private      Vole : Radio 1 (UK,2007)***'

Vole is a mysterious outfit of musicians, who compiled here some recordings from their radio and internet broadcasts from their own local radioshow on radio 4A Brighton. We hear 7 short tracks between 1 and 3 and a half minutes only, cut out fragments of what I assume came from longer improvisations or perhaps just one or two sessions. The tracks fit well with one another, but perhaps don’t flow enough into eachother to give enough the feeling of a concept, an idea or a mindful structure. And although the individual tracks show great moments, they often end abruptly. All improvisations have soft percussions, are rather moody and calm sound-and harmonic explorative free jazz styled, with a possible portion of acid.

First track is played by something what sounds like trumpet, sitar, cowbells, cups and plastic dishes. It abruptly stops before it almost started. Track two is build from what seems like background talk on tape, experimental acoustic and electronic sound manipulations or is this looped fast bass percussion, with a trumpets and sax improvisation. Track 3 shows calm madmen vocal sounds, percussion with a vibrating pencil, screaming-like-a-scraping-throat-vocals sax, and the calm crushing of plastic cups. This also stops abruptly just when it started to build towards something promising. Was this the only perfect moment in it ? Track 4 is played by and improvised with trumpet, sax, percussion, flute, with a mood of opening up space, near the ground, but also ends quickly. Track 5 is played by sax, trumpet, and cello, in a nice and free improvisation. Track 6 and 7 are nice continuations. We hear a flute improvisation, organ-kind of sounds breathing, and pulsating its way through, and some piano. Last track is performed by lots of percussion, harmonica, calm madmen (again!) breathing vocals, bass tones, and a sax used to make wind bubbles. Strange, and nice. Now the next thing would be to bring such recordings or kind of improvisations into one big construction, and let them roll their course.

Homepage & audio : http://www.vole.info/ & http://www.myspace.com/vole 
& EP info & audio : http://www.vole.info/vr1.html & http://cdbaby.com/cd/vole
& http://musicishere.com/artists/Vole/Vole_Radio_1_E.P
1.URCKarm Rec.      Hop-Frog's Drum Jester Devotional : Chants de Sewage (US,2007)**°°

5. This album starts very interestingly in a semi-middle Eastern/North African feeling, with a singing sample, and an improvisation in two layers of some primitive bowed instrument, with colourful fitting percussion, one note piano touches and certain high tone pitches, as textures first. Also used are more samples of Arab singing. The whole piece is hypnotic & rather psychedelic. There is some spoken word added as well. What is very clever is that the music from then on constantly changes and moves from acoustic sounds to processed sounds until it sounds like produced electronic music, in a similar natural way. Somewhere and suddenly an acoustic guitar theme leads a next part, until the belly dance bells, guitar- and tabla rhythms are being processed like I just described. Only in the end, where more political spoken word is added (the building up of the war history), the music moves less with this thought on stagnancies in certain political evolutions, and it becomes more simple with it.

Audio : sample 1, sample 2
More info on the limited releases : http://www.hop-frog.com/urckltdseries.htm
Info : http://www.hop-frog.com/URCKDRUMJESERCHANTS.html


2.URCKarm Rec.      The Master Musicians of Hop-Frog : Centuries Later (US,rec.2004,pub.2007)***°

6. With this title the group seem to refer to their music as if they are conscious of their past lives in a different ethnic group, as if they are remembering their previous Nomad music. This time they play it in a different time, and have their hands on electric guitars, electronic rhythms and rhythmical processes, which they use, like often, to start with in semi-Middle eastern modes, in combination with whistle improvisations, acoustic percussion, glockenspiel and harmonica (“poison well”). The guitars start to roar, with some distortion, some Arab vocal sample comes in, the percussion becomes heavier, brooding and the music brilliantly moves again between acoustic and electronically processed music, rhythmically only like a belly dance for the mind, transforming its general sound harmonies in somewhat acoustic sequences between two worlds (“come and see”. With Indian tabla, acoustic guitar rhythms, spoken word, violin, the additional electronica sound as if becoming the sound format of an aquarium, while the track forms itself into a new kind of world beat music with a tendency to become abstract and organic too (“Jilala across the sky”). The words “LSD is the spiritual antidote to the atom bomb” like a few other sayings can be heard on “Limily Partitians”. “Greensleeves” is a rather fun track, because it uses this tune on keyboards, as well as an Irish folk dance in a different keyboard mode, while the watery sequences continue like nonsense. Last tracks are build up more than before on the rhythms, samples, loops and spoken word, and the last track even the use of dub echoes.

