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Showing posts with label justin robertson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label justin robertson. Show all posts

Wednesday, 22 April 2026

Gorilla Head

At the end of March I went to see Ladytron play at Gorilla. The tickets were a gift, courtesy of friends who couldn't make it. I tend to think of Ladytron as a relatively recent band but they formed in Liverpool in 1999 and have released eight albums since 2001, the most recent a few weeks ago. Gorilla was rammed to the rafters, a little unpleasantly so. Once inside the venue (and it's a small venue anyway) the only way to move was if someone else moved. Making our way to the bar was a feat in itself and once there there was little chance of moving any further forward. 

The band played twenty songs, set up with the two female members, Helen Marnie and Mira Aroyo, at the front of the stage- Helen sings most of the songs, the archetypal cool front woman, and Mira playing synth/ guitar and singing on a handful of songs. When Mira sings they become more angular, sounding like a Bulgarian Stereolab. When Helen sings, they snap into sharp, futurist synthpop mode. 

Behind them founder member/ songwriter Daniel Hunt plays bass/ synths, there's a human drummer and another synth/ keys player. The songs from the new album Paradises follow in the electronic- synth pop vein they're known for and early on this single, Caught In The Blink Of An Eye, stands out- dramatic and urgent, slow burning synth with the drummer adding masses of extra oomph. 


Old favourites Seventeen (their breakthrough from 2002) and Destroy Everything You Touch (from 2005) are saved for the end of the set and the encore. There's some audience- band interaction, Daniel joking about the heat onstage making everything 'moist' and all the songs, new and old, are well received. Just wish it hadn't be so packed in there. 

More recent, closer to home and slightly less packed out, Justin Robertson appeared at Head last Thursday promoting his latest novel The MineralTail. Head is just up the road from me, a twenty minute walk to Stretford and is a bar/ space in a former branch of Barclays with the bar being the surviving bank counter and some of the late 60s modernist design features still intact. It's a low key and welcoming place with 70s geometric wallpaper and assorted pieces of furniture. 

Justin promoted his second novel The Trial Of Jonah at Head a year ago and returned with his third- The MineralTail, a cosmic tale of the greatest three piece rock 'n' roll band ever formed (in this case, a trio of a megalithic stone and two dogs), the greatest album ever made and the longest song ever recorded. Following on the heels of the semi- autobiographical time travelling story The Trial Of Jonah, it's an irreverent, freewheeling tribute to the redemptive powers of music and of sound. 

Justin reads a couple of passages and does an in- conversation with our host Stephen, who delves into the book's creation myth, the Buddha nature of dogs, 'Satan's flaccid jingles' and we take a headlong dive into the magical psychedelic world of pan pipes and bagpipe jazz.   

The MineralTail has an album to accompany it, the soundtrack to the novel. There's a fifteen minute sampler at Soundcloud- motorik space rock, ambient dub ritual and rocking cosmische. Listen here


Friday, 6 March 2026

Thrice Yes

'Language has the power to alter our perceptions... a single word can change our reality... and that word is yes!'

Jezebell's second album, Jezebellearic Beats Volume 2, came out last year, a twenty track, four sides of vinyl epic with remixes, edits, originals and five brand new recordings. The album's ultimate track was Turn It Yes, the song that maybe Jesse and Darren have been building up to all this time- rippling synths, rolling electronic drums and percussion, a vocal sample about language and reality and the word yes and a second vocal sample, one about a famous exhibition at The Indica Gallery in 1966 that proved to be a crucial part of the story of one of the most famous people of the 20th century. 

Today sees the release of a remix EP, Turn It Yes redone in three versions. Sean Johnston's Hardway Bros remix is straight out of Sean's top drawer, a thumping, pumping, uptempo glide by that threatens to turn into Underworld on several occasions- I can imagine Two Months Off and this remix being mixed in and out of each other, cutting from one to the other for ages. Sean keeps it going, the juddering kick drum and the words and the topline, all piling up, a never ending peak. The Parvale Remix is tougher still, a four four chug with everything- bpms, synths, rave bass- set to max. 

Justin Robertson is the third man, remixing Jezebell in his psychic folk dub, Five Green Moons mode, slowing Jezebell down, dubbing the bass, FX ricocheting, drums skanking, organ notes flaring like flashes of sunshine and that nagging key topline appearing and re- appearing and the vocals slurred and stoned... 'and that word is Yes'. Justin's on a roll right now and this one is right up there with his best work of recent times. 

You can find Turn It Yes Remixes Vol. 1 at Bandcamp

Justin can also be found remixing Brisbane band Das Druid. The Aussie three piece have been compared to the sound of late 80s/ early 90s Manchester, the swaggering indie- dance rolling drums, psychedelic guitar lines and euphoric, wide eyed spirit. On their Das EP there are three songs- Freedom, Less Than 3 and Incense- and if you slotted them into a Madchester/ indie dance playlist they'd be right at home, you'd barely hear the joins. The third of those three, Incense, also carries one of the next steps from those early 90s days, the spaced out swirl and psychedelic rock of Spiritualized and early Verve. 

Justin's Five Green Moons remix of Freedom comes in two versions, a remix and a dub, each eight minutes long, the spaced out dubness, FX and melodica and slo mo rhythms slipping and sliding through a Five Green Moons haze. As well as those two Das Druid are put through their paces by Ruf Dug, the Stoner Trance Version of Incense, a slow burning behemoth, distorted bass and grinding rhythm in contrast to the half whispered, starsailing vocal. The drums double up at three minutes and there's some wailing, an acid house, psychedelic stew. Intense. Incense. 'Two hands are better than one'.

