Mum + Dntel + Floach

Mum (Iceland)
Dntel (Usa)
Floach

MUM now based between Reykjavik and Berlin produce melodic vocals, with their warm, bold integration of both analogue and digital technologies

Dntel Some things Jimmy Tamborello, aka Dntel worries about: car accidents, cancer, being kidnapped and tortured, the death of friends and family, never having another girlfriend, the house catching on fire, drowning, earthquakes, stray dogs, schizophrenia, etc. etc. Life Is Full Of Possibilities. Dntel comforts himself by combining melancholy melodies with an assortment of electronic production styles.

Floach – musical archaeologist. His own of special brand of vintage lo fi electronica, like Indiana Jones keeps a level head but occasionally has to cut its own wretched path.

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Electric Wizard + Warhorse + Mistress

Electric Wizard
Warhorse
Mistress

The last two years have been revoultionary for Ultra-Heavy Rock and Doom Metal. Massive attention is being given to the genre and some incredible albums have been released. Doom Godfather Wino (The Obsessed) brought us Spirit Caravan and guitar God Matt Pike (Sleep) gave us High On Fire. Eyehategod reformed, continuing their sickness and Electric Wizard pummeled us with low-end destruction. Well, it’s time to clear soom room in your Doom section next to the above mentioned classics. THE HEAVIEST ALBUM OF THE MILLENIUM HAS ARRIVED.

Destructive, brutal, black, death, doom sufficiently sums up the massive WarHorse sound. We’re talking riffs sooooo heavy, bass sooooo low, drums sooooo massive, you get the feeling of being beaten slowly with a wet mattress. However, WarHorse is definitely not a one trick pony (pun intended). They have contraasted this massive heaviness with a unique use of dynamics. One minute you’re drawn into a trance-like state with soft, dark, quiet passages. The next you’re violently struck by enormously bombastic dirge riffs. This extreme use of dynamics (read:loud/quiet) and dark atmospher even brings to mind the work of Slint or Pink Floyd. Call them the Slint of Sabbath. This technique is what sets apart WarHorse from the thousand of pretenders to the throne. Not only will this appeal to the doom/stoner rock crowd but the extreme heaviness and sinister vibe is being praised by death metal fans as well. A truly classic debut album that will be talked about and praised for a long time to come!

To find out more check:
www.southernrecords.com

Fans of sludge-heavy riffing doom need no introduction to Electric Wizard. They’re all about Sabbath, H.P. Lovecraft, murder, and copious amounts of weed.
To find out more check:
www.riseaboverecords.com/electricwizard/

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Do Make Say Think + Hood

Do Make say Think
Hood

Do Make Say Think formed in 1995-96 in Toronto, Canada. Founded by two pairs of musicians with backgrounds as various as punk, jazz and industrial metal, the group has included a number of additional musicians over the years contributing to both live shows and recordings. Core members Charles Spearin (bass, keyboards, trumpet) and Ohad Benchetrit (guitar, saxophone) first played together in high school and birthed the Toronto punk band Dead Lemmings in the late 80’s; both have gone on to work in sound production and engineering in Toronto. The other founding pair, Justin Small (guitar) and James Payment (drums), are seasoned downtown rock players who’ve done time in a long list of bands, among them the post-industrial rock group Malhavoc. During the summer of 1995, these players came together to score the music for a Canadian youth dramatic production, sequestering themselves in an empty school room for rehearsals.

The four basic verbs ‘Do’, ‘Make’, ‘Say’, ‘Think’ adorned the walls of said classroom, and these elementary-level educational placards were adopted as a project name for the nascent group. Over the course of the following year, Do Make Say Think confined themselves to a rehearsal room in the basement of University of Toronto radio station CIUT, joined by now-departed member Jason MacKenzie (drums, keyboards, electronics) and occasional contributor Robert Brasz (synths, treatments, effects). Equipped with an 8-track recorder, the station facilities allowed them to track various pieces as they evolved; combined with home tape experimentation, the band began to knit together scintillating instrumental soundscapes that combined rock riffing with dub and psych elements. Using the CIUT studios, as well as the studios of a local art college, their eponymous first album was completed in 1997, with all members participating in the splicing and mixing of final tracks. Far from compromising the process, this collective approach to composition-production yielded a stunning debut record that teems with exuberant sonic texture and a brilliant blend of highly-structured and improvisational parts. Each song is finely-honed, while the record as a whole is an undeniably unified effort. The band self-released the album on CD in a run of 500; Constellation co-owners Ian & Don heard the record in early 1998, were duly blown away, and offered to re-release it as their first non-Montral-based recording. The album came out on Constellation in the summer of that year to international acclaim.