The Masters are E.Loi on guitar, programming, keyboards, effects ; Carl F.Off on bass, synthesizers, accordion, vocals, been, effects ; Hermit The Flog on synthesizers, vocals, accordion, chrismas bells, effects ; David Hazelton on clarinet, synthesizers, percussion ; Thee Honeytwin : vocals on two tracks ; Nancy Blake : flute ; Benjamin Mahoney on guitar, sytnh, effects ; Paul Glenn Clabough : throat swinger ; Robert “Goger” Emery : violin and effects and Blakey and Colin : vocal noises.

Audio : "Poison Well", "Jilala Across the Sky", "Limey Partitions", "The Cherries of Persia"
More info on the limited releases : http://www.hop-frog.com/urckltdseries.htm
Info : http://www.hop-frog.com/urckreleasesCenturiesLater.htm

Another album from the label with more related music is reviewed on next page->
New American Folk Hero    Mike Tamburo : Language of the birds and other fantasies -7cdr- (US,2007)***°?

This box contains 7 black CDRs and one DVD. I constantly delayed reviewing these discs seriously. It simply is too much music to find a gap of time for, big enough to listen and review in one stroke, so I decided to review one album at a time instead. It was already clear to me how Mike Tamburo masters a great guitar playing and combines this often with harmonic drones.

CD1, “A Fine Line on the Throne Of Time” (2CDR)***°

1. **** Using additional “harmonic drones” is a much too simple a description compared to what exactly happens here in this release. Mike Tamuro beautifully blends all kinds of ideas coming forth from harmonic vibrations from strings, amplified, resonating or acoustic, to blend this neatly, like shadows that follow the improvisations with the pickings (arpeggios and melodic evolutions) and slides. Some accompanying sounds are like stretched in time variables of string sounds and noises, there are sounds of irons and bells and delays, but all very intelligently evolve from the organic environment of what has been played. One small sound improvisation created a soundscape of string sounds, new music that could accompany a moody part in a science fiction movie, a new world with machine-like organic movements, just like a small experimental music part. There’s a passage with dulcimer improvisations, where John Fahey and old blues just looks here and there over the shoulder, and around the corner. An album alone worth the purchase & publication on a full release. Even the experimental part shows much more quality and vivid variation compared to the average release in the field.

2. *** This second disc sounds more improvised and experimental, more like a giant bonus track in different sections, built from resonating guitar mostly, which are at one time becoming like flutes, echoing a lot, with hypnotic and slumbering parts, and with several picking assemblations, some slide ideas to complete the sonic explorations. 

CD2, "Language of the birds" (CDR)***'

This second 8-track album consists of solo 6-string compositions and improvisations recorded in three different places. At first listen, I felt a bit lost with them, being not technical enough to understand all moves, and not being sure what they are really expressing, except for being just themselves, pickings that are constantly changing and developing and moving, walking endlessly, continuing to bring me further and further, with no restrictions. There is almost a constant change (with little theme repetitions & turns to make more clear orientation points). There are some brilliant moves but as content in the composition it remains as having the effect of a grey veil over the expressed area, when not showing clearly its conscious directions or change or underlying structure that uplifts this obviously talented game to a sort of more human reality to visualize. Also a second listen didn’t give me this yet, but I still very much appreciated the dreamy trance-walking effect of it. I shouldn't try to figure out the language of the birds too much. It doesn’t need any effort to just enjoy their presence of the moment. There’s wasn’t any moment that didn’t maintain the same sort of listening attention. It is as if John Fahey just stopped adding any references in his music and just tripped out...

