LP
backorder
Label:Blackford Hill
Cat-No:BH007V
Release-Date:12.08.2022
Configuration:LP
Barcode:5050580789494
backorder
Last in:11.10.2023
+ Show full info- Close
backorder
Last in:11.10.2023
Label:Blackford Hill
Cat-No:BH007V
Release-Date:12.08.2022
Configuration:LP
Barcode:5050580789494
1
Morgan Szymanski & Tommy Perman - Moonrise (Luna de la Rosa)
2
Morgan Szymanski & Tommy Perman - The Road to the Cottage
3
Morgan Szymanski & Tommy Perman - Danza del Fuego
4
Morgan Szymanski & Tommy Perman - Canción de la Luna (Homage to Debussy)
5
Morgan Szymanski & Tommy Perman - In the Pines
6
Morgan Szymanski & Tommy Perman - Fibonacci Dusk
7
Morgan Szymanski & Tommy Perman - Pipistrellus
8
Morgan Szymanski & Tommy Perman - Dance of the Trees
9
Morgan Szymanski & Tommy Perman - Sarabande for the Souls
10
Morgan Szymanski & Tommy Perman - Moonset (Pine Spectrals)
11
Morgan Szymanski & Tommy Perman - Mémento (Homage to Lorca)
12
Morgan Szymanski & Tommy Perman - Down by Paddy's Burn
Music for the Moon and the Trees by classical guitarist Morgan Szymanski and experimental musician Tommy Perman is the result of a long-held wish that the two childhood friends would get the chance to create an album together. It's a meditative album; a gentle thing of serene beauty and quiet innovation.
All of the sounds heard on the album were recorded in the woodland surrounding the cottage. There was a childlike sense of wonder as the duo recorded the sounds of the trees, birds, bats and an assortment of found percussion. Convolution reverbs were created by snapping twigs and pinging spruce branches. Much of the music was improvised with live single-take performances by Morgan combined with Tommy's computer generative improvisations.
Limited edition of 300 copies pressed on12" eco-mix vinyl (each copy is unique) More
All of the sounds heard on the album were recorded in the woodland surrounding the cottage. There was a childlike sense of wonder as the duo recorded the sounds of the trees, birds, bats and an assortment of found percussion. Convolution reverbs were created by snapping twigs and pinging spruce branches. Much of the music was improvised with live single-take performances by Morgan combined with Tommy's computer generative improvisations.
Limited edition of 300 copies pressed on12" eco-mix vinyl (each copy is unique) More
More records from Blackford Hill
Label:Blackford Hill
Cat-No:BH021V
Release-Date:22.11.2024
Configuration:LP
Barcode:5050580833432
pre-sale
Last in:-
+ Show full info- Close
pre-sale
Last in:-
Label:Blackford Hill
Cat-No:BH021V
Release-Date:22.11.2024
Configuration:LP
Barcode:5050580833432
1
Sam Annand - Juno-6 Chord Progression
2
Sam Annand - Cartesian Sequence Pt. 1
3
Sam Annand - Cartesian Percussion Pattern
4
Sam Annand - Waveshape Sequence
5
Sam Annand - Bandpass Sequence
6
Sam Annand - Cartesian Sequence Pt. 2
7
Sam Annand - PWM VCPan
8
Sam Annand - Bowed Instruments
9
Sam Annand - Waveguide Pattern
'Cupar Grain Silo' is Sam Annand's first release on the Blackford Hill label. Its nine tracks blur the lines between ambient electronica and sonic history, as synthesised melodies and rhythms reverberate through the extreme acoustics of the disused Cupar Grain Silo in Scotland. Built in 1964 as a sugar store, the silo towers 60 metres above the surrounding Fife countryside. Its industrial life was short: in 1971 it was closed, and barring a short period as a grain store, remained empty for decades.eate bursts of scattering spatial imagery and harmonic blooms, following short percussive moments." Originally recorded on 21st May 2016, 'Cupar Grain Silo' is now released on 12" vinyl with an accompanying booklet of imagery and essays. The compositions are at once true to the unique architectural acoustics of the silo whilst also being playful and experimental with the creative possibilities it offered. Arpeggiated melodies ebb and fall across extended call-and-response shapes formed by the silo's reverb; modular drum patterns crackle like dying machinery; whilst bowed drones waver and wash over. In 'Cupar Grain Silo', Sam Annand has harnessed the extraordinary acoustics of the disused silo to tap into this sense of joy and amazement that reverberation can bring.
