isolatedmix 98 - Windy & Carl

 
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It’s hard to talk about the evolution or history of Ambient music without mentioning American duo Windy & Carl, or indeed their long-time supporting label Kranky.

With releases dating back to the early 1990’s, Windy Weber and Carl Hultgren’s sound can be the purest of textured ambient music, layered with reverb, delay and effects. And then as albums progress, you may find yourself pushed into the Space Rock/Experimental spectrum with their instrumental and guitar-heavy approach coming to the fore instead of the background. At times, oven the course of their ~30 year career, the dreamier (Pop) side of music can even be heard, citing massive 80’s punk and rock influences, and the rare vocal additions that float in and out of their discography.

With such a history, and only so much an intro can do, I took the time to send over a few questions to the duo, with the hope of shedding some light on their inspirations, sound and thoughts on Ambient music in general. Read below for an insightful interview with them both.

This mix comes as a perfect soundtrack for our time, in both this moment and indeed today’s world, where we’re treated to a simple, yet blissful curation of textured music, much akin to the infamous Windy & Carl approach. From the duo’s heavy influences in Durutti Column, to label-mates Labradford, and legendary compositions from Aphex and Suzanne Ciani. Float away with some gentle tones that have inspired Windy & Carl.

The new album by Windy & Carl titled Allegiance and Conviction is out now on Kranky.

Download

Tracklist:

1- Durutti Column - Sleep Will Come
2- Stars Of The Lid - Porch (edit #28)
3- Suzanne Ciani - Paris 1971
4- Aphex Twin - Rhubarb
5- Thomas Koner - Kanon (Part 1: Brohuk)
6- James Leyland Kirby - So Pale It Shone In The Night
7- Aphex Twin - Blue Calx
8- Labradford - Air Lubricated Free Axis Trainer
9- Bark Psychosis - Pendulum Man
10- Fennesz - Liminality
11- Arthur Russell - Sketch For "Face Of Helen"

~

Interview with Windy & Carl Feb/March 2020

ASIP - As a band that traversed many years and ‘fashions', I’m interested to know what you think of ambient music today and it’s apparent big media ‘revival’ we see year-on-year. You guys must get bored seeing that pop-up again and again over the years given how long you’ve been a part of it?

W - Ambient music - that’s funny. I can't tell you how many people went gaga for those Numero and Light In The Attic comps, and then decided they too had to make ambient music, especially with keyboards. And no - we don't fit into that scene nor have we ever really been invited into that scene. We seem to somehow be eternally our own floating orb in this world, and that is fine.

C - I have been enjoying that there have been a lot of re-issues and collections of Ambient artists who were doing this long before the big media revival which has been taking place during the last handful of years. I'm not bored with it at all, but I do find it very curious that people we know who were once in rock bands (Indie Rock, Garage Rock, etc) that are now 'Ambient artists' all of the sudden.

W - When we started, we listened to a lot of sub pop bands - Codeine, Dinosaur Jr, Mudhoney - and groups like Sonic Youth, Neil Young, My Bloody Valentine, Teenage Filmstars and Opera and Country and a million other things. We started recording songs and they were songs - short and rather formulaic, and one of our very first reviews said we sounded like the Durutti Column.

As we started making longer form pieces, we had reviews that mentioned Brian Eno. so 1) we have not done a thing that is even close to being Brian Eno worthy as a reference, and 2) the only Eno we had EVER listened to was Roxy Music and the Baby's on Fire album. so we were just plain confused. How the hell was what we were doing in long form pieces like Antarctica any relation to Baby's on Fire? We did not get it at all, until a handful of years later we heard Eno’s Ambient albums. I still don't really feel that what we do is in that realm - we certainly don't use a million effects or computers or processors. What you hear on our records is what we played to begin with, and we don't use a computer to change anything. We have some pedals and a few rack delays, but it's not anything like the set up I see others using. Our music is far more about the technique of playing it - of making it happen - not some kind of studio wizardry.

