SOUNDWAVE : 73 : JONATHAN AMMONS

Today’s guest deejay is Jonathan Ammons.

Jonathan guest deejayed on the show last October. Jonathan’s mix was so moving that I invited him back to Soundwave. Today’s mix is equally remarkable. I had the unique opportunity to listen to it while driving from San Diego to Sacramento to visit my wife this weekend. It’s wildfire season in California (it’s always wildfire season), and Jonathan’s mix provided the soundtrack to my apocalyptic drive. The skies were tinted dirty brown from the ashes from the wildfires, but somehow the sun managed to blast the landscape with glaring light: grass and trees parched from California’s megadrought. Every 20 miles or so, I’d pass an abandoned car to the side of the highway. And yet, Jonathan’s mix somehow lent some beauty to such desolate scenery.

Jonathan has some words about his mix below.

Join us next week when our guest deejay will be anthéne.

See you then!

 

Jonathan Ammons
Jonathan Ammons

I think that my past year has looked like many people’s lives during the middle of one of the largest global pandemics in history. A lot of isolation, a lot of finding ways to busy yourself or occupy your mind. In the past, as someone who worked from home, I had enjoyed drone, ambient, and all of those experimental genres for the way they occupied a space without dominating it. If ambient music was created to generate music that did not evoke strong and tumultuous emotions — as Brian Eno claims— that was exactly what I wanted droning on in the background of my house while I pecked away at a keyboard for work. As a journalist, it provided this stoic, emotionless wallpaper for the background of my daily existence.

Covid changed a lot of that. They daily monotony left me just craving a change of emotion. But I didn’t want words; I didn’t want lyrics that would remind me of how things were when we were able to go places, meet people, kiss strangers at a bar… I wanted the same stability that the drone I’d come to love gave me, but I wanted something a little more expressive.

I also noticed that the more I used any streaming platform, the more the algorithm would eventually whittle things down to the same handful of artists. I wanted new things. I wanted variety in a locked-down life with no chance of spontaneity. So I decided to cut all algorithmic music out of my life. I stopped listening to Spotify or Pandora or any of those generated playlists and dialed back in to the radio.

I have to give a giant shoutout to Noods Radio out of Bristol, England, because they have been a major lifesaver. A station dedicated to the wild and weird sounds of Bristol. You never know what you’ll find, but the rich spread of creativity has introduced me to a slew of new artists. Props to BBC6’s great ambient show, as well.

Northern England’s A Beautiful Burning World make’s gorgeous sounds using very simple gear and tape loops. They even have a subscription system for $15 a year, and you can get their entire discography for cheaper than that! Much of this mix comes from artists discovered through the radio or combing around Bandcamp.

Seamstress makes delightful chill-out beats. Scanner gorgeously blends drone and ambient with deep arrangements that are so subtle, but meaningful. And I don’t know why it took me till now to notice Garth Stevenson’s incredible compositions. We really are in a golden age for the reinvention of modern classical music. Just look no further than Tristan Perich’s fantastic work.

I also have to give a shoutout to Kimathi Moore. Kima is an incredibly talented sound artist here in Asheville. His style’s shift between ambient, drone, and Edgard Varèse-like tone poems. I got the chance to work with him on a music video he shot for my latest album, and got to see just what a meticulous worker he is.No wonder his sounds are so precise and pristine.

Of course, I had to include some Harold Budd. I included a selection off of his album the Serpent (In Quicksilver) because I remember hearing an interview with him in which he claimed that it was his favorite record that he’d made. A major loss for the ambient music world, losing one of the original masters to this damned virus.

And lastly, the original tracks are two previously unreleased compositions. I started messing around with more tape loops in my studio this winter, and really decided to dive into it, which is how “The Same River” originated. The closing track is actually from a much larger piece I have coming out in the Fall. “A Certain Kind of Light” is a 40-minute piece in five movements. It was an experiment to see just how far I could go using only a single chord. The incredibly talented Olivia Springer performed all of the string parts for that piece. I’ve included the final movement of that piece to close out this mix as its debut.

