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Sheavy
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: March 28 2010 Location: Alabama Status: Offline Points: 2866 |
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Posted: February 19 2023 at 23:20 |
Hi! Welcome to The Arcanum.
The Arcanum will act as a repository for my musical musings, mainly reviews, but may include other random related thoughts as relates to Prog. Will probably include some side quests off that though. For those of you new to The Arcanum, or don't know my musical tastes, it tends towards the raw, unrefined, and underground side of things. Psych, RIO/Avant, Prog Electronic, Prog Folk are favorite subs, as well as the regional subs, Krautrock, Indo-Prog/Raga Rock, Zeuhl etc. However not averse to any genre (except maybe Neo Prog). If Genesis, Marillion, IQ etc.., proper, clean sounding Prog is what you seek here you will be disappointed. If it's Guru Guru, Current 93, Tangerine Dream, Amon Duul, Captain Beefheart, Acid Mothers Temple etc.. then you will probably find something to enjoy here. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ As a random little aside; it's been a literal decade since I've written a review on the site, and about 5-6 years since I've interacted on this site in any real, meaningful way. So uh, hello to all you people that remember me and to those who don't. I hope you find enjoyment in these ramblings.
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Sheavy
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: March 28 2010 Location: Alabama Status: Offline Points: 2866 |
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The Arcanum review No.1 Davenport - At The Foot Of Zodiac Mountain Davenport
Family were a collective of freak folks and psychedelic noise(unmerry)markers that
hail from the Madison, Wisconsin, USA areas’ underground noise/psych scene.
Davenport Family (DF from now on) carry on in the tradition of the first Amon
Duul, Ya Ho Wha 13, Siloah, Zendik Community, etc. That is to say, making
loose, krautrock inflicted, improvised and primitive free folk/psych/rock of
the utmost heathenistic variety and quality, minus the cult aspects of Father
Yod and Zendik, and more of the ‘light up a campfire and start clunking and clogging
away on whatever instrument you have on hand’. It’s safe to assume most DF
releases were recorded outdoors, in barns or some such other place. This
applies to the community gathering only however, don’t let my description of
campfire gatherings and B.Y.O. instruments lead you into thinking this is going
to be a summer of love, peace dude, hippie affair. DF’s brand of communal folk
freakery often times doesn’t merely flirt and toy with undercurrents of
darkness, but fully embrace them. Though DF aren’t as dark, think of the
similarly minded collective from Belgium, Silvester Anfang and their
self-styled ‘Funeral Folk’. This final offering from Davenport Family, before changing
name to Second Family Band, and continuing on in the same manner, offers a
magnificent send off. The nearly
33 minute jam that is At the Foot of Zodiac Mountain starts out life slowly at
first. Electronics, guitar and vocals queasily and darkly groan away, often
drenched in reverb and various effects. While drums and various percussion
freely thump and clang, sparse and distant, before gaining momentum and tribalistic
rhythm, rising in intensity against the backdrop, which has turned into a
frenzy of buzzing and thrumming, feedback and noise, before falling apart and
re-congealing into the void-like morass. This presents itself as a cycle, that of
lysergy, slowly building into uncouth paganist noise, but upon the feverish plateau
being reached, the tribal percussives, cracked and moaning guitars and
electronics, whooping and hollering, everything inevitably and slowly slides
back into abyss of zonked out and evilly twinkling sparsity. By the time the
final recorded cycle has spasmed out into the darkness, you’ll want to join in
(or you stopped listening 5 minutes in cause you hated this wonderful mess,
fair play). I
unashamedly love these communal groups who jam out wild, percussive, psych
freak outs, and this dark and gloamy, paint spattered little cassette offering
sits at the top of this niche pile. |
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Gordy
Special Collaborator Folk/Eclectic/PSIKE/Metal/Post/Math Team Joined: January 25 2007 Location: US Status: Offline Points: 4011 |
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Subscribed and following! Great to have you back, Alex!
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"Life is beautiful. Let the future generations cleanse it of all evil, oppression and violence, and enjoy it to the full."
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Sheavy
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: March 28 2010 Location: Alabama Status: Offline Points: 2866 |
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Thanks my friend |
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Gordy
Special Collaborator Folk/Eclectic/PSIKE/Metal/Post/Math Team Joined: January 25 2007 Location: US Status: Offline Points: 4011 |
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Since you posted your review, two people have downloaded that Davenport album - and only that Davenport album - from me on Soulseek.
