Posts Tagged ‘glitch’

November 20, 2009 0

Mixtape 2009

By in Musical Murmurings

Mixtape 2009 by Sheq

It’s taken some doing, but here it is. With 30 tracks across 65 minutes, there should be something here for almost everyone. I hope so anyway.

This’s been an especially good year for music so, obviously, I couldn’t include everything great from 2009. The Slew, Russian Circles, Mamer, Broadcast, The Heavy and Efterklang are just a few that didn’t made it onto the mix, but that’s not to say they didn’t  release solid albums this year. Overall, I’d say the mix is a reasonable indicator of what my albums of the year are likely to be.

Well, enough of my yakkin. Whaddya say? Let’s boogie!

Tracklist

  1. Wevie Stonder - Glidstep
  2. Bibio - dwrcan (Eskimo Remix – 45rpm)
  3. Blakroc - Dollaz & Sense
  4. MF Doom – Gazzillion Ear
  5. Eyedea and Abilities – Burn Fetish
  6. Them Crooked Vultures – New Fang
  7. Brother Ali – Tight Rope
  8. Raekwon - Black Mozart
  9. Belbury Poly – Remember Tomorrow
  10. Robot Koch – Death Star Droid
  11. Anti Pop Consortium – Capricorn One
  12. Three Trapped Tigers – 7
  13. Pablo - Sky Is High (Instrumental)
  14. Madness - Dust Devil
  15. Jay-Z – Already Home
  16. Joker - Stash
  17. King Midas Sound – Meltdown
  18. King Cannibal – Flower Of Flesh And Blood
  19. Ges-E and Sukh Knight – Vengeance
  20. Sukh Knight – Knightlife
  21. Darkstar - Videotape
  22. Pablo - Act Of Persuasion
  23. Bibio - Cry! Baby!
  24. Thavius Beck – Go
  25. Grizzly Bear – Two Weeks
  26. Tinariwen - Tahult In
  27. P.O.S. - Purexed
  28. Mayer Hawthorne – Just Aint Gonna Work Out
  29. Ancient Astronauts - I Came Running
  30. Hudson Mohawke - Rising 5

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October 29, 2009 0

Hudson Mohawke – Butter

By in Music Reviews

Sometimes, it’s important to know when you’ve failed; to acknowledge that no single person can dampen the inevitable tide of public opinion alone. When it comes to the ’80s revival, such is the situation. Not only are the fey, indie boys and girls suiting up in the most outrageous fashion clashes, they’re regurgitating the narcissistic thoughts that plagued the decade in a less interesting manner. And as for electronica, the genre is ramping up the stakes by creating lurid landscapes that parody the most kitsch elements of that cocaine-flecked, paranoid period.

Well, at least that’s what Warp signing, Hudson Mohawke, has done on his debut outing for the eclectic label. Watching the youthful exuberance the 15-year-old  HudMo displayed on two turntables as UK DMC Finalist, DJ Itchy, it’s possible to see his affinity for combining the quirkier elements of the genre, even though he mashes them into a somewhat confused set.

Nevertheless, should anyone have a true understanding of hip-hop, it’s the turntablist: cutting and looping beats for MCs was all in the game for the traditional DJ, but turntablists took the art to the next level, deconstructing sampled beats with flair and dynamic incredulity.

That’s not to say every DJ a good beatmaker makes, but it does give credence to the argument that Butter is a temporally schizoid listen. Where fellow Warpee, Bibio, battles to include vintage sounds from the ’60s and ’70s, HudMo is happiest when re-imagining the classic ’80s sounds that, no doubt, influenced his hip-hop education.

Utterly committed to the groove which is fundamental to the longevity of a hip-hop track, it’s fair to say that HudMo has woven elements of legendary hip-hop producer Dilla into Butter’s tapestry. To single out tracks that demonstrate this point is facile; rather like picking a ship out of the armada that’s bearing down on a dinghy in the middle of the Atlantic.

Some listeners may be looking for big, commercial tracks on Butter. Well, there are a handful of those: ‘Joy Fantastic’, ‘Rising 5′, ‘FUSE’ and even Damfunk, man of the moment, gets a look-in on the futuristic Rn’B smash ‘Tell Me What You Want From Me’. But it’s on the less accessible numbers where the greatest rewards are found. When HudMo expels the geeky energy spent on beat-juggling to production, as he does on the cut-up ‘Fruit Touch’, ‘Allhot’ or ’3.30′, the results are frequently impressive, prospectively hinting at one of HudMo’s signature flourishes.