Endless thanks to Joseph for having me back for another Soundwave mix. It’s been a pleasure to follow along and hear what everyone is listening to these days!

  1. Jonathan Ammons “The Same River”
  2. Scanner “The Ascent”
  3. Floating Points “Apoptose Pt. 1”
  4. Kimathi Moore “Eyris”
  5. Harold Budd “Rub with Ashes”
  6. Seamstress “Save the Bees”
  7. A Beautiful Burning World “Sonder: III”
  8. Garth Stevenson “The Southern Sea”
  9. Tristan Perich “Drift Multiply: Section 3”
  10. Jonathan Ammons “A Certain Kind of Light: Movement V”

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SOUNDWAVE : 72 : VARGKVINT

SOUNDWAVE : 72 : VARGKVINT

Today’s guest deejay is Sofia Nystrand, AKA Vargkvint.

For months, Sofia’s music kept appearing on my Spotify Discover Weekly playlists. If I didn’t find Sofia’s music there, she’d pop up on someone else’s playlist. Or I’d find her music on Bandcamp. In fact, Brueder Selke (CEEYS), played Sofia’s “Utåt” on their mix for Soundwave a few weeks ago.

There’s a reason for this, of course. Sofia has that magical ability to trasnport you to a world that is uniquely hers yet utterly familiar though her songs. Sofia deftly weaves folk, contemporary classical, pop, experimental music, and ambient. It’s a gorgeous thing to experience and I’m delighted to share her mix with you on today’s show.

If you’d like to hear more music from Sofia, she is featured on the Realismo Mágico compilation album from piano and coffee records. Some of the artists you’ll find on Sofia’s mix can also be found on the album (Klangriket, Sjors Mans, Jakob Lindhagen, Alexandra Hamilton-Ayres, Simeon Walker, Ceeys). Sofia has also just released a rework of the first track, “Pomegranate,” by Sergio Diaz de Rojas.

Sofia has some words about her mix below.

Before I get out of Dodge, I’m happy to report that this weekend I briefly had my wife and kids in the same house. It was short lived, though. My wife headed back to work Sunday evening, and the kids will be visiting their dad next week. But after months and months of being apart, it was a small blessing.

Join us next week when our guest deejay will be Jonathan Ammons.

See you then!

 

Sofia Nyland, AKA Vargkvint
Sofia Nyland, AKA Vargkvint

When I was working on this mixtape, I wanted it to be centered around collaboration and how music can change when being transformed by another person’s creativity. I’ve just released a rework album where people have reimagined my songs from the album Hav (I have two of them included in the mixtape), and it made me inspired to find other remixes or reworks to include. One of my favorite songs of this year is the rework that Alexandra Hamilton-Ayes have made of Frances Shelley’s ”Evening Star”. Apart from the amazing reworks, I have included a few newly released songs, and a couple of my personal favorites from artists who I really admire.

  • Sergio Diaz De Rojas “Pomegranate”
  • Rockettothesky “Grizzly Man”
  • Tim Linghaus “Love and Dust”
  • Joakim Alfvén “Opinium”
  • Richard Luke “Everything a Reason (Jakob Lindhagen Rework)”
  • Vargkvint “Fyr (Reimagined by Bonander)”
  • Justina Jaruševičiūtė “Prayer”
  • Frances Shelley & Alexandra Hamilton-Ayres “Evening Star (Alexandra Hamilton-Ayres Rework)”
  • Simeon Walker “Drift (Reworked by CEEYS)”
  • Marie Awadis “day 3”
  • Klangriket “Björk (Jakob Lindhagen & Vargkvint Rework)”
  • Bonander“Gone in the Wind”
  • Vargkvint “Stormen Kommer II (Reimagined by Klangriket & Sjors Mans)”
  • Simeon Walker “Compline”
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    SOUNDWAVE : 71 : ROEL FUNCKEN

    SOUNDWAVE : 71 : ROEL FUNCKEN

    Today’s guest deejay is Roel Funcken.

