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IMPORTANT (Please read to avoid confusion):
Some items below may be tagged with a bold, red, all-caps "out of print/unavailable" notice. This does NOT mean that all other items not so tagged are, in fact, in stock -- or for that matter, in print and available, though there's a good chance they are. Some folks get confused on this point, and we can see why, so please read this for further clarification and other important before-you-order information. Unlike some mailorder websites, we don't have an electronic inventory system linked to our site, so you can't be sure of what we actually have or don't have in stock at any given moment without asking us -- please email our mailorder department for availability status -- or better yet, just go ahead and place your order using our shopping cart function and we'll get back to you with the status of each item. If you have general non-mailorder questions, email the store.


album cover R.E.M. Around The Sun (Warner) cd 16.98
With Around The Sun, R.E.M.'s album discography reaches a baker's dozen and they start it off with a total heartstring pulling, major motion picture soundtrack-ready song "Leaving New York". Is this how far they've come (or more specifically, how far they've strayed) from their early days? Apart from the presence of Stipe's unmistakable voice, these songs are for the most part faceless. When taken on its own for what it is, it's really not that, uhh, bad. They've simply become an extreme example of 'mellowing with age' (others might use the less kind word 'bland'). Newer R.E.M. fans will probably still find plenty to love on Around The Sun, but old schoolers might doze off after a few songs. As if to spice things up, Q-Tip drops in to lend some vocals on one song "The Outsiders", but they seem jarring and out of place -- sorta like when your ol' Uncle Louie tries to get hip with the kids by donning some ass-draggin' pants and a backwards baseball cap. It just doesn't fit now, does it?
MPEG Stream: "Leaving New York"
MPEG Stream: "The Outsiders"

album cover R.E.M. Collapse Into Now (Warner Bros.) cd 17.98

album cover R.E.M. Collapse Into Now (Warner Bros.) cd 17.98

album cover R.E.M. Collapse Into Now (Warner Bros.) lp 26.00

album cover R.E.M. Collapse Into Now (Warner Bros.) lp 26.00

R.E.M. Reveal (Warner) cd 17.98

album cover R/R COSEBOOM Beneath Trembling Lanterns (Dynamophone) cd 13.98
We've got a couple more fine releases from Dynamophone Records, the SF indie label we were raving about last list (also see: Balustrade Ensemble, Halou, Po, Pornopop, A Lily, Curium, and Disinterested)! Beneath Trembling Lanterns begins with the distant peal and tinkle of bells and glassy chimes. An enchanted beckoning. Ms Coseboom's cooed vocals are quite akin to retro sugar of Julee Cruise or the womanly knowingness of Jane Siberry. However, the album's overall impression is more modern a la Lamb or Portishead -- a beautiful blend of old and new sounds, styles and instrumentation. Sweet, soft, slow and soothing.
MPEG Stream: "Visitor Hummingbird"
MPEG Stream: "Little Dust Wing"

album cover RA RA RIOT The Rhumb Line (Barsuk) cd 14.98
Ever since Death Cab For Cutie made the leap to a major label, it seems that everyone's been waiting to see what new band on Barsuk fills that indie void. While Ra Ra Riot do have a similarly earnest and sensitive poppy vibe, their delivery is much more peppy and their brand of pop has more chamber undertones and classic power pop chops that the more classic indie rock sounds of DCFC. But judging on the number of folks that had been hounding us to get this in stock after their sold out show at the most recent Noise-Pop fest they may soon be glowing in some bigtime popularity. We hear lots of Elvis Costello and some of the songs sound like The Strokes covering Arcade Fire. We give them some bonus points for covering Kate Bush's "Suspended In Gaffa". Not breaking any new ground but certainly delivering catchy tunes in a fine tradition, and who knows, they might just be the next big thing?
MPEG Stream: "Ghost Under Rocks"
MPEG Stream: "Dying Is Fine"

album cover RABBITS Lower Forms (Relapse) cd 14.98
We reviewed a split 7" from these Colorado noise rockers a while back, where we described them as sounding like "some sort of modern version of big ol' post punk sludge groove, hard not to hear some Scratch Acid in there. Ultra grimy downtuned guitars, super dense and mathy arrangements, woozy basslines, blown out fuzz guitar, growled/shouted vocals. Almost like a way darker, way more punk Pelican in a way." Apparently they liked that enough to put it on the cover (!), and some of that definitely still applies (not the Pelican thing so much here), this is some seriously heavy, crusty, noisy, pigfuck, distorto filth, raw and nasty, think classic AmRep, think Karp, a sort of post metal heaviness wrapped around dirgey punk rock pummel, dense distorted knuckle dragging caveman crush, the vocals a throat shredding howl, somewhere between death metal growl, Killdozer Yowl and Muppety howl, the music buzzy and blown out, super rhythmic, downtuned, heavy and hypnotic. Kinda weird to think Rabbits are from Portland and is made up of guys from Angel Hair / The VSS / Pleasure Forever, cuz damn if this don't sound pretty Midwest to us. Regardless, this is some thick as molasses, punked out sludgy noise rock that KILLS. Total doom sludge metal punk bliss. Fuck yeah. We've got compact disc and colored vinyl.
MPEG Stream: "Burn, Sun, Burn"
MPEG Stream: "A Tale Of Tales"
MPEG Stream: "Rot"

album cover RABBITS Lower Forms (Relapse) lp 17.98
We reviewed a split 7" from these Colorado noise rockers a while back, where we described them as sounding like "some sort of modern version of big ol' post punk sludge groove, hard not to hear some Scratch Acid in there. Ultra grimy downtuned guitars, super dense and mathy arrangements, woozy basslines, blown out fuzz guitar, growled/shouted vocals. Almost like a way darker, way more punk Pelican in a way." Apparently they liked that enough to put it on the cover (!), and some of that definitely still applies (not the Pelican thing so much here), this is some seriously heavy, crusty, noisy, pigfuck, distorto filth, raw and nasty, think classic AmRep, think Karp, a sort of post metal heaviness wrapped around dirgey punk rock pummel, dense distorted knuckle dragging caveman crush, the vocals a throat shredding howl, somewhere between death metal growl, Killdozer Yowl and Muppety howl, the music buzzy and blown out, super rhythmic, downtuned, heavy and hypnotic. Kinda weird to think Rabbits are from Portland and is made up of guys from Angel Hair / The VSS / Pleasure Forever, cuz damn if this don't sound pretty Midwest to us. Regardless, this is some thick as molasses, punked out sludgy noise rock that KILLS. Total doom sludge metal punk bliss. Fuck yeah. We've got compact disc and colored vinyl.
MPEG Stream: "Burn, Sun, Burn"
MPEG Stream: "A Tale Of Tales"
MPEG Stream: "Rot"

album cover RABBITS Sloth And Bees (self-released) 7" 2.98
We listed a split lp a little while back, that featured these guys teamed up with the equally strangely named Under Mountains. We dug both bands so much we decided to get our hands on whatever we could, thus, this latest 7" from Rabbits. Who are WAY heavier than their cute and fluffy name might lead you to believe. Rabbits are some weird post punk, angular sludge rock hybrid, a super chaotic screamo groove outfit, corrosive guitar lines, totally spastic drumming, howled vocals, a massive heaving swirl of post punk grooves and unhinged post rock fury. Dense and complex, blown out and droney, there's some Scratch Acid in there, but way more revved up and wild, careening like some sort of PCP dosed yeti. The second side slows it way down into some serious sludge territory, sounding almost Melvins-like, with downtuned riffing, relentlessly pounding rhythms, the whole thing heavy as fuck!
Packaged in super cool black on black sleeves, each side visually depicting the song titles (sloth on one side, bees on the other) and includes a thick hand screened red cardstock insert.

