Aug
28
2008
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Aether Everywhere #9 – British Neo-Psychedelia (1980’s)

Ok, this is a tough one to classify. So i limited it to the brits and to the 1980’s – and came up with a mix that skims the surface of some of the more inspirational artists to emerge from this often unreconizedly furtile period for psychedelia, what started w/ post-jangle dream pop, splinted out rapidly into various club sounds, goth-rock, Madchester, and later into shoegaze and modern brit-pop, but those are podcasts for another day.

Summer’s coming to an end, with what we hope is the beginning of a long and glorious fall season. I can’t think of a better mix to usher in a new season than this emotive mix by Britains favorite melecholic romantics. So download it, Ipod it, and take it with you for your next cool evening walk.

The Cure – Plainsong / Cocteau Twins – Blue Bell Knoll / Echo & The Bunnymen – The Yo-Yo Man / The Chameleons UK – P.S. Goodbye / The Stone Roses – I wanna be adored / The Psychedelic Furs – Pretty in Pink / New Order – Perfect Kiss / Echo & the Bunnymen – Porcupine / The Chameleons UK – Perfume Garden / Kate Bush – The Big Sky (Meteorogical Mix) / The Cure – Pornography

Written by admin in: AE Radio, Neo-Psychedelia, Tanner McCuin |
Aug
15
2008
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Aether Everywhere Podcast #17: Konsidering Kompakt

This weeks episode of the Ae radioshow consisted of another mega-mix, but this time not of a particular band as we did last time with Stereolab, but instead with the illustrious and prolific Kompakt Label. Started by GAS’s Wolfgang Voigt and couple fellow compatriots with a love of, and desire to marry gaussy drifting ambience to 4×4 german techno. Kompakt has grown exponentially in the 10 years since it’s creation thanks to it’s incredible standard of quality, and as the last couple years has managed to break through to listeners not as comfortable on the late night dancefloors as they are in headphones.

Infact as per-usual with the knee jerking indie-critics, many are saying Kompakt has reached some percieved “saturation point” and many of these critics have been claiming a “Kompakt backlash” is in order or underway – which given the last years amazing and varied output by label artists such as The Field, Pluxus, and Gui Boratto, would seem to us to be absolute hogwash and bandwagon jumping.

It’s our opinion that Kompakt remain supremely relevent, engaged and still on the forefront of a genre they themselves pioneered more than a decade ago. Regardless, we’ve taken it upon ourselves to compile a seemless two hour mixtape of some of Kompakts more recent triumphs to let you decide. Enjoy.

Transient – Pluxus / Beautiful Life – Gui Boratto / Intershop 6 – Dettinger / Brutalga Square – DJ Koze / Der Westenplanet – Markus Guentner / Heroes – Hug / Nitsa Is 11 – Ferenc / Closer Dance – Closer Musik / Align – Mikkel Metal / Estella – DJ Koze / Sandia – Ferenc / Phanto & ghost – Michael Mayer / Gate 7 – Gui Boratto / Tactic without Practice – Hug / Chromophobia – Gui Boratto / Kinoton – Pluxus / Wenn Musik der Liebe Nahrung Ist – Markus Guentner / Kappsta 2 – The Field

 
icon for podpress  Aether Everywhere #17: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download
Written by admin in: AE Radio, Ambient-Techno, Podcasts, Tanner McCuin |
Aug
08
2008
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Due to the request of our attendance at a recent Snake in the Garden show this week Aether Everywhere Radio show (and subsequent podcast) has been delayed for two more weeks. But thanks to a healthy back stock of unreleased AE Podcasts from previous shows along with a personal request from a regular reader I’ve decided to go back to the vault and pull out our show from Last winter focusing on one of my favorite genres – Japanese Psych. What follows is a reprinting of the original post as it appeared on highgatecenter.blogspot.com, enjoy.

Hey everyone. Sorry that it’s taken until now to post the latest Aether Everywhere set and download (Jenny’s been checking her computer every couple of hours, folding her arms, and stomping away), but both Tanner and I had pretty hectic weekends. OK, so mine wasn’t really all that hectic, but since I was recently informed by my supervisor that, no, a hot pink Marc Bolan t-shirt (and the like) is not acceptable attire for work, I had to go get me some new threads.

