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Sunburned Hand Of The Man
Locked/Loaded
Meudiademorte MDDM-38
One-Sided C60 Cassette
£6.99
“New Limited cassette from Sunburned Hand Of The Man. Sounds funky like a psych jam at a hot summer day in the winter. But where is the ice cream... lim to 200 copies.” – MM.
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Sunburned Hand Of The Man
Glek
Manhand MH-90
CD-R
£8.99
Five track album from the Sunburned line-up of Moloney, Bohill, MJK, Thomas and Franklin, recorded live at the Sunburned loft in 2005. Classic SBHOTM outer space percussion, electronics, Xhol-style rhythms and caveman visions. Edition of 100 copies with full colour sleeves in plastic cases.
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Sunburned Hand Of The Man
The Dry Triangle
Manhand MH-92
Cassette
£6.99
Edition of only 50 copies archival trawl through some very early, pre-Mind Of A Brother jams from an extended Sunburned Hand Of The Man line-up: “Songs from around the indoor campfire. A very early line-up - the borders books crew / liquid andrew days. Donnelley, Cousin Rich, Chad, Moloney, Thomas & who knows. These tapes are so fun for me to go through because I don't remember a shred of it happening but these are very formative pieces which led to the mind of a brother crew - circa 1997, this one has a starsailor tribe vibe.” – John Moloney.
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Sunburned Hand Of The Man
Haz
Manhand MH-93
Cassette
£6.99
Edition of only 50 copies archival trawl through some very early, pre-Mind Of A Brother jams from an extended Sunburned Hand Of The Man line-up circa 1997. The focus here is more on drug-glazed synth moves and eerie, lurking atmospherics, making it one of the more minimal, psychedelic SBHOTM sides. Roughly the same line-up as the companion The Dry Triangle cassette.
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Sunburned Hand Of The Man
Drifting Mist
Manhand MH-101
CD-R
£9.99
”September 2007 tour - 4 piece Cleveland department - Moloney, Nodelman (Borbetomagus et al), O'shea and Richardson on this synth-heavy live drift. Edit and art by Sunburned's Sarah.” – MH. Hand-numbered edition of 100 copies.
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Sunburned Hand Of The Man
Silence Of Colour
Manhand MN-99
CD-R
£9.99
”Sonic juxtaposition of Humboldt County Medical on Halloween 2008 Vs. Southern Vermont dank -July 2008 - run through the editing and art filter of Sunburned's newest member Sarah O' Shea - features Franklin, Moloney, O'shea, Thomas and Schneiderman” – MH. Hand-numbered edition of 100 copies.
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Sunburned Hand Of The Man
Spraycan In Space
Manhand MH-102
CD-R
£9.99
”76th (and final) instalment in the Sunburned 2008 live series brings us to the new Mystery Train featuring special guests Matthew ‘MV’ Valentine on shred and Matt Krefting (Son Of Earth et al) on speeches. Christmas music for Eddie Quasar. Edit and layout by Sarah.” – MH. Hand-numbered edition of 100 copies.
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Sunburned Hand Of The Man
The Ox Of Oh
Tarot & Bananas No Cat
Cassette
£8.99
First limited edition cassette in a series curated by Sunburned member Michael K and focussed on ‘classic era’ jams recorded in the Sunburned loft 2003-2006. This first instalment is limited to 100 copies and is drawn from a 2003 session featuring Dave Bohill, John Moloney, Rob Thomas, Phil Franklin and Michael K.
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Sunburned Circle
The Blaze Game
Conspiracy Records Core-054
LP
£12.99
Two-way face off between two modern riff monsters, Sunburned Hand Of The Man and Finland's Circle. Sunburned Hand line-up features Mick Flower of Vibracathedral Orchestra on guitar, reed horn and percussion alongside Phil Franklin, Rob Thomas, Ron Schneiderman, John Moloney and Michael K. Both bands play together as one and the results span fluttering psychedelic blues, Silence-style monolithic rock, ritualistic trump and moan and a whole ton of motorik metal. The limited LP version comes with a fold-out poster.
