“Flust Etterklang” is Haav’s Zen-like, Impressionistic Adaptation of Inge Weatherhead Breinstein’s Cosmic Ambient Jazz Song “Flust”

Haav, photo courtesy the artist

“Flust Etterklang” is Haav’s adaptation of the Inge Weatherhead Breistein track “Flust” from his album Skogskammer. Original sound sources such as the layers of saxophone and modular synth stream into further reaches of abstract tone as a singular flow of sonic experience. Haav weaves in field recordings from metalic sculptures and the local coastal surroundings and slows them down so that even the noise of birds and water has the audio equivalent of an image slightly out of phase. The compound effect puts one in a mood of taking in the minute details of the environment around you and getting lost in its myriad details as interconnected phenomena of existence of which oneself is merely a part. The best ambient music has that effect of inducing a Zen-like state and Haav’s treatment of “Flust” and transforming it into “Flust Etterklang” has taken a fantastic cosmic jazz-like composition and given it a deeply impressionistic filter. Listen to “Flust Etterklang” on Spotify and follow Haav on Instagram.

Razor Braids’ “She” is a Delicate Anthem to Staying Present When Meeting Someone Special

Razor Braids, photo by Justin Bruschardt

Brooklyn’s Razor Braids wrote a tender anthem to remember to be in the moment in situations in which your energy might be derailed by thoughts about your past and overthinking the future. In particular when you meet someone special who takes you by surprise with their attention and interest. There is an awareness in the lyrics of the tendency of many people to throw a wrench into something that could be good by succumbing to anxiety over not wanting to mess up an important connection with thoughts of assuming you’re going to make the same old mistakes or that you’re limited by them all the time or new types of errors and offenses one might commit. But really if you can stay in the moment it’ll be okay. The music is loosely in the realm of indie rock or punk the way say bands on the Kill Rock Stars or K Records labels might be in the 90s with punk spirit and ethos but an embrace of vulnerability and gentleness of spirit as a virtue and an aspect of being a complete person. The music video, directed by Razor Braids bassist and vocalist Hollye Bynum, shows a party in which women are mingling and having a good time and not stressing what someone might think is wrong with them, rather, being in the moment as suggested by the song and enjoying genuine connection with one another. The song was apparently written as a queer anthem given the lyrics and the presentation of the song but really anyone that claims they’ve never felt a twinge or much more than a twinge of anxiety in social situations especially in meeting someone special is probably not being completely honest. The immediacy of this Razor Braids song and its inviting spirit makes it accessible for anyone. Watch the video for “She” on YouTube and follow Razor Braids at the links provided.

razorbraids.com

Razor Braids on Facebook

Razor Braids on Instagram

Saapato Orchestrates an Irresistible Sense of Luminous Tranquility on Ambient Track “Fool’s Empyrean”

Saapato, photo courtesy the artist

“Fool’s Empyrean” finds Saapato layering processed field recordings to give a tangible sense of place whether walking in a field, through a forest, walking near a river or a larger body of water. And it is through these sense memories across the track’s nearly ten minutes that we are transported, floating in our minds through these landscapes all at once like translucent sets of memories while a distant and evolving drone and slow arcing tones like abstracted pedal steel tones courses through it all like the sonic equivalent of an amalgam of a light wind leisurely guiding clouds crossing the sun. Intonations of a whispery electronic flute marks time later in the song while whorls of lightly distorted and shimmery guitar sounds blossom and fade. Intermittent bird sounds peek through the incandescent musical haze in an masterfully unhurried composition that induces a psychically cleansing sense of rest from beginning to end and swept away in the end with an increase in the flow of white noise and luminous electronic chimes trailing off into the distance like a slow moving train. Listen to “Fool’s Empyrean” on Spotify and follow Saapato at the links below. Saapato’s new album, the aptly titled Somewhere Else, dropped on November 3, 2023.