Sometimes I feel as if our purism (meaning lack of wizardry) in creation sets us apart from so many others, and keeps us from being a part of any scene or movement. Our music comes from inside us, and from this incredible channeling that happens when we play - music that comes through us from somewhere else. I guess I often do not feel as if we are a part of a scene, but I do love being part of the Kranky family of creators, even though even in that world we are unknown in my eyes. Part of my feeling of being left out of everything else is how many years we have run our own record store, and how many people have come in and talked about Ambient music and wanted Tim Hecker or Grouper or Sigur Ros but not had any clue who we are or what we have done. In our eyes, no one knows us. It's weird, its a weird place to be.

So yeah - these pop ups of "new age" or "ambient" cycles come and go and pass us by while we are just doing our own thing.

We make music because we cannot help ourselves. It has to happen.

20+ years is a hell of a run for musicians still releasing great records. You had a break in-between and now eight years after your last full length album. I don’t like talking about what’s long or short periods of time as it’s subjective, but are you a band that likes to take your time with music?

W - Well, we have not had an album on Kranky in 8 years, but we released a handful of seven inch singles, 2 different cassette tapes, an almost hour-long piece to help raise funds for our friends who own the UFO factory [BELOW] (their bar was damaged and we made music to help them pay bills while they had to reconstruct the building), so we have not been unproductive at all. Our output has simply been in different forms. We have also been recording that whole time, and we currently have 3 or 4 other full length projects that need to be finished up and then released, including a Jazz album, a tape that will feature 2 tracks of 30 minutes or more each, an album of very dark harsh guitar work, plus more. we have been busy recording and releasing, but not a full length "proper" album on a label.

C: I would rather be able to have albums ready to go much more often that it has been taking us. Since the last W&C album 8 years ago, we have been recording a lot of material during that time. As far as the new W&C album goes, we eventually decided which pieces of music worked well together. Once we had the instrumental songs sorted out, Windy worked on the vocals & concept for the project. We spent a lot of time together mixing the album. We put a lot of time and effort into it, much more than we ever have. The songs we chose were recorded over a period of 6+ years. There is a lot of material we still have to work with. A lot of it does not sound like our typical style. There are some strange jazz-like experiments, some fun synth based songs, some really heavy loud dark stuff too. It was just a matter of time until we assembled the songs for the new album. We have had a lot of fun recording during these past handful of years.

It’s easy to reference you as one of the pioneers of ambient music and on the surface the absence of drums in your music would mean many people automatically put you in this genre, but your sound is much more than that. Do you set out to make “Ambient”? How do your records normally come about?

W- There is no normal with us. There’s a series of events that can happen for us to be making new music. One of us writes, the other listens and offers a layer. Sometimes we play and it just happens.

Antarctica just happened. I hooked up the keyboard to a pedal and pressed a key. I heard Carl running through the house and down into the basement where he hooked up the cassette 4 track we used at that time; then he plugged in his guitar and started to play. I taped down the key I was holding with electrical tape, and picked up my Bass and we simply played. It was spontaneous. Sometimes our music simply happens - it is channeled from somewhere outside of us and is then there coming out of us. Other times, we each have parts that we combine. And sometimes, like in the case of Carl's solo album; I had no ideas; I had nothing to add; because the tracks seemed perfect on their own. (Do you know that Carl has a solo LP? it came out in 2014, and has one of the most beautiful pieces of music on it I have ever heard, and it was so perfect on it's own there was literally nothing I could add to enhance it or to not ruin it.

C- I've always felt that we've never quite been in the Ambient scene or the Dream-Pop scene. There are elements of ambient music in our sound, but we are not just simply ambient. We have much more of a song structure to what we do. Way back in the early years of W&C we thought we needed a drummer to be able to create music. Before we put out our first single in 1993, we auditioned a drummer I knew from a previous band in the late 1980's. We got together one afternoon and improvised together for a couple of hours. We thought it sounded really good & that it might be our way forward. The guy left his drum kit at our house & we didn't hear back from him for about 6 months. It was really disappointing that we never worked again - maybe this is the reason we went ahead without a drummer for the majority of time since then. Sometimes our music comes about from a couple of ideas from either one of us. Sometimes they happen by accident. I think the harder we specifically try to do something, the more time it takes & the feeling of the initial ideas become less interesting. On ‘Depths’, Windy plays most of the main guitar lines and obviously she writes and sings the words. On our new album, I wrote and recorded all of the music myself. There is no formula for each album, we just work with how we feel it should be.