album cover RABBITS / UNDER MOUNTAINS split (Eolian) lp 9.98
These guys dropped into the store and left some records for us to check out and holy shit did we have our asses handed to us. It's very rare that we'll hear a split lp with two bands we've never heard of, that will knock us for a loop, BOTH bands kicking serious ass, but here you go. There seems to bee some sort of Colorado connection (Angel Hair, VSS, etc.) and you can hear it once in a while, but this is a lot darker and lot heavier. Both bands have a similar sound, so much so that you could be forgive for assuming they were the same band, but closer listening reveals lots of important differences. Rabbits are some sort of modern version of big ol' post punk sludge groove, hard not to hear some Scratch Acid in there. Ultra grimy downtuned guitars, super dense and mathy arrangements, woozy basslines, blown out fuzz guitar, growled/shouted Yow-like vocals. Almost like a way darker, way more punk pelican in a way. Which is most definitely a good thing.
Under Mountains counter with their own furiously dense and heavy, sort of sludgy post-math rock. Lots of angular guitars, some strangely Maiden-ish moments here and there, super complicated drumming, heavy and sludgy but also groovy and pretty dang catchy. They, like Rabbits, could definitely fit comfortably alongside the modern crop of instruMETAL rockers, but both bands, especially UM are a lot mathier and grimier. Reminded us a bit of the recent more rock releases on Rise Above, like Capricorns, Taint, etc.
Killer stuff!

album cover RACCOO-OO-OON Behold Secret Kingdom (Release The Bats) cd 14.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
Here at AQ, we're well acquainted with multiple 'o's. Most often used in reviews of ultra doom records, you know Moss, Monarch, Asunder, Catacombs, Celestiial, Bunkur, and usually used to denote -more- doom. The slower and the filthier, the sludgier and the more buzzing and trudging, the more 'o's. So describing a band as doooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooom is not at all unheard of around here. But we rarely see multiple 'o's anywhere else. So what's the deal with Raccoo-oo-oon? What are all of those extra 'o's for? Do they mean anything? And what about the hyphens? What the heck are they all about? Is that how you pronounce the band name, ra coo OO oon. 4 syllables. Or just the more traditional two, as in the middle 'oo' is silent?
No matter how you interpret the 'o's and hyphens, it's strange and unusual and not a little bit confusing. Which pretty much perfectly captures the essence of these guys' sound. A dizzying collision of free rock splatter, jazzy skronk, stumbling outsider folk, and full on noise. What makes Raccoo-oo-oon special is the fact that they somehow manage to sound like all of those things at once. An ultra dense blitzkrieg of sounds, that impossibly manages to be heavy and free, skronky and melodic, spastic and pretty all at the same time.
We've listed a few other releases from these guys, a clutch of lps and a cd, all of which kicked our asses big time, but as much as we dug those discs, Behold Secret Kingdom trumps them all. Songs, sound, it's all so much more focused, the melodies are catchier, the blown out blasts are even more caustic and abrasive, the vocals are much more 'present', a strange sort of howled primitive wail, the guitars are heavier, more dense, the rhythms, groovier, a surprising amount of 'swing' for a noiserock combo.
With Behold Secret Kingdom, Raccoo-oo-oon have sort of emerged as super distinctive noisemakers, in a scene rife with same sounding combos, these guys don't really sound like anybody else.
Right out of the gate, the sound is a wall of thick guitars, swirling and keening, loads of buzz and squealing feedback, the drums a dense tribal blow out, the vocals drifting over the top, some strange invocation. It's equal parts krautrock, noiserock, and post rock, all smeared and tangled into a glorious blast of super fresh, garage-y psychedelic free rock whatthefuck. The next track veers into some angular synth drenched new wave noisiness, with squiggly synths, droning high end guitars, thick buzz swaths of sound, relentless, almost funky drumming, and moaning atonal speaking-in-tongues vocals. As hard as it might be to imagine, it sounds a bit like some impossible mash up of Crash Worship, Excepter and Faust, but with some weird new wave-y sheen.
The songs are definitely rhythm based, the propulsive drumming guiding everything, the vocals sort of trailing after the drums, the guitars, at once riffing and defining the shape of the songs, but at the same time drifting and swirling totally free, unmoored from any sort of traditional song-based structure and wrapped around the jams like thick tangled ropes of sound. There is occasional sax, which is where a lot of the skronk element comes from, but even sans sax, the songs retain a bit of skronkiness, angular and atonal as often as warm and melodic (maybe more often in fact.
Occasionally, the band -really- let loose, the guitars erupt in acidic squalls, the drums splattery and abstract, everything spinning wildly, the result a huge dense cloud of super distorted psychrock freakout. And just as often, they lock into some strangely new wavey garage rock stomp, like a less misanthropic, more groovy and druggy Brainbombs, and as if that weren't confusing enough, they also often just let loose and engage in endless dopesick jamming space rockery, a roiling blown out FX drenched space rock pound, relentless and so goddamn good. And like we mentioned before, the magic here is that Raccoo-oo-oon don't just switch gears from space rock to weird free rock jam and back, all of those different sonic sides bleed into each other, and all over each other, one at a time but then ALL AT ONCE, a slithering, shimmering, constantly shifting, shape changing organic sound sprawl that is as amazing to hear as it is difficult to describe.
And if we were in fact, to apply the same sort of rules regarding the extra 'o's, to these guys, that we do in our doom reviews, then we might as well begin calling these guys Raccoo-oo-oooo-oo-ooooooo-oo-o-o-o-ooo-oo-oooo-ooo-oo-oo-oo-ooooooo-oon. Fuck yeah.
MPEG Stream: "Black Branches"
MPEG Stream: "Mirror Blanket"
MPEG Stream: "Visage Of The Fox"

