Category: Reviews (Page 155 of 200)

EMIKA Flashbacks EP

Emika Flashbacks artwork

Berlin-based EMIKA is one of the dark horses of UK electronic music.

With her trademark sub-dub bass, an unsettling creepiness looms in her brand of experimental pop. A classically schooled musician with a degree in Music Technology, Milton Keynes born Ema Jolly began work as a sound designer for Native Instruments in the former divided city, where in parallel she honed what started off as a moody dubstep orientated sound with a voice that was like a cross between Róisín Murphy and GAZELLE TWIN.

Since her self-titled debut album was released in 2011, her introverted electronica as exemplified by the single ‘Drop The Other’ has developed into a more expansive, immediate template via her third album ‘Drei’ in 2015. One of the highlights was the excellent ‘My Heart Bleeds Melody’, a concoction of intricate pulsing layers and solemn detachment that made for a captivating experience that grew with each listen. Also from ‘Drei’, ‘Battles’ demonstrated her attention to detail with regards production, particularly with the pitch shifting of vocals and the careful processing of sibilant cut-ups for a hauntingly percussive effect while the enticing ‘Miracles’ was beautifully stuttering avant pop.

Known for doing unusual cover versions like Chris Isaak’s ‘Wicked Game’ on her second album ‘Dva’, her most striking reinterpretation to date has been David Bowie’s ‘Let’s Dance’. While not quite slowed to a funereal pace, EMIKA gave the song a deep asexual resonance, with only a passing resemblance to the original.

Ever the busy soul, EMIKA is currently completing her first classical project ‘How To Make A Symphony’ with the Prague Metropolitan Orchestra, an adventure that has been helped to fruition by a crowdfunding campaign. But the interregnum sees the release of an EP entitled ‘Flashbacks’. Laced with chromatic hints of her Czech heritage and a chattering rhythm, the title track touches on her ongoing demons of being held back by trapped memories. “I try to forget about you” she exclaims.

A sombre electronic number with angelic qualities, ‘Flashbacks’ is accessible yet retains all those esoteric qualities that have made EMIKA’s work so critically acclaimed. The monochromatic video, filmed by Tving Stage Design on some forlorn Icelandic beach using two iPhones, compliments the delightfully gloomy atmosphere provided by echoing piano and eerie chorals.

emikacrp2

Also on the ‘Flashbacks’ EP, the lengthy ‘Restless Wings’ is a rhythmical mood piece with haunting string machine that continues EMIKA’s interest in more leftfield forms, while ‘Total’ features the soprano stylings of regular collaborator Michaela Šrumová. The gently percussive and synth laden ‘Total’ could be seen as a vocal-led sonic progression on ‘Restless Wings’. Šrumová makes reappearance on a Bonus Mix of ‘Flashbacks’ which naturally takes on a more ambient overtone in its arrangement.

Now casting a wider net, showcasing her genre crossing diversity and independence as a recording artist, EMIKA is an artist for the long haul. As EMIKA herself has said: “I am grateful that some how I’ve got to a place where it is all about the music and creativity”. Her music may not necessarily be immediate, but in amongst those layers is music of distinct quality that deserves time and investment.


‘Flashbacks’ is released as a download EP and 12 inch vinyl by Emika Records on 4th March 2016, available direct from https://emika-official.bandcamp.com/

http://emikarecords.com/

https://www.facebook.com/emikamusic/


Text by Chi Ming Lai
1st March 2016

GAPTOOTH Pillow Fort EP

East London’s Hannah Lucy aka GAPTOOTH, first emerged onto the indie / electro scene in 2013, releasing her debut album ‘Connections-Departures’.

The single heralding the production, ‘Ladykillers’, was full of girl attitude and feisty feminist power, and it received an ample airplay on BBC 6 Music, as well as being featured on numerous compilations.

2016 sees the return of the strong minded artist with ‘Pillow Fort’ EP, mixed by Oli Horton, who was previously involved on ‘Connections-Departures’, duetting with Ms Lucy on ‘Enduring Freedom’.

Horton was a core member of a great synth hope TRADEMARK, who not only supported Human League and Chicks On Speed, but also remixed various artists, such as THE MODERN (aka MATINEE CLUB featuring Nathan Cooper aka KID KASIO), GOLDRUSH, KISH MAUVE, BOY KILL BOY and CAS FOX.

Nowadays Horton is an artist and producer under the pseudonym Dreamtrak, being involved in various projects, including QUEEN OF HEARTS and further remixes such as ‘No Pressure’ for LITTLE BOOTS.