What keeps you going all these years?

W - The same thing that made us start in the first place - an insatiable need to create music. We love music. We hate music. We are huge critics and lovers at the same time.

Before we ever met, we had these intense relationships with music that gave us the longing to be able to create music ourselves, and when we ended up together, it all came to fruition. We were the catalyst we each needed to let out this lifetime of day dreams and emotions and waves of sound. somehow, we seem to only be able to do this together. Yes, we each have solo albums, but we have found that the only way we really feel connected creation wise is when we play together, even if that means one of us starts a piece and the other joins later.

It's too hard to work with anyone else. It's too soul-baring. Making music is hard, and it's really hard if you are shy or nervous or have apprehensions about whether or not what you are doing is any good. We work well together and can actually work on things and find ways to make them better or as good as we can hear in our heads, but need time to figure out. We play and record a lot, and only sometimes do not have the drive to be making music. It's like our own personal illness or demon or addiction or love affair - we make music because we cannot help ourselves. It has to happen.

This album is a departure in a lot of ways, and we wanted the first track to have an impact and atmosphere that were not our standard style.

Your new record on Kranky ‘Allegiance and Conviction’- I’m intrigued by the opening track, it was very unnerving but ultimately made the rest of the album feel extremely soothing. Was that the intention?

W - Why do what you always do? Why repeat yourself?

On this record, Carl wrote all the music. I’ve managed to convince him to record more of his playing, because he sits and plays often but does not always record it. This means that in the past chunk of years, he has recorded more than he previously did. As he filtered through recordings, he collected the tracks we used for this record. They spanned about 4 or 5 years. He gave them to me to see what I had to add, and I ended up contributing some samples for track 5 and then vocals for the rest. I wrote song six first, and realized it felt like a story ending, so I wrote the previous tracks as a story and track one is the beginning of the story. The first mixes sounded very much like a typical W&C song, and that just did not feel right. This album is a departure in a lot of ways, and we wanted the first track to have an impact and atmosphere that were not our standard style.

The words and the singing, they took me two full years to do. Two years. I wanted these songs to be better than what I usually do and i was on a mission to sing in tune and in key and to have my voice heard. I know the vocals are a bit louder than on our other records, but I am proud of them and also wanted the story to come through, and you can't hear the story if you can't hear the vocals! While I am normally intensely nervous about my voice - I am very happy with my singing on this record.

It's all sort of a spy story and I wrote it in a way that you can see it from the point of view of either male or female - there are no mentions of gender identification really. I saw it as from a woman's point of view, but it can be from any point of view. Go somewhere foreign, meet your asset, do the job and watch your ass, but find that you have fallen in the old trap - you've fallen in love, and let your guard down, and then been abandoned and in danger.

The end? She gets away, she gets through the forest and to the designated place, but does she live or does she die? You decide. I left it wide open. So in reality - the beginning - it's a feeling of unease is really telling of the rest of the story.

I can hear your aesthetic strongly throughout the mix you provided. Gentle lulls, colors and a focus on some instrumental elements. What was the intention or inspiration with the mix?

W- The mix could have gone in 20 different ways. 1) Other than some old school Kranky cohorts, we stayed away from including friends. 2) We wanted to showcase pieces we enjoyed but that did not have too much movement, and found that most of the Biosphere and Arovane we have was a bit too busy. And so staying away from busy we also had to cut out Charlemange Palestine (whose work I love) and some shorter pieces by Tangerine Dream and Talk Talk. We went for cohesion, a smooth transition from song to song including the texture and tone and frequency of the sound, and then for something relaxing. It does get a bit dark at times, but it's great music for turning off the rest of the world and finding some peace, which we all need these days.