album cover RACCOO-OO-OON Behold Secret Kingdom (Release The Bats) lp 14.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
Here at AQ, we're well acquainted with multiple 'o's. Most often used in reviews of ultra doom records, you know Moss, Monarch, Asunder, Catacombs, Celestiial, Bunkur, and usually used to denote -more- doom. The slower and the filthier, the sludgier and the more buzzing and trudging, the more 'o's. So describing a band as doooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooom is not at all unheard of around here. But we rarely see multiple 'o's anywhere else. So what's the deal with Raccoo-oo-oon? What are all of those extra 'o's for? Do they mean anything? And what about the hyphens? What the heck are they all about? Is that how you pronounce the band name, ra coo OO oon. 4 syllables. Or just the more traditional two, as in the middle 'oo' is silent?
No matter how you interpret the 'o's and hyphens, it's strange and unusual and not a little bit confusing. Which pretty much perfectly captures the essence of these guys' sound. A dizzying collision of free rock splatter, jazzy skronk, stumbling outsider folk, and full on noise. What makes Raccoo-oo-oon special is the fact that they somehow manage to sound like all of those things at once. An ultra dense blitzkrieg of sounds, that impossibly manages to be heavy and free, skronky and melodic, spastic and pretty all at the same time.
We've listed a few other releases from these guys, a clutch of lps and a cd, all of which kicked our asses big time, but as much as we dug those discs, Behold Secret Kingdom trumps them all. Songs, sound, it's all so much more focused, the melodies are catchier, the blown out blasts are even more caustic and abrasive, the vocals are much more 'present', a strange sort of howled primitive wail, the guitars are heavier, more dense, the rhythms, groovier, a surprising amount of 'swing' for a noiserock combo.
With Behold Secret Kingdom, Raccoo-oo-oon have sort of emerged as super distinctive noisemakers, in a scene rife with same sounding combos, these guys don't really sound like anybody else.
Right out of the gate, the sound is a wall of thick guitars, swirling and keening, loads of buzz and squealing feedback, the drums a dense tribal blow out, the vocals drifting over the top, some strange invocation. It's equal parts krautrock, noiserock, and post rock, all smeared and tangled into a glorious blast of super fresh, garage-y psychedelic free rock whatthefuck. The next track veers into some angular synth drenched new wave noisiness, with squiggly synths, droning high end guitars, thick buzz swaths of sound, relentless, almost funky drumming, and moaning atonal speaking-in-tongues vocals. As hard as it might be to imagine, it sounds a bit like some impossible mash up of Crash Worship, Excepter and Faust, but with some weird new wave-y sheen.
The songs are definitely rhythm based, the propulsive drumming guiding everything, the vocals sort of trailing after the drums, the guitars, at once riffing and defining the shape of the songs, but at the same time drifting and swirling totally free, unmoored from any sort of traditional song-based structure and wrapped around the jams like thick tangled ropes of sound. There is occasional sax, which is where a lot of the skronk element comes from, but even sans sax, the songs retain a bit of skronkiness, angular and atonal as often as warm and melodic (maybe more often in fact.
Occasionally, the band -really- let loose, the guitars erupt in acidic squalls, the drums splattery and abstract, everything spinning wildly, the result a huge dense cloud of super distorted psychrock freakout. And just as often, they lock into some strangely new wavey garage rock stomp, like a less misanthropic, more groovy and druggy Brainbombs, and as if that weren't confusing enough, they also often just let loose and engage in endless dopesick jamming space rockery, a roiling blown out FX drenched space rock pound, relentless and so goddamn good. And like we mentioned before, the magic here is that Raccoo-oo-oon don't just switch gears from space rock to weird free rock jam and back, all of those different sonic sides bleed into each other, and all over each other, one at a time but then ALL AT ONCE, a slithering, shimmering, constantly shifting, shape changing organic sound sprawl that is as amazing to hear as it is difficult to describe.
And if we were in fact, to apply the same sort of rules regarding the extra 'o's, to these guys, that we do in our doom reviews, then we might as well begin calling these guys Raccoo-oo-oooo-oo-ooooooo-oo-o-o-o-ooo-oo-oooo-ooo-oo-oo-oo-ooooooo-oon. Fuck yeah.
MPEG Stream: "Black Branches"
MPEG Stream: "Mirror Blanket"
MPEG Stream: "Visage Of The Fox"

album cover RACCOO-OO-OON Mud Mound (Gilgongo) 7" 5.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
A gentle dreamy little sonic addendum to one of this week's records of the week, the latest from the strangely named Raccoo-oo-oon. But is it really that dreamy and gentle? Well, sort of. Beginning with softly plucked atonal strings and simple pots and pans percussion, all of a sudden lurches into a strangely new wave-y synth jam, propulsive drums, fuzzy slithering synth melodies, sounds sort of like Avarus jamming with Mates Of State. Weird, but pretty dang cool. The flip side begins in a similarly laid back fashion, a super abstract percussion jam, lots of cymbals and bells, clangs and sizzles and clatter, with hollering and hooting way back in the distance, before the band once again explode in a frenzy of fuzzed out rock, this time though, it, a buzzy, slightly jazzy space rock freak out, all thick bass, pounding drums, throbbing synths and moaning and honking alien horns buried beneath the sonic swirl. Killer stuff, and just like the full length, it's impossible to figure out where in the world these guys are coming from, and equally impossible to predict what's gonna happen next, which is precisely why we're digging it so much.

album cover RACCOO-OO-OON Mythos Folkways Vol. III (Woodsist) lp 14.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
More blissed out full moon music from these multi syllabic musical mammals (say that ten times fast!). Four tracks spread out over 2 sides... And if the last Mythos Folkways lp is any indicator, blink and you'll miss this...
The first half begins all fluttery and folky, dreamy melodies drifting amidst swirls of percussive thrum, all tangled up into some sort of fracture folk, peppered with random free jazz skitter, garbled vocals and dense clouds of FX. It sounds like a band -about- to stumble into action, -about- to fully rock out, tense and dense and abstract and mysterious, for most of the side, but then they DO rock out and it's awesome. A blown out mathy psych jam, drums and cymbals everywhere, guitars grinding and growling and swooping and soaring, all wrapped in thick swaths of reverb and delay and distortion, eventually petering out and finishing off with some soft blissy drift.
The flip side follows a similar sonic pattern, beginning with more abstract skree and clatter, a haphazard improvised ramble, which gradually builds into a tripped out alien krautrock jam, still abstract, but with little propulsive lurches, draped with bizarre falsetto vocals, haunting harmonies, all unwinding into a slithery garage-y groove.
Cool hand screened covers, photocopied insert, and of course way limited...

