music: boff lemurr, video: david ruggiero, hamburg 2008 // all rights reserved.
Vielen Dank David, dass ich das Video hier zeigen darf ;) Und danke Hanna für den schönen Song ;)
• Video: Dead Man's Bones
An Oscar-nominated Hollywood heartthrob and his best friend round up a bunch of instruments-- some of which they don't know how to play-- and a massive children's choir and make a concept album about the supernatural. Seems like a recipe for disaster, right? Guess again.
Meet Dead Man's Bones, a collaboration between actors Ryan Gosling (Half Nelson, The Believer, The Notebook) and Zach Shields. The duo plan to release their debut album, Never Let a Lack of Talent Get You Down, on their own label, Werewolf Heart, this summer. You might have seen their MySpace page, or a video for their song "In the Room Where You Sleep" floating around the web recently. In the clip, Gosling and Shields lead a bunch of kids, all dressed in Halloween costumes, through a spare acoustic lament. It's creepy and catchy. It sounds like a middle school assembly gone goth. And it's pretty damn good. [pitchfork]
• Sounds:
Just in time for Halloween comes a spooky new track from Memory Tapes, a rather epic 17-minute suite of icy Italo synths, atmospheric strings, and driving beats that evoke your favorite horror movies of decades past. There's even some creepy Michael Myers piano plinks at the end.
Memory Tapes - Walk Me Home
Switch was asked to remix The Big Pink’s first single “Dominos”. The band have an album out now called “A Brief History Of Love” on 4AD… It’s a seminal record from the band, and we can’t say for certain but we think the album title is inspired by the book from Nicole Krauss “History of Love”. [via maddecent]
The Big Pink – Dominos (Switch Remix)
Freaky video [via runningsushi]
Royksopp feat. Fever Ray - This Must Be
Totally crazy stuff.
JJ - Things Will Never Be The Same Again
• Special: Classless Kulla & Istari Lasterfahrer
Wie kommst du jetzt bloss auf diesen Scheiß äh an dieses Zeug? Kurze Erklärung: Ende September Schmitti in Kölle getroffen und einen schönen Spaziergang ins A-Musik gemacht, weil wenn in Kölle dann auch eine Platte mitnehmen. Dort unbeholfen in den 7 inches herumgewühlt und sie da ein Rambo Cover! Sehr geil. Platte auf den Vorspielteller und Musik für spuuki und verrückt gehalten, gekauft, Photo gemacht (?), Schmitti geschenkt und nicht mehr vergessen. Back in Vienna kurzer Googleerfolg: Handbag/abba heisst der Künstler (geiles Napalm Death Shirt!). Krasser Breakcore, Gabbacore, Dubmassaker. Google schmeisst mir Sozialistischer Plattenbau an den Kopp (Margarita mag das Logo). Und tatsächlich dort Handbag/abba gefunden. Dann die Bestsellers (sic!) durchgeschaut und Classless Kulla als Beifahrer von Istari Lasterfahrer gefunden (siehe Cover). Totalle Verwirrung. Ist das geil oder saudoof? Für letzteres entschieden und diverse Tracks angehört. Hier gefunden. Bestellen ins Ösiland geht nicht nach getätigter Anmeldung :(. Trotzalledem gehört und gefreut. Lasterfahrers Seite angeschaut und gemyspaced. Classless Kullas Seite angeschaut und diesen lustigen Buffy Song gepostet (vornehmlich um Hippe zu begeistern und für immer diese dämliche "True Blood" Diskussion zu beenden). Buffy forever.
mp3: Classless Kulla & Istari Lasterfahrer - Buffy The Slayer & The Angel of Death
Noch ein kurzes Ohr in die Hey-O-Hansen - Sonn und Mond (mag ich), Fluppe unter die Oberlippe und ab ins Bett. Der Taxi kommt morgen früh um 8:00 Uhr. Shit! Gute Nacht...