The Das EP is also available at Bandcamp

Justin is in demand in the world of Magick Knives too where he's taken the Dungeon Jazz and Wizard Psych of their song Existence into his folk- dub netherworld, where the hills have eyes and the isles are being prepared for midsummer. Dislocated trumpets, disembodied vocals, spindly guitars and whirling organs. Get tripped out at Bandcamp

Sunday, 1 February 2026

This Chant Is God Voice

Justin Robertson took his Five Green Moons on the road last week for a trio of gigs, in Liverpool, Manchester and Todmorden. On Thursday night he was at Rainy Heart in Stretford, a new South Manchester venue with some fearsome speaker stacks, in a retail unit in what used to be Stretford Mall.

 Five Green Moons may not be the most unlikely thing to have ever happened in the former Stretford Mall- that would probably be Muhammad Ali's visit in 1971. The three time heavyweight champion of the world was on a visit to the Stretford branch of Tesco (when it was Stretford Arndale) on a promotional tour for Ovaltine, a visit that had to be closed down by police due to the sheer number of people that arrived hoping to see the world's most famous sportsman. Ali was backed into a corner by an ecstatic mob and had to be rescued by the police. But, Five Green Moons may well be a close second to that. 

Justin stands behind a bank of equipment- laptop, drum machine, synth, theremin, FX pedals- dressed in ceremonial robes, horned headgear and hood with guitar and e- bow. What follows is as much ritual as gig, a slew of influences fused into one- pagan poetry, the bass and drums of dub, weird folk horror, post- punk, gnomic lyrics about ritual, repetition, sense, form and beauty, fuzz and sci fi. It's a fully realised hour of music, no gaps between the songs, a one man excursion into rite and the occult via music, everything drenched in the space of dub- 'everything's a song in the sound world', he chants at one point, his right hand wafted round the theremin and the bass kicking around the concrete walls. 

Towards the end he plays Boudicca, a track from last year's Moon 2 album (Brix Smith is on vocals on the recorded version, a presence from 1980s Manchester, The Fall being one of the main reasons Justin arrived in Manchester to study in the mid- 80s). Boudicca is a trippy collision of post- punk and dub, a celebration of the Queen of the Iceni, sung by Brix. After an hour of Five Green Moons ritual, of Justin's spoken word vocals, the rubbery bass, the skittering/ thudding drum sounds and Space Echo, the distorted guitar and FX, come to end. Justin holds his arms forwards bringing the invocation to a close. 

This Chant Is God Voice is one of the prime cuts from Moon 2 and was a highlight on Thursday night at Rainy Heart. 'Repetition is ritual/ Form is beauty/ This chant is beauty'. 



Sunday, 4 January 2026

An Hour Of 2025 Dub/ Dance

A follow up to my New Year's Eve mix which was an ambient/ downtempo and largely instrumental hour of music. This one starts out dubby and then heads in Balearic and dance directions, getting increasingly thumpy with a three tune Belfast detour before finishing with the voice of Andrew Weatherall. As maybe all mixes should. 

There were a lot of things that I couldn't find room for here, not least Four Tet's Into Dust (Still Falling)- maybe there's time for one more 2025 mix next Sunday to see that year out. 

An Hour Of 2025 Dub/ Dance

  • Adrian Sherwood: Spaghetti Best Western
  • Soft Cotton County: The Future's Not What It Used To Be (Justin Robertson's Five Green Moons Remix)
  • Rude Audio: No Sleep
  • Escape- Ism: Last Of The Sellouts
  • Daniel Avery ft. Cecile Believe: Rhapsody In Blue
  • Jezebell: Movimento Lento
  • Puerto Montt City Orchestra: ...And We'd Be So Happy
  • Pandit Pam Pam: The Senator
  • Le Carousel: We're All Gonna Hurt
  • Factory Floor: Tell Me
  • Black Bones: Voodoo
  • The Light Brigade: Shuffle The Pack

Adrian Sherwood's The Collapse Of Everything was one of my favourite albums of 025, a solo album that becomes a mystical sonic adventure, Sherwood reaching out from dub into soundtrack territories and beyond. Spaghetti Best Western's guitars are worth the price of entry alone. 

Soft Cotton County's Coward Of The County Fair came out in January 2025, a single backed with a pair of Justin Robertson dubs (wearing his Five Green Moons hat- and the Five Green Moons Moon 2 album should have showed up here too). SCC are an indie/ dreampop/ shoegaze duo from Richmond- upon- Thames. This is lovely, laid back folk/ dub. 

Rude Audio are a South London dub/ dub techno specialists under the leadership of Mark Ratcliff. The Strange Phenomenon EP was a 2025 highlight, premium grade Dulwich dub. 

Escape- Ism's The Charge Of The Love Brigade was one of my 2025 peaks, a ten song trip inside Ian Svenonius' world, the last man in the business to sell out. 

Daniel Avery and Cecile Believe's Rhapsody In Blue was the most 80s teen drama, pop moment on Tremor (and came with a Midnight Version too, dirtier and tougher). It still hits the right spots now, six months after its release.

