stanleystanley’s Ambient Single “palace of steam” is a Temporary Autonomous Tranquility Zone

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stanleystanley, photo courtesy the artist

As the title “palace of steam” suggests, Jordan Russell-Hall as stanleystanley has crafted a soundscape that is both hazy and warm. Fog-enshrouded but luminous. The track drifts in and progresses through a series of melodies layered with complimentary drones that serve as a textural backdrop to the palpable sound of crystalline arpeggiation hitting in a circular pattern before fading into horizon like the end of a dream. For those few minutes, though, you find yourself transported to a place that may be described as a temporary autonomous tranquility zone in the titular location and spending some time perhaps leaning back against the walls of said palace and supported by the fleeting physicality of the place while bright tones wash over and though you to cleans out at least a little of the anxiety and built up angst from everyday living. The song can be found on the new stanleystanley EP beside myself out on The Ambient Zone imprint. Listen to “palace of steam” on Bandcamp and follow stanleystanley at any of the links provided.

beside myself by stanleystanley

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Dean Manning Shows How You Can Handle the Pain of a Bad Breakup With Grace and Humor on “Messy Time”

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Dean Manning, photo courtesy the artist

Dean Manning’s metaphors and imagery on “Messy Time” are evocative and unusual and the dark, self-deprecating humor could have waxed maudlin about a relationship that has come apart and its aftermath but the tenor of the song is simply one of weary acceptance. Manning doesn’t place the blame for the breakup on anyone and acknowledges his own inability to perceive the signs that things were off. It’s a gentle song that sketches how one’s life can be turned upside down but everyone can come out at the end of that period essentially okay with no need for misplaced rancor. To help him to bring some subtle sonics to the song Manning brought in multi-instumentalist Justin Stanley who brought his skills to recordings with Prince, Leonard Cohen and Beck and Stella Mozgawa, the talented drummer of Warpaint. Fans of Low and Yo La Tengo’s more mellow moments will find Manning’s song charming and resonant. Look for the full record Sunday Mountain out on Manning’s label Cloudy But Fine on September 6. But for now you can listen to the song on YouTube.

Freedom Fry’s “David Bowie” is a Simple Love Song About Rejecting Conformity of Identity in Our Ever Evolving World

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Freedom Fry, photo courtesy the artists

With its new single “David Bowie,” Freedom Fry once again demonstrates its knack for letting stripped down but sonically rich music serve as a backdrop to a compelling and relatable, if unusual, story. In this case the narrator is someone who can’t help being a weirdo who goes through life dressed up like they’re out of the same science fiction glam universe as David Bowie during his Ziggy Stardust phase. But our storyteller is casually confused by people not accepting their normal because it suits them. And let’s face it, business casual or formal business wear is odd in its own right because it imposes a uniform standard of presenting oneself and thus conformity. In its way it is a form of psychological warfare to normalize behaviors and mindsets that deny your unique human qualities. The narrator of “David Bowie” sees no reason to adhere to such needlessly strict and destructive standards and rejects the laughter of those who have submitted to the will of conditioned and unquestioned behavior. This narrator sanely sets their own standard and speaks nothing of imposing one on others. It’s also a bit of a love song suggesting a like-minded companion has been found who too can shrug off the shackles of a phony sense of normalcy. If anyone was an avatar of making the world accept his eccentricity it was the likes of David Bowie, Prince and Sun Ra but Freedom Fry made David Bowie the icon this time out. Listen to “David Bowie” on YouTube and follow Freedom Fry at the links below.

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“Boychoir” Finds Noise Punk Band Hissing Tiles Dissecting the Toxic Narratives That Erode Our Lives From Inside and Out

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Hissing Tiles, photo courtesy the artists

“Boychoir” appropriately sounds atonal, troubled and desperate. Post-punk/noise rock band Hissing Tiles spent some time writing the songs for the album of the same name to explore one of the root sources of violence and social tension and that’s the principal of the masculine and how it manifests in negative ways in culture, belief systems and our own psychology whether we identify as masculine or otherwise. The feedback in the song is like the internalized narratives of what it means to be a “real” man and the social inducements to cling to those ideas regardless of the fallout and consequences we may not even see as negative but simply normal when in fact there’s nothing “normal” about mindsets that warp our perception and thinking and allows us to rationalize oppression. And yet isn’t it true that most people want to be pumped up about something and to be cheered on in their endeavors. The song suggests maybe taking a deep look into what we allow ourselves to be excited about and the manner in which we accept encouragement, to dissect our own pedagogy of desire and realize that we can change our will to perpetuate psychic poison. Listen to the lead track to Boychoir on Soundcloud and follow Hissing Tiles at the links below.

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Chris Child & Micah Frank Evoke a Sense of Ancient Civilization and Technology on Ambient Drone Track “Peering At Dawn”

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Chris Child & Micah Frank, photo courtesy the artists

“Peering At Dawn” sounds like what might happen if some artificial intelligence from Puma Punku or Göbekli Tepe had somehow made its way to the northeast of the modern United States tasked with creating theme music for the local environment only to be discovered by local explorers in the grotto where this artifact was hidden for millennia and documented its creations to sample through analog synths and old tape machines that occasionally warped the source recordings. It’s that enigmatic and seemingly out of step with standard reality. The same could be said for songs by Boards of Canada and Seefeel where alternate realities seem to blend and put the sounds out of time in their music. It’s reminiscent of weirdo, tripped out library music and thus the sense of having come from another time and place before the modern era but difficult to accurately place with its mixture of blurred tones and the background sound like generative sound replicating the sense of phosphenes. The song hails from Chris Child & Micah Frank’s forthcoming release Tape Loops Vol. 1 due out on 8/23 through Foil Imprints. For now, though, listen to “Peering At Dawn” on Soundcloud and follow Chris Child & Micah Frank at the links provided.