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Franklin's Mint
Time Bends Light
Sunburned Records No Cat
CD
£10.99
New limited self-released solo album from Phil Franklin, Sunburned Hand Of The Man’s wildcard stand-up man, art visionary and song and dance man. The follow-up to the excellent Gold CD, this one stretches further into the kind of saw-dust gargling American country-honk forms of players like Steve Young, Country Honk-era Stones, Flying Burrito Brothers, Skip Spence and The Grateful Dead circa Working Man’s Dead. Franklin is a beautiful songwriter with a very personal take on classic song writing and private press sonics and this is an excellent collision of both that takes his vision well outside of the Sunburned cultus and into the stream of classic American songforms. Comes packaged in a wooden box with paste-on artwork. Edition of 100.
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Pewtr
Always Heavy
Yod Tapes #15
Cassette
£6.99
“Pewtr is Sunburned Hand Of The Man’s Ron Schneiderman taking a solo electric guitar and spoken word trip to parts unknown. On the Mazzacane tip.” – YT. Edition of 100 copies.
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Baby Jesus Burnout
s/t
Manhand MH-85
Cassette
£7.99
Limited cassette from this new Western Mass trio featuring Conrad Capistran (Sunburned Hand Of The Man/Tarp), Bob Fay (former Sebadoh drummer) and Matt Jones playing a particularly baked take on DIY synth ritual. On Sunburned’s own imprint.
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Cave Bears
Horribble And Useless
Yod Tapes #19
Cassette
£7.99
Demented angular synth with helium-vox and cartoon cut-ups from this group from Turners Fall, MA, much championed by Sunburned Hand Of The Man.
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The Aether Myth'd
The Eight
Spirit Of Orr SO-65
CD-R
£9.99
New collection of material from this east coast acid/freak unit featuring Paul Labrecque and Ron Schneiderman of Sunburned Hand Of The Man alongside a bunch of mystery 'guests'. All assembled from recordings that span 2004 through to 2007 mostly made at their Blueberry Studio space in Brattleboro, VT. This is heavy guitar psych dilated to the point of narcolepsy, with lazy cartwheeling lead guitar ala Jerry Garcia working static acid assemblages of endlessly rotating notes while a second guitar dunts a bunch of notes into amorphous shapes somewhere in the distance. Primitive basement psych that should appeal to any Twisted Village aficionados pining for a new apex of high. This is a tour-only disc in a run of 200 hand-assembled copies.
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Matt Krefting
I Couldn't Love You More
Ecstatic Peace E#91D
CD
£9.99
New solo album from Matt Krefting, a member of Duck, Idea Fire Company, Face/Ass, Son Of Earth, The Believers et al. All cover versions, with tracks by Richard Thompson, Jerry Garcia, Rick Danko and more cut with the help of J. Masics and members of Sunburned Hand Of The Man and The Believers. "My "career" in music is about to enter its 13th year. Lucky 13! I've performed in at least 15 groups (probably more on the order of 20 if you count guest spots) over the years, the most prominent being the long-running "quiet music" combo Son of Earth and the short-lived-but-much hyped Believers. Historically more of an experimental man, the Believers project showcased my always right-below-the-surface interest and passion for all things rock, and so, a couple of years after the demise of that group, I was approached by Ecstatic Peace, who asked me to produce a solo record. For the better part of a year I conceptualized, recruited, and eventually came up with I Couldn't Love You More. An early attempt to marry electronics, field recordings, and song was scrapped in favor of the personal and perhaps obvious choice of producing a covers record. It was the perfect idea, the realization of a dream. Years of singing in the shower and on long car trips had given way to the stuff of fantasy. Why stick to what you know when you can reach for what you've always desired? I asked friends to help with the realization. John Moloney, Phil Franklin, Ron Schneiderman, and Rob Thomas (all of Sunburned Hand of the Man), I've known for years. Same with J Mascis. Old friends John Shaw (who I've done more music with than anyone) and Lynn Myers provide some vocals here and there, as does my wife, Jamie Jo Oltmans. The Wild Card here is John Townsend. Andrew Kesin of Ecstatic Peace introduced me to him, and he was a jack-of-all-trades. He plays on most of the tracks, sometimes exclusively, and co-produced. I chose songs from all over the map, from Rick Danko to John Martyn to the great Bill Fay. Not exactly lightweights, and quite intimidating when their full historical weight is taken into account. However, I attacked each piece with the intensity of one who truly loves these songs. I didn't concern myself with being overly arty or inventive in my interpretations (there are no truly radical re-workings of anything here), instead allowing my own emotional investment in the material to guide me and inform the other players. These are songs of love and longing. The themes are eternal. It's an honor to have had the chance to play them. Enjoy the music." - Matt Krefting, December 2008
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Sunburned Hand of the Man
An Ant’s Death
Manhand MH-105
CD-R
£8.99
Self-released hand-numbered edition of 100 copies, with an audio collage of a 2008 Birmingham show, a blow-out from Mick Flower’s house, a London gig and a set from Greenfield, MA. Features a buncha heads: Moloney, Thomas, Schneiderman, Sarah O' Shea, Paul Labrecque, Mick Flower, Conrad Capistran, Phil Franklin, Taylor Richardson, and Adam Nodelman (Borbetomagus).
