Ravecore Masters vol. 1

I like to include a review of some sort of electronic and/or dance music every week.

Some of the electronic albums I’ve reviewed lacked diversity, something that compilation albums can typically offer more easily. In a genre built around making repetitive beats interesting, it must be difficult to make a full album and keep it entertaining.

The compilation I’m reviewing this week is Ravecore Masters vol. 1. I’ve honestly never heard of “ravecore” as a legitimate music genre. I know there are various kinds of music played at raves, but I didn’t know that such music had its own genre now. Perhaps it’s just called “ravecore” for aesthetic reasons. The name does sound nice. Continue reading

Coph Nia

Coph Nia is a dark ambient and sometimes noise band from Sweden.

Coph Nia

Their music tends to be a mix of dark ambient soundscapes and loud abrasive noise tracks. I chose Noise Shaper to review because it’s a free download and it also has a mixture of both musical habits of Coph Nia.

Coph Nia derives it’s name from Aleister Crowley’s Liber AL vel Legis Chapter III verse 72:

I am the Lord of the Double Wand of Power; the wand of the Force of Coph Nia—but my left hand is empty, for I have crushed an Universe; & nought remains.

Throughout the discography of Coph Nia you will notice references to Crowley’s work and other occult symbolism. Continue reading

Super Ponybeat

Super PonybeatSince Fall 2010, a resurgence of fandom for My Little Pony has been occurring. You could say it went viral, or just admit that the internet made it “cool” to like it.

This newest iteration of My Little Pony was created by the same person responsible for Flapjack and Foster’s Home For Imaginary Kids. This drew some people to watch it initially, since those shows have sizable followings of their own. However, once the internet took a hold of it there was no stopping My Little Pony.

Like anything the Internet takes a hold of and makes immensely popular, there’s going to be a gaggle of spin-offs. There’s going to be fan comics, fan fiction, t-shirts—and now we have music. Continue reading

Starfucker

Starfucker

I’ve been in a mood lately that calls for relaxing music. Starfucker’s latest release Jupiter is relaxing, but nowhere near as downtempo as some music I’ve reviewed.

It’s also nowhere near as fast. Jupiter has a moderate enough tempo for its duration to be appealing in its entirety. As such, it makes for good listening while studying, cleaning, or working on the computer. There aren’t many surprises.

You can listen to the whole thing and forget you even pressed play. It’s solid, but forgettable. Continue reading

Clairy Browne & The Bangin’ Rackettes

Clairy Browne and the Bangin' Rackettes

I haven’t listened to a lot of retro-sounding music, except when The Pipettes first came on the scene. I like Clairy Browne & The Bangin’ Rackettes marginally better than I ever liked The Pipettes.

Clairy Browne & The Bangin’ Rackettes have that doo-wop and blues feel to them, but in a more authentic way. They aren’t a pop group with doo-wop and blues influences, but the real deal, and not half bad.

Their current album, Baby Caught the Bus, isn’t the usual kind of music I listen to, so perhaps I’m infatuated with it due to the novelty. Something about it makes me want to dance. This kind of music was always meant to be catchy, but I’ve always found it less enjoyable than I should.

Baby Caught The Bus was released on Nov. 11, 2011 and it’s loaded with interesting songs. Continue reading

Florrie

Album Cover for Introduction, by FlorrieI discovered Florrie’s music on Last.fm, while playing one of their similar artists radio stations. Usually when I listen to Last.fm radio, I’m also focused on something else, programming or writing or reading. I don’t give all of my attention to the songs that play on Last.fm radio, because typically either they are songs I’m already familiar with or they have no standout qualities. But sometimes a song I’ve never heard before grabs my attention. I have to stop what I’m doing and check out the song and album titles, see who the artist is, see if the track is available for legal download, and search the web for other info about the artist and their music. That’s exactly what happened when Call of the Wild by Florrie popped up on Last.fm radio a few weeks ago.

Continue reading

Hal McGee – Contact Compilation 1

The album Contact Compilation 1 isn’t really comprised of tracks by Hal McGee. It’s a various artists compilation that he produced, the first of nine Contact Compilation Project volumes.

McGee has released a multitude of compilations, experiments, and his own work over the years. This compilation features 60 international artists and domestic artists making 60 second tracks.

Most of the tracks on the album are noise music. An occasional track may have semblances of melody, but most of them are strange “I don’t know what I’m hearing” stuff. I find a lot of it relaxing. Some of it is grating too, but most of it I’m just trying to figure out what strange sounds are coming from where. Continue reading

Renard – Nice People

I had never sat down and listened to a full Renard album, but something just seemed attractive about an album titled Nice People.

Album cover for Nice People, by Renard

I had heard some of his spin-off projects, but never anything from the DJ mastermind himself. I chose this one due to its description: “A selection of audio inspired by unforgettable times with unforgettable creatures.” I follow this guy on twitter and tumblr, so I figured I might understand some of the references.

I only understood one, and that’s Jokes Don’t Die So Easy. I’ll get to that later. Continue reading

C418 – Seven Years of Server Data

Some of you may be aware of a popular game called Minecraft and its immaculate success. C418 is responsible for the soundtrack of that game. The subject of this article, however, is not the game’s sound, but instead a collection of C418′s really old work mixed in with some newer work.

In his words:

After cleaning up the folders on my server I decided to put up a collection of some songs as a free album.

Bear with me though as this is a very varied collection from very old music to very recent remixes. Some might sound terrible and the sound quality is something that could be better (FLAC will not save you most of the time).

Album cover for Seven Years of Server Data

Most of this album sounds like a mixture between broken computers, new age, and delightful little charming tracks suited for a video game (no surprise there). Continue reading

Music Changes

Since the early 1890s we’ve had something physical to listen to music on. Starting with wax cylinders, we’ve progressed to reels, vinyl, cassettes, 8-tracks, compact discs and eventually digital players and the digital format popularized in part by MP3.

I recall the days of Napster and Kazaa striking fear and curiosity into the public mindset. It seemed like everyone thought that digital files were going to change the music industry, and I’d argue that it did. The industry adapted with services like iTunes and Rhapsody.

Physical CD sales have been on the decline, and we’ve been seeing more services that offer digital downloads of our favorite music at competitive prices. Cloud services like iTunes and Amazon let us control and listen to our music almost anywhere we choose. However, physical files may also be going the way of compact discs. Continue reading