02 May 2023: Jethro Tull; Daniel Biro; jarguna

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From Hugh Fielder:

From Christianity to paganism - the Jethro Tull revival continues. Just as it seemed that Tull were fizzling out amid a welter of live albums, orchestral albums and anniversary reissues, not to mention lan Anderson solo albums (confusingly using the same musicians) that picked at the bones of Tull's past, the band have been reborn as a viable contemporary outfit.

Their 2022 album The Zealot Gene, themed around verses from the Bible, restored Jethro Tull to the UK Top 10 album chart for the first time since Thick As A Brick back in '72. Now, just over a year later, Tull are back with RökFlöte which has forsaken the Bible in favour of the paganism of Norse mythology, a more popular rock'n'roll inspiration that has given rise to a whole musical genre.

But anyone expecting a death metal album from Jethro Tull is going to be disappointed. Ian Anderson is more interested in the characters and the cruelty that proliferate amid the myths and sagas of the Norse lands than in the comic-book manifestations that the subtlety-free death metal bands suck up so eagerly.

What's surprising is that Anderson can kick up more menace with his flute than any number of hoarse roaring voices and thrashing guitars. Rökflöte opens – and closes –with some metal-sounding flute feedback that makes for a chilling atmosphere. On the opening Voluspo, that's followed by a ponderous theme to underscore the portentous implications of the prophecy that lies at the heart of Norse mythology.

Anderson introduces the family of Nordic gods-including the one-eyed Odin and his son Thor whose murderous exploits make up the various sagas-with a seemingly inexhaustible supply of themes and melodies that are every bit as descriptive as his lyrics. And his flute playing has reached a maturity that enables him to capture the complexity he uncovers in Thor's character, on Hammer On Hammer, while also making a lyrical allusion to Putin. Likewise the howl he produces on his flute at the beginning of Wolf Unchained is more effective than the real thing, hinting at the carnal power that makes the image of the wolf so disturbing,

The music lightens up when Anderson moves on to the sagas themselves, but the intricacies remain. As do the idiosyncratic allusions - such as the Mae West flotation jackets worn by the pilots who protected Britain during World War Two that crop up in Guardian's Watch, a song about those who protect the gods.

Daniel Biro (born 1963 in Johannesburg, South Africa) is a London-based keyboard composer, keyboard player, improvisor, and producer. Stylistically, Biro's music is a combination of his early influences (70s jazz-rock, Berlin-style cosmic synths, ECM label-style jazz, Motown soul and West-coast rock) with more experimental ambient electronic minimalism. As an improvisor, Biro specializes in exploring the sonic depths of the Rhodes piano and vintage analog synthesizers, with which he performs regularly.

 Daniel Biro:    Synthrospections are improvised solo keyboard performances. No music is prepared in advance and nothing is pre-programmed apart from the initial sound of each keyboard. It’s all about capturing ‘in the moment’ ideas, warts and all, and retaining the original structural flow of the event.

Once recorded, I slightly edit some of the too obvious ‘warts’ and give the ensemble a decent mix. No other instrument layers are added, even though that would sometimes enhance the music, and every idea is kept in the chronological order in which it appeared during the improvisation.

My aim is to play. Not press ‘Play’. To play my keyboards in real time without any constraints. To allow myself to find, as opposed to look for, musical ‘objects’ and explore them for a while until the next idea comes along. An instant composition creating itself.

I have no pre-conceived idea of which musical genre to inhabit. Categories are irrelevant. Things can go from very melodic tunes to experimental atonality, from groove-based jazziness to ambient soundscapes. All the music that is inside me is given an equal opportunity to emerge.

My keyboards are an eclectic mix of vintage and new. Each instrument has its strengths and character (which sometimes includes not working properly…). The unpredictability of tweaking synths in real time is part of the fun. For these recordings I don’t use any computer-based instruments or plug-ins. No mouse-clicking. Pedal loopers are used to ‘freeze’ some ideas into spur-of-moment backdrops on which I can build.

