Hailing from Japan, this electronic project’s brainchild is Naohiro Fujikawa. You can download his latest album Twisted for free.
What a beautiful concept.
‘The grave of the Russian composer Alfred Schnittke in Novodevichye Cemetery in Moscow is surmounted by a stone on which is engraved a rest beneath a fermata with a triple forte noted at the bottom: A very, very loud extended silence.’
- John Biguenet, Silence (London: Bloomsbury, 2015), p.49.
Perhaps the simplistic beauty of the album comes from the fact that she wasn’t writing these songs to share with the world but rather just to fulfill her own desires. Modesty can breed grandeur. If it weren’t for her son Robby’s eagerness to share her music, the world may never have gotten a taste of this masterpiece. Robby gifted a copy to Dinosaur Jr’s J. Mascis, who in turn passed it onto the label Orange Twin.
You can purchase the album here.
Baier is currently working on her second album. At least she was in 2008… Listen to one of the new songs at her official site (scroll all the way down).
I just discovered an interview series called Making Music. They have a set of videos with Alan Sparhawk from the band Low. The few interviews I've seen so far are very different than most. They get into the gritty details of the songwriters methods of creating songs, gear used, and much more.
Formed after Terry Hall, Neville Staple and Lynval Golding left The Specials.
Pretty uncategorizable and weird….this is a short film compromised of bits and pieces from the album of the same name.
Further Reading:
Renaldo and the Loaf Official Site
Article on The Weirdest Band in the World
This song is from their second album Palais Schaumberg, which was released in 1981. Palais Schaumburg was an early 80’s Neue Deutche Welle (German New Wave) band from Hamburg, Germany. The band was co-founded in 1980 by Holger Hiller and Thomas Fehlmann, who met each other at the HFBK.
Listen to more here.
Further Reading:
Art-Magazin interview of Hoger Hiller in German (2013)
Article in Electronic Beats
A Guide to Neue Deutche Welle