{"id":205278,"date":"2017-07-13T07:00:10","date_gmt":"2017-07-13T11:00:10","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/theartsdesk-on-vinyl-30-moby-the-beach-boys-napalm-death-john-coltrane-and-more-the-arts-desk\/"},"modified":"2017-07-13T07:00:10","modified_gmt":"2017-07-13T11:00:10","slug":"theartsdesk-on-vinyl-30-moby-the-beach-boys-napalm-death-john-coltrane-and-more-the-arts-desk","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/modern-satanism\/theartsdesk-on-vinyl-30-moby-the-beach-boys-napalm-death-john-coltrane-and-more-the-arts-desk\/","title":{"rendered":"theartsdesk on Vinyl 30: Moby, The Beach Boys, Napalm Death, John Coltrane and more &#8211; The Arts Desk"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    If theres a downside to the resurgence of vinyl, its that all    thats left in most charity shops these days is James Galway    and his cursed flute and Max Bygraves medley albums. Then    again, theres always new stuff coming in so its down to    everybody to get in there quick, before the local record shops    hoover up all the gems. And there it is. Many small towns now    have local record shops again. Thats surely something to    celebrate. Theres even a Vinyl Festival this September in    Rotherhithe, with a hundred stalls featuring independent labels and    dealers, and the latest vinyl-related tech, alongside DJ sets    and staged in conversations with various usual suspects (eg    Tim Burgess). As Ive written here before; vinyl is a fad right    now but it may not always be, so get stuck in and grab some.    Monthly reviews on theartsdesk on Vinyl guide    through the best of whats out there, from bangin techno to    spanking new countrynwestern to seminal 50 year old jazz. Dive in.  <\/p>\n<p>    VINYL OF THE MONTH  <\/p>\n<p>    Hidden Orchestra Dawn Chorus (Tru    Thoughts)  <\/p>\n<p>    The    third album from Brighton electronic producer Joe Acheson is a    suite of field recording-based music themed around dawn in the    countryside (apart from two tracks recorded in urban    environments). That sounds like the sort of conceptual art    project people give lip service to, that creates a few column    inches in broadsheet arts supplements, but is basically boring    to listen to. Not so. Coming on double transparent vinyl, the    gatefold sleeve describes details of the various locations the    material was recorded, which range from his own garden to a    forest near Prague, and the whole is speckled with violin and    piano by the composer Poppy Ackroyd, as well as loads of    birdsong. What makes it all so listenable is a dubby    propulsion, a mantric head-nodding quality thats earthy yet    light, dragging the listener into what can only be described as    a soundscape (my allotted one use of the term for 2017).    Alongside the crackling fires and whistling winds (and, on    Serpentine, relatively hectic percussion) theres a plethora    of mellow woodwind and mournful strings. The whole thing could    have been an ambient drag but, instead, its a gently engaging    masterpiece.  <\/p>\n<p>    Various The Wicked Die Young: Nicholas    Winding Refn (Milan)  <\/p>\n<p>    Nicholas Winding    Refn is a Hollywood auteur to watch (albeit one from Denmark).    His films are unafraid to wander outside the normative. Perhaps    the best example of this is his beautiful, bizarre horror    meditation on the fashion industry, The Neon Demon,    from last year. Cliff Martinez wrote the distinctive electronic    soundtrack to that film, as well as Refns Ryan    Gosling-starring pair, Only God Forgives and    Drive. The Wicked Die Young is a companion    piece, wherein Refn compiles, over four sides on art gatefold,    the music that inspired the mood of The Neon Demon.    The result is a great and imaginative collection that retains    the strange, sometimes sickly sensual mood of the film in    question. It runs the gamut from punk groovers such as 999s    surprisingly supple Homicide to the kitschy sex-disco of    Tommy Seebacks Bubble Sex; from the even purer kitsch of    Lynsey de Pauls Wont Somebody Dance With Me and Dionne    Warwicks Theme From The Valley of the Dolls to original    gothic synth-pop tunes by Electric Youth, Martinez and Refns    brother Julian. The concept behind The Wicked Die    Young sounds indulgent but the result is hugely enjoyable.  <\/p>\n<p>    Moby & The Void Pacific Choir More    Fast Songs About the Apocalypse (Little Idiot)  <\/p>\n<p>    If you    enjoyed last Autumns These Systems Are Failing, then    More Fast Songs About the Apocalypse is very similar.    