Jezebell's second album, Jezebellearic Beats Volume 2, pulled together some further remixes and productions together with some new material- this track, Movimento Lento, and the closer Turn It Yes, were a perfect pair of bookends. 

Puerto Montt City Orchestra's ...And We'd Be So Happy came out on Brighton's Higher Love label, the home of many fine modern Balearic releases. A spoken word family trip to the seaside in the pouring rain. 

Pandit Pam Pam is from Sao Paulo and makes uneasy ambient music. The Senator is the most dancefloor friendly thing in the Pandit Pam Pam back catalogue, dynamic and lively but still a little unpredictable and the horn that floats above the drums is a thing of beauty. 

Le Carousel is Phil Kieran from Belfast. We're All Gonna Hurt is full on, pulsing, electronic dance music, uplifting but shot through with heartbreak, like all the best dance music is. 

Factory Floor's 2025 return saw them come back with more bone shaking beats and face melting synths, on a pair of singles, Tell Me and Between You. Stephen Morris added some drum programming touches to Tell Me. Experimental, machine music with a random human heart. 

Black Bones are also from Belfast. They released an album across a variety of vinyl formats, dark industrial basement music- acidic, technoid, dubbed up Belfast rave. 

The Light Brigade are David Holmes and Keith Tenniswood. Shuffle The Pack is a righteous acid house record, a call to arms and positivity and very much part of Holmes' 'music as an act of resistance' vision that fades out leaving Andrew Weatherall's voice talking about music, smoke, coloured lights and acid house as gnostic ceremony. 


Friday, 26 December 2025

Boxing Day Double

The period between Christmas Day and New Year's Eve (increasingly known as Twixtmas) is the best bit of the festive period for me- the big day has gone and you're into a vague hinterland, not quite sure what day it is. Normal rules regarding eating, drinking and socialising don't apply. Time expands and contracts. It could be Thursday afternoon, it could be Tuesday morning, it doesn't really matter. Things kick in again on 30th December as people begin to ask what you're doing on New Year's Eve but for a couple of days, it's very much a slowed down life. 

A Boxing Day double for you. In 2015 Courtney Barnett had the Boxing Day Blues. She had them pretty bad...

Boxing Day Blues

Two years before that Dark Horses and Justin Robertson's Deadstock 33s found an altogether livelier and more acidic way to spend the first day of Twixmas- drones, motorik drums, lysergic synthlines, a bassline to shake you out of your torpor and a numbed out vocal. One to put on when the relatives you haven't seen yet pop round later and you want to raise the Boxing Day intensity levels a little. 

Boxing Day (Justin Robertson's Deadstock 33s Vocal Mix)



Wednesday, 5 November 2025

Boudicca

Justin Robertson's Five Green Moons album Moon 1, out a year ago, was a Bagging Area 2024 favourite. Happily Five Green Moons returns for late 2025, this time with Brix Smith on board with a new track Boudicca- named after the Queen of the Iceni people of South Eastern England who led a major uprising against the conquering imperial forces of ancient Rome. 

Dub is still very much the foundations of Five Green Moons along with some post- punk dread and some weirded out, wired folk. Justin's calling it pastoral dub which definitely fits. There's an album to follow at the end of the month and if it's all as diverting and enjoyable as Boudicca we'll have another Five Green Moons album soundtracking the end of a calendar year. 

Justin and Brix have crossed paths before. In 2022 Justin's Deadstock 33s and Brix collaborated on Brix Goes Tubular, a Bandcamp digital only EP, Brix's vocals on to of a rubbery bassline, post- punk/ dance sound. The dub version stripped it back and added some bleepery to produce Caribbean sounding dub.

Brix Goes Tubular (Dub Version)

Friday, 5 September 2025

It's Curtains For You

When The Stone Roses- The Remixes came out in October 2000 I was very much not interested in it.It seemed to be yet another Silvertone cash in on an album and a band they'd been bleeding dry for over a decade, by a record company the band took to court to part company with. Remixes of the songs from the debut album also seemed to me to be an inherently un- Roses thing. Sacrilege. Heresy. Those songs don't need anything else doing to them. Why would someone even think of it? 

I'm not a person who dislikes remixes either as has been well established over the lifetime of this blog- I often prefer the remix to the original track (depending on the remixer obviously). The Stone Roses- The Remixes also came at a time when it felt very unlikely that there was any involvement from the band in this. Squire and Brown weren't talking. Reni was whereabouts unknown. Mani was heavily involved with Primal Scream. Ian's solo career was well under way and they all seemed happy to move on. 

I've shifted my attitude to this album twice, once a few years ago when I heard the Justin Robertson remix of Waterfall out in a bar and found myself enjoying it. Justin didn't do anything too radical to it, a skippy acid house drum beat, some atmospherics and a xylophone, and then the guitar riff comes in with Ian's vocal, those lyrics about a girl dropping acid and boarding a cross channel ferry, leaving 'the filth and the scum/ this American satellite's won'. There's a spaced out and stripped down state to Justin's remix that I like now.

Waterfall (Justin Robertson Remix)

A few weeks ago my friend Spencer sent me a link to the Soul Hooligan remix of Shoot You Down. Curiosity won and I clicked through. Lots of reverb, the strum of a guitar isolated, a loop of brushed drums, Ian's hushed vocals, the hum of an amp switched on behind everything. Ian's line, 'I'd love to do it and you know you've always had it coming', gets looped up, the guitars pile up a bit, cymbals splash- it's nicely done and, again, not a radical re- working but different enough to hear the song anew.

