Disclaimer

Any links that appear on this blog have been added in order for music to be readily available to anyone who should want to hear it. If you download any of these files it is expected that you delete the music after a day or so. If you like an artist, buy their music and support them by going to shows and buying merchandise.

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Christmas just came early

That's right children. I'm no fat man, but I've got a veritable dickload of goodness for you to get excited over. If you would like to touch my sack in appreciation then that can be arranged.



This Heat - This Heat

So if you haven't heard their avant post-punk masterpiece Deceit, you should really rectify that. If you have and wondered "oh I wonder what they sounded like before that" then wonder no more!


Miles - Facets

Miles is half of Demdike Stare, who have put out a bunch of great material collected in their '11 release Tryptich. His first release under his own name (he has been putting out different stuff under other names for years) takes that darkness from Demdike Stare, and gets closer to a sound the fantastic Andy Stott might produce. Great EP.


Andy Stott - We Stay Together

What, you slept on this guy too? Well you're in for a treat. The two EP's he has released this year have been awesome, this later one particularly so. This has dark, very minimal beats, though not as quite primal as Passed Me By. Excellent "dub techno" as the kids call it (sorry dev).



Ah, French Impressionism. What's impressionism you ask? Well, no doubt you have heard the name Claude Monet, and perhaps seen this painting by him; now imagine that same image represented by music; soft around the edges, slightly blurred tonality, more liberal use of dissonance though not at all in the same way as the Expressionists, etc. You should at least know "Clair de lune" aka one of the best pieces of music ever... well that's this guy, and here is some of the best music written for the piano.


Arnold Schoenberg - Verklarte Nacht, String Trio

Expressionism? You got it. Whilst the French were (typically) being all airy-fairy and passive, the Austro-German composers, led by one Mr. Arnold Schoenberg, took all of the emotion the could muster, and dramatised it as much as possible. Dissonance features strongly, as Schoenberg led the charge in atonal music, and later serialism, though the main piece we have here, "Verklarte Nacht", is one of his earliest, therefore sounding a little more like Wagner/Mahler, but all twisted and distorted. Not that intimidating, I promise. "Verklarte Nacht" (Transfigured Night) is for string sextet by the way.


Morton Feldman - Triadic Memories

Fast forward another 50 or 60 years, and all tonal barriers have been broken down, Cage has drawn up a blank score, and the Americans are beginning to be recognised in the post-WWII "contemporary classical" era. One of the most important, and peculiar, is Morton Feldman, a good friend of John Cage. Along with other artists from different fields, they were apart of the New York School, known mainly for painter Jackson Pollock. Well, I'm going to post another painting just because I can, this time by Philip Guston, who was part of that crew, and who Feldman dedicated a piece to (he did that quite a bit). Again think of this painting and the odd use of colour, the hazy quality though in a different way to impressionism, the ambiguity of it all, the strange brush stroke patterns. These things can be applied to Feldman's music also. Quiet, slow, recurring asymmetrical patterns which bring about a hazy sense of timelessness (Wittgenstein's idea of infinity is very apt here). It is all quite ambiguous, and like many other twentieth-century composers, he explores dissonances in his music, though in a more intriguing fashion. Timbre and texture are of the utmost importance, each note, each chord, all ringing out together and repeated and repeated and repeated...

I have written more than I intended but that is because I love his work so much. This is a solo piano piece, around a hour and a bit, masterfully played by Aki Takahashi. 


Eric Dolphy - Iron Man

If you have not heard this man's avant opus Out To Lunch then you had better go do that. Either way, here is some more fine playing from Charles Mingus' favourite horn player. This album is one of his later works, and oh boy is it one fiery occasion. It's loose, crazy and of course a little bit out there, but still hanging on to the post-bop idiom by his fingernails. 


Dead Language - Dead Language

Everybody loves some powerviolence, especially when it features members of Iron Lung, No Comment, Walls and Solutions. Debut LP released this year.



I have really come around to El-P this year, after somewhat stupidly neglecting him after a hasty listen to his later album. Company Flow certainly straightened me out though, and then I checked out this gem. Sometimes odd, dense beats, combined with dense lyricism. Dude is incredibly talented just needs to work on his quality control a little bit, but it doesn't hamper this album too much anyway.




Hope this helps to make up for the lack of activity on here of late.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Dmitri Shostakovich - The Complete String Quartets (Fitzwilliam String Quartet)


It is entirely necessary to get these 6+ hours of music.

The giant of twentieth-century Russia, who had a quite tumultuous (and fascinating) relationship with Stalin and the state, wrote both 15 string quartets and symphonies. Each display his prowess as a composer of the modern world, though he does not abandon tonality completely. This makes him a excellent choice for somebody perhaps less inclined to dive in to what is sometimes an intimidating century in the classical world.

