Saturday, June 29, 2024

Goal (Sudden Death Penalty Shoot Out)


 

The European Championship round of 16 begins today, Germany meets the previously unconvincing Danes, who were able to secure second place in the weak England group. This England is a mystery to everyone at this European Championship. I have quite a few people around me who support England, but Southgate's security football disappoints everyone here, not just the fans in the motherland of football.

Doesn't matter. Today the cards are being reshuffled; those who disappointed in the group games can suddenly shine in the playoffs and vice versa. Nevertheless, the task seems feasible today. In the quarter-finals it would most likely be against the Spaniards, who have so far been absolutely convincing and have achieved new qualities. A point where Germany and its team are far from reaching, even if we here in the country have the feeling that after a wonderful generation, the really bad years of football could be over and something new could emerge. So I think that we will say goodbye as hosts in the quarter-finals at the latest, even if nobody says it here and it will hurt a little when the others make themselves comfortable in the own living room.





I have no memory of how this 12″ got on my record shelf.

I assume I pulled it out of a Grabbel box, at least that's what the printed price suggests, which was reduced several times until I came along and had mercy.

J. Saul Kane was no stranger at the beginning of the 90s, that could have been the motivation. Maybe I was also looking for more football topics, intrigued by New Order's “World in Motion”. The 12“ was also released for the 90 World Cup and, with its combination of hip hop breaks, heavy Latin basslines and madcap samples from football commentators and fans, was a tribute to football legend Pelé and the Brazilian team.

So let's see if it brings us luck today. 

But Depth Charge is not The Barmy Army and the tracklist doesn't bode well either.


Goal (First Half)

Goal (Second Half + Extra Time)

Goal (Sudden Death Penalty Shoot Out)

Wednesday, June 26, 2024

Balafon sketches


 

Last Saturday, Adam Turner - who takes us by the hand with wonderful daily posts to immerse us in the world of music and also shares very personal phases of his life - played a warm-up set for Marconi Union and Contours as part of “The Flightpath Estate DJs”. What reads very interestingly written will have made everyone's eyes shine even more and has already been confirmed as such by Adam.

An evening that I would have liked to have experienced in my city. Read it about here:


http://baggingarea.blogspot.com/2024/06/live-at-soup-marconi-union-contours-and.html


With Marconi Union I had some experiences with their Ambient Transmissions and the albums around it. Sublime ambient music, definitely worth discovering.

Here and today a few lines about Tom Burford’s Contours „Balafon Sketches“

In 2020, first released on tape & later also as vinyl, 100% of the proceeds go to Kids of color & colors youth network, super symphatical without having heard a single note. The album moves, as the name suggests, with the African xylophone/balafon as the main protagonist, between percussive Balearica and fourth world scenes. A very, very nice album that you can use on a summer evening to leave football behind and sit in the garden with a drink, or another place of your choice. If it is inside, then with the window wide open.




„When music speaks to both the past, present, and futures to come, it invites listeners to take pause and cherish the moment. Contours’ recent release Balafon Sketches does just that and this profound meditation is worth savoring. There’s a lovely melange of traditional instrumentation (Indonesian gamelan and West African balafon) alongside homemade string and percussive instruments that are drenched in delay and reverb to create interlocking polyrhythms and soothing ambient textures. Tracks like A2 “Keld,” featuring Abel Selaocoe & Callum Connel, illicit feelings of home and comfort with layers of wind instruments and an acoustic guitar that sounds like it’s in love. On the other end of the spectrum is “Okutama,” a synthesizer-driven track that uses field recordings of a nocturnal rainforest to conjure mystery. There’s also a lovely pattering drum here that is played with so much personality it sounds as if it’s speaking. We recommend playing this one on a quiet night at home paired with your favorite red wine.“

–Tana Yonas -



Balafon Sketches began as a series of live jams in Cumbria. Percussionist and producer Contours & instrument builder, musician, painter and ceramicist Seth Sutton experimented with balafons and a gamelan alongside Sutton’s homemade string and percussive instrumentation. The tracks’ foundations were built running these elements of tuned percussion through delay and reverb pedals, experimenting with interlocking polyrhythms and the overtones and textures created by the raw recordings. 