This acoustic guitar picking album review also exists on http://psychedelicfolk.homestead.com/guitar11.html

CD3, "Don't leave your bones in my back yard" (CDR)***

Like the previously reviewed CDR, also this album hangs in sound well together, and sounds as if it is intentionally built up this way, the 5 tracks (of which some are pretty long) are recorded on 4 different occasions. This time it is an experimental album, which is based upon moody droning string soundscape improvisations mostly (6-string guitar, chime, bow, tuning fork, gamelan wind, chimes, metal objects, electric guitar, bow, effects) as well as dulcimer.  I will describe a bit what happens. Track 1 is built from oscillating amplified guitar mixed with harmonic drones of strings (high notes as well as bass), like a moody intro. The second track is divided in sections where each time different instruments are used : echoing strings forming loops, then cowbell-like sounds played as if on windchimes, then hammered dulcimer with some bell tones, then droning echoing baritone vocal mumblings that become waves of sounds, with some additional higher toned drone sounds that become an abstract world,  then echoing guitar notes, slowly adding new moody tones, a sphere that becomes a new organic mood, with two layers, to end with some oscillating sounds, like on the first track. The third track more is like echoing sounds that are mixed with changed speeds so that the effect becomes like an abstract sound of ghosts and windy & watery moving rivers in tubes with some loose material drained with it. Then it moves more rhythmically, but remains a sonic format of organic blurry water. The 4th track is a dulcimer solo, loosely played, then with more clear picking notes, softened and more loose again, before returning to a drone area with some notes involved. The fifth and last track returns thoroughly back to the world of sounds with which the album started. It consists of small and slow echoing notes on amplified guitar and droning notes on the same guitar, which note for note finds its soundscape, adds some oscillations, and with two layers of recordings finds a world of its own.

CD4, "In the present the past keeps haunting" (CDR)



review will be added later



CD5, "Of Faith and Joy and Happiness" (CDR)



review will be added later



CD6, "Jade is the color of my true love's fate" (CDR)



review will be added later



DVD : "Persistent Visions Volume One" (DVDR)**°

I also watched the DVD, with 5-6 abstract art-soundtrack movies and two direct live recordings. On these art-soundtracks, this is mostly a play with light effects. On the first one, the images pass by like an old film with stripes, scratches and light effects, in colour, as if this also is a painting in motions. Another movie was based upon an irregular metallic plate that reflects light. A third movie showed simple and simplistic kaleidoscopic visions. Another movie showed a colour negative of a person who scratches his body, then moves slightly off screen, while the camera vision is positioned directly on a wall, just above a person’s presence. Last two live tracks, seeing Mike Tamburo perform, gives more vision and insight on how he builds up his music and how this looks like during a live concert. Now it is much clearer to me how he adds all these effects, on this occasion to an acoustic/amplified guitar mostly. Of course the tendency of such an approach that it becomes one-minded linear, happens this way very easily. My earlier comments saying that I missed a more clear compositional structure in the pickings, still remains present. Also, sounds like drones at a live concert seems a lazier creation, than just hearing the results on CD, when not being distracted by the limitations of movements with the material, while on the other hand the material at hand actually also increased the possibilities of its production.

Limited to 250 copies.