Aaanyway, this past Thursday, we featured Ghost’s Snuffbox Immanence from 1999. A lot of people consider this to be their “classic” album, and I’d agree with that (although depending on the day, Lama Rabi Rabi gives it a run). We then spun a bunch of like-minded Japanese psych tracks, ranging from Ghost’s side work with Damon and Naomi (the rhythm section of Galaxie 500) to Nobuzaku Takemura, whose Steve Reich-meets-Markus Popp “Kepler” is reminiscent of Snuffbox’s “Daggma.” Hope you enjoy, and tune in Aether Everywhere this Thursday at 10 for some Elephant 6 action! – JOSH

(ps. This is one of my favorite setlists, i love all of these songs, and some of the artists are some of my all time favorite players, do yourself a favor, download this one, pop it into your ipod for that ride on the train, walk in the winter woods, or drive down the coast – also check out my mad photoshop p0Wnage! -tanner)

1) Damon & Naomi w/ Ghost – “I Dreamed of the Caucasus”
2) Keiji Haino – “I Don’t Want To Know”
3) L – “Troll”
4) LSD March – “Kimi Wa Tengoku”
5) Maher Salal Hash Baz – “What’s Your Business Here Elijah?”
6) Susumu Yokota – “Sleepy Eye”
7) Nagisa Ni Te – “Me On The Beach”
8) Boredoms – “(two circles)”
9) Nobukazu Takemura – “Kepler”
10) Boris w/ Michio Kurihara – “Fuzzy Reactor”
11) Masaki Batoh – “Spooky”
12) High Rise – “Outside Gentiles”

 
icon for podpress  AE Podcast #4 - Jap-Psych: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download
Jul
25
2008
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Aether Everywhere #16 – Stereolab.

This weeks AE is a special tribute to one of our all-time favorite music makers, Stereolab – whether they’re kraut-rocking, bossanova-ing, or french-popping they’ve always brought their A-games and a sense of playful experimentation and dedication.

Stereolab have never been a band to shy away from one off singles, bonus disc, limited EPs and tour only offerings. While i’m no completist (and thankfully so) i’ve found myself always out the lookout for another stereolab offering, namely because of the quality of their output and their willingness to experiment (listen to their tracks with Nurse w/ Wound)

I won’t go into all that detail, i’ll let the music speak for me, but rest assured if you enjoy anything you hear on this seamless two hour mix, there is plenty more to be found. As always AE podcasts are free to listen to, download and share, but if you like it, go buy the albums.

DISCUSS IT HERE

1) Trippin’ with the birds [w Nurse w/ wound] 2) Golden Ball 3) Pain et Spectacles 4) I was a sunny rainphase 5)Young Lungs 6) The Free Design 7) Symbolic Logic of Now! 8) K-Stars 9) Allures 10) Margerine Rock 11)Nihilist Assault Group [parts 1-3] 12) Escape Pod (from the world of men) 13) The Black Arts 14) …Sudden Stars 15) Steel drum march of the metal men [with Nurse with Wound] 16) Animal or Vegitable 17) Fench Disko 18) Simple Headphone Mind [with Nurse with Wound] 19) Les Bons Bons Des Raisons 20) Narco Martenot

 
icon for podpress  Aether Everywhere #16: Stereolab [1:53:56m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download
Jun
27
2008
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This weeks AE podcast is one long mix (divided into convenient hour long sets)  covering music from some of Sweden’s greatest psychedelic music makers, all not coincidentally appearing to varying degree, in three seminal outfits spanning from the mid 60’s to the early 70’s.

Starting around 1966 “Parson Sound” came out on the scene – easily the heaviest of the three, the group played huge, revolving walls of sound – thundering drum patterns, shreiking electric violins and guitars, ghostly moans and super blown production. Tracks would shamble in and after 10 minutes of building tension, crumble away.

allmusic described their one (compiled from various sessions 30 years later…) album as “mind-bending music that draws on the Velvet Underground, West Coast psychedelic bands, and Terry Riley and 1960’s minimalism, as filtered through a Krautrock-like angst and with some Swedish folk influences thrown in.”

Next followed (international) Harvester – The lineup remained mostly the same but this time they decided to abandon some of the more alienating elements of Parson sound and focus more on swedish folk roots and a more progressive psychedelic sound, described by someone in the know as “mastodon waltz-drone / acid soaked free jam psychedelia.” pretty apt – very stoned, very hippy – but so very heavy.

After a few years of this arangment the band reformed into their most successful arangment as “Trad Gras Och Stenar” translating to “Trees Grass and Stones”. Stripping back some of the heaviness and distortion Trad Gras opted instead for a more measured sound drawing more from the ongoing west coast psychedelic sound including the extended guitar interplay that bands like the Grateful Dead were popularizing. Though the volume has been dialed down to just under 10, the band still remained true to their vision of anarchic music making, playing at illegal festivals, staging shows at protests and writing their music to incorporate crowd participation.