RACCOO-OO-OON s/t (Release The Bats) cd 9.98
Man do we hate good-byes. Whether to an old friend or to a favorite band, saying farewell ain't easy. Especially for Iowa City's Raaccoo-oo-oon, who offer up this self-titled lp as their official last release. And though we'll miss tediously typing out all the necessary c's and o's to correctly spell the bands name, we feel this last record is a worthy farewell gesture. Seems like they really gave it all they got here, blown out noisy post-everything chaos, they nobly go down with the ship on this one. Noise rock annihilation, highly recommended for fans of Dead C or Skull Defekts! Don't miss your chance to say goodbye!

album cover RACCOO-OO-OON / WOODS Pre-American Lands (Not Not Fun) lp 14.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
These two bands are a match made in hell. Assuming hell is some backwoods primitive pagan free folk jazz flecked noiserock jam session taking place during a full moon in the heart of some dark forest. In this corner, we have the impossible to pronounce Raccoo-oo-oon, from Iowa of all places, who fill up their side of this lp with a length, shimmery almost-jazzscape rife with scrabbly electric guitars, haunting washes of some distant horn section, angular riffing, muted trumpets doused in wah wah, this is some sort of alien psychedelic free jazz. Sort of. Abstract and space, this is an epic space rock jazz freakout fantasy, spacey FX, big waves of skronk and skree collide with tranquil drifts of jangly guitar and simple caveman percussion, a few minutes in, the record skids to a halt as some beast made out of speaker shredding digital glitches and grinding spastic in-the-red guitar rips everything to shreds, but the record quickly picks back up and drones on in a hypnotic blissed out jazz flecked krautrock freefolk groove.
And you thought that was way out, the flipside is the work of Brooklyn's Woods, who are a pretty good match for Raccoo-oo-oon, donning a similar cloak, equal parts deconstructed free jazz and avant noise rock. Swooping atonal guitars slip wildly through a dense tangle of staggering stumblin freejazz Neanderthal percussion, surrounded by clouds of dizzy guitar squiggles and swirling psychedelic distortion. Woods are like the damaged offspring of the No Neck Blues Band and Sunburned Hand Of The Man, the child they keep locked in the basement, the one who pounds on the door until they through raw meat down the stairs to calm him down. Mix in some weirdly rock riffs (at points it almost sounds like the band will lock in and rock out, although they never do) and some splattery jazz weirdness, and you've got the wonderfully weird world of Woods.
Elaborately packaged in a hand painted, silk screened, sleeve, garish green and black and brown, purple photocopied insert. Pressed on super thick swirled yellow opaque vinyl, and each disc comes with a different colored rabbit's foot attached to the sleeve!

album cover RACEBANNON In the Grips of the Light (Secretly Canadian) cd 13.98
The Secretly Canadian label is generally known for stuff (like Songs:Ohia and the Danielson Family) much more quiet and gentle than this, the debut album by a "PA destroying" crew of raucous rockers from Nebraska. They word on these guys was: Heavy (a la Melvins/Blue Cheer) and Spastic (a la Beefheart/Melt Banana)...so, needless to say, we were interested, but kinda doubtful. Probably the only bands to really pull that combo off are Japan's Ruins, and Oxbow, and Alboth!, and a few others. And while these guys are no Ruins, they are indeed sludgy and spastic, yes, doing noisy originals and a suitably messy, rockin' cover of Captain Beefheart's "Electricity". At first this album seemed like a typical avant-punk sloppy blend of distorted guitars and voices not really going anywhere but up their own ass(es), but these elements gradually coalesce into interesting songs if you devote some attention and let your ears get pummelled by the relentless repetition, electronic effects, and the multi-layered screams of their endlessly ranting vocalist(s). The songs on here seem to get better towards the end of each, as the band starts winding down and individual parts are given more space, and get more distinct. Altogether, on "In the Grips of the Light" Racebannon are more noisy than heavy, but either way will interestingly impact your skull. File with other American avant-hard-rockers like Clawhammer, Mount Shasta, US Maple, Liquor Ball, Dazzlingkillmen, Lightning Bolt...
RealAudio clip: "Sober and Sad"
RealAudio clip: "Electricity"

album cover RACEBANNON IV: Acid Or Blood (Southern) cd 14.98
Jeepers it's been a while since we've reviewed an album by these heavynoisyspasticartpunkrock dudes from Nebraska, and we almost neglected to list this new one, but thought we should since there's bound to be a few AQ customers who groove to Racebannon's weird brand of manic, maybe-metallic mayhem, one part Melvins, one part Dillinger Escape Plan, one part anything on Skin Graft or Toyo (RIP).
Sounds like: screaming sneering vox, jagged guitar distortion, wiseass brutality... When you're in the mood for it, great! When yr not, well, the 22 separate, entirely silent 7 second tracks that come between track 10 and 33 will be among your faves here.
If on the other had you want even more of Racebannon's earhole abuse, keep an eye out for their next release, a 12" entitled Merzbannon, which is apparently one of their previous albums "remixed" by you-know-who.
MPEG Stream: "Awaken"
MPEG Stream: "Bad Case Of..."

album cover RACEBANNON IV: Acid Or Blood (Tizona ) lp 16.98
Look out, now it's on vinyl too... Here's what we said about the cd version last year:
Jeepers it's been a while since we've reviewed an album by these heavynoisyspasticartpunkrock dudes from Nebraska, and we almost neglected to list this new one, but thought we should since there's bound to be a few AQ customers who groove to Racebannon's weird brand of manic, maybe-metallic mayhem, one part Melvins, one part Dillinger Escape Plan, one part anything on Skin Graft or Toyo (RIP).
Sounds like: screaming sneering vox, jagged guitar distortion, wiseass brutality... When you're in the mood for it, great! When yr not, well, the 22 separate, entirely silent 7 second tracks that come between track 10 and 33 will be among your faves here. [However, we didn't check to see if these occur on the vinyl as well.]
If on the other had you want even more of Racebannon's earhole abuse, keep an eye out for their next release, a 12" entitled Merzbannon, which is apparently one of their previous albums "remixed" by you-know-who. [Still haven't seen this, sadly.]
MPEG Stream: "Awaken"
MPEG Stream: "Bad Case Of..."

album cover RACEBANNON Satan's Kickin' Yr Dick In (Secretly Fuckin' Canadian) cd 14.98
Ok, first off, someone in Racebannon needs to be flogged for that title. That aside, this is a fine disc of crazed and metallic art-punk weirdness. More mayhem than a bunch of old Skin Graft bands fighting in an alley with the Load records roster. A real rumble. Refer to our review of their previous album "In The Grips Of The Light" for more descriptives -- this disc is pretty similar but if anything more metal and crushing and, well, Satanic. Actually there's some sort of weird narrative concept to this album that has to do with a character named Rhonda Delight, and the Devil, but figuring it all out to explain to you would require too much reading of what appears to be a libretto in the cd booklet, so you'll have to check it out for yourself.
RealAudio clip: "untitled track 5"

RACHEL'S Handwriting (Quarterstick) cd 14.98

RACHEL'S Music for Egon Schiele (Quarterstick/Touch & Go) cd 12.98
Second time around, Rachel's is just 3 musicians. The music was composed for a play about the artist Egon Schiele. Someone described it as chamber music for indierockers, and that does pretty much sum it up. Such lovely chamber music, it is!

