Various Artists – Tomb Of Iconoclasts (Cryo Chamber)

Label Description:

The Tombs series returns with a special roster curated by Apocryphos featuring new and familiar artists, creating atmospheres of dread and existential horror.

The knell of a distant bell fallen can be heard within the decayed houses of the gods. Once standing with grandeur and might, these temples are now their own tombs across a wasteland left by man.

Recommended for fans of oppressive dark ambient, brooding atmospheric and layered texturing


Tomb Series Discography:
Tomb of Empires – cryochamber.bandcamp.com/album/tomb-of-empires
Tomb of Seers – cryochamber.bandcamp.com/album/tomb-of-seers
Tomb of Druids – cryochamber.bandcamp.com/album/tomb-of-druids
Tomb of Ordeals – cryochamber.bandcamp.com/album/tomb-of-ordeals
Tomb of Wights – cryochamber.bandcamp.com/album/tomb-of-wights
Tomb of Primordials – cryochamber.bandcamp.com/album/tomb-of-primordials
Tomb of Iconoclasts – cryochamber.bandcamp.com/album/tomb-of-iconoclasts

 

released October 7, 2025

Written, Produced, Performed
Apocryphos
Atrox Pestis
Dødsmaskin
Envenomist
Fractalyst
Gnawed
Infinexhuma
New Risen Throne
Plague Machinery
Pœna Sensus
Phragments

Artwork & Mastering
Simon Heath

Various Artists – The Cousin Silas Emporium Members Project – The Cardinal Points – South Part 2 (The Cousin Silas Emporium)

Label Description:

Volume 2 from The Cardinal Points (South). As ever, thanks to all involved.


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Various Artists – Two Halves vol. 11 (Pan Pan Pan Avian Distress Call)

xxx

Label Description:

Here we are – Vol 11 of the ” Two Halves ” series ~

While I enjoy collaborating with others directly ( And am particularly happy with my track on this volume ) one thing that I also really enjoy is combining the sounds of other artists in my mind – Sometimes it’s a ” Styles Clash ” sonic mash up, other times a Sympatico Through-line vibe. But it’s always something that generates heat, excitement to ponder. And almost always, it comes back sounding different and often even better than expected. Another curious artifact, which I think is manifest on this volume, is that theses tend to have, in my view, the consistency of a album by one group / person- It seems somehow connected. I was tempted to write it off on the first couple of volumes but it’s consistent enough now that It bears mentioning – I don’t give the pairs any sort of direction or theme to work with, apart from technical issues when first paired putting in touch, I take a hands off approach. And only a few times have results not come in ( Mitigating Circumstance & All ) So, Some food for thought as a peek behind the curtain.

Hope you enjoy these sounds, and again – Thanks so much to the artists participating for taking this leap of faith & delivering such stellar results ~!


Cover Image = Hali Palombo
http://www.halipalombo.com

Spirituals – PSALM020: Psalms (Phantom Limb)

Label Description:

We celebrate reaching twenty releases on our Spirituals imprint with a special compilation album featuring material from every artist who has featured in the catalogue so far.

From Spain’s seminal ambient luminary Suso Saíz and his collaboration with Menhir, to debuting solo South Korean drummer Chloe Kim 김예지. From Nigerian producer and violist Ibukun Sunday, to the teenage electronic experimentations of label founder James Vella and his A Lily project, Spirituals’ remit is and always will be to champion voices in experimental music from all over the world. To offer a creatively fertile and accepting environment to produce music that can reveal secrets about the cosmos and ourselves.

Our twentieth release is a thank you to everyone for listening, thank you for supporting, thank you for allowing us your time.

Phil Western – Afterflash: A Remixed Tribute (Map Music)

Label Description:

What Phil created in his time on earth makes our world a better place. He was the kind of person everyone needs to know or at least know about. He was full of unexpected surprises. He held the land speed record for the demolition of food and on tour would go to sleep fully clothed, often with his shoes on.

Phil was everything: a rogue, a maverick, an explorer. He suffered his demons but did so with courage and an unflinching painful honesty. Phil was easy to talk with. He was always engaging, interesting, and interested. He had a mane of dark, dark hair and a smile to melt hearts. His eyes told his entire life story, if one dared to gaze long enough.