SET 1: Harvester – Nar Lingonen Mognar // Trad Gras Och Stenar – Dansa Jord // Harvester – Och solen Gar Upp // Trad Gras Och Stenar – Rochtrall // Harvester – Kristallen Den Fina // Harvester – Hemat // Trad Gras Och Stenar – Sommarlaten (previously unreleased extended version) // Parson Sound – Tio Minuter // Trad Gras Och Stenar – Kangbron

SET2: Trad Gras Och Stenar – Halsa Ulla // Parson Sound – India (slight return) // Trad Gras Och Stenar – Chrisboogie // Trad Gras Och Stenar – Drammen export – Sommarlaten // Parson Sound – One Quiet Afternoon (in the king’s Court) // Harvester – Nepal Boogie

COMMENT HERE

 
icon for podpress  Aether Everywhere #15 Set #1: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
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Written by admin in: AE Radio, Heavy-Psych, Podcasts, Tanner McCuin |
May
29
2008
2

Aether Everywhere Podcast #13 – Shoegazing

Aether Everywhere #13Welcome to another installment of the Aether Everywhere Radio show & Podcast – This weeks show Features the entirety of Ride’s now classic Shoegaze barn burner “Nowhere”. While it would seem logical that any show highlighting Shoegaze would focus mainly on that Colossal 900lbs gorilla of Shoegaze “Loveless” I assume anyone who’s interested in the genre has already spent umpteen hours in headphones pouring themselves over Mr. Shield’s genius megablown masterpiece.

So where do you go from there?

Might I suggest, Nowhere. No quite the boiled down wall of sound that the genre would later be defined by – Ride prefer instead to keep the instruments separated in the mix, taking painstaking steps to keep everything apparent even in the midst of some of the greatest psych freakouts this side of the 1980s (Spacemen 3, put your hands down…) – The Melodies are strong and anthemic, and the energy is in the same deep breath airy, driving and Lysergic.

Nowhere is an album as comfortable to be your secret soundtrack in headphones as it is charging out of your car stereo. One tip though – if you’re listening to Nowhere out on the open road, roll down the windows, turn it up – and take it all in. As the title suggests this is music for the moment, fuck the destination. – Tanner

Aether Everywhere #13: Shoegazing

Add your comments here.

1.Chapterhouse – Breather // 2.Jesus & Mary Chain – Sugar Ray // 3.Seefeel – Filter Dub (1-01 Mix) // 4.Slowdive – Souvlaki Space Station // 5.Galaxie 500 – Another Day // 6.Pale Saints – Sight of You // 7.Spiritualized – Sway // 8.Seefeel – Climactic Phase No. 3 // 9.Swervedriver – Duress // 10.My Bloody Valentine – Soon // 11.Ride – Leave them all Behind

Download Aether Everywhere #13


Written by admin in: AE Radio, Podcasts, Shoegaze, Tanner McCuin |
May
15
2008
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Aether Everywhere #12: An Evening Filled With Gas

Yes indeed, boys and girls. For those of you who have read for years about the now-legendary late-90s/early-00s output from Wolfgang Voight’s ambient project, Gas, but have been less than interested in forking over $80 for Pop on Amazon, this is your lucky month. Long out of print, Gas’ four bulletproof albums, Gas, Zauberberg, Konigsforst, and Pop are finally being reissued as a box set and will be released at some point in May (I’m too lazy to google the exact date(-ed I can’t find an exact release date either…)). Voight tapped into something awe-inspiring on these releases, with the majority of his tracks featuring ghostly Wagnerian string and horn samples, an assortment of pops and clicks, and a steady 80 bpm house beat to anchor it all. While this may sound slightly incongruous and simple on paper, it’s nothing short of magical when you slap on a decent pair of headphones.

For the Aether Everywhere radio show, we featured the ‘98 release Zauberberg in its entirety, and followed that with several tracks from Konigsforst and Pop. Pop always seems to be the critical darling of the bunch, which is understandable, as Voight pushed his trademark sound into a more resplendent, accessible realm, but I personally find the other two albums to be right there with it. If your interest is piqued, and you missed out on the absolutely transcendent experince that is Josh-and-Tanner-awkwardly-stumbling over-words-in-a-public-forum, do yourself a favor and check out the podcast we’re supplying (if it’s not here yet, check back shortly), then hightail it down to Pure Pop and scoop up the full albums. Then try to listen to anything else for the next two months…

-josh

Aether Everywhere Podcast #12

direct your comments here

Written by Josh in: AE Radio, Ambient, Josh LaClair, Podcasts |
May
02
2008
3

Aether Everywhere #11

For last night’s radio show, we featured some fantastic minimal techno, courtesy of the Basic Channel/Chain Reaction family. Basic Channel was a production team and label formed in the early ‘90s in Berlin, Germany, and it began as a collaboration between Moritz Von Oswald and Mark Ernestus. The two set out to put a new spin on Detroit techno, infusing it with dubby textures and grainy production that often makes you feel like you’re listening to the music from another room.

