Ernesto Diaz-Infante – Saca Los Cuernos al Sol

My fellow Californian Ernesto Diaz-Infante provides us with a warm, shimmering work of nine instrumental pieces composed solely for guitar.  Each track is warm, not only by experimental music standards, but in terms of pure music listening.  My particular favorite was IV, which reminded me of a hybrid between John Fahey and Roy Montgomery playing while immersed in a silvery pool of water well outside this realm.  It made for a very pleasant listening experience.

For a hard copy of this release, go to Headlights Recordings.

Various Artists – Remain Alone (A Disciples Compilation)

Many years ago, I was enthralled with the music of 4AD artist His Name Is Alive, but lost track of what they were doing.  That’s a shame, as Warren Defever has continued to be involved in great music, and this one has to be one of the most interesting I’ve seen in a while, as it’s a paean to Roky Erickson and The Thirteenth Floor Elevators.

Defever isn’t the only star on this compilation, however.  Also featured are Phew (best known for her work with Can in the West) and Model Home, a band out of Washington, D.C., who left me feeling quite impressed with a sound that reminds me a bit of Suicide.  The comp is rounded out by Ian Masters of the Pale Saints performing with Nick Davidson as 3 Eyed Monkey, who bridge this album with a song loaded with farfisa-laden bliss.  For those who are happy to bridge shoegaze with garage rock.

Autumn Tears / Zeresh – Widowing / Possessing

What a strikingly good album this is.  Autumn Tears is a collective of musicians from Billerica, Massachusetts who make an ethereal sound that blends the best of bands who would have fit well on 4AD Records during their 1980s heyday and progressive rock, especially for those who are fans of the Russian symphonic group iamthemorningZeresh are beloved friends whose work has been reviewed on this blog in the past, and Tamar Singer’s vocals sound utterly sublime here.  This crosses neofolk with a restrained but foreboding metal vibe.  Dark, but magically so.

Of special note, the mastering on this album was done by Peter Bjargö of Arcana, who seems to have ears made of gold, as I’ve head the pleasure of hearing his other mastering work, and it’s always on point.

Samo Salamon – Dolphyology: Complete Eric Dolphy for Solo Guitar

Our friend from Maribor, Slovenia, the fine guitarist Samo Salamon, graces our blog with a new release.  This one is just him alone playing the works of Eric Dolphy accompanied by his guitar and, apparently, his cat adding in a meow or two.

From Samo’s Bandcamp site:

The idea of the project began by practicing at home alone during the many Covid lockdowns, rediscovering Dolphy’s music again. Furthermore, I was inspired to do this album by Miles Okazaki’s great solo guitar Monk project. We had a long talk this year via Skype and it was so great to hear how he approached Monk on solo guitar. In the same manner, I have tried to approach Dolphy, but in my own way. First I transcribed all the compositions by Dolphy and arranged them for solo guitar, trying out different techniques. In the end, I improvised on tunes – sometimes free improvisation and in other cases following the harmonic structure. I have played Dolphy’s tunes throughout my musical career, improvising on them, but rarely in a solo setting; probably because of fear or respect. But now I was like, OK, let’s do it: I told myself I should not be afraid to play single lines or be burdened by the great solo guitar musical heritage, which I immensely respect.

Samo’s playing is warm and joyful, and his work is always welcome on these pages.

Various Artists – Discember: Hear Xmas, See Xmas, Say Xmas

As we observe Christmas Eve and the Nativity today and tomorrow based on the Julian Calendar, we share an avant-garde take on “Christmas” music.

The French experimental record label Camembert Électrique have released a 94-track comp of some rather interesting takes of some Yuletide classics, as well as a fair number of originals.  Some of the artists included include Anastasia Vronski, Sean Derek Cooper Marquart, James Hoehl, and our dear friends, Lezet.  It’s not a conventional compilation for the season, but it holds its own rather well.

Various Artists: Zanzibara: First Modern Taarab Vibes From Mombasa & Tanga, 1970​-​1990

It’s so good to see the inestimable Buda Musique take the modern route and make some of the treasures of their back catalog accessible, not only digitally, but on fine vinyl and CD editions.