Improvising is a fine balance between being in control and giving up that control. Being a composer and being an interpreter. Trying and not trying. Thinking and not thinking. Obviously this can be risky as one can get stuck in a place where nothing very interesting is happening. Or have playing mistakes ruin a good bit (that’s where the editing comes in…). But using mistakes as sparks for new ideas is inherent in the quick-thinking improvisational process. It’s a dangerous path. But that’s the challenge: to jump off the cliff and hope you’ll levitate.
 

credits

released May 25, 2021; complimentary copy provided by Daniel Biro
All music written, recorded and produced by Daniel Biro

Recorded live for Soundcellar livestream concert on May 6th 2021 at the DB Studio, London.
alternative jazz fusion progressive rock ambient electronic electronic experimental electronic synth synthesisers London

 


In the words of jarguna

I’ve been wanting to make an album like this for some time. The sound searches for pure drones, introspective textures, absent from time and space, recall when I was looking for these sounds with my first synthesizer (Korg M1), around 1993. The biggest evolution has certainly been the experience during many productions, this is the 48th, but over the years I have also enriched my instrumentation, and since 2014 I have started assembling my modular synthesizer. These sounds come above all from this instrument, research but also spontaneity, a free flow of introspective energy, textures that try to make me enter a cathartic, meditative mood, at times light, suspended, floating, at other times, abysmal, material, dark and restless.

Some tracks of the album make a clear reference to some psycho-active substances, more romantically called entheogens. It is a story almost as old as man, to the point that some cultures have developed behind some of these substances, even becoming sacred for some cults, transforming the perception of reality and hypothesizing structures or entity of other dimensions. The deception of the senses has always been one of my favourite themes, an impudent art that seeks by all means to make people understand that man interfaces with the world only and thanks to his sense organs, but what if these organs were altered, like a radio picking up other frequencies?

credits

released April 13, 2023
Our thanks to Raffaele Pezzella for the complimentary copy of this release.

REVIEWS

Avant Music News
avantmusicnews.com/2023/04/16/amn-reviews-jarguna-explorations-of-the-unconscious-2023-reverse-alignment/



Marco Billi, aka jarguna, born in Florence (1973), is a constant traveller. He visited Nepal, China, India, Indonesia, and in 2001, took a trip of research along the Amazon. He meets the local people and engages in a study of their music-symbolic rituals and shamanic medicine, studies the characteristics and performs direct and indirect experiences through rituals and meditations. Going through all these experiences, he understands how the simplest sounds as well as complex music structures, may play a beneficial and therapeutic role. Agreements and frequencies, may intervene by acting on the entire body, involving mind and body, and also acting on the subtler planes. The relationship between music and the environment remains focused in the soul of jarguna.



Published by Reverse Alignment
Music by jarguna
Mastering by Raffaele Pezzella
Cover Design by jarguna
© 2023. All rights reserved
ambient dark dark ambient drone ambient industrial post-industrial Sweden

25 April 2023: Celebrating the new release from the Kurt Michaels Continuum: "Stones From the Garden"

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The first half of tonight's show will feature the Kurt Michaels Continuum recent release, Stones From The Garden, in its entirety.   Just released this month, this releases showcases Kurt's songwriting and musicianship in a variety of styles.  He is joined by a number of guest musicians including Billy and Michael Sherwood and Amanda Lehman.  The second half of the show will focus on his more ambient tracks from his first two releases, Inner Worlds and Outer Worlds.

We are proud to welcome Kurt back to FreeForm - we featured his first release, Inner Worlds, a collection of ambient pieces back in 2003; this new release really showcases his songwriting skills.