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D. Charles Speer & The Helix
Distillation
Three Lobed No Cat
LP + CD
£18.99
Deluxe 180g vinyl in heavy Stoughton gatefold sleeves from this offshoot from the No-Neck mothership led by David Shuford and featuring Marc Orleans (Sunburned Hand Of The Man), Hans Chew (Jack Rose et al) and Rob Gregory (The Suntanama). Distillation is an even deeper countrified pass through classic Americana given the kind of psychedelic nudie suit edge of The Byrds circa Sweetheart/Notorious or the first Flying Burrito Brothers album. Shuford’s vocals have an uncommon weigh that gives the songs a Biblical/basement tapes feel while the arrangements are weirdly sophisticated in a way that rewards repeated deep listening. Edition of 891 copies, bundled with a bonus CD that features a live set from the group and an MP3 download coupon.
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Kohoutek & Soil Sing Through Me
New Milk
Wabana No Cat
CD-R
£5.99
New instalment of Wabana's limited to 200 CD-R series is a big band collaborative shot from these two North American psych/drug units, with Kohoutek go up against a Soil Sing Through Me line-up that features Paul Labrecque and Ron Schneiderman of Sunburned Hand Of The Man. Some of the backwoods garage style of the attack has a nice Crazy Horse/Savage Sons Of Ya Ho Wha meets ballroom Kosmiche feel, with plenty of serpentine string action and upper atmosphere analogue tweaking. There's even some shots of Miles 70s electro/brass confusion, albeit transmuted in a similar style to Sunburned Hand's acid funk. All laid down with a great recorded-through-a-cheap-stereo feel.
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Head Of Wantastiquet
18.02.2010
Unsound Recordings UNR-013
CD-R
£13.99
Edition of 120 copies CD-R documenting a live performance from Paul Labrecque (Sunburned Hand Of The Man/Trees Chants And Hollers/The Other Method et al). Labrecque’s string work makes reference to the lonesome sound of Sandy Bull and John Fahey while connecting with the experiments in contemporary American Primitive drone of Paul Metzger and Matthew Valentine. Quietly psychedelic and spellbindingly intimate. In full colour gatefold card sleeve.
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Eleven Twenty-Nine
s/t
Northern Spy NSLP-007
LP
£13.99
New duo project from Tom Carter of Charalambides and Marc Orleans of Sunburned Hand Of The Man. If you’ve caught any of the recent solo blats from Tom Carter since his relocation to NYC then you’ll know that that these days his guitar is fully set to shred and this is a stunning document of two string-thinkers working with maximal freedom and organic rhythms. The opening “Eyes Of Jewels, Mirrored Bodies” marries Orleans great fingerpicking style – which comes from a similar place to Glenn Jones – to Tom’s wild west coast style. Later tracks explode the blueprint even further, marring a 90s underground feel for squeal with an immolating post-Sonny Sharrock aesthetic. Easily one of the wildest sides either of these guys have cut and if you’re into bloodied six string euphoria then you’ll even be able to forgive them their ‘poem’ to Jack Rose. Stick to the string-slinging, brothers! 150g vinyl with download.
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Eleven Twenty-Nine
s/t
Northern Spy NSLP-007
CD
£11.99
New duo project from Tom Carter of Charalambides and Marc Orleans of Sunburned Hand Of The Man. If you’ve caught any of the recent solo blats from Tom Carter since his relocation to NYC then you’ll know that that these days his guitar is fully set to shred and this is a stunning document of two string-thinkers working with maximal freedom and organic rhythms. The opening “Eyes Of Jewels, Mirrored Bodies” marries Orleans great fingerpicking style – which comes from a similar place to Glenn Jones – to Tom’s wild west coast style. Later tracks explode the blueprint even further, marring a 90s underground feel for squeal with an immolating post-Sonny Sharrock aesthetic. Easily one of the wildest sides either of these guys have cut and if you’re into bloodied six string euphoria then you’ll even be able to forgive them their ‘poem’ to Jack Rose. Stick to the string-slinging, brothers!
