A Strangely Isolated Place (Where it all began)

Twenty years ago today, June 9th, 2003, Ulrich Schnauss released A Strangely Isolated Place on the revered, City Centre Offices label.

This album, along with his similarly brilliant debut ‘Far Away Trains Passing By’ are now widely regarded as an unmatched blend of IDM, Electronica, and Shoegaze-esque etherealness, and generally regarded as a “landmark electronic music statement”. Both transportive and escapist without becoming overly cliché or veering too far back into the experimental realm, it was this unique mix of styles and melodies that made Ulrich’s music popular in a time of internet nerds listening on Pandora, Lastfm and early internet radio streaming stations. Ulrich’s music crossed genres effortlessly, tracks found their way into the electronica and indie scene, just as easily as Global Underground’s legendary mix series, propelling Ulrich’s exposure and helping add a new dimension to club-focused DJ mixes of the time. Nick Warren, Tom Middleton and Jon Hopkins were just some of the artists to include Ulrich’s music within noticeable mixes of the day.

I don’t think I’ve heard anyone describe Ulrich’s output to a tee (mine above is just as terrible), and maybe that’s where I drew so much inspiration from back in the day.

It was 2008. The album had already been out for five years. At a time when I was just trying to document the music I loved, I had (and still) struggled with words on paper. Yet for some reason decided to start a blog about music… The point wasn’t really to review or translate music into words, and I still find that exercise a little pointless. Music exists as music and commentary, is a way to add your own personal reflection. When it veers into conveying an anonymous or represented opinion, it becomes pretty pointless IMHO. Music is personal and subjective on every level. At the end of the day, it was the feeling that album transmitted, the places it took you, and the indescribable intangible qualities that made A Strangely Isolated Place stand out. Trying to describe it will hardly ever do it justice. Similarly, I didn’t feel like I had to describe music to want to share it, but it was the only way outside of sending links to friends.

It helped that around that time I spent around two hours a day on the train commuting to work. The album was perfect window-watching material. When a stranger’s armpits are in your face, standing room only, on the 7.32 am into Kings Cross for 35 minutes, plus delays, this music drew an impenetrable field between my headphones and the real world.

Little did I know at the time I would be here with the name today.

I remember, cautiously, asking Ulrich if it was alright to (basically) rip it off. I refused to start the isolatedmix series until he agreed to be the first. It only felt right, given I had already created an entire website with his album title. Whether he regrets his agreement (or his label at the time) I’m not sure. But it’s now become another way to share his album’s brilliance over time, whether people realize it or not. 

I think about changing the name often, more out of respect for the album and to leave it as its own entity in time. But I’m yet to find a better feeling or description that would capture the music I try to include on the label. Just this week, I signed an artist who was attracted to the label’s name and perceived meaning, as a reason to reach out to me.

So thank you Ulrich, for this album and those people surrounding it, in more ways than one.

PS - Get your music up on Bandcamp!!

 
 

The NRG - Live '94

 
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My friends and I have an ongoing private joke where we (non-musicians for the most part so no chance of it ever happening) would set up a band/electronic act one day, that doesn’t really exist.

We already have the name, branding and who gets to play lead singer (it’s not me, unfortunately). We would make a fake website, and ACE the social media game, sell fake merch etc etc. We were only half-serious, I guess (right guys?) as it sounds either crazy, or like people with too much time on their hands, or both… very possible given the world today.

Well now someone beat us to the punch and has done so in spectacular style. The minor difference, however, is that these (guys/gals) are evidently, actually musicians and have created a rather lovely album, despite the fact that the story, gigs, flyers, tickets etc surrounding it is, apparently all made up.

In what is maybe a dig at today’s social-media-driven hyperbole, or just a fun way to present music The NRG are a forgotten electronic music act from the 90’s that play ‘Stadium Ambient’. And yes, you’re probably already getting the KLF vibes if that term, color pallete and name didn’t already push it over the edge.

The concept is pretty amazing, but so is the music. You can compare it to The KLF’s Chill Out of course, but it definitely leans more towards The KLF’s more upbeat music in energy and rave nostalgia, despite some very glaring references to the OG Chill Out album (Pedal Steel anyone?)