Shoot You Down (Soul Hooligan Remix)

Soul Hooligan are/were Austin Reynolds, a producer from Essex. I played their remix of Shoot You Down at The Golden Lion last weekend. 

After finding that I enjoyed that one I went back in and have dipped in and out of the some of the rest. This one, Kinobe's remix of Elizabeth My Dear stood out...

Elizabeth My Dear (Kinobe Remix)

Ian and John's anti- monarchical ditty opens side two of the debut album, the circling Strawberry Fayre guitar part re- purposed with Ian wishing death upon the monarch, all less than a minute long. A statement as much as a song. Kinobe turn it into a sweetly 60s psychedelic folk song, looping, delaying and FXing it out for nearly five minutes. 


Tuesday, 24 June 2025

The Trial Of Jonah

Justin Robertson has been doing a mini- tour to promote the publication of his second novel, The Trial Of Jonah. He was at Head in Stretford last Thursday doing a reading, a Q&A with Stephen Molynoodles and then a DJ set. The novel tells the story of Jonah Plantaganet, a time travelling demon and cultural vampire, but also of Justin Robertson, a childhood in a small town in the Home Counties, a move to Manchester in the mid- 80s and a life in music and art. In the novel Jonah meets Roman legionaries, saves the life of John Lennon and turns The Beatles onto electronica, hangs out with King John after the Baron's rebellion of 1215- 1217, and zig zags through 20th century counter- culture. In the semi- autobiographical version of Justin's life, Jonah is entranced by the woodland near his childhood home, guided by an older relative into buying dub records, and bedazzled by the Hacienda in the mid- 80s. He also kidnaps Mike Pickering but I'm not sure we ever really got to the bottom of that particular story. I've not read the book yet so I may be mixing up some of the novel and what Justin talked about- but that seemed to be part of the point of it all.

Justin read two sections from the book and during the Q&A talked about everything that went into the writing of it and into Jonah- not least the struggle between originality versus influences and the act of creation as an act of possession. Stephen asked all the right questions and Justin is a relaxed and articulate interviewee, open, reflective and funny. Justin talked about the creation of music and the alchemy that comes from people who don't really know what they're doing but want to make music getting into a studio with machinery and equipment that enable them to do that and then misusing it, the genesis of both punk and acid house. Eventually we get to the phrase, 'it could have been worse', a very British response to things. You can buy The Trial Of Jonah here

It's a fun evening, free and local. Justin sets up to begin playing and it's a Temple Of Wonders style set (a monthly radio show he does with a wide ranging musical policy). It's a work night, 11 PM, a lovely June evening, and Justin is playing proggy, folky psyche in a bar in Stretford. 

Back in the early 90s Justin formed Lionrock with Mark Stagg and MC Buzz B and via Mike Pickering they signed to DeConstruction, one of the early/ mid- 90s key UK dance labels, one that put out records by K- Klass, Black Box, Bassheads, M- People and Kylie Minogue. Lionrock's first single was a self titled progressive house thumper with Justin's signature trumpets, a track that was inescapable in Manchester in 1992/ 1993.  

Friday, 6 June 2025

I Wanna Be

Justin Robertson's recent dub excursions, both his remixes and his own productions, have been first rate. He's kept that winning streak going with a pair of dubbed out versions of Fluke's I Wanna Be under his Five Green Moons name (the Five Green Moons album Moon 1 was one of my favorites of 2024). 

I Wanna Be (Five Green Moons Dub) is a world of deep bass, crashing drums, rattling rimshots and FX, unfolding over eight glorious dubbed out minutes- groove, space and echo. You can get the remix and the dub- there isn't much between them- at Bandcamp. 

Fluke's re- emergence last year was a welcome return. The original version of I Wanna Be came out a week before the Five Green Moon ones and is very much in familiar Fluke territory- throbbing, pulsing, widescreen progressive techno with Jon Fugler's vocals up front, 'I wanna be/ The very best me I can be'. 



Monday, 10 March 2025

Monday's Long Song

Soft Cotton County are from Richmond- upon- Thames and make, in their own words, 'folk music from the future'. In October last year they released an album called 10 Years Of Travel, slow burning, low key dream- pop indie with detours into bossa nova. Last week a remix of the song The Future's Not What It Used To Be came out, a remix by Justin Robertson wearing his Five Green Moons hat. Last year's Five Green Moons album, pagan folk/ dub, was a Bagging Area favourite and Justin's done it again with this remix- slow motion, indie dub stretched out over a very chilled seven minutes and twenty one seconds. 



Friday, 10 January 2025

Passions

Ride/ GLOK guitarist/ writer/ singer Andy Bell has returned this week with a cover of I'm In Love With A German Film Star, the 1981 single by The Passions (retitled I'm In Love... by Andy). For the single Andy's got Dot Allison in on vocals, a song totally suited to Dot's style, and Michael Rother on guitar. It shimmers and floats, with fuzz guitars drifting in, and does all the things you'd want it to. 

