Author: Editor

  • MundoVibe Jazz Mix

    New jazz selected by MundoVibe Editor John C. Tripp. Featuring tracks by The Greg Foat Group, Matthew Halsall, Jessica Lauren Four, Bill Laswell, Babs Robert, GoGo Penguin, Meshell Ndegeocello, Charlie Hunter, Menagerie, Pyramid Blue, Dwight Trible, Positive Flow, Tawk Tomahawk, Leron Thomas and Jan Allan Quintet.

    For A Breath I Tarry
    By The Greg Foat Group

    Mary Emma Louise
    By Matthew Halsall

    Swamp Thing
    By Jessica Lauren Four

    Bagana_Sub Figura X
    By Bill Laswell

    Pro Forma I
    By Babs Robert

    Seven Sons Of Björn
    By Gogo Penguin

    Please Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood
    By Meshell Ndegeocello

    Rust Belt
    By Charlie Hunter

  • Kode9 Interview on “Black Sun”

    Kode9 Speaks on the release of “Black Sun”

    It’s been 5 years since South London based duo Kode9 & the Spaceape’s debut album. On this new disc, named after Kode9’s influential 2009 single Black Sun, the intensity and themes of their debut Memories of the future remain, but the delivery is clearer and more rapid, the beats more jagged and restless. Starting as a dense onslaught, Black Sun proceeds to expand and contract its galaxy, sucking you into its orbit, and daring you to come and bathe in the warmth of its toxic glow.

    Kode9 and the Spaceape explore an accelerated sonic fiction with this album. Spaceape verbally conjures up world under a Black Sun; his lyrics intimate an unknown time, that resonates strongly with the present, after an unclassified radioactive event has transformed the planet, much of which is now on fire. Spaceape sends radio transmissions from this irradiated, scorched zone. His demeanor has changed. Kode9 has tuned into him on a different frequency.

    https://dailymotion.com/video/xigmpi

    Through the noise of crackling fires, rise the ominous drums of Black Smoke, an incantation exorcising demons hungover from their first album. Reciting angular fictions of bodily breakdown and mutation (derived from his own experiences during the making of this record), confrontations with death, illicit, destructive love, crashing economies, hypocritical politics, failed revolts, underachieving gods and coded references to cartoon characters from the 1970s, Spaceape balances narrative and abstraction in his densely layered lyrics. On three of the songs, the duo are joined by the yearning backing vocals of Shanghai based singer Cha Cha. She first worked with them on the 2009 single Time Patrol.

    Musically, Kode9 uses the album to develop his own innovations and strategies. His neon noir synths sidestep fashionable 8bit novelty and avoid the forced euphoria of many of his contemporaries. The mostly drumless pounding of Promises and Bullet Against Bone are turbo-charged upgrades of the duo’s Bass Fiction micro genre initiated in 2004 by their iconoclastic debut, the Prince cover, Sine of the Dub.

    The broken, drone house tracks Green Sun, Love is the Drug and the remake of title track, Black Sun, plus the analog synth work on Otherman inherit in mutated form the melancholy DNA of Memories of the Future and build on the unsettling dancefloor dynamics of the original Black Sun single. Even the astral ambience and dread poetics of Neon Red Sign, glides along on bustling hi-hats and leaning, 2step syncopations despite the gravity of it’s deep bass drops and wobbling sub. Providing moments of breathing space in this torched environment, are 2 beatless instrumentals. Out of the chittering, insectoid rustling and squelches, wavers the electric keys of Hole in the Sky. And the album’s finale is Kryon, Kode9’s collaboration with Flying Lotus, started around 4 years ago. If you have heard Kode9 & Spaceape play live in the last few years you will recognize this epic wall of analog synth. But perhaps the fractured clarity of the album shines through strongest in the spiky funk, skattered snares and intertwined vocal call and response in The Cure or the crunked out rapidfire paradoxes of Am I. The energy is involving and enveloping. The changes in speed and pressure create an exciting ride around the Black Sun.

    MundoVibe: I’ve been constantly listening to “Black Sun” and it’s really heavy music. It reflects a lot internally, would you say it’s coming from a deep place, a mental place even though it‘s bass?

    Kode9: A lot of the music I make is conceptual somehow, there’s an idea in it. That’s what we try and do, you know we’re always trying to balance stuff that you’d want to listen to with headphones and you’d want to move to. I think more than our first album this does have a bit more dynamic and energy in it. But I’m never so interested in stuff that’s just one function, just for that sake. So, that’s what we’re trying to do.

    MundoVibe: You are quoted as calling your music “uneasy listening”, I though that was interesting.

    Kode9: Well, it’s not easy listening, I suppose people keep telling me it’s challenging and I don’t know if that’s like a veiled insult or it’s challenging. I enjoy listening to stuff that’s got slightly anomalous elements in it, like a little blotch in a landscape or a hair on the photographic lense. I think our stuff whether it be the kind of synths we use or the melodies, have a curdled sound. I like this idea of the curdled melodies. My mom used to always say “don’t drink fruit juice after you’ve just drunk milk, because it’ll curdle. And actually the idea of pouring pineapple juice into a glass of milk is one kind of accurate way I see my music. It’s like, “these two things really shouldn’t be here. But if you ignore the rule that they shouldn’t be together it actually tastes kind of nice.