~

Support Windy & Carl on Bandcamp

 

isolatedmix 97 - Jane Fitz: We Fall Into The Sun

 
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There’s many ways I thought about introducing Jane Fitz, and no-matter which way I went, I couldn’t do her accolades justice. A DJ’s DJ, a producer, a respected digger, event curator, and doing it all for years now… the list goes on. I came back to something very simple. Jane is the first DJ I thought of when we organized our upcoming London Label night. Someone who could spin records in an intimate setting; on an amazing system; have the trainspotters out in force; transition between ambient and [insert pretty much any genre] and ensure everyone has a good time.

My request to Jane to complete a mix for us actually came before the event was on the horizon, but it was serendipitous to say the least and mean’t I would hunt her down every day until she got this one out into the world to give you all a preview of her infamous sets. Those who follow her already know, her live mixes and podcasts are often a deep and winding journey between techno, acid, abstract experimental, straight-up electronica, psychedelia, ambient and more. As a result, they often stretch for multiple hours at a time. Jane likes to take people on a journey - a DJ in the truest sense of the word honing her craft and with a smile to boot. Jane is also a vinyl enthusiast, and I regularly see her name supporting ASIP releases and many other likeminded labels so it’s a true honor to have her a part of the isolatedmix series.

Thank you, Jane, for the considered effort and time that went into all of this. Of course, in true Jane Fitz style, we’ve been treated to a bit of an extended session at 1hr 44mins. We look forward to seeing Jane spin next week. To accompany the mix, I sent Jane a few quick questions, below.

~

How did you approach your isolatedmix? Is there a concept in mind?

JF - Less of a concept and more of a mood - I wanted to create a moment in time with this mix and it's definitely reflective of how I feel currently - a little winter-weary and hungry for sunshine and longer days. I have been playing a lot of long and all-night sets recently and the beginnings generally sound like this, atmospheric, thoughtful, but heady and trippy too, which I set out to capture. It's something I'm enjoying more and more - and I guess this mix takes that long slow build from the set, and just stays in that space, rather than kicking it up a notch. Now it's finished I see it as part of a bigger whole, I have a part two in mind but for something and somewhere totally different.

Where and how was the mix recorded?

JF -At home in my studio in the garden, in one take. Everything is off records. I had been thinking about it for quite some time, trying to describe what I thought makes an ASIP mix and suffering a bit of DJs block. But in the end, once I'd whittled down to about 50 possibles, the records told me what to play and in what order, like they always do.

You're known as a brilliant selector and vinyl enthusiast, how did it all come about?

JF - Thank you! Pure love for music that grew to an obsession and became a longterm relationship. I started collecting records aged 10 and I've had some very full and some very lean periods doing so. But I guess obsessively from my late 20s (so the past 20 years or so) I've compulsively bought as much as my pocket and my space will allow. I just love records, I love the sound of music played on a record and I love storing and filing and rediscovering the music I already own on record. 

What are a few of your secret weapons on vinyl?

JF - Now if I told you the secrets would they still be weapons??

In keeping with the spirit of ASIP I give you this. It didn't make it onto this mix but it features on a tape released by Nachtdigital of my ambient set there a few years ago. And this one, a really lovely record with a dark heart I picked up in New York for very cheap two tracks from this make the mix. 

What are some of your favorite record shops?

JF - Round And Round - Melbourne; Low Company and the Little Record Shop - London; Redhill - Helsinki; Staalplaat - Berlin. Yugovinyl - Belgrade; Clique and Living Inc - Seoul; A1 - NYC; Seance Centre and Invisible City - Toronto; Snickers - Stockholm; EAD and Los Apson in Tokyo. And I have some really secret ones I won't reveal...

What's your digging process? Looking for something in particular? Browsing by art? By genre? Portable turntable?!