Contours built upon these recordings utilising a range of live instrumentation such as synthesizers, drum machines and other organic percussion. He worked alongside several instrumentalists: cellist Abel Selaocoe and saxophonist/ flautist Callum Connell feature on ‘Keld’, violinist Simmy Singh on ‘45npr’, and violinist Beka Reid on ‘Eastern Bells’. 


Balafon Sketches sees the coming together of electronic and organic instrumentation. It crosses musical traditions that makes for a sonic journey, taking as much influence from African rhythmic practice as it does from minimalism, electronic music and the transcendental nature of ambient music and spiritual jazz. 


This release is the organic output of spontaneous experimentation with friends, and was entirely recorded in our homes in Manchester and Cumbria. 


Originally self-released as a limited cassette run in July 2020. Balafon Sketches now sees a limited edition vinyl re-issue courtesy of new Stockport imprint 'Net Of Gems'.


Seth Sutton: Gamelan, percussion & homemade instrumentation 

Abel Selaocoe: Cello 

Callum Connell: Saxophone & flute 

Simmy Singh: Violin 

Beka Reid: Violin 

Tom Burford: Production, balafon, gamelan, percussion, drum machine, synthesizer, RE20 space echo & field recordings 


Mastered for vinyl by Dominic Clare @ Declared Sound

Artwork and sleeve design by Kitty Hopking

Released by Net of Gems

Distributed by All Night Flight Records




File under: Balearic I Fourth World 



Monday, June 24, 2024

Electric Meadows


 

I'm afraid there aren't enough Barmy Army releases to help the German team have a completely successful performance at the 2024 European Championship. Yesterday, for the first time, I didn't post anything from On-U Sounds supergroup in the run-up to the game and it almost went wrong: the equalizer was only in the 2nd minute of stoppage time. 1:1 against Switzerland. The German team will go into the round of 16 as group winners. But whether that is an advantage remains to be seen. I suspect that the trip to the home European Championship will be over in the quarter-finals at the latest, when we face the Spaniards, who have been outstanding so far. But first you have to get there. After yesterday, that's not even so certain. Nevertheless: the European Championship with the many peacefully celebrating fans is a huge joy. 


I haven't posted any music for a few days, which will probably be the norm in the future. But of course I continue to listen to music these days, albeit less due to up to 3 games per day. 


If you discover unknown music by revered artists, where you thought you already had everything on your music shelf or on your hard drive, the excitement is usually quite great. A few days ago I re-read an interview with Lo Recordings boss Jon Tye (Seahawks, Captain Sunshine, Ocean Moon) on the famous Ban Ban Ton Ton:


https://banbantonton.com/2020/12/15/interview-jon-tye-ocean-moon/


„Did KPM approach you for a solo record? I love the Seahawks one.“


„From the outset there was talk of a series or releases…after Island Visions it seemed natural to progress to Crystal Harmonics and from there to Astral Vibrations – a deeply psychedelic vision featuring members of Stereolab, Peaking Lights and The Horrors. There’s also an album with Jon Brooks called Electric Meadows.“





I had already read it a few times and suddenly my ears pricked up: “Electric Meadows”?

I couldn't find anything on Bandcamp or Discogs. Surprisingly, the album was available on Apple Music and I found a site where you could download the album.


You can't really find anything else about it on the Internet.

Well, here we have another wonderful New Age-esque ambient music from Ocean Moon, which is great to curl up in the hammock to and think about your life. There is always something to reflect on and the weather is very inviting for that right now.


A large part of the Ocean Moon release is created in the probably wonderful surroundings of Cornwall.

A reason to take a closer look at the area.


Now I just have to find out what the aforementioned “Astral Vibrations“ is all about.