RACHEL'S Music for Egon Schiele (Quarterstick/Touch & Go) lp 11.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
Second time around, Rachel's is just 3 musicians. The music was composed for a play about the artist Egon Schiele. Someone described it as chamber music for indierockers, and that does pretty much sum it up. Such lovely chamber music, it is!

RACHEL'S Sea & Bells (Quarterstick) cd 14.98

RACHEL'S Sea & Bells (Quarterstick) cd 12.98

RACHEL'S Selenography (Quarterstick) cd 14.98
More quietly stunning chamber music from this constantly evolving group of post rockers. Absolutely beautiful!

album cover RACHEL'S Systems / Layers (Quarterstick ) cd 14.98
The Rachel's have always been in a tough position. Indie kids eat up their take on chamber music, but lots of other music folks think, 'well why not listen to REAL chamber music?'. We were always of the mind that it was great that a bunch of indie rockers were exploring and trying something new (well, new to them) and maybe turning some kids on to classical music in the process. And their records were always quite pretty and pleasant. And then they surprised everyone by pairing up with electronic duo Matmos for their last release. But on Systems / Layers, Rachel's have finally bridged the gap between their traditional chamber music side and their experimental side, and the results are fantastic. Still present are the lovely mournful strings and Rachel Grimes delicate piano, but the arrangements are strange and more otherwordly, with plenty of found sounds and field recordings. Alternately dreamy and creepy, familiar and totally alien. Reminds us a bit of a less bombastic Godspeed or listening to classical music on your Walkman with only one earphone on as you explore some new city. We always liked Rachel's but this is the first record of theirs that really made us super excited. Check it out.
MPEG Stream: "Moscow Is In The Telephone"
MPEG Stream: "Water From The Same Source"
MPEG Stream: "Systems / Layers"

RACHEL'S / MATMOS Full On Night (Quarterstick) cd 12.98
This release from Rachel's and Matmos will undoubtedly warrant sufficient critical consternation / amazement / hate / love simply based on the unusual pairing of the two sets of musicians. Rachel's - the indierock answer to a chamber ensemble - present a shortened but reconstructed version of "Full on Night" originally found on their first album "Handwriting." This updated version dynamically rearranges the original such that it maintains its antiquited sound (delicate played piano with a reserved guitar angularity)... It's super sparse at first and mutates by the end of the track into something quite rockin', especially for the Rachel's.
San Francisco's electronica duo Matmos, by turn, apply a wealth of electronic trickery to the Rachel's sound. Scraped violin and a guitar din similar to the Moore / Ranaldo duets for guitars and screwdrivers emerge from a digidubscape that gets quite volatile by the end of Matmos' 18 minute excursion. While apparently not overly concerned with keeping the Rachel's material recognizable, Matmos mirrors the out-rock / chop-shop of Brise-Glace -- that project fronted by Jim O'Rourke many many moons back.
This is one of those records that the staff in the office is so confounded by that they have to run out to the front room to find out what's playing. I mean, you'd never guess.

RACHEL'S / MATMOS Full On Night (Quarterstick) lp 12.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
This release from Rachel's and Matmos will undoubtedly warrant sufficient critical consternation / amazement / hate / love simply based on the unusual pairing of the two sets of musicians. Rachel's - the indierock answer to a chamber ensemble - present a shortened but reconstructed version of "Full on Night" originally found on their first album "Handwriting." This updated version dynamically rearranges the original such that it maintains its antiquited sound (delicate played piano with a reserved guitar angularity)... It's super sparse at first and mutates by the end of the track into something quite rockin', for Rachel's.
San Francisco's electronica duo Matmos, by turn, applies a wealth of electronic trickery to the Rachel's sound. Scraped violin and a guitar din similar to the Moore / Ranaldo duets for guitars and screwdrivers emerge from a digidubscape that gets quite volatile by the end of Matmos' 18 minute excursion. While apparently not overly concerned with keeping the Rachel's material recognizable, Matmos mirrors the out-rock / chop-shop of Brise-Glace -- that project fronted by Jim O'Rourke many many moons back.
This is one of those records that the staff in the office is so confounded by that they have to run out to the front room to find out what's playing. I mean, you'd never guess.

album cover RACONTEURS Consolers Of The Lonely (Warner Bros.) cd 16.98

album cover RACONTEURS, THE Broken Boy Soldiers (V2) cd 14.98
We hardly need to write anything about this disc, as it's a band that features the White Stripes' Jack White. For most folks that seems to be enough. If you've even glanced at Rolling Stone or Spin or any music video channel, you're probably sick to death of this band already, without hearing note one. And White has been ubiquitous in publications like Star and Us Weekly, his breakups and dating habits, right there alongside Brad and Angelina, Vince and Jen, and all the baby Apples and Shiloh's. But all that stuff serves to do is to distract from what is in fact a fucking killer pop record. And while White's voice features prominently, as do his songwriting and guitar playing, all completely killer by the way, this record is all about his bandmate Brendan Benson and his perfect pop pen. This is no White Stripes side project, instead this sounds more like the latest and greatest Brendan Benson record, that just so happens to feature Jack White. Benson has been making perfect pop records for years, quietly outdoing all of his pop rivals. Benson's One Mississippi is probably one of the greatest pop records you never heard. As was the follow up Lapalco. Benson's got a killer voice, a great ear for melody, and a seemingly effortless knack for spitting out ultra perfect pop, but with plenty of loud guitars. An unsung power pop hero for sure. So it's a bit sad that it takes teaming up with his longtime pal White to get heard by more than a handful of indie pop hipsters, but so be it. And the fact is that the combination of White's voice and guitar teamed up with Benson's is pretty much unbeatable.
This record is great. Ignore all the press bullshit, all the photo shoots and all the hype and just dig in. The opener, "Steady As She Goes" might just be the pop song of the year (and peep the killer video featuring the band racing soapbox derby style featuring Pee Wee Herman as a nefarious race saboteur!). Awesome harmonies, strange studio FX, crunchy guitars, all wrapped around a hook that will get stuck in your head FOREVER. The rest of the record, while never quite reaching the pop perfection of the opening track, is still pretty dang great. Leaning strangely toward some lost seventies radio rock, a hard rockin' pop sound, Zeppelin III, Steve Miller Band, Beatles, etc., but with a serious hard pop sheen. Fans of the Posies, Sloan, Silver Sun, Apples In Stereo and all things glistening Beatles-esque Big Star-ish, big guitar, soaring harmony, foot stomping, hand clapping, kick ass power pop!!
MPEG Stream: "Steady As She Goes"
MPEG Stream: "Hands"