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The Other Method
No Bridges No Walls
Wooden Finger 02
CD-R
£6.99
Second release from the label that brought us the phenomenally popular Trees, Chants & Hollers from Valerie Webb and Paul Labrecque. The Other Method is that duo’s electric/horns group and No Bridges No Walls gathers recordings that date from the same time as their previous release, One Eye Love Is and also features Michael Kay from Sunburned Hand Of The Man. This is electronics, horns, vocals and drums bent with the same kind of elastic ferocity as yr favourite brass-devouring free jazz duo. Also touches on some nice zones of chattering delay that summon up visions of small constellations melting into slow blobs of tone somewhere in the throat of Marshall Allen midway through Phil Niblock’s Sun Ra film The Magic Sun as well as some subtle, almost modal trance pieces that will please fans of Trees, Chants…Limited to only 150 copies.
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Sunburned Hand of the Man
The Trickle-Down Theory Of Lord Knows What
Eclipse No Cat
LP
£14.99
Original vinyl copies of their long-gone 2003 Eclipse LP, which many rate as their best. It's certainly their most form destroying, a whole other vibration from most of the Manhand CDs.
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Sunburned Hand of the Man
The One You Forgot To Forget
Lost Treasures Of The Underworld No Cat
C40 Cassette
£8.99
Cool archival release that bundles a bunch of peak-period jams from Sunburned Hand Of The Man, al recorded across 2006. Features a bunch of radically expanded line-ups, with the core group joined by Chris Corsano, Mick Flower, Bridget Hayden and Keith Wood. Weird, detourned, almost Magic Band scale jams go up against vocal goofs, string drones, Ubu-styled garage and all-out Xhol worship. Cassettes come in screened cloth cases with insert.
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MV & EE with Mick Flower
Hit The North
Heroine No Cat
CD-R
£6.99
“Fantastic set by Matthew Valentine and Erika Elder from the recent UK tour in February 2010 recorded at the Brudenell Social Club, Leeds. On this one the duo are joined by local resident Mick Flower on bass for the whole set and the Doozer provides blues harp on a couple of tracks. Whilst this is the same line-up and a similar set as those played in Manchester and Coventry a few days later (captured on recent Heroine releases "(Bad) Blood on the Doozer's Guitar" and "Electric Wharf (Conventrian)") this is well worth checking out as it has quite a different sound: more agressive, bit faster and really good mix on the sonics. Firstly, this 'bootleg' comes from two composite mixes to get it right and it shows with a much clearer recording than some of the other Heroine releases. The set opens with "Cold Rain" which sounds sublime this time around; Mick's bass is less distorted, you can hear those melodic bass runs properly this time, and this is clearest I have heard Erika's firebird mandolin and lap steel outside of a spectrasound recording. About four minutes in MV drops a beautiful solo with single melting notes ringing out, great version. Next up is "Get Right Church" which is the only performance from the set which does not have such a hard edge. Instead it is a much more authentic blues rendition which reminds me of the electric blues recordings from Chess Studios circa 1950s. The Doozer's blues harp is simple 3-note riffs but with effective note bending in the style of Junior Wells or Little Watler, and MV's clean, single note solos sound like Hubert Sumlin. Midway through MV produces some delicate clean wah-wah reminiscent of Hendrix's "Up from the Skies" before bursting into a fuller onslaught for the song's close. If the versions of this song from the No Floor Tour were blues rock at their finest, then this version is simply electric blues at its finest. Dedicated to Jo Ann Kelly who I'm sure would have approved. "Summer Magic" returns to the more frazzled playing on this set with the opening chords being laden in wah-wah and hammered out relentlessly throughout. Really like the version of "Environments" on this set of shows with the sitar-sounding meanderings going into waves of raga induced chord-like crescendos which whip up a frenzy. Sounds a bit like a live take on "Jook Enthusiast", the opening track from the latest COM release "Bollywoe". Finally, a few seconds of fuzz signals the descent from "Environments" into one of the heavier versions of "Canned Happiness" I have heard, even without drums. Not much canned boogie, only a full-on feedback onslaught just to prove they can melt guitars better than Courtis / Moore, yeah right! Only question remains, did Mick Flower's house feature in the top ten middens? Great sonics. Highly recommended.” – Andrew Ross