Gutter prog FTW! Edited by Gordy - February 21 2023 at 10:51 |
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"Life is beautiful. Let the future generations cleanse it of all evil, oppression and violence, and enjoy it to the full."
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Sheavy
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: March 28 2010 Location: Alabama Status: Offline Points: 2866 |
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Lol ^
Gutter Prog is an appropriate term (and great label name) to describe this stuff, I'll have to start using it now. It's one of three DF releases I own physically, all on cassette cause obviously.
Edited by Sheavy - February 21 2023 at 19:22 |
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Gordy
Special Collaborator Folk/Eclectic/PSIKE/Metal/Post/Math Team Joined: January 25 2007 Location: US Status: Offline Points: 4011 |
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I'll petition the collabs to codify GP as a sub-subgenre of krautrock, covering all the borderline-lobotomised percussive freakout groups you and I love so much. I still plan to force the team to listen to 6majik9 and the rest of the Music Your Mind Will Love You dudes. ;)
I only have one DF release, Rabbit's Foot Propeller, which I fortuitously stumbled onto while on tour in 2014. I remember you and PSIKE were posting some really exciting groups at the time, which I was following as I moved through the South up to NYC and the Northeast. Edited by Gordy - February 21 2023 at 18:25 |
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"Life is beautiful. Let the future generations cleanse it of all evil, oppression and violence, and enjoy it to the full."
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Sheavy
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: March 28 2010 Location: Alabama Status: Offline Points: 2866 |
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Instantly my new favorite sub lol
I didn't know you were in a band/played any instruments! Can I get nosey and ask about that?
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Gordy
Special Collaborator Folk/Eclectic/PSIKE/Metal/Post/Math Team Joined: January 25 2007 Location: US Status: Offline Points: 4011 |
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^I'll shoot you a PM, I'm long overdue in responding to you as it is!
EDIT: And a third person has downloaded Zodiac Mountain from me. Your review must've caused a minor wave in the underground! Edited by Gordy - February 22 2023 at 12:02 |
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"Life is beautiful. Let the future generations cleanse it of all evil, oppression and violence, and enjoy it to the full."
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Gordy
Special Collaborator Folk/Eclectic/PSIKE/Metal/Post/Math Team Joined: January 25 2007 Location: US Status: Offline Points: 4011 |
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Your review must have caused galactic waves, because the Davenport Family released three posthumous recordings onto Gutter Prog in the past few days, one of which being their unissued final album!
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"Life is beautiful. Let the future generations cleanse it of all evil, oppression and violence, and enjoy it to the full."
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Sheavy
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: March 28 2010 Location: Alabama Status: Offline Points: 2866 |
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It's been a little over a year, almost on time for annual visit to this site . What better time than now for a second review?
The Arcanum review No.2 Harold Budd – Abandoned Cities While pianist Harold Budd is probably best known to the general music fan for his collaborations with Brian Eno (Ambient 2 and The Pearl), his catalog is deep. Various solo albums in the realms of piano driven Ambient and Classical, along with a slew of collaborations and work done for various films, tv series, and art installations, which is what Abandoned Cities seems to have been originally created for, “ABHASA: Image-Bearing Light by Lita Albuquerque, Harold Budd, and Robert Kramer”, but I cannot find much of anything online about this installation. On Abandoned Cities, Budd turns in two slow moving side long
tracks of hypnotic, etheric, brooding, and ultimately bleak and depressive Dark
Ambient, before that was even a genre proper. The A side, Dark Star, slowly
sweeps along on a bed of mournful, layered, undulating synth drones, some
darker and brooding, others a bit lighter and melancholic. It’s like weaving
your way through a dead, rubble strewn city. This is aided by some occasional
guitar textures, slow and dour, almost abrasive, but not noisy. The B side,
Abandoned Cities, takes things even slower, more minimal and more melancholic,
but not quite as dark, like looking at the sun through grey clouds. If side A
was a more intimate, personal look at the city, side B is a bird’s eye view of
everything, slowly drifting and wafting above the streets and buildings rooves,
it’s all depressive and introspective, but at arm’s length. The bed of layered
synth work is still present here, but instead of guitar we have somber, quiet,
and extremely minimal piano work as our aid. Neither track really goes
anywhere, but that’s the point, simply wanting to show this place in your
mind’s eye for a while. The album title “Abandoned Cities” could not have been a
more perfect choice for this incredible release, same with the artwork, a
B&W photo of the upper façade of a building, a teaser for all that is inside.
