New*  Keith Fullerton Whitman Occlusion pre-order available on Editions Mego.

Recorded on February 18th, 2012 at LES ATELIERS DE BITCHE, Nantes, France.
Performed on a 4.2 Quad Array, captured in stereo from the performer\'s perspective on a Zoom H1 HANDY RECORDER (auto level :: OFF)

Occlusion (Weteringschans)

Recorded on February 25th, 2012 at PARADISO, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Performed on a 4.2 Quad Array, captured in stereo from the performer\'s perspective on a Zoom H1 HANDY RECORDER (auto level :: ON)

… Occlusion is a loose framework for a multi-channel, freely improvised piece of LIVE ELECTRONIC MUSIC, performed without the aid or consent of pre-recorded or even pre-arranged materials of any kind. A given realization will last between 10 and 30 minutes ; time is elastic. Every effort has been made to avoid divisible rhythms (although mistakes are occasionally made) … Still, I consider it a "kind" of Dance Music.
These two realizations, recorded a week apart at festivals in France and The Netherlands during February 2012, capture the piece (much like those on the Generators LP) in two entirely different iterations, in states of (A) a mildly inebriated bliss & (B) an arbitrarily triggered blind rage. Both recordings were made at 24-bit, 96khz through the absolute cheapest means available to the consumer to do so. They sound fantastic.
Occlusions is a companion piece to Generators in that they share the same tool-set … however, it is the FREE JAZZ yang to Generator’s MINIMALIST yin. It is not recommended to those seeking meter, melody, cleanliness, or a clearly outlined organizational sense.

Keith Fullerton Whitman. Auto-Melody Generator w/Drums 2012.

“… testing a revised set of “Auto-Melody Generator” patches (using Intellijel Dixies for the sine waves, a DrumDokta DRM-110 for the drums) for a concert w/ JD Emmanuel in June in Brooklyn ; not that I’m consciously trying to ape his style (which I love) - just trying to yield something a bit more flowing & less asynchronous / manic than the recent “Occlusion” pieces …

Close-ups of the Voight-Kampff machine, shot with a Canon VIXIA HF M50 (in VERY low afternoon light ; impressive performance) with the stock lens ; line-level audio pumped out of the “thru” of a direct box directly into the mic input of the camera (with the internal manual preamp levels set on the low side ; still doesn’t sound half bad despite the output buzz of the Vermona) …”

Raglani HUSK. Now available for order direct from The Sixth Ear.
Double LP $22. shipping inside the U.S. is $5. The U.K., France and Germany is $15. Payment is via PayPal and secured.
Email The Sixth Ear for ordering info.
Husk, a career-spanning double-LP retrospective marking Raglani’s “early period” (2004-2009), is both the artist’s “Best-of” collection*, as well as a document of a personal orientation within the canon of electronic music.  As a devoted student of E.M. history and synthesis techniques, Joseph Raglani has spent the past decade in his St. Louis studio consuming and refiguring.  While highly-informed, these tracks avoid simple derivation, the traces of influence are not easily decipherable; the common descriptors fall away.  The sonic legacies orbiting the INA GRM axis cross paths with pop sensibilities more akin to the sensuous pulse of New Order.  Raglani mines the expressiveness of this fertile boundary space.  The compositions on Husk are dense featuring a palette of analog and digital electronic instruments as well as guitar, voice, pedal steel, organ, melodica. Disparate elements find a way to resonate to maximum emotive effect.  The sonic energies are not bound to their sources, but are rather utilized for their ability to express.  One fourth of the material is available here for the first time; the remainder from private-press and small run releases has been remixed by Raglani and re-mastered by Greg Davis for presentation in this collection.  Husk is Raglani’s second mass-market release following his 2008 CD Of Sirens Born released on Kranky Records.  Artwork by Robert Beatty (Three Legged Race / Hair Police / Resonant Hole).  In an edition of 500 copies with printed inner-sleeves. *Featuring material from the following releases:Pastiche Electronic (Pegasus Farms [Demo] CS, 2008)May Tour 2009 Split With Steve Hauschildt (Pegasus Farms CD-R, 2009)Oneism (IDES CS, 2007)Empire Trilogy (No Label/Artist’s Edition, 2008)Classically Sprained (Arbor CS, 2009)Vanity Well (Chondritic Sound CS, 2009)Raglani & Scenic Railroards (Gameboy / Pegasus Farms CD, 2005)

Raglani HUSK. Now available for order direct from The Sixth Ear.