From the liner notes:
 
Stones From The Garden by Kurt Michaels Continuum (April 2023) The long awaited follow up to Soaring Back To Earth....a harder hitting collection of newly penned originals that include guest appearances by Billy Sherwood (Yes), Michael Sherwood (Sammy Davis Jr, Toto and The Monkees), Amanda Lehmann (Steve Hackett), John Abbey (John Cale) and Dennis Johnson (Survivor, Dennis DeYoung & Chase)

And here’s what a few folks had to say about the music:

“Kurt is a class act...and like a friendly port in the storm, he is always a welcome sight to behold. His innovative creations speak for themselves” Denny Laine (Moody Blues and Paul McCartney & Wings)

“For those of you who like old school massive rock production Brit style” Jack Douglas (Producer John Lennon, Patti Smith and Aerosmith)

“I’ve worked with Kurt in the past and quickly discovered that he is a true artiist. Caring for music and composition the way it should be....he has a great sound I’d recommend to any music lover.” Billy Sherwood (Yes & Asia)

“This is truly a strong “progressive” piece of music, with a really good memorable melody and captivating words. Easy to follow, nice feel to it and wonderful “musical” vocals...highly recommended by me! Annie Haslam (Renaissance) about “I’m In Love With That Dream”
“Listening to your music I feel like I am back in London England on Oxford Street at AIR studios with Sir George Martin.
 
Very Nice music!” Ralphe Armstrong (Mahavishnu Orchestra & Aretha Franklin)

“Prog love! Cool concepts, lots of textures and some nice chordal twists and turns.” CJ Vanston (film composer Spinal Tap, songwriter & producer: Toto, Spinal Tap, Joe Cocker &Def Leppard)

Kurt Michaels Continuum is the platform of creative musical expression for Chicago based singer/songwriter/guitarist Kurt Michaels. A touring veteran who has played with or shared a stage and/or contracted musicians for legendary rock icons, including: Spencer Davis, Joey Molland (Badfinger), Denny Laine (Moody Blues & Paul McCartney/Wings), Ike Willis (Frank Zappa), The Babys, Carl Palmer (Emerson Lake & Palmer), Carl Verheyen (Supertramp), Tom Brislin (Kansas), Chris Squire & Alan White (Yes), Wolfman Jack, Otis Day, The Drifters, Coasters & Platters, Fabian, Dickey Lee, Temptations, Bobby Vinton and others....


Venues performed at include Wire, SPACE in Evanston, Mayne Stage, Reggies, Chicago Theater, Shank Hall, Bloomington Center For The Performing Arts, GSU Performing Arts Center, Park West, Raue Center, Northlight Theater @ Potowatomi Casino and many others....


Discography


Inner Worlds part one by Kurt Michaels (Eitux Records - 2003) debut solo studio release of
atmospheric/instrumental/electronic music sprinkled with guitar . all instruments: Kurt Michaels


 

 
Outer Worlds by Kurt Michaels (Umbrello Records -2007) a live compilation of improvised guitar-based soundscape
duets, as accompanied by Jim Gully, Michael Cosentino and John Melnick



Soaring Back To Earth by Kurt Michaels (Self Released 2011) a diverse collection of harmonically inventive original rock songs with narratives that reflect adult themes. Includes guest appearances by Billy Sherwood (Yes), Tom Brislin (Kansas) and Michael Sherwood (Sammy Davis Jr, Toto and The Monkees)


 


Action Moves People (2013) A spoken word compilation celebrating unity and universal love. Includes Kurt Michaels’ “Moments Like These. Other artists contributing to this project included John Wetton (King Crimson/UK/Asia). A comment from Paul Simon: “I whole heartedly support the producers’ excellent efforts, which were put into the album,
Action Moves People. I think it is well done, promoting a better future for everyone, and I’m all for that.”


18 April 2023: Tone Science Module No.7 Cause and Effect (DiN:TS07); Algarnas Tradgard; Helecho Experimentar

 

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The music you hear on tonight's show is available on the artists' Bandcamp pages and websites. (links below) 

We urge you to support the musicians you hear on FreeForm Radio.

I also host the Rural Electric (Mostly) Country Music show Tuesday from 7-9 pm ADT


Tone Science sub-label, from DiN records, continues to explore the world of modular synth music with Tone Science Module No.7: Cause and Effect.