    When I began inviting people to guest deejay on Soundwave I requested mixes that were 30 – 60 minutes long. A 30 minute mix is perfect, but ambient mixes lend themselves to long sets, so I expected a log of guest deejays would not be able to help themselves, and would send me hour long mixes.

    Then Roel wrecks my format by sending me a mix that’s two hours long!

    But that’s what Roel does. He wrecks formats. His expression through music is always from an unexpected angle. It takes you off guard.

     

    Roel Funcken
    Roel Funcken

    Strap yourself in for a dense, yet spacious mix. There’s nearly 50 tracks on today’s show. Intermingled with Roel’s mix are songs from his latest album, S1 . MK2. Each of his tracks were recorded in one take.

    You can find Roel on Soundcloud here and on Bandcamp here.

    I am currently exactly where I was when I launched Soundweave during the beginning of the pandemic. My wife and kids re aways and it’s just me and my dog. The difference is back then Soundwave was my way of coping with the stress and isolation of the pandemic. Now it’s just part of our lives. I’m in a different head space. It’s a beautiful day and I’m listening to Roel’s beautiful mix. While the family is away, I can work on personal projects without distraction. Life is grand.

    Join us next week when our guest deejay will be Vargkvint.

    See you then!

    1. thme “until then”
    2. High Plains “Ten Sleep”
    3. Deaf Center “Hunted Twice”
    4. roel funcken “FM Level”
    5. Kane Ikin “Prometheus’ Trail”
    6. Ghost and Tape “Laex”
    7. Illuha “Diagrams Of The Physical Interpretation Of Resonance”
    8. Jacaszek “Zal”
    9. roel funcken “Modulation Level”
    10. ASC “Some Other Life”
    11. Zoltan Fecso “Morning’s Theme”
    12. Slow Walkers “Torn Cloth”
    13. blochemy “quirz”
    14. roel funcken “MMF Cutoff”
    15. Benoît Pioulard “An Image Apart From Ourselves”
    16. dramavinile “a bad thing”
    17. roel funcken “Pulse Width”
    18. thme “that’s what it will be like”
    19. Plaid “Hydrosphere”
    20. Nils Frahm “Over There, It’s Raining”
    21. This Valley of Old Mountains “Myr”
    22. omrr “Illicit”
    23. roel funcken “Glide”
    24. Ólafur Arnalds & Nils Frahm “Three”
    25. Ard Bit “MDZLM”
    26. roel funcken “Ring Modulator”
    27. Bersarin Quartett “Welche Welt”
    28. Bing & Ruth “Warble”
    29. roel funcken “White Noise”
    30. Clark “Upward Evaporation”
    31. Paw Grabowski “Untitled 18”
    32. roel funcken “Attack Time”
    33. Julien Neto “Questionable Things”
    34. Kane Ikin “Hyperion”
    35. roel funcken “Envelope Mix”
    36. roel funcken “Q Peak”
    37. Ard Bit “NTRZPM”
    38. Paw Grabowski “Untitled 10”
    39. roel funcken “Delay Time”
    40. roel funcken “Overdrive”
    41. Ard Bit “MEMORIES OF THE 14TH”
    42. Atrium Carceri & Cities Last Broadcast “An Atrementous City”
    43. exm “norest”
    44. roel funcken “Pole”

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    SOUNDWAVE : 69 : FROM OVERSEAS

    This week’s deejay is Kévin Séry, AKA From Overseas. Kévin is also the label manager for Past Inside the Present, a label, and resource for the ambient listener.

    From Overseas is Kévin’s ambient project. Using his guitar as his tool of expression and looping techniques, he creates a multiplicity of layers, intense drones, and mesmerizing soundscapes both in the studio and in live performances.

    Originally from the tiny French Overseas Department and Region, Reunion Island, he routinely bounces between his home island, a small port town on the east coast of the US, and continental Europe, picking up fresh ideas and inspiration along the way.

