SOUNDWAVE : 75 : COMPLEX HOLIDAY

SOUNDWAVE : 75 : COMPLEX HOLIDAY

Today’s guest deejay is Robert Farrugia, co-founder of Complex Holiday, an itinerant label for inside-out ambient and sound art tomfoolery.

I’m usually fastidious about tracking how I come to know guest deejays on Soundwave. Unfortunately, my initial conversation with Robert began on Facebook Messenger and that chat is lost to the ether. Well, really, Facebook has that conversation stored somewhere. But it’s as good as gone for me.

Whatever lead me to Robert, I’m glad I invited him to join us.

What you may or may not know is that I get the mixes you hear months in advance. I usually enjoy it for a week or two before I move on to listen to the next guest deejay’s mix. I’ll also re-listen to the mix a few weeks before their show is released. I listen to the mixes a lot.

 

Robert Farrugia
Robert Farrugia, Photograph by Chris Vella / Storbju

Robert’s mix was a welcome companion for the last week. Nationally, the U.S. is caught between wildfires and hurricanes. Internationally, the U.S. has left Afghanistan. And on a personal note, the was my kid’s first week at high school. While our area is 75% vaccinated, I’m still anxious about how this will work out. Within the first week there’s already been a report of a student with COVID-19. Robert’s mix felt like an echo of how I’ve been feeling about all of it.

There’s a tension that builds up early in Robert’s mix that unravels nearly halfway through before exploring different sonic territory. The mix ends hauntingly and somberly.

That feels right.

Join us next week when our guest deejay will be Michael Donaldson.

See you then!

  1. Dylan Henner “I Was Reading the News But I Felt So Sad I had to Stop”
  2. Snap Dragon “Breathe”
  3. Benoît Pioulard “Whose Palms Create”
  4. Robert Farrugia “Tlellix”
  5. Warmth “Cirrus”
  6. David Cordero “Sevredol (Sight Below Remix)”
  7. Marsha Fisher “Chapter House”
  8. Kurt Buttigieg “Confiance en quoi”

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SOUNDWAVE : 74 : ANTHÈNE

SOUNDWAVE : 74 : ANTHÈNE

Today’s guest deejay is Bradley Sean Alexander Deschamps, AKA Anthéne, curator of Polar Seas Recordings.

I discovered Anthéne when Ishmael Cormack (listen to his mix for Soundwave here) requested music recommendations on Twitter. There were some great suggrestions, and I listened to everything I could find on Bandcamp or Spotify. Anthéne’s music was warm, dreamy, and organic for all its etherealness. Naturally, I extended to Anthéne to guest deejay on Soundwave.

Last week I drove from San Diego to Sacramento with Jonanathan Ammons’s mix providing the soundtrack for that apocalyptic journey. This week Anthéne’s mix was the music for my night drive back to San Diego. This time there were no abandoned cars, wildfire smoke choked skies, or searing sunlight. Instead, a beautiful, three-quarter orange moon floated on the horizon while the stars came out, one by one. It was a long drive, and I played Anthéne’s mix several times, which got me as far as Los Angeles.

If you feel like sharing, please tell me where you listened to today’s show.

Join us next week when our guest deejay will be Complex Holiday.

 

Sean Alexander Deschamps, AKA Anthéne
Sean Alexander Deschamps, AKA Anthéne

  1. Mary Lattimore “Sometimes He’s In My Dreams”
  2. Drape “Solo In High Dreary”
  3. Sylvain Chauveau “Et peu à peu les flots respiraient comme on pleure”
  4. Keeley Forsyth “Photograph”
  5. Sarah Neufeld “Stories”
  6. Gia Margaret “No Sleep No Dream”
  7. Yasmin Williams “Juvenescence”
  8. Havenaire “Beta”
  9. Mount Eerie & Julie Doiron “Real Lost Wisdom”
  10. Leo Svirsky “River Without Banks”
  11. Slow Reels “Lakka”

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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 : 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 : 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”

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    SOUNDWAVE : 61 : NANEUM

    SOUNDWAVE : 61 : NANEUM

    Today’s guest deejay is Jon Solo, AKA Naneum.

    Carmen Rizzo introduced me to Naneum when he was a guest deejay on Soundwave. Carmen’s mix was gorgeous and I invited each musician he featured on his mix to guest deejay on Soundwave as well.

    Jon’s mix is equally gorgeous. Whenever I listen to it I’m transported from sunny San Diego to a snow morning in the woods of Massachusetts when I was a boy. I can’t explain why but there is something about the delicacy of the music Jon selected that evokes that experience. That’s the beauty of the mixes on Soundwave, they take you on a journey. I’m curious to know where Jon’s mix takes you.