album cover RADAR BROS. Eight (Merge Records) lp+cd 17.98
There was a time when this LA combo was one of THEE aQuarius bands, played in the store constantly, top ten lists, in-stores, the whole shebang. Former aQ staffer Byram, and former aQ owner Windy, were both huge Radar Bros. boosters, but really everyone dug their dark wistful slowcore indie pop sound. Weirdly it's been YEARS since we reviewed a RB record, and our very favorite, The Singing Hatchet, popped up in the early days of the aQ list, so gets a very brief, but still pretty glowing review, worth reprinting here, cuz it probably applies to the band in general, not just that record: "Mellow LA-based slowcore trio Radar Bros make some of the most emotional music we've ever heard. With super-plaintive, Pink Floyd-y vocals, creamy thick guitars, and hook-filled melodies, some of Radar Bros songs are so beautiful you literally have to stop what you're doing just so you can listen to them - yeah, they're that good! Fans of Low, Half Film, Red House Painters, and Palace will LOVE this record."
And we have to say, listening to this new one now, we're tempted to think the same thing. The first song started, and it was like we never stop listening, totally warm and familiar, and dreamily enveloping, but there have been some changes, the sound is a little noisier, more distorted, there's even weird drum machine on the first track, but it's all woven into a warm shimmering haze, that simply blends into the classic Radar Bros. sound, and makes it just more, more fuzzy, more psychedelic, but just as hooky, and dreamy, and poppy, and addictive as before. In fact, as we often do, we listened to opener "If We Were Banished" five or six times in a row, before we moved on to "Reflections", which was somehow just as great! Think the above mentioned bands, but maybe this time around, include Teenage Fanclub, Olivia Tremor Control, Sleepy Sun, the sound is definitely more washed out and shoegazey, lots of studio stuff going on, swirling effects, swooping backwards guitars, textures and layers, all of which suits the songs, but the key is that the songs are still fantastic, stripped down, hushed and intimate, slide and lap steel surface here and there, the drumming spare and simple, the vocals warm and just a little bit rough. Long time fans will not be disappointed, and fans like us, who some how missed out on the last few definitely have some catching up to do. And if you've yet to check these guys out, give the samples below a listen, and prepare to be smitten. So good!
MPEG Stream: "If We Were Banished"
MPEG Stream: "Reflections"
MPEG Stream: "Couch"

album cover RADAR BROS. The Fallen Leaf Pages (Merge) cd 14.98
It's been so long since we've heard from the Bros. (three years since "And The Surrounding Mountains" was released) that we'd taken them for broke-up. Well, we're pleased that our fears were unwarranted. There's no escaping the sounds-like-early-Pink-Floyd chorus of remarks that seems to follow Radar Brothers like an albatross whenever they're played. But then again, that's certainly not a bad comparison, or anything to be ashamed of. They can keep milking this musical cow as long as they want as far as we're concerned, cuz they know how churn it better than anyone. As with their previous recordings, their songs are mostly paced in that unique Radar Bros. snail paced tempo, like they're being pulled through molasses and their lyrics are the stuff of fever dreams. Haunting and dispassionate descriptions of horrific scenes, bleak outlooks and unhappy endings are the stuff of Jim Putnam's song writing, which are then hermetically encased in dreamy, opiate paced songs. You find yourself wanting to sing along with a chorus, but are afraid someone might catch you as the lyrics "Hey, is that blood, coming from me..." slip from your lips. With their songs seemingly floating in a space in between major and minor key, like a good blues, Radar Bros. can write sad songs that warm your cockles. It's a creepy and wonderful warmth of feeling, not unlike crying into a pillow until you fall asleep as a child, only to wake up feeling great. And while we don't want to deceive you into thinking the Radar Bros. resemble, even remotely, a blues band, there's also something -- as Allan pointed out -- timeless about the music of The Radar Brothers. They don't seem to take their cues from what anyone today is doing. If there's anyone they're influenced by it would be the aformentioned Pink Floyd (circa Meddle), or (a severely depressed and macabre) Beach Boys. Like their previous recordings, The Fallen Leaf Pages was recorded entirely at Jim's Skylab (now currently under Phase III) studio, and as you might guess it's absolutely gorgeously produced. Fallen Leaf Pages is an album that will grow on you with each listen. Highly recommended!
MPEG Stream: "Papillon"
MPEG Stream: "Is That Blood"
MPEG Stream: "Show Yourself"

album cover RADAR BROTHERS And The Surrounding Mountains (Merge) cd 14.98
Back in November of '99, Radar Brothers' album The Singing Hatchet was our Record of the Week. Didn't think it was possible, but the band has actually gotten even better (to the point of -gasp- converting an AQ staffer or two who didn't like' em before), thus we hereby bestow the same honor on the new record And the Surrounding Mountains. For those of you who're unfamiliar with the LA-based trio of Jim, Senon, and Steve, their sound can be most easily described (and I'm sure they're tired of hearing it) as very similar to Pink Floyd. And not just any ole Pink Floyd, mind you!, but specifically the sad, epic two songs that conclude The Dark Side of the Moon: "Brain Damage" (y'know, "the lunatic is on the grass...") and, god, especially "Eclipse" ("And all that is now/And all that is gone/And all that's to come/And everything under the sun is in tune/But the sun is eclipsed by the moon...") You know how you never want that song to end, it's such a pretty, bittersweet way to close an album? Radar Brothers have made FOUR ALBUMS of that sound all stretched out and atmospheric and personal and warm. The guitars are ever so plaintively strummed so that you hear the chords but also the individual strings, the vocals are hushed and sung usually as a duo, the melodies achingly gorgeous, majestic swells of emotion. They're so great that I find it hard to do anything else while listening to Radar Brothers; like Low and Red House Painters' work, Radar Brothers' songs *demand* stillness and respect -- all your attention. Highly recommended.
RealAudio clip: "You and the Father"
RealAudio clip: "Camplight"
RealAudio clip: "This Xmas Eve"
RealAudio clip: "Sisters"

album cover RADAR BROTHERS Auditorium (Merge) cd 14.98
The vastly different music groups Dengue Fever and Radar Brothers share the bass playing excellence of Senon Williams. He must be a very busy man -- both have awesome new albums out now! Don't want to belabor the point too much, but the contrast is remarkable between the international technicolor frenzy of Dengue Fever and the Pink Floydian space-rock of Radar Brothers. One gets your heart pumpin' and brings a flush to your cheeks. The other offers unwinding, soothing dreaminess (a possible point of comparison: an earthier Flaming Lips!). Both stir the listener to open channels and let go! Despite the implied audience and artist stage enclosure of title, the Radar Brothers' fourth full length is for roaming open spaces and star-gazing while keeping an introspective mood. No walls in sight. Simply beautiful.
MPEG Stream: "When Cold Air Goes To Sleep"
MPEG Stream: "Hearts of Crows"

RADAR BROTHERS s/t (Restless) cd 15.98
Wow, out of nowhere (okay, there was a 10" a coupla years ago but we missed out) comes this FANTASTIC trio from Los Angeles whose quiet, mournful sound and plaintive vocals remind us of Neil Young & the delicate side of Pink Floyd. For fans of Low, Scud Mountain Boys, Radiohead, and Rex. Definitely a winner; we highly recommend you hear them.