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MV & EE w/Mick Flower, The Doozer and Anram
Monumental Force (Biggest Moment)
Heroine No Cat
CD-R
£6.99
“Big sounding highly energetic set from the trio of Matthew Valentine, Erika Elder and Mick Flower from the infamous “Steal Yr Slice” tour joined by Andy Ramsay (drums) and The Doozer (mouth harp). Towards the end of this tour the group started to play two sets a night with not much of an acoustic/electric split but probably more of an experimental trio/stretched out Golden Road jams split. Presented here is the second set from the show at Café Oto which is fast becoming one of London’s premier underground music venues. I actually attended this show and there was a tremendous atmosphere with everyone sat round tables looking like a scene out some Parisienne café. The microbrews kicked in by the time the second set came round. This set is also notable as it marks the live debut/audition of Andy Ramsay (of Stereolab fame on drums). First off the sound quality on this recording is fantastic with the drums sounding really full giving the overall set a big sound of monumental proportions. Secondly, it is fair to note that given this is the debut performance of a new line-up the particular choice of numbers, rockers like “East Mountain Joint”, “Get Right Church” and “Canned Happiness” lend themselves towards more strung out blues jams in the style of the Allman Brothers Band or Canned Heat. Probably most similar sounding to the recent Freak Flag set a couple of nights later from Exeter. The set opens with one of the tour’s highlights, a reworked version of “East Mountain Joint”. The drums are played with a motoric precision and with minimal fills giving the song an almost euphoric drive. Mick’s melodic basslines sound particularly fantastic with a really good sounding mix between all the guitars. At about five minutes the song breaks into a two-note bassline which signals the start of that west coast style jam. Compared to other versions though, the song seems to naturally speed-up, giving this a really energetic edge. The song breaks again into a slower paced section before finishing on a kind of start/stop break beat rhythm. This is one of the highlights of the set for me. The addition of slow pounding drums turns “Home Comfort” into a real Neil Young/Crazy Horse sounding jam. MV is particularly wild on guitar on this one, sounding almost possessed while laying down walls of feedback between wild flurries of notes. A rarely available cover of Dylan’s “Positively 4th Street” makes a welcome return having only previously appeared on the Red Head Transistor and Not Only Wine But Oblivion I Pour sets. However, given both those were duo performances this is the only true authentic “Dylan ‘65” sounding electric folk version. The set finishes with some monumental blues jams around “Get Right Church” and “Canned Happiness”. The Doozer’s simple but effective three-note bending harmonica riffs really enhance those numbers and Anram’s double kick-drum fills give them a real driving energy, inspiring MV to some wild electric blues – sweet, my kind of stuff. Overall, a set which runs: “East Mountain Joint”, “Home Comfort”, “’Scuse Me Rap”, “Positively 4th Street”, “Reconnoitering The Lovejoy Rap”, “Get Right Church”, “Help Yrself Carny Rap” and finally “Canned Happiness” into “Environments” back into “Canned Happiness”. Fairly long single set at 59 minutes, recommended for those who like their extended sweet Golden Road style jams. On the basis of the quality of this recording I can’t wait to hear the first set whose release is imminent. It’s recommended.” – Andrew Ross.
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Matt ‘MV’ Valentine
What I Became
Woodsist 052
LP
£15.99
“Matthew Valentine opens it up to deliver a masterpiece solo album in what might just be one of the recorded highlights of his career so far: It was always going to be important that MV delivered an album that didn’t sound principally like an MV&EE album or any of the releases with the various augmented ‘Golden Road’ line-ups. In that regard, he has succeeded in delivering a record that sounds like nothing he has done before while clearly building on prior musical and personal themes – a concept that recurs throughout this deeply affecting musical statement.