Each producer released vinyl-only cuts under various monikers, and some of these tracks were edited and compiled on Basic Channel’s lone self-titled album, released in 1995. That’s what we served up for our first set. The diversity of these tracks is staggering–one minute you’re hearing Manuel Gottsching’s E2-E4 being played from the bottom of a canyon, the next you’d swear you were listening to a lost track from Zuckerzeit-era Cluster. Needless to say, this stuff helped to establish a whole new strain of dance music–you know, the kind you really can’t dance to–and created ripples that can still be detected in some of the best music being released today.

Basic Channel branched off into other notable entities, and probably the most important of these is the Chain Reaction label. For our second set, we included four long tracks, and three of these were culled from artists on Chain Reaction–Monolake, Porter Ricks, and Fluxion. (The fourth artist, Maurizio, is one of the pseudonyms for Von Oswald.) Each track highlights different avenues being explored while still adhering to the minimal dub-techno template established by Basic Channel. If you have a penchant for experimental dance music and interesting production techniques, you’ll be all over this. Check out our second set, and as always, if you like what you hear, track down and buy the albums. Also, feel free to drop us a message–we’re always open to suggestions and feedback. Enjoy the sunny Friday!

Aether Everywhere Podcast #11 – The Basic Channel Family

Written by admin in: AE Radio, Podcasts | Tags:
Apr
25
2008
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Aether Everywhere #2

We’re going to christen the new AE blog with a healthy dose of Motorik -> Space Kraut rock goodness with the Aether Everywhere Radio show’s second episode dedicated to Harmonium and Co.

Harmonia started out as side project for Hans-Joachim Roedelius and Dieter Moebius of Cluster and Michael Rother of Neu!, and on Deluxe, they also prominently featured Guru Guru’s Mani Neumeier on drums. We recommend both this and Musik Von Harmonia, if you haven’t checked them out. Eno loved them, and Bowie’s Berlin-era albums wouldn’t have sounded the same without them.

The download, courtesy of your charitable psychedelic ambassadors:

1) “Girl Call” – Guru Guru UFO / Great opener – starting out slow and building in waves of echoing guitars and Mani Neumeier’s dextrous playing.

2) “Fotschi Song” – Cluster Zuckerzeit/Listen to this and try to remember the last time you heard a song so gracefully kick some ass.

3) “E-Musik” – Neu! Neu! 75/Listen to this and try to remember the last time you heard a song so full-on kick some ass.

4) “Veterno” – Harmonia Musik Von Harmonia/Harmonia’s more stripped down approach, with the drum machine taking center stage and Rother practicing beautiful restraint.

5) “Sunrain” – Ashra New Age of Earth/When the rest of Ash Ra Tempel fell away, Manuel Gottsching pushed on, creating gorgeous cyclical patterns that rivaled the work of his former bandmate and space rock pioneer, Klaus Schulze. This couldn’t be a more perfectly titled song.

6) “Ala Tul” – Agitation Free Malesch/Dear Lord, thank you for making Krautrockers who love them some Terry Riley and Steve Reich. Amen.

7) “Darkness: Flowers Must Die” – Ash Ra Tempel Schwingungen/And just when you thought “E-Musik” kicked the most ass…

8) “Birth of Liquid Plejades” – Tangerine Dream Zeit/Dear Brian Eno, Thank you for taking credit as the inventor of ambient music, even though we put out Zeit in 1972 and you put out Discreet Music in 1975. Love, Tangerine Dream

9) “Universal Band Silhouette” – Jan Jelinek Kosmischer Pitch/This may seem like a bit of a curve ball, considering Jelinek’s a microhouse guy and this was recorded in 2005. For Kosmischer Pitch, though, he decided to assemble his tunes using Krautrock samples, and “Universal Band Silhouette” kicks the album off with hypnotic guitars that would make Michael Rother proud.

10) “Im Garten Der Gemeinschaft” – Popol Vuh Fitzcarraldo/A beautiful cut buried in the soundtrack for a Werner Herzog film about a opera house being built in a South American jungle. Any of the albums Florian Fricke composed for Herzog’s films are worth seeking out.

Aether%20Everywhere%20episode%20%232.mp3

Written by admin in: AE Radio, Podcasts | Tags: , ,

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