JF - I actually just bought a portable turntable recently so I think this might alter my digging habits. I have different ways - if I'm digging in store I just try and work my way through everything and wait ‘til something speaks to me - whether it's label info or cover art. In more modern stores its straight to the bargain bins. Discogs I have a number of ways - I like to obsessively stalk producers and labels. But I also love to set myself weird parameters using the 'explore' function. I always bump into something brilliant that way.

You're set to play our first ASIP label night in London at Hidden Sounds (I can't wait!) what can everyone expect from your set?

JF - Transcendental brain music that fully intends to kidnap you. I'm a sucker for all things psychedelic and druggy and deep and for a night like this (I can't wait either!) I think I need to take people places in their minds but also do my best to create the horizontal-listening rave. Dancing without decibels. Heat without beats. Something special...for you. 

~

Listen on Soundcloud, Mixcloud or the ASIP Podcast.

Download

Tracklist:

01. Legion Of Green Men - Noise Floor /External Opascule #55 (Plus 8)
02. Jay Glass Dubs - Urged To Be Cleansed While Bathed In More Blood (Berceuse Heroique)
03. Aiwa - Etamorph (Banlieue)
04. Sixtyone - Tregnanton (Verdant)
05. Lyterian - What We Left Behind Will Be Lost Forever (Space Cadets)
06. O Yuki Conjugate - Steppe Land (Emotional Rescue) (Wrong speed)
07. Annawooh - Dust From WIthin (Stoscha)
08. Hugo R A Paris - Heliophagis (Jackstone)
09. Andrea Belfi - Plateau (Float)
10. Frazer Campbell - Araline (Elliot Project)
11. Annawooh - Stellar Explosion (Stoscha)
12. Evolution - B-S-W-P-S-S (Chill-Core-Mix) (Gaia Tontrager)
13. O Yuki Conjugate - Rite Of Passage (Emotional Rescue)
14. Fabio Orsi - Moon (Oltrarno)
15. TM404 - Trico (Kontra)
16. KNR - Zabran (Diskant)
17. M//R - Among The Methods (Great Circles)
18. Covert Dub - Spectre Overseas (Orbjects, Overseas And Oceans) (BMG)

Jane Fitz | Soundcloud | RA | Instagram

 

isolatedmix 96 - bvdub: Obelisks In Onyx

 
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“In Ancient Chinese philosophy, yin and yang is a concept of dualism, describing how seemingly opposite or contrary forces may actually be complementary, interconnected, and interdependent in the natural world, and how they may give rise to each other as they interrelate to one another.”

If you know bvdub, then this statement rings true on many levels where his music is concerned, and it’s also a perfect metaphor for his latest mix.

Often recognized as a master of modern ambient music, we find ourselves in a different terrain exploring the sound of his roots and earlier influences. You’ll hear these influences amongst the (rare) occasions he inserts beats into his ambient music and even more so in his aliases as Earth House Hold and East Of Oceans. The raw, deep, emotional and unpolished forays are a signature sound that the biggest Brock fans can hear a mile off - whether it’s a twelve-minute classic bvdub monster, or 150-bpm breakbeat.

We find ourself in a polarizing world, with Brock currently (no doubt for many of us reading) on the other side of it. Whilst today we worry about an increasingly dangerous virus, Brock is literally on lock-down in the middle of it, unable to leave his apartment in China.

All of this has come together as one complete, timely mix. If Brock’s isolatedmix 50 was the yin, then this is the yang to follow it up. If you only know Brock for his ambient work, get ready for a taste of his other side. And if you thought for one second that this virus outbreak was bad, imagine being at the epicenter of it on the other side of the world amongst a truly dystopian lockdown.

And lastly, if our isolatedmix series ever needed a more defining moment to encapsulate its meaning and name, this might just be the one…

~

“Returning to China two days after the revelry of my birthday back in the US among lifetime friends and family, I entered a ghost town in every sense of the word – depending on your belief system, both figuratively and literally.