Phil loved wholly, without caution, and with the deepest sincerity. His unquenchable curiosity doubled as an altruistic way of disarmament and evoked harmony when met with a different perspective. Phil was relentlessly gentle and understanding even when it was undeserved.

Phil was a veteran psychonaut whose deep inner journeys, life experiences, and struggles imparted him with a degree of insight, wisdom, humility, and humor that is all too rare. His expression of these qualities in his music infused it with a melancholic understanding of the beauty, joy, frailty, tragedy, and absurdity of the human condition.

Phil was a true artist in every fiber of his being. His incredible talent and infectious energy left a lasting impression on the world, and his music will always hold the top spot in our hearts.

Phil continues to inspire us all.

– The Remixers (Worldwide)

The idea for this project came from having a few remix packs that Phil had given me ages ago for some releases I’d curated, and inspired by Dave King’s (Longwalkshortdock) yearly tribute songs that he’d been posting since Phil’s passing. I had already remixed one of Phil’s songs almost a decade earlier, and had just decided to start on another near the beginning of 2021.

In a conversation later that year with Jaime Dunkle (Love Above Will), I mentioned I was working on another remix. During that conversation, I came upon the idea of putting together a bunch of remixes from Phil’s friends/collaborators as a tribute album, which she enthusiastically encouraged me to do.

After receiving the blessings from Phil’s family to move forward and reaching out to all the potential remixers, the pool of available songs for remixing was soon expanded with the invaluable assistance of Tim Hill (Rim). Not long after that, a couple more artists came on board, including Omar Hashmoder who revealed that he had the files for the last song Phil had been working on right up to the night before he left us. That song, “Dream Death,” is now finally being released, as well as a remix by Omar who also contributed some sounds to the original version.

This project was not without its share of delays and complications, one of which was Bandcamp refusing to give access to Phil’s artist page to his mother so this album could live there with the rest of his discography. Thankfully, Robert Shea’s Map Music has given it a fitting home considering that some of Phil’s earliest solo works originated from that seminal record label.

It has been a profound honor to work with all the artists and fellow lovers of Phil throughout this project. More than anything, I hope this album inspires people to continue exploring Phil’s vast catalog of music in all his solo and collaborative guises.

– Seth Branum (Bainbridge Island, WA)

My dear son: I miss you so much, but like your music, you now live in my heart and mind. Love, Mom.

– Enid Western (Vancouver, BC)

credits

released April 20, 2025

Mastering: Martin Granger (www.7d6music.com) and Jesse Creed
Cover Portrait: Simon LaPlante
Cover Design/Layout: Jaime Dunkle
Executive Producer: Seth Branum

All songs originally written by Phillip Western, except “HeWatchedMeSleepLastNight”, written by Simon LaPlante.
Copyright: The Record Company

The bonus track “Dream Death”, previously unreleased and the final track Phil worked on before his passing, is sent to album buyers on 4/20.

The majority of the proceeds go to the fund for Phil’s daughter, Mora Western

MAP219-D

Various – 60 Minutes Of Laughter (Cause And Effect)

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Label Description: For more info on 60 Minutes Of Laughter
including additional pictures and texts
www.haltapes.com/60-minutes-of-laughter.html

new digital transfer from the original master tape, November 2015

60 Minutes Of Laughter was recorded in Indianapolis, Indiana, in 1981 and 1982, and was issued in 1983. 60 MOL was Deborah Jaffe’s tape project, the fourth issue of a small press magazine Debbie published called 12 Seconds Of Laughter. 60 Minutes Of Laughter features sounds by Hal McGee, Debbie Jaffe [aka Master/Slave Relationship], Viscera, Gabble Ratchet, Trish & The Swishettes, The Dancing Invisibles, Residential Rick (Karcasheff), and more. 60 MOL is a lo fi lo tech collage consisting of earliest recordings by Viscera, tape cut-ups, primitive noise jams, simultaneous poetry readings, deconstructed rock songs, a live dada performance recording in a Country & Western bar, weird pop songs, experimental music, and more.

