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MIND
DE-CODER 52
“Each day, each noise I gather
explodes, leaving me to death; to rest in the solace of silence and to be
re-born.”
Gopichand Lagadapati
BROADCAST CREATION DAY MAGIC FLUTE WAY
Following
the sad and untimely death of Trish Keenan in 2011, Broadcast only had the one
album left in them – the soundtrack to the cult horror film Berberian Sound
Studio that they were working on at the time of her passing. But then MOTHER IS
THE MILKY WAY appeared, a roundup of bits and bobs they were working on and
were no doubt going to get back to one day. It’s a resolutely tuneless affair, but
quite lovely for all that, full of song sketches and experimental flourishes
that has an undeniable hauntological quality that puts in the same
psycho-geographical location as previous collaborators The Focus Group and,
indeed, the Moon Wiring Club. It was originally released as a tour-only EP in
2009 but was later released as a download in 2011 to stop e-Bay sharks cashing
in on Keenan’s death.
THE FLAMING
LIPS SGT. PEPPER’S LONELY HEART CLUB
BAND
I’m no great
fan of the Flaming Lips, me (except for the rather marvellous She Don’t Use
Jelly from 1993’s TRANSMISSION FROM THE SATELLITE HEART, obviously, which you’d
have to be particularly hard-hearted not to enjoy) but one of my favourite
releases of the year was the band’s track-by-track remake of the Beatle’s
classic SGT. PEPPER’S LONELY HEART’S CLUB BAND, renamed in this instance WITH A
LITTLE HELP FROM MY FWENDS. I’m not entirely sure they even appear on this
particular track, largely featuring guest appearances from My Morning Jacket,
Fever The Ghost and a searing guitar solo from J. Mascis. The album is messed
up and often misses the point of the original by a country mile but, for all
that, there’s an incredible sonic buzz to it that demands to get turned up to
11 whenever it hits the decks.
CONNAN
MOCKASIN IT’S CHOADE MY DEAR
Choade is a
tricky word, isn’t it? It’s either stoner acronym slang for chilling, as in Chilling Hard On A Deck
Every Day, or, and its provenance is unclear, a derogatory term for a penis
that is wider than it is long (an uncommon medical condition, apparently). A cursory
glance at the song lyrics leaves me none the wiser as to Conan Mockasin’s use
of the term, but given the otherwise languid, drowsy, psychedelic whimsy of
FOREVER DOLPHIN LOVE, the 2011 release from which it is taken, I’m inching
toward the former (no pun intended), although what with one thing and another, I
suspect that literal meaning takes a backseat to dreamy nonsense for the most
part.
MOON WIRING
CLUB PERIPHERAL PEACOCKS
Having been
a fan of Ian Hodgson’s Moon Wiring Club for some time now, I remain never less
than moderately amazed at his ability to put an onomatopoetically appropriate
song title to his hallucinatory imaginings. Peripheral Peacocks is the first of
several tracks on this evening’s show that I’ve taken from his latest release, LEPORINE
PLEASURE GARDENS, a kaleidoscopic assemblage of charmed fancy and consummate
variety. Initially intended to be based around vocal/voice samples, it features
much audio chicanery, often propelled by intricate rhythms and a newly devised
complexity that precisely mirrors a half-remembered long-eared trance-speed
world of warped dimensions and jugged kinetosis. Marvellous, as always.
SIOUXSIE AND
THE BANSHEES PEEK-A-BOO
Peek-A-Boo
was seen as a much welcomed return to form for Siouxsie and the Banshees, but
it was mostly the last great recording for a band that had lost its way. Taken
from their ninth studio album PEEPSHOW, released in 1988, Peek-A-Boo is
nevertheless an incredible track, a crazed assortment of fairground accordions,
distant to-and-fro vocals and reversed horns that manages to be both 30s hip
hop and entirely futuristic at the same time.
SPROATLY
SMITH THE MAGPIE’S NEST
Haunting
acid-folk weirdness from Sproatly Smith, who never forget to be anything less
than lovely, no matter how peculiar or curious their sound-world of
pagan-inspired bucolic folk tunes actually are. The Magpie’s Nest is taken from
their second release, 2010’s PIXIELED, a gorgeous album of transcendental
pastoral loveliness.