Following the success and critical acclaim of the first six Tone Science compilation albums, 
DiN label boss Ian Boddy has collated another nine tracks from musicians of varying backgrounds working in the realms of modular synthesis.

One of the things that is so delightful about artists working with modular synthesisers is the sheer variety of styles on show. These instruments more than any other can be personalised for each musician who can then express themselves within their own sonic world.

This volume starts with a pair of beautiful, texturally detailed sequenced tracks “Abalone Vortex” 
by Andrea Cichecki and “Tempestarius” by Chris Meyer which form a natural pairing that create a melodic, calm opening.

“Dim Rill” by Rodent enters a more mysterious zone with mesmerising bell like tones that bounce around in the stereo field before yielding to the rising harmonic motif of “Flutter” from Dark Sparkler that promises resolution but ultimately falls back into mystery.

The mid-point of this volume sees Blakmoth take the music sonically into a very deep, dark place with a huge slab of dread that is “Of Ash And Sorrow”. Counterbalancing the first four tracks it sets up the audio space for the remainder of the album.

The next three pieces see a more heavily sequenced space emerge with definite echoes of the Berlin School ethos that was instrumental in inspiring so many modular synth artists. No more so than on “Pareidolia” by Brendan Pollard with its groaning, spring reverb clatter in its opening that gradually coalesces into a throbbing analogue bass line. “Hecataea” by Andrew Ostler and
“A Hopeless Momentum” by James Cigler complete this trio of sequenced tracks with varying layers of complexity and harmonic exploration.

The album floats away into space as it closes with the track “Near Earth” by Jon Palmer. Inspired by the weird and wonderful abstract sounds on the long wave radio band this impressionistic soundscape fades to an eerie signal mournfully calling in the void.

“Tone Science Module No.7 Cause and Effect” continues the journey down the rabbit hole of possibilities and sound worlds inhabited by artists and musicians working in this ever fascinating and varied musical field.
 

credits

releases April 21, 2023

Andrea Cichecki - Abalone Vortex - 7:39
The Abalone gemstone is said to be healing, have soothing powers and to relieve anxiety or stress. It promotes compassion, love and can help in emotional times.
andreacichecki.com

2) Chris Meyer - Tempestarius - 7:30
The Tempestarii were magicians who could summon storms at will. This track gave me the opportunity to blend my Berlin School roots with my current Tribal Ambient pursuits.
aliaszone.com

3) Rodent - Dim Rill - 5:15
In the woods of the Pisgah, moving in and upstream, only the last lights of the day are with me. My wet steps drown out the thoughts of home.
instagram.com/rodent516

4) Dark Sparkler - Flutter - 6:45
This is a stormy shipwreck of a patch, with siren calls and turbulent water. It eventually gets washed ashore.
darksparkler.bandcamp.com

5) Blakmoth - Of Ash And Sorrow - 6:30
A strain about pain, a constant like darkness that consumes everything. Hope is a flame pushing back at the darkness. It burns until only soot remains.

blakmoth.bandcamp.com

6) Brendan Pollard - Pareidolia - 8:23
A Berlin School inspired study in perception of cyclical variation utilising a large 5U modular system and sequencer units.
brendanpollard.bandcamp.com

7) Andrew Ostler - Hecataea - 7:23
Three aspects of modular - drones, sequences, and audio processing - all wrapped around a bespoke tuning (7/6, 6/5, 4/3, 3/2, 9/5, 20/11, 2/1).
andrew-ostler.bandcamp.com

8) James Cigler - A Hopeless Momentum - 8:30
A relentless chain of days, always evolving, yet, always feeling the same. A treadmill instead of untrodden land. But look back. We have traveled a long way.
youtube.com/jamescigler

9) Jon Palmer - Near Earth - 6:40
Until recently, the bottom end of the longwave radio band was full of beacons and other signals producing a weird, slightly melancholy soundscape. The unspoken voices of the Earth. 

ambient andrea cichecki andrew ostler blakmoth brendan pollard chris meyer dark sparkler em electronic electronic music electronica james cigler jon palmer rodent tone science modular synth Sunderland

 


Älgarnas Trädgård were a psychedelic and progressive rock band from Sweden[1] which is found on the Nurse With Wound list.