Pseudo-dadaist music, noise and poetry circa 1981 and 1982 from your friends at Cause And Effect. Our biggest seller to date, 60 Minutes Of Laughter is a wacky collage of nonsense bits and non sequiturs like “Yeah, Yeah, Yeah” by Trish and the Swishettes”, “Dharma Proclivity/Butchered Calf” by Jolifanto Karawane and Mipoola Palinga and “Freedom To Be Immoral” by The Conversations. Also includes early ultra-minimal music by Viscera (“Starvation And Beating”, “Seeing The Future”, “Outraged Civilized World”, etc) and a ten-minute “Dada” performance by Karawane and Palinga in a country and western bar. For $2.00 what the hell?
– January 1985 Cause And Effect Cassette Distribution Catalog
www.haltapes.com/cause-and-effect-january-1985-catalog.html

60 Minutes Of Laughter Side A 31:21

Red House, Blue House – DJ & HM
Voulez In The Voulez – GS
Untitled/uncredited excerpt from “The Edge” – Viscera
Ant War – HM
Kurtz Kapers (Apocalypse Later) – Kurtz Memorial Band
A Different Kind Of Music – Viscera
Love In The Tropics
Starvation And Beating – Viscera
Floatin’ On The Waves – Dancing Invisibles
Love Is On My Side – Trish & The Swishettes
Home – Viscera
Composition – HM
Outraged Civilized World – Viscera
Another Simon And Garfunkel Hit
Three Blind Pigs – Residential Rick
To Tristan, With Love
Yeah, Yeah, Yeah – Trish & The Swishettes
Seeing The Future – Viscera
Airplanes And Engines (Are Beautiful) – Dancing Invisibles
Husband And Wife Scenario
New Eyes
Pain Research – Trish & The Swishettes
Improv – Gabble Ratchet
Apple Pie
Wurlitzer Intermission – DJ

DJ – Debbie Jaffe
HM – Hal McGee
JK – Jolifanto Karawane
LE – L. Extentensa (Toby O’Brien)
MP – Mipoola Palinga
RK – Rick Karcasheff

60 Minutes Of Laughter Side B 31:17

Wurlitzer Intermission (cont)
Collage/Gertrude Stein
Dharma Proclivity/Butchered Calf – JK & MP
Tinyness – Park Avenue Rick
Live At The Sanctuary – JK & MP
Bird Is Dead – HM & DJ
I Love You I Love You I Love You
Repercussive Illusion – HM
WWIII – Army Brats
WWIV – Army Brats
My Balls – LE
Public Lavatory, Blue Light – HM & DJ
The Edge – Viscera
Negative Image
Everything And Nothing – Viscera
Tiger Talk – Burnt Circuits
I Don’t Understand – DJ w/ “Mr British”
Silly Love Songs
Why Do You Do It?
Freedom To Be Immoral – The Conversations
Accepting Things As They Are – Viscera

Army Brats – HM, vocals; RK, drums; DJ, keyboards
Burnt Circuits – DJ & HM, vocals & keyboards
Dancing Invisibles – HM, vocals; Roger Vice, guitars; DJ, misc. items
Gabble Ratchet – RK, keyboards; David Mattingly, keyboards; Jack Sexson, guitar; DJ, guest vocalist
Trish & The Swishettes – Trish, vocals; HM, vocals, guitar; DJ, vocals
Viscera – HM, vocals; DJ, keyboards

60 Minutes Of Laughter was the first audiotape artwork on which I ever appeared. 60 Minutes Of Laughter was Deborah Jaffe’s tape project. It was the fourth issue of a small press magazine Debbie published called 12 Seconds Of Laughter.

I met Jaffe in August of 1981 while I was working as a prep cook at a Mexican restaurant in Indianapolis. We found that we shared a lot of the same interests in music, art and literature and Debbie and I became best friends. We often visited her friends Rick Karcasheff and David Mattingly, who knew a lot about weird avant garde music. They had a group called Gabble Ratchet and they played analog synthesizers, with Jack Sexson on guitar, and recorded their noisy experimental music on cassette tapes.

Debbie published a small press magazine called 12 Seconds Of Laughter, the subject of which was “the obscure, in all forms”. She took photos from foreign film catalogues, nonsense absurdist phonetic poems, cut-outs from advertisements, tracts, etc. and collaged them together to make non-statements about “love, sex, politics, psychology, religion”.

After publishing three print issues she conceived of an audio version on cassette. 60 Minutes Of Laughter was a compilation of audio routines of material by ourselves and our friends that Debbie and I had recorded on a small portable “shoebox” cassette recorder during 1981 and 1982. Deb made a collage of these recordings with various segments from poetry and language instruction records, a Wurlitzer organ, domestic audio scenes, her junior high school band and sundry sonic doodles.