Audio : "Dance Enis Dance" & on http://www.myspace.com/tamburo
Info : http://www.musicfellowship.com/mf33.html
Homepage : http://www.miketamburo.com/
Info on Mike Tamburo : http://virb.com/miketamburo
Descriptions on http://www.mimaroglumusicsales.com/... & http://www.musicfellowship.com/mf33.html
Other reviews : http://www.terrascope.co.uk/Reviews/Reviews_August07.htm#Tamburo & http://www.dwacres.com/node/1452
Strange Attractors       Plants : Photosynthesis (US,2007)**'

These Oregon based Plants don’t move their compositions much : loops, sounds, songs, layers, all hang around tiny one points of where these “plant”-tracks grow. Around a more sleep-consuming core, of combined layers that make a blurry sound of overlapping harmonies, making an association with drones, there’s also some playtime of acoustic instruments (flutes, guitars, banjo and semi-acoustic), dual vocals and songs, that hang around the created web like fresh dewdrops. This is psychedelia, and still it is not. While the repetitive, loop-and drone-like elements are stagnant, the inspiration around it doesn’t bring us too far away from this hanging around tiny spots of vague inspirations. The only difference with many groups who record similarly, is that this is recorded professionally.

Audio : links will be added later
Homepage : http://www.plantsmusic.com/ & with audio : http://www.myspace.com/plants
Label info : http://www.strange-attractors.com/catalog/saah051.html
Other review : http://www.scaruffi.com/vol7/plants.html#pho
ACID FOLK REVIEW PAGE 18 : IMPROVISED EXPERIMENTAL FOLK

US : Sephiroth's Knot/ Jow, Jow The Death Knell Rung, Mu, Plants, Mike Tamburo (2x)
Hop Frog's Refrigerator Mothers_&_Drum Jester Devotional (6 x) ; UK : Vole ; N :  Origami Arktika



More rather exp.folk on the next review page ->

or go back to psych-folk index
or go back to general index




private   Sephiroth's Knot : Magic of the opening Eye (US,2006)**°'

1. Sephiroth's Knot is a big group (I read somewhere a 12+ ??) freak and free jam collective, partly psychfolk and partly noise, partly experimental. The first EP's two first tracks are completely acoustic and with a wide eye-view on infinity. Third track is semi-acoustic unreasons and meditative unrest noise on guitars and metal strings with a bit of electronic keyboard waves, an industrial improvisation of disorganizing orders in chaos, as trash becoming organic. The track reaches freightning proportions of industrial unpeace, like revolting ghosts from broken apart rusted machines. The organ and electronic keyboards waves thoroughly take over the sound mass changing it into a more melodic infinity to conclude with. Last track is more a moody half-sleeping consciousness experimental music track, with keyboards waves, percussion on trash cans or with keys, voices mumbling or celebrating, and one-note chime drones. Here the collective as a group makes the composition. Last track is also experimental : crazy voices, an overload of jam debility, and a steady jam rhythm and bass, keyboards trying to pull the strings, the complex strings which are overloaded with knots. Now, the Sephiroth’s knots become like points of concentration, and the chaos disappears once more into the collective’s consciousness, creating a mood, pulling all sounds into the (self-)organizing organicness of the evolution.


private   Jow Jow, The Death Knell Rung (US,2006)***°

2. This release really shows the collective force. Starting in a condition close to chaos and complete disharmony, the collective succeeds to create different, moody sections of inspirations, from acoustic psych song and improvisation (with a female vocalist and acoustic guitar) over more experimental, rather industrial music like with rubbed piano and other strings, to a commune like collective sound (with vocals like a Father Yod community singing in chorus). Organ and drums are some of the organizers…

Homepage with audio : http://www.myspace.com/sephirothmusic


private   Jow Jow, The Death Knell Rung : Drug Friends and other themese (US,2006)
private     Jow Jow, The Death Knell Rung also known as "The Sephiroth" (US,2006) ?
private   Sephiroth's Knot in concert (US,2006) ?
private        Sephiroth's Knot / Jow Jow, The Death Knell Rung (US,2006)***°
private        Jow Jow, The Death Knell Rung : Maiden Mask & Secret Spring (US,2006)

some reviews of these might be added soon


private   Sephiroth's Knot : Trance of the Death Mask (US,2006)***?

3. It’s hard to tell what is really happening here. You almost need to (not enough) go in trance with the music to be able to describe this communal improvisation which builds up mostly in one line in one trance, with a tube feeling filled with organic sonic mass.