On transparent candy pink vinyl in photo-art inner sleeve, it    may well be that Moby and pals recorded these songs in the same    sessions. In terms of production, they certainly sound that    way, great hammering walls of melodic synth, with attacking    electronic percussion flying along beside, all adding up to a    polished 21st century anti-Trump punk. The odd thing    about this album is that, while its exhilarating, I find it    hard to recall specific songs after it finishes. Im left with    a general fist-pumping-the-air sense of righteous howling at    the misguided powers that be. That said, there are gigantic    stand-outs, such as the cinematically vast All The Hurts We    Made, which sounds like long-lost Eighties act Red Box    reinvented on an apocalyptic scale by an angry rave-punk    behemoth, or the closing A Happy Song which comes on like    Gary Numan going ballistic. Hearing These Systems Are    Failing, and More Fast Songs About the Apocalypse    live on a large system would be a wild experience, theyre a    vibrant addition to Mobys critically underrated back    catalogue, but two albums of this stuff is enough.  <\/p>\n<p>    The Beach Boys Wild Honey (Capitol)  <\/p>\n<p>    After the    well-documented sandpit and LSD shenanigans of the    Smile\/Smiley Smile project, culminating in    commercial failure, the battered Beach Boys regrouped for what    would be songwriting genius Brian Wilsons last wholly    conceived album for a decade. Given the critical kudos which    The Beach Boys have gathered in the intermediate 50 years, its    usually forgotten that as the psychedelic Sixties bloomed and    rock music came into being, they were sneered at as a crappy    pop band, a relic of the previous clean-cut era. The critics    were certainly not on their side in 1967. Wild Honey,    then, was an attempt to deliver something with more oomph and,    indeed, it has a rhythmnblues vivacity that fits in with    what, say, Stax Records were up to at the time. Its not too    far, even, from the Northern Soul aesthetic in places, while    songs such as How She Boogalooed It have an almost Stonesy    feel. The title track, with its Otis Redding-buys-a-Moog vibe,    is a must-have number, and the whole thing has a welcome    punchiness.  <\/p>\n<p>    Various Closed Circuits: Australian    Alternative Electronic Music of the 70s and 80s, Volume    1 (Warner Music Australia)  <\/p>\n<p>    This    collection is worth the price of entry for obscure unit And An    As seven-minute 1982 corker Affirmation. It sounds somewhere    between The Talking Heads and all those early Eighties    Manchester indie bands who tried in vain to play funk. Closing    with a hypnotic sequence where bleepy keyboard meshes with    harmonica and jangling guitar, its a minor classic. Over two    records in an info and image-filled gatefold, the rest is a    fascinating mixed bag which runs from the bizarre to the    brilliant to the best-not. Given the title, I was expecting a    collection of 80s electro-pop. There are moments imitative of    that, such as Jules Rock, Rock Daddy, which recalls    Animotions 1984 hit Obsession, or the ballad Waiting by    The Dugites, which has a rhythm track very similar to    Ultravoxs Vienna (which it pre-empted). However, much of    Closed Circuits is indie band music with electronic    trimmings or just plain post-punk experimentalism. German    Humours \"A Young Mans Old Girlfriend is a lovely    Chameleons-ish thing, albeit with the lyrics recorded inaudibly    low, while Anna Cessna & Essendon Airports Talking to    Cleopatra is an alt-pop mess that would have fitted in well    beside And The Restless Natives There Goes Concorde Again    on The John Peel Show, meanwhile Scattered Orders A    Few Little Shocks is sheer industrial assault. In parts, then,    a revelatory selection.  <\/p>\n<p>    Bernard Herrmann Psycho (Stylotone)  <\/p>\n<p>    Psycho is one of the most groundbreaking films ever    made. In terms of horror, its a key text, and, as its director    Alfred Hitchcock acknowledged, much of the films power came    from Bernard Herrmanns jarring music (Hitchcock pinned it down    to exactly one third). This 7 single, limited to 1960 copies,    in honour of Psychos year of release, was cut    directly from the master tapes at Abbey Road and sounds that    way. It contains the theme music at the start of the film,    which mingles a driving melodic thriller motif with something    altogether more unsettling, and on the flip, the famous string    stabs of the shower murder. The latter is still used as comedy    verbal shorthand to describe the dangerously mad over half a    century after it was composed. Its a short, sharp, shock of a    piece and this 7 makes it ripe for dropping in between other    tunes, as a DJ or host, spicing up the menu with something    brief, utterly recognizable, classic and energetically    disquieting.  <\/p>\n<p>    Miranda Lee Richards Existential    Beast (Invisible Hands Music)  <\/p>\n<p>    Miranda Lee Richards would have made a less plasticized    Lana del Rey, if shed had that sort of team behind her a few    years ago. She has that hazy David Lynch-ian thing down but    seems more red-blooded and rockin than Americas A1 trip hop    diva. Her fourth album, which arrives with a 12 x 24    lyric\/art insert, has a country music tint, but is equally    smeared with a woozy, stoned, singer-songwriter ethos. Her    voice is crystal clear, girl-ish, precise in delivery, and    provides an ethereal counterpoint to the tuneful, classy    psyche-pop guitar. Here and there are very faint hints of the    Cocteau Twins and Miranda Lee Richards acknowledged influence,    Mazzy Starr. It's likeable drug-tinted space-pop for wafting    around dimly lit rooms trailing a hallucinatory swirl of Boho    silk scarves.  <\/p>\n<p>    Various Behind the Counter With Max    Richter (Rough Trade)  <\/p>\n<p>    Max    Richter has gradually wended his way to becoming a leading    light of the current modern-classical boom. He exemplifies an    unfussy Venn diagram crossover between trad conservatoire    virtuosity, self-taught electronic freakery and the    relationship of both to the filmic, both literally and    conceptually. This three disc set in triple gatefold lays out    his parameters via a compilation that runs from Aphex Twin and    Mogwais pop music heritage to the canonical likes of Handel,    Schubert, Rachmaninov and Purcell. Along the way, and, perhaps,    most interestingly, he showcases the more approachable face of    abstruse art music, such as Massachusetts vocal ensemble    Roomful of Teeth performing a piece called Partita III.    Courante by Pulitzer Prize-winning New York composer Caroline    Shaw, which consists of singing and voice exercises cut    together in a way thats both beautiful and entirely different,    or the glitched Buchla synthesizer twinklings of Kaitlyn    Aurelia Smith, which achieves a sort of sonic Aurora Borealis.    There are a couple of his own works in there too, and its    pleasing to see him give peculiar teenage Norwich newcomers    Lets Eat Grandma the nod. An elegant collection wherein Max    Richter whispers, Come into my world, its not noisy and its    sometimes not immediate, but stick with me and youll find    unexpected treats.  <\/p>\n<p>    Napalm Death Scum (Earache)  <\/p>\n<p>    When Scum    appeared in 1987, it changed the game for speed-metallers    across the world. It brought in a number of tropes that would    prove highly influential, notably the incomprehensible    growl-vomited vocals and sudden bursts of blast beats    (demented drum assaults). Time has not mellowed it. One way    that it stands out from many of the bands it influenced is the    defiant lo-fi scuzz-punk feel, especially on side one. Another    curious aspect is that its the ultra-hardcore Midlands    outfits most famous work yet was made by, essentially, two    different bands, one per side, neither of which contained any    members of the current Napalm Death (their bassist first    appeared on the next record). Overseen by drummer Mick Harris,    master of the aforementioned blast beats, and with input on    side one from Justin Broadrick, later of industrial metallers    Godflesh, it has a rising, falling insectoid hum, the brevity    of the songs and the socio-political lyrical content subsumed    by the violent need of its makers to purge these emotions from    their system. Cheap, caustic and ballistic, Scum    remains a signpost on the landscape of extreme music and its    power remains little dissipated by the intermediate 30 years.    Comes in original lyric\/photo sleeve.  <\/p>\n<p>    John Coltrane Ol + Coltrane    Plays the Blues + Giant Steps + Trane: The    Atlantic Collection (Warner Bros) + John Coltrane    & Don Cherry The Avant-Garde (Warner    Bros) + Milt Jackson & John Coltrane    Bags and Trane (Warner Bros)  <\/p>\n<p>    The    word legend is much overused by music writers, and even more    by PRs. However, some artists achieve legendary status, via the    giant shadow their work\/persona casts over the decades, most    especially if their time on earth flared brief but oh so    bright. John Coltrane falls into this latter category, a    saxophonist who, for around a decade prior to his death from    liver cancer in 1967, flew at the boundaries of what jazz could    be in a manner only comparable to his great contemporary, rival    and occasional collaborator, Miles Davis. These Atlantic    albums, all recorded at the very dawn of the Sixties for    Atlantic Records (although some were released later in the    decade), showcase an artist enjoying the outer limits of what    was then critically and commercially acceptable in jazz, prior    to leaping off into free forms and outright experimentalism    that divided listeners. 1962s Coltrane Plays the    Blues, for instance, featuring material recorded during    the 1960 sessions for the commercially successful My    Favourite Things album, is full of warmly approachable    tones and easy vamping, sprightly, never settling to easy    levity. The hook-up with trumpet master Don Cherry around the    same period (but not released until 1966) is entitled The    Avant-Garde but finds both musicians enjoying their own    take on Ornette Coleman compositions, flighty, occasionally    challenging, but never going off at the deep end. Giant    Steps, produced by Atlantic giant Nesuhi Ertegn (brother    of Led Zep pal Ahmet) is a livelier creature, fluid and often    frantic, by the standards of the time. Its all Coltranes own    music and was a breakthrough album, truly putting him on the    map. Its restless energy still leaps from the speakers today.    1962s Ol, meanwhile, the last release while Coltrane    was still on the label, is my own favourite, primarily for its    driving, flamenco-flavoured, side-long suite of a title track,    although the new Trane: The Atlantic Collection is a    juicy catch-all compilation (although no Ol). Finally, the    Milt Jackson collaboration isnt actually a John Coltrane album    at all, more Jackson featuring him, but is from the same period    and a tasty addendum to these reissues. All albums come with a    12 x 12 insert featuring the front\/back cover art.  <\/p>\n<p>    Alison Moyet Other (Cooking Vinyl)  <\/p>\n<p>    As one who    hasnt listened to anything Alison Moyet has done for years,    and who associates her with middle-of-the-road jazz-pop from    the Eighties, Other is a right ear-opener. Many of you    will have caught up with these developments already with 2013s    The Minutes album; Moyets return to electronic    backing which is, after all, where she began with Yazoo    three-and-a-half decades ago. Other is, then,    overflowing with elegant, studio-symphonic pop, produced by Guy    Sigsworth. It ranges from the luscious Bond theme-ish The    Rarest Birds to the snappy electro-funk of Reassuring    Pinches, and goes many places else (including spoken word    poetry). Moyet has said how liberating recording this album and    its predecessor have been, freeing her from expectations people    have of middle-aged female jazz singers. More power to her.    Its a creative renaissance worth following.  <\/p>\n<p>    Coldcut x On-U Sound Outside The Echo    Chamber Boxset (Ahead of Our Time)  <\/p>\n<p>    For five    years, from around 1985, the DJ-producer duo Coldcut and the    On-U Sound label-owner and producer Adrian Sherwood were two of    the most influential sound-makers in British electronic music,    always right at the vanguard, yet both with large popular    followings. Coldcut majored in Steinski-influenced, hip    hop-flavoured dance music cut-ups, with a soul-pop edge, while    Sherwood, Londons alt-dub kingpin, revelled in pushing reggae    and world music into bassbin-shattering post-punk weirdness.    Finally joining forces, Outside the Echo Chamber is an    album in 7 boxset form. Names such as Roots Manuva and Lee    Scratch Perry make solid appearances, although the best tune    is an instrumental called Metro that riffs on the Doctor    Who Theme. The package mingles poppy approachability,    especially on the lovers rock song Make Up Your Mind\", with    more exotic outings, such as an appearance by Mumbai singer    Hamsika Iyer, as well as a number of reverberating dub    versions. The eight 7s, in brown paper sleeves, are dinked,    which is to say they have a large hole punched out of the    middle like old-fashioned jukebox fare. The boxset comes with    two plastic Coldcut-logoed adaptors to play them on a normal    deck.  <\/p>\n<p>    Peter Gabriel Passion + Long Walk    Home (Caroline International\/Real World)  <\/p>\n<p>    Really    these should be called The Last Temptation of Christ    OST and Rabbit-Proof Fence OST, for thats what    they are. I had them allotted as secondary Gabriel releases but    upon putting them on the decks, the mastering is extraordinary,    the sound incredible, truly putting many of the other releases    this month, however good the music, into sonic perspective.    Take, for instance, The Promise of Shadows from the fifth    side of the soundtrack to Martin Scorceses controversial 1988    film The Last Temptation of Christ. It sees Gabriel on    synths play off against virtuoso drummer Billy Cobham, the    latter very far from his usual jazz-funk mode, creating a dark    percussive piece that simply inhabits the whole head, such is    the depth of sound. Passion is the much fuller, more    rewarding of the two albums. It features musicians from all    over, from Turkey to Bahrain to Ghana, and sees Gabriel    immersed in his love for fusing sounds from around the globe.    It also includes additional pieces that arent in the film.    Indeed, theres no need to have seen the film to enjoy it, a    rich, electronically-enhanced tapestry of sound that would fit    well into a marijuana-stewed late night yurt-bar at WOMAD. The    music from the 2002 Australian film Rabbit Proof Fence    is equally well-cut to vinyl but lacks Passions    breadth and sense of adventure. Instead, its meditative tones    are moody ambient, more ponderous, although fans will note that    the track Ngankarrparni was recycled by Gabriel on the    Up album, put together around the same time. Both    albums come in photo-laden gatefold with info\/image inner    sleeves. Passion is a triple, with its sixth side    taken over with etched art imitative of the films poster.    Long Walk Home is a double.  <\/p>\n<p>    Dave Gold Heaven on Their Minds (My    Only Desire)  <\/p>\n<p>    They were    certainly having a ball at BBC Radio 2s Jazz Club live    sessions in 1974. These four cuts are big band jazz, on its    deathbed, having one last funky ball, before rolling over and    becoming part of history. If you want to know more about all    that, read Romany and Tom: A Memoir, a biography of    his parents lives by Ben Watt of Everything But The Girl. His    dad was a big band jazzer dreaming of a future in the 1970s    when there simply wasnt one. Its heart-breaking stuff. Back    to the matter in hand, Dave Gold was a band-leader through the    Sixties, Seventies and Eighties, working for library music    label KPM and others. These loud, proud pieces of music have    clearly been plucked from obscurity due to their outrageous    danceability. Jesus Christs Superstars Heaven on    Their Minds becomes a brassy monster, Golds own walking    bassline romp OConnell Street is a flute-addled joy, Jimmy    Webbs A Pocketful of Keys is frantic, cheesy easy, and    Golds Nostalgia (Aint What It Used to Be) has something of    Theme From Shaft about it in places, albeit on the end of    Blackpool Pier. An ebullient package for retro soul-funk    instrumental junkies.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rubn Gonzlez Introducing (World    Circuit)  <\/p>\n<p>    20th anniversary re-release for the album the    Cuban pianist Rubn Gonzlez cut at the same time and in the    same studio as the outrageously successful Buena Vista    Social Club, on which he also appeared. Its a wonderfully    joyous affair. In his mid-seventies by the time of the    Buena Vista sessions, hed played with a whos who of    Cuban music during the previous decades, from proto-salsa and    rumba kingpin Arsenio Rodrguez in the 1940s to self-proclaimed    inventor of the cha-cha-cha, Enrique Jorrn, in the 1960s. By    1996 Gonzlez had no piano of his own and was living in    relatively humble circumstances so, once Buena Vista    was finished, he hung around at the studio, playing the piano.    With producer Nick Gold still at the controls, able to see the    potential of what was happening,Gonzlez jammed    out this album in two days with a gang of associates. It    consists of Cuban standards as well as three of his own, and a    jazzy, previously unreleased piece he composed with bassist    Orlando \"Cachato\" Lpez. Coming on double in gatefold, with a    16 page booklet containing info from the original release, it    bleeds sunshine and booty-shaking rhythms redolent of the    bubbling youth these ageing musicians were so easily able to    capture.  <\/p>\n<p>    ALSO WORTHY OF MENTION  <\/p>\n<p>    Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit The    Nashville Sound (Southeastern): The sixth album from    former Drive-By Trucker Jason Isbell is a singer-songwritin    country music affair but with a steely, modern lyricism,    reflecting the southern American working peoples sense of    abandonment and hopelessness. Arriving in a gatefold featuring    group Polaroids and a photo\/art inner sleeve, as well as an 11    x 11 four page lyrics booklet, The Nashville Sound    was a Top Five US hit. Its easy to hear why. Whether rockin    out on Cumberland Gap or strumming quietly on Chaos and    Clothes, most of the album reeks of trapped, small town    working class desperation at the circumstances low government    investment and ruthless capitalism have wrought.  <\/p>\n<p>    Goatwhore Vengeful Ascension (Metal    Blade): Theres a sticker on the outside of this one saying    Americas most stirring Blackened Death Metal band is back!    Twenty years into their career and on their seventh album,    Louisiana four-piece Goatwhore are no nearer making pop music    than they ever were. Vengeful Ascension, which comes    with a 12 x 12 lyric insert and demonic Boschian poster, is    rammed with battering, down-tuned dirge-metal that concerns    itself with Satanism and doomed apocalyptic imagery. These guys    love their Book of Revelations. Possibly. It's rather    too relentlessly chugging for this writers tastes, but if you    like your blackened death metal solidly machine-moody rather    than bloodily raging, Goatwhores latest may be for you.  <\/p>\n<p>    Courtney Barnett How to Boil an Egg    (Milk!): The Aussie garage chanteuse fires out a one-off while    we await the follow-up to 2015s sassy breakthrough debut album    Sometimes I Sit and Think and Sometimes I Just Sit.    Its an exasperated song about stasis, about trying in vain to    get life moving, pleading with mundanity, riding a jangling    Modern Lovers-type riff. Although it lacks Barnetts capacity    for pithy humour, its a passable place-holder. The weird thing    is its supposed to be part of the Split Singles Club series of    collectable 7s released by Barnetts own Milk! imprint, yet my    copy is a one-sided 12 white label.  <\/p>\n<p>    Metro Skim Identifying Possibilities    (6 Dimensions): Steve Bicknell was a perennial presence in    1990s UK techno, his LOST nights providing a template for a    certain type of ruthlessly metallic toughness that exists to    this day. 6 Dimensions is his label and this seven-track 12 EP    is their second release. Its not music designed to be played    by anyone but mixologist techno DJs, for whom it would be a    tool in the armoury rather than listening music. In that world    and that sense, these cuts are tasty. There are a couple of    electronic abstractions thrown in but nothing invites anyone    but supremely stern tech-heads to get involved.  <\/p>\n<p>    Hector Plimmer Sunshine (Alberts    Favourites): Busy London DJ-producer Hector Plimmer releases    his debut album on the delightfully titled Alberts Favourites    label (named after cassettes co-owner Adam Scrimshires grandad    would compile for summer holidays together). Its Gilles    Peterson-friendly percussive noodle, tipping its hat to the    sound of drum & bass here and there, but organic and    cuddly, firmly in the realm of chill-out jazz. Music synch    agencies reading theartsdesk on Vinyl should    check it. Its too nice-but-forgettable for me but its the    sort of thing most of us have chatted across during delicious    summer festival afternoons, a soundtrack for easy good times.  <\/p>\n<p>    Paradise Lost One Second (Music For    Nations): Twenty years ago Halifax metallers divided their fans    with their sixth album. Gone was the raging drum attack and    death metal snarl, to be replaced by banks of keyboards and    polished production. Theyd become electro-goths. Theres a    hint, even, of Violator-era Depeche Mode about this    music, albeit backed up with Marilyn Manson-esque swathes of    epic guitar. The creative punt paid off as the album was a    proper commercial success in mainland Europe and even generated    a Top 10 hit in Finland (with the song Say Just Words). On    double in art\/image gatefold, this two decade anniversary    re-release only emphasises that their reinvention is    surprisingly easy on the ear, with has much in common with the    moodier output of late period Gary Numan as with longer haired    contemporaries.  <\/p>\n<p>    Umfang Symbolic Us of Light    (Technicolour): New York DJ-producer Emma Olson  AKA Umfang -    makes music thats uncompromising in the extreme. It leaves    this listener wondering if its ridiculous Emperors New    Clothes stuff or at the very vanguard of techno-tronica. Its    incredibly simple, minimal material, looping around    mantrically, too machine-like to be hypnotic, but earnest,    stern, very much its own thing. A resident at Brookyns    Technofeminism night and a member of its associated Discwoman    movement, shes involved in pushing the cause of women in    electronica. As a writer and occasional promoter whos been    involved in electronic musics shaven-headed blokeyness for    nearly three decades, I heartily back that cause. And her music    is fascinating, different a possible grower  <\/p>\n<p>    James Yuill A Change of State (The    Happy Biscuit Club): London singer-songwriter James Yuill is a    good example of the 21st century musician. Once    signed to Moshi Moshi, he earns his breadnbutter here and    there, self-releases an album every now and then, melding    classic acoustic numbers to laptop-tronic beats and sounds. On    A Change of State, Yuills fifth album, his airy voice    and lightly played guitar mingle with revolving, building synth    patterns. The whole thing, on two records in lyric gatefold,    has a melodic underpinning thats appealing, slowly persuading    the listener in. Theres something of Nick Mulvey about it    although less cosmic in scope. Instead, James Yuill offers a    classy lesson in combining classic song styling with home-made    modernism.  <\/p>\n<p>    LTO Storybook (Injazero): Eno-esque    electronica from a Bristolian ambient producer who can range    into fragments of crackly, Gonjasufi-style songs but is equally    at home taking the listener off on a drift through shimmering    instrumental tones. Once a member of opaque downtempo explorers    Old Apparatus, alongside Planet Mu artist Asher Levitas, he    currently earns much of his living as a piano teacher. Cuts    such as Rise very much show off LTOs controlled skill at    that instrument. A laid back but concentrated piece of work.  <\/p>\n<p>    Dauwd Theory of Colours    (Technicolour): Berlin-based American-Welsh producer Dauwd Al    Hilali has had material out in the past on homes to quality    techno-tronica such as Ghostly International and Kompakt. Now    making a debut on Ninja Tunes techy sub-label Technicolour,    the album Theory of Colours is interesting rather than    dynamic. This may seem like damning it with faint praise but    its layered analogue gloops and swirls, occasionally interceded    by the ebb and flow of throbbing, subterranean kick-drums,    doesnt so much carry the listener off as float in on itself.    Its approachable enough, late night soundtracking for the    avant-stoner, but lacks contagiousness.  <\/p>\n<p>    Martha Tilston Nomad (Squiggly):    Anyone whos hurled themselves into the British festival scene    will have come across the Small World Solar Stage, a venue that    turns up in the best places (Glastonbury, Secret Garden Party,    Bimble Bandala, etc) offering a new agey, folky selection of    roots and global flavours. This was where Martha Tilston cut    her teeth at the start of her career and still sometimes    appears. Her latest album  of too many to count  has a    festival campfire-friendly infectiousness and a lyrical    ambition to it. Its easy to imagine Sinad O'Connor covering a    song such as Little Arrow, which has a pointed, heartfelt    passion, as well as a catchy tune, but, by the same token,    Tilston is equally capable of a laidback narrative folky love    song such as Taxi Light. Comes with an 11.5 x 11.5    photo\/info insert.  <\/p>\n<p>    Mike Dunn DJ Beat That Shhh\/Move It Work    It (moreaboutmusic): For anyone who knows their shit,    Mike should need no introduction, says the press release,    inducing a bunch of journos and bloggers to go Googling then    pretending theyve been avin it to Mike Dunn since they were    twelve years old. However, Im not falling for that. 99% of you    wont have heard of Mike Dunn. I hadnt. He was a Chicago    DJ-producer who was around when they were inventing house music    in the mid-Eighties. He knew Ron Hardy, a key player in houses    development, and undoubtedly went on the journey that Chicago    music took at that time. This makes him a person of interest,    rather than a Chicago house music legend ( dance music hub    residentadviser.net). By such standards, Eater and The Lurkers    are punk legends. Which theyre not. Anyway, to the music,    which, in the case of DJ Beat That Shhh is funky UK    garage-flavoured house thats jiggy and bar-friendly, while    Move It Work It is an update of classic 88-style Chi-house.    