    MundoVibe: I like that analogy with the cottage cheese (sic).

    Kode9: Cottage cheese? That’s an interesting label.

    MundoVibe: Anything but dubstep right (laughter).

    Kode9: Yeah, curdling.

    MundoVibe: For some reason I associate dub music more with the UK than Jamaica, although the connection is obvious. I see you music as a continuum of going back to, say, On-U Sound and Adrian Sherwood. What is your continuum?

    Kode9: I think that’s a stronger reference point with our first album, more so than this album because I don’t think there’s a strong presence of dub, even in an upgraded fashion, with this album. You know, we were trying out some different things. I suppose the musical lineage that I put myself in as a DJ come from jungle in particular and right through what I do now which is house, dubstep, grime, etc.  As a music listener my interests go back to ‘70s funk, jazz and through hip hop so I think some of those elements have come through in this album. Like we used some of the analogue synths that were used in ‘70s funk and so on.

    MundoVibe: To set the tone perhaps?

    Kode9: Yeah, those kind of sounds, those kind of frequencies and those kind of raw analogue synthesizer sounds are something I’ve always loved and are deeply psychedelic to me. That’s one of the things that we wanted to do on this album which is very different from the first album.

    MundoVibe: So you clearly wanted to take a new direction with this new album.

    Kode9: Yeah, I suppose it’s just upgrading, like you upgrade your operating system. We wanted to upgrade our operating system a bit and explore some other avenues that maybe didn’t come quite so easy to us or so naturally. And just keep challenging ourselves.

    MundoVibe: I’ve detected a theme throughout it, to me it’s very reflective of the state of the world. There’s a lot of references to faith, religion, politics.

    Kode9: You’re right although for us the album takes place in a fictional world which is featured in the artwork. And that fictional world is after some unclassified radioactive event which fucks up the atmosphere and hence your ‘black suns’, ‘green suns’, suns filtered through this toxic atmosphere. And there’s series of social implications of this event with lots of social upheaval, revolutions, sexual relationships have been banned so all intimate relationships take place illicitly. And there’s a lot of themes of bodily mutation and health type themes. All of the population is undergoing these unpredictable bodily mutations because of the radiation. Some groups of the population are trying to resist these mutations, trying to hang onto the humanity as opposed to becoming something other and turn into a monotheistic religion for redemption and salvation. Whereas other groups the mutations are taking them in another direction and they’re not going to resist it, they’re going with it. And how the story ends up is certain groups take this synthetic compound to keep them alive but they don’t try and resist the mutations that are taking place and are disoriented and as we put it, “they remain to bathe under the black sun”. They stay in this fucked up environment instead of trying to escape to some promised land.

    So, that’s the kind of narrative and clearly elements of that that resonate with a lot of what’s going on in the world. Particularly there’s one line of  Spaceape’s that particularly great that says: “There’s a prophet on every corner who has under achieved.” That really sums up how fucked up most religion, monotheistic religions of the world are.

    MundoVibe: So, I guess I did pick up on some of the messages there.
    So you see it as an allegory of what’s going on?

    Kode9: It’s a work of fiction and like all works of fiction there is going to be some resonance with what’s going on in the world. But the way we do it it’s quite a loose resonance. In other words we try to keep it open to the listener to superimpose their own political ideology. The lyrics are spoken from a number of different perspectives, it’s not just coming from Spaceape. He’s assuming the voices of, and telling the stories of, different characters. We prefer to leave things just a little bit more open ended.

    MundoVibe: I was just thinking about this, the sound in and of itself, without lyrics is very conveying of politics or messages without even being literal.

    Kode9: I’m interested if you find that.

    MundoVibe: I haven’t read your book “Sonic Warfare” but I remember when it came out and was reading more about it. And you’re someone who’s investigating how sound can effect people. What’s the driving thought there?

    Kode9: I suppose it’s just exploring that idea. With music we assume that it’s there to give us pleasure, to help us escape or to sooth us. I came across all of these examples of where music is used to torture or specific frequencies or sound used in crowd control or used to make people irritated, make them feel uneasy and so on. And I’m not trying to do that in my music but I certainly have an interest in things like this and this idea of curdling. Curdled sound, and that ambiguity of something it’s not noise but something’s not right about the melody or something’s off tune. It’s two sounds set together uneasily and I’m interested in how that can jar with people and that can make people recoil or it can produce enjoyment. That ambiguity of sound is always fascinating.

    MundoVibe: I was thinking about genres of music  and how we’ve gotten to micro-genres. Going back to Jamaica, you know the dancehall thing for a while was being pushed as the next big thing but never quite got there. Now it’s gone into its own world. And I wonder if some degree that’s what you have to do with your music to avoid it just being co-opted and turned into drum’n’bass and commercials and all of that crap. How do you feel about that?

    Kode9: I suppose my opinion on that is I’m not hostile to commercialization in itself. It just so happens that when it happens the music gets worse. I don’t know if you know the Burial music, that for me was a really heartening example of how music can become popular and cross over and become mainstream almost. But not compromise musically and not compromise in terms of PR, not front up the music by being a face. And I thought that was really inspiring that something can become popular without getting rammed down people’s throats. So that’s how I feel about it — as long as you stay strong about the music and stay true to what you like then everything else is peripheral.