Albeit of a different era, the re-pitching of vocals (from 33rpm to 45rpm) that hip-hop embraced earlier this decade (Hi, M.O.P.) is another of the album’s acknowledgements to the genre that shapes its sound. Unlike FlyLo, HudMo has completely bypassed the entire recorded output of ’90s hip-hop, and applied the production techniques of the 2000s to the sounds of the ’80s and come up smelling like Axel Foley on assignment at a dairy yard.

Butter is, of course, one of the most essential releases of 2009; another record that puts the UK at the forefront of electronica. It demonstrates an intuition for the art it so successfully emulates that it’s almost OK to see the kids in those ridiculous dayglo outfits. Almost.

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October 15, 2009 0

King Cannibal – Chaos ADD Mix

By in Musical Murmurings

King Cannibal – Knowledge mix by knowledge

* King Cannibal – Intro (Ninja Tune)
* Svarte Greiner – Where Am I (Type Records)
* 2562 – Channel Two (Tectonic)
* Unknown – Unknown, Acappella
* Distance – Night Vision, Skream’s So Nasty Version (Planet Mu)
* Moderat – Rusty Nails, Shackleton Remix (B Pitch Control)
* Freund Der Famille – Pewars (Freund Der Famille)
* Moderat- A New Error, Headhunter Remix (50 Weapons)
* Mims – Like This, acapella (Capitol)
* Clouds – Protecting Hands (Deep Medi)
* Bakongo – Bambara (Roska Kicks & Snares)
* Sendai – Sustaining The Chain (Time To Express)
* Milanese – The End, Untold Remix (Planet Mu)
* Vaccine – Radiate (Offshore)
* TIgerhook Corp – Evil Eyes (Vamp Tech Recordings)
* Sendai – Sustaining The Chain, Peter Van Hoesen Remix (Time To Express)
* Pearson Sound- Wad (Hessle Audio)
* Pearson Sound – PLSN (Hessle Audio)
* SP:MC – Taiko Dub (Tempa)
* Burnkane – You Will Forget (Planet Mu)
* Scuba – From Within, Marcel Dettmann Remix (Hot Flush Recordings)
* Monolake – Titan (Imbalance Computer Music)
* Page – Ballin Is My Hobby Remix acapella (unknown)
* Von D – Echolow (Black Achre)
* Monolake – Titan (Imbalance Computer Music)
* Scuba – From Within, Marcel Dettmann Remix (Hot Flush Recordings)
* Micronauts – The Jazz (Loaded)
* XXXY – Constant (Mindset)
* Babylon System – Loaded (Argon)
* SP:MC – Taiko Dub (Tempa)
* XXXY- Reflections (Mindset)
* Sarantis – Nitroglycerine, MRK 1 Remix (Senseless)
* Martyn – All i Have Is Memories (Applepips)
* Shortstuff – Progression (Formant Recordings)
* Skream – LIghtning (Tempa)
* Scuba – Klinik (Hot Flush Recordings)
* Athues – Sphere One (Baum)
* Shortstuff – A (Formant Recordings)
* Peter Van Hoesen – Attribution One, MLZ Remix (Time To Express)
* Sendai – Sustaining The Chain  (Time To Express)
* Monolake – Titan (Imbalance Computer Music)
* Freund Der Famille – Pewars (Freund Der Famille)
* Jeff Mills – The Bells (Purpose Maker)
* Aviv Geffen – It Was Meant To Be A Love Song, King Cannibal Remix (Mars Records)
* Scuba – Ruptured, Surgeon Remix (Hot Flush Recordings)
* Round One – I’m Your Brother, Chicago Mix (Main Street)
* Vaccine – Radiate (Offshore)
* LL Cool J – Goin Back To Cali (Def Jam)
* Huey – Pop Lock & Drop It, Acapella (Jive)
* South West Clik – All Chrome 38 Blacked Out 9, Acapella (unknown)
* Freund Der Famille – Symbian (Freund Der Famille)
* Master P – I Need Dubs, Acapella (Koch)