Debbie and I recorded numerous simultaneous poems. We chose texts from a wide variety of sources — our own poems, magazine articles, shopping lists, advertisements, The Bible, etc. The often arbitrarily-chosen texts clashed, collided and melted into one another.

Debbie and I read in the newspaper that a local Country & Western Music bar called The Sanctuary had an open microphone night every Wednesday. Anybody could go into the little performance area and play a song. We constructed big paper cones to put on our heads. We chose Dada names for ourselves: I was Jolifanto Karawane. Debbie was named Mipoola Palinga. We wrote our new names on the hats. I taped the words of Hugo Ball’s Dada abstract phonetic poem “gadgi beri bimba” (1916) onto my beat-up $70 acoustic guitar. We both donned long black coats. When it was our turn we donned our big tall cardboard cone-hats and walked to the stage. Deb went to the microphone on a stand stage right. I sat down in a chair in front of a boom mike lowered to my mouth level. I spoke into the microphone, addressing the audience:
“The first step is to realize you’re asleep.I mean, would it really matter if you stuck your head in a Waring blender?”
I began to rub and scrape a grooved stick against the guitar strings, pulling the stick back and forth roughly over the strings and striking the body of the guitar with my hands and the stick. I increased the speed of the rubbing and striking and abrasive scraping up to a big crescendo. I cried out in a loud voice inflected with a pseudo-Caribbean-tribal wail, stretching the phrasing out and down and around as far as I could: “Gadji beri bimba!”
Debbie took up the response in a long cascade of wails, yelps and pseudo-operatics. Our vocal lines crashed into silence.
Then I took up the next call: “Glandridi lauli lonni cadori…”
We continued this call and response of a line from Ball’s poem with Debbie providing the elements of contrast, background and setting. Debbie warbled and chirped and giggled like a maniac and screamed and bellowed out and swooped in big arcs up and down. I leaned into the microphone, coughed up the words, rolled and gargled them around in my mouth and throat and spitted and barked them out – going through a rapid-fire catalog of exaggerated phrasings, monkey chattering, accents and character voices from Monty Python and bad jungle movies.
The audience soon started to make lots of noise, with lots of loud talking and people standing up, shouting and yelling and shaking their hands and gesticulating. People yelled out their responses to what we were doing, things like: Devo!
We were up there making a bunch of racket, just yelling a bunch of stuff, and me beating and misusing and abusing my guitar. After several minutes of this chaos we brought the assault to a close and the audience burst out yelling and clapping and shouting – united together in their response to us. As we finished a guy in the audience yelled out “Heil Hitler!”. And the rest of the audience burst out cheering and laughing in agreement at the sentiment. They were clearly excited and everybody was having a good time.
We were scared and decided it would be a good idea to pack our stuff and head out the door as quickly as possible before we were attacked. Neither of us wanted to get beaten up and we didn’t think it was unlikely if we hung around much longer.

Debbie knew a guitar player who idolized Tom Petty. Deb and I tried to work out some songs, with Deb and I doing some vocals along with Roger’s hot electric playing. “Airplanes And Engines” was extracted from an epic nine-minute version. I had written a poem of several pages treating the subject of how technology, in spite of its drawbacks, will be the instrument through which we will transcend earthly, bodily limitations and enter into different realms of the spirit or consciousness. I do my very worst imitation of Jim Morrison. “Floatin’ On The Waves” was another example of how Deb and I banalized and deconstructed rock music. The excerpt here shows us reducing song lyrics to mere arbitrary sounds, with no regard to content – only to the way the words sounded together.

A couple of times that fall of 1981 we visited a waitress I knew from the restaurant where I worked. We all had a lot of fun sitting around in her house doing trio vocal improvisations – stream of consciousness – start with no preconceived idea – listen to the others – make sounds in reaction to what you hear – whatever came into our heads. Deb and I were trying to cultivate a kind of artistic infantilism, to draw closer to true uninhibited expression. We experimented quite a lot with babbling, shouting, crying, screaming, whining and giggling. We also cultivated artistic “primitiveness” in an effort to communicate as directly and instinctively as possible.

