Switched On – Omar Ahmad: Inheritance Remixed (AKP Recordings)

by Ben Hogwood

What’s the story?

The ‘sonic invention’ and ‘cosmopolitan outlook’ we identified in a review of Omar Ahmad’s Inheritance album get a second look, courtesy of an imaginative remix project where the whole LP is made over by guest artists.

Ahmad is a Palestinian-American artist, a multi-instrumentalist who has proved a perfect fit for the musically open approach of the Californian label AKP Recordings. The original album saw him take on all instruments, from field recordings to cello, synthesizer, voice and percussion – plenty for the assembled artists to build on.

The tracks of the original are presented in the same order.

What’s the music like?

AKP have cast the net far and wide, meaning the remixed Inheritance veers between widescreen ambience and active beat work-outs. Most of these are extremely effective, too, presenting a tableau that stays faithful to Ahmad’s colourful intentions but uses them as the stimulus for vibrant new creations.

These range from the spacey A Little Time For Me, given a strident hip hop beat by Sam O.B., or Lapses, led by some excellent broken beats with rich colouring from Otodojo. The heat soaked Sham Oasis and roomy Descended from a Wanaque Tree (Borrowed Memory) work really well, remixed by Kirin McElwain and Ki Oni respectively – while Solpara goes the other way, applying a wide-screen view of the clattering beats on Losing A Friend.

More mysteriously, Black Gesso is pulled this way and that by ACE, with mysterious sounds from the depths.

Does it all work?

Pretty much. Sometimes the clatter becomes a bit much on the faster tracks but that’s all a matter of preference – the feeling being that Ahmad’s music is most expressive at a slower tempo.

Is it recommended?

It is – a great complement to the original album, and a lesson in how best to approach a remix album.

For fans of… Thievery Corporation, Aim, RJD2, Blockhead

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Published post no.2,269 – Tuesday 13 August 2024

Switched On – Luke Elliott: Every Somewhere (AKP Recordings)

by Ben Hogwood

What’s the story?

The theme of Every Somewhere is the relationship between humans and the natural world – a theme that has preoccupied a number of artists in recent years.

Luke Elliott, a UK-born musician and producer based in Amsterdam, used modular and analogue synthesizers to make this work, sampling and re-sampling material together with fresh ideas. Talking about the album, he says how “the crossover between artificial sound and nature became a central theme, a subject for particular consideration, whether by “leaning into the sounds of people shouting alongside bird calls and breezes” or by incorporating a friends’ recording of the sea organ of Zadar, a large-scale land art instrument which plays music via sea waves passing through its tubes.” This appears on the opening Better Start Being.

Every Somewhere is dedicated to Elliott’s late cat Agatha (below), who was by his side – and on his lap! – during much of the record’s construction.

What’s the music like?

This is ambient music, developed through rich colours. Elliott writes with a refreshing freedom, and with positive energy, his compositions unfolding with an easy and instinctive charm. The music might be mostly electronic but it does feel as though it was recorded outdoors, in the close company of the listener.

Often the light is dappled on Elliott’s compositions, with a really appealing sense of light and shade. Go With Curiosity pulses with rhythmic invention and riffs of a semi-serial quality, while Land Soft has a similar energy but in a more tonal plain. Stellar Overflow takes a wide panoramic look, a lovely restful track.

Shelter In Western Regions, a co-write with Ryan J Raffa, has a fulsome bassline, Even The Moon Is Leaving has a lush backdrop, while Presolar Friends feels more personal in spite of its similarly wide scope.

Does it all work?

Yes. Elliott writes fluently, and each track has its own pleasing structure within the whole. The wide-open sound lends itself to headphones or a surround sound system, with stimulating audio perspectives.

Is it recommended?

It is – there is plenty to enjoy here, either on a purely ambient, background level, or through more detailed listening.

For fans of… Tim Hecker, Matthewdavid, Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith

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Published post no.2,240 – Monday 15 July 2024

On Record – Howe Gelb: Weathering Some Piano (AKP Recordings)

by Ben Hogwood

What’s the story?

Howe Gelb is a seasoned musician of many projects, so it is entirely within character to see him popping up with a solo piano album for AKP Recordings.

Made in his Arizona dwelling, it is a private affair, with Gelb on the piano in an adobe room insulated with denim, ensuring the acoustic is intimate and without reverberation.

Discussing the album, Gelb says, “Nature is in itself an improvisation. It can never be an accurately nor consistently planned thing. It should also be noted an extreme climate resonates with emotional wherewithal. Thus, these captured pieces of pianistic atmospheres are simple paintings of the horizon, a semi still life, the net result of allowance, and never intended to be drawn again. Resonance achieved via residence.”

What’s the music like?

Listening to this album gives the impression of eavesdropping on a pianist from the room next door. Gelb’s conversational way of playing is at once appealing, the soft tones of the piano providing an ambience like no other.

The musical language is simple but in a rewarding sense, like an Erik Satie Gymopèdie might be. Weathered itself wears a distracted look, as though the pianist is preoccupied with looking out the window, but Barometer is more structured and completely charming. There is light humour in Coffee vs Rain and Puddle Jumpin’, and a touch of humidity in The Promise Of Thunder.