BROADCAST THE APHID SLEEPS
More spooky
goings on from Broadcast’s MOTHER IS THE MILKY WAY.
TRWBADOR CO2 (excerpt)
Bit of a
cheat this, as I only use the first few minutes of this track (before the
supernatural dance beats kick in) from enchanting Welsh duo, Trwbador, to provide
something atmospheric for a bit of dialogue from the classic British horror
movie Village of the Damned to play over. On the rest of their gorgeous album,
SEVERAL WOLVES, they mix a folky acoustic openness with introspective
electropop beats – think a pastoral version of St. Etienne somewhere between their
Tiger Bay/Good Humour albums mixed with mid-period Stereolab and you’ll be in
the right neighbourhood, although that doesn’t really do them any justice at
all. I shall do good by them in the next show.
DER
PLAN KLEINE SCHLAGER-REVUE
I came
across Der Plan in David Stubbs excellent discourse on Krautrock, Future Days,
in which he describes the group as a compact post-script to Krautrock, inasmuch
as they shared the same driving imperative to innovate as their more classic
forebears. Kleine Schlager-Revue is taken from the group’s second album
NORMALETTE SURPRISE, released in 1981. Their early use of sampling suggested
whole new ways that music could be reassembled – all sudden vistas and
surprising collapses of perspective, and the odd bit of porn thrown in for good
measure.
ELEPHANT’S
MEMORY OLD MAN WILLOW
If you’ve
heard of Elephant’s Memory at all it’s probably because they provided the music
for the Warhol-esque psychedelic party scene in John Schlesinger’s Midnight
Cowboy, which I’ve rather cleverly weaved into the track (even if I do say so
myself). On the other hand, they were also known as John and Yoko’s backing
band for a couple of years, where they were renamed the Plastic Ono Elephant’s
Memory Band for live performances. Old Man Willow was included on their eponymous
1969 album.
MARK RONSON
feat. KEVIN PARKER DAFFODILS
A rather
marvellous little taster from the forthcoming UPTOWN SPECIAL album from Mark Ronson which features a host
of guest performances and, on this track, Tame Impala’s Kevin Parker who
apparently sings on two more tracks and provides a lot of the albums
instrumentation. This track is by turns mesmerizing and hypnotic – a joyful
explosion of psychedelic exuberance. I
can’t help feeling that the album will be fab.
MOODOÏD LA CHANSON DU CIEL DIAMANTS
Another
artist who benefited from the Kevin Parker touch is Parisian multi-instrumentalist
Pablo Padovani, guitarist for Melody’s Echo Chamber. On his debut EP, simply
called the MOODOÏD EP, released in 2013, he invites Parker to create a mix
that’s both dreamy and languorous, flitting between sonic experimentation and
full on psychedelic bluster. It could do without the umlauts, though.
ROTARY
CONNECTION SURSUM MENTES
This little
throwaway piece, lasting no more than 43 seconds, can be found on the eponymous
debut album from the psychedelic soul band Rotary Connection, who released
their first album in 1967. Tripped out and experimental, this is the sound of a
band exploring new dimensions in sound – I just wish they could have explored
them for a little longer, is all.
MOON WIRING
CLUB 37 DAYS FROM THIS POINT
Another
track from LEPORINE PLEASURE GARDENS that haunts and delights in equal measure
TEMPLES A QUESTION ISN’T ANSWERED (A BEYOND THE
WIZARD’S SLEEVE REIMAGINING)
I’m very
excited by this – Temples gave over their debut album SUN STRUCTURES to the
Beyond The Wizard’s Sleeve boys who take the ever so slightly restrained
arrangements of the original and replace them with acid-fried expanded
versions, soaking the drums in dub, ramping up the fuzz and sending strings and
harps spiralling into the ether. A Question Isn’t Answered in particular
benefits from the reanimation, sounding lowdown and dirty, strutting and
self-assured – it sounds like it wants to shag you. The rest of the album, now
renamed SUN RESTRUCTURED, is this good.
THE MOON
WIRING CLUB ONLY YOU CAN SEE ME
A clip from
a dream about a trip to the seaside played backwards, I expect.
VASHTI
BUNYAN JELLYFISH
Ephemeral,
diaphanous, exquisite – Vashti Bunyan’s HEARTLEAP is almost naked. Achingly fragile
and lovely.