    MundoVibe: Do you see your music as being specific to place and time and culture.

    Kode9: It’s an unusual sound for London but it’s still a London-based sound that we have. It’s not typical of dubstep, it’s not typical of the kind of house that comes out of London but for me anyway I think there’s something very British about our sound. And that’s important to me because most of music I’ve DJ’d with is mostly from London. It’s always dominated the music I DJ with.

    MundoVibe: So, you probably grew up in that culture with the music. Was going out to underground venues and, say, pirate radio an influence?

    Kode9: I didn’t grow up with it, I moved into that because I grew up in Scotland in Glasgow and moved to London 10 years ago. I’d spent some time there before but the last 10 years I’ve been immersed in that world. And that just coincides with when I’ve been releasing music and I started DJing not just as a hobby but seriously because I’ve been Djing for twenty-some years. So, yeah, moving to London and pirate radio culture, that whole culture is very strong.

    MV: Did you start Hyperdub before anything else?

    Kode9: Hyperdub started as a web magazine in 2001 and we ran it for two or three years. It was really in-depth interviews with London-based artists. I did that pretty much on my own for a few years and ran out of momentum and drive to keep it going. So, a friend of mine suggested I release some of my music and suddenly the magazine became a record label. Initially to release my own stuff and then I discovered Burial’s stuff and it started to spread.

    MV: It’s the beauty technology today is that it’s virus-like how something can just spread.

    Kode9: And from nothing.

    MV: Are you astounded when you’re half way around the globe and people are embracing your music?

    Kode9: It always amazes me the places to which our music has reached. I’ve played in China a few times but last year I played in the Philippines and that was genuinely surreal. It was really amazing and heartening to connect with them.

    MV: I can imagine. As cliched as it is it’s the universality of music.

    Kode9: Yes.

    MV: Do you handle your distribution?

    Kode9: We have a distributor who handles all of our stuff. I’m not a big fan of the business side of running a label, the more we can outsource stuff the better. There’s cheaper ways of doing it but as long as it’s not a stress for me than that’s how we do it.

    MV: I just want to get back into the process of how you make your music. You explained the theme of “Black Sun” and, of course, you have Spaceape. Do you sit down and sort of brain storm ideas or…

    Kode9: Yeah, I’ll make some instrumental tracks to him, he’ll come to me with lyrics. We’ll try the lyrics on one track, live with that for a few weeks. Then usually what happens is that I’ll put his lyrics on another track that I’ve got and everything tends to shift around for a while. I always change my mind about drum patterns where I change them and just get rid of the drums. There’s a lot of that with this album, the drum pattern’s constantly shifting on the tracks, the bassline’s constantly shifting. It only crystallized in the second half of last year, that’s when the album started to properly take shape.

    MV: You have so much at your disposal but you have to put it all together. It’s got to be challenging.

    Kode9: We’ve got too much choice. Really, the hardest thing sometimes is trying to remember what you like, trying to get back to a very basic feeling. And obviously what you’re constantly trying to do is iron out things that don’t make you feel good. That’s the uneasy listening thing. When you’re making an album you’re listening to the same music over and over again and occasionally some of the elements will just make you feel uneasy, it’s like that thing repeats too many times or it’s just there too long. So, you’re constantly just nit picking. Usually what you end up doing is subtracting, paring things down until what’s left is lean and mean and there’s no flab on it. All that’s there is what’s needed. That’s a hard process.

    MV: So, how do you feel five years on with this release?

    Kode9: From the first album? I suppose we’re kind of happy with what we’ve done. It is what it is, we’re happy to have escaped the process because it’s very intense. And we just hope people enjoy it, get something from it.

    MV: Is there pressure from your fanbase that you feel?

    Kode9: To be honest with you, when we work together when I do stuff with Spaceape we know who our fans are.

     


  • Nick Edwards (aka Ekoplekz) Steps Out of the Sonic Shadows

    Interview by John C. Tripp

    Nick Edwards still bares the stamp of his earliest sonic impressions, those seemingly benign songs and sounds that fill our minds and memories years later as adults. In his case it was the sounds of Bristol, UK in 1969. Edwards’ earliest exposure to experimental electronic music came via the insidious, subliminally subversive sounds of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop, Tristram Cary, Barry Gray and the plethora of weird library records that soundtracked childrens’ TV programmes transmitted during the 1970s. This heavy exposure led to a natural affinity for the early Industrial, synth and post-punk noise of Cabaret Voltaire, Throbbing Gristle, SPK, Robert Rental & The Normal, Fad Gadget and early Human League.

    Like a sonic sponge Edwards was swept along by the tide of new sonic possibilities engendered by nascent electro, techno, hip hop, house and ambient electronica. Simultaneously he was developing a strong taste for the more experimental side of seventies art/krautrock and the Jamaican dub reggae of King Tubby, Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry, Prince Jammy etc. At some point all of these influences combusted and Edwards began recording his own music during his teens in the late-eighties, using primitive hardware-based audio studio environment, direct to four-track cassette. He would continue his self-exploration of sound in the early 90′s creating a large body of recorded work, with a vast majority of the material remaining unreleased.