RADAR BROTHERS The Singing Hatchet (See Thru Broadcasting) cd 14.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
Mellow LA-based slowcore trio Radar Bros make some of the most emotional music we've ever heard. With super-plaintive, Pink Floyd-y vocals, creamy thick guitars, and hook-filled melodies, some of Radar Bros songs are so beautiful you literally have to stop what you're doing just so you can listen to them -- yeah, they're that good! Fans of Low, Half Film, Red House Painters, and Palace will LOVE this record.

album cover RADAR BROTHERS, THE The Illustrated Garden (Merge) cd 14.98
While they are most certainly still very Pink Floyd-esque in their interstellar expansiveness, the beloved Radar Brothers' fifth album has what might be their most straightforward pop songs to date... and we're digging 'em! The mood is downright upbeat and breezy at times, but it totally works with the band's warm enveloping sound which also suited their earlier slow creeping melancholia just as well. The Illustrated Garden is a wistful instead of solemn listen, and a wonderful follow-up to their last full length, Auditorium. Songs such as "Rainbow", "Radio" and "Horses Warriors" are perfect for cruising down the West Coast on a warm spring or summer day with the top down. As always, recommended!
MPEG Stream: "Dear Headlights"
MPEG Stream: "Horses Warriors"
MPEG Stream: "Radio"

album cover RADAR EYES Best Friends (Hozac) 7" 6.50
We actually had the debut tape from these Chicago fuzz pop garage rockers, released on the seemingly now defunct Plus Tapes label, but for some reason never managed to get it reviewed, which is a bummer, cuz this new 7" is definitely hitting the spot. You can now add another band to the roster of garage pop combos we dig, who like some of their sonic brethren and sistren, are channeling classic sixties girl group pop, even the vocals here, make, but high enough and reverby enough to have us thinking 'girl group' all along, the music is lush and melodic, fuzzy guitars and driving drums, chiming melodies, underpinned by swirling synths, the first track getting downright distorted and crunchy near the end. While the B sides is a short blast of fuzzy almost punky pound, with whirring organs, buried vox, and a super sweet chorus that must go over gangbusters live. Serious sing along potential for sure. Definitely excited to hear more!

album cover RADAR EYES s/t (Hozac) cd 10.98
First full length from these Chicago fuzzpop garage rockers, and it definitely fulfills the promise of the cassette and 7" that came before, the sound a glorious mix of brooding, organ driven drugrock, paisley underground power pop and Mikal Cronin / Ty Segall style garage pop jangle, with the sound shifting constantly between murky and droney and washed out, to glistening and dreamily majestic, fuzzy, crunchy and hooky, to pounding and propulsive, hints of new wave find their way into much of the record, reminding us of another recent aQ fave the Mind Spiders, but there's still plenty of that reverby jangle pop Phil Spector wall-of-sound haze that defined those earlier releases, and a definite tendency towards tranced out psychedelic memser that positions much of the record alongside the sound of fellow psych-rockers like Moon Duo, Wooden Shjips, the Spyrals and the like. Which of course also means there's some obvious Spacemen 3 worship going on (just check out the woozy dreamy druggy drift of "Disconnection") as well as nods to the Velvets ("Prairie Puppies"), and of course the current crop of similarly minded locals (Thee Oh Sees, etc.), but even with all those sonic comparisons, Radar Eyes definitely make the sound their own, thick low slung basslines, wild gouts of psych guitar tangle, churning rhythmic crunch, shimmering fuzzed out jangle, dreamy vox, big hooks, and be sure and stick around for the record closer, "Side Of The Road", where the band go full on cold/new/dark wave, all pulsing synths and buzzing basslines, programmed rhythms and deep crooned vocals, ominous and haunting and darkly sinister, sounding suddenly like something you might expect to hear on Sacred Bones or Captured Tracks...
MPEG Stream: "In Love"
MPEG Stream: "Prairie Puppies"
MPEG Stream: "Miracle"
MPEG Stream: "Accident"

album cover RADAR EYES s/t (Hozac) lp 14.98
First full length from these Chicago fuzzpop garage rockers, and it definitely fulfills the promise of the cassette and 7" that came before, the sound a glorious mix of brooding, organ driven drugrock, paisley underground power pop and Mikal Cronin / Ty Segall style garage pop jangle, with the sound shifting constantly between murky and droney and washed out, to glistening and dreamily majestic, fuzzy, crunchy and hooky, to pounding and propulsive, hints of new wave find their way into much of the record, reminding us of another recent aQ fave the Mind Spiders, but there's still plenty of that reverby jangle pop Phil Spector wall-of-sound haze that defined those earlier releases, and a definite tendency towards tranced out psychedelic memser that positions much of the record alongside the sound of fellow psych-rockers like Moon Duo, Wooden Shjips, the Spyrals and the like. Which of course also means there's some obvious Spacemen 3 worship going on (just check out the woozy dreamy druggy drift of "Disconnection") as well as nods to the Velvets ("Prairie Puppies"), and of course the current crop of similarly minded locals (Thee Oh Sees, etc.), but even with all those sonic comparisons, Radar Eyes definitely make the sound their own, thick low slung basslines, wild gouts of psych guitar tangle, churning rhythmic crunch, shimmering fuzzed out jangle, dreamy vox, big hooks, and be sure and stick around for the record closer, "Side Of The Road", where the band go full on cold/new/dark wave, all pulsing synths and buzzing basslines, programmed rhythms and deep crooned vocals, ominous and haunting and darkly sinister, sounding suddenly like something you might expect to hear on Sacred Bones or Captured Tracks...
MPEG Stream: "In Love"
MPEG Stream: "Prairie Puppies"
MPEG Stream: "Miracle"
MPEG Stream: "Accident"

RADAR EYES s/t (Plus Tapes) cassette 5.98

RADAR EYES s/t (Plus Tapes) cassette 5.98

album cover RADIAN Chimeric (Thrill Jockey) cd 15.98
We REALLY like Viennese instrumental glitch-groove trio Radian. This, Chimeric, is their first album in four whole years. And it's awesome. So it deserves a glowing review from us. We're having trouble writing it, though. The problem is, we made the mistake of going back and looking at what we wrote about their previous albums, and feel like we already said it best about 'em then, can't really top lines like these: "Y'know how in subatomic reality, seemingly solid objects aren't solid at all, but filled with empty space interspersed with electrons and protons and such? Radian's music is kind of like that, atomized, spacious, abuzz with crackling energy", and "There's a jazz/improv element as well, but rather than rock/jazz fusion this is more like fission, breaking down elements of both musics, and releasing volts of energy in the process."
See? Good stuff, eh? And those sentiments apply here as well. Though, it's not like this is just the same as Radian's earlier work. No, their computer-processed live improv post rock electro-acoustic sound (whew!) has definitely developed, Radian themselves considering Chimeric to be more "Free", though what they mean by that we have to guess, perhaps it's why this Radian record does seem rather more noisy, raw, chaotic, rocking, & heavy than ever before, though.
Which is much to our liking, as it brings 'em even closer to sounding like some bands to which we've compared 'em in the past, a "sliced-up Circle" and, especially, a "sci fi This Heat", that uniquely rhythmic British experimental prog-rock unit from the '70s, who are really one of our "touchstone" bands here at AQ that we're always referencing in reviews, always hoping to hear something new that reminds us of 'em (we're the same way about the likes of Comus, Goblin, Earth, Magma, Black Sabbath, and Circle too). Thus, one reason we dig this Radian album so much (and Radian's other efforts too) is 'cause we can hear a lot of This Heat goin' on here. This Heat gone electronically futuristic in some mad scientist's laboratory, that is... The fractured structures, jumbled rhythms, distorted guitar stabs, and rumbling textures found here are totally hitting the spot. We mentioned it's been 4 years since their last album, and it's about time. We NEED more music like this, thanks Radian!
MPEG Stream: "Git Cut Noise"
MPEG Stream: "Kinetakt"

