h{EE}l -Value Ape (Self-Released)

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Label Description:

So, True Story. I Grew up in the suburbs of Chicago – There were a lot of great things about being in the midwest, one of which was the breakfast culture. Anyhow, we lived about 45 minutes away from a small diner, what I think most people would relate to as being a ‘ Greasy Spoon ‘ – While the food wasn’t all that great I remember always having a blast. Something about the regulars shooting the shit & the combination of cheap meat & sugar stickiness to everything delighted my pre-pubescent senses. Except, However, for one thing – A Minor detail to be sure but one that at the time terrified me & sill gives me pause

There was a small balcony above this eatery establishment, a widow’s peak or some such, a small nook in the roof just above the main entrance – This a place I always sort of thought of as having a main floor. And in this nook, keeping watch over the busy main road & not that far from the airport ( I Often wondered, as an adult, what the appeal of this place was for my father. We had plenty of places much closer that surely had equally bad food. But I digress ) Anyhow, in this nook there was a life sized ” Ape ” ( Obviously a cheap costume on a dress form ) It was waving in a cross between a cordial getting and a nazi salute. But the thing I found unnerving about it was that it was never explained, no – It was never even mentioned really. I went through a period of time where I would try my hardest not even to look at the cursed thing but it was an effort doomed to failure – I Always had to sneak a peak at those garish rubber lips, those outsized & fumbling giant rubber hands – As is the custom in ape costumes of the cheap & tawdry variety, this one also had very pronounced nipples & a vague suggestion of being pregnant.

Anyhow, Life went on I eventually got old enough to where I didn’t have to go to the diner any more. But I never forgot that ape. I Don’t think I ever will. I Wonder where it ended up

credits

released August 10, 2024

Album Title VALUE APE Attributed to a concept by the cartoonist Daniel Clowes ( The genius behind EIGHTBALL & Ghost World – Check them out )

This album created using the sounds of

CP McDill / KR Seward / Jo Bled / Executive Producer Prick Wolf / {AN} EeL

Text / Image : {AN} EeL

Actual Form – Hyperzone (EarthQuaker Records)

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Label Description:

As the walls between musical genres continue to fall or at least be ignored by many, the ears of today’s music lovers are as open as they have ever been. Luckily, the Akron-based instrumental trio of guitarist Joshua Novak, drummer Ian Cummins, and bassist James Haas have more than enough music and power to fill the most voracious listeners of complex hard-rocking music.

Novak, Cummins, and Haas are Northeast Ohio music scene veterans. As with many bands from the musically fertile region, Actual Form’s members have spent quality time in other bands honing their skills and playing in various styles. The trio’s prior experience on stages and in local studios around the region and their varying musical influences have given them a wide and colorful palette of sounds from which to draw. Guitarist Novak believes those factors help keep the band’s music ever evolving while maintaining a unique sound.

“We have an edgy sound, and we have a million influences. But we kind of funnel everything through our sound as opposed to the other way around,” Novak said. But that array of influences, including rock, punk, noise, jazz, prog, metal, and more, doesn’t mean the trio is just talented genre mimics. Their unique sense of rhythm and melody are the roots of every song Actual Form composes, whether it’s 160 seconds of punk-injected noise or a dynamic 12-minute, multi-part epic. “We have a lot of metal influences. But we’ve always shied away from being a metal band. We have always considered ourselves a progressive punk band because we have that toothiness(sic) to us,” Novak said. “We don’t sound like a modern metal band, and I think if we tried to, people would say, ‘wow, this band is bad.”

However, Actual Form refuses to shy away from its collective power, propulsion, and knack for complex melodies that are still memorable. Hyperzone contains a modest five songs, but there is plenty for the open ears of music lovers to absorb. Cummins is a deft, rhythmically varied, and always exciting drummer who also beats the unholy hell out of his kit. On stage, bassist Haas is the closest the band has to a frontman, managing to navigate the trio’s constantly throbbing and shifting metronomic pulse and complicated lines while energetically striking all the best rock dude poses. Novak has the technical acumen of a shredder mixed with the windmilling muscle of a straight-ahead rocker and the barely contained energy of a raging punk. But musically framing and ripping through flashy, technically impressive solos is not the goal of Actual Form’s music. “We just want everything to be as good as it can be,” Novak said.
“And we try to cater to the song and just leave our egos behind a bit. Sometimes one of us will really like a part, but it’s just not working, and you just have to leave it behind for the benefit of the song.”

Throughout every track on the album, the band moves as a locomotive unit. The single and album opener “Lurker on the Threshold” is visually embodied in its accompanying humorous and mildly disturbing video and makes for an excellent introduction to the band’s signature sound. On extended tracks “Bulkus” and the epic album closer “Ice Princess,” the trio expertly navigates the multi-part tunes’ zig-zagging dynamics. Novak mixes searing and jagged yet melodic lead lines with black metal-infused chain saw riffs, tension-relieving moments of ambience, and the occasionally distorted noise freakout. Haas provides the harmonic and rhythmic anchor. Cummins abuses his drum kit in all the best ways, mixing powerful heavy metal gallops, machine-gun-like blast beats, taut, prog-influenced grooves, and epic syncopated fills.