Homepage with audio : http://www.myspace.com/sephirothmusic
URCKarm Rec.       Hop-Frog's Drum Jester Devotional : Bets ov -volume 1- (US,2006)**°'

3. Hop-Frog's Drum Jester Devotional uses most often looped ideas from Middle Eastern North African recordings, mixed with band sounds, with electronic and rather fast laptop controlled rhythms, and some spoken word repetitions, that seem to work like almost political statements for the benefit of a creative world into a North African desert context, taken to a citizen's consciousness. The music is like a new ritual form, devotional-organic,  echoed, sandune whirly confronting. I recognise also a hurdy-gurdy drone in the first track, a little fragment from The Cure's Forest album, looped and rearranged to different and faster rhythm drives, with orchestration, nervous Arabian clarinet mixed with middle African singing, and so on.  While the opium plant is on the cover, a plant which brought peace to the users, associating also the ancient travel roots from west to east, the music is more aware of all omnipresent diverse elements that don't find a new place into the creative world yet.

Audio : "Eastern Spleen 3 (Donkey Beat Mix)","Devotional Desert (Poppy Mine Mix)", "ElephantsAgony (Tranquilizer Dart Mix)"
Hop-Frog's Collective page : http://www.hop-frog.com/
Label's entry (with review) : http://www.hop-frog.com/DJD%20BETS%20OV.htm
Homepage with audio : http://www.myspace.com/hopfrogsdrumjesterdevotional
Live picture : http://www.lighthousepromo.net/images/hf5_wlp.jpg

See the many more links and ideas from the Hop-Frog's group : http://www.hop-frog.comsolo release->
Mandragora Rec.       Mu : Paradise Camp 23 (US,2006)**°

This is a collection of jams with shamanic behaviours lead by Erik Amlee on acoustic and electric guitar or sitar mostly, with close friends (Joel Boulon Boultinghouse and Nate Longeope) and wife (Aleda Jonquil) on noise electronics and keyboards. The booklet describes the inspired word ‘Musex’ (mu/muse/musics/..) as the art of spontaneous creation reaching the hidden world of the dead, while he explains this music as a direct communication with the spirits, as a shamanic technique of direct free improvisation, as an open portal to an archetypal consciousness of the muse, when being one with the music, in real-time song, and this not as communal shamanism, but as a personal and direct access to a creative world. In this case all the inspirations are slightly droning as an effect bringing to a certain vague dream state.

There are different opinions on improvisation. Personally I think that creativity is not necessarily visible only in direct improvisation. At the same time, all music where the creator and performer tends to become completely one with the creative process in it, shows through their intentions and a certain character that is involved with it. With some luck these intentions overcome the personal aspects and find the eternal links through in a process becoming completely one in its sound creation. But even with sounds as the final result, I still consider all kinds of creativity equally important for expressing something, and to get a certain result. Both composed and improvised music, can direct results, equally as long as the intuitive creative process was involved with it. With focusing too much on composition, I agree with Erik Amlee, that there is a danger we could forget making direct contact with the creative process in music, which is much more one in an improvisation, even if improvisations that really can create and achieve something for real,  are always depending on the moment which was created for it. Such a momentous condition needs an occasion that can be prepared with vision, technique, mentality, personality and things that I think are also real on earth. Paradise Camp 23 creates however directly on the sonic occasion, within something that works like a drone, through jamming deeper into it. Myself, I had to make myself open to it for the vagueness of this mood, because that still is what it is. It has not reached a new construction found in another world, but the intentions to exist consciously in nothing but the moments itself that surely is achieved and recorded. And, by making a collection of such different moments, there also is a spontaneous structure and (vague) evolution in time. An enjoyable album once the listener is one with the first moment and goes along the way with it.

