Checkpoint Staalplaat: Revisiting Radical Sound, with Geert-jan Hobijn

What a pleasant surprise this turned out to be!  Staalplaat Records was the label my friends and I would swear by on every release they put out when we were teenagers, and the quality never left them.  From the Youtube channel (sorry, my Chinese friends, but this will be remedied one day soon):

“From vinyl to cassettes and the occasional… flexi-postcard! Geert-Jan Hobijn reflects on Staalplaat’s origins as a cassette label, and some current releases. In this special interim episode of Cassette Culture, Martin Franklin and Jerry Kranitz speak with Geert-Jan Hobijn, the legendary founder of Staalplaat—the experimental music label that began in an Amsterdam squat in 1982 and went on to define an era of radical sound and design. We focus on some current activities publishing unreleased Muslimgauze recordings, reissuing classics from the Korm Plastics label – and dreaming up outlandish packaging ideas (including a cassette release that came with a pair of custom-designed socks). The conversation also touches on the challenges and joys of running a label across decades, the crossover between Staalplaat’s releases and Geert-Jan’s own Staalplaat Sound System installation work, and the philosophy of making music and art available in ways that resist the digital mainstream.”

To read up on this podcast, check out It’s Psychedelic, Baby, a blog dedicated to brilliantly weird music.

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