‘Pillow Fort’ minimalistically sees only four tracks, with Stay Away From Me’ as the opening gambit. It’s a song written to celebrate the “final unfriending of a toxic ex”, where GAPTOOTH feels that she “must erase you”. Rough vocals over a synth melody fortified with harsh guitar continue the feminist themes, and can be compared to those of Saffron of REPUBLICA. The video accompanying the title has been directed by Bristol based singer/songwriter Laura Kidd aka SHE MAKES WAR.

‘Good Guys’ sounds punky and rugged and describes dating mishaps, angrily wrapped up into a synthy piece, while ‘Such A Girl’ slows the tempo somewhat at first, describing the harshness of the modern world and the roles imposed on both men and women.

The closing track, ‘I Built A Fort’, with its minimalist sounds, depicts a child-like solution to the issues of the world of today. Every problem can be seemingly sorted, when one builds a fort made out of duvets and sings a grown up version of ‘If You’re Happy And You Know It’.

While the debut album bore heavier guitar and louder sounds, the EP, while still being angry, raw and in-your-face, deploys more electronic tones and is rather tongue-in-cheek.

The readiness of the sound of GAPTOOTH will probably appeal more to the younger electronica fans, or to those who enjoy the matters of importance being tackled using quirky sarcasm and light-heartedness, SUDDEN CREATION style.


The ‘Pillow Fort’ EP is released on 4th March 2016 by Gaptooth Music and available as a CD or download from https://gaptooth.bandcamp.com/

http://www.gaptoothmusic.co.uk/

https://www.facebook.com/gaptoothmusic


Text by Monika Izabela Goss
Photos by Steve Dawson
29th February 2016

CHVRCHES Clearest Blue

chvrches 2016

The world just can’t get enough of CHVRCHES.

CHVRCHES have admirably stuck to the synthpop credentials with which they made their name and last year, delivered what LITTLE BOOTS, LA ROUX, and LADYHAWKE and HURTS all failed to do… a decent second album in ‘Every Open Eye’!

It is an indicator of how far CHVRCHES have developed. Understanding their strengths and taking a less complex approach to their effervescent synthpop, one key move was employing the more electronically tuned Mark ‘Spike’ Stent on the mixing desk, rather than more rock inclined Rich Costey who had looked after the debut ‘The Bones Of What You Believe’. It’s a lesson that a veteran band like DEPECHE MODE could learn from.

Speaking of whom, during the propulsive four-to-the-floor action of ‘Clearest Blue’, the song is wonderfully held in a state of tension before a dynamic surprise in the final third that recalls the classic overtures of Vince Clarke.

CHVRCHES-2015-04

Anyone not noticing the aesthetic similarities to The Basildon Boys’ first UK Top 10 hit has stubbornly got their heads in the sands. But does it matter? Well, no! As the highly respected Factory Records biographer James Nice put it in an interview with The Ransom Note recently “I have no problem at all with something new being imitative as long as it’s good”; and ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK totally agrees!

One of the 30 Songs of 2015, the new surreal video for ‘Clearest Blue’, directed by Warren Fu, appears to have a number of symbolic connotations, with front woman Lauren Mayberry looking forlorn in the woods, suited in armour, before eventually shedding that very coat of arms to face her public. It reflects the general feisty mood of the ‘Every Open Eye’ album, with Mayberry emerging as a fighter following playing the victim on CHVRCHES’ debut.

What Iain Cook, Martin Doherty and Lauren Mayberry have managed to do is get teenagers listening to classic synthpop. Hopefully these youngsters will research electronic music’s legacy, which is why historical referencing is so important, to preserve the genre’s roots.

And from that, they will attempt to create their own music. Now that can only be a good thing for the future.


CHVRCHES gigs 2016 poster‘Clearest Blue’ is from the album ‘Every Open Eye’ via Virgin Records, available as a CD, deluxe CD with three bonus tracks, vinyl LP and download

CHVRCHES play London’s Royal Albert Hall on Thursday 31st March and Glasgow’s SEE Hydro on Saturday 2nd April 2016

http://chvrch.es/

https://www.facebook.com/CHVRCHES

https://twitter.com/CHVRCHES

https://www.facebook.com/chvrchesfans/


Text by Chi Ming Lai
24th February 2016

SCANNER & ANNI HOGAN Scanni

SCANNI

Electronic producer SCANNER (aka Robin Rimbaud) and pianist / arranger Anni Hogan are individually known for their experimental works sampling radio / mobile phone transmissions and being a part of MARC & THE MAMBAS respectively.