The song comes ahead of an album, Andy's third solo album, out at the end of February- Pinball Wanderer. Andy's solo work outside Ride, two albums (The View From Halfway Down and Flicker) plus his GLOK albums and singles, have been some of my favourite releases of the last five years so I'm looking forward to this one. In his promo blurb to accompany the single Andy said that for the album he went less is more, 'less tracks, more atmosphere, less layers of instrumentation, more vibes.' What's more, if you go to Bandcamp, there is a 12"/ digital release of the single with remixes by Justin Robertson's Deadstock 33s and GLOK (Andy as GLOK remixing Andy as Andy). All three remixes are top drawer. 

The Passions original is one of those songs that seems to exist in a world of its own. Released in January 1981, it was written by singer Barbara Gogan about Steve 'Roadent' Connelly, some time Clash and Sex Pistols roadie who had some minor roles in some German films. 

I'm In Love With A German Film Star

This is The Passions on Top Of The Pops, early 1981, singer Barbara the epitome of early 80s front woman cool. 



Sunday, 15 December 2024

2024 In Dub

The list making has started. Some of my blogging compadres have already pressed the Best Of 2024 button. At some point before Christmas I will post an end of year review and list. In the meantime, here's some of 2024's highest quality dubwise sounds wrapped up in an hourlong mix- there's much more that could have fitted into this mix too but in the end I wanted to keep it to under sixty minutes. Repetitive, bass heavy, echo- laden and spacious sounds for Sunday. 

2024 In Dub

  • Coyote: Living In Heaven
  • BTCOP: Sabre 540 (Rude Audio Remix)
  • Five Green Moons: Garbage Van Exhaust
  • Uj Pa Gaz: Roxy (Hardway Bros Meets Monkton Uptown)
  • David Harrow and Little Annie: End Of Times (Rude Audio's Immutable Remix)
  • Hugo Nicolson and David Harrow: Revolvalution (Dan Wainwright and Rude Audio VIP Remix)
  • Justin Robertson's Deadstock 33s: In Minus Shadows
  • The Woodentops: Dream On (Rolo's Dub)
  • Richard Norris: Fever Dub
  • Coyote: OMG

In early December Coyote released a dub 12", two huge dub tracks,Living In Heaven and OMG,  that are in their own description 'light as a feather- heavy as lead'. 

Living in Heaven sounds like it be from side six of Sandinista!, a massive compliment in this household- it also has a touch of the Sabres Of Paradise Ysaebud single. Rattling bassline, echo and vocal sample. Coyote add some strings. Lovely deep stuff

Rude Audio's remix of BTCOP's Sabres 540 came out on Tici Taci in February, a remix that Rude Audio's Mark Ratcliff thinks his among his best work. He's right. 

Five Green Moons is Justin Robertson's latest venture, a post- punk/ pagan dub excursion, an eleven track album that continues to reveal new depths with each play. Justin appears later on too, with a track from the EP he released on the excellent Pamela label in April, four tracks all to some extent infused with dub. 

Uj Pa Gaz is from Tirana, Albania, a Tici Taci recording artist, producer and DJ. Roxy came out in late July and appears here in Hardway Bros Meets Monkton Uptown remix , heavy duty dub action from Sean Johnston and Duncan Gray. There is a very beguiling Middle Eastern melody line that plays out from the start, tumbling percussion, rimshots, delay and the deep hit of dub bass.

David Harrow has turned sixty this year and has celebrated with a release every month, a treasure trove of music emanating from his LA studio. His EP with On U legend Little Annie, the New York post- punk/ dub poet, had the original version of End Of Times, an instrumental, an acapella, and six remixes, two by Rude Audio- the Immutable and Protean Remixes. The Immutable is the dubbier of the two, a dubbed out rhythm underpinning Little Annie's poetry, 'this is not a happy hour'.

And Rude Audio turn up again, their third appearance here, now with the assistance of the wonderful Dan Wainwright. They took a track recorded by two former Andrew Weatherall cohorts- David Harrow and Hugo Nicolson and spun out into psychedelic dub complete with a brain melting ukulele solo. There are Sabres Of Paradise sounds scattered throughout it.

The Woodentops released a new album in April this year, Fruits From The Deep, a deep and rewarding trip under the sea. Dream On was one of the highlights, remixed in dub style by main Woodentop Rolo McGinty. Dream On (Rolo's Dub) starts and ends with an airplane taking off. Flying off to somewhere warm seems like a dream right now. 

Richard Norris' Bandcamp subscription service rewards on a monthly basis, a project that started with his Music For Healing ambient project but has blossomed into other areas, not least his Oracle Sound series of albums. Oracle Sound is (currently) three albums of superb, home grown dub. Fever Dub is from 2024's Oracle Sound Volume Three. 

Tuesday, 26 November 2024

I See All And I See Nothing

Back in October I wrote about a new Justin Robertson project, Five Green Moons, a weirdly wonderful track called One Little Moon which I said had a feel of The Wicker Man meets King Tubbys Uptown, pagan/ folk spliced with post punk dub. Since the album arrived it's had a lot of play on my stereo, eleven slices of Justin's current sound served up in a way that builds on what he's been doing at virous places in the last few years- his novel The Tangle, some of the dubbings he's put out at his Bandcamp page, the Deadstock 33s EP on Pamela earlier this year, and the sounds and feel on the track he gave us for Sounds From The Flightpath Estate Vol. 1, Curtains Twitch On Peaks. Justin knows his stuff- he reads, he paints, he understands where things come from, and Five Green Moons album Moon 1 fits within this demi- world he's sketching out. 

