with its panoply of madcap pinging, pattering, and manipulated folk droning. It was the next Horaflora release, however, “The Gland Canyon” (Install), that really knocked me off my horse, convincing me that Horaflora is engaged in some of today’s most compelling excursions into what sound is capable of doing. Horaflora music, and “The Gland Canyon” in particular, has an internal logic and a strange type of sentience that I really like. I compare this music to an ecosystem, not so much for sounding like a rainforest or something, but because of all the interrelated sound components that hum with activity while achieving an overall balance. .. feature :: by Mike Pursley
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Berlin’s Bis auf’s Messer emporium has all bases covered. From two rooms in the Eastern borough of Friedrichshain, Robert and Stefan run a store and a mailorder operation, they organize gigs, and not one, but two labels: Stefan’s label is Vendetta, while Robert is head of the Adagio 830 imprint. Before visiting the store for the first time a few weeks ago, I had only been a regular mailorder customer. After one hour in the store I was already considering doing a feature for Foxy Digitalis, after another hour on the listening sofa I knew I would do it. By then it was 4pm and the small store was buzzing – on a Monday afternoon. All record players were taken, so Robert was in high demand to comment on releases he had just gotten in. And while his passion as a music dealer was obvious, he commented rather skeptically on most of the things people showed him... feature :: by Jan-Arne Sohns
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More so than perhaps any festival on the radar, the lineup itself was truly the draw of Chicago’s inaugural Neon Marshmallow Fest, the four-day cornucopia of experimental music of all stripes (yes, Cornucopia did play). (yes, Cornucopia did play). Programmed by Chicagoans Dan Smith, aka Red Electric Rainbow, and Matt Kimmel, of the video site Acid Marshmallow, Neon Marshmallow somehow managed to cram in, on two stages at the beautiful, industrial Viaduct Theatre, over 90 sets by an astonishingly wide variety of prominent artists... feature :: by Travis Bird
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Padna’s own Nat Hawks runs a rad micro-label out of Brooklyn with an even radder name! The releases that LFT lovingly puts out are by passionate artists that just want to do something different and push the envelope. You know, do their own thing. Artists like Robe., Arklight, Color Rabbit, Spermwhales, and Universal Studios Florida are a fun, eclectic bunch that have gotten out there thanks to this little critter of a label. Read what Nat Hawks had to tell me about his label…... feature :: by Dave Miller
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Show review from August 6th, 2010 at Cafe Oto in London featuring Graham Lambkin, Call Back the Giants and Helm. I was disappointed by the headliners, but a smashing performance from Helm and some creepy poetry from Call Back The Giants made it all worthwhile... feature :: by Peter Taylor
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Eggy Records (and Eggy Distribution) is the brainchild of Portlander, Raf Spielman. He is perhaps best known as the guy behind the excellent project, The Polyps, and also as an integral member of one of the most underrated pop bands around, The Golden Hours. Yet it is with the tapes and 7”s he’s been quietly releasing on Eggy that he’s really making a name for himself. All the releases are packaged in beautifully silkscreened sleeves (all designed by Spielman – his work is instantly recognizable). The music generally has a bit of a pop-bend, but is always interesting in other ways as well. If he could, he’d eat spaghetti every day and he has a book of drawings coming out through Container Corps (which I’m damn excited about). I highly recommend heading on over to Eggy and seeing all the goodies Spielman has to offer... label-spotlight :: by Brad Rose
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Donovan Quinn has already proven himself to be one of the more gifted folk-pop songsmiths of the past decade through his work with Verdure and The Skygreen Leopards. But his recent efforts backed by the 13th Month have been particularly notable for their pitch perfect blend of pop, rock, and country songcraft and darkly imaginative lyrics, both enhanced by a well-considered analog sound. Donovan answered some questions about “Your Wicked Man”, his brand new full-length co-released by Soft Abuse and Shrimper Records, and about some of his other recent projects... feature :: by David Perron
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Marc Manning is an artist and musician living and working in San Francisco. Inspired by the forests of the pacific northwest and the ghost folklore of the north east, Manning uses the wail of his electric guitar to ward off unseen forces that seem to be conspiring against him. He has released music under the monikers, Legend of Boggy Creek, Everything is Fine, Red Weather Tigers, and Heavy Lids. He has performed extensively on the east and west coasts over the past 10 years. Manning is a veteran of several Philadelphia atmospheric bands, the shoe gazer art rock of "The Legend of Boggy Creek" and cave core rock of "Everything is Fine". .. feature :: by Dave Miller
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I’ve been vaguely familiar with the TRD W/d (aka Turned Word) label for a while but only become fully aware of just how much incredible stuff they’ve been doing when I did a massive trade with one of the guys who runs it, Dan Beckman. Most familiar to me is Beckman’s project, Uke of Spaces Corners, but the thing that’s so great about TRD W/d is the range of stuff they release. C Section 8’s “Urban Music” is one of the best things I’ve heard all year, but it’s totally off another path from Uke. Add in killer stuff like Flak Mask, Impractical Cockpit and Shep & Me, and you’ve got one hell of a line-up with a little taste for everyone. Get on that wagon, folks... label-spotlight :: by Brad Rose
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