On both Dunn chats with cool American authority, making them    likeable DJ fodder to which he adds character.  <\/p>\n<p>    Dingwei Untied (Cooking Vinyl):    Dingwei is a megastar in her native China, and has been for a    decade-and-a-half. As well as a career in pop, shes written    soundtracks to multiple successful films and TV series. Now she    wants to explore beyond her countrys borders and, with    assistance from Suzanne Vega on the trip-hoppy Gypsy, her    latest album was put together in Thailand with a team who,    between then, have worked with Kate Bush, Sting, Massive    Attack, Sade and others. All in Chinese, apart from an English    version of Gypsy, its mournful alt-pop rather than shiny    major key pop. Think Portishead by way of London Grammar and    Roisin Murphys most recent albums. Im not finding it more-ish    but, then again, I dont much care for London Grammar of Roisin    Murphys recent albums. Comes in gatefold with a cool-looking    2 x 3 Chinese lyric poster.  <\/p>\n<p>    Stephen Emmer Home Ground (Electric    Fairytale): Dutch media heavyweight Stephen Emmer was once a    sideman for Eighties alt-pop sorts The Associates and The Lotus    Eaters, but his main reputation derives from being a hugely    successful player in the world of television music. Three years    ago he decided to re-engage with the wider world of popular    music, putting out an album of symphonic pop with various high    profile singers. He now follows it up with another wherein he    channels the spirit of vintage, easy listening soul, featuring    singers such as Chaka Khan, Patti Austin and the late soul    songwriter Leon Ware. The result is slick as anything, very    much the sort of thing that pops up on radio stations with    names like Smooth FM and Breeze FM. Theres nothing vibrant    here but its partly in aid of the charity War Child so lets    move on and wish it all the best.  <\/p>\n<p>    Various Disco Anthems (Demon): In    terms of content, this three disc collection in gatefold is    closer in tone to the old Disco Double compilations    one finds in charity shops than to The Men in the Glass    Booth aficionado boxsets theartsdesk on    Vinyl reviewed back in January. Which is to say it    contains many of discos big names  The Jacksons, Village    People, Odyssey, Dan Hartman, Earth, Wind & Fire, etc  but    the sell is that its all 12 versions. It could, in other    words, have been a treat but the mastering is utterly feeble,    presumably taken from digital and shamefully weak, removing    every ounce of phatness, making the whole thing a pointless    exercise. Shame. A missed opportunity.  <\/p>\n<p>    We welcome any and all vinyl for review. Please hit    <a href=\"mailto:thomash.green@theartsdesk.com\">thomash.green@theartsdesk.com<\/a>    for a postal address.  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>See the original post:<\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"http:\/\/www.theartsdesk.com\/new-music\/theartsdesk-vinyl-30-moby-beach-boys-napalm-death-john-coltrane-and-more\" title=\"theartsdesk on Vinyl 30: Moby, The Beach Boys, Napalm Death, John Coltrane and more - The Arts Desk\">theartsdesk on Vinyl 30: Moby, The Beach Boys, Napalm Death, John Coltrane and more - The Arts Desk<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> If theres a downside to the resurgence of vinyl, its that all thats left in most charity shops these days is James Galway and his cursed flute and Max Bygraves medley albums. Then again, theres always new stuff coming in so its down to everybody to get in there quick, before the local record shops hoover up all the gems.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/modern-satanism\/theartsdesk-on-vinyl-30-moby-the-beach-boys-napalm-death-john-coltrane-and-more-the-arts-desk\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":7,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[187717],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-205278","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-modern-satanism"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/205278"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/7"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=205278"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/205278\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=205278"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=205278"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=205278"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}