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Caracol Teams Up With Illa J on “Flooded Field” to Break the Emotional Isolation of a Loved One

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Caracol, photo courtesy the artist

Caracol’s new track “Flooded Field” was written in collaboration with Illa J, the brother of J. Dilla. The song’s structure has well-arranged complexity with downtempo flavor and a reggae cadence with electronic steel drum accents. Its rich synth piano flourishes and splashes of rapidly expanding tonal wash suggest a sound palette drawn from 80s hip-hop production. When Illa J comes in the song exits the ethereal undertones and comes down to earth for a nice passage of vivid imagery to reinforce the message of the lyric “Your heart is a flooded field” and the sense of isolation the narrator of the song feels for the object of her love and a desire to bridge that emotional barrier. It is as though Illa J gives the critical clue to solve the emotional conundrum. The dynamics of the song as it shifts between vocals, moods, rhythmic flavors and an effervescent melody keeps it an interesting and rewarding listen beginning to end. Check out “Flooded Field” on Soundcloud and follow Caracol at the links below.

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Typewriter’s Impressionistic Dreamscape of “Kalemegdan” is a Fusion of Synth Pop and Experimental Dance Track

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Typewriter, “Kalemegdan” cover (cropped)

With “Kalemegdan,” Typewriter takes the language and sonic palette of current EDM and left field dance music generally to create a soundscape with saturated atmospheres and lush orchestration. As the track evolves it fuses a stretched pop melody and introspective moods to create an extended reflective moment like watching a section of a dream spool out behind you in slow motion for you to take in impressionistically and in vivid momentary details of peak significance as motes of memory and emotional attachments swirl about you to give context to the way your subconscious mind reveals to you and important bit of information, perhaps even a lesson, that cannot be conveyed with mere language. The song operates on that sort of dream logic as familiar elements of song are used in ways they often aren’t. To call it a dance track or a simply electronic pop song would miss the point of the way Typewriter is aiming for a synthesis of the two and more. Listen to the song on Soundcloud and follow Typerwriter at the links below.

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“Le Canto” by ALM and Featuring Sofree and Luzmira Zerpa is a Theme Song For a Science Fiction/Magic Realist Thriller as Yet Unmade

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ALM featuring Sofree and Luzmira Zerpa “Le Canto” cover (cropped)

“Le Canto,” the ALM track featuring Sofree and Lizmira Zerpa masterfully combines modern electronic dance music with Latin pop for a song that sounds like music from a science fiction movie made as a collaboration between Pedro Almodóvar and Jaime and Gilbert Hernandez. It begins with a sense of mystery and takes us into the thick of a story rich in romance and intrigue with strong female characters and the impression that local mythology and culture and technology are not so distinctly separated. The dynamic dub bass serves as an interest contrast and compliment to the organic, Latin rhythms and vocals and lending a dimensionality and depth to the track worthy of the imagery and ideas it inspires. Listen on Soundcloud and follow ALM at the links below.

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Kendra & The Bunnies’ “Figure 8” is a Tone Poem of Personal Liberation From Social Conditioning

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Kendra & The Bunnies, photo courtesy the artist

“Figure 8” by Kendra & The Bunnies comes in like impressionistic sketches of a melody that is given context when the vocals come in about a free spirited girl who doesn’t want to be penned in my conventional notions of how to be. The guitar work can be challenging at first but its own logic and improvisational style, given to going off the rails here and there, makes perfect sense in the entire arc of a song that feels like free verse poetry set to a folk song written by someone who had to figure out how to write one having read about that music and having access to a guitar without ever hearing it before making some of her own. It’s not outsider music but has a similar appeal because Kendra Muecke’s approach to songwriting seems to be one as immersed in poetry, biographical storytelling and constructing expectations of identity as a path to healing the trauma of the identities and values imposed on us by a culture that values efficiency and material value over humanity. Maybe when you hear the song you won’t find it so very different but in the realm of folk-inflected singer-songwriter music the subtle and distinct differences are striking. You may even dismiss it as a bunch of hippie nonsense but it is exactly those kinds of left-field ideas we need in a world filled with turmoil. The song comes from Kendra & The Bunnies new album of Vinyl and you can listen to the single on Spotify and follow Kendra and the band at the links below.

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AxMod Pays Tribute to Northern Disco Idol Todd Terje on “Bounce 808”

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AxMod “Bounce 808” cover (cropped)

AxMod pays tribute to Norwegian nu-disco star Todd Terje on “Bounce 808.” Referencing the classic drum machine, the Roland TR-808, that has been a staple of house music and hip-hop since the 80s the song is simple in its beats but that aspect of the composition allows the other elements to shine more as the track evolves from a basic melodic synth line into expansive arpeggios and bubbling flourishes of tone. AxMod brings in synth swells as an element to indicate urgency and give the song some momentum with tones while ever so slightly bringing up the BPMs before tastefully bringing things back without an abrupt drop as happens all too often in electronic music. The orchestration of elements is what is most impressive with the song as AxMod employs atmosphere, texture, dynamics, rhythm and melody to craft a song that works as a not so minimal synth tune and as a dance track. Listen to “Bounce 808” on Soundcloud and follow AxMod at the links below.

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