Gelb’s melodies have light inflections and ornaments, suggesting a jazz influence that sits in the middle ground. Although the reverberation is deadened by the recording conditions, Gelb keeps the sustain pedal down for much of Rhapsody In Cloud Formation, the pitches colliding softly with consonant overtones until an unexpected ending in the lower pitches.

Perhaps the most meaningful piece is the extended central opus, The Sky That Can’t Make Up Its Mind. Here the thoughts and moods are varied, at times going off centre but then coming back, exploring each end of the piano with a youthful mind. There are sudden sharp bursts of clarity and a surprisingly discordant centre, before the piece comes home to rest having traversed all the moods.

Does it all work?

It does. With an intentionally lazy, improvised approach, Gelb has made an instinctive album that allows the mind to wander.

Is it recommended?

It is. Weathered Piano is a pleasing anecdote to the more clinical piano sound served up alongside many a morning coffee. It is a charming piece of work, a more than pleasant distraction for home listening.

For fans of… Erik Satie, Chilly Gonzales, Joep Beving

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Published post no.2,189 – Saturday 25 May 2024

On Record – Dave Harrington, Max Jaffe & Patrick Shroishi: Speak, Moment (AKP Recordings)

by Ben Hogwood

What’s the story?

One of jazz music’s strongest qualities is improvisation, and the way musicians are encouraged to speak with freedom and walk a tightrope, to see what they are capable of.

Such a statement can certainly be applied to these three musicians, who improvised this recording on the afternoon of their very first meeting. Dave Harrington contributes guitar and electronics, Max Jaffe looks after the drums and percussion while Patrick Shiroishi is the saxophonist, as well as contributing bells and tambourine.

What’s the music like?

Consistently engaging – and inventive with it. There are four longer form pieces here, and the shorter Ship Rock. Each finds the players fully engaged while the extra-long pieces are well structured, with imaginative changes of colour to aid the ebb and flow.

Staring Into The Imagination (Of Your Face) is immediately notable for Jaffe’s sensitive brush work and Shiroishi’s well-judged vibrato, the saxophone given a nicely poised solo. How To Draw Buildings is something of an epic that bursts with sonic invention, with smoky and psychedelic moods that feature some powerful, long notes on the sax.

Dance Of The White Shadow And Golden Kite has a great urgency, breaking out into manic episodes, while Harrington’s guitar shapes the start of Return In 100 Years, The Colors Will Be At Their Peak. This track is full of incident, becoming fractious as each instrument strives to be heard.

Does it all work?

Largely. With such an instinctive approach – and such little preparation time – it is a risk to open out the broad canvas in this way, but the musical chemistry is such that these three musicians succeed in their endeavours.

Is it recommended?

It is. There is fiercely passionate music to be heard here, and imaginative use of the colours available. Hopefully the trio will continue their musical quest, as it would be interesting to chart their ensemble work over a period of years, to see where it takes them.

For fans of… Jeff Parker ETA Quartet, Ben Monder’s Amorphae, Body / Head, 75 Dollar Bill

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Published post no.2,119 – Saturday 16 March 2024

Switched On: Carlos Ferreira – Isolationism (AKP Recordings)

by Ben Hogwood

What’s the story?

On his Bandcamp page, Brazilian artist Carlos Ferreira is described as an ‘experimental guitarist and composer whose work explores the relationship between sound, space, time and memory.

Isolationism is meant as a study in frequency, resonance and vibration – achieved through the use of electronic and acoustic instrumentation, drones and field recordings.

What’s the music like?

Impressively varied for slow music of this type, and unusually absorbing, too. Isolationism works when listening close up, but it also gives the listener an intriguing set of perspectives as they work through the album, each track placing them in a different soundscape. Around them Ferreira blends a wide variety of slow-moving studies, each individually coloured to descriptive effect.

An Extension Of Breath, featuring sound artist Echo Ho, sets an airy mood, together with field recordings of birds that will confuse the listener walking along on headphones.

The two Quietitude tracks are rather special. Quietitude I features sustained chimes that resonate deeply over a drone that slowly makes itself known and increases in volume only slightly – but enough to sustain a good deal of tension. Quietitude II is much more distorted and ominous, providing a heavy backdrop even when the treble opens out to more opulent textures.

Clarinettist Lucas Protti is a sensitive guest on Living A Metaphor, where his opening ruminations feel borne from a street corner. Percussionist Manami Kakudo brings an unexpected bout of kinetic energy to Naturaleza Muerta, with more playful riffs and bold textures.

Meanwhile Artificial Lungs is a study in perspective, with a single probing piano line tracing tendrils that are gradually washed away by a wave of more distorted but consonant harmony. Take Shelter is more restrained before agitation returns in the form of Organic Matter, where pitches align in bright harmony against slow moving percussion given maximum reverb.

Does it all work?

It does. Some of the louder music can be quite abrasive and confrontational, but this is an observation rather than a criticism. It shows that Ferreira can evoke very different moods in the course of his work.

Is it recommended?

It is – providing more evidence that AKP Recordings are a springboard for fascinating and absorbing musical explorations. Carlos Ferreira definitely fits the bill for that.

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Published post no.2,008 – Monday 13 November 2023