One of the coolest musical experiences I’ve had comes with this album. Two of
my hobbies, that are intertwined with each other, photography and urban
exploration, lead me to a great deal of abandoned and interesting places. One
of those places was the now demolished Saint Nicholas coal breaker nestled in
the hills of Pennsylvania. A towering 6-7 story or higher hulking, industrial
behemoth left to rot. Me and my pals had entered and were having a blast
exploring and photographing the place. As often happens we tend to separate and
wander around on our own. I decided to put the camera and tripod aside for a
bit, put some earbuds in and just take a walk around listening to this album.
It was an absolutely incredible experience to walk around this grey ironclad,
rust flaked site, among old control panels and crunchy, sketchy catwalks. It
sounds utterly insane to say but that was one of the most peaceful experiences
I’ve had, either with music or exploring. I really sucked at photography back in 2011, so I don't have many pictures that are worth sharing from the Saint Nicholas coal breaker, but here's a couple (all the pictures above are from different unrelated places, they just kinda fit the mood). Untitled by Abandoned Alabama, on Flickr Untitled by Abandoned Alabama, on Flickr Edited by Sheavy - April 21 2024 at 19:57 |
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Sheavy
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: March 28 2010 Location: Alabama Status: Offline Points: 2866 |
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Two reviews in a year? Is this insanity? The Arcanum review No.3 Guru Guru – Ufo If listening to bands jamming makes you break out in small,
red, itchy bumps you’re going to want to look toward some later mid 70s work
for satisfaction, say the jazzy psych rock of Dance In Flames or full on Fusion
oriented Guru Guru of the late 70s on Globetrotter. This is not that however.
This, Guru Guru’s 1970 debut album Ufo, is a wonderful and heavily acidic mess.
On the first side we get three songs, all teetering on the
edge of the unstructured abyss; flirting with uncontrolled free fall into an
ocean of acid so thick and fuzzy there is no swimming out of. Stone In and Girl
Call both start out a little sleepy. Some tremendously fuzzed out guitar
moaning and groaning here, and some freely wandering drums and bass there (and
some AUAUghghauauGhhhHh ‘vocals’ dribbled out on Stone In! Always love to
hear). Both songs start to coagulate into the nearly gone, hectic and frenzied,
point of no return, freak outs discussed earlier, but ending just before free
fall, or at least Stone In fades out and Girl Call is rather abruptly, but
kinda, effectively cut off. Also have to stop and mention how much I love the guitar
distortion on Girl Call, some truly deranged, heavy, and fuzzed out wah wahs.
Next Time See You At The Dalai Lama starts off sounding a bit more structured
than anything else on the album, and seemingly more deliberately paced. The
structure and pace does start to falter and waver, Ax, Mani, and Uli all
rambling and coasting off into the cosmic brain, then coalescing for a slight
time, before succumbing to the drift again. Now, to flip this f**ker over, and here we find that the
inevitable has happened. You dance and prance for so long on the edge of
psychedelic insanity, that falling into the vastness of kosmische sea will occur.
The first of the two songs, sharing the album name, Ufo; sees our intrepid
oceanic trawlers completely immersed into nebulous and hypnotic soundscapes.
Guitars, electronics, percussion, and effects all dither and scratch around and
about, occasionally swarming together into a truly wild proto industrial/noise
piece here. A musical rendition of a grimy, old piece of space junk limping
through the cosmos. While plenty of classical composeurs ;) were fiddling
around with long and exploratory pieces of music, I find they never seem to
actually be all that enjoyable, or reach the depths that more amateur works do.
When you fiddle with the unknown the known ain’t going to cut it. The final
track Der LSD/Marsch is more grounded, but no less prescient. The first half,
Der LSD I guess, sees some strung out guitar calling out over foggy, sunken
graveyard, while some plodding bass and wispy and haunting, electronically
treated flute(?) (Kraftwerk!?) slowly flow around. This all mends together into
possibly the most cohesive our intrepid group have sounded, or it just seems so
after the past 12 minutes. Marsch is appropriately titled, because after making
it out of vast cosmic, oceanic, expanse it’s a long walk back. Guitar, bass,
and drums all have moments of cohesive, buoyant, forward drive, but fall into a
tired and languid sounding plod on occasion. Proclaims the group on return “Soon the ufos will land and
mankind will meet much stronger brains and habits, lets get ready for that.” |
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