More
+ Show full info- Close
1
Holmes + atten Ash - Dione
2
Holmes + atten Ash - Daphnis
3
Holmes + atten Ash - Phoebe
4
Holmes + atten Ash - Prometheus
5
Holmes + atten Ash - Rhea
6
Holmes + atten Ash - Janus
7
Holmes + atten Ash - Titan
8
Holmes + atten Ash - Enceladus
9
Holmes + atten Ash - Tethys
10
Holmes + atten Ash - Telesto
11
Holmes + atten Ash - Mimas
12
Holmes + atten Ash - Hyperion
13
Holmes + atten Ash - Iapetus
Saturnian is a suite of thirteen choral tracks taking their names from some of Saturn's known moons; Dione, Daphnis, Phoebe, Prometheus, Rhea, Janus, Titan, Enceladus, Tethys, Telesto, Mimas, Hyperion and Iapetus, all named after figures from Greek and Roman mythology, each loaded with their own turbulent back stories. It is the debut release by Holmes + atten Ash, written, recorded and produced remotely in Edinburgh and Bristol by the duo Simon Holmes and Paul Nash. After Simon had created a choral piece to accompany Luke Jerram's enormous, world touring artwork Museum of the Moon, Saturnian was a natural progression. When Simon was sent an initial score for the ethereal track Enceladus, composed by Paul in Bristol, he added choral arrangements recorded in Edinburgh. Their shimmering, tense opus continued to evolve from there. Just as the discarded bed springs and abandoned car parts that Simon stumbled upon in the Pentland Hills seemed to him at once "horrible but also oddly beautiful", Saturnian melds together melancholy and levity, fusing moments of dark angst with a celestial calm. Opening with the glistening, hopeful brightness of Dione, increasingly urgent rhythms give way to digital, otherworldly calls from what might be rainforest creatures chirping into life with robotic squawks and delicate keyboard lines on Phoebe, followed by slowed down, monastic song on Rhea. Tethys is a hypnotic blur of synthesiser and soft chanting, while Rhea is a mysterious, echoing chasm, lifted by melodic, gentle male vocals. Janus has a glowing, effervescent energy, swiftly followed by a sense of tension on Titan, which throbs with driving percussive unease. Much like Saturn and its frozen, rocky moons, this debut album from Holmes + atten Ash is mysterious and beguiling, with a hint of foreboding in the depths of its powerful beauty and epic scale.
More
Customers who bought this also bought this
Label:Tresor Records / BMG
Cat-No:TRESOR313EP1
Release-Date:13.10.2023
Genre:Techno
Configuration:12" Excl
Barcode:4251804142717
in stock
Last in:08.09.2023
+ Show full info- Close
in stock
Last in:08.09.2023
Label:Tresor Records / BMG
Cat-No:TRESOR313EP1
Release-Date:13.10.2023
Genre:Techno
Configuration:12" Excl
Barcode:4251804142717
1
Cybotron - Maintain 04:56
2
Cybotron - The Golden Ratio (Version) 04:43
Territory: WORLD
FORMAT 12” 180g vinyl, printed labels,
A4 printed inlay 170gsm, dl code,
black innersleeve, white outersleeve
TRACKLIST
A. Maintain 04:56
B. The Golden Ratio (Version) 04:43
INFO
Cybotron has re-emerged in our contemporary cybercultural age when artifactual futures begin a transition into a new era of
"Meta".
By combining their knowledge of philosophy, science fiction, and mechanical engineering, at a time when electronic instrument
companies were only just beginning to distribute their products to the masses, two prosumer audio technicians named Juan
Atkins and Rik Davis were able to re-engineer Cybotron – a combination of the words “Cyborg” and “Cyclotron” (an atomic
particle accelerator) – to be used as a home studio performance music that would change the course of independently produced
and distributed electronic music.
Dissolving the boundary between singer, songwriter, and producer, Juan Atkins named Cybotron’s future forward funkadelic
sound “techno” in reference to Alvin Toler’s concept of unlikely “techno rebels” against technocracy. Techno is music that
sounds like technology, and its purpose was to help society survive our collision with a universally felt “future shock” by inserting
an audio virus into the cultural matrix.