What I Became is particularly introspective and inward looking - at times fairly dark – and it shares aesthetic ground with career anomalies like Gene Clark’s White Light, Dennis Wilson’s Pacific Ocean Blue and Neil Young’s On The Beach. In fact, an even closer comparison may be Terry Reid’s River album with its notable side A/ B split loosely termed ‘City’ and ‘Country’. What I Became also seems to have a split focus, with the first side focusing on ‘physical surroundings’ and evoking the importance of that Home Comfort vibe through more up-tempo numbers, while the second side is more introspective and seems focussed more on personal aspects. The presentation of the album seems to support this ‘concept’ of the journey and what he became. The inner sleeve acts almost like a scrapbook of MV’s life, with pictures from throughout the years pulling in various locations, homes, and personal acquaintances. At an informed guess this includes MV’s homes from Lower East Manhattan through to Maximum Arousal Farm in Vermont. It also features a various who’s-who of the psychedelic underground, including a shot of him hanging with the late Jutok Kaneko of Kousokuya, and it even goes so far as to include his influence on the free folk underground with a poster for the original Brattleboro Free Folk Festival. It’s then that you realise you are looking at a virtual time capsule and you feel the weight of personal importance that this release carries.
Opener “Continuing The Good Life” seems to act as the prelude or overture to the LP – a two and half minute instrumental with a single hooting vocal cry. It features some beautifully finger-picked country folk chords with subtle psychedelic and spectrasound arrangements, as if paying reference to his other work and sounds. Also some sublime single piano notes that remind me as much of English as American folk, with the influence of some simple Joe Boyd-type produced arrangements. At the end the song segues between acoustic guitar and an ‘environ’ looped soundscape, reminding me of some of the recent live transitions between “Environments” and “The Hungry Stones” from the “Steal Yr Slice” tour. Next is “Hit The Trails” which is the wildest full-on song on the album. Again this seems to focus on the importance of physical surroundings as well as paying homage to MV’s love of playing live – “Hit the trails, up on the road”. I read a few older interviews with MV prior to listening to this record and a recurring theme which came up was the influence of ‘where I live’ on the sound of his records. This can be traced through his work from living around the area of 4th Street and Avenue B in the Lower East side (“Av. B” later on this album) where there were small practice spaces and the remains of the Manhattan loft scene all the way to the influence of the open space of his surroundings in Vermont on his work in more recent years. “Hit The Trails” could even be a reference to walking the East Mountain Road itself, which is featured appropriately on the back cover shot. The track itself has more of a ‘live’ feel and sounds not unlike Thurston Moore’s “Trees Outside The Academy” with its blend of frazzled electric guitar and soaring arcs of notes over repetitively strummed chords on the acoustic. The way “Hit The Trails” is sung/spoken reminds me of Lee Ranaldo’s vocals on classic tracks like “Hey Joni” and “Mote”. Next is a clear reference to the influence on MV of lunar sounds with the excellent space raga jam of “PK Dick”. This was originally released as a 7-inch on Time-Lag (TL043) back in 2007 as a Dylan-esque folk blues w/rambling prose recorded on a 4-track. Here it’s radically re-worked with the original lyrics spoken over the top with the kind of gonzo rap-style delivery used on “The Beater” from Bollywoe (COM35). We hear the repeated mantra of “Ryan stepped up, everybody gave him a hand” from the extended title of the original accompanied by a space raga jam which includes hand percussion that is almost dub-like alongside enchanting harp and lucid spectrasound meanderings that come across like underwater guitars. It’s worth spinning back-to-back with the original. Side one closes with the deeply personal “Stay” in anticipation of the more introspective side two. With gently strummed acoustic chords and a delicate arrangement of oscillating wah-wah tones, MV delivers one of his finest vocals to date. Overall, this album seems to have more of a focus on the vocals and the lyrics, and no more so than this track. The lines “I will always love you that way, why won’t you stay” could sound almost cliché in the hands of a lesser performer, but delivered here in a strained, raspy, emotional vocal style reminiscent of Dennis Wilson circa Pacific Ocean Blue you know it’s heartfelt and sincere – long drawn on the anguish of the soul. Overall side two seems to work as a complete side as opposed to individual tracks. With a running order of “Ease My Eyes”, “Ave. B” and “Sweet Little Indian Girl”, all tracks are stripped bare and based around strummed acoustic guitar chords and vocals. It’s heartbreakingly beautiful. “Ease My Eyes” has some gentle finger-picked chords and an acoustic bass sound courtesy of Mike “Muscox” Smith that is so clear and organic you could