Passing by: David Douglas, Nikosf, Warmth and an epic Ghostly colab

David Douglas – Moon Observations

Atomnation, head-up by our friend Applescal is on a roll this year. You may have seen me getting excited about the upcoming Gidge album already, but until that time arises, Pascal is treating us to label stalwart David Douglas’ latest, ‘Moon Observations’. A truly immersive journey through different styles of electronica, packed full of instrumentation, emotion and beautiful melodies. The title track below, my favourite of the bunch. Available on Bandcamp.

 
 

Nikosf – Collecting The Moments

You probably know Nikosf from his releases on Dewtone (The Forgotten Pieces and Silence Speaks When The Words End), but this is the first release of his to see some action on wax. As you’d expect it’s a love affair with “tranquil soundscapes, minimalistic rhythms and warm dub undertones”. This kind of music is normally reserved for digital only, maybe CD, so it’s great to see it getting a full vinyl press. Available on Decks.de

 
 

MOSHImix22 – Warmth

Continuing the deep and dubby vibe is Warmth, with a guest mix for MOSHItaka. Featuring Doyeq and Martin Nonstatic you should know what rabbit hole this is going down. If you’re new to Warmth, check out his own Soundcloud page for some beautiful productions of his own.

 
 

Download

Tracklist:
Alex Humann – Slave
Audub – Sonar Dub
Doyeq – Sine
Stefan Gubatz – An
BdTom – Humanoids
Havantepe – Melody For Penelope
Yernesto – Deep Ambition
Andrea Cichecki – Subjective
Stefan Gubatz – Aus
Martin Nonstatic – Quantum Dub
Van Bonn – Onwards II

Christopher Willits / Heathered Pearls / The Sight Below – Collider

Lastly, and with little explanation needed, is this mega-lineup of Ghostly all-stars going all-in. “Collider” is a collaborative track between Christopher Willits, Heathered Pearls, and The Sight Below made using Splice (splice.com/) to promote Michael Cina and John Klukas’ upcoming show in Minneapolis”.

I thought this was going to be a pretty dark piece given those involved, but instead it’s a refreshingly beautiful piece of music that wouldn’t be out of a place underlying an epic reflective moment on a movie Soundtrack; think Underworld’s ‘To Heal’ or some of Clint Mansell’s work, but with added #dronelife.

 
 

Photo by astrangelyisolatedplace – Monkey Face/ Smith Rock, Oregon.

Donnacha Costello - Ten Years Later

Donnacha Costello’s ‘Color Series’ first debuted on his own label ‘Minimise’ in 2004 and over the next year or so, evolved into ten releases which to this day remain some of my favourite vinyl records. With influences ranging from Aphex Twin, Plastikman, Autechre, Model 500 and Farley Jackmaster Funk, Donnacha reached into new territory with this series, combining his love of synths, techno music and in many instances, ambient music, to produce a collectable and sought after series of vinyl, and a defining style of music for many of today’s producers.

It’s not often we look back here on ASIP, but as many of you know, I’m a big lover of vinyl and have recently been reaching back into these records to remind myself just how good they were.

I had the chance to ask Donnacha about the series and give his commentary on my favourite five from the series. Kicking off below, with an introduction by the man himself:

“I had been into several techno series – Concept, M-Series, Studio Eins, Ernst (Brinkmann) and wanted to do one of my own. It wasn’t as conceptually rigorous as those but it was just something I wanted to do. It came off the back of a time when I really lost interest in techno and had been making ambient and experimental electronic music (I’m doing that again now). Also, it was a response to the kind of clicky-tricky nonsense techno that was around at the time. People engaged in really convoluted sound design processes. Lots of people were like “oh, I recorded a car backfiring and pitched it down and combined it with some bees buzzing and 100 plugins to make a kick drum” and I just decided that this was really stupid when you could use a 909 and it would sound way better.