album cover RADIAN Chimeric (Thrill Jockey) lp 15.98
We REALLY like Viennese instrumental glitch-groove trio Radian. This, Chimeric, is their first album in four whole years. And it's awesome. So it deserves a glowing review from us. We're having trouble writing it, though. The problem is, we made the mistake of going back and looking at what we wrote about their previous albums, and feel like we already said it best about 'em then, can't really top lines like these: "Y'know how in subatomic reality, seemingly solid objects aren't solid at all, but filled with empty space interspersed with electrons and protons and such? Radian's music is kind of like that, atomized, spacious, abuzz with crackling energy", and "There's a jazz/improv element as well, but rather than rock/jazz fusion this is more like fission, breaking down elements of both musics, and releasing volts of energy in the process."
See? Good stuff, eh? And those sentiments apply here as well. Though, it's not like this is just the same as Radian's earlier work. No, their computer-processed live improv post rock electro-acoustic sound (whew!) has definitely developed, Radian themselves considering Chimeric to be more "Free", though what they mean by that we have to guess, perhaps it's why this Radian record does seem rather more noisy, raw, chaotic, rocking, & heavy than ever before, though.
Which is much to our liking, as it brings 'em even closer to sounding like some bands to which we've compared 'em in the past, a "sliced-up Circle" and, especially, a "sci fi This Heat", that uniquely rhythmic British experimental prog-rock unit from the '70s, who are really one of our "touchstone" bands here at AQ that we're always referencing in reviews, always hoping to hear something new that reminds us of 'em (we're the same way about the likes of Comus, Goblin, Earth, Magma, Black Sabbath, and Circle too). Thus, one reason we dig this Radian album so much (and Radian's other efforts too) is 'cause we can hear a lot of This Heat goin' on here. This Heat gone electronically futuristic in some mad scientist's laboratory, that is... The fractured structures, jumbled rhythms, distorted guitar stabs, and rumbling textures found here are totally hitting the spot. We mentioned it's been 4 years since their last album, and it's about time. We NEED more music like this, thanks Radian!
MPEG Stream: "Git Cut Noise"
MPEG Stream: "Kinetakt"

album cover RADIAN Juxtaposition (Thrill Jockey) cd 14.98
Y'know how in subatomic reality, seemingly solid objects aren't solid at all, but filled with empty space interspersed with electrons and protons and such? Radian's music is kind of like that, atomized, spacious, abuzz with crackling energy. We loved the last Radian album, Rec.Extern, and are mighty pleased with this new one, another dose of glitch-happy instrumental post-rock from the Vienna-based trio of Martin Brandlmayr (drums, vibraphone, electronics, computer), Stefan Nemeth (synthesizers, guitar, computer) and John Norman (bass). Yeah that's two computers, and no they're not checking their email, they're integrating their live playing with computer processing and programming droning, rhythmic soundscapes of urgent beats and simmering atmospheres... Imagine the likes of Circle, Salvatore, This Heat, and Village Of Savoonga...all sucked into a computer (kinda like Tron) to do virtual battle... There's a jazz/improv element as well, but rather than rock/jazz fusion this is more like fission, breaking down elements of both musics, and releasing volts of energy in the process. Exciting, beautiful, creative, futuristic.
MPEG Stream: "Shift"
MPEG Stream: "Rapid Eye Movement"

album cover RADIAN Juxtaposition (Thrill Jockey) lp 13.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
Y'know how in subatomic reality, seemingly solid objects aren't solid at all, but filled with empty space interspersed with electrons and protons and such? Radian's music is kind of like that, atomized, spacious, abuzz with crackling energy. We loved the last Radian album, Rec.Extern, and are mighty pleased with this new one, another dose of glitch-happy instrumental post-rock from the Vienna-based trio of Martin Brandlmayr (drums, vibraphone, electronics, computer), Stefan Nemeth (synthesizers, guitar, computer) and John Norman (bass). Yeah that's two computers, and no they're not checking their email, they're integrating their live playing with computer processing and programming droning, rhythmic soundscapes of urgent beats and simmering atmospheres... Imagine the likes of Circle, Salvatore, This Heat, and Village Of Savoonga...all sucked into a computer (kinda like Tron) to do virtual battle... There's a jazz/improv element as well, but rather than rock/jazz fusion this is more like fission, breaking down elements of both musics, and releasing volts of energy in the process. Exciting, beautiful, creative, futuristic.
MPEG Stream: "Shift"
MPEG Stream: "Rapid Eye Movement"

album cover RADIANT HUSK Beyond An Endless Swale (Bezoar Formations) cassette 5.98
THIS IS CURRENTLY OUT OF PRINT OR OTHERWISE UNAVAILABLE TO US AT THE MOMENT, SO PLEASE DO NOT ORDER IT. SORRY.
Though we sold out pretty quick, some of you aQ-loyalists might remember a super killer cd-r we got awhile back from local guy Matt Erickson, otherwise known as Radiant Husk. Aside from also playing in the free-psych noise duo Sudden Oak, which is equally as awesome (although most of their releases are now out of print), Erickson has been busy conjuring a fantastic offering of ritual saxophone sorcery. In relatively the same vein as Terry Riley's alto sax work in the seventies, Beyond An Endless Swale explores the more damaged, far reaching capabilities of the sax. And despite any reservation you might have about the sax, take it from us, there ain't nothing smooth or soft about Radiant Husk. Beyond An Endless Swale will lure you to the twisted outlands of grey shorelines where distant foghorns coax you into hypnosis, improvised melodies hover above richly layered drones and singing overtones, reverbed sax riffs lull into the dreamy horizon. An endless journey exploring all kind of sonic territory, at times Erickson pushes his sax on the verge of fiery collapse, piling dense layers of blistering noise and feedback, bird-like squeaks and wails, only to let it all melt away into the soft-droning sky. All housed in hand made tape inserts assembled in a very limited quantity, this cassette is a gem and should really not be missed!

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