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October 9, 2009 0

King Cannibal – Let The Night Roar

By in Music Reviews

Those of a delicate mental disposition may not find ‘Let The Night Roar’ to be a particularly helpful record. Etched out by a man obsessed with ragga rhythms, King Cannibal (aka Dylan Richards) mashes the techno of The Prodigy’s ‘Music For The Jilted Generation’ with the sonic edge of Drum n’ Bass to an almost unbearable level of industrial paranoia. The superb ‘Aragami Style’ welcomes the listener to this world of uneasy listening with warped dancehall beats and a vocal snippet that states, “I wanna slice your face”. Clattering hi-hats and a distorted bassline reminiscent of ‘Their Law’ follow along with a chorus chant of “Kill it, Kill it, Kill it!”

This element of menace spills into ‘Murder Us’, as a hypnotic techno beat underpins a throbbing bassline, and yet, as the track dynamically develops, it offers droplets of twinkling synth to invite us to a more accessible realm before cruelly returning to aural oppression. Enjoys playing with styles as much as the listener’s imagination, Richards steps successfully into the dubstep arena with ‘So…Embrace The Minimum’ and ‘Flower Of Flesh And Blood’ which feature half-step beats and snappy snares buried in reverb.

A fan horror movies, Richards adds detuned harmonies to vocals, which lend the album a cinematic air. ‘Colder Still’ and ‘Dirt’  bear this quality and the former is viciously set upon by intermittent breakbeats, whilst the latter seems to feature a ferocious monologue delivered by a comedy Rasta in an episode of Red Dwarf.

Though genuine, too much of ‘Let The Night Roar’ sounds like it is trying hard to be…well, hard.

Get 3 songs: Aragami Style, So…Embrace The Minimum, Flower Of Flesh And Blood.
Dig it? Dig deeper: The Bug, Ed Rush and Optical, The Prodigy.

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October 9, 2009 0

Warp20 (Chosen)

By in Music Reviews

Although the name ‘Warped Records’ existed for less than a few days, the concept offered by co-founders Steve Beckett and the late Rob Mitchell has been successfully gathered by the record-buying public since the label’s inception in 1989. No misnomer, Warp Records’ twisted career is positively littered with records that came to popularise definitive moments in dance music’s history. From the 500 copies of Forgemasters’ ‘Track with no name’ sold from the back of a car, to Maximo Park’s platinum selling ‘A Certain Trigger’, Warp continue to add diverse, innovative musicians to their credible and independent roster.

With that in mind, it’s a pleasure to welcome the 24 tracks that comprise Warp20 (Chosen). Split across two discs, Disc 1 features 10 songs as chosen by fans on Warp20.net, whereas Disc 2 is filled with 14 of Steve Beckett’s personal favourites. With over 60 artists and thousands of records to choose from, neither task can have been easy, with both discs unlikely to comprehensively represent the label.

Somewhat predictably, Disc 1 opens with the Brit-nominated, psycho-funk of Aphex Twin’s ‘Windowlicker’, and also includes cuts from similarly big name Warp artists. Squarepusher’s 2-step garage parody ‘My Red Hot Car’ runs nicely into Boards Of Canada’s multicoloured trip to ‘Roygbiv’, before the tenacious, syncopated stomping of Battles’ ‘Atlas’ enters the fray with signature pitch shifted vocals that berate any listeners in search of rational sounds. With Disc 1′s tendency to favour later Warp releases, it’s good to see LFO’s 1991 club smash ‘LFO’ (Leeds Warehouse Mix) make an appearance. Available on previous compilation 10+2, the voters of Warp20 clearly believe that LFO’s impact on dance music cannot be overstated. Similarly, Luke Vibert’s 2003 classic ‘I Love Acid’ is here for old skool type delights. For cerebral listeners and purveyors of ‘Intelligent Dance Music’, Autechre’s mechanical ‘Gantz Graft’ should entrance, but the sweetly arpeggiated guitars of ‘Eyen’ (Plaid), and the soaring key changes of Clark’s ‘Herzog’ generate less challenging, yet equally sonically fulfilling rewards.