Double LP $22. shipping inside the U.S. is $5. The U.K., France and Germany is $15. Payment is via PayPal and secured.

Email The Sixth Ear for ordering info.

Husk, a career-spanning double-LP retrospective marking Raglani’s “early period” (2004-2009), is both the artist’s “Best-of” collection*, as well as a document of a personal orientation within the canon of electronic music.  As a devoted student of E.M. history and synthesis techniques, Joseph Raglani has spent the past decade in his St. Louis studio consuming and refiguring.  While highly-informed, these tracks avoid simple derivation, the traces of influence are not easily decipherable; the common descriptors fall away.  The sonic legacies orbiting the INA GRM axis cross paths with pop sensibilities more akin to the sensuous pulse of New Order.  Raglani mines the expressiveness of this fertile boundary space.  The compositions on Husk are dense featuring a palette of analog and digital electronic instruments as well as guitar, voice, pedal steel, organ, melodica. Disparate elements find a way to resonate to maximum emotive effect.  The sonic energies are not bound to their sources, but are rather utilized for their ability to express.

One fourth of the material is available here for the first time; the remainder from private-press and small run releases has been remixed by Raglani and re-mastered by Greg Davis for presentation in this collection.  Husk is Raglani’s second mass-market release following his 2008 CD Of Sirens Born released on Kranky Records.  Artwork by Robert Beatty (Three Legged Race / Hair Police / Resonant Hole).  In an edition of 500 copies with printed inner-sleeves.

*Featuring material from the following releases:
Pastiche Electronic (Pegasus Farms [Demo] CS, 2008)
May Tour 2009 Split With Steve Hauschildt (Pegasus Farms CD-R, 2009)
Oneism (IDES CS, 2007)
Empire Trilogy (No Label/Artist’s Edition, 2008)
Classically Sprained (Arbor CS, 2009)
Vanity Well (Chondritic Sound CS, 2009)
Raglani & Scenic Railroards (Gameboy / Pegasus Farms CD, 2005)

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Pete Swanson. Man With Potential. Album overview.

One of my favorite records of 2011.

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Fenn O’Berg. In Hell. Editions Mego.

Fantastic double LP by the trio of Fennesz, Jim O’Rourke and Pete Rehberg.  One of my favorite listens in awhile. Great stuff. Check out the sound sample.

Bryter Layter Review from Resident Advisor (Ian Maleney)
Joseph Raglani and Mike Pollard are no strangers to the worlds of drone and synthesizer music. Between them they have issued dozens of tapes, CD-Rs and LPs under a host of monikers, many on Pollard’s own Arbor label. Two Lenses is a return to work under the Bryter Layter name first used on 2009’s cassette release Imprinted Season. Developing the themes explored on that earlier tape, the duo take a direct and melodic approach to analogue synthesizer composition without losing any of the cinematic grandeur often associated with the style. Two Lenses avoids the drone scene tendency towards lengthy durations, instead playing itself out in a series of relatively short bursts of concentrated melody and distinguished timbre. The antecedents are clear, from Brian Eno’s Discrete Music to Popul Vuh’s work with Werner Herzog, but never overbearing. The second track in, “First Light,” exemplifies the approach as a syncopated lead line extends itself over a billowing cloud of polymorphous tones. Counter-melodies emerge softly from the distance, repeating and changing slightly before fading indistinguishably into something new. Nothing is forced; each gradual shift from solitary tone to complex and full depth of field happens naturally, even as the undercurrent layers of sound subconsciously wash from languid note to languid note.  While consonance is of the utmost concern throughout the record, things do take a turn for the noisier in the form of “Aspect.” Here the buzzing of oscillators drifting in and out of feedback provides the bed of sound for distorted, distant melody to drift over. It is far from aggressive but it does hint at the darker edge of the tools being used. In some ways, it’s the only track to really expose the mechanized or unnatural element at the heart of the sound, an important break that stops the album from hazily drifting too far on a kosmische cloud of its own making. Two Lenses finds strength in restraint. No epic blowouts, no extended passages of fried circuitry and knob strangulation, just an ear for the beautifully melancholic and structures of hidden complexity. Even at its noisiest, everything remains crystal and the discretion used in choosing each element is abundantly clear. Each detail is allowed to be as important as the next, regardless of size, tone or duration. The care and warmth in every sound makes Two Lenses a disarmingly easy listening experience, at once capable of fading modestly into the background or rewarding every ounce of your attention. The choice is yours.