In 1972, they released Framtiden är ett svävande skepp, förankrat i forntiden. More recently, in 2001, archived recordings from 1974 were released under the album title Delayed

Älgarnas Trädgård biography
Founded in Gothenburg, Sweden in 1969 - Disbanded in 1976

ÄLGARNAS TRÄDGÅRD are a seminal, 6-piece Swedish combo who made one album in 1972, a cult classic and masterpiece of psychedelia that could have come straight out of the 'Kraut' school of Space Rock. After the release of their album, they kept on playing live for a while, even recording a full album's worth of new material in 1973-74. But it wasn't until 2001 that this material was mixed and released, on a cd entitled "Delayed".

Their 1972 classic, "Framtiden ar ett Svavande Skepp, Forankrat I Forntiden", is a veritable testimony to the halcyon days of hippiedom - a time when grown men, like children playing with forbidden colours, were popping hallucinogenic bonbons and experimenting with psychedelic sounds in their quest for mind-expanding adventures and altered states of consciousness. However, ÄLGARNAS TRÄDGÅRD's music never lapses into drugged-out silliness or aimless noodling. It ranges from earnest, to Medieval, to completely creepy - a sort of 'RIO meets folk'. They concoct some earthly (and unearthly) sounds using a combination of traditional, modern rock instruments and ethnic/archaic ones, the result being a spectacular blend of slow-smoking psychedelia with a strong vernacular Swedish folk bent. Their guitar-based, trance-like music is reminiscent of ASH RA TEMPEL; it also shares GONG's organic mayhem and the hypnotic qualities of early TANGERINE DREAM. If you can imagine a Nordic version of AMON DÜÜL II or ASH RA TEMPEL, you'll have a pretty good idea of what they sound like. The 2001 cd "Delayed", which makes heavier use of drums and guitars, is yet another marvellously atmospheric and creative mixture of prog and psychedelia.

Highly recommended for Krautrock aficionados as well as for fans of CAN and PINK FLOYD, circa "Ummagumma".
 


For the final section of the show, we'll hear the experimental ambient sounds of Helicho Experimentar's release: Hostil

released March 3, 2023

Todos los temas grabados, mezclados y masterizados por Helecho Experimentar
Track 05 Feto Defecto Voz: Pablo Darío Martín Fontana ( Nei Ming)
neiming.bandcamp.com/album/w-m-ng

Diciembre 2541... Rosario( Argentina)
De las entrañas del ego q vomita la furia unicelular del individuo en llamas, la máquina análoga experimenta el hecho, escupiendo a través del Mosco Dantesco 8 vidas q vociferan gritos indesifrables en su Cualquiera... Cualquiera
Helecho Experimentar

https://revistathe13th.blogspot.com/2023/03/lanzamiento-helecho-experimentar-hostil.html 

11 April 2023: Ryuichi Sakamoto Tribute

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Tonight's show is a tribute to composer Ryuichi Sakamoto.  The first half of the show will showcase his early electronic compositions; the second half will be devoted to his Academy Award winning soundtrack for The Last Emperor.



 

Ryuichi Sakamoto (Japanese: 坂本 龍一[a], Hepburn: Sakamoto Ryūichi, January 17, 1952 – March 28, 2023) was a Japanese composer, record producer, and actor who pursued a diverse range of styles as a solo artist and as a member of Yellow Magic Orchestra (YMO). With his bandmates Haruomi Hosono and Yukihiro Takahashi, Sakamoto influenced and pioneered a number of electronic music genres.[1]