“Ant War” is a recording of me playing my cheap electric guitar through a small amplifier. I liked to misuse, abuse and overuse the tremolo and reverb effects on the amp. I was trying to create something that had a lot of energy but that evoked visual imagery. A driving rhythmic pulse, with noise in overlapping, frothing currents of distortion and crackling electricity, controlled feedback and pitch manipulation.

“Composition” was composed with a Casio VL-Tone, and is an early example of my use of programmed music. The VL-Tone was the first keyboard ever made by Casio. The VL-Tone was a hybrid calculator/musical instrument.

There are two recordings of Rick Karcasheff and David Mattingly’s experimental music group Gabble Ratchet on 60 Minutes Of Laughter. Both date from the months before I met Debbie, Summer 1981. I admired Gabble Ratchet’s improvisational style, and their use of Korg MS-10 analog synthesizers.

“Improv” is a short snippet from a much longer jam. Debbie included it here to showcase her weird stifled scream. “Collage/Gertrude Stein” is composed of a collage of pop music, news programs, TV ads and other sonic detritus, mixed completely into the left channel; and in the other speaker, a Gabble Ratchet jam tape with Deb doing readings from a book by Gertrude Stein.

Rick’s two short tracks are original works that clearly point to an infatuation many of us had at that time with The Residents. “Three Blind Pigs” is based on a traditional nursery rhyme I knew well from childhood, but in the original it was three blind mice. In Residential Rick’s world the mice become pigs.

On 60 Minutes Of Laughter Debbie Jaffe included several audio scenes and oblique references to her life that illustrated some of the themes that she would later develop in Viscera and Master/Slave Relationship. Debbie’s early life experiences caused her to doubt and rebel against common notions of romance, marriage, family, religion and popular taste.
The pieces “Husband And Wife Scenario” and “New Eyes” were from a recording Deb made of her much older half-brother Jim, his ex-wife Val talking with their church minister in 1973 in Des Moines, Iowa.

“Kurtz Kapers” was taken from a recording Jaffe made of her junior high school band in 1976. She played clarinet in the band.

When Debbie lived in Marion, Indiana she went to the Wurlitzer Electric Organ shop downtown and played the organs, which were available for rent on an hourly basis. There were cassette recorders built into the organs. Debbie took extracts from her hours of organ jam tapes for the “Wurlitzer Intermission” segments on 60 Minutes Of Laughter.

Deb got the sound effects, language and poetry records from the main branch of the Indianapolis Public Library. One of her great finds was the Gertrude Stein record that had a scratch on it that caused the phrase “sometimes Vollard mumbled” to repeat over and over. Debbie used this recording as a segue into the first Viscera piece on the 60 Minutes Of Laughter tape.

60 Minutes Of Laughter contains the earliest recordings by Viscera, from the Summer of 1982. That Summer Deb and I started developing some pieces in which I would recite, sing or act out poems and stories we’d both written, and Deb would compose a minimalist background/ backdrop or mood setting using simple instrumentation – mostly our Casio VL-Tone mini keyboard. We wanted to get right to the heart and guts of the matter of life and existence: to live and show the pain and torment of existence through the art. There was no redemption in life except for the artistic expression of our experiences. This expression must be direct and bare, devoid of artifice and rationalization, all the loose psychic wires hanging loose and going every which way. Erratic mood swings and spurts of energy followed by lassitude…our fragmented perplexed perception of the world outside and our fragile mental states.

Music we were listening to during that time included: Patti Smith, Talking Heads, The Residents, The Doors, Eno, Joy Division, New Order, Lemon Kittens, Nurse With Wound, Throbbing Gristle. Plus, we were reading lots of books on dada and stuff by William Burroughs.

Originally released by Mirth And Merriment Productions. Reissued by Zidsick.

Various Artists – Noise Forest (Cold Spring)

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Label Description:

A classic compilation that emanated out of Osaka, “Noise Forest” brings together a powerhouse of early 90’s Japanese noise stalwarts: MERZBOW, C.C.C.C., SOLMANIA, DISLOCATION, MONDE BRUITS, MASONNA, VIOLENT ONSEN GEISHA, and INCAPACITANTS.

The ultimate Japanoise collection, originally released in 1992 on the cult Les Disques Du Soleil label / record store on CD-only, and now impossible to find. Remastered and presented here on deluxe 2LP in matt-laminate gatefold sleeve (first time on vinyl) and new CD edition, all with new artwork.