    Kévin’s mix is very familiar, even though I’m unfamiliar with every song and musician featured in his mix. There’s something about Kévin’s mix that evokes the sound and feel of 4AD, a label that was known for alternative rock, post-punk, gothic rock, and dream pop albums. But if I had to narrow it down, I’d say that Kévin captures the spirit of 4AD’s This Mortal Coil. There’s something haunted in the selection of his songs but still quietly triumphant.

    Kévin has some words below about his mix.

    Join us next week when our guest deejays will be brothers Sebastian and Daniel Selke of CEEYS.

     

    Kévin Séry, AKA From Overseas
    Kévin Séry, AKA From Overseas

    It’s an honor to be part of the Soundwave series. I love doing mixes like this. It’s a great way to go on a unique journey and to immerse yourself in the work of amazing and influential artists. This mix was made on February 23rd, 2021, when winter was slowly giving space to spring. Hopefully, people feel what I feel and can discover a few gems.

    1. 36 & awakened souls “Guide Me Home (awakened souls – Shoegaze Version) ”
    2. Lucy Gooch “Ash and Orange”
    3. Emily A. Sprague “Woven”
    4. Chuck Johnson “Raz-de-Marée”
    5. Illuvia Iridescence”
    6. Ilyas Ahmed & Jefre Cantu-Ledesma “Ocean Blue”
    7. From Overseas “Rêve”
    8. Christina Giannone “Untitled111”
    9. Alex Somers “Sooner”
    10. Mogwai “Dry Fantasy”

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    SOUNDWAVE : 68 : ORPHAX

    SOUNDWAVE : 68 : ORPHPAX

    Today’s guest deejay is Sietse van Erve, AKA Orphax.

    I discovered Sietse on Bandcamp and, through him, his music label, Moving Furniture Records. Both Sietse’s music the artists on his label focus on drones, experimental ambient, minimalist, microtonal, and field-recordings music. Their music provides yet another example of the scope of ambient music, which is precisely why I invited Sietse to join us on today’s show.

    Sietse’s mix continues his fascination who those areas of ambient music. What struck me about his mix, however, was the physical sensations it invoked. I wasn’t aware of it at first, but after repeated listening, I gradually became conscious of a gentle pulse in my ears while Sietse’s mix played over my headphones. That realization was delicious. And when I played Sietse’s mix through my speakers, I slowly noticed a delicate pressure ebbing and flowing through my body.

    Furthermore, what was also remarkable was that I wasn’t playing Sietse’s mix particularly loud. Even so, I felt the music. I hope you have the same experience when you listen to today’s show.

    Sietse has some words about his mix below.

     

    The Universal by The Penitential Station
    The Universal by The Penitential Station

    Before I go, I want to alert you that one of my favorite music labels, Other Forms Of Consecrated Life (listen to their mix for Soundwave here), will be releasing a new album by The Penitential Station: The Universal by The Penitential Station. Like the album before it, The Cloud of Forgetting, The Penitential Station continues to delve into the music of Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina. The liner notes to The Universalexplains that the “interleaving of polyphonic voices explores German mystic Eckhart von Hochheim’s pantheistic notion of a ‘Universal Soul.’” That’s a philosophically heady description of The Penitential Station’s music. Mine is much simpler: it is an extended moment of grace.

    Join us next week when our guest deejays will be Kévin Séry, AKA From Overseas.

    See you then!

     

    Sieste van Erve, AKA Orphax
    Sieste van Erve, AKA Orphax

    When I am asked to make a mix, I always think about what to do. First of all, I am not a DJ. I’m a musician with a record label. And additionally, should I go for some music of the musicians on my label, should I go for some of my favorite tunes, or should I do a mix of both?

    Lately, I turn more to the first, as I love the music these people do, and I think they deserve to be heard. And even with a catalogue of over 90 releases, this is a rather difficult task, especially when limited to only 60 minutes.

