Music Reviews

by Steve Silverstein

 |  No. 25

:
“Aqua”/”Oarca” 12”

Reviewed by Steve Silverstein

Records which employ structures and rhythms typically associated with minimal techno tend to be recorded to sound sterile and detached. Polmo Polpo contradict this aesthetic. They combine sometimes...

 |  No. 23

: Unsung Heroine CD

reviewed by Steve Silverstein

Norway's Midnight Choir create dramatic - sometimes melodramatic - tension through simplicity and subtlety. To capture their pretty and often quiet songs, they turned to engineer Phill Brown and...

 |  No. 23

: Ink CD, Psychogeography CD

reviewed by Steve Silverstein

These two records capture the raw and trashy sound of two powerful rock bands playing. They resemble the sound of Spot's Husker Du recordings or Chris Burgess's work with My Dad is Dead more than...

 |  No. 21

: Click et Craque LP

reviewed by Steve Silverstein

Dating back to the Swell Maps and the Styrenes, bands approaching home recording with inexpensive technology often combined conventional pop elements with strange approaches to texture and layering....

 |  No. 20

: Remue CD

reviewed by Steve Silverstein

Many current recordings employ an unnecessarily cartoon-like style that abandons natural instrument sounds in favor of exaggerated caricatures of these sounds. Recorded both with Nicholas Vernhes in...

 |  No. 20

: Hef CD

reviewed by Steve Silverstein

An equal balance among all players provides a guiding principle for freely improvised music. Hef presents engineer Colin McClean the challenge of balancing electric and acoustic instruments. The...

 |  No. 20

: Doozy CD

reviewed by Steve Silverstein

Lozenge's music combines a powerful sonic density with carefully composed melodies. To capture this challenging mixture, they turned to Cheer-Accident guitarist Phil Bonnet, who until his untimely...

 |  No. 19

: Parallelograms CD reissue

reviewed by Steve Silverstein

The CD reissue of Linda Perhacs's Parallelograms illustrates that a CD mastered carefully from a vinyl pressing can still sound great. More importantly, it returns to print a beautiful...

 |  No. 19

: The Beginning CD

reviewed by Steve Silverstein

Ready for the House and Later On CD reissues The mysterious figure known only as Jandek started lo-fi home recording in 1978, long before anyone thought of using those words. The Beginning marks his...

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