You all know how much I love that album (I put together a whole new reinterpreted mix for it) and I’m sat here wishing these old geezers from Sheffield (or whoever they are!) would have approached me to release this superb album. It would have been as magical as the thoughts in Jimmy’s head and two steps towards completing some kind of imaginary trifecta one day (it has to be a pyramid right?)… The KLF Reinterpreted Mix [CHECK]… The KLF Reinterpreted album…[CHECK]…

Now I sound like a loony.

Live ‘94 is available on Bandcamp

And you should definitely check out the website for this release.

 

V/A - Touched by Silence

 
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This isn’t the first time I’ve felt compelled to share a release from Touched, but it is the first time I’ve been truly wowed by the effort Martin Boulton has gone to in aid of Cancer Research (and great music).

You can go for the epic end of the scale, and hunt down this wooden CD boxset containing full, new albums by the likes of Future Sound of London, and isolatedmix vets Scanner, Anders Ilar, Autumn of Communion + more, or you can scale it back slightly and get them all on digital (98 tracks). Or, if funds are tight but you still want music by The Orb, James Bernard, HIA, DF Tram, (Ghost), Atom TM + more, then there’s the ‘Touched by Silence The Compilation' featuring a more modest amount of tracks, still all for a good cause. All of the above, featuring designs by The Designers Republic.

I started at the compilation and with just this release alone, you’ve got some of the finest electronic-leaning ambient and ambient electronica of recent years. James Bernard is up there opening up proceedings, before a classic vocal dub track by The Orb, and a hypnotic piece by R&S vet David Morley. I also really enjoyed the DF Tram track, featuring an Orb-esque sample that sounds like an instant classic.

Available on Bandcamp


 

Violeta Vicci - Autovia

 
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You often hear me gushing about todos’ mixes. If you don’t then, (lucky you!) you can experience his latest for yourself here. But point being, todos has an amazing ear for creating vivid ambient excursions along with finding beautiful music amongst all the madness.

It was todos latest mix that led me to discover this track (and album) by violinist and composer Violeta Vicci.

Like many violinists and experts in their field, it sounds like Violeta Vicci (full name Violeta Barrena-Witschi) has honed her craft in the presence of the very best. Just a quick glance at her bio reads like a classical-music virtuoso resume, and her Discogs one-liner is a knock out by anyones accounts: “She has collaborated with artists such as Thom Yorke, Elbow, Jonny Greenwood, Clint Mansell, Baxter Dury, One Eskimo, Eliza Doolittle, Sophie Ellis Bextor and Pink” …

But Autovia is surprisingly Violeta’s debut album, produced with the expert hand and ears of Martin “Youth” Glover (Killing Joke), who appears to have pushed from a purely classical world into a more avant-garde, electronic guise.

The track that led me to discover Violeta, ‘Violet Light’ has the innovative and ambient qualities of a Nils Frahm, the poise and talent of a composer like Max Richter (especially his Vivaldi reworks) and the instrumental technique of a cellist like Julia Kent. Those are all references so you know where to start with Violeta, not comparisons - essentially this record continues in this guise to various degrees, some more soundtrack, some even more euphoric, and is not to be missed.

Available via the label Painted Word on vinyl and digital.

 

Celer - Xièxie

 
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Celer’s latest album, Xièxie, is a daunting undertaking at first glance. Not only does it read like a travel diary, but in-between the ten-plus minute tracks are interludes, sound recordings that narrate the beautiful textures that bookend each glimpse into Will Long’s trip to China.

It’s a tale of juxtaposing sounds that come together as a sublime narrative of travel. Field recordings form intros - instead of becoming part of the main tracks (as you’d likely expect from an album like this) - but thats the point. Upon each moment of significance, Will takes you elsewhere, painting a glimpse of voyeurism and scattered, slow motion activity. Drawn-out loops of dreams from a window turn into water paintings and a pensive, dystopian backdrop.

Everything moves faster than we can control. Days are just flashes, moments are mixed up but burned on film, and all of the places and times are out of order.

Simple and refined, this will become my perfect recommendation for anyone looking for the sharp point of emotive ambient music - it’s all here: narrative, escapism, texture, story and reflection. One to get lost in.

Available on Bandcamp in digital and vinyl editions.