    For this mix, I first selected from 20 of the albums that we’re released on Moving Furniture Records, followed by trying out a combination of tracks and, in such a way scrapping nine selected tracks. The mix ended up somewhere between minimalist drones and warm ambient sounds with some weird excursions to more abstract works.

    I hope you enjoy listening.

    And who knows, maybe next time I will do a mix with some personal (none-Moving Furniture Records releases) music. There is so much lovely work out there.

    Cheers,
    Sietse

    1. Ryan van Haesendonck “Sur La Plage”
    2. Richard Chartier “Conitinue 4”
    3. Gagi Petrovic “Diligence”
    4. Coen Oscar Polack “आवारा”
    5. Fani Konstantinidou “Winter”
    6. Orphax “Elisabeth (Rework)”
    7. Matthijs Kouw “Remembrance”
    8. Machinefabriek ”Dwaal (Nicola Ratti Version)”
    9. Frans de Waard, Peter Johan Nÿland, Richard Youngs “fpr_vii_fp_edit_(ext)”
    10. Bruno Duplant & Alfredo Costa Monteiro “Soleils Noirs (excerpt)
    11. Haarvöl “Small Scale And Isolated Occurrences (For Eliane)”

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    SOUNDWAVE : 67 : felt body

    Today’s guest deejay is Hunter Reyne; AKA felt body.

    Hunter is yet another talented musician I discovered through Bandcamp. What appealed to me was Hunter’s deft use of field recording in his music. He creates a very lived-in world and evokes imaginary memories of a time and place I’ve never experienced. It’s lovely. And of course, I invited Hunter to join us on Soundwave.

    What’s delightful about Hunter’s mix is while some of the songs reflect his sensibilities, some are entirely unexpected. I’m specifically thinking of his inclusion on Tôsha Suihô’s “時雨のあと(Shigure no Ato)” and an example. It’s those surprises that are one of the reasons I get excited about when I listen to our guest deejay’s mixes, and I hope you’ll feel the same.

    Hunter has some words about his mix, which you’ll find below.

    Before we get to that, I want to mention that guest deejay and Krautrock legend, Roedelius, has put together an excellent program for the music festival and symposium, More Ohr Less, that will have ended as of the release of today’s show. The event took place in his hometown in Baden, near Vienna. Some of the participants were Anna von Hausswolff, Carl-Michael von Hausswolff , Chandra Shukla, and many more. More Ohr Less will have been live-streamed, and if I know Roedelius, he’ll make the stream available to those who missed it.

    The other thing I wanted to mention is that a few weeks ago, I said I would wrap up Soundwave in early 2022. At the time, I felt the pandemic was winding down, and Soundwave will have served its purpose. I hadn’t realized that I was myopic. Yes, things are improving in the U.S., but here are parts of the world that are in a terrible state. I hope I’m not implying that Soundwave is some transcendent force for good. I mean that this little show provides solace or distraction for a brief period during the pandemic, then I will keep releasing shows.

    Join us next week when our guest deejay will be Orphax.

    See you then!

     

    Hunter Reyne, AKA felt body
    Hunter Reyne, AKA felt body

    I wanted to capture some of the ideas and inspirations that I’ve been taking from throughout Covid, as well as that latent sense of both anxiety and, in the end, a peacefulness – however, it’s achieved.

    Quarantine has had an odd effect on my lifestyle. I find I unable to make broad movements anymore (like taking a trip or even commuting to work). Still, my smaller movements, like simple walks along the river near my house, have become themselves opened-up and, in their way, as expansive as a weekend spent in a different country. I have become so attentive and enamored with the space around me. I have gone crazy, and I speak to it, and it speaks back to me. We are lovers.

    In making this mix, I was drawing from Guy Debord’s psychogeographyand also broader atmospheric theories put forward by theorists like Julianne Rebentisch and Tonino Griffero. Walking and movement, and momentum are essential to the worlds within these nine pieces, yet I find each of them incredibly still, meltingly so. This is the paradox at the heart of a psychogeographic outlook. As I move, I become more singular with the landscape around me, more fluent in its languages and behaviors, and poetries. I hope in listening you will find some stillness in movement, too.