The album opens with some percussive noises, the Space Echo FX unit kicking into life and a distorted PiL bassline bumping into earshot. Several disembodied voices flit in and out of the mix. A detuned guitar line cuts in. The bassline keeps repeating itself. The sound of the ancient, weird, folklore version of the English countryside- not the one the tourists see with Cotswold stone and green and pleasant fields but something darker- hedgerows, thorns, a foreboding cottage in the valley with one light flickering in a dirty window. Strange goings on.  

Tiny Spiral Loom rattles around, the speakers vibrating, guitars and bass running against each other as hi hats hiss. On Dark Wing Soundwave he channels the urban dub that his friend Andrew Weatherall found in Sabres Of Paradise, repetition and basslines combining with acres of space. I See All And I See Nothing is a little lighter, the clouds clearing at least for a while, the bass and percussion gliding and Justin's echo- laden guitars more beatific. 

There are echoes all over Moon 1 and the sounds conjure all sorts of memories too, things happening just of earshot. What did that voice say? What was that? Have I been here before? Memories, echoes, questions. 

Flip the album over and Song Of Dust splutters into life, insistent, stuttering rhythms building and a horn playing an off kilter melody. Another voice, speaking lines of verse about jealous gods and effigies. 

Spider Dub follows, another huge Sabres- esque bassline, organ, the hiss of a steam engine, a slowed down 1950s guitar line fed through a valve amp, all pushed along with the propulsion of PiL circa Metal Box. There's more to follow. In The Emptiness could be a dubbed out children's TV theme tune.  Materials Made From The Blood is wonky, pastoral psychedelia, encountered in a wooden village hall you wandered into accidentally when taking shelter from the elements. Justin's voice returns, intoning esoteric lines. Everything's A Song In A Sound World is beamed in from the dystopian discotheque. Final track Cracked Cloud Before War enters gently, synths and a calming rising and falling bass, massively distorted horns (maybe?) playing a distant haunted dancehall melody. Moon 1 is a self contained album/ world, a moon in its own orbit, the old woodland gods and vanishing 19th century folklore rubbing up against Studio 1 bass, a folked up, pagan dub soundtrack for late 2024. 

Sunday, 10 November 2024

Another Bagging Area Mix For Tak Tent Radio

I've done another mix for Tak Tent Radio, an internet radio station broadcasting out of Scotland for several years now and host to a wonderfully diverse and obscure selection of music. This is my twelfth mix for Tak Tent, an hour of tunes entirely music from 2024 and focussing very much on the dubwise sounds before pitching things up at the end with a pair of twisted dancefloor bangers. Listen to it at Tak Tent or at Mixcloud.

Tracklist

  •          Coyote: OMG
  •          Five Green Moons: One Lost Moon
  •          The Jonny Halifax Invocation: The Mountain Dub
  •          Richard Norris and Jon Carter: Ceefax (Jon Carter Due South Dub)
  •          Puerto Montt City Orchestra: Hey You (10:40 Remix)
  •          Pandit Pam Pam: Pass A Wish (Jezebell’s 50 Ways Mix)
  •          100 Poems: Come, Hear Me Now
  •          Fat White Family: Bullet Of Dignity (Beyond The Wizard’s Sleeve Remix)
  •          Acid Klaus ft Philly Piper: Aerodromes (David Holmes Remix)



    Tuesday, 1 October 2024

    Five Green Moons

    Justin Robertson seems fired up musically and creatively at the moment, his recent EP on Pamela and a run of tracks on Bandcamp all indicating someone still wanting to move forward, to take sounds into new areas and keep exploring. Dub influence has permeated much of his recordings and productions along with a weird pastoral, off kilter, pagan feel- the Wickerman meet King Tubby's Uptown perhaps (or at The Golden Lion more likely). Justin's newest project is an album on Pamela is Five Green Moons, a track ahead of an album next month. Bass and hissing hi hats, Space Echo, voices that come crawling out of a hedgerow in the English countryside, wide- eyed and having seen things. 

    Sunday, 7 July 2024

    An Hour At Tak Tent

    Tak Tent Radio is a Scottish based internet radio station that broadcasts all manner of interesting, experimental, leftfield and niche shows by a variety of guests. I've contributed guests mixes for a few years now and last weekend the latest Bagging Area Tak Tent emission went out, my eleventh. You can listen to it at the Tak Tent website here or at Mixcloud here. It's a chilled out dubby/ ambient/ Balearic affair, mostly music released this year but with a vintage Andrew Weatherall and David Harrow track thrown in, their sole recording as Planet 4 Folk Quartet (for Warchild in 1995). 

    • M- Paths: Emerge
    • Planet 4 Folk Quartet: Message To Crommie
    • Richard Norris: Pagan Dub
    • Sewell & The Gong: Passing Oort Clouds (Justin Robertson’s Deadstock 33s Remix)
    • Justin Robertson’s Deadstock 33s: Minus Shadows
    • Psychederek: Hapi
    • Spatial Awareness: Dream Food (SA Dub)
    • Timothy J. Fairplay: Centurion Version
    • Coyote: Every Forest Has A Shadow (Vanity Project Remix)
    • KlangKollektor: Midnight Express
    • Florecer: Hidden Thoughts


    Friday, 8 March 2024

    Pamela One To Four

    Pamela Records is a London based label with to date only four release to its name (three already out and one to come shortly), run by Dave Jarvis and Darren House. Pamela is a sister label to Moton Records (and hence the joke of the name, which I think is Tamla Motown pun). Pamela 001 was one of the last releases by Andrew Weatherall before his untimely death in February 2020- in fact if memory serves Pamela 001 arrived on my door mat just a few days after Andrew's death. The EP has four Andrew Weatherall and Nina Walsh tracks, led by the track The Moton 5 (another Motown. Jackson 5 pun I'm guessing). The Moton 5 is a slinky number built around a deeply chuggy groove and some machine based noises, occasional bursts of timpani and synth chord key changes, and a huge descending, slightly Eastern sounding synth string part. 