Silvia Bächli (Giardini, Switzerland) Info
Bestué/Vives (Arsenale) Video
Michael Borremans (Palazzo Grassi) Info
Jake & Dinos Chapman – Fucking Hell (Punta Della Dogana) Video
Elmgreen & Dragset (Giardini, Denmark & Nordic Countries)
Hans-Peter Feldmann - Schattenspiele (Giardini)
Spencer Finch (Arsenale & Giardini) Info
Shaun Gladwell (Giardini, Australien) Photos
Raoul De Keyser – Untitled (Fortuny)
Ragnar Kjartansson – The End (Palazzo Michiel Da Brusà)
Alfred Kubin – The Eye of the Tempest (Fortuny)
Mark Lewis (Giardini, Canada)
Steve McQueen - Giardini (Giardini, Great Britain) Video
Mattia Moreni – Una nuvola colpito dal fulmine (Fortuny)
Bruce Nauman – Giorni (Universita Ca’ Foscari) Info
Fiona Tan - Disorient (Giardini, The Netherlands) Video
Wolfgang Tillmans (Giardini) Info
James Turrell – Red Shift (Fortuny)
Jef Verheyen – Escape ZERO (Fortuny)
Jef Verheyen – Urbino. L’Espace idéal (Fortuny) Picture
Lois & Franziska Weinberger (Giardini, Austria) Info
• MP3s:
Ladies and Gentlemen! Brilliant new track by Washed Out. Enjoy:
Washed Out - Feel It All Around
and the Toro Y Moi Remix:
Washed Out - Feel It All Around (Toro Y Moi Remix)
'Feel It All Around' is a big thick wall of beautifully incongrous sounds. There're heavy, room-punching drums, there's an almost 10-CC style dreamy vocal, there're layers of dense sounds lurking ominously in the back. Yet it all clicks together with Washed Out's magical sonic touch, and the result is one of the most distinctive sevens of the year. The remix is a glorious monged out downtempo version, with Justice-style tudorian keyboards, backwards loops and great slap bass. It's the perfect morning after antidote following the night before. puregroove
myspace.com/thebabeinthewoods
• Album der Monate Juli/August: Mount Eerie - Wind's Poem
Over his long career, from the K Records days as auteur outsider with the Microphones to his recent solo-geared output as Mount Eerie, Phil Elverum has developed many contiguous lyrical themes. Chief amongst them is the theme of human's relations with nature, and the boundaries of nature and self. He grew up in the shadow of Mt Erie, surrounded by forests and lakes. You can imagine the young Elvrum somewhat askance from the world, skateboarding alone in a place with no paved ground, making his world in the grasses and the trees. Since then he has not abandoned the wilderness for the lure of the city, living in and around his home town of Anacortes for his adult life. In 2002 he spent a year without proper electricity in a Norwegian shack, in the process gathering material for an album and 144 page book both entitled Dawn. His photographic output is heavy with landscapes. His music is frequently concerned with nature, perhaps most succinctly summed up back in 2002 on the singles compilation Song Islands, when in ‘Phil Elvrum’s Will’ a notional account of his dying wishes he declared ”I want wind / I'll trade the traffic for the roaring waves”.
But with Wind’s Poem there is a sense that before this all was merely flirting, and now Mother Nature and Phil are going at it hammer and tongs. The album is on a Romantic mission to sketch the terrible, grotesque beauty of nature, to tap its darkness and majesty. And in the process perhaps to lose the self in some kind of sublime connection.
It’s part of the album’s strangeness that Elverum searches for a dialogue with natural forces. On ‘Summons’ Elverum implores the wind “Come revealer / come destroyer ... speak to me” in his soft curiosity-inflected voice (his poetry directly recalling Shelley’s 'Ode to the West Wind': “Destroyer and preserver; hear, O hear!") The dialogue takes on the character of mental illness on ‘Lost Wisdom Pt 2.’; “I think the screaming wind says my name / significance found in rocks”, as the perennial post-Darwinian difficulty of finding where nature might end and where we ourselves might begin is dramatised in psychological meltdown. And indeed at points Elverum completes the sublime transformation and becomes nature itself. On ‘Wind Speaks’ he chants “I am the river / I am the torment of tearing flame / I remove bodies / I hold void I have no shape”. This hints that ultimately he has no control of the dynamic transformations he exposes himself to, as on ‘My Heart is Not at Peace’ he softly intones “If my heart were at peace would it be a blossom satisfied / or would it be a stone?”
Questions of self bleed into political questions. In Wind’s Poem Elverum derives a nationalism from nature, citing the American continent’s “wild fresh heritage” as a basis for a love of his country. On ‘Through the Trees’, (an 11 minute sloW-core anthem built around sustained rough-hewn synths, like a Boards of Canada confined to world-weary Casiotone), he gently croons “I can see / the land of dreams / through the trees”. America obscured to an outsider perhaps, but more likely America as home of the natural: a nation redefined in Elverum’s own interests.
There's darkness here too, which he unveils by hitching the album to David Lynch’s cult Nineties supernatural soap-opera Twin Peaks. Angelo Badalamenti’s dreamwave electronics, that could convey idyll and cellar-dungeon in the same chord, are looped into a lo-fi grove on ‘Through the Trees’. ‘Between Two Mysteries’, opens with a synth lead lifted straight from the show’s ‘Laura Palmer’s Theme’, and lyrically references the series’ title. In between the glades, the overpowering oceans and identity-shifting winds there is the seamy rub of human evil that flourishes in disconnected towns and fragile suburban outposts.
And the music itself holds an immense darkness. The dense, percussive wall of layered synths and brazenly distorted guitars that usher in ‘Wind's Dark Poem’ stand as a revisitation of the kind of big sound experimented with on Microphones' Don’t Wake Me Up. But they also announce a new tone of ferocity and depth of darkness, an expansive hardness throughout the album. Not only did Elverum succeed in his aim “to make the loudest album yet”, but he also succeeded in presenting it delicately.
As a photographer, author, poet, musician, comicbook writer and label owner, it is always tempting to posit Elverum as a Renaissance man, but he is not that. The Renaissance man seeks to resolve contradictions in a totality, by bringing the world together in personality. Think Lars Ulrich or Sting. Publicity-shy Elverum is happy to let ironic opposites exist side by side, an artist shorn of the neurotic impulse to make their mark on the world at all costs. The Renaissance man’s garden was classical and ordered, his home the rational city. Elverum’s garden is vast and untameable, and he is of the American country. The Renaissance man seeks to hold a candle to the darkness. Elverum imagines the darkness, and makes music that is the stuff of darkness itself. Elverum is the long lost heir to Romanticism, creating heavy symphonies of limitations. This is a terrifying, wise album, sung by, in his own words, “the voice of an old boulder”. Daniel B. Yates in Drowned In Sound