    1. Toshiya Tsunoda “The Day After A Typhoon, Miyagawa”
    2. perila & ulla “blue drum”
    3. Maria Teresa Luciani “Giardini Pubblici”
    4. Gesellschaft Zur Emanzipation Des Samples “TaxiTrailer”
    5. Zdeněk Liška “A Small Stone in Space”
    6. Tôsha Suihô “時雨のあと(Shigure no Ato)”
    7. Tzvi Avni “Vocalise”
    8. Hiroshi Yoshimura “Horizon I’ve Ever Seen Before”
    9. Haco “Faito!”

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    SOUNDWAVE : 66 : COREY PARLAMENTO

    SOUNDWAVE : 66 : COREY PARLAMENTO

    Today’s guest deejay is Corey Parlamento.

    Corey was on Soundwave last summer, and his mix was unique because it was an extension of his show on AshevilleFM, where he played instrumental soundtracks. Sadly, Corey no longer produces that show. Fortunately for us, Corey kept to that format for today’s mix.

    When I invite guest deejays on Soundwave, I’ll ask them to write up a description of their mix: the reason they chose songs, if there was a theme or story they wanted to convert through their mix, etc. The mixes speak for themselves, but I think it adds another level of appreciation for understanding their intentions.

    If they don’t send me a description, I’ll usually write my impressions of their mix. But for today’s show, I decided to call Corey and hear in his own words the motivations behind his mix.

     

    Corey Parlamento
    Corey Parlamento

    Corey’s mix is built around the kernel of Black to Comm’s “Stolen Androgens.” Corey said he listened to this track repeatedly long before he assembled today’s show. The song begins so abruptly and then loops itself around some fascinating accompaniment. He liked how voice is used in this track.

    Corey has had Yasuaki Shimizu’s Music for Commercials album for quite some time and incorporated it into his radio show for segues. The faint sound of water drops is what attracted him to Shimizu’s “Seiko 2.”

    Fatima Al Qadiri’s “Souleiman’s Theme” is taken from the Atlantic film score, Corey’s current favorite soundtracks of the last couple of years, and transitions nicely into Kali Malone’s “Hagakyrka Bells,” from her album, The Sacrificial Code.

    Corey also selected a track from the remastered soundtrack for Lady Macbeth by Third Ear Band, followed by Mary Steele’s “Al Rosana (My Rose),” which is available through Canary Records. This label specializes in archival music. “Al Rosana (My Rose)” is recorded from the 1920s in New York City and features a sonic blend of many cultures. Corey told me this piece is eery and conveyed a sense of decaying time.

    Lustmord follows Mary Steele with a piece from the First Reformed soundtrack. Up next is a track by Michael Gordon, a composer for the movie Decasia, directed by Bill Morrison, who assembles found damaged footage.

    Loren Connors takes it down a notch after Gordon, who is one of Corey’s favorite guitarists.

    Corey wanted to follow Connors with a longer track from Sean McCann’s “Puck” but settled on “Nightfall.” Corey describes the album that track was taken from as having a lot of space, weird vocalizations, subtle noises, drones, and crashing sounds.

    Corey closes his mix with a track of his own which he recorded under the name Livingdog. The track is taken from his album, The Four Times, released by Cold Moon Records out of New York City. This is the one-year anniversary of The Four Times, and Corey says the album was inspired by Le Quattro Volte. The movie has no soundtrack, but Corey’s imagination was capture by the meditations on a goat farmer who is reincarnated into a goat, then reincarnated into a tree which then turns into smoke.

    And there you have it, Corey’s mix.