     

    Naneum: solo piano
    Naneum: solo piano

    If you want to hear more music from Jon, you can begin with his January 2021 release, Solo Piano. You can hear more of his music here.

    I’m going to keep today’s show notes brief. I just drove over eight hours to Sacramento to spend the next few weeks with my wife. I’m looking forward to catching up, having a nice meal, and getting some shuteye. I want to get up early so we can go kayaking.

    Join us next week when our guest deejay will be Brian Sangmeister.

    See you then!

     

    Jon Solo, AKA Naneum
    Jon Solo, AKA Naneum

    1. Goldmund “Sometimes”
    2. Islands Of Light “Goerde”
    3. Abby Gundersen “Stratus”
    4. Carmen Rizzo “Stratification (Naneum Remix)”
    5. Ólafur Arnalds “Saman”
    6. Slow Meadow “Ships Along The Harbor”
    7. Lars Jakob Rudjord “Mothersong”
    8. Joel Shearer “Sunday”
    9. Alan Ellis “Soothe”
    10. Poppy Ackroyd “Feathers”

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    SOUNDWAVE : 60 : NATE HEARD

    SOUNDWAVE : 60 : NATE HEARD

    Today’s guest deejay is Nate Heard.

    Fitz Gitler introduced me to Nate after I asked him who would be interested in doing a mix for Soundwave (listen to Fitz’s mix here). If Fitz recommends anything then I’m going to listen because that guy has excellent taste in music, so invited Nate to guest deejay on Soundwave without hesitation.

    Nate did not disappoint. I’ve listened to his mix many times, usually with a cup of coffee while I’m starting my workday. Despite each listen, Nate’s mix sounds fresh even as it’s burnished with another lacquer of familiarity.

    Nature said that today’s mix inspired him to dust off his Ableton and begin composing again. I look forward to whatever he decides to share.

    Nate is a medical geographer who uses maps to support health programs around the world. When I asked him if there was anything I should mention on today’s show notes, he said he wanted to promote efforts such as 80,000 Hours (a London-based organization that conducts research on which careers have the most significant positive social impact and provides career advice based on that research), GiveWell (an American non-profit charity assessment and effective altruism-focused organization, focusing primarily on the cost-effectiveness of the organizations that it evaluates, rather than traditional metrics such as the percentage of the organization’s budget that is spent on overhead), and Animal Charity Evaluators (a US-based non-profit charity evaluator and effective altruism-focused organization that finds and promotes the most effective ways to help animals).

    Nate was some words about his mix below.

    As of Monday, I am fully vaccinated. Outwardly, you’d never know that being vaccinated has changed my life. I still wear my mask when I go out into the world. I still keep my distance from people. I don’t want to pass on the virus even though I may be immune to it, and I certainly don’t want to risk catching one of the variants. Inwardly, I feel like a weight has been lifted. I feel a little bit invincible.

    Before the pandemic, I purchased tickets to see Swans perform in Los Angeles. The concert was rescheduled, rescheduled again, and finally canceled. I’m hoping that once enough people have been vaccinated that I’ll finally get to see them.

    This week I’ve been putting my CDs in storage. While packing, I came across fantastic music by C – Schulz, Coil, Zoviet France, Techno Animal, Z’EV , and others that I plan to share on a future mix.

    Okay, that’s it for me.

    Join us next week when our guest deejay will be Jon Solo, AKA Naneum.

    See you then!

     

    Photo of Nate Heard taken by Miles Heard at Battleground National Cemetery, which was established after The Battle of Fort Stevens where President Abraham Lincoln came under direct fire from Confederate troops.
    Nate Heard
    Photo Credit: Miles Heard

    Like many mixes that appear on Soundwave, this one captures a specific moment, even though these selections come together from a span of about 50 years. I received Joseph’s kind invitation to be a guest deejay the day after seditious white supremacists stormed the Capitol building. I was a mess. I happen to live in Washington, D.C., and have spent some time in those office buildings. Terre Thaemlitz’s “D.C. D.O.A.” (1997) came to mind and ended up anchoring this mix.

    “I got a phone call. He wants us to join him.”

    “In Washington.”

    “Some kind of big demonstration.”

    “They think they’ve finally got a shot.”

    “I can’t go to Washington. I can’t even get out of bed!”