almost be there in the room. MV has always displayed a strong influence from English folk and the interplay between the guitar and bass could easily be that of Nick Drake and Danny Thompson. Erika Elder makes her only appearance on this track, contributing some atmospheric slide as well as some haunting double-tracked vocals. The song closes with a restrained solo of single weeping notes. “Ave. B” retains the mood of the side with a reflective piece that possibly relates to the earlier days and sounds around 4th Street, Avenue B and Tompkins Square on the Lower East Side. The side closes with the epic “Sweet Little Indian Girl” which is a dark blues masterpiece. It’s possibly a coincidence in light of the comparisons between Country Stash and David Crosby’s If I Could Only Remember My Name, but this song may have taken its title from Rita Coolidge’s character in Crosby’s “Cowboy Movie” from the same album. At almost nine minutes in it gives way to two simple chords accompanied by sporadic hand percussion that sounds like falling raindrops courtesy of Woods’ Jeremy Earl holding this fragile song loosely in place. With atmospheric vocals and lyrics that include “So please tell how far down I came, I don’t know what I’ve become” this is the darkest I’ve heard from MV this far. Only the desolation of Neil Young’s “Ambulance Blues” comes close. A deeply personal, psychedelic and at moments very dark release from MV – not psychedelic in the sense of far out ‘spectra’ but more in terms of its intense intimacy and sparse nature, particularly on the second half of the album. Even in the context of some of the recent Heroines and the stunning Country Stash this is a landmark release and it lines up alongside deeply personal albums like On The Beach and Blood on the Tracks or even Jandek’s Chair Beside A Window. It feels like a fully conceived artistic statement, with the cover and inserts working to enhance the experience. Indeed, the classic cover shot featuring MV at Maximum Arousal Farm with Mick Flower in the background (probably on the No Floor Tour April 2010) sanding his homemade Indian banjo stand seems to typify What I Became perfectly – an insight into the world of MV. I went wild over Country Stash and this is equally compelling though for completely different reasons. It feels like the solo album that MV was destined to make – if you are only going to buy one record this year it comes with my absolute highest possible recommendation.” – Andrew Ross.
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MV/EE/Flower
April Flower
Child Of Microtones COM-36
8xCD-R Box Set
£79.99
Staggering document of the entire April Flower tour that took place in April 2011 and saw Matthew Valentine and Erika Elder joined by Mick Flower (Vibracathedral Orchestra/Flower-Corsano Duo) on electric bass. This trio might be the single greatest ‘small group’ to grace MV’s back catalogue. Something about the way Flower is able to navigate with the vaguest and most subtly ‘implied’ directions seems to free the group sound to float all the way out there, resulting in some of their most effortlessly psychedelic and unequivocally beautiful visionings of deep rural psych. The set comes with 8 separate CD-Rs, all with their own Heroine style sleeve/title, housed in a tall oversize handmade art book with beautifully printed artwork, a VIP certificate and a thick booklet with colour covers that features a complete rundown of the shows, snaps and liners from Coot Moon and MV himself. It might just be the most gloriously crafted artefact to come out of the Child Of Microtones stable, a label that has long set the standard for tactile home-burned presentation. The shows come from Feeding Tube in Northampton 4/4/11, Saratoga Arts Centre, Saratoga Springs 4/5/11, The Church, Boston 4/6/11 (where the group are joined on drums by Chris Corsano for an amazing heavy psych set), State University Of New York 4/7/11, Death By Audio, Brooklyn 4/8/11 (where they’re joined by Jeremy Earl of Woods), Brickbat Books, Philadelphia 4/9/11 (a stunning set with guest spots from Willie Lane and Harmonica Dan), Wilkes-Barre, PA 4/10/11 and Mystery Train 4/11/11. The whole set is massively varied, with odd acoustic re-thinks of primo meat up against endlessly extended soft-as-snow renderings of haunted blues and full-blown free improvised navigations of the furthest environments. If I hadda pick a highlight it may well be the astounding Brickbat Books set that just sounds so great and has the group playing with at an all-time high of confidence and euphoria but really the whole set is a stone and one of the most necessary releases of the year. Edition of only 99 copies, so make your move. Can’t recommend this enough! To further prime you for the jams, our resident COMmentator, Blues Scholar Andrew Ross, gives us a close-up on one of the major discs: Yorkshire Puddin’ – MV & EE with Mick Flower