Over to Disc 2, where time spent with Steve Beckett as selector yields more exciting and lesser-heard tracks. The most intriguing opportunity offered by this disc is hearing which sounds turn Beckett’s ear. Much like the output of R&S records, the music here bears a communal, nascent feel. Whether you use the uplifting, chemical drive of Grizzly Bear, Black Dog Productions or Seefeel to get you there, the outcomes are frequently euphoric. The incongruous, gangbanging beats of Flying Lotus (‘GNG BNG’) and the complex, deconstructed circuit-smashing doled out on Aphex Twin’s ‘Bucephalus Bouncing Ball’ are of particular note. It’s possible to argue in favour of a greater variety of artists on Warp20, but then arguing about what should and shouldn’t make it on to compilations is about as useful as putting clogs on a duck. Beckett has selected songs he has a personal affection for, regardless of whether the artist appears on Disc One or not; and that honesty and integrity is part of what makes Disc 2 (and Warp Records, for that matter) so entirely engrossing and enjoyable.

Warp20 (Chosen) is not just another bookmark in Warp’s history: Warp20 is the brief guide bought by the student that’s not been paying attention in class.

Get listening.

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August 29, 2009 0

Three Trapped Tigers – EP 2

By in Music Reviews

’6′, the first track of the imaginatively titled follow-up to debut EP1: EP2, opens with a mournful, reflective fuzz before breaking into a warm, ’80s inspired, synth-driven wonderland that’s complemented by looped harmony vocals singing nothing but vowels. A sparkling, off-beat track that finds clean guitars subtly providing melody, the glitch elements of TTT find themselves temporarily taking a back seat as this introduction soars dramatically through grey clouds like a victorious Maverick in an F-14 Tomcat.

’7′ is altogether more familiar territory for the Tigers and the Tomcat’s fuselage is broken apart by pummelling, industrial, filtered drums that hide a menacing monosynth. ’7′ demonstrates that TTT are on their way to shedding Squarepusher’s ‘Big Loada’ skin that so ably protected them on EP1. Surging Led Zeppelin style riffs announce a change in time signature and the group segue from the dramatic to the melodramatic as they begin to waft gentle guitar harmonics at the recording desk. TTT’s strength come from their complex arrangements which are driven by an incomprehensibly intuitive groove. Now with guitarist Matt Calvert on production duties, EP2 benefits greatly from a vastly improved sound.

Set to present the greatest challenge to the listener. ’8′ is all squealing feedback, 303 squeak, mangled artificial harmonics augmented by manic drums: the musical heartbeat of a robot on amphetamine. Rewind, close the eyes and let the sounds pound. Soon, the chaos becomes robust, a groove locks and as the Vernon Reid guitar riffage climaxes, the song blows out like a candle caught in the eye of a fantasy hurricane.

The inescapable influence of Aphex Twin is at work with the mellifluous, sorrowful and dynamic ’9′. Reminiscent of The Romance Of Young Tigers who seek crescendo at every opportunity, ’9′s impending dissonance is unexpected, ending abruptly with the airy harp-like piano it began with.

EP2 is simply better than EP1, which, if you’ve heard EP1, signifies a somewhat speedy growth. To paraphrase the Wu Tang Clan: “Three Trapped Tigers aint nuthing ta fuck wit!”

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July 21, 2009 0

Bibio – interview

By in Interviews

Stephen Wilkinson (aka Bibio) is the latest signing to über-cool label, Warp Records. The 30-year-old Wolverhamptonite’s penchant for mixing up guitar-based, electric folk alongside digital bleeps and squeaks effectively lie together on the curiously titled, Ambivalence Avenue.

“It’s not got anything to do with ambivalence in particular, really, ” he says somewhat non-committally. “It was triggered off by a weird daydream I had on a coach going down to check out some universities in London. We were travelling down a road similar to that on the front cover [of Ambivalence Avenue] with white hotels and trees lining the streets – stuff like that. Obviously, I was approaching a time when I was moving away from home, going to university and though it wasn’t confusion as such…it wasn’t really that in itself that was so important. That was the trigger; and the sensation that accompanied it is what I can’t put my finger on.”