Audio : "Kether", "Oaxaca", "Bhang"(or here), "Gamelan", "Krunkin"(or here), "Mandy Lynn", "Late Sunday", "Pad Hop", "Garuda"
Label info : http://www.mandragora.com/mr019.html
Interview with Erik Amlee : http://www.digitalisindustries.com/foxyd/features.php?which=166

Review of Erik Amlee's sitar CD : http://psychevanhetfolk.homestead.com/othersitar.html#anchor_18
Barl Fire Rec.         Mike Tamburo : Dance Enis Dance (US,2007)***'

I came across the name of Mike Tamburo more than once on the internet, knew he was involved in some similar musical (acidfolk related) interests, but it took a long time before I was able to hear any of his music.

This CDR album, of which only 100 were pressed has an interesting story in the liner notes. It speaks about the worries of Mike Tamburo going deaf. His friend Sayas told him a story about some brotherhood in Turkistan where deep in some valley is supposed to live a Brotherhood of deaf musicians who play a gigantic instrument whose vibrations affect the soul immediately. It gave Tamburo some goal to look for. It took him also to some ideas to work with deaf musicians but this all turned out to be a failure.
The final solo result on this album, seems like an attempt to deal with the problem of acoustic improvisation control (symbolizing the clear hearing) and being overwhelmed by buzz, echoing vibrations and drones (the distortion of hearing), which at times becomes like a real musical fight, like staying awake with direct improvisation, and being overwhelmed by the dream state monster which eats consciousness, just like a death state does. In some way this is also the story of our modern times. The constant over-sensibilization of the senses (magnetic, vibrations of brain, heart and body, as well as hearing) of too loud sounds, of hardly hearable vibrations from electricity, television, radiowaves (including from mobile phones), distant machines and cars, including magnetic and electromagnetic disbalance are a constant stress on modern man. When you use your ears with sensitivity, some of the most sensible people might suffer from the results of the “dust” which this over-sensibilaziation of the senses brings. Me, for instance, at night, I hear a constant buzz/drone, and wish already a long time for real silence but it is nowhere to be found. Men spoils with sound and vibrations our senses. This is one of the reasons why it has became difficult for urban people to be able to make purely acoustic inspirations without disturbing effects. With some chaos in our minds, most acoustic improvisation from nowadays are entirely different from the ‘70s because they are also dealing with an increased concentration of chaos, noise, buzz, drone, and so on. It spoils our concentration in general, not only our ears. While such music, without self-questioning, this is a generally accepted fashion in improvised folk nowadays. Mike Tamburo seemed to have turned this into a personal concept, like his own struggle, and it became a conscious process. All instruments were played by Mike Tamburo himself. The acoustic improvisations are on guitar and hammered dulcimer. The drones and buzzes are produced by use of amplifier, Tibetan bowls, chromatic harmonica, pickups, ebow, and effects. While the drone part tends to overwhelm, the creative struggle tends to transform each detail in some kind of peace seeking harmony. I only think the last few minor notes tends to say there has been a certain feeling of loss in the process in this battle, something which is clearly, and sadly, understandable.

Audio : "Dance Enis Dance (excerpt 1)"(or here), "Dance Enis Dance (excerpt 2)"(or here)
Info : http://homepages.tesco.net/~beautiful.day/Barl_Fire_Recordings_DanceEnis.htm
Homepage : http://www.miketamburo.com/ & with audio : http://www.myspace.com/tamburonext release ->
Silber Rec.       Origami Arktika : Trollebotn (N,2007)***'

The music of the album is related with Trollebotn, a small area in Telemark in Norway with a wide open landscape and with a lake and mountains, a wild place associated with trolls and mountain giants. It used to be a backwards area with remains of extremely old customs and habits. In a time of further globalisation with fast consumingcultivation and regulation of land and all that is on it, this not only means that so much diversity in nature dies out ; the same happens in the diversity of mankind and all its privately kept and communal secrets, but also all the local variations of more recognisable memories and life stories. I just read that every two weeks another language dies out, and together with it all its customs, myths but also specific wisdoms related with certain areas, and learned in and for specific circumstances. But sometimes just variations of what is generally known dies out as well. Origami Arktika decided to sit down and try to preserve and relive all of what is left in especially Rune Flaten’s memory, because he had some of his musical roots in this area. Some traditional folk songs from Trollebotn and surrounding areas were suggested, and the group worked on them and let them mould very organically into something they felt most comfortable with. To succeed well in this, and with respect for preservation, and also in order to get the right feelings, just in case, not to be distracted from the true sense in them, they went for the recording session to this secluded island and shut themselves of from the rest of the world for a week, playing day and night. Eating, drinking and diving for the sea-serpent (the local legend) while not making music. Only a few extra musical additions were added later near Oslo.