All freeway exits and entrances sealed. All roads closed. All business, schools, everything shuttered. Villages guarded by vigilante blockades keeping any outsiders out. Nothing but complete and utter silence. A town of one million reduced to me, my girl, our dog, and the one person I saw on the street in a four-day span. Two days later, our apartment complex would shut itself off from the world as well – no one in, no one out – police in biohazard suits adding emphasis to orders already now on loop 24 hours a day via loudspeakers throughout the city, and countless red banners warning that simply paying a visit to a friend could amount to “double homicide.”

With literally nowhere to go and nothing to do but watch the tallies climb along with the rest of the world, I had to get my mind to another place. A place in the now... a place for the living. And since I don't know how to live in the now, my mind of course returned to glories – and defeats – of times past. More specifically, for some reason, my well over ten years of DJing from 1989 to the beginnings of 2000, before I left it all behind.

Ever since I've begun making my own music, I have, for the most part, eschewed DJing in any form, from mix or podcast invitations to requests to do it live, mostly because I felt it would now be impossible to let the music of others speak for myself – to truly express what I wanted to say. But extreme times call for extreme measures... and new looks at life, and how I live it, bring new perspective. And with that new perspective came the realization that the beauty of others' music can bring beauty not only in and of itself, but also in its ability to say things I can't... a beauty that was literally my entire life for over a decade, but one I have, for the most part, resisted for some reason unclear to even myself other than being some kind of subconscious defense mechanism to protect myself from the pain of how it all ended.

But it doesn't have to be “one or the other.” Music is one, massive life we all share. And sharing it in more ways than one only makes that life even better.

So, under a forced isolation that stretches into the times I write this, I made a mix. A mix that celebrates my newfound lease on a part of my life I thought long left behind. A mix that speaks to the hope that it can remain and grow once again to even a fraction of its former self. A mix that is, more than anything, a story of darkness and light.

All tracks burned as MP3 to CD, and mixed on two Discman's recorded to the same tape player I used to record my mixes in the '90s, a rare find in a mystery closet at my friend's house while back home. Because that is literally the only method I used in the last couple years of my “career.” I don't have turntables anymore, and I refuse to use CDJ's or whatever their equivalent is. And at the end of the day, I always take the path of most resistance.

In coming back to this place, I've seen even clearer where I've come from. Where I've been. Where I long to return. And where I still want to go.

Everyone told me not to come back. Many questioned why I would return to such a place. To pure darkness. And the dark hearts of human nature that have, unsurprisingly, arisen from its depths. But you can't see darkness without light. And you can find either any day of the week if you're looking.

Why did I return? The answer is simple. This is my home. And you don't run away from your home.

Even when it's on fire.

- bvdub

Download

Listen on Mixcloud or Soundcloud or get this mix as a podcast.

bvdub | web | Bandcamp | Discogs

 

isolatedmix 95 - Sraunus

 
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Dub-techno has kind of fizzled-out for me in the last few years. Not by design, but likely more as a comparison to how much I used to listen and dig for new music in that vein. Back in 2010, I stumbled across Sraunus who epitomized the best of genre with his debut album ‘Out Of The City’. It was a classic ASIP blog find, relatively unknown and deserving of more listens. Since then, Sraunus went on to release several more lovely albums with perhaps his most revered coming on Greyscale in 2017.

For those not familiar with Sraunus, the man behind the controls is Paulius Markutis - a Lithuanian producer originating from the post-industrial town of Panevežys. Sraunus escapes dub-techno clichés by placing his sound in strangely personal narratives that weave field recordings, delicate pop harmonies and darker emotional undertones. Any dub-techno listener, knows how hard it is to stand out in this field and Sraunus has gathered a respectable following for his consistent output over the years. But, as with all producers that dabble in dub-techno, ambient music is never too far away and provides much needed inspiration.

For his isolatedmix, Paulius decided to create an ambient mix, focusing on individual pieces of tracks in a hope to depict something new to the listener, moving from dark moods to bright, layering elements and intros into one rich tapestry - a truly immersive and technically flawless journey.