On the first of numerous occurrences during the interview, Wilkinson refers to  emotion, and how he uses music as a platform to transmit it to the listener. Outlining the construction of track ‘London Planes‘ (which features on earlier album ‘Fi’ released on Mush), which sees arpeggiated guitars harmoniously entwined, he says, “It had this kind of spirit or vibe that was very particular to the blissful side of London as opposed to the city side. And then a couple of years ago, I was writing a guitar riff and it brought back the same, weird emotions that I get that…like flickering shadows casting through trees in London avenues.” And this “Idyllic, London avenue” is represented on Ambivalence Avenue‘s artwork with a character one assumes to be Wilkinson out and about recording ‘found sounds’ for his recordings to thrive on.

Ultimately, though, what Wilkinson wants is for the listener to imbibe a “Summery, nostalgic vibe,” from the track. “Hopefully the lyrics are building blocks to someone else’s imagination – that’s really what I prefer to do. Whereas lyrics put words in people’s heads, instrumental music might more likely paint pictures in people’s heads.”

Strangely enough, title track, ‘Ambivalence Avenue’ put me in mind of an American children’s television programme, one captured by an innocent, retro-styled recording exuding an ineffable charm.

“I think that, not just with that track, but also with the track ‘Lover’s Carvings’ as well, there’s an intention to get a bit of ‘Sesame Street’ in there: where kids play out on basketball courts in this idyllic, blissful Bronx! It was also really influenced by [Brazilian pop artist] Marcos Valle. The album that really influenced me is Previsão do Tempo’“.

Moving on to talk about specific influences, I asked Wilkinson about the legendary ’70s trio, America, and did they have any significance on the development of Bibio?

“I’ve got a couple of America LPs that I’ve picked up from charity shops and they’re the kind of band I wouldn’t rave on about, but there’s maybe something within their sound that I’m trying to capture. Sometimes, influences aren’t necessarily stuff you listen to; it could be stuff heard as a kid, on films, or on radio – but it’s not necessarily at the forefront of your attention. With someone like Marcos Valle, that was something I was obsessing about”.

On listening to Valle’s recordings, it becomes clear that Wilkinson is not so much trying to recreate styles, but sounds. So who else makes his hit-list?

“Around that time, I was really getting into J-Dilla, MF Doom, Madlib and you can probably hear that in a couple of tracks. ‘Fire Ant’ is very much an ode to Dilla. The chopped-up vocals that you can hear on that track, that really stems from being a Daft Punk fan.” The mention of the French duo sends Wilkinson into hyperdrive as he begins enthusing at great length about their album Homework. “I got it on cassette from the library about a year after it was released and their track ‘High Fidelity’ has got all these chopped-up vocals that don’t make sense. That just blew me away. A lot of the time, people just presume I listen to lots of hip-hop and stuff like that but really, Daft Punk have been in my musical history along with a lot of other mid to late ’90s French House stuff. There’s something in that music that’s got a tinge of melancholy, but also an uplifting feeling.”

That sentiment itself seems to sum up a lot of what Bibio is about, but how does he feel being included amongst Warp’s output which famously features artists like Aphex Twin, Flying Lotus and Two Lone Swordsmen? “It’s a dream come true,” he admits. “I’ve always been a huge fan of the label and I think that I’d have to admit to being influenced by Warp artists than any other label.”

It isn’t just music that spins a heady web over Wilkinson, he also gets his kicks from nature, “It would seem odd to me if anyone didn’t have an interest in nature, because you are nature; you are a part of it.  I get a lot of elevation from going somewhere natural, like going camping, going out somewhere wild, climbing mountains. I think my favourite places in the world are river and valleys – places like that which are mossy and green – places that are really psychedelic.”

Drawn in comparison to Wilkinson’s experience of clubbing, roaming England’s green and pleasant land would seem to be his preferred option: “I’m not much of a clubber,” he confesses “I don’t dig everyone gurning and the hot, sweaty, dark environment and spending 30 minutes queuing up to get a can of Red Stripe. I don’t really go to concerts much either…I’m more of a hi-fi person.”

With leanings towards the natural, Wilkinson eschews computer plug-ins in favour of his guitar commenting that “You can sit on the garden with that, it’s quick and accessible”. Most sounds on the album come from outside the computer due to Wilkinson’s continual search to escape the digital, sequenced and rigid. “While I use the computer to record, it’s like an advanced recorder where I can capture things, move them around and edit them. I’m not really a computer-based musician as such.