    Oh, and Corey wanted me to tell you that he’s got a new album coming out on July 23 called Many Aways. I will, of course, remind you when the album is released

     

    Jon Hassell
    Jon Hassell

    Before I leave you to Corey’s wonderful and mysterious mix, I have some sad news. When I launched Soundwave, I didn’t anticipate having to say farewell to so many talented and wonderful musicians in one short year. Today it saddens me to tell you that Jon Hassell, a trumpet player pioneering electronic musician, left planet earth last week. Jon played with everyone, from Brian Eno to Peter Gabriel to Techno Animal. I first became aware of Jon on his appearance on the Myths 3 : La nouvelle sérénité compilation album, and he’s been part of the soundtrack to my life ever since. You owe it to yourself to make Jon part of the soundtrack to your own life. I encourage you to purchase his music or stream him on your favorite streaming service.

    Join us next week when our guest deejay will be felt body.

    See you then!

    1. Black To Comm “Stolen Androgens”
    2. Yasuaki Shimizu “Seiko 2”
    3. Fatima Al Qadiri “Souleiman’s Theme”
    4. Kali Malone “Hagakyrka Bells”
    5. Third Ear Band “LADY MACBETH”
    6. Mary Steele “Al Rosana (My Rose)”
    7. Lustmord “Hanstown Kills”
    8. Michael Gordon “Decasia, Part 5”
    9. Loren Connors “No Goodbyes”
    10. Sean McCann “Nightfall”
    11. Livingdog “Body Of A Tree”

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    SOUNDWAVE : 65 : YANN NOVAK

    SOUNDWAVE : 65 : YANN NOVAK

    Today’s guest deejay is Yann Novak, the founder of Dragon’s Eye Recordings.

    I met Yann when I showcased his label on solipsistic NATION.

    I discovered Yann’s label through Mike Lazarev’s music blog, Headphone Commute (if you enjoy Soundwave, you’re going to love Headphone Commute).

    Yann curates a heady offer of music through Dragon’s Eye Recordings featuring notable artists such as Pinkcourtesyphone (Richard Chartier), Genrietta, and Lawrence English. Some of the label’s releases are whimsical, some challenging, and some so ephemeral that you might imagine you dreamt of hearing it. But all the releases on his label are lovingly selected and demands to be listened to just as Yann’s mix demands to be heard.

     

    Yann Novak
    Yann Novak
    Photo Credit: Robert Crouch

    A few highlights.

    The hairs went up on the back of my neck when I instantly recognized Geinō Yamashirogumi’s score for the cyberpunk classic, Akira. Back in the 80s, the movie was considered as imponderable as 2001: A Space Odyssey, but Akira has influenced culture to such a degree that it seems straightforward by our current standards. Incidentally, you can purchase Kaneda’s jacket, who is the film’s protagonist.

    Yann’s inclusion of Billie Eilish & ROSALÍA’s was an unexpected delight. Eilish is kind of cyberpunk herself, having sung about our anthropogenic doom and interviewed by an AI bot.

    The Future Sound Of London make yet another appearance on Soundwave via Yann’s mix. So much of the electronic music that was fasionalble in the late 80s seems dated but The Future Sound of London still feel timeless.

    Lloop was also a surprise. I first heard Lloop when I showcased The Agriculture label on solipsistic NATION (mumbles) 15 years ago.

    I know it isn’t true but I can’t help but feel that Yann made this mix specifically for me. It’s uncanny.

    Yann modestly didn’t include his own music in his mix but I wanted to mention that Friday he released his new album, Lifeblood of Light and Rapture., available through Room40 (streaming starts July 2). Yann is really proud of this album and he can’t wait for everyone to experience it! He hopes it’s just the kind of lightness… or darkness you need right now.

     

    Frank Riggio’s Empreinte Musicale 3 LP
    Frank Riggio’s Empreinte Musicale 3 LP

    Before I wrap this up, there are two things I need to mention.

    Frank Riggio just released the third and last installment of his new trilogy, Empreinte Musicale 3. It’s just as weird and wonderful as his previous two albums. Go listen to it, and then buy it, and afterwards, listen to Frank’s Soundwave mix.