Bryter Layter Review from Resident Advisor (Ian Maleney)

Joseph Raglani and Mike Pollard are no strangers to the worlds of drone and synthesizer music. Between them they have issued dozens of tapes, CD-Rs and LPs under a host of monikers, many on Pollard’s own Arbor label. Two Lenses is a return to work under the Bryter Layter name first used on 2009’s cassette release Imprinted Season. Developing the themes explored on that earlier tape, the duo take a direct and melodic approach to analogue synthesizer composition without losing any of the cinematic grandeur often associated with the style.

Two Lenses avoids the drone scene tendency towards lengthy durations, instead playing itself out in a series of relatively short bursts of concentrated melody and distinguished timbre. The antecedents are clear, from Brian Eno’s Discrete Music to Popul Vuh’s work with Werner Herzog, but never overbearing. The second track in, “First Light,” exemplifies the approach as a syncopated lead line extends itself over a billowing cloud of polymorphous tones. Counter-melodies emerge softly from the distance, repeating and changing slightly before fading indistinguishably into something new. Nothing is forced; each gradual shift from solitary tone to complex and full depth of field happens naturally, even as the undercurrent layers of sound subconsciously wash from languid note to languid note.

While consonance is of the utmost concern throughout the record, things do take a turn for the noisier in the form of “Aspect.” Here the buzzing of oscillators drifting in and out of feedback provides the bed of sound for distorted, distant melody to drift over. It is far from aggressive but it does hint at the darker edge of the tools being used. In some ways, it’s the only track to really expose the mechanized or unnatural element at the heart of the sound, an important break that stops the album from hazily drifting too far on a kosmische cloud of its own making.

Two Lenses finds strength in restraint. No epic blowouts, no extended passages of fried circuitry and knob strangulation, just an ear for the beautifully melancholic and structures of hidden complexity. Even at its noisiest, everything remains crystal and the discretion used in choosing each element is abundantly clear. Each detail is allowed to be as important as the next, regardless of size, tone or duration. The care and warmth in every sound makes Two Lenses a disarmingly easy listening experience, at once capable of fading modestly into the background or rewarding every ounce of your attention. The choice is yours.

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The Sixth Ear contributor Raglani has a new free track for download on his soundcloud page.

Here.

Poster artwork by Jeremy Kannapell for the Close/Far comp on Saint Louis experimental music Rhizomatic Saint Louis.

Poster artwork by Jeremy Kannapell for the Close/Far comp on Saint Louis experimental music Rhizomatic Saint Louis.

Thomas Ankersmit. Live at LAMPO Chicago. Serge Modular System.

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Raglani. Re-entry With Entity. 2009. HUSK 2012.

“I just approved the third attempt (or was that the 4th) at a test pressing. Covers are printed and I believe these should be out within a month. It’s been a LOOOONG process with mishaps at every stage of the way. I know I’ve been saying it’s any day now for awhile but now it truly is any day now. This double LP is a kind of “best of” and covers a lot of material from 2004-2009. Culled from cassette releases such as Oneism, Vanity Well and Classically Sprained as well as a few unreleased songs and demos. Re-Entry was a cassette 4-Track demo I started before the may 2009 tour in which all my music equipment was stolen. So I decided to leave it just the way it is.”

- Joe Raglani

Artwork by Robert Beatty.

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Matt Carlson. Transcparient. 2009.

Nice extended, slowly evolving piece from Carlson’s archive.

From his soundcloud page:

“Transcparient is a piece I made in 2009 and self-released in a barely-existent CDR edition of 30. This is the first thing I made with my modular which at the time consisted essentially of 2 oscillators, 2 EGs, a filter and a VCA. There is some Echoplex in there as well and the final section is a mix of synth and percussion recordings.”

His LP on Draft is AMAZING! Get it!

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Keith Fullerton Whitman. Regaining Composure. Ekhein. 2011.

One of the most beautiful and elegant electronic cassettes of the last several years.

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Caboladies. Woodn. From the Album Renewable Destination. 2011.

Keith Fullerton Whitman at The Cable Festival. 2/18/12.

Via R.A.S on Vimeo.

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