    Zooming forward a decade Edwards came to public attention as one of the first wave of music bloggers, writing the influential Gutterbreakz blog from 2003-2009. This was a highly personal journal of musical obsession, notable for inadvertently helping to trigger worldwide interest the dubstep phenomenon. In 2010 Edwards returned as a musician and live performer, forming musical projects like EKOCLEF. As Ekoplekz, Edwards has released a solid amount of records and cassettes on various labels including Punch Drunk, Mordant Music, Further Records, Public Information, Perc Trax and Plant Migration. Edward’s formative influences range from early electronics and radiophonics to 70′s dub, industrial and krautrock, newer forms of leftfield dance music and the post-noise experimental vanguard.

    Focusing on his own music once more, Edwards re-emerged as Ekoplekz in 2010. A volatile mix of radiophonics, industrial noise and disintegrated dub, with a commitment to primitive hardware technology and lo-fi cassette recording techniques, Ekoplekz proved an unexpected critical success, leading to a steady stream of releases on labels such as Punch Drunk, Mordant Music, Further Records and Public Information. Edwards continues to produce music at a feverish rate, both solo and in collaboration with others, most notably Ralph Cumbers (as Ekoclef) and Baron Mordant (as eMMplekz) and his first solo release under his own name on the respected Editions Mego label is available now.

    MundoVibe: Your music is deliberately lo-tech and distorted. Interestingly enough, in this day and age of digital perfection it is sounds more subversive than ever. What is it about this sound that appeals to you?

    Nick Edwards: I’ve always been drawn to more primitive recordings, whether its Elvis or Throbbing Gristle. I like the sound of music recorded onto tape, not necessarily just for the warmth, but also the subtle distortion that can be achieved. And I like the sound of older analogue sound processing and effects. I guess my taste for it comes from when I was a little kid playing my parents’ 7″ singles, which were all old pop songs from the fifties and sixties. There was so much character present in those recordings, especially those Joe Meek productions like ‘Telstar’, and the biting sound of Hank Marvin’s Strat on the early Shadows hits, which would literally send a shiver down my spine. And I guess I will always prize those lo-tech sounds over digital clarity or accuracy. In fact I have no interest in achieving a perfect, transparent recording. The character of the recording should be as distinctive as the actual performance it documents.

    I do have an unhealthy obsession with the idea of decay, particularly the area of urban decay. I was born into a world of shiny new motorways and modernist architecture and I’ve been watching all that concrete gradually aging and falling into ruin ever since.

    You developed this methodology when digital tools might not have been accessible as they are today. But now you have these tools at your disposal so why not just digital and use all of the latest software?

    I started with cassette recording technology back in the late eighties when it was the only option available to me. Just devising a simple sound-on-sound recording process using domestic cassette recorders was a miraculous act of will-to-power. The results were often poor, but the personal satisfaction of successfully getting an idea onto tape was enormous. I spent a long time working out better ways of getting a good recording on tape. It’s that sense of battling against the odds that always appeals to me when I hear these old, brutally recorded demos. Eventually I got a proper cassette 4 track recorder. Then, a few years later I spent quite a lot of money on one of the first digital multitrack recorders, a Fostex DMT8, and just thinking how horrible it sounded…just a very dry, dead sound. I persevered with it for a while but sold it eventually, vowing to return to cassettes. So I bought a secondhand Yamaha MT3X portastudio, which is the same machine I use to this day. So what was born out of necessity has now become an aesthetic choice. It’s not just some retro stance – I genuinely believe it gives my recordings a distinctive extra layer of character and bite.

    version-350x350One thing that has changed is the loss of physicality of a music recording. Most people experience music now as an MP3 or digital track. Yet there is still a cassette and vinyl culture that collects and listens to music this way. Does the medium change the message of music, especially yours?

    I think it varies. I know some people who genuinely love and prefer the sound of cassettes over MP3s. Other people are ‘objectophiles’…they might listen to MP3s for convenience but like to have something they can display on their shelf…and maybe for other, older people those archaic analogue formats have a talismanic quality that feeds off a nostalgia for a ‘better’ world that they see rapidly disappearing. I suspect my releases tap into all those potential areas, and I feel it’s quite appropriate for me to exploit them, because the music contained within is born from a similar viewpoint. I rarely buy or consume music on digital formats, so I try to package my music for consumers who have the same outlook as me. But I’m not on some anti-digital crusade. Most of my key releases are available in digital/download format, for those who prefer those formats.

    There is a strong element of decay in your compositions, perhaps reflecting the state of society, the decline of industrial manufacturing, the ultimate death and decay we all face. Would any of these be fair interpretations of your music? What ideas are behind your compositions?

    Yes it’s probably true that I do have an unhealthy obsession with the idea of decay, particularly the area of urban decay. I was born into a world of shiny new motorways and modernist architecture and I’ve been watching all that concrete gradually aging and falling into ruin ever since. I think perhaps my generation have experienced an unprecedented amount of change in our lifetime (cultural, technological, political, architectural etc) and it’s sometimes hard to deal with, particularly in these uncertain times. So we yearn for the comforts of the world we dimly remember from our childhood. We can’t go back there, so instead we spend a lot of time mournfully obsessing over the rapidly decaying artifacts left behind. Inevitably, for those working in the creative arts, these feelings will bleed into their work and I’m no exception to that. I don’t think it’s necessarily an unhealthy state to be in, as long as you can stay anchored to the present and try to keep moving forward.