Sakamoto began his career while at university in the 1970s as a session musician, producer, and arranger. His first major success came in 1978 as co-founder of YMO. He concurrently pursued a solo career, releasing the experimental electronic fusion album Thousand Knives in 1978. Two years later, he released the album B-2 Unit. It included the track "Riot in Lagos", which was significant in the development of electro and hip hop music.[2][3][4] He went on to produce more solo records, and collaborate with many international artists, David Sylvian, Carsten Nicolai, Youssou N'Dour, and Fennesz among them. Sakamoto composed music for the opening ceremony of the 1992 Barcelona Olympics,[5] and his composition "Energy Flow" (1999) was the first instrumental number-one single in Japan's Oricon charts history.[6]

As a film score composer, Sakamoto won an Oscar, a BAFTA, a Grammy, and two Golden Globe Awards. Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence (1983) marked his debut as both an actor and a film-score composer; its main theme was adapted into the single "Forbidden Colours" which became an international hit. His most successful work as a film composer was The Last Emperor (1987),[7] after which he continued earning accolades composing for films such as The Sheltering Sky (1990), Little Buddha (1993), and The Revenant (2015). On occasion, Sakamoto also worked as a composer and a scenario writer on anime and video games. He was awarded the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres from the Ministry of Culture of France in 2009 for his contributions to music.[8]

 

04 April 2023: King Crimson, Jethro Tull, Dev-I-Ant

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Larks' Tongues in Aspic

King Crimson
 

Larks' Tongues in Aspic is the fifth studio album by the English progressive rock group King Crimson, released on 23 March 1973 through Island Records in the UK and Atlantic Records in the United States and Canada. This album is the debut of King Crimson's third incarnation, featuring co-founder and guitarist Robert Fripp along with four new members: bass guitarist and vocalist John Wetton, violinist and keyboardist David Cross, percussionist Jamie Muir, and drummer Bill Bruford. It is a key album in the band's evolution, drawing on Eastern European classical music and European free improvisation as central influences. 

Bill Martin wrote in 1998, "[f]or sheer formal inventiveness, the most important progressive rock record of 1973 was... Larks' Tongues in Aspic", adding that listening to this album and Yes's Close to the Edge will demonstrate "what progressive rock is all about".[17]

In the Q & Mojo Classic Special Edition Pink Floyd & The Story of Prog Rock, the album came number 22 in its list of "40 Cosmic Rock Albums".[18]

Larks' Tongues in Aspic comes in at #20 in Rolling Stone's "50 Greatest Prog Rock Albums of All Time" list.[19]

The album is featured in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.[20]

 


The Zealot Gene is the 22nd studio album by the British rock band Jethro Tull, released on 28 January 2022 by Inside Out Music.[2][3] Nearly five years in production, it is their first studio album since The Jethro Tull Christmas Album (2003), and their first of all original material since J-Tull Dot Com (1999), marking the longest gap between the band's studio albums.

The album entered the UK Albums Chart at number 9, becoming Jethro Tull's first UK top ten album since 1972. 

The Zealot Gene is not a concept album, but biblical references are made throughout and Anderson began writing each song with a passage from the Bible.[6] "Mrs. Tibbets" references the mother of Paul Tibbets, the pilot of the Enola Gay who dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima in 1945. The title track was inspired partly by the rise in right-wing populism "and how extremist views seem to spread more freely and everything gets more exaggerated – sometimes through news stories, and some from ferocious tweets."[6] Anderson said that "Mine Is the Mountain" is not a reflection of his own view, but rather about seeing God as a victim and the "desperation of man to create this figurehead, and in human form, because that’s the only way we can understand it."

 


Canadian duo Devin Sabatini and Anthony Prugo are the artistic minds behind the dark ambient project Dev-I-Ant. Their creations take inspiration from a mutual love for horror films and soundtracks, as well as from the industrial and dark ambient music of past decades. The two enjoy collaborating up north in a cabin in the woods where they recorded the album "Progression Of The Wolf".

credits

released March 23, 2023

Written & Performed by Devin Sabatini
Lyrics by Anthony Prugo
Published by Reverse Alignment
Mastered by Simon Heath
Cover Design by Tyler Serr
© 2023. All rights reserved
ambient dark dark ambient drone ambient industrial post-industrial Sweden