Techno’s blueprint spread across the Detroit-Berlin Axis between Metroplex and Tresor. As human society began its transition
from a post-industrial to an information-based market economy, Cybotron enabled a thorough system override of the human
senses towards a tangible man-machine hybridity and showed the world how to channel their emotions and imaginations into
new sound technologies and create new ‘sonic’ spatialities where listeners can transport themselves out of the physical world
into the future. The cover of their debut album Enter (1983) transmitted a fragmented view of a body in motion being digitized
mid-stride, dissolving physical and virtual reality into sonic fiction.
Today, the man-machine hybridity of Cybotron is still the truest form of techno, coevolving in conversation with the technological music they created and inspired. The latest data disk marks a new chapter that reflects a techgnostic musical expression of
the knowledge acquired during their decades-long hiatus. Unlike the dance music industrial replications of the Model 500
formula, acknowledging the content marketing expectations that segments music into specific, sellable genres, this techno
music is self-aware. Cybotron processes dance music tropes spawned from its very own blueprint with a meta-tactical precision
out of sync with our current rave new world.
Cybotron’s return demonstrates a studied engagement with what techno was and should be with a peerless update of Juan
Atkins’ initial inventive idea of do-it-yourself electrically reengineered music xeroxed onto both sides of the 12” – uploaded
directly into the alleys of your mind.
- The Rhythmanalyst
More
FORMAT 12” 180g vinyl, printed labels,
A4 printed inlay 170gsm, dl code,
black innersleeve, white outersleeve
TRACKLIST
A. Maintain 04:56
B. The Golden Ratio (Version) 04:43
INFO
Cybotron has re-emerged in our contemporary cybercultural age when artifactual futures begin a transition into a new era of
"Meta".
By combining their knowledge of philosophy, science fiction, and mechanical engineering, at a time when electronic instrument
companies were only just beginning to distribute their products to the masses, two prosumer audio technicians named Juan
Atkins and Rik Davis were able to re-engineer Cybotron – a combination of the words “Cyborg” and “Cyclotron” (an atomic
particle accelerator) – to be used as a home studio performance music that would change the course of independently produced
and distributed electronic music.
Dissolving the boundary between singer, songwriter, and producer, Juan Atkins named Cybotron’s future forward funkadelic
sound “techno” in reference to Alvin Toler’s concept of unlikely “techno rebels” against technocracy. Techno is music that
sounds like technology, and its purpose was to help society survive our collision with a universally felt “future shock” by inserting
an audio virus into the cultural matrix.
Techno’s blueprint spread across the Detroit-Berlin Axis between Metroplex and Tresor. As human society began its transition
from a post-industrial to an information-based market economy, Cybotron enabled a thorough system override of the human
senses towards a tangible man-machine hybridity and showed the world how to channel their emotions and imaginations into
new sound technologies and create new ‘sonic’ spatialities where listeners can transport themselves out of the physical world
into the future. The cover of their debut album Enter (1983) transmitted a fragmented view of a body in motion being digitized
mid-stride, dissolving physical and virtual reality into sonic fiction.
Today, the man-machine hybridity of Cybotron is still the truest form of techno, coevolving in conversation with the technological music they created and inspired. The latest data disk marks a new chapter that reflects a techgnostic musical expression of
the knowledge acquired during their decades-long hiatus. Unlike the dance music industrial replications of the Model 500
formula, acknowledging the content marketing expectations that segments music into specific, sellable genres, this techno
music is self-aware. Cybotron processes dance music tropes spawned from its very own blueprint with a meta-tactical precision
out of sync with our current rave new world.
Cybotron’s return demonstrates a studied engagement with what techno was and should be with a peerless update of Juan
Atkins’ initial inventive idea of do-it-yourself electrically reengineered music xeroxed onto both sides of the 12” – uploaded
directly into the alleys of your mind.