My music doesn’t have that clean, in-the-box sound: it sounds a bit softer and a bit rounder, production-wise because I use microphones. I’ve got these old tape-recorders that I use to degrade stuff – that’s how I get that sound.”

Unlike contemporaries like Autechre who work solely in-the-box, I was keen to understand how Bibio will be presented live – purely because the music is a mix of a traditional band setup alongside the electronic.

“That’s a good question and it’s one of the problems of electronic music: it’s created with machines as opposed to live manipulation of an instrument. My music is somewhere in-between because some of the tracks aren’t electronic at all, they’re effectively a band recording but with one member. So a future plan is to try and get a band together to make some of my songs happen in the live situation. The important part is to get them sounding right because I spend so much of my time making my music sound a particular way with lots of studio trickery, it’s not often possible to do that live.”

Because of this obstacle, it’s clear that Bibio will not be performing tracks live any time soon. But without live shows, how do you promote a record?

“The live show isn’t going to happen soon as I’ve got a lot to work on, especially if I’m to get a band together: it’s not something you can put together in a week. So for the moment, I’m going to be doing DJ sets just to get out there and get used to it all. I’ve been really enjoying putting this DJ set together – I’m playing a lot of exclusive tracks so it’s not just a case of playing tracks that people have heard. I’m not a DJ, I’m a musician!” he says somewhat cheekily, before going on to explain that he’s already working on his next album.

“I just write music constantly so when it comes to album time, I’ve got lots of tracks to choose from. I don’t sit down and write and album, I just sit down and write tracks. Usually it ends up at 50 tracks by the time I’ve cut it down.” This would explain why Wilkinson doesn’t have the time to learn flamenco guitar or to learn how to be a ‘proper DJ’ using turntables instead of a laptop. And as the nature-loving, analogue-friendly musician points out: “Being on Warp has become a full-time job in itself…”

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June 7, 2009 1

Bibio – Ambivalence Avenue

By in Music Reviews

Bibio is Warp records’ latest signing Stephen Wilkinson. As such, this compendium revels in the odd, outlandish and glitchy. Combining the quirk of Aphex Twin‘s Drukqs and the euphonious sensibilities of America‘s Hearts, Ambivalence Avenue displays an inventive, wistful and curious talent. Though Stephen’s stripped down acoustic performances (as on ‘The Palm Of Your Wave’) are reminiscent of Nick Drake or Donovan, his vocal delivery throughout tends to rely on an American accent with harmonies to thicken out an otherwise thin delivery.  Appearing to lack the technical ability to fully emulate any of his inspirations, Bibio’s interpretations take a lo-fi path that aren’t really lo-fi at all but cunningly disguised as such.

Starting with a stroll down ‘Ambivalence Avenue‘, the sunshine skipping 3/4 beat, a backwards guitar solo and “Do-do-de-do-do” sing-a-long chorus all form an inviting beginning to a varied and enthralling record. Dipping his toe into a puddle of funk (‘Jealous Of Roses’), Bibio opens the gate to a small garden of East Coast hip-hop on ‘Fire Ant’ which is an addictive instrumental piece that demonstrates an unexpected fluency in the genre. It’s a style that does not reappear again and the album changes gears as ‘Sugarette’ with its shifting, glitchting 8-bit noise gives way to the ’60s folk thrumming of ‘Abrasion’ and ‘Lover’s Carvings’ before returning to anarchic disco of ‘S’Vive’.

The least confusing more focused pieces come to close the album: ‘Cry! Baby!‘ finds arpeggiated guitars leaning leisurely on their wah-pedals before waltzing with staggered drums as they find accompaniment from twinkling xylophones and electro basslines. It’s a stimulating piece that elevates the album in preparation for finale ‘Dwrcan’, whose title and content bears more resemblance to anything on Drukqs than it does to Ambivalence Avenue.

Though deeply digital, Ambivalence Avenue is a natural sounding macrocosm of an album, simultaneously enduring and alluring. It should be acquired and enjoyed immediately.

Ambivalence Avenue is released on June 22nd (Warp Records)

Download a free album sampler here.

Cry! Baby! – Bibio

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