Ideas?

Wednesday, June 19, 2024

Experience is the best Teacher


 Today the European Football Championship enters its second matchday and it will become clear what Germany's 5-1 win against Scotland was really worth. Hungary has been a difficult opponent to play against recently, wins: none. It will be exciting.

The weather is still not very summery, but every now and then summer shows what it can do.

Overall, there have been a surprising number of good games so far, Turkey's game against Georgia yesterday, which was in danger of not taking place due to the masses of water coming from the sky, was such a surprise hit. Endless chances on both sides, spectacular goals. I didn't expect that.


Today calls for another Barmy Army highlight with the album “The English Disease”. In addition to the well-known On-U Sound team, spectacular substitution players were also involved, such as Woodentop's man Rolo McGinty, David Harrow & Ministry's Al Jourgensen. An album full of voice samples, football choirs and the classic ON-U sound. My favorites on the album are “Sharp as a Needle”, the acidic “Devo” & the gorgeous “England 2 Yugoslavia 0”. A result that would make me very happy today: Germany 2 Hungary 0.




„"Nowadays everything happens at once and our souls are conveniently electronic"

- John Cage - 


For music fans coming fresh to the Barmy Army's "English Disease" the appeal would obviously be the set of tough rhythms with their origins in reggae and funk. Perhaps the substance of the "lyrics" and the many references to the contemporary football issues of the late eighties may bypass those who do not also hold an abiding interest in the beautiful game (was it that non-heroic goalkeeper, Albert Camus, who first dubbed football thus?) Either way, what we have here is yet another edition in what can now be recognised as an ongoing series of On-U Sound unofficial documentaries. Previous subjects have included mental health, conspiracy theory, the global hegemony of multinational corporations, B.S.E., the use and abuse of technology, the perverse nature of organised religion. But, of course, football is more important than all of these.

The release of the vinyl version of The English Disease" in October 1989 was prefaced,

as On-U's premier football venture, by Tack>>Head's The Game" in early 1987. Featuring the voice of ITV football commentator Brian Moore, the original cut also included the sampled voices of Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher in a "political mix", these had to be replaced by a sanitised version with a professional impressionist replacing the reluctant Ron and Maggie! Etched on the 12" copy of the Fourth & Broadway single was the legend - Where's the Barmy West Ham Army?". West Ham United are supported by, amongst a few thousand others, Adrian Sherwood. The Barmy Army was the militant faction of the East End team's supporters who, on the odd occasion, tended to be rather over-enthusiastic in their chosen form of encouragement in support of the boys.


The Barmy Army then, surfaced in a more acceptable sonic form in January of the following year with a 12" on On-U Sound, perversely, but generously as befits the average West Ham fan, paying tribute to Liverpool's Scottish striker Kenny Dalgleish. Also contained on "The English Disease" set,

"Sharp as a needle" utilises a sample of the traditionell Wembley anthem "Abide with me" - as well as "You'll never walk alone“ from the original Anfield Kop. The rhythm was first slated for use by Mark Stewart and the Maffia before its appropriation by the army that was barmy. However

another of the album's rhythms was actually used by Mark Stewart when "Devo" surfaced as These things happen" on the artist's Mute album "Metatron". On "Sharp as a needle Adrian Sherwood employed Rolo, then of the Woodentops, to play bass guitar. And a bizarre factoid for this uniquely English product - the man on the keyboards was Ministry's Al Jourgensen, fresh from his Sherwood-  „Twitch“ Album.