Saapato on Instagram

saapato.com

Queen City Sounds Podcast S3E49: Lord Dying

Lord Dying, photo by Neil DaCosta

Lord Dying is a band from Portland, Oregon that formed in 2010 and over the course of the past several years has established itself as a group who took roots in doom/sludge and extreme thrash and created a body of work that is as heavy as it is atmospheric, as bludgeoning and aggressive as it is capable of shifting into delicate and introspective moments. In 2019 Lord Dying released its most creatively ambitious album up to that time in Mysterium Tremendum, a meditation on death and loss and the extremes feelings that come about in their wake. It was the first chapter in a trilogy of albums whose next installment is Clandestine Transcendence which releases on streaming, download, CD and Coke Bottle Clear and Olvie Green 180g vinyl on January 19, 2024 via the MNRK Heavy imprint. The album is perhaps even more diverse in the sonics of its songwriting with the extreme ends of the band’s style emphasized with the most crushing and heavy hitting passages in the Lord Dying catalog and the most ethereal and delicate moments of vulnerable introspection. Stylistically Lord Dying includes its most clear and straight forward vocal performances and a song that starts out like something you’d expect from a punk outfit before it escalates into something much heavier. It is arguably Lord Dying’s most creatively realized record thus far and a welcome entry in a body of work that is uncommonly imaginative and eclectic in the realm of heavy music.

Listen to our interview with Erik Olsen of Lord Dying on Bandcamp and follow Lord Dying at the links provided.

Lord Dying on Facebook

Lord Dying on Twitter

Lord Dying on Instagram

Lord Dying LinkTree

The Bodies Obtained’s Beautifully Nightmarish “You’ll Always Be, What’s Her Name” is a Cyberpunk Flavored Collage of Trip Hop and EBM

The nighmarish tonal drifts, warping and bends in “You’ll Always Be, What’s Her Name” by The Bodies Obtained from the beginning sets a darkly surreal mood. Especially the cutting, swelling flares of synth, clearly distorted to give it a discordant quality that tears into the downtempo mood established by the rhythm. But even that rhythm fractures and stumbles and reasserts itself and flows with the sounds seemingly dropped into the track like samples without an anchoring context like the melodiously wordless vocals. Like a trip hop song comprised of freely associated sampling, like a DJ Shadow song with a cyberpunk aesthetic. No actual human now could know but it’s like the band has created the experience of jacking into a neural network right out of a William Gibson novel but instead of a smooth experience you got into a feed with a crumbling and inconsistent connection and being routed in not random but intermittent bits of information. And yet in the end it all works out for a chill track that is simultaneously fascinatingly and beautifully unsettling. Which could be said of all the songs from the new The Bodies Obtained album Until I Crawl Away which dropped on November 10, 2023. Listen to “You’ll Always Be, What’s Her Name” on Spotify and follow the duo at the links below.

“Prototype” is millhope’s Downtempo Synthwave Song About Working Toward a Brighter Future

millhope, photo courtesy the artist

The sound of a future depicted in the more existential science fiction movies of recent years with an ambient sense of dystopian menace and hope (think Ex Machina and Beyond the Black Rainbow and the like) is present in millhope’s single “Prototype.” With vocal contributions from Jenny Thiele to inject its vibrant synthwave style with a human touch the song pulses along with extended keyboard melodies swimming over and under the sprinkling of introspective and delicate guitar work and a skeletal yet vivid percussion giving the song and its layers of ethereal tones an unconventional solidity. The title suggests a lot like building something one hopes will be a breakthrough whether that’s a technology, an invention, a lifestyle leading to better things. The song has that kind of breezy optimism that contrasts nicely with its darker musical elements. Listen to “Prototype” on Spotify and follow millhope at the links below.

millhope on TikTok

millhope on Facebook

millhope on Instagram

millhope on Promote It

Amiture’s Darkly Lurid Industrial Noise Rock Single “Billy’s Dream” Simmers With the Desperate Electricity of a Person on the Verge of Breaking