    Julianna Barwick goes straight for catharsis with “Inspirit” (2020). It’s a purification. Listening to it feels like participating in a rite. Like “Inspirit,” Haruomi Hosono and Bill Laswell’s “Unfinished Screams” (1996) washes over you, but in alternating waves of drum & bass and ambient synth & insect passages. The outro forms a bridge to the musique concrète and collage pieces that compose the mix’s core.

    The one electronic music class I’ve taken focused primarily on tape processing and the studio techniques Delia Derbyshire used, such as cutting and splicing magnetic tape with a razor. This excerpt of “Circle of Light” (1969) is a nod to Derbyshire’s brilliance with this medium and, like other excerpts in the mix, encourages seeking out the complete pieces.

    “Espace/Escape” (1989) is one of the most tonally rich pieces of musique concrète I know and endlessly rewarding on repeated listening. Holger Czukay’s “Träum Mal Wieder” (1984), roughly “dream again,” is also built from ethereal, dreamlike sources but is held together by driving percussion and has much more structure than its name suggests.

    The album “Pan De Sonic – Iso,” which includes the track “Evening Night fall – Fire, cricket, wine glass etc” (2021), will be available by the time this mix appears on Soundwave. Ai Yamamoto composed it entirely of “domestic field recordings” from the artist’s COVID lockdown in Melbourne. It promises to be an extraordinary release.

    Chris Burke’s “Everything I Need” (1995) is at once jagged and tender, much like Joe Cocker’s source vocals. To my ear, Burke captures the essence of Cocker’s song with only variations on a four-second sample.

    “Avril 14th” (Aphex Twin) is recognizable from the opening bar of loscil’s remix of Wagner and Murcof’s cover (2017). But unlike the original or the cover, the melody doesn’t hit until 2:03, which for me, was one of the biggest payoffs in music I’d heard in a long time. It’s patient and brilliantly arranged.

    The opening track on Pauline Oliveros, Stuart Dempster & Panaiotis‘s “Deep Listening” is “Lear” (1993) which, the more I thought about it, evoked the 45th president. The greed. The king’s solicitation of flattery. King Lear does not want the responsibility of power. Only the benefits. Shakespeare’s tragedies typically end with a restoration of order after chaos. Maybe less so with Lear.

    I’d wanted to end this mix on an up note but settled for something absurd. Negativland’s “Time Zones” fit the moment and make for a clear bookend to Thaemlitz. The madness of Lear and the brain worms of conservative political talk radio. Some kind of big demonstration? “It’s not even funny.” Eleven tracks. “It’s ridiculous.”

    1. Terre Thaemlitz “D.C. D.O.A.”
    2. Julianna Barwick “Inspirit”
    3. 細野晴臣 & Bill Laswell “Unfinished Screams”
    4. Delia Derbyshire & Elsa Stansfield “Circle of Light – Part Two, excerpt”
    5. Francis Dhomont “Espace/Escape, excerpt”
    6. Holger Czukay “Traum Mal Wieder”
    7. Ai Yamamoto “Evening Night fall – Fire, cricket, wine glass etc”
    8. Chris Burke “Everything I Need”
    9. Vanessa Wagner x Murcof “Avril 14th – Loscil remix”
    10. Pauline Oliveros, Stuart Dempster, and Panaiotis “Lear, excerpt”
    11. Negativland “Times Zones, excerpt”

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    SOUNDWAVE : 58 : COSMIC CHAMBO

    SOUNDWAVE : 58 : DANIEL CHAMBERLIN

    Today’s guest deejay is Daniel Chamberlin.

    Daniel and I met on Twitter over our shared appreciation of Paleowolf (listen to the Paleowolf mix on Soundwave here). I learned he is the host of Inter-Dimensional Music, a syndicated weekly community radio broadcast of “heavy mellow, kosmische slop, and void contemplation tactics.” After enjoying a couple of his shows, I invited Daniel to guest deejay on Soundwave.

    What I love about Daniel’s mix is that his segues are so seamless that I often am unaware that he’s transitioned into another track. Granted, the music featured on Soundwave lends itself to those kinds of segues, but Daniel is particularly deft at it.

    The other remarkable thing about Daniel’s mix, for me at least, is that he selected songs that feel very familiar to me. Except that I’ve never heard them before. They feel intimate and worn in.

    Finally, Daniel’s mix took me on a sonic and emotional journey. I’d get lost in his mix. When it ended, I was satisfied but would have been just as happy to have it continue indefinitely.

    You can find Daniel on InstagramMixcloud, Twitter, YouTube, Bandcamp and his blog, Into the Green.

