A couple more before I head to work for the night:

45.
Derek Rogers – Informal Meditations: No Kings might have been the surprise label of the year this year as they put out great releases from Brandal, Molyneux, Sexton, Rambutan, and this spectacular live cassette from Derek Rogers. Hopefully they will use their success to start dubbing larger batches, as getting your hands on anything from them is a truly painful exercise at this point. That being said, if you can track them down these are gorgeous tapes. Receiving this in the mail I was instantly impressed with the care put into the packaging; a nicely printed pattern on a very cool green cassette, an acetate overlay on top of some nicely printed super thin paper (apparently it is made from flowers). This is what cassette collecting is all about.
Now, onto the music. Rogers sculpts some beautiful synth drones on both of these pieces. They are nicely oscillated and filtered creating some nice drift/harmonics. However, he never lets them roll too long. His ability to interrupt these drones with some metallic clatter and contact mic scraping adds just enough edge to keep this from just going nowhere. As a result each of these live recordings has a definitive beginning, middle, and end. This is important as it leaves no question there is an aim, a purpose, to each stretch of music and sound here. This isn’t lazy, let’s plug in some pedals and see where the feedback goes music. This is well orchestrated sound. He moves easily from pretty organ bends that sound completely unprocessed to stuttering synth lines that don’t so much jar you as direct you to a different place. Generally if the word “meditation” appears in a drone work it is likely not going to have a lot of movement—Rogers breaks that rule here and has made something very unique and very much his own in a genre that can sometimes suffer from an amount of sameness.
Code:
http://www.mediafire.com/?dm5u32f1dpkcg13

44.
Deaf Center – Owl Splinters: It is hard to judge this record objectively. Any Deaf Center/Greiner/Skodvin/Totland/Nest release is going to have such huge expectations that really there is nothing it can do but fall short. There are some moments on this album that are mind blowing. There are very few artists that can accomplish the huge cinematic moments that these two pull off on “The Day I Would Never Have,” my favorite track on the record. Those elongated swells and resulting collapse have such an impact and make the sound seem bigger than it actually is. It’s those moments on here that are reminiscent of the classic Pale Ravine, but there are a few pieces here that seem incomplete or just disconnected. Maybe it’s because there are more solo parts here, and while those times definitely leave no doubt that both of these guys are absolutely brilliant musicians, they lack not only intimacy but they don’t seem connected to the rest of the record unfortunately. That being said, the high points here are as good as anything any other ambient record had to offer this year, and pretty much make up for the handful of shortcomings.
Code:
http://www.mediafire.com/?2bki0t1qcrz3iae

43.
Ken Seeno – Invisible Surfer on an Invisible Wave: This is the guitarist from Ponytail making a record that sounds like nothing you would expect from the guitarist from Ponytail. I haven’t listened to this much the past couple of months, but I played the hell out of this record this summer. I like what is going on here. So much dream/ambient music is associated with desolation and cold, wintery stuff, this tape though is the complete opposite as hinted at by the title. This is for lack of a better term, beach ambient. What Wavves is to punk rock, this record is to ambient music. It feels like early morning surf or pitch black evening cool beaches. There is a calm here that is very organic but it’s a warm almost happy calm. It’s a sense that sometimes people just want to be alone, not because anything is wrong, but just because sometimes the quiet is really fucking nice. The arpeggios here are nice, simple but nice, not too different than some of the solo Emeralds projects. When the guitar breaks in it seems like Seeno is just kind of messing around, enjoying doing what he gets to do for a living, and that is what sets this record apart. He isn’t miserable and isn’t just making music to show off what he can do. This is the sound of an artist pretty content with where he is just making a record that he wanted to make. We could use more albums like that in my opinion.
Code:
http://www.mediafire.com/?gf9kh2scgvs9pf6

42.
Imaginary Softwoods – The Path of Spectrolite: Imaginary Softwoods is John Elliott from Emeralds. He is the big guy with the monster Doepfer sequencer and ridiculous amount of CV gear that probably goes pretty unnoticed during Emeralds sets. The fact is without him Emeralds would probably be a bit less exciting as his sequencing and coordination of washes with them is what, in my opinion, propels their sound constantly forward and has allowed their evolution into a band that is incredibly successful in the 3-7 minute song realm. Bottom line: He is way more awesome than he gets credit for.
With that out of the way, this record is really, REALLY good. Here he completely steps out of McGuire’s shadow (which is quite a feat as McGuire casts a pretty long one) and shows an attention to synthesis detail that is remarkable. Every tone, every sequence, every drift here is so completely comforting and warm. There is no despair, nothing dark, this is what Ecstasy sounds like. I think part of the comfort of this comes from the familiarity of tones used. This record is not about the processing of any sound, but rather the creation, and the more importantly the sequencing of each note. From what I can tell part of the formula here was to use a varying number of steps within a sequenced group. So, though multiple sequences may contain a repeating CV the first sequence might be eight steps, the second four steps, but then the third an odd three steps, so the tones only align every twenty-fourth step which is where the group would then repeat. It’s fucking great, as depending on where you focus on the song you are going to hear something different than the person standing next to you. It makes me excited. It lets me know that this was well thought out and that this guy isn’t some fucking lackey just turning knobs on an expensive piece of gear.
The guys at OCRB may have said it best:
OCRB Wrote:
There's a lot of this stuff around at the moment - but this stands out as special as each track is a musical feast, with a great structure sadly lacking from a lot of ambient analog electronic music. It is all too easy to set a few tones going and leave the room for half an hour, and call it an ambient drone, some of us demand much more.
This record succeeds by being a nearly perfect blend of technical ability and relatability (as well just generally making you feel like you going to float away). Even if you throw out all of the proficiencies that I love this is still just a beautiful album that can be enjoyed by most anyone. It isn’t some huge statement about the state of anything, it doesn’t try to convince you of anything, it just exists to be enjoyed, and I am sure to hopefully make anyone that hears it a bit happier.
I am interested in seeing where Elliott goes from here, as I think the continued growth of Emeralds’ relationship with Lopatin will result in more focus on what he brings to the band, and as great as McGuire and Hauschilt are, and as great as the three of them together are, I am most interested to see singularly where he goes next as an artist.