    Lastly, I believe I’ll wrap up Soundwave sometime in 2022. I launched Soundwave to cope with the stress and isolation of the pandemic. I told myself that once COVID-19 is no longer the threat that grinds nations to a halt that the show willhave served it’s purpose and that I’d bring it to an end. Unless the pandemic spirals out of control again or unless I change my mind, I will release all the remaining mixes our generous guest deejays have provided for us.

    And on that note, please join us next week when our guest deejay will be Corey Parlamento.

    See you then!

    1. Geinō Yamashirogumi “Requiem”
    2. Félicia Atkinson “Infant vampire”
    3. Tim Hecker “Arctic Lover’s Rock Pt. 2”
    4. Billie Eilish & ROSALÍA “Lo Vas A Olvidar”
    5. The Future Sound Of London “Domain”
    6. Braulio Lam “Dream Lens (Edit)”
    7. Fortresses “Spring”
    8. Labrinth “Forever (Euphoria: Special Episode 2)”
    9. Allen Ginsberg “Pacific High Studio Mantras (feat. Arthur Russell)”
    10. Byron Westbrook “Heavy Weather”
    11. Tim Hecker “The Return Of Sam Snead”
    12. Ian Wellman “Watershed”
    13. LLOOP “Track 1”
    14. Geinō Yamashirogumi “Requiem”

    Subscribe to SOUNDWAVE on iTunes, Overcast, Castro and Pocketcasts.

    Logo by Rik Oostenbroek

    SOUNDWAVE : 64 : SEAN HOCKING

    SOUNDWAVE : 64 : SEAN HOCKING

    Today’s guest deejay is Sean Hocking.

    Sean is the host of Metal Postcard Records, an independent record label based out of Sydney. I met Sean nearly a decade ago when I interviewed him and showcased his label for solipsistic NATION. He releases great music through Metal Postcard Records, so I invited Sean to be our guest deejay last summer. It was a wonderful mix, so naturally, I asked Sean to delight us with another set.

    A casual listen of Sean’s mix will leave you with the impression that it’s wonderful and whimsical. Its certainly that but a closer listen reveals depth and speaks to the human condition. It works on both levels, which is a neat trick. It’s also a bit of an Australia travelogue, so enjoy the ride!

    If you want to hear more music from Sean, he also hosts Bottom of the Pops, which you can find on Spotify. It’s the Nuggets of internet radio. Sean also hosts shows on Dandelion Radio, FSK Radio out of Germany, and 8K in New Zealand.

     

    Sean Hocking
    Sean Hocking

    Tuesday California officially opened up and eased pandemic restrictions.

    I still wear a mask and socially distance in some situations but it’s nice to mingle with people and dine at restaurants. And it’s nice not wearing a mask at the gym, especially when I’m on the stair machine.

    I’ll be listening to Sean’s mix on Fathers Day and hopefully hoping to go out for brunch with my family. If you’re a dad or have one, I hope you can do the same.

    Join us next week when our guest deejay will be Yann Novak, the founder of Dragon’s Eye Recordings.

    See you then!

    1. Sean Hocking “Australian Dawn Chorus”
    2. Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu “Amazing Grace”
    3. Lajamanu Community (NT) “Emu Dreaming”
    4. Warwick Thornton “The Beach (Trailer)”
    5. Tony O’Connor “Ningaloo”
    6. George Greenhough “Memories Surfing Lennox Head Early 1970’s”
    7. Gravy Murphy “Seaside Acid”
    8. Peter Sculthorpe “Songs of Sea and Sky (Second flute solo)”
    9. Sean Hocking “Mutitjula Walk”
    10. Jack Burton “Lake Monger pt. I, II III”
    11. Salary “DD Dub”
    12. Soda Eves “No One Else”
    13. The Emergency “Omega Point”
    14. Sean Hocking “Fire at night outback”

    Subscribe to SOUNDWAVE on iTunes, Overcast, Castro and Pocketcasts.

    Logo by Rik Oostenbroek