This compilation brings together a collection of artists from the towns of Mombasa and Tanga, in Kenya and Tanzania respectively, highlighting the genre of taarab.  The genre is influenced by Taarab is influenced by the musical traditions of the African Great Lakes, North Africa, the Middle East and the Indian subcontinent.

Over at the label’s Bandcamp site, there is a brief history of the genre and its effect on the cultures of Kenya and Tanzania in French.

The Bayan Mongol Variety Group – The Bayan Mongol Variety Group

From Discogs.com and Light In The Attic Records:

The Bayan Mongol Variety Group existed from the early ’70s to the late ’80s. After the collapse of the USSR, the ensemble began to experience serious difficulties with funding and booking concerts, and finally disintegrated, after which the participants lost contact with each other. Fortunately, thanks to efforts from the fans, some old contacts were reestablished, key records and sound sources were dug up, and now this historical record is released again. File under funk, jazz-rock, prog rock, or psychedelic rock. Reissued in cooperation with the band.

Various Artists – Blackford Hill: Transmissions / Volume One

Welcome to the first proper release promotion of 2022, and it’s quite a lovely way to begin the year.  Blackford Hill is a record company out of Edinburgh, Scotland, and they offer up a compilation of ethereal independent music from bands like Ultramarine, Emily Scott, Kate Carr, Jake Tilson and a host of others, providing 31 tracks.

From the Blackford Hill Bandcamp site:

The prospect from Blackford Hill is wide-ranging and far-reaching. This recently established label, curated by designer/publisher Simon Lewin, is based in Edinburgh and shares its name with a prominent topographical feature of that city. This compilation, ‘Transmissions / Volume One’, is a mapping of interests and affinities, a setting out of current coordinates, a taking of bearings but also a projection of possible routes of travel.

The duo Ultramarine channel the tangy atmosphere and languid cyclical pulse of an English estuary through their distinctive ambient techno. Poet Liz Lochhead recites a sonnet in celebration of love while Andrew Wasylyk’s piano scans the measures of an enraptured heart. A vocal ensemble led by Hanna Tuulikki performs new music that reverberates not only with the history of Gaelic song, but also with calls and cries of shoreline birds once imitated within that tradition. The fertile imagination of Lomond Campbell unlocks a spacious looking-glass world, a virtual zone that stretches out beyond his piano’s keyboard. Bow Gamelan Ensemble, metropolitan adepts of bricolage, discover sounds that lurk within saws.

Through Blackford Hill, Lewin and co-curator Tommy Perman extend a warm welcome to a selection of musicians, singers and artists in sound they have encountered and befriended across the years. Invariably they are individuals who deeply value their creative independence and approach their work in a spirit of exploration. Their own passionate involvement, integrity and excitement transmits. Often these artists are also highly responsive to the particularities of place. They prefer immersion within specific landscapes and the various histories they embody, to the abstraction of ideas and theories or the demands of a certain style. Their projects and their recordings are personal and grounded; they have character and context and that transmits.

With ‘Transmissions / Volume One’, Blackford Hill welcomes receptive listeners in search of a fresh outlook and new perspectives. From the luminous voices that glow from Simon Kirby, Rob St John and Tommy Perman’s ‘Sing the Gloaming’ to the wah-wah scintillation of Richard Youngs’ ‘Thought Plane 2020’; from the psychogeographical resonance of Kate Carr’s ‘The Owls Were Calling That Dark, Dark Night’ to Jake Tilson’s tantalising acoustic snapshots of instrumental music heard on the streets of Paris and New York, or to the reedy tones generated by water flowing through Sam A Mcloughlin’s homemade river harp in Healey Dell near Rochdale, the prospect from Blackford Hill is indeed wide-ranging, far-reaching and warmly inviting.

All profits from the sales of ‘Transmissions / Volume One’ will be donated to Shelter.

There is a book attached to this compilation, marrying gorgeous images with equally sumptuous music.