The same was true of synthesisers, people were doing all of this stuff and forgetting that the square bass on a Juno 60 or a 101 sounded immense. So, I decided to do a series of machine techno records. Not such an unusual sounding idea now but in the context at the time, they stood out like a sore thumb or represented a breath of fresh air, depending on how you wanted to look at it  The success they had speaks to the fact that this was the right thing at the right time. Mathew Jonson emerged right around that time too with a machine sound. Real synths, reals drum machines and lots of the personality of the writer on show. It’s a nice set of records I can always look back on and enjoy listening to and I’m looking forward to telling my kids the story”.

 
 

5. Blue (B-side)

Starting with a signature Donnacha Costello sound, ‘Blue’ conjures a fizzy undercurrent bouncing off muffled walls. It’s 4am and Donnacha’s just flicked the switch that the likes of Donato Dozzy and Neel still strive for on today’s dancefloors.

Donnacha: “The core of this track is an unmodulated TB-303, around which the other elements do a little dance. Not many people use the 303 that way but it’s really good for that. I tried to keep things as empty as possible. It related back to my love of Richie Hawtin’s Concept series and was “me meets Rich” really. It’s easy to forget, In the context of the past 5/6 years (2008-2014) when things like Sandwell District and other spacious techno music came to the fore, that there really was nothing else around in 2004 that was stripping things back like this. It was a response to the music of the previous 4/5 years (1999-2003) that had become so complex and flashy and, for me, lacked soul and personality”.

 
 

4. Grape (B-side)

Listening back to this now, and you could be forgiven for thinking it sounds like so many of the techno tracks that came out around the same time, and indeed many years before. Ame’s ‘Rej’ comes to mind for example – that beautiful undercurrent driving through. ‘Grape’ could be classed as Ambient Techno by some given it’s hypnotic, repetitive feel, and would probably be the standard to which many of todays producers attempt to match. The only difference being, by the time you’ve finished ‘Grape’ you’ll be climbing the ceilings instead of relaxing in your chair.

Donnacha: “Again, the 303 provides the core of this track. The difference being that pretty much everything in this track is gradually modulated over about 10-11 minutes until by the end it’s pretty thumping. And again, it references Plastikman pretty heavily. It was a real nod to Consumed era Plastikman, even down to the purple I chose for the cover. It was pretty much made for Rich to play and he told me later that year that he and Ricardo were regularly using it to ramp sets up from calm to more energetic because of the way it builds and builds over such a long time. I’ve never made any secret of being a huge Plastikman fan so that was nice”.

 
 

3. Opal (A-side)

This is straight-up electronic bliss. Out of the gate, blinking lights, and colour transform into an arpeggio of bleeps, claps and pulsating rhythms. Take this out of context and it’s a banging techno-track, but listen to it at the right time, and it’s a state of mind – euphoric, hypnotising and relentless. 4.13… and Jesus said let there be synth.

Donnacha: “This was a nod to my early days and the thin line between trance and techno that was expertly tread by lots of Plus8 records in the mid to late 90s. I was 50/50 about putting it out but I’m glad I did in the end”.

 
 

2. Orange (A-side)

I’ve played this track so many times… It normally sits about two tracks into my mixes – those which start off extremely ambient and then veer towards techno or minimal. What begins as a very crisp beat is soon enveloped in Donnacha’s soaring synths and little stabs of magic. It’s a head-nodder. I’s the kind of track that’s played at the start of a night which you anticipate a rather twisted journey.

Donnacha: “Rubine Red was when I realised that I could do anything with this series, I didn’t have to stick to one style or blueprint and when I made myself more free, the results were a lot better. Orange A was one of the best expressions of that idea. I think it’s one of the tracks that stands out as being completely its own thing, free from other associations and classification. There’s a certain link to the Warp Artificial Intelligence series here (a tenuous one but I know it’s there). This track actually has some of my favourite synth sounds from the series in it”.

 
 

1. Cocoa (B-side)

Not that Donnacha would have been trying to mimic Aphex Twin’s Selected Ambient Works, but for any fan, this is as close as you’re going to get. Closing out the Colour Series, analogue synths conjure a beautiful texture, amplified by a simple melody. Warmth and grace. The perfect finish to an epic ten releases.