No excuses. Listen.

Friday, October 28, 2011

Henry Purcell - The Fairy Queen

Britain's version of Bach and probably their most well known and highly thought of composers. The Fairy Queen is a masque, or semi-opera with words from Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream. It's such a great piece of music, with complex contrapuntal ideas and, as with practically everything Baroque, features the goddamned fugue.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

AFX - Chosen Lords


Richard D. James. Yes, that crazy guy.

This is a compilation of some highlights from the Analord series put out under the AFX moniker. Needless to say, it's awesome.


Chosen Lords

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Emika - Emika



Emika's world is one that owes not only a huge debt to the London underworld of Dubstep, but the Bristol world of trip hop. You could also lump her in with the recent strain of darkwave inspired artists, such as Salem and Holy Other. Her music is rife with stifling atmosphere and a violent paranoia, all set to a soundtrack of twitchy and stuttering percussion and ruthless bass thumps.


Link removed as per request of blogger

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Cocteau Twins - The Pink Opaque

1985 compilation album from everyone's favourite unintelligible dreamy scottish poppish (kinda) band.

and it rules

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Moss Icon - Lyburnum

Woah this place looks different it's all grey. Here is some Moss Icon, some band that were playing emotional hardcore before people were even calling it that (emotional hardcore sounds dumb anyway, like regular hardcore isn't emotional already?). Too bad they missed the 'Revolution Summer' by a year or something. Blah blah, it's good, get it.

New Contributor - Deviant

The looserthanloose blog/community/brotherhood/family/fraternity/club/group would like to welcome its newest member, the ineffable, unassailable, incomparable, inaudible (cuz its the internet lol) and a bunch of other words too DEVIANT.

He's also got better everything than you.

but particularly hair.
oh baby

Wayne Shorter - Juju


Shorter put out a string of great albums on Blue Note through the 60's, before he went all fusiony and founded Weather Report in the 70's. This album was released in 1964, around the time he joined Miles Davis' amazing quintet, though before his playing evolved into what it would be like in that group later on. Here, Shorter is very much under the spell of Coltrane (as nearly all saxophonists were at that stage), but the one thing that shines through no matter what period of his career you pick, is his compositions. While they were still basically following the general bop guidelines of the day, his harmonic and melodic material is far more intricate in its relationship to each other. What results is you humming along to things in your car you never thought you would.

Also featuring two parts of Coltrane's quartet in McCoy Tyner and Elvin Jones, and the ever-reliable Reggie Workman on bass, you know you are in for something special.


Juju

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Mainstream Rap Special

I love 90s underground rap because the internet tells me to, and I hate mainstream rap becuz its just about bitches and hoes and money and its not intelligent at all LOL a milli a milli i mean wtf is that hahahaha thats not rap RIDIN DIIIIRRRTY LOL

^ That shit pisses me off. Here's some rap that wasn't produced by DJ Premier circa 1994 but still manages to rule:

Lil Wayne - Da Drought 3
Lil Wayne - Dedication 2
Chamillionaire - Ultimate Victory
T.I. - Trap Muzik
T.I. - King
Three 6 Mafia - Mystic Stylez
Jay-Z - Reasonable Doubt
UGK - Ridin' Dirty
Big K.R.I.T - Returnof4eva
Bone Thugs-N-Harmony - E 1999 Eternal
Curren$y - Pilot Talk
Game - Documentary
Snoop Dogg - Doggystyle



Fleshpress - III - The Art of Losing All


 feel like sluj? heres sum sluj


Bill Withers - Just As I Am

great great voice plus he can sing iknowiknowiknowiknowiknowiknowinknowiknowiknowiknowiknowiknowiknowiknow then KEEP SINGING without taking a fuckign BREATH yeah thats right holy shit anyways this is a great album filled with delicious melodies, brilliant soulful vocals and luverly phrasing this is a staple of r&b and one of the best soul albums ever recorded of all time in the world ever

Friday, September 16, 2011

Lord Finesse - Return of the Funky Man


Early 90's East Coast, you know the drill.

He did a great deal of the production on this too, and got a bit of help from, among others, Showbiz (of Showbiz and A.G fame (A.G also guests)). Solid, if nothing outstanding, but oft-neglected just because of the rest of the great shit back then.


Return of the Funky Man

Monday, September 12, 2011

Mayhem - Deathcrush


Fuck yeah Mayhem
Fuck yeah Deathcrush
Fuck yeah songs called Chainsaw Gutsfuck

but seriously this is a great lil slice of black metal this and De Mysteriis are the two highest points of their discog easily and hey if you dont like it its only 20 mins long so stfu

The Beach Boys - Pet Sounds


Classic album if you don't like this then you are not a person. This is probably the best pop album ever to exist bar maybe a Beatles album. You can hear its influence even today, clear as a bell. The harmonies, the songwriting and the vocal precision are all breathtaking and it's hyper-melodic but retains this sense of atmosphere that balances its sound pretty much perfectly. oh yeah and its the most catchy and singalongable thing ever in the world ever.