    Before I wrap up today’s show notes, there a couple of things I want to mention.

     

    My second Moderna vaccination.
    My second Moderna vaccination.

    Monday I got my second dose of the Moderna vaccination. I was prepared for the worst: a very sore arm, chills, fevers, body aches, etc. I experienced none of that. I did sleep for over 24 hours, though.

     

    Hans-Joachim Roedelis
    Hans-Joachim Roedelis

    Michael Donaldson was inspired by mix from Krautrock legend Hans-Joachim Roedelius to write a post on Roedelius’s musical career on his blog. It’s a good overview of Roedelius, so please read it if you’d like to learn more about the man.

     

    Back to Beyond and Cycle
    Back to Beyond and Cycle

    Guest deejay protoU has released a new album, Back to Beyond with Alphaxone. Listen to protoU’s mix for Soundwave here. Rhucle, who has also guest deejayed on Soundwave, has released his new album, Cycle. Both albums are fantastic and unique to each artist.

    Join us next week when our guest deejay will be Mauricio Sotelo, AKA Haiteku.

    See you then!

     

    Daniel Chamberlin
    Daniel Chamberlin

    Here’s an hour of heavy mellow meditation.

    Cosmic Chambo presents a heavy mellow ritual soundtrack for meditation, yoga, and other mindfulness practices in the service of transcending false binaries and dismantling white supremacy. Listen for hypnotic choral music, metal-informed jazz drone, heavyweight ambient dub, and organic industrial rhythms.

    1. Wife Signs “Void Contemplation Tactic”
    2. With Great Care “Bloodflow”
    3. Anna von Hausswolff “Dolore di Orsini”
    4. David Hykes and the Harmonic Choir “Solstice Kyrie”
    5. itta “Moonlight”
    6. Kevin Richard Martin “Back to where i belong”
    7. Divide and Dissolve “We Are Really Worried About You”
    8. DEAFKIDS & PETBRICK “O Antropoceno”
    9. Azu Tiwaline “Terremer”
    10. KMRU “behind there”
    11. Ancestral Duo “Trajesty”
    12. Dedekind Cut “The Crossing Guard”
    13. Jamire Williams “God’s Morning Invitation (featuring Chassol & Carlos Niño)”
    14. Path of the Sun “Aquatic Sun”

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    SOUNDWAVE : 53 : AMBIENTBLOG

    SOUNDWAVE : 53 : AMBIENTBLOG

    Today’s guest deejay is Peter van Cooten, host of Ambientblog and DreamScenes on Concertzender.

    I ask each guest to deejay who they know who would be interested in participating in the show with a mix. Harrold Roeland, who was a guest deejay on Soundwave back in December, suggested Peter. I’ve known about Ambientblog for years and have listened to many of Peter’s mixes on Mixcloud. I’m thankful that Harrold made the introduction because Peter’s mix is exceptional.

     

    Peter’s Soundwave mix.
    Peter’s Soundwave mix.

    Mix is not the word for what Peter does on today’s show.

    It’s more accurate to say that Peter composed a concept album masterfully weaved from a multitude of sampled material. Take a look at the “playlist” below to get an idea of the scope of today’s show. It’s a work of art you get to immerse yourself in for the next hour.

    Peter’s mix, like all of his Ambientblog shows, is an experience. Follow Ambientblog on Mixcloud to hear more of his work.

    I’ve included an excerpt about today’s show from Peter’s website below.

    Today’s show is special because it’s also Soundwave’s one-year anniversary.

    I launched Soundwave to help me cope with the stress and isolation of COVID-19.

    This close to what we all hope is the finish line of the pandemic its easy to forget that we were all white-knuckling it for the first couple of months. Every day was filled with existential dread. Would this trip to the grocery store kill me or someone I love? It’s exhausting to live that way.

    During that time, I could not watch tv or movies or listen to music because they were not speaking to the truth of our new reality. I’d watch a tv show and fret how there was no social distancing and why the cast wasn’t wearing masks. Pop music was particularly difficult to listen to because it was so painfully vapid. How am I supposed to enjoy a love song when I might be a patient or a vector in this pandemic?

    The only music that I could tolerate and gave me solace was ambient, classical, experimental, and instrumental music. It was the soundtrack for my stay-at-home lockdown. And if I found some relief with this music, why not share it with others? Any why not ask people I respect to share their mixes?

    I’m humbled by everyone’s gift of generosity of time and effort. We’re all going through this together, each in our way. I’m grateful that during this pandemic that each guest deejay lovingly crafted mixes to share with us.

