Birch Book

by Birch Book (2011, Les Disques du 7ème Ciel)

The enigmatic B’eirth is best known as the frontman for the psychedelic folk outfit In Gowan Ring. However, with his Birch Book project, he has moved away from the psychedelics and instead, opted for a simpler, more straightforward folk sound. The result, however, is still some pretty haunting—and haunted—music, thanks to B’eirth’s deft guitar-work and dreamy Nick Drake-esque vocals.

One of the most recent examples of this is a limited edition Birch Book EP released earlier this month by Les Disques du 7ème Ciel. The EP consists of six songs: a gorgeous, moving version of “Life’s Lace”—which originally appeared on Birch Book’s A Hand Full Of Days—plus five new songs sung primarily in French.

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EverythingIsChemical Virtual 7” No. 7

by Lovesliescrushing (2011, EverythingIsChemical)

After long spans of time between their releases—6 years between Xuvetyn and Glissceule, and then 7 years after that until Chorus—Lovesliescrushing had a bumper year in 2010. Not only was their long-awaited Girl.Echo.Suns.Veils retrospective released, but they also released the Avianium companion album as well as the CRWTH remix album. It brought the band, arguably one of the most experimental and abstract artists in the shoegazer realm, back into the genre’s limelight.

So what do they do after such a banner year? Why, release a “virtual” 7” that finds them going back to what they do best: creating another batch of shapeless, abstract, and ultra-ethereal compositions made up of nothing more than the ghostly remains of Scott Cortez’ guitar manipulations and Melissa Arpin-Duimstra’s voice. It’s a formula that has served them well over the last two decades, and while it might seem old hat for the duo, subsequent listens to EverythingIsChemical Virtual 7” No. 7 still reveal some fascinating soundscapes.

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Princess Ghibli

by Imaginary Flying Machines (2011, Coroner Records)

On the one hand, you’ve got the films of Studio Ghibli, arguably some of the most beloved films in all of cinema. Gorgeous artwork and animation, compelling mythologies, and well-drawn (npi) characters aside, I’m convinced that one of the reasons for Studio Ghibli’s success is their soundtracks, many of them composed by Joe Hisaishi, whose exotic melodies and sweeping arrangements are the very definition of inimitable.

On the other hand, you have the Italian metal label Coroner Records, home to artists including Blood Stain Child, Destrage, Breach The Void, and Disarmonia Mundi.

On the surface, these two things have nothing in common, and any attempt to bring them together would be like combining matter and antimatter, i.e., mutual annihilation. And yet, the universe is a strange, strange place and sometimes, these combinations work out in ways that no one could have ever foreseen. Which brings us to Princess Ghibli, where Imaginary Flying Machines—a collaborative project featuring Disarmonia Mundi, Blood Stain Child, Destrage, Living Corpse, and Neroargento, as well as various vocalists—turns in death metal covers of some of the most beloved songs in the Studio Ghibli catalog.

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Plainspeak

by Aaron Roche & Tim Hinck (2010, Sounds Are Active)

I’m often amazed and humbled at the number of musicians who e-mail and ask me to check out and write about their music. One thing this means is that I have a pretty steady influx of new and interesting music. Unfortunately, it also means that those e-mails sometimes get lost in the deluge. Which brings me to Aaron Roche.

Roche originally e-mailed me back in early February concerning Plainspeak, his collaboration with Tim Hinck (as well as members of Lambchop and Silver Jews). We’re now approaching the end of March and I’m finally giving Plainspeak a spin—you can listen to the entire album on Aaron Roche’s Bandcamp page—and I’m kicking myself for having waited so long. You see, this is sublimely gorgeous stuff. The Sounds Are Active blurb claims that the duo “have taken folk and modern classical music to another dimension entirely” and I’m inclined to believe it.

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Last Of The Country Gentlemen

by Josh T. Pearson (2011, Mute Records)

In a previous life, Josh T. Pearson once sang “We sing these songs because we have to/Not because we want to.” He was the frontman of Lift To Experience back then, and he was referring to the band’s divinely appointed role as prophets of the End Times.

Lift To Experience is long gone now, the casualty of demons, drugs, and death, but that sentiment is alive and well on Last Of The Country Gentlemen, Pearson’s solo debut. He’s no longer singing about the Apocalypse, though. Or rather, he’s singing about a different kind of apocalypse, something equally traumatic: the pain, regret, and turmoil of a failed relationship. Pearson’s songs pull no punches as he chronicles all of the ugly, nasty, and shitty things that bring about a relationship’s end, and the no man’s land afterwards. Betrayal, infidelity, guilt, hatred, doubt… Last Of The Country Gentlemen‘s seven songs are full of them.

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