All kinds of experimental music can be found on Bandcamp: free jazz, avant-rock, dense noise, outer-limits electronics, deconstructed folk, abstract spoken word, and so much more. If an artist is trying something new with an established form or inventing a new one completely, thereâs a good chance theyâre doing it on Bandcamp. Each month, Marc Masters picks some of the best releases from across this wide, exploratory spectrum. Augustâs selection includes mysterious Ukrainian rock deconstruction, abstract campfire hymns, homages to Pauline Oliveros, and electronic essays made in part with a Nintendo DS.
Cristián Alvear and Takashi Masubuchi
Distinct Restless Objects
Chilean guitarist Cristián Alvear met Japanese guitarist Takashi Masubuchi in Tokyo in 2019 for a live collaboration, and got an excellent recording of the results. Distinct Restless Objects offers seven tracks so clear, present, and tactile, itâs as if you can reach out and touch their strings. If youâre not familiar with either playerâs work, the music might seem tentative and hesitant, understandable enough for what was presumably a first-time meeting. But Alvear and Masabuchi both are skilled at slow, sparse sounds, criss-crossing them in ways that are sometimes like call-and-response, other times like parallel path-weaving. Things can get busy too: on the tense, propulsive â4,â one playerâs spare plucks are embedded in the otherâs rapid notes, creating the illusion of marking time while simultaneously escaping it.
СеÑб Ñ ÐолодÑ
ÐâеâзâкâоâÑâÑâоâвâнâиâй Ðâжâаâз
Itâs kind of great that the Bandcamp page for this release includes zero information on who СеÑб Ñ ÐÐ¾Ð»Ð¾Ð´Ñ is, what instruments they play, and where and when ÐâеâзâкâоâÑâÑâоâвâнâиâй Ðâжâаâз was recorded (beyond this being a live recording from Lviv, Ukraine). It has the air of a basement jam with a cadre of friends and freaks in attendance, screaming to root the band on as they dive into improv noise-rock that skirts the edges of groups like the Boredoms, No-Neck Blues Band, and Fat Worm of Error. When СеÑб Ñ ÐÐ¾Ð»Ð¾Ð´Ñ arenât deconstructing rock tropesâgrinding out off-beats and strangling chordsâtheyâre falling face-first into dirt-jazz flames that they somehow both fuel and douse. The flailing energy on ÐâеâзâкâоâÑâÑâоâвâнâиâй Ðâжâаâз is both inspiring and fun; hereâs hoping СеÑб Ñ ÐÐ¾Ð»Ð¾Ð´Ñ stay as active as they are anonymous.
Edsel Axle
Variable Happiness
Vinyl LP
Rosali Middleman crafts thoughtful songs under her own name, creates high-energy garage rock as part of Long Hots, and just a couple years ago made a great tape of solo guitar explorations for the unifactor label. Variable Happiness, her first effort under the name Edsel Axle, could be seen as a follow-up of sorts to that latter release. Once again, Middleman turns her guitar into a painterâs brush, patiently building up riffs and phrases into fiery expressions of emotion and energy. Itâs perhaps even more far-reaching than her previous solo guitar work, evoking some of Michael Morleyâs noise under the name Gate, Neil Youngâs feedback meditations on the Dead Man soundtrack, and the haunting tones of the underappreciated solo guitar album by Lowâs Alan Sparhawk. Ultimately, though, Edsel Axle shows Middleman furthering a style thatâs fully her own, melding dreamy contemplation and aggressive execution into one beautiful sound.
Sana Nagano and Leonor Falcón
Peach and Tomato
Compact Disc (CD)
Sana Naganoâs last album, Smashing Humans, was a maelstrom of punk-jazz, with her high-octane violin leading an energetic ensemble. Here she teams up with violist Leonor Falcónâher friend since the two met in grad school eight years agoâfor pieces that are more reserved, but still quite tense. Two of the tracks are dedicated to Béla Bartók, while two others are movements from Profokievâs Sonata for Two Violins, meaning thereâs some reverence to tradition here. But Nagano and Falcón inject burning edges into those pieces, especially the darting, pin-prick âEtude 2.â Their originals offer a similar mixture of past and future, particularly the album closer âFlow,â which sees both musicians exploring the entire range of their instruments.
Max Pozin
Reichwaltz.Schlafkultur
Israel-born, Russia-based multi-instrumentalist Max Pozin has two excellent releases out this month. Pustozwet â Astralis features a quartet playing live with various horns and wind instruments, including flute, trumpet, sax, and âsport whistle.â But Iâm more partial to Pozinâs solo effort Reichwaltzâ.Schlafkultur, recorded in Moscow a year ago. It highlights Pozinâs electronics work using âcraftsynth,â ânintendo ds,â âelektrofaustus dronething,â [sic] and more. Across two half-hour-plus tracks, Pozin explores rhythm, repetition, drone, and glitch, balancing unpredictable shifts with highly-focused minimalism. âReichwaltzâ is the busier track, twisting and turning through fast-pulsing oscillations, while âSchlafkultureâ is more high-toned and meditative.
Diana Rogerson
blue bottle in a jam jar
Compact Disc (CD)
First released digitally on Bandcamp in 2021, Diana Rogersonâs blue bottle in a jam jar now arrives on CD via Nihilist, prompting a chance to revisit this excellent work of unpredictable rock deconstruction and dramatic sound art. A sometime-member of Nurse With Wound and Current 93, Rogerson here forges an aesthetic all her own, using electronics and whatever else she might be into to craft unsettling environments that are both playful and sinister opener âfalling apartâ is a nightmarish soul-goth jam; itâs followed by the warped, hammered buzz of the wordless âblue bottle.â From there, Rogerson continually mixes her breathy voice with dissonant textures, chopping it into chanted exhales during âlip service,â and, most memorably, crafting a robotic mantra in the whirring ânot what i wanted.â
Ayami Suzuki & Rob Noyes
Classic Fevers and Chills
Cassette
The drone-based sound of Japanâs Ayami Suzukiâmade primarily with voice and some electronicsâseems ideally suited for collaboration, as she can modulate and mold it to fit any mood. Such was the case on her 2022 duo set with Tetuzi Akiyama, two long pieces of heavy tones. Her new collaboration with American guitarist Rob Noyes is a completely different kind of mesmerizing. Noyes, a master at acoustic finger picking, plays a sparser, more wandering style than Akiyama, and it appears that Suzuki has simplified her approach accordingly, using only her voice. The result on the very aptly-titled Classic Fevers and Chills is something akin to campfire hymns: seven pieces that hum, melt, and glisten, with the pairâs individual contributions timed so well itâs hard to imagine it was all improvised.
Williams / Kleijn / Kassinger
Two or Three
Compact Disc (CD)
In 2017, the trio of horn player Mars Williams, cellist Katinka Kleijn, and bassist Rob Kassinger convened to perform Pauline Oliverosâs composition âFor Two or Three Instruments,â which she had written not long before passing away a year earlier. A couple years later, the trio decided to make a studio recording of this piece, along with improvisations inspired by Oliveros and her Deep Listening philosophies. The result, Two or Three, is a masterclass in collaboration, as William, Kleijn, and Kassinger make small, quiet sounds that delicately form three-way dialogue. At times, as during the 17-minute âImprovisation II,â the trio lets loose a bit, but the bulk of Two or Three is less about activity than room and space. Itâs almost as if the music takes a back seat to its effect on the players, weaving silence into sound.