    The other three tracks on Pamela 001 show how high Andrew's quality control was- all three are the equal of the lead track and all stand alongside anything else Andrew recorded under his own name. Slap And Slide has the inclusion of a burst of slap bass, something fairly rare in Weatherall world. March Violets sees the return of Andrew's steam powered drum machine and some very WRF bleeps and FX (and is named after one of the novels in Philip Kerr's Berlin Noir trilogy,highly recommended if you fancy some detective fiction set in Germany in the 1930s). The Moton 5.2 finishes the EP off, a further deconstruction of the lead track, uberchug, chug as a way of life. 

    Pamela 002 didn't appear until three years later, in the summer of 2023, a four track EP by Jo Sims titled Bass- The Final Frontier. It came with a David Holmes remix that was one of my favourite pieces of music from last year, seven minutes and twelve seconds of wobbly, slo mo, supercharged sci fi acid house. 


    The flipside of the 12" had two further tracks, Demons Of Dance and Mumbo Jumbo. The former is a bass led beast, a fuzzed up electro crawl. The latter is a wiggy and spaced out treat pushed onwards by a rattling drum track. 

    Pamela 003 followed a few months later, an EP from Anthony Teasdale called Tango de la Boca. Once again, four tracks across two sides of a 12" single, with the title track a chunky, sundown moment with a rippling piano line.

    The EP also featured A Pavement In Palma and Deep In The Forest Something Stared and was completed by the Balearic sounds of It's 5am Somewhere

    Pamela 004 is next, four tracks from Justin Robertson. I pulled together a fifty minute mix of Justin's recordings as Deadstock 33s a few Sundays ago (it's here) and by happy coincidence his Pamela EP comes out at the start of April. Justin's EP keeps the standards high, not just of the Pamela back catalogue but of his own releases and recordings from recent years. There's plenty of wired dub basslines, chuggy drums and spacey FX, a wonderful four track, twenty five minute release. Opener In Minus Shadows is a dubby delight with a front foot bassline and some guitar that could come from an early New Order record. The distorted effect on the voice makes the vocal sounds like its been beamed in from some other world, and is a close cousin of the track Justin gave us for The Sounds From The Flightpath Estate Volume 1. The snares rattle and echo while the kick drum thuds away. It's followed by Endless Motorcade, propelled by a faster, pumping drumbeat, with revving engines and a foreground synth bassline. Sci fi bleeps and FX swirl around. Cup Of Silence follows, basement chug, thumping kick drum, melodica, shakers, flutters of flute and more disembodied vocals. The dub bass returns, a Sabres Of Paradise style speaker shaker. Of Ghosts rounds things off in fine style, drum machine gainfully employed and plenty of squelch and filters bouncing around. Washes of synth chords come in, again recalling early 80s New Order, the promise of an imaginary Factory electronic dub offshoot from 1983, and then bleeps riding over it all. 


    Sunday, 25 February 2024

    Fifty Minutes Of Deadstock 33s

    Last May I did a Sunday mix of Justin Robertson remixes from the 90s, forty minutes of trumpets and acid house/ indie- dance. It's here. I always intended to come back and do a more recent mix of Justin's music and having struggled with a completely different Sunday mix for a couple of days- it just wan't coming together and the segues were difficult to get right- I thought today would do for a return to Mr. Robertson and specifically his music and remixes as his Deadstock 33s. There are eight tracks in today's mix coming in at around fifty minutes, plenty of dub influence, lots of chuggy drum machine rhythms, a few New Order- esque moments, some cosmic motorik grooves and some lovely wired and weird synth and FX flying around. On top of all that Justin is always faultlessly turned out, has a fine array of headwear and always comes across as a thoroughly good chap. 

    Fifty Minutes Of Justin Robertson's Deadstock 33s

    • Mercury Project
    • Magnetic
    • The Confidence Man (Justin Robertson's Deadstock 33s Remix)
    • Dark Endless
    • Brix Goes Tubular
    • Lone Raver In Dub
    • The Circular Path (Asphodells Remix)
    • One Lone Rider
    Mercury Project came out on a  2013 compilation titled Treasure Hunting, released by Astrolab, and a rather good round up of chuggy cosmic disco/ house from a decade ago with Hardway Bros. Tim Fairplay, Toby Tobias, Scott Fraser, Daniel Avery, Mugwump, Marc Pinol and Ana Helder in the list of artists included. Something of a forerunner in that sound/ scene. 

    Magnetic was from an EP with Daniel Avery and sounds like early 80s New Order wired up to the nearest electricity pylon, a very smart piece of 2012 motorik psychedelia, released on Optimo.

    The Confidence Man  was a stand out song on Andrew Weatherall's solo album Convenanza. The remix album that followed it, Consolamentum, saw Andrew remixed by Justin along with Unloved, Heretic, Duncan Gray, The Emperor Machine, Red Axes, Tim Fairplay and Scott Fraser. On the sleeve there was a very Weatherall quote- 'delights are stronger the longer they remain secret' (by Joseph Roth).