Donnacha: “This was pretty much a love song for my then girlfriend, now wife and mother of my children. I don’t know if she knows that, actually. Perhaps I should tell her, ha  It’s actually recorded in a weird time signature but doesn’t really feel that way (I’ve always liked doing that). This and the unreleased ambient track were made on the same summer’s morning just as I was about to move out of Fifth Floor #2, my studio at the time, where most of the series was recorded. It was an emotional time, my career was taking off, I had just bought a place to live (referenced as Studio 23 on the cd) I was in love. All very big stuff. Happy days!”

 
 

*Bonus* Cocoa Sessions Unreleased (Only available through the Colorseries compilation)

It just so happens that Cocoa was probably the most ‘ambient’ of the bunch, and this unreleased cut (which was part of the Colour Series compilation later released in 2007) is an extension of the original. However this time Donnacha introduces a rumbling synth undercurrent, turning those textures into a vivid awakening.

Ten years later, and Donnacha is on track to deliver something extra special for us all again: “Right now, I’m really interested in ambient music, drone music and modular synths. I’m about to buy a very unique modular synth that I’ve been waiting for since I ordered it in 2001. It’s being built this summer and I’m going to make a few albums with it. I’ve been toying with the idea of doing some kind of crowd funding campaign for a long time so I’ve decided to do one around my next album Love From Dust to see if I can recoup some of the cost of this synthesiser up front because it’s really bloody expensive  Love From Dust will lie somewhere in between the emotional approach of my Together Is The New Alone album (Mille Plateaux, 2001) and the experimentalism of my Modul.Isol album (Raster-Noton, 2004). I can’t wait to get started on it when my new synth arrives”.

The campaign runs until June 20th and can be supported (and the album purchased) here on Indiegogo.

isolatedmix 45 - ASC

Despite being one of my favourite albums from last year, I never actually got around to writing about ASC’s ‘Time Heals All’. Released on Silent Season, it cemented the label as one of the best out there for the year, and firmly assured ASC as a class act – not only under his more familiar drum’n bass guise, but with these new ventures into deep, atmospheric ambient soundscapes.

2014 sees James Clements revisit this approach. ‘Truth Be Told’ has already sold-out in physical formats, with a digital release set for June 1st [available here] – something most ambient artists can only dream of in today’s industry. But, if you’ve laid ears on this release already, or indeed any of his previous on Silent Season, this success won’t come as a surprise.

‘Truth Be Told’ is James’ third full-ambient release and his third on Canadian based label Silent Season. An extension of his previous sound, it’s another dream-like album packed full of textures, sound design and vivid journeys. An extension of ‘Time Heals All’ (2013), the album is tailored for the ethereal escapist, diving deep, and shimmering beautifully across nine tracks.

It’s hard to pick any moments from the album or indeed talk through it track-by-track, as it sits beautifully as one piece – something i’m sure James was intending. You quickly draw comparisons with his influences from bvdub, but here, witnessed through more attention to detail as opposed to the building, progressive swathes of pads Brock is known for. Instead of 15-minute euphoria, you’re treated to tiny echo-ing detail, bouncing around your head like you’re walking through the main hall of a desolate, grand 19th century building. Small creaks, echoes, washes of atmosphere and tiny bells adorn a purposeful journey, as you gently stroll in slow motion, half-edged, taking in the charm of the sounds surrounding you.

The album glides through moods swiftly and unnoticed. A gentle, nonchalant first track ”Some Other Life’ is a perfect setting for what’s to follow, never quite divulging any melody and tinkering at the sounds you’ll be treated to throughout the journey. By track four, ‘Hall Of The Gods’, the atmosphere is tense, and the walk through desolate halls has turned into an expansive chamber full of history and fear. What’s apparent through this album, is that James has a keen sense for tension, moments and vividness – perhaps evident by his recent work on soundtracks as detailed in the interview below.

By track nine, you’ve been lulled into the depths of ASC’s magic and ‘The Certainty of Tides’ capitalises on his expansive synth-work, sitting neatly alongside complimentary washes and sounds adorning the vivid distanced hills. It’s the kind of work that lets you sit back and watch the world go by