- The Rhythmanalyst
More
LP Excl
in stock
Label:pinyonbay records
Cat-No:pinyon-003
Release-Date:01.07.2022
Genre:Jazz
Configuration:LP Excl
Barcode:4251804128636
in stock
Last in:05.05.2022
+ Show full info- Close
in stock
Last in:05.05.2022
Label:pinyonbay records
Cat-No:pinyon-003
Release-Date:01.07.2022
Genre:Jazz
Configuration:LP Excl
Barcode:4251804128636
1
the MIMIKOTO project - Blackbird’s Philosophy (Part I) – 7:38
2
the MIMIKOTO project - Notes from Kirishima – 8:01
3
the MIMIKOTO project - Jellyfish Dance Accident – 5:02
4
the MIMIKOTO project - Goddess of the Lake – 5:15
5
the MIMIKOTO project - Blackbird’s Philosophy (Part II) – 4:22
Third album from the MIMIKOTO project
GENRE/S: Nu Jazz, Jazzy, Ambient, Deep House, Space Jazz, Neo Soul, Funk, Electro Jazz, Modal Jazz, Free Jazz, Drone, Electronica
TRACKLISTS:
1 Blackbird’s Philosophy (Part I) – 7:38
2 Notes from Kirishima – 8:01
3 Jellyfish Dance Accident – 5:02
4 Goddess of the Lake – 5:15
5 Blackbird’s Philosophy (Part II) – 4:22
SHORT INFO:
Like the MIMIKOTO project’s previous albums, also “Blackbird’s Philosophy” can be described as a symbiosis of jazz with electronic music and other styles of groovy stuff.
On this album the electronic elements melt into the acoustic sounds and rhythms on a quite subtle way, while the acoustic patterns partially adopt styles of electronic music reminding of deep house, ambient and Detroit house.
Jazzy Rhodes, bass, drums and sax solos performed by jazz-rooted musicians like Darius Blair, Uli Schiffelholz, Johannes Schwarting and Justin Zitt, play a more important role than on former releases and bring nuances of funk, modal jazz, free jazz and bebop to this album.
With Fabio Kumori’s string orchestral sound created with upright bass, effects and looper in the track “Notes from Kirishima”, even elements reminding of classical music and atmospheres from soundtracks become a part of this album. These elements merge with rhythmic sound arpeggios of analog synths and vibraphone, which create a maybe unknown style of new music.
On the last track of the album, namely on the track “Blackbird’s Philosophy (Part II)”, you hear the soulful and expressive voice of Noomi Mae Coleman, who joined the MIMIKOTO crew in 2020.
The MIMIKOTO project was founded in 2019 as a collective of musicians related to jazz, funk, soul and electronic music, after a certain period of composing and playing as duo, trio and quartet.
More
GENRE/S: Nu Jazz, Jazzy, Ambient, Deep House, Space Jazz, Neo Soul, Funk, Electro Jazz, Modal Jazz, Free Jazz, Drone, Electronica
TRACKLISTS:
1 Blackbird’s Philosophy (Part I) – 7:38
2 Notes from Kirishima – 8:01
3 Jellyfish Dance Accident – 5:02
4 Goddess of the Lake – 5:15
5 Blackbird’s Philosophy (Part II) – 4:22
SHORT INFO:
Like the MIMIKOTO project’s previous albums, also “Blackbird’s Philosophy” can be described as a symbiosis of jazz with electronic music and other styles of groovy stuff.
On this album the electronic elements melt into the acoustic sounds and rhythms on a quite subtle way, while the acoustic patterns partially adopt styles of electronic music reminding of deep house, ambient and Detroit house.
Jazzy Rhodes, bass, drums and sax solos performed by jazz-rooted musicians like Darius Blair, Uli Schiffelholz, Johannes Schwarting and Justin Zitt, play a more important role than on former releases and bring nuances of funk, modal jazz, free jazz and bebop to this album.
With Fabio Kumori’s string orchestral sound created with upright bass, effects and looper in the track “Notes from Kirishima”, even elements reminding of classical music and atmospheres from soundtracks become a part of this album. These elements merge with rhythmic sound arpeggios of analog synths and vibraphone, which create a maybe unknown style of new music.
On the last track of the album, namely on the track “Blackbird’s Philosophy (Part II)”, you hear the soulful and expressive voice of Noomi Mae Coleman, who joined the MIMIKOTO crew in 2020.
The MIMIKOTO project was founded in 2019 as a collective of musicians related to jazz, funk, soul and electronic music, after a certain period of composing and playing as duo, trio and quartet.
More