Get this shit now

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Dirty Beaches - Badlands



Sup guys? Here's some incredibly dismal music for you, and one of the best albums of the year! Enjoy.

---

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Our Sunday Affairs - Smiles From Next Year


Young dudes playing twinkly lil emo ditties like a bau5

really pretty especially the song that is about Alyssa but isn't but so is.

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Benga - Diary of an Afro Warrior



Fairly minimal dubsteppy goodness, kind of a mid-point between atmospheric stuff and bass overload 'womp'. That's why it's good. Won't blow your socks off, but should appeal to anybody with an interest in the genre.


Diary of an Afro Warrior

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Electric Masada - At the Mountains of Madness


Seeing as Qwe posted some Zorn, I figured I would post this.

One of Zorn's groups, Electric Masada is an outlet for the klezmer music he has also been doing in Masada, but, as you may have guessed, with an electronic spin. Along with the usual frenetic sax and percussion of most of Zorn's work, we find laptop electronics, keyboards and electric guitar adding to the insanity. This isn't as bat shit insane as Naked City, however noisy avant-garde jazz with middle eastern influence doesn't fully reside in the sane camp either.

This is a double live album of monumental quality.


Disc 1
Disc 2

Sunday, August 7, 2011

John Zorn - Naked City


the most insane album you will ever listen to. sometimes groovy, sometimes beautiful, sometimes a whirring grind assault.

get the fuck on it. absolutely brilliant

Saturday, August 6, 2011

Saturday, July 30, 2011

UNKLE - Psyence Fiction


James Lavelle has worked with various partners throughout UNKLE's lifetime, which probably explains the gradual change in style through the years. In the beginning, UNKLE was much more of a straight-ahead trip hop project, and for the debut, Psyence Fiction, Lavelle was teamed up with arguably the best in the business; Josh Davis, aka DJ Shadow.

If you dig any of the 90's trip hop, it's safe to say you will enjoy this. Both men obviously know what they are doing, and the large amount of guest vocalists/MCs actually work particularly well.


Psyence Fiction

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Thou - The Archer & The Owle

An EP or something from my favouritest sludge band in the whole wide world (probably). The last Pygmy Lush cover is absolutely brilliant and the Nirvana cover is cool too. I have nothing more to say.

Plaid - Double Figure


Some tasty IDM, drawing influence most notably from Warp label-mates Aphex Twin, and to a lesser extent Autechre. If mentioning Warp, Aphex Twin and Autechre together doesn't encourage you then I don't even know man. It's good alright.


Double Figure

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Thursday, July 14, 2011

'nuvva bwog


it's Meatplow's blog and, be you one who suffers in their unfamiliarity with such an individual FUCKING RECTIFY IT

http://ohwhatisyoursillysong.blogspot.com/

Shipwreck A.D. - Abyss


I do think it's been awhile since I've heard some catchy as fuck hardcore that doesn't also annoy the shit out of me.

The riffs are restrained in a good way, conservative. It's good because it works with their style, which I want to call metallic hardcore but don't because i really really hate that term so what metalcore isnt good enough for you pedantic shits

oh dude you got it all wrong metalcore and metallic hardcore are completely different. i mean have you compared judge with botch

idk man fuck it's just a great hardore album listen to "squall" if you dont believe me.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Pete Rock & C.L. Smooth - Mecca and the Soul Brother


You know what? It doesn't even matter if the beats outshine the MC because when you're Pete Rock your name comes first bitch.


Mecca and the Soul Brother

Monday, July 4, 2011

I Have Dreams - Three Days 'Til Christmas

This would've been totally hilarious if I posted this three days before Christmas but I'm not, it's nowhere near Christmas. In fact, it's probably as far from Christmas as you can get and I don't give a shit because this album has absolutely nothing to do with Christmas. Fuck Christmas, I don't care for it. Hell, it's not even an album, it's an EP. Extended play. As opposed to a long play? Extended sounds like it ought to be longer than long. Shit, I don't care. This is the soundtrack to your girlfriend breaking up with you and getting together with some piece of shit junkie trash and making dumb twitter statuses about how she loves her boy dumb amounts and couldn't be happier while you continue to be a worthless loser going nowhere in life fast, but fuck it you get to play Oblivion all day and Skyrim's coming out in November and you don't need a girlfriend because video games are way better anyway and they won't break your fragile little emo heart.