Amiture, photo courtesy the artists

There’s something sinister about the sound and dark visual style of the video for “Billy’s Dream” by Amiture. It’s reminiscent of Dom and Nic’s treatment for The Chemical Brothers’ “Setting Sun” video. It all seems normal but there’s an underlying unsettled quality to the surreal aesthetic. But this Amiture song is more steady in its pace even when it bursts forth with the processed percussion and guitar sounds. Like an industrial song written by Nick Cave who is bored with anything resembling the standard sounds. It’s like an even more post-punk The The and the story of a man, Billy Lamb, who has lost track of who he is and slips in and out of a dream of prowling underground gambling establishments haunted by memories of his family, both his father and his son, and how he wants to escape his circumstances but seems drawn back into his personal nightmare by his own weaknesses. But the desperation is there and we hear it in the music. The steady snare strike and the contorted, textural tones generated by heavily modified guitar signal or electronically create a disorienting atmosphere where it feels like the whole thing could careen off into hysterical psychosis from its sustained emotional intensity and because of that there’s a thrilling simmer of electricity throughout the song. Watch the video for “Billy’s Dream” (directed by Cyrus Duff, produced by JZ Tinneny and shot by Owen Smith-Clark) on YouTube and follow Brooklyn’s Amiture at the links provided. The duo’s new album Mother Engine drops February 9, 2024 via Dots Per Inch Music on streaming, download and vinyl.

Amiture on Facebook

Amiture on Instagram

Crystal Canyon’s Tenderly Melancholic “Sierra” is a Shoegaze Tribute to the Late, Great Julee Cruise

Crystal Canyon, photo courtesy the artists

“Sierra” is Crystal Canyon’s tribute to Julee Cruise “which guitarist/vocalist Lynda Mandolyn says is, ‘me having a conversation with her spirit, dreamlike.’” And the song’s drifting and hazy atmospheres and processional pace with guitar sounds trailing off like an early morning fog in the sunrise. The drum accents hit perfectly to punctuate the paces and Mandolyn’s introspective vocals relate late night meditations on heartache and heartbreak and processing the flood of feelings in a way that won’t hit as hard even if they hit deeply. The way the song gently unfolds and repeats the themes with a hypnotic quality will appeal to fans of Slowdive’s unorthodox crafting of melody and mood as well. Listen to “Sierra” on YouTube and follow Portland, Maine’s Crystal Canyon at the links below. The group’s new album Stars and Distant Light was released November 3, 2023 on streaming, download and vinyl.

Crystal Canyon on Instagram

Listen to the Uplifting Electro-Mechanical Conversation of brednotbred’s Single “sod” From Antipsych

The resonant sound of bell tones introduces us to brednotbred’s densely rhythmic, flowing collage of textures and tones that is “sod.” Fluttery and furiously energetic percussion pushes the song along as ethereal melodies intone like a conversation between the bells and a more airy yet vivid synth tone is happening with the percussion making punctuated commentary. Like those percussion sounds are the voice of a teletype machine off duty and having something to say about the world in its own flurry of words and taking the time to listen as well as contributing. Whatever the nature of this conversation between machines it sounds otherworldly and friendly and the opposite of the dystopia sometimes depicted in film when inorganic entities communicate. Listen to “sod” on Spotify as well as other electro-mechanical discourse on the new brednobred album Antipsych which was released on November 9, 2023.

brednotbred on Instagram

Strange Men’s Haunted Music Video for “Hot Nights” is a Concise Catharsis of Noisy Punk

Strange Men, photo courtesy the artists

Strange Men is a punk duo comprised of drummer/vocalist Róisín Isner and guitarist/vocalist Ashley Clayton whose splintered, fuzzy outbursts seem to channel the likes of the gloriously feral grunge punk of Babes in Toyland and the stripped down and amplified garage rock of The Bobby Lees. In the video for its single “Hot Nights” directed by Panda Dulce (aka Kyle Casey Chu, co-founder of Drag Story Hour) it looks like Strange Men is performing in haunted shed replete with with a figure like something out of a Japanese ghost movie (possibly Chu) except less menacing the band and more the embodiment of the clashing chords and rapid contrast of introspective and screamed vocals this time out provided by Isner. The song seems to be one of contrasts itself: “Hot days make hot nights/Cold days make cold nights.” And how on hit nights she comes alive as does the band. The lyrics clearly aren’t meant to be linear and more an expression of the primal forces underlying the music. Fans of the likes of Shearing Pinx, Nü Sensae and the aforementioned will get the most out of this song just 86 seconds long that rapid runs through all the essentials of what makes for a great punk song with cool hooks, cathartic vocals and a complete lack of self-indulgent excess. Watch the video for “Hot Nights” on YouTube and follow Strange Men from San Francisco at the links provided.

Strange Men on Instagram