     

    My first vaccination shot.
    My first vaccination shot.

    Today’s show is also special because today, I also got my first shot for the COVID-19 vaccination.

    I was shopping for groceries when the Mercy Plaza Pharmacy called me and told me they had extra doses. Could I stop by for a vaccination? Most definitely.

    My cilantro stymied the woman who was ringing up my items at the grocery store: were they regular cilantro or organic? She was about to do a price check when I explained that I needed to get the hell out of there to be vaccinated. I didn’t care about the cilantro’s cost; ring me up so I can leave! She understood.

    The folks at Mercy Plaza Pharmacy couldn’t be nicer. They’re a family-owned business, and the owner checked up on me after my shot to see how I was feeling. We talked about San Diego, Sacramento, and our kids. This is going to sound weird, but I had such a great time that I can’t wait to go back.

    So here we are a year later. We’re almost at the finish line. Hopefully, next year, this will be behind us, and we can all enjoy each other’s company. I’m looking forward to meeting some of you in person. Maybe I’ll even get to meet Peter.

    Join us next week when our guest deejay will be Michał Milczarek.

    See you then!

     

    Ambientblog album art.
    Ambientblog album art.

    It’s my honour to open the second year of this series with my contribution. Of course, we can only hope that the series will continue for musical reasons, not because of the pandemic.

    Clicking through the list of contributions, you’ll find that most of them are what I call mixtape-style compilations: a head-tail-mix of (full) tracks. Traditionally, my (Ambientblog) mixes are different (which does not mean necessarily ‘better’, by the way) in that they incorporate many sampled parts of tracks (a full-length track is either an exception or a very short track itself), mixed in a layered collage-style. I always try to shuffle the collage’s fragments so that they seem to melt together and thus start telling a different story.

    Whether this is successful or not can only be determined by the listener.

    This mix is simply named after the podcast Soundwave. It is a happy coincidence that it literally starts with waves—sonically manipulated by Jos Smolders—and ends with the same waves morphing into the sound of a cheering crowd.

    Different kinds of soundwaves are all around us, every moment. Sometimes we’re aware; most of the time, we are not. This mix (hopefully) shows that it can be rewarding to take a moment’s rest to really listen and let the sounds affect you.

    Thanks to Joseph Aleo for inviting me!

    1. Jos Smolders “Plate 7”
    2. Mia Zabelka & Icostech “The Final Stop”
    3. Robert Scott Thompson “Still The Syllables Of Water Whisper”
    4. Charley van Veldhoven & Túrion “Hemellichaam IV (Henrik Meierkord Recycle)”
    5. FM Einheit & Susie Green “Joyful Pleasure”
    6. Joey Largent “Below Diorite Waters”
    7. Barbara Ellison “De Auflaan de Pussychat”
    8. Jana Winderen “The Listener”
    9. Grace Ferguson “Barnumbirr”
    10. C-drík “An Imaginary Place Inhabited By Those Who Are Asleep”
    11. James Osland & Finn Kelvin “Things That Have Form Will Alway Disappear”
    12. Daniel Thomas Freeman “Crawling Out Of The Void”
    13. William Basinski “For Whom The Bell Tolls”
    14. Morgen Würde “Mittsommer”
    15. Biosphere “Stordjupta”
    16. Randal Collier-Ford “Eyes Of The Temple (feat. Northumbria)”
    17. Merope “Alma”
    18. Space Whisper “Park Date”
    19. Innesti “Dark Describes An Arc”
    20. Joost Lijbaart “Twinkling Night”
    21. Pinkcourtesyphone “Another Interior”
    22. f5point6 “Natural Selection”
    23. Andrew Heath “I Sleep Above The Forest”
    24. Lustmord “Journey Of The Dead Man”
    25. Bow Quintet feat. Aidan Baker “Bryanbaum Variation”
    26. Aase Frejadóttir “Saying It”
    27. James Rushford “Musica Callada, Book I – Angelico”
    28. Nick Luscombe “Tokyo Spring Birdsong”
    29. Akropolis Reed Quintet “Homage to Paradise Valley: I. Ghosts of Black Bottom”
    30. Kate Carr “I Spotted Some Backyard Dancing”
    31. Olivier Alary “Khaltoum”
    32. Kazuya Nagaya “the Book Of Sunken Memory”
    33. Jos Smolders “Plate 5”
    34. A Winged Victory For The Sullen “Every Solstice & Equinox”

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    Logo by Rik Oostenbroek