Three Days 'Til Christmas

Zomby - Where Were U In '92?


Garage step dubstep 2 step eskibeat wtfever this rules has womp show it to your friends and out womp them youll be cool then


no but seriously this shit is so good

Bwog


Check out this fucking blog cunts

http://noddingout.blogspot.com/

Saturday, July 2, 2011

T.S.O.L. - Dance With Me

Punk rock classic, get this if you're not afraid to embrace your inner necrophiliac and chant along to I wanna fuck, I wanna fuck the dead! Because, you know, that would totally give you limitless amounts of punx cred. Don't be afraid this'll be like any other punk record you've heard because there's something different about this I can't quite label. It's got quite a deathrock-esque sound to it. Worth your time.

Dance With Me

Penfold - Amateurs & Professionals

Whiny emo songs for whiny emo kids. More than just 'songs about girls and being sad and stuff'. Get this if you're a fan of Mineral and the ilk because it sounds like them but arguably better. Arguably. You're welcome to argue that. I'm just here to hyperbole after all. If you were here then I would take you eeeveryyywheeere. Listen to that song if you only listen to one (why the fuck would you ever do that?) because it's certainly among the better emo songs in the history of emo songs. Emo is a really dumb word.

Amateurs & Professionals

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Monday, June 27, 2011

Where the fuck is everyone?

Pictured above: me, looking for everyone.

The Men - Leave Home

Holy shoegazing punx hardcore just got interesting. I really hope more hardcore bands take a leaf out of The Men's book in the future because it really is a breath of fresh air to see them try something a little different. This is rad. That's the word that comes to mind. Rad. People should use that word more often without trying to be ironic. Leave Home seems like a logical progression from their noisier previous release Immaculada, seeing the band focusing more on the less conventional parts of their sound and with great success. I think it's way more punx to play whatever the fuck you want as opposed to the same rehashed hardcore everybody else has been playing for years. The Men are more punx than you. All of you. Deal with it.

Leave Home

Grouper - A I A

Another wonderful release courtesy of Liz Harris this year. While I'm not feeling this quite as much as her previous output, Dragging A Dead Deer Up A Hill, it's still a very solid two LPs worth of dreamy, ambient bliss. I can only see this growing on me in the future so perhaps it'll come to rival her previous release in my eyes, who knows? Well worth a listen if you're a fan of all things chill. However if all you listen to is tough guy hardcore to make up for your raging insecurities concerning your potentially questionable masculinity this may not be for you. It's okay to let your sensitive side take over sometimes though. It's not gay. Unless it is gay, but that's cool too. I mean you could totally get married in NYC now. What a wonderful world we live in.

Dream Loss
Alien Observer

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Giles Corey - Giles Corey

I've been listening to very little other than this album recently and I can't quite pinpoint what about this I find so enthralling. There's just something here that keeps me coming back for more of this gloomy, lo-fi, folky, ambient, inane genre tag, so and so forth piece of awesome. It's the solo project of one Dan Barrett of Have A Nice Life fame, who are without a doubt one of my favourite bands, so this was always going to be brilliant. It comes highly recommended regardless, provided you're not averse to a rather melancholic, depressing 56 minutes ahead of you.


Giles Corey

Portishead - Roseland NYC Live

Portishead absolutely kill it live on this release. It's arguably more moving than any of their studio recordings and is definitely aided by the inclusion of an orchestra, though it's Beth that really takes the metaphorical cake, she's incredible on here. If you call yourself a Portishead fan and don't have this already, get it asap.




P.S. I'm back, did you miss me? Nope? Yeah, fuck you too. I have nothing to do until October now so expect more posts from me. Joy!

Monday, June 20, 2011

Autechre - Confield


By becoming even more detached, mechanical, cold, and uninviting, Autechre somehow became even more interesting.

One of their best.


Confield

Sunday, June 12, 2011

[Post-foetus] - The Fabric


Ardent (hah, yeah right) followers of this blog will have seen the Baths album I posted up quite awhile ago. Had you downloaded it, you would have heard one of the better albums released last year. His songwriting is so inspired, and the textures he achieves require successive listenings, which is definitely a good thing considering how addictive his blend of glitch, ambient and hip hop is. So here's [Post-foetus], his first project. Yes it's good. No it's not as good as Baths. Yes you should get it.

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Iniquity - Serenadium


A wise man once said, 'don't judge a book by its horribly cheesy CGI cover'.

Danish band Iniquity released this back in '96, a time when all that quality old school dm was drying out a little bit, and new trends were starting up. This album is a perfect representation of that time, as it's still got a little of that old school vibe, but is leaning towards the more modern brutal and technical dm camps.

Something for every dm fan here, no excuses for not checking it out.


Serenadium