“Picking one of my highlight shows from the box set, I opted for the opening night where the core trio played the Feeding Tube Records shop. For whatever reason, the Feeding Tube venue always seems to conjure up something special when MV & EE play (check out previous Heroines like “Muy Alto” and “Toasted Cookie”) with a real creative edge and great quality sonics. The performance here on the April Flower tour is no exception with a real high-end folk art performance that is totally killer. The sonic mix on the recording itself is up there with the best, with the vocals really clear in the mix and the bass sounds so organic, almost acoustic at times. If that wasn’t enough there are a few live rarities/new tracks thrown in for good measure. The set opens with “Drone Trailer” and keeps with the transcendental arrangement of late but with the dual vocals of MV & EE sounding particularly enchanting. There’s some delightful interplay between MV’s melodic solo expressions mixed with Erika’s pedal steel during the main instrumental break. Next up is the set’s mind-blowing highlight, which is a 30 minute passage which runs “Hammer”, “Space Blues”, “Crow Jane Environs” and finally into “Death Is Your Friend”. Starts with “Hammer”, which is a spectacular re-think of the song’s arrangement. Previous versions have had a West Coast/Crazy Horse style feel to them but this particular arrangement comes across like a folk/blues mammoth. Sparse restrained clean guitar, almost acoustic at times, combined with Erika’s vocals (doused in echo with long drawn notes) which are simply heart-breaking. Some lucid wah-wah infused soloing from MV which is continually pinned down by Mick’s organic bass seals the deal. Hands down this is my favourite version of “Hammer” yet. This segues into “Space Blues” (only previously included on Double Double Raw) which is a short instrumental passage with a real psychedelic edge. Some great high-end bass work and almost jazz-like runs from Mick overlade with space FX on the slide sounding particularly great. Next is “Crow Jane Environs” from Liberty Rose (COM34). Only previously available on the duo performance from Blasted Wavelength this is a vastly superior version and this is its only inclusion in the sets in this run of shows. With its traditional folk lyrics and an arrangement that displays MV’s admiration of British and Celtic folk this is a radical re-interpretation of the folk source but with a real dark/psychedelic undercurrent that none of the current ‘psych/acid folk’ imposters would be capable of creating. Eerie vocals over finger-picked inverted and transformed chord structures – it’s simply stunning. But the real star of the track is Mick Flower whose high-end melodic bass phrasing takes it to a new dimension, coming across like a cross between Bert Jansch’s “Jack Orion” and The Pink Floyd’s “Careful With That Axe Eugene” – check out the psychedelic guitar jam that erupts around 4m30s. It doesn’t get much better. This segues into “Death Is My Friend” which is another live rarity. Only previously available on the Deep Space Circuit and Double Double Raw sets although the arrangement here borrows more from the studio version on “Liberty Rose”, albeit with a more electric blues feel. It features those “Freight Train” style vocals from Erika with a mid-song rap that is as seductive to rival Kim Gordon’s on “Kool Thing”. This develops into a sublime electric blues jam with some great hypnotic blues licks from MV pinned by a repeating bassline from Mick Flower in the same style as he did to those arrangements of “Get Right Church” and “Canned Happiness” on the Steal Yr Slice tour. For anyone that read the recent article in the Wire on Bill Orcutt, it really does feel like artists like Orcutt and MV are pioneering modern interpretations of country and folk blues whilst still paying their respect to the source – recognising “the fact that you’re not Robert Johnson”. “Crash Palace Of Records” is another new track (only previously available on the All Good Habs set, although that was recorded after this tour and so this is the real live debut) with the arrangement staying pretty true to the studio version from this year’s stunning Country Stash – albeit a month prior to that album’s release. “Environments” is sufficiently different from the versions with Mick Flower from the Steal Yr Slice tour to keep even the completists more than intrigued. It still has that raga feel particularly with the addition of Mick’s japan banjo interwoven with MV’s traditional banjo and some great space FX from Erika on the lap steel. However, towards the end it breaks into a newer stretched passage which has a real heavy underground Tokyo psych feel to it coming across somewhere between live Hendrix circa 1970 and Takashi Mizutani. In fact, anyone that enjoyed some of the heavier moments from Herbcraft’s Ashram To The Stars with those industrial/mechanical sounding feedback-drenched guitars should check this out. This segues into the set closer, the road anthem of “Feelin’ Fine” which has a particularly sweet frazzled tone on the guitar on this one. Overall, this set is totally killer (but it’s that middle passage that will keep you coming back) and has to rank up there with some of my personal favourites like Toasted Clam, Muy Alto, Double Double Raw, Wobbly Hall and even I Left My Wallet In The Trossachs. If that wasn’t enough there are another 7 sets in the box set such as the mind-blower from Brickbat Books featuring Willie Lane. It’s highly recommended!” – Andrew Ross.
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