    In the 1970s certain Jamaican producers, namely King Tubby and Lee “Scratch” Perry gave birth to “dub”, utilizing rudimentary production technqieus of cutting and splicing tape, employing reverb and messing with sound. How did their music and production techniques impact your listening experience and the music you create?

    Well, as I mentioned earlier, I started out listening to those old pop records from my parents’ era, which were often covered in tape echo and captured on primitive recording equipment. So when I first started hearing those dub reggae records it was like the same thing on steroids! In King Tubby’s hands, all those amazing textures which were hinted at in the early days of pop suddenly took center stage. And Lee Perry’s Black Ark productions make instant sense if you’re already familiar with Joe Meeks’ Holloway Road recordings. All that stuff had a huge impact on my development as an artist, without question.

    I wanted to make a record that was like a summation of everything I’d been working on over the past couple of years in my guise as Ekoplekz. In that respect it was quite a lot more calculated than my previous records, because I wanted to make sure I included certain sounds and techniques I’d been developing.

    With your signing to Peter Rehberg’s Editions Mego label you have dropped your Ekoplekz name, opting to use your real name. Is this a stepping out from the shadows for you?

    To some extent, yes. For some time I’d had this little nagging voice in my head kept asking me why I, a mature, adult solo artist, was hiding behind this stupid name, and maybe it was time I started taking myself a bit more seriously. But at the same time, Ekoplekz is quite a fun, memorable name to play around with, and the unique spelling makes it really easy to google information about yourself. In the end my mature, serious side won the argument, but I haven’t completely abandoned the Ekoplekz brand just yet.

    Plekzationz is comprised of four 15 minute pieces: ‘Chance Meets Causality Uptown’ , ‘(No) Escape From ’79′, ‘Inside The Analog Continuum’ and ‘A Pedant’s Progress’ Is there an overall concept that ties these tracks together?

    Each part is intended to focus on specific core obsessions that drive my creativity, but not in a tidy, discreet way, because that’s not the way I work. So there’s a lot of cross-talk between them. But I’m not gonna spell it all out for everyone…the clues are in the titles…

    Plekzationz could be the soundtrack for a lo-tech sci-fi movie or a vision quest in the desert. Where do you see its place, what was the “vision” you had for this release?

    I’d love to hear this sort of music in a sci-fi movie today! But to answer your question, I was aware that releasing a record on Editions Mego might bring me to the attention of a slightly wider audience, so I wanted to make a record that was like a summation of everything I’d been working on over the past couple of years in my guise as Ekoplekz. In that respect it was quite a lot more calculated than my previous records, because I wanted to make sure I included certain sounds and techniques I’d been developing. The end result is like a personal journey through the recording/performing process, compressing two years of development into a one hour showcase. For instance, the bass guitar at the start is very deliberate, because my earliest tracks were just me fishing around with a bass guitar, a keyboard and a couple of fx pedals. And the final part is a completely live, one-take improvisation, intended to demonstrate how far I’ve come (and how far I still have to go) in terms of confidence and performance technique, without any post-production or studio trickery. But at the same time I wanted to make sure there were enough fresh elements to satisfy those who’ve been following my work since the early days.

    On listening to Plekzationz, it’s interesting how one’s mood and state of mind are effected by listening to it. One can go from relaxed and passive to agigated to thoughtful to sad. There’s a lot of feeling packed into this recording. Any thoughts on the various states of mind your music creates?

    I try not to approach music from an analytical or intellectual viewpoint. I always try to be guided by emotional, instinctive feelings when I’m recording and performing. If those emotions are conveyed to the people who listen to it, then I guess you could say that the music has succeeded, and that’s all that I, as an artist, could ever hope for.

    Although one wouldn’t say your music is beat-driven, there is definitely a pulse and cycle to what you are doing. There is a also a heavily distorted beat buried in the mix. How does rhythm and cycle fit into what you’re creating?

    Not long ago I was involved in an evening of live music, performing spontaneously with four other artists, all of whom were experienced improvisors. One of them said to me afterwards that I was the first person he’d ever played with who used ‘beats’ in improvised music, which surprised me. The fact is, I spent years deeply involved in electronic dance music, either as amateur producer, dj, blogger or simply fascinated listener. From disco, early hip hop and electro in the eighties, through to techno, jungle, dubstep, its always been an area of interest to me, so naturally there will be rhythmic elements in my own work. I never try to deliberately suppress my influences. Hopefully by letting all those influences (and the feelings they inspire) freely intermingle, I can create music that is a unique sum of all its parts.

    From disco, early hip hop and electro in the eighties, through to techno, jungle, dubstep, its always been an area of interest to me, so naturally there will be rhythmic elements in my own work.

    Many of your compositions are lengthy, allowing you the time to slowly introduce themes. What is it about a longer track that works for you?

    Doing longer tracks is actually quite a new thing for me. Most of my earlier work is shorter bursts of sound, typically around 3-5 minutes. But for ‘Plekzationz’ I definitely wanted to spread the sound out, let it breath and develop at a slower rate. I can certainly see potential to slow the pace down even further on future releases. I’m really into the idea of making ‘ambient’ music that is weird and disconcerting, rather than mellow/chill-out.