A forest isn’t something normally associated with noise; it brings to mind silence and solitude. However, the ominous cover art here – and the artists within – bring to mind the notorious suicide forest Aokigahara. Despite all tracks falling into the Japanoise genre, the tracks are very diverse, yet every track is so distinct it could only be by that artist.

Notes on each track taken from Noisextra’s ‘Noise Forest’ special: www.noisextra.com/2024/01/10/various-artists-noise-forest

• CD in matt-laminate digipak.

• 2LP Black in matt-laminate gatefold sleeve.

• 2LP Forest Green in matt-laminate gatefold sleeve. Ltd 250 copies.

releases December 6, 2024

1. recorded at ZSF Produkt Studio, 11/07/91
2. recorded at Telecom Studio 06/07/91
3. recorded & mixed at works Fatagaga 07/91
4. edited by Dislocation 1991. Includes live recordings at Freebird (03/02/91) and Bubble (21/02/91). F.Kimura (guitars), K.Kiyokawa (performance), Y.Yanagawa (sax), T.Osaki (electronics)
7. recorded in 1989
8. T.Mikawa + F.Kosakai

Mastered by Martin Bowes
Layout by Abby Helasdottir

Various Artists – paisajes en tundra

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Label Description:

(ENG)

Glacier retreat, while a natural phenomenon in some cases, has been exacerbated by various human activities such as burning fossil fuels, deforestation and intensive agriculture. The accelerated melting of ice leads to a series of catastrophic consequences and irreversible effects that are impacting both natural ecosystems and human life.

This album was created as an initiative to raise awareness of this phenomenon, as well as to raise funds to support Glaciares Chilenos (www.glaciareschilenos.org), a Chilean NGO founded with the aim of educating and protecting the more than 26 thousand glaciers located in the national territory, through the development of educational programs and visibility of scientific content on glaciers.

In keeping the editorial line of the previous benefit compilation “migraciones”, Bahía Mansa decides to expand the previous sound palette and invites 10 other global artists to participate in this collaborative instance as part of the annual support for ecological causes.

All proceeds will be donated directly to Glaciares Chilenos (NGO).

******

(SPA)

El retroceso de los glaciares, si bien es un fenómeno natural en algunos casos, se ha visto exacerbado por varias actividades humanas como quema de combustibles fósiles, deforestación y agricultura intensiva. Los hielos comienzan a derretirse más rápidamente, lo que conlleva a una serie de consecuencias catastróficas y efectos irreversibles que están afectando la vida natural y humana.

Este álbum nace como iniciativa para concientizar de este fenómeno, así también como para reunir fondos y donar a Glaciares Chilenos (www.glaciareschilenos.org), ONG chilena fundado con el objeto de educar y proteger los más de 26 mil glaciares ubicados en el territorio nacional, a través del desarrollo de programas educativos y visibilización de contenido científico sobre glaciares.

En esta línea, y continuando en la línea editorial del anterior compilado a beneficio “migraciones”, bahía mansa decide ampliar la paleta sonora anterior e invita a otros 10 artistas globales a participar en esta instancia colaborativa como parte del apoyo anual a causas ecológicas.

Todo lo donado va en directo beneficio de Glaciares Chilenos (ONG).

******

Thank you infinitely to all the artists who contributed their talents and passion to this project, making it possible to extend this important message!

credits

released October 25, 2024

curated by bahía mansa
mastered by Nico Rosenberg at Alt-Köpenick Studio
artwork by shesoundvisual.

THANKS TO:
Nico Rosenberg (CL) – nicorosenberg.bandcamp.com
Anto Little (CL) – antolittle.bandcamp.com
David Cordero (ES) – davidcordero.bandcamp.com
shesoundvisual (CL) – shesoundvisual.bandcamp.com
Ryan J. Raffa (US) – rjraffa.bandcamp.com/music
Carlos Ferreira (BR) – carlosferreira.bandcamp.com
M. Linnen (US) – mlinnen.bandcamp.com
Yumi Iwaki (JP) – soundcloud.com/iwakiyumi
El Encanto de Lo Discreto (UY) – elencantodelodiscreto.bandcamp.com
emho (FR) – emho.bandcamp.com

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