It should be recorded that prior to the release of "The English Disease" there was little likelihood of coming across any examples of football tunes which would not be enjoyed by your grandmother, at least this was certainly true in England where popular music with a football theme had been strictly confined to the Hip hip hooray we're on our way to Wember-lee" variety. In Europe, where there seemed to be a preponderance of Bavarian oompah bands and rubber castanets, it was even worse. I can recall that in attempting to produce a football themed radio programme at the time the best examples came, unsurprisingly, from Brazil, Jamaica and the countries of the African continent. So The English Disease rather than breaking a mould created one. Recorded at a time of social paranoia when the Thatcher years were drawing to a close, football was under unprecedented scrutiny. Identity cards, the destruction of the traditional terrace, hooliganism ("the English disease"), policing standards, a return to family values - the game was becoming, to coin a

phrase, a political football! Sherwood resisted the obvious temptation of an easy shot by turning out a strictly Hammers polemic but focused instead on producing a passionately political sonic documentary where supporters from across the football spectrum joined together in a joytul celebration of the game whilst levelling a number of incisive jibes against the game's establishment, both at club and organisational levels. As the cool academic Steve Redhead observed in his treatise on post-political popular music, The End-Of-The-Century-Party":

*Instead of trying to represent a locality, region or sub-culture, Sherwood's mix ..... captured a blend of passion, pride, regionalism and nationalism by deconstructing, and then reconstructing, the various diverse elements. Not representation so much as presenting the unpresentable".


On listening back to "The English Disease" the radio and TV samples together with the terrace chants almost, in fact do, take on an anthropological slant. There is little, if any difference in the use of such source material as compared to the ethnic and tribal material to be found on the albums of African Head Charge. Or is the only difference, in the terminology of Marshall McLuhan, that football is "hot whereas pure dance is "cool"?

On an On-U archive note, the fabulously mutant-subbuteo artwork of this On-U Sound release departed from the norm in that it was the responsibility of one Steve Hardstaff. Steve is perhaps better known by his pseudonym, Jah Cuzzi, which appears as a credit on many of the albums coming out from the smaller Merseyside labels, especially Probe Plus. He was also the man with pen and brush duties for the legendary "Bugs on the Wire" - a compilation set which contained the original of Dub Syndicate's "Ravi Shankar Pt.1" radio remix, in addition to BimSherman's long-lost tune "Need to Live".

-Steve Barker from the Album Notes-


https://www.discogs.com/release/474244-Barmy-Army-The-English-Disease



Saturday, June 15, 2024

No Scotland, No Party


 



Germany 5, Scotland 1. hmm. Yesterday was of course a nice evening for us. 

No reason to be euphoric. Every game is different, we know that. But you can and could enjoy the moment first. The Scottish fans were impressive. The German team's game as well.  We'll know more on Wednesday and where the journey might take us. Today the next games and again the peacefully celebrating fans in the cities. I always find it impressive how much power football can develop.


No music today and possibly not or only irregularly in the next few days.

Friday, June 14, 2024

The Big Man And The Scream Team Meet The Barmy Army Uptown


 

So, today, June 14th, the start of the European Football Championship in Germany. 

I fondly remember the 2006 World Cup summer fairytale with fairytale weather and endless sun. Now a European Championship is not a World Cup, the weather is currently far from these conditions and the mood? Sure, everyone in the country wants a new summer fairy tale, a distraction from the many drastic problems in the world. Was the situation better in 2006? There have always been and always will be threats, but felt: yes. 

I'm not a football fanatic, but when the big tournaments come up, we always enjoy being there as a family and with friends & it's actually always a good time. In terms of football, we as Germany haven't been spoiled much since the 2014 World Cup title and were even eliminated very early in the last 3 tournaments (2x preliminary round, which never happened before (!) and once in the round of 16). Being eliminated against England at the last European Championships didn't hurt any more than against any other nation. I would have finally been more than happy for the motherland of football to win the European Championship title. For me, the country has always been the measure of all things in terms of football and music. But I think they won't be able to repeat their final appearance this year. I also don't believe in a German title, home advantage or not. But it would be very nice to get far in the tournament and create beautiful football again. In the spring there were signs that gave a little hope.

So today is the start of the tournament. We'll eat & drink & play table tennis with friends and then watch the game together in a friend's garden & hopefully drive home afterward somewhat happy.