Unsettling the listener can often be a no-brainer, anything too far musically or sonically removed from the standard song format can feel alien and unnerving.

While the low frequency, extended drones of doom rockers SUNN O))) and the noise / frequency experiments of PAN SONIC are calculated to challenge, the opening track on ‘Scanni’ feels disturbing but in a FAR more subversive way. ‘A Life Well Lived’ feels like a mash-up of two different songs in two different keys, yet playfully welded together to test the listener, creating a tension which is not entirely pleasurable. Initially the song is the musical equivalent having nails dragged down a blackboard, but after repeated listens the track eventually sinks in and makes sense in a twisted way.

anni hogan2016Thankfully the rest of the album follows a more musical path and the use of different vocalists gives ‘Scanni’ an organic / electro-acoustic MASSIVE ATTACK feel. ‘Future’ has a house vibe to it, with a hypnotic drum machine and live bass groove with piano / horns overlaid with soulful vocals provided by Jennifer John.

‘Mine Was Full of Tears’ with its moody piano initially recalls Thomas Dolby’s cover of ‘I Scare Myself’, whilst ‘Carelessly’ featuring ex-SWANS vocalist Jarboe evokes the latter work of TALK TALK, all suggested space and atmospherics.

By track number five ‘Glorious’, the musical manifesto of ‘Scanni’ is well and truly laid bare… this is a late-night listening album, and it is one for quiet retrospection. The use of electronics is sparing throughout, a few well-chosen loops and textures here and there…

scanner2016‘Cinecittà (Feel Everything)’ (again featuring Jarboe) is a sensual percussion free piece, with ethereal VANGELIS style synthetics.

The track ‘Golden Light’ featuring the spoken words of Wolfgang Flür feels far more at home here than it did on the former Kling Klang resident’s recent compilation and only the toe-curling lyrics of final track ‘With You in My Life’ feel out of place (sample lyric “babies don’t cry anymore with you in my life”) in the context of the overall work.

This is a brave and beautifully produced album that despite its opening curveball, does something that many works fail to achieve these days… it sucks you in and transports you to another time and space entirely.

Whether the album will be high profile enough to gain a nod in this year’s Mercury Music Prize awards is debatable, but regardless, ‘Scanni’ deserves recognition as a triumph of creative / artistic freedom over the desire for commercial success and will undoubtedly become a firm favourite with followers of both artists.


‘Scanni’ is released by Cherry Red Records on 26th February 2016 as a CD and download

http://scanni.co.uk/

http://www.scannerdot.com/

https://www.facebook.com/AnniHoganOfficial/

http://www.cherryred.co.uk/


Text by Paul Boddy
22nd February 2016

SARAH P. I’d Go

Greek electropop goddess SARAH P. started her music career in 2010 as the frontwoman of KEEP SHELLY IN ATHENS who had a number of acclaimed releases including the ‘In Love With Dusk’ EP and the album ‘At Home’.

After she parted company with KEEP SHELLY IN ATHENS in early 2014, SARAH P. relocated to Berlin to explore more pop oriented climes. There had been signs of her wanting to pursue a more accessible direction on her final KEEP SHELLY IN ATHENS track ‘Old Time Glory’.

So it was no great surprise when her debut mini-album ‘Free’ turned out to be her most direct work yet. ‘I’d Go was possibly its standout track and with an afflicted demeanour of optimism, she announced “I’m not afraid, why should I be? Now I’m free…”

Showing her making faces at the camera and finding solace in a giant cuddly rabbit, the video also features paradoxical footage of SARAH P. as the forlorn figure she is sometimes assumed to be. In her own words she confesses: “I’m a childish woman and nobody can stop me from being one” and adds “If there’s anything I stand for with all my heart is the ‘Go be you’ motto!”

Slowly but surely, the real SARAH P. is being revealed.


SARAH P Free‘I’d Go’ features on the mini-album ‘Free’ released by EraseRestart via the usual digital outlets

The 12 inch vinyl EP can be obtained from
http://eraserestart.bigcartel.com/product/sarah-p-free-vinyl

http://sarahpofficial.com/

https://www.facebook.com/sarahpofficial/

https://twitter.com/sarah_anna_p


Text by Chi Ming Lai
Photo by Christoph Neumann
20th February 2016

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