A first thing that is great about the concept is that there is included great background info with each song, and for the Nordic people, lyrics, something which adds depth to the songs. The music is much improvised.

The first track, “Anne Sit Heime”, a lullaby, is softly accompanied by a repetitive pattern by the band, a result which works with a humming to sleep trance effect (even when the band uses drums and electric guitars). But also the next few tracks sound similar as if an old lady sings them to her children, while the band accompanies them with drums, bass, thumbpiano, percussion, rhythmically and with the same kind of humming drone effect. At other times the band plays more organically and technically free, and then it is as if the natural elements of the area reveal itself, with similar sounds like a wooden boat on water, iron or tin clancking to wood and so on, but also with use of water sounds or a soft rhythmically thunder-like bass drumming. The songs and also the stories behind them have very much the desolateness of the area in them, where you cannot escape from circumstances even when new things happen. In that way the band captured this well and express all the sad ballads moodily with a new contemporary sound.

Audio : "Anne Sit Heime" & on http://www.myspace.com/origamiarktika
Label listing : http://www.silbermedia.com/origamiarktika/
Homepage : http://www.kunst.no/origami/arktika
About the sessions : http://arkivnett.no/alias/origami/arktika/6.3-2005-troll.html
A Silent Place  Gianluca Becuzzi & Fabio Orsi : Muddy Speeking Ghosts through my machines (I,2007)****

review of this experimental album with folk elements moved to http://progressive.homestead.com/prog19.html#anchor_177
URCKarm Rec.       Catastrophic Mermaids on Parade (US,2007)***

4. This is a solo project by Hermit the Flog from the Hop-Frog collective under a different name. I found the first two pieces especially rewarding, based upon naturally evolving rhythms of loops, drones, waves and sequences this is mixed with a sound variety that also feels natural and dynamic, with sounds that remain recognisable like drones of metallic rubbing, dug-like sound mix of vocal sounds, vibrating sequences into a turmoil of vibrating movements, mixed with pan-flute (“Lonely Eyes of Amnesia”) or more rhythmically processed sequences that becomes like floating, cosmic machinery, or like within waves of water (“underwater orbit donuts”). Thoroughly the abstract movements become more earthy and become completely led by the rhythmic excursions (bass, sequenced loops, rhythmic semi-electronica). There’s added some spoken word (female or a falling asleep hypnotic male voice), without adding much more than this, losing itself into the post-80s wave and  rhythmical trip near the end.

Audio : "the city night prayer i become", "small falling rock burial", "hidden electric flea variations"
Homepage with audio : http://www.myspace.com/refrigeratormothers
More info on the limited releases : http://www.hop-frog.com/urckltdseries.htm
Info : http://www.hop-frog.com/URCKcmopdebut.htmlnext two Hop-Frog Collective releases here->
URCKarm Rec.       Hop-Frog's Refrigerator Mothers : Ghosts of a Primitive World (US,2003-2006)**°°

The term "refrigerator mother" was coined to describe a parent, whose cold, uncaring style so traumatized her child that it retreated into autism. Carl Off : “Refrigerator Mothers or ‘emotionally cold mothers’ was the term commonly used as the reason children had autism up through the 1960's. Coming from broken homes and not fitting into the general mould of society this primitive ideal really appealed to us. Hop-frog's Refrigerator Mothers is one of many projects under the Hop-Frog collective umbrella. We are a tight community of artists focussing on experimental and psychedelic arts. We also have a love for music of indigenous & folk music from around the world and attempt to weave a new experimental sound through those influences.” Hop-Frog is a story from E. A. Poe, about a fool who takes revenge on the king after lack of respect. 