Having enlisted additional horn players (pulled from the ranks of Toronto jazz experimentalists Guh) for their live performances this year, Do Make Say Think are moving towards the increasing employment of a brass section in their new material; the live results have thus far promised a new compositional maturity and a truly genre-defying approach to instrumental rock.

Hood are an integral part of Domino’s geographic series of UK music, beautifully reflecting in picture and sound their West Yorkshire roots. Although their music has a natural homespun quality that aligned them with the early nineties lo-fi movement, they are now in a much less easily categorised area; blending an almost neo-acoustic folkiness with harder-edged electronics. But Hood remain instinctive, trying to make something beautiful from what is close at hand. If you haven’t heard them in a while you ought to, and this outsider recommends you start their new album, Cold House.

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Techno Animal + Jansky Noise + v/vm + Matt Wand

TECHNO ANIMAL
Jansky Noise
V/VM
Matt Wand

Friday 29th of march capsule and statik join forces once again to bring the medicine bar a truely leftfield, subversive audio visual event featuring the sonic thuggery of TECHNO ANIMAL, the comedic audio butchery of V/VM + dj sets from jansky noise and stockhausen and walkman. The night promises to push the audience as far as they can go (home!!!) and further then they would probably like. Truely ecclectic promoters capsule and statik always take risks when collaborating, messing with the audiences preconceptions of club spaces. This night promises to further the reputations of two of Brums finest nights.

“all you need to know about them is that they push musical boundaries to the extreme, then push beyond them”
kerrang aug 2001

TECHNO ANIMAL formed in 1990, this is their first ever show in Birmingham, surprising really as one half of TA is Justin Broadrick one of Birminghams premier noisemongers. With a cv that includes NAPALM DEATH and the infamous GODFLESH. Together with his partner Kevin Martin of GOD + ICE fame they released their latest album ‘ Brotherhood of the Bomb’ (matador) on september the 11th 2001. Universally acclaimed by metal, dance and high brow press alike its a terrifying fusion of hip hop, industrial, electronica, dub and all things heavy and groove based. This show promises something special, a home coming of sorts for Broadrick, having moved to Wales this will be his first show in brum for years and his bringing TA’s full stage set up including an uncomprimising light show.

VVM bring the worst invitation to the best party of a life time! VVM bring the VVM – designed to RIP through any back catalogue care of VVMCPS,,, laughing sneering & slobbering chunks of AUDIO Gristle (expected)!!! NME QUOTE “MANY nod there carcass wrenching mullets in GLEE to VVM” – Q MAGAZINE ” when VVM play bring a HAT your head may POP off” – Animal “an OFFAL display of bad pop records and fades re-mangled beyond the height of fashion”

Jansky Noise is the Maggot Farmer of Power Electronica and noise he has set up a tray with 30,000 maggots in it, each maggot as it wriggles sets of a sequence of predefined noise(s) never before has there been such an invested way to sequence! one hard to pallet slab of meat for the maSSES::::::

To find out more check: http://brainwashed.com/vvm/

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Godspeed You Black Emperor! + Kepler + Iacon

GODSPEED YOU BLACK EMPEROR!
kepler
iacon

Montreal group Godspeed You Black Emperor! are the reluctant heroes of avant rock, whose electric elegies and vaulting idealism seem perpetually at odds with the world.

Listen… we all stop paying rent tomorrow and have a meeting somewhere, all the millions of us who lose everyday and know that things are fucked and know that we’re fucked and that mostly we’re powerless to change it. We stop paying rent tomorrow and sit down and figure out what the fuck a little. Let’s do that – let’s not talk about rock music anymore, let’s ease up on the careless adjectives a little bit, let’s fuck the rent and have ourselves a little meeting about the state of things finally … and let’s stop talking about the millenium. THE END OF THE WORLD WILL NEVER FUCKING COME… Love, Godspeed You Maudlin Emperor! 21/6/99

For further information check:
www.cstrecords.com

Kepler share a diffuse rock ethic with groups like GYBE with whom they have toured. If this Canadian quartet lack the focussed sparseness and fragile clarity of, for example early Low, they more than compensate with a looser feel and an experimental openness with inventive arrangements. “Upper Canada Fight Song” and “The Changing Light At Sandover” are particularly fine examples of their subtly drawn out style.
WIRE Issue 26 (Tom Ridge)

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Check Engine + Solway Fifth + Deadsunrising

check engine (members of sweep the leg johnny)
solway fifth
calvados beam trio

Summer 1993. South Bend, Illnois. A basement: Check Engine, mark one, comes into being. they have one song, called “Por-San”, named after the industrial strength cleaner that was the only foe our bathroom feared. That Check Engine lasted long enough to hang out several times with Carlo, and Rossi, wreck the life and livelihood of one Vincenzo Carrasco and play one show, a battle of the bands in April ’94. That was enough for a time. The Next Six Years.