    There is also a sense of floating, disconnectedness and space that permeate your sound. How do these themes fit into what you’re doing?

    Yes, that continues the idea of making ‘ambient’ music. A lot of these feelings come from the soundtracks and special sound effects used in the TV programs I used to watch as a kid in the 1970s, which would often have unearthly, floating incidental electronic sounds. So I tend to associate those spacey, dark atmospheres with a personal feeling of warmth and nostalgia. It just feels totally natural to me.

    Nick Edwards tweaks the knobs. Image courtesy of secretthirteen.org

    In creating your music, is it a building up of sound elements? How do you develop a track’s core concept.

    All my music begins with improvisation, usually just shaping and developing a rhythm or textural background wash, then adding more detailed sounds on top. I suppose I approach it like a painter would, working with oil on canvas…or maybe water colours..? Sometimes the end result feels structured, other times quite abstract-expressionist. When I’m recording the music, i just try to work instinctively, without any firm goal or concept in mind. The conceptualization comes later when I start thinking about how best to present the work to the public, assembling it into rational chunks of information, thinking of suitable titles for any given piece of music, working with a visual artist on the record sleeve, etc. Its only then that the conceptual elements start to form.

    You stated in another interview that “my music is like a wall, a psychologically protective wall that helps keep me sane in the face of all the media/consumerist bullshit that surrounds me.” That said, would you ever want your music to reach a much wider audience? What are you thoughts on our media culture?

    Haha…I think I was in a particularly belligerent mood when I said that, but I’m not the sort of artist who will ever crossover to a mainstream audience. That’s not a statement of intent, I’m just being realistic. But coming back to that idea of sci-fi movie soundtracks, if a producer asked to use my work in a film, or the BBC asked to use something I’d done as background music in a documentary, then of course I’d be thrilled. I like the idea of introducing experimental or challenging sounds to mainstream audiences subliminally through incidental music and sound effects, which is how I was first introduced to it as a child. Looking back, I feel very lucky to have been exposed to a more Avant Garde climate at an early age. Everything seems so safe and conservative these days…or just irritating, rather than challenging or genuinely shocking.

    Official Site for Nick Edwards

     

    http://boomkat.com/embed/549347/8B7BFF
    Read full review of Plekzationz – Nick Edwards (Ekoplekz) on Boomkat.com ©

    Nick Edwards on Edition Mego

     

    Nick Edwards (Ekoplekz) on Boomkat.com

     

  • Dub is Good for You: UK Dub’s Resonators Catch Fire on “The Constant”

    By John C. Tripp, Editor

    An interview with London’s Resonators on their new LP “The Constant”

    res·o·nate [rez-uh-neyt]

    1. to resound.
    2. to act as a resonator;  exhibit resonance.
    3. Electronics . to reinforce oscillations because the natural frequency of the device is the same as the frequency of the source.
    4. to amplify vocal sound by the sympathetic vibration of air in certain cavities and bony structures.

    Think of a Jamaican sunset, awash in golden and rainbow colors, ocean waves lapping at your feet on a soft and sandy cove, air of salt and fish fry, a soft trade wind caressing your body, cold Red Stripe in hand. Then transport that moment to London (or any cold, wet city) and add a 9-piece band playing deep, dubby reggae in the background. You can’t help but sway your hips to the pulsing bass and rich tapestry resonating through the air.

    And this is the effect London’s Resonators have on the ears, body and soul — transporting listeners to a magical, mystical place where worries and stress slip away.  You may not be in Jamaica when you hear them but their sound will sweep you away to another state of mind.

    Resonators are everything you love about dub reggae and much more.  “An extremely well-rounded and highly enjoyable performance from a band that oozes confidence, are at ease on stage and most importantly have a real thirst for and understanding of real, authentic reggae music,” says UK Reggae Guide. It’s old school reggae with a new school energy and sensibility and Resonators have built a strong presence on London’s and Europe’s reggae and soul culture with a sound that’s warm and familiar yet radically different. Resonators’ music embraces diverse influences, making their music relevant in today’s Bass culture as well as reminding us of reggae’s uplifting influence on the dance floor.

    What unites us is a love for the feel, the groove of ‘classic’ reggae. However, we also want to be open to new influences, and be free to create how we want to create, no limitations.

     Inspired by the meditative quality and universal appeal of Jamaican roots music the band radiate a playful and unified stage presence. The two lead singers Kassia Zermon and Faye Houston wipe away the notion of the big-ego front man whilst Darren JamTone provides live dub effects, and the balance is set. Following its release in 2010, Resonatorsʼ eponymous debut album gained worldwide and national radio support on BBC Radio 2, BBC 6 Music and Kiss FM from the likes of Mark Lamarr, David Rodigan and Craig Charles.

    Since signing with Wah Wah 45s, the band have released four heavyweight 7″ singles, receiving international radio play and widespread acclaim.

    The last couple of years have seen them play at legendary venues including Brixton Academy, Koko, Jazz Cafe and at top UK and European festivals including Glastonbury, Green Man and Outlook Croatia. To date, the band have shared stages with Horace Andy, Fat Freddy’s Drop, Mad Professor and TheSkatalites amongst many others. This summer saw them at Lovebox, Sunrise Celebration and Notting Hill Carnival, to name but a few.