THE SOFT
HEARTED SCIENTISTS THE UNKNOWN TIDE
Last year
saw the release of the Soft Hearted Scientists sixth album of off-centre
psychedelic wonderment's, THE SLOW CYCLONE – all spooky and innocent and
timeless. You can hear breathing, coughs, cat miaows, cheap drum boxes,
cardboard box percussion, songs about decommissioned robots, a daydream about
being the destroyer of all evil, a guest vocal by the wolf from the 3 little
pigs, and Cobra Clouds. Charming, endearing and beguiling.
MIKE
RATLEDGE RIDDLES OF THE SPHINX
SEQUENCE 2
Created by
former-Soft Machine member, Mike Ratledge, RIDDLES OF THE SPHINX is considered
by many to be a ground-breaking electronic score. Composed using ARP, Moog and synthesisers
modified by Denys Irving, the man behind the mysterious and controversial 1970s
band Lucifer, Ratledge's soundtrack provides the perfect minimalist backdrop to
the 1977 cult film's avant garde storyline. Dreamlike and timeless, there's a
space-age quality to the Riddles of the Sphinx sequence with its myriad of
synth rhythms, synthetic melodies and 8-bit progressions.
LES BIG BYRD THEY WORSHIPPED CATS
Motorik
meditations and krautrock vibes dominate in this far out debut from
Sweden’s Les Big Byrd (I mean, just check out the album's cover). The eponymous title track is heavy on trippy textures,
wandering synths, and a production that simply grooves.
MOON WIRING
CLUB ARIADNE’S DREAMHOUSE
This is what
drugs make the world sound like, kids.
DOG AGE HALF BAKED
More
Scandinavian psychedelic goodness, this time from Norwegian psyche-rockers Dog
Age. They’re a band undoubtedly inspired by The Beatles and Syd-era Pink Floyd
(nothing wrong with that, of course) but on their second album, SIGH NO MORE,
released 1991, there’s an air of resigned melancholy, as exemplified by this
track, Half Baked, that I feel quite drawn to.
THE FLAMING
LIPS LUCY IN THE SKY WITH DIAMONDS
The single
that everyone was talking about, featuring Miley Cyrus and Moby. Miley Cyrus
doesn’t distract from the song half as much as you’d imagine, imbuing it
instead with a detached iciness that counters the acid-burn out of the rest of
the album. Not entirely sure what Moby added to the track, though.
GHOST OF A SABER
TOOTH TIGER MOTH TO A FLAME
A loopy
tripped-out extended epic from Sean Lennon and partner Charlotte Kemp Muhl to
close their wondrous album MIDNIGHT SUN. Rather than escaping the landscape of
Strawberry Fields, the album skips through its marmalade meadows and plays
beneath its kaleidoscopic skies producing one of the richest psychedelic treats
of the year.
CAN FUTURE DAYS
FUTURE DAYS,
released 1973, finishes the run of Can’s classic albums and is the last to
feature Damo Susuki on vocals. It’s a largely ambient affair and fairly divides
the critics – some seeing it as a fully realised vision of the band’s trip,
while others, like Julian Cope, saw it as a schizophrenic stalemate. It’s hard
to deny, however, that the title track, which opens the album, is one of the
band’s most wistful, epic and exquisitely beautiful songs.
GRUMBLING
FURS NEIL MEGSON FANCLUB
Another
little tripped out noodle that barely lasts 40 seconds or so but which contains
all that is lovely and weird. This is the opening few moments from the
Grumbling Furs third album PRETERNATURALS – the critics appear to be raving
about it, but I can’t help thinking that this is the best thing on it. Inasmuch
as I know about these things, the Neil Megson in question is either a retired
U.S. soccer midfielder who currently coaches youth soccer, or Throbbing Gristle
and Psychic TV front man and all round singer-songwriter, musician poet and occultist
Genesis P-Orridge who was born Neil Megson in 1950. You decide.
CLIFF
EDWARDS WITH THE DISNEY STUDIO CHORUS
WHEN YOU WISH UPON A STAR
The American
singer and voice actor, known as Ukulele Ike, is best known as the voice of
Jiminy Cricket from Disney’s 1940 Pinocchio, of course. Sometimes it seems
that Mind De-Coder is all about wishing on a star, so it was a good track to
end on.