Musically, Primal Scream & Adrian Sherwood's Barmy Army are available today, who recorded this single in 1996 for the European Football Championships , together with trainspotter Irvin Welsch. For several years, Primal Scream produced one highlight after another. This was another & wait: 1996? Wasn't there something? Final at Wembley and…oh.


https://www.discogs.com/master/28357-Primal-Scream-Irvine-Welsh-And-On-U-Sound-The-Big-Man-And-The-Scream-Team-Meet-The-Barmy-Army-Uptown


The Big Man And The Scream Team Meet The Barmy Army Uptown (Full Strength Fortified Dub)

The Big Man And The Scream Team Meet The Barmy Army Uptown ( Electric Soup Dub)

The Big Man And The Scream Team Meet The Barmy Army Uptown (A Jake Supreme)

Thursday, June 13, 2024

Drives to the Beach


 

One of the most calm and beautiful stuff I've listening to this year..!! Thanks to the musicians and to the Tokonoma crew for releasing it“


I've discussed the weather a bit over the last few days, probably because it's had a bit of an impact on my well-being. Is it April? Is it November? It's definitely not June, just before the summer solstice.

Similar to the weather, my posts jumped back and forth a bit between ambient and jazz.

Then maybe today it's time for Turn on the Sunlight. The project, founded by Jesse Peterson, about whom I can't say anything, and Carlos Niño, moves like a dream back and forth between Ambient, New Age & Jazz & thus creates the admittedly somewhat constructed bridge between the posts of the last few days. Carlos Niño has been moving in exactly these musical areas for many years and can look back on a variety of collaborations (Matthew David, Miguel-Atwood Ferguson, Laraaji, etc. etc.). 

With “Drives to the Beach”, Peterson & Niño plus Pablo Calogero have created a wonderfully atmospheric piece of ambient new age jazz, with which they continue to expand, including the follow-up albums “You Belong”, “Ocean Garden” & “Canoga to Haʻikū”. To transform improvisational jazz rooms into livable oases of well-being.




„Dusk’s fading sunbeams hang over the outstretched ocean, a reflection of light on rippling waves guides a seance to conjure tones of solace. Turn On The Sunlight, Carlos Niño and Jesse Peterson’s weightless vehicle, are joined by Pablo Calogero and Mia Doi Todd in the crystalline waters. Drives To The Beach is a gossamer hymn to adventures led by the changing sky; a world where multi-hued spirits dance along the horizon and invite us all to hear their revenant whispers.

From the beginning of opener “Frogs,” it’s clear that Niño and Peterson set up Drives To The Beach for Calogero to star. Magical waves of saxophone, flute, and bass clarinet move lithely across the celestial landscape. Clicking out hypnotic rhythms while looping repeating arpeggios over reverb-soaked guitar chords and gentle frog purrs, Calogero’s feet never touch the ground. “Horizon” soaks in the moonlight with Mia Doi Todd’s wordless vocals becoming a luminous sprite. Chimes glisten like starlight as sanguine drones lilt in the cool air before Calogero’s saxophone puts a cotton candy exclamation point toward the end. Beautiful.

Turn On The Sunlight creates spaces to let go. It’s music that lends itself just as easily to contemplation as clearing our minds and drifting away. Synth pads open up and sing on “Sailing,” an expansive journey through distant realms. Resonant percussion sweeps across the arrangement, a pointed counterbalance to the dense drones beneath. Saxophone passages glide effortlessly across the surface leaving a trail of gold dust in their wake. It’s beautiful here and the water is warm.

Textures created from sonic dust are the lifeblood of Drives To The Beach. Niño and Peterson fuse them together into intriguing shapes that bind together to form this enchanted world. Right until the end in the underwater expanse of “Whales,” with is soothing waves and electronics, Calogero calls out to anyone in earshot to take a breath, to listen. Turn On The Sunlight continues to search for meaning or at least a place where daydreams run wild and the air is crisp.“

-foxydigitalis-



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