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Tracklist:

01. Takashi Kokubo - 海のつぶやき
02. Iron Cthulhu Apocalypse - Circumference (4 Hz Theta)
03. ULTRA ウルトラ - クレジット u p g r a d e ° 21
04. Latin girl signing
05. Garrett - Awaiting the Light
06. Halftribe - Tuning Out
07. Field recording
08. Laraaji - Ocean Flow (Seahawks Deep Drift Mix)
09. Roberto Musci - Tower of Silence
10. Roberto Musci - Improbably Music
11. Jefre Cantu-Ledesma - Joy
12. Sraunus - Kolonista
13. Baubas
14. Untitled
15. Nouveau Life™ - アンドロイド未来
16. Dominykas Niaura - Gyvenimas ėmė ir prabėgo
17. Roberto Musci - Claudia, Wilhelm R and Me
18. Unknown - 展示
19. Virtual仮想中空(VHS)- その日が来るとき
20. Sam Amidon - Lucky Cloud
21. Flaming Tunes - Restless mind
22. Baubas
23. Carlo Giustini - A1. Il Vicino (Si Muove)
24. Terekke - Swim
25. Blue Darkness - A Sleepless Town

Sraunus on Bandcamp | Facebook | Soundcloud | Discogs




 

isolatedmix 94 - Brambles

 
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Back in 2012 we were introduced to the work of Brambles. It came through a debut release on Welsh label Serein. From the very first track on ‘Charcoal’, as those beautiful strings hit, we knew we were in for something spectacular. It seems like millions agreed too, with 2.1m people streaming the track on Soundcloud since its upload - a testament to the beauty at hand. The album only got better as it progressed too, with the second track ‘Such Owls As You’ ending up as my favorite.

It wasn’t until 2015 that we were treated with a follow-up arriving as a single, more experimental track in ‘Half Gramme Holiday’, featuring another beautiful composition but this time underpinned by slow heart-beating drums. It was a subtle progression, perhaps enough of a progression after a three-year hiatus. But since then, we’ve been waiting to see where Brambles would land next. A full four years later (and three years after I emailed inviting Brambles to contribute an isolatedmix ha!) we have a new album coming soon, and an accompanying journey in the form of isolatedmix 94.

The lead single from the (yet untitled) album, Spirits may come as a surprise to listeners expecting another Charcoal. But Brambles’ respect for texture, composure and melody is clearly evident throughout this new approach.

… the sound palette has shifted dramatically but the moody and melancholic qualities that made their previous release so resonant remain deeply embedded.

One notable addition is the added manipulation of vocals. In Spirits, this evangelical, alien language is used as an instrument, never quite overpowering, holding enough back to add depth and mysteriousness.

The new balance of ambient and more colorful pop-infused productions comes to life within Brambles’ isolatedmix, showing where the inspiration has arisen from over the past few years.

This mix is a little trip around my current influences. Starting with experimental ambient, to left-field pop and ending with dreamy folky shoegaze. Some tracks are recent discoveries and others are tracks I keep returning to. I love how the internet has spawned so many micro-genres and niches. It's overwhelming at times but also exciting to find a new style and follow that path through the various artists, collaborations and offshoots. I have also included an unreleased Brambles track which will be on my forthcoming album - M.

Download.

Tracklist:

01. Kara-Lis Coverdale - Touch me & die
02. Ryuichi Sakamoto - Fullmoon (Motion Graphics Remix)
03. Natureboy Flako - Gelis
04. Brambles - Out Of Bounds
05. Amnesia Scanner - AS Daemon
06. Aisha Devi - Two Serpents
07. Susumu Yokota - GEKKOH
08. Visible Cloaks, Yoshio Ojima, Satsuki Shibano - Anata
09. Zora Jones - Oh Boy
10. Lorn - UNDEAD DOGS
11. SOPHIE - Is It Cold In The Water?
12. Charli XCX - Cross You Out (feat. Sky Ferreira)
13. Nosaj Thing - How We Do (feat. KAZU)
14. M83 - Corridor
15. Florist - The Fear of Losing This
16. Slowdive - So Tired
17. Julia Holter - How Long?
18. Grouper - I’m Clean Now
19. John Maus - Cop Killer

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