    The eagerly anticipated second album and first for Wah Wah 45s, The Constant, has been critically acclaimed and is in heavy rotation on all reggae-loving jukeboxes and laptops alike. It fuses direct and healing messages about today’s world with progressive roots-inspired dub and a deep soulful sound. The first single taken from the album, Surrender was released earlier this year and was described by David Rodigan MBE as ‘British Reggae at its best.ʼ

    MundoVibe was fortunate to track down the very busy Resonators for this interview.

    MundoVibe: Congratulations on the release of your second album, “The Constant” on Wah Wah 45s. How does it feel to have this record coming out?

    Resonators: It feels great to be putting out our second LP, especially with the support of the fantastic crew at Wah Wah 45s. A lot of work has gone into it and there’s a real sense of progression with this record. Very pleased we’ve been able to release it on vinyl too!

    MundoVibe: Though you have a classic sound, it isn’t stuck in the past. How do you balance being a contemporary dub reggae band with retaining a classic feel?

    Resonators: There’s a massive melting pot of musical tastes within the band and everyone is capable of pulling out some music that the rest of us have never heard. What unites us is a love for the feel, the groove of ‘classic’ reggae. However, we also want to be open to new influences, and be free to create how we want to create, no limitations. Therefore, it’s a love and respect for that old feel, and the freedom to explore and be influenced by new territories which gives us that blend.

    Resonators-stairs

    MundoVibe: Tell us about the cover art for “The Constant”, which is a painting using strong symbolism.

    Resonators: The artwork is by a good friend of ours, Jim Sanders. It’s very primal and he has an amazing way of evoking all sorts of emotions with his work. Whether the reactions are positive or negative, his work is very striking and visceral and reflects on the subjects of life, death, love and reproduction. It’s universal. We hope our music is too!

    MundoVibe: As an 8 member group, how do all of you get along? Do you approach the music collaboratively or are there some members who assume greater roles in writing the music and orchestrating it?

    Resonators: We’re 9 members including Darren, who’s become a significant creative element of our sound. Our approach to the music is very collaborative. Often someone will come along to the regular sessions we have with an idea and we’ll play around it, each finding our own space within the music. Other times we’ll just have impromptu jams which’ll spit out new ideas. We tend to spend a good few months developing tracks before they’re unleashed on stage. We’re very lucky to have such an an amazing group of musicians who get on so well and are completely open to each others suggestions without any ego. It’s all about the music!

    MundoVibe: Your two vocalists, Faye Houston and Kassia Zermon are the perfect accompaniment to your sound. How did you end up with these two charismatic ladies on vocals?

    Resonators: We’ve known each other and worked together for a long time now. Kassia and Faye have sung together in various other projects, through which they’ve built a good relationship and sensitivity to each others styles. It’s fairly unusual to have two lead vocalists and it works well with Resonators because of this long-standing relationship.

    MundoVibe: Lyrically, your music addresses social and personal issues. They stand out for being socially conscious but not overtly preachy. What is your stance on your lyrics and how are they formed?

    Resonators: Kassia and Faye’s writing processes are actually quite different; Faye likes to take away a rough recording of a new instrumental idea, put it on repeat and let lyrics evolve from the feelings, experiences and memories evoked from the music, in a considered fashion. Kassia’s practice is deeply rooted in improvisation, on-the-spot ideas and jamming, but again inspiration coming from how the music makes her think and feel. They tend to put the two together and see where it takes us.

    MundoVibe: Tell us about the dub side of Resonators. How does dub influence and shape your sound?

    Resonators: From the outset Resonators was intended to be a live dub act, to merge the aspects of a live band and dub engineering to create that other, sonic dub space we all know and love so well!

    MundoVibe: If you could describe your sound as a delicious meal, what would the ingredients be?

    Resonators: A hearty, fruity, spicy veggie curry. With chocolate icing.

     MundoVibe: How does “The Constant” differ from your debut LP, how has your sound evolved?

    Resonators: The current Resonators line-up had just very recently formed when we recorded the first album; ‘The Constant’ is thus the true fruits of labour of the nine-piece as it stands, and in some ways our first real album, as it’s more collaborative from the writing point of view. We had more time to develop the songs and work with the same extremely talented producers who mixed the first record too – Darren JamTone (our live dub master), Nick Manasseh and Richie Phoe.

    MundoVibe: You are on the indie label Wah Wah 45s, which is run by two passionate music promoters and DJs, Dom Servini and Adam Scrimshire. Tell us about how you connected with Wah Wah 45s and its role in forming your sound and getting your music out.

    Resonators: Wah Wah 45s booked us for a gig at the Vibe Bar back in 2010. It was a steaming night and the vibe (no pun intended) was incredible. We slipped Dom a copy of our debut album and the next day we got and email saying they wanted to release Sweet Love Affair as a 7″ single. Since that success, we’ve released three other singles with them and now the LP. It’s great to work with an independent label who are so personally passionate about our music and they’ve really helped get our music out to a wider audience.

     MundoVibe: Assuming you’ll be touring in support of “The Constant”, what can we expect from your live show?

    Resonators: We’ve been gaining some reputation for the natural energy of our live shows. A large part of this stems from how close personally we are as a band, and the enjoyment we get from gigging with each other and interacting with the audience.