    Dark Endless was on a digital only compilation released by Spun Out Agency in 2022, a tribute to Mr. Weatherall, that went under the title More Of That Frightful Oompty Boompty Music. Justin gets on the cosmische tip on Dark Endless, a throbbing bassline and swirling sounds setting the controls for the outer limits. 

    Brix Goes Tubular was a Bandcamp only single from 2022, three tracks recorded by Justin and Brix Smith (with a dub mix). I'd forgotten about it until pulling this mix together and really like it, Brix and Justin finding a musical sweet spot in the space somewhere between dub, Tom Tom Club and surf. 

    Lone Raver In Dub is a bouncing, rocking dub- flecked tune from September last year, part of the ongoing Deadstock 33s Unreleased series at Bandcamp, a goldmine of music. 

    The Asphodells (Andrew Weatherall and Timothy J Fairplay) remixed Deadstock 33s' The Circular Path in 2013. The remix is ticking, clanging, metallic space motorik with a spluttering topline and acres of echo and wobbling synth oscillations. 

    One Lone Rider came out in summer 2023, a massively distorted bass drum and frequency test synth line, six minutes of hypnotic sci fi dub/ acid house.

    Sunday, 18 February 2024

    An Hour For Tak Tent Radio

    Last Sunday Tak Tent Radio hosted an hour long mix of mine, my tenth for the radio station. You can listen to it at Mixcloud and or at Tak Tent. It's mainly made up of music from 2023 with a couple of older (but still fairly recent) ones, almost all having featured at this blog at some point in the past. The Jezebell track is unavailable elsewhere and was sent out to people who pre- ordered the double vinyl edition of Jezebellearic Beats Vol 1(and although Jesse and Darren said the track would never be made available from them they were happy for other people to share it- I thought this mix was a good place for it and luckily Jesse and Darren agree). The Khidja track has become a minor Bagging Area obsession- this is the third mix its appeared on, previously making it onto my end of 2023 mix and the David Holmes at The Golden Lion one a few weeks ago.  

    • CLAIR: Body Blossom (Extended Mix)
    • Psychederek: Test Card Girl
    • Andy Bell and Masal: Tidal Love Conversation In That Familiar Golden Orchard (Edit)
    • Coyote: We Got Lost
    • Justin Robertson’s Deadstock 33s: Golden Twilight 23
    • Cole Odin: Dawn’s Approaching (Psychemagik Remix)
    • Jezebell: A Dangerous Side
    • C.A.R.: Anzu
    • Khidja: Do You Know This Record Marius?
    • Bedford Falls Players: Marmite Marimba
    • Four Tet: Bubbles At Overlook 25th March 2019

     

    Saturday, 13 January 2024

    Saturday Sessions

    Keeping up with all the music that is being released is a full time job, one I don't always have the time to devote to it. There are albums and releases from last year I still need to explore. All the while, more and more music comes forth via the magic of the internet with radio shows, sessions and mixes. This is a round up of some recent shows and mixes, some I've enjoyed in full and some I've only got partway through and will go back to. If you listen to all of these today, you'll finish sometime this evening, exhausted maybe but replenished. 

    First up is Justin Robertson and his bi- monthly Temple Of Wonders. This episode is fresh off the press, broadcast three days ago on 10th January, a two hour jaunt through Justin's record box taking in a typically eclectic range of music- psychedelia, dub, ambient, global, setting out with Pilot Voyager and concluding two hours and thirty eight tracks later with Tim Hardin. Listen at Mixcloud

    On New Year's Eve Sean Johnston stayed home and broadcast to those staying in and to those who'd bene out and came back to find Sean still at the decks, seven hours and forty five minutes of chuggy cosmic ALFOS tunes, starting out quite slow and trippy and getting increasingly propulsive and dancey. Excellence as standard. Listen here

    Jesse Fahnestock and Emilia Harmony's music was a repeat attraction at this blog last year, their Electric Blue Vision EP, Jesse's 10:40 album, a slew of Jezebell tracks and various other releases, lighting up 2023. Jesse and Emilia sat in with Brighton's Balearic Ultras and Music For Dreams playing music and chatting, an hour of laid back discussion, and perfectly pitched and seamlessly sequenced music, telling the stories of what lies behind the Electric Blue Vision EP. Both Jesse and Emilia have great voices for radio- it's a lovely way to spend an hour. Listen to it here

    Lastly on New Year's Day Nina Walsh appeared on the long running Sonic Treasures radio show, Brother Joseph's Glasgow based radio show that transmits via radio Magnetic, a trove of the leftfield and eclectic, ambient, electronic and psychedelic. Nina played a perfectly sequenced two hours of music, some unreleased tracks done with Andrew Weatherall, plenty of music from her Fireflies band (as heard on Killing Eve), some WRF and some unreleased Andrew Weatherall remixes of Fireflies. Find it at Soundcloud

    While we're talking about radio, transmissions and new music, the death of legendary radio DJ Annie Nightingale was announced yesterday. Annie was BBC 1's first female DJ and a tireless and endlessly energetic advocate for new music, leftfield sounds and underground music, not least much of the music that has featured here over the last fourteen years. She died aged 83. RIP Annie.