1. This is a collection of recordings between 2003 and 2006. I like the group especially when there are enough instruments and people around, like in the first half of the album. The first two tracks hang together, and start with a found-sound-combination of a looping rhythm in a ride-the-camel-in-a-caravan sphere, mixed with harmonica, amplified guitar in semi-eastern chords, with strange keyboards sounds, some down-the-belly dance hand percussion, and some wahhweih… vocals. It is a rather psychedelic sound improvisation, in a ritualistic way as while travelling. In the second part I hear processed tabla loops, space sounds keyboards, a sound fragment of Arab singing, keyboard drones, with watery and other strange sounds. It has a short slightly annoying keyboard sounds part, then adds Middle Eastern bells rhythms, more Middle Eastern chords on guitars, and acoustic rhythms. The third track starts with an overload lead of North African rhythms and bass strings, mixed with other samples and spoken word,.. The fourth track is different and darker, with rather aggressive conscious words of “I’m this and that” to peak for that everybody can be born as anybody and everywhere,.. This track with ritualistic percussion, wailing guitars and prepared guitar repetitions sounds very much like Virgin Prunes (from the time of their most popular album). The left over 4 other tracks are expressed much simpler and a bit more stagnant in sphere, exploring a fundament of primitive prepared sounds on different guitars or other plucked instruments, with ritualistic hand percussion and with the addition of either some vocal experiment, scraped material chimes, echoing bells, noisy sounds, or bar piano.

The instruments used here were kitchen sink, juno 1, juno 106, cura cumbus, melodica, sh-101, pipes, chains, industrial filter device, electric guitar, twelve string acoustic guitar, electric bass, soft synths, computers, frame drum, floor tom, various cymbals and bells, harmonium, effects processors, Ruan (moon guitar), prepared acoustic guitar, prepared piano.

Refrigerator Mothers is a part of the Hop-Frog’s collective of experimenting musicians. On this release this is Carl.F.Off, e.loi, Hermit the Flog, Denise Owens, Jewelie Off, Karen Crews, Katlyn Off, Matt McGowin, Thee Honey Twin and B Tin White, with guests Benjamin Mahoney, Jason Savvy and Paul Glenn Clabough.
Other projects included hop-frog's drum jester devotional, Catastrophic Mermaids on Parade & the Master Musicians of hop-frog. 


URCKarm Rec.   Refrigerator Mothers : The Nightmare is only a flower on the path to enlightening/
Arab national anthem (US,2006)***°

2. The single took out cleverly the part with handbells and Middle Eastern guitar improvisation on one of both sides. I assume this is the "Arab National Anthem" part. The other side is the track that starts with the words of "I Am..." in a ritualistic mind-influencing way, and that thoroughly evolves to that great Virgin Prunes like energetic musical psychoses. A very good selective choice from the full album.

Homepage : http://www.hop-frog.com/RM.htm & with audio : http://www.myspace.com/refrigeratormothers
Hop-Frog's Collective page : http://www.hop-frog.com/
Intro on Hop-Frog : http://www.vidioatak.org/insect/hopfrog.htm
Entries on label page with review : http://www.hop-frog.com/rm%20ANA.htm
& http://www.hop-frog.com/urckreleasesRMGhosts.htm
Other reviews : http://outerspacegamelan.blogspot.com/2006/10/refrigerator-mothers-ghosts-of.html
More live pictures : http://www.hop-frog.com/photos.htm

PS. About E.A.Poe's Hop-Frog, the story : http://www.pambytes.com/poe/stories/hopfrog.html
or http://xroads.virginia.edu/~HYPER/POE/hop_frog.html or here
& resume here : http://www.balancepublishing.com/hopsyn.htm