Elsewhere in the world: Steve Sostak and Chris Daly are playing in Sweep The Leg Johnny. For six years they work as hard any band on the planet recording and releasing one full and one mini album on Southern (with another due later in 2002) and touring Europe and the US one what seems like a perpetual loop. Brian Wnukowski is playing in Big’N and Paul P. Joyce is playing bass in Lynx. Come 2002 and these kids have come together as a stable line up and are set to make thier first release a self titled album on Southern. What does Check Engine sound like? Two vocalists, two guitarists, a drummer, a bassist and a sax player. Complex little rock songs. Big Star if Chilton had grown up listening to Tangerine Dream and Drive Like Jehu? I don’t know. Next question? When Paul and Brian first lock on a rhythm its, Love at first rumble. After that, Chris and Joe get to the business of weaving guitars. Then there’s the singing – two singers, one not quite the lead singer, the other not quite the back-up – twining together lines in different meters, mirroring each other in a staggered echo or matching up syllable to syllable while singing slightly different words. As for the words themselves, Joe’s songwriting is all about hate and heartbreak, and dead German intellectuals; don’t get your hopes up there. Focus instead on the love-match Brian and Paul orchestrate between their own elemental force and the goofy trickery of guitars that know each other far too well. Or the way Steve uses the sax and his voice as extensions of one another, threading through and threading together everything else.

for further details : www.angiesmells.com/checkengine/

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Cave In + Deadsunrising

Cave In (Usa)
Deadsunrising

Since their incarnation in April 1995, Cave-In hasset their course for progress. What originally started as four high school boys exploring their love of metal has come around to being four guys who are considered to be independent music’s most solid bet for a brighter, heavier future. A bastion of imagination and musicality, Cave-In crafts compositions that are epic inscope and sound. Cave -Inbegan work on their breakthrough rcording, ‘Until your heart stops’, in 1998 at God City recording studios with Kurt Ballou (converge) at the helm. The result was a fierce and blistering set of unorthadox heavy metal that garnered the band international notoriety and tours with heavyweights Isis and Neurosis.

It was during this time that Cave- In’s rehearsals took a marked turn for the different. The metal gave way to epic space, and prog-rock penchant to detail, but the approach stayed true to their roots and was no less aggressive.

While everyone in the band is only a meagre 21, the result of 5 years intensive evolution often sounds like a lifetime of training.

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Capsule xmas Party

freeform (live) + visuals by designers republic
floach. solway fifth . iacon
djs . xmas treats . santa

If lasts years party is anything to go by this should be a pretty good night, feel free to come in fancy dress and you’ll get in for nothing.

 

Freeform sounds are warm, melodic and rhythmical and nods as much to dub or jazz as it does to electronica. In Simon’s own words: I’m into sounds which are super-real. Like putting a magnifying glass on a sound and exaggerating it 1000 times. Pyke’s skill lies in his ability to sculpt real world sounds, and his music has been described, as Gorgeous otherworldly funk that effortlessly manipulates time signatures, investigating every aspect of what electronic music should be. they have worked with artists including, Bill Laswell, Autechre, Atom TM, Kid 606 and Jan Jelenek Following his debut single on Warp with releases on many influential, underground labels such as Skam, Worm Interface, Language and Chocolate Industries, Freeform’s most recent release was the critically acclaimed Green Park, also released on Quatermass. Famously, Howie B used a chunk of Fane (from the Skam EP) on U2’s number one single, Discotheque.

for more info:
www.freefarm.co.uk

If lasts years party is anything to go by this should be a pretty good night, feel free to come in fancy dress and you’ll get in for nothing.

Floach Following a short break from gigs floach returns to the stage this December for this show which promise to be full of festive cheer. A more visual experience can be expected and taking inspiration from Christmas hits of the past will be on the agenda, although hardcore roots will be strictly adhered to. Imagine Santa taking heroin with Thurston Moore then taking his sled joyriding over the rooftops and you’ve got something near a floach Christmas.

for more info check: www.halfeaten.com

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