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ECK ECHO – CUATRO SUYOS
S/95.00CUATRO SUYOSCARDINAL DIRECTIONS IN PERUVIAN ELECTRONIC MUSICLABEL: ECK ECHO RECORDS
VINYL 12″ 45RPM
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LITERAL OASIS – NEBLEENA 001
S/95.00LITERAL OASIS – NEBLEENA 001LP 33rpmLABEL:NEBLEENAThe ten-track compilation delivers an evocative set of tracks by Hydroplane, Equilet, bioMecanico, Ando Laj (Wandering Eye/Diskotopia), Captainmarmalade, Sweguno, Overre, Fluorescent Grey, Wake, and Ghroth, bringing together both newcomers and veterans of the ‘intelligent dance music’ movement that sprouted out of Warp Records in the early 1990s. Literal Oasis also features the debut of PREEMS, a collaboration initiated by Gorrio and Delgado in recent years that focuses on live/hardware-based performance and improvisation. -
SUN RA – ASTRO BLACK
S/203.33Vinyl LP
Sello: Modern Harmonic
The title track was a vehicle for Arkestral vocalist June Tyson, who had been with the band since 1967 and was in absolute peak form in 1972. Meanwhile, Ronnie Boykins, who had been Sunny’s full-time bassist from 1957 through 1968, was a welcome guest on this occasion. It is his ostinato that holds the theme statement together, and his arco that guides and accompanies Sunny on his space wandering, where they are joined by Akh Tal Ebah on trumpet, and by the ecstatically interweaving alto saxes of Marshall Allen and Danny Davis. A trio of wriggling alto (Danny Davis), mini-Moog synthesizers, and high bowed bass develops, with Sunny and Ronnie accompanying Tyson’s hushed recapitulation. This is one of the Arkestra’s greatest performances.
Tracklist
- Astro Black
- Discipline “99”
- Hidden Spheres
- The Cosmo-Fire
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JOHN CAGE WITH DAVID TUDOR – VARIATIONS IV
S/190.63Vinyl LP
Sello: Modern Harmonic
It could be argued that there is no more controversial figure in music history as avant-garde electronic composer John Cage. Perhaps best known for his composition “4’33,”” which consisted of Cage sitting at a piano for four-plus minutes of total silence, Cage was both loved and loathed in the 60s and 70s as a leading light in avant-garde music and as an entertainingly weird guy who used radios, televisions, live dancers and his own Adam’s apple as instruments in his live performances. Cage’s music blurred the line between music, performance art and visual art in a way that no other composer has before or since.
Tracklist
- Introduction
- Excerpts—7PM To 8PM
- Excerpts—8PM To 9PM
- Excerpts—9PM To 10PM
- Excerpts—10PM To 11PM