     

    http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/v=2/album=3283347458/size=venti/bgcol=FFFFFF/linkcol=4285BB/

     

     

    Resonators Official Website
    Resonators Facebook
    Resonators Bandcamp
    Wah Wah 45s

  • The Shaolin Afronauts Return to 1970’s Heavy African Grooves

    The mysterious afro-soul of The Shaolin Afronauts first echoed across the dance floors of Australia in late 2008. Heavily inspired by the sounds of 1970’s West Africa, Ethiopia and the pioneering avant-garde jazz artists of the same period, The Shaolin Afronauts draw on the this highly innovative and sometimes volatile era in music, using it as inspiration to create music with the same fire and intensity. Though there is something refreshing and original about the Afronauts, their music could be described as somewhere in between the heavy Afrobeat of Fela Kuti and the Ethio-Jazz of Mulatu Astatke. The key to the Shaolin Afronauts unique sound is the line-up, which comprises of a three piece horn section, 5 piece rhythm section and three percussionists, and this polyrhythmic approach layers the groups sound with a mesmerizing and hypnotic texture.

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  • The Return of Banda Black Rio – New Studio Album ‘Super Nova Samba Funk’

    William Magalhães with members of Banda Black Rio (Photo by Júnior “Samba Rock Na Veia”)

    William Magalhães forms a modern-day Banda Black Rio epitomising the spirit of his father Oberdan’s original ’70s Brazilian samba soul and funk group. BBR defined the Black Rio movement now enjoying a revival headed by Magalhães’ incarnation with the passion of soul and funk again linking Rio and New York for a feel-good blast that also takes in hip-hop, samba, pop and bossa. Brazilian icons Seu Jorge, Marcio Local and Elza Soares feature alongside bossa pioneers Caetano Veloso and Gilberto Gil as well as Flame Killer and GOD PT3 from the famed NYC Mobb Deep crew. Super Nova Samba Funk brings Rio’s black music cultures together to embody the ecstatic revival of Brazil and the Black Rio movement.

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  • Norman Jay Interview

    An audio interview with Sir Norman Jay by Fabien Vouillon

  • Ikebe Shakedown Serve Up a Salsa Picante of Boogaloo-Afro-Funk With a Dash of Disco

    Ikebe Shakedown, the self-titled album from the Brooklyn-based band, plays with elements of Cinematic Soul, Afro-funk, Deep Disco, and Boogaloo in all the right ways. After spending a few years together the group, named after a favorite Nigerian boogie record (and pronounced “ee-KAY-bay,”) delivers a driving set of tunes featuring a mighty horn section anchored by tight, deep-pocketed grooves.

    The Ikebe debut for Ubiquity Records sees the band push their globally-informed sound and eclectic approach to tune-writing into new territory, “Self-titling the album is a way to introduce the audience to the many facets of the band — to provide a more complete understanding of what we do,” bassist Vince Chiarito says. “Our sound has grown to incorporate our influences without overtly representing any one in particular. It just sounds like us,” he adds.

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  • Brownswood Electr*c Plots the Blips & Beeps of the Underground

     

    Listen to the full compilation at AOL Music

    In June of 2010, Gilles Peterson’s mighty Brownswood collective (specifically Peterson’s assistant Alex Stevenson) hand-picked artists to form a compilation that represented the multi-dimensional, kaledescopic landscape of the label’s musical interests. A tight, bright roundup of bass music at that sliver of time, ‘Brownswood Electr*c’ bred a new wave of producers and paved the way for a new sound, capturing the beats and personalities of then-up-and-comers (now game-changers) George Fitzgerald, Mount Kimbie, Mosca, Rockwell and Pearson Sound, among many others. The collection found fans in DJ Mag (nominating it for their ‘Best of British’ Awards that year), Martyn and Hemlock’s Untold, who aptly summed it up: “It’s a really spot-on snapshot of the grey area of “dance” music that keeps getting messier.”

    Messy or delightful chaos (your choice), the grey area hidden between the frayed splinterings of microgenres is perhaps where the most unexpected colours form. It’s where imaginations are freed, and artistic expression lies abound: no confines, no uncomfortable boxes to tick nor adjectives to hold on to. Taking in the relentlessly malleable state of electronic music of late, what’s considered ‘future’ today may very well be tagged ‘post’ within a handful of months. The naysayers and genre-enthusiasts may argue otherwise, but to Mr. Peterson and his Brownswood family, the music world couldn’t be in a more fruitful and exciting place as a result.

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  • Creole Choir of Cuba Coming to North America

    When one thinks “Cuba” the idea of creole culture doesn’t often come to mind, but the island shares a long and intertwined history with Haiti and the Dominican Republic. A million Cubans speak creole, a fusion of African, French and other tongues. The islands have a shared history: many Haitians fled to Cuba after the revolution of 1790, others during the oppressive regime of Duvalier.

    In the 1800s more than 30,000 Haitians emigrated to eastern Cuba with another wave occurring from 1920 – 1940 and yet another in the 1980s. Today, estimates of the Haitian population in Cuba range from 300, 000 on up to 1 million. Each wave of immigrants had its own distinct characteristics and brought with them the strong musical and dance traditions, their religion, customs, rituals and cultural habits on their journey from Haiti to Cuba.

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