Actual Form’s Hyperzone isn’t just music for musicians. It’s for any listener who likes to be surprised and taken on a sonic journey through the vast landscape of instrumental music.

credits

released May 6, 2022

Actual Form Is:
Ian Robert Cummins- Drums
James Matthew Haas- Bass
Joshua Maxon Novak- Guitar

Written Arranged and Performed by Actual Form

Recorded and Mixed by: Jeff France at EQD Audio Recording Laboratory

Mastered by Adam Boose at Cauliflower Audio

Synthesizer at the end of “Lurker On The Threshold” and Mellotron at the end of “The Ice Princess” by Stephen Dennis Clements

Additional Percussion on “Skritterz” by Jeff France

Art and Design by David Russell Stempowski

license

all rights reserved

Violeer – Fairgrounds (Self-Released)

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Label Description:

i began recording fairgrounds in january of 2024 in an attempt to capture the intensity of our recent string of live shows throughout central ohio…as violeer had always been a project that i had shared with my husband since its inception…

however…throughout the spring and early summer of 2024 our creative and romantic partnership slowly eroded and the release evolved into something else…a dark meditation on loss, addiction, mental illness and the quiet rage that follows when everything that was once familiar is no longer…when forever becomes finite…

recorded in columbus ohio

january through may 2024

no coast

no sea

no eloquence of hope

credits

released June 2, 2024

matthew soko: lyrics, vocals, tape loops, noise, objects, arrangement

joseph morgan: original artwork and video

license

all rights reserved

Tukahdus – satunnaisia hetkiä (few fictional moments) [Self-Released]

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Label Description:

If we are not listening to music, we can have a certain part of the song looping inside our head, while we are walking somewhere, working or just lazing around. Surroundings will offer us lots of different sounds and noises that will mix with those loops.

credits

released August 9, 2024

Music, mixing and mastering by tkhds
Cover art collage and design by tkhds

license

all rights reserved

Bogatir – Decomposition (Self-Released)

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Label Description:

decomposition was recorded during the autumn of 2023. inspired by the season and its various manifestations of decay, the album came together through hours of introspection, reflection, prediction, predication, hyperfixated porings over media from and about experimental artists, a deep delve into the behaviors of magnetic tape, observations of nature interacting with and juxtaposed against fabrication, experimentation with tape loops, analog synthesizers, digital synthesizers, drifting, phasing, found art, scanning, speeding, slowing, stretching, condensing, reversing, repeating, recording, analog deterioration, digital degradation, drones, microcasettes, arrangement, disarrangement, agreement, disagreement, composition, and decomposition.

credits

released December 21, 2023

decomposition:

written and performed by Max Platitsyn
engineered and recorded by Max Platitsyn
mastered by Caeleigh Featherstone

guitar on “dissolution” and «титры» written, performed, and recorded by Sweet Teeth

educational video and audio sample on “danse decomposition” from «Коррозия металлов, способы защиты от неё»

«что же будет с родиной и с нами?» is a cover of the song «Что такое осень» by the band ДДТ. lyrics by Yuri Shevchuk (Юрий Шевчук).

inspired by Emil Cioran, Philippe Soupault, Harold Budd, Renaldo & The Loaf, Eugeniusz Rudnik, Gavin Bryars, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Jon Brion, Colin Stetson, Emile Mosseri, Leonard Bernstein, Milton Babbitt, Puce Mary, Sofia Gubaidulina, Delia Derbyshire, Solmaz Sharif, and more.

artwork and design by Max Platitsyn – decomposition triptych, distorted scans of a postcard of H.N. Werkman’s print Composition (1925)

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Confusion – Limbic Psalms (Very Much Recordings)

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Label Description:

experimental, electro-pop, and ambient artist, Confusions (ben turner), explores digital and analog music-making processes.

credits

released January 5, 2024

All pieces and lyrics composed and performed by Benjamin Turner.

Recorded and engineered by Benjamin Turner.

Additional recording and engineering at Oranjudio Studio, by Joey Gurwin for tracks 1, 5, 6, 7, 8, & 16, thanks to Music Columbus.

Mixed and produced by Joey Gurwin and Benjamin Turner.

Pre-mastering steps by Joey Gurwin.

Mastering by Benjamin Turner.

Album artwork by Brian Rogers. Variation on a photo by Mitchell Multimedia.

Featured performances and contributions:

01- Noncredible – Caleb Miller: tape saxophone

02 – It’s Not Mine – Noah Fisher: space echo

04 – Ppl B4 – written by Stew Johnson (guitar), Sam Johnson (cello), Benjamin Turner (synthesizer/production).

06 – Another Green Man – Brendan Youngquist: advice
Rachel Scott: advice

07 – It’s Not Mine – Caleb Miller: saxophone

08 – String – Joey Gurwin: midi toms

09 – Dialectics – Brendan Youngquist: advice

14 – Quarry – Niki Weber: soundscape contributions / advice

15 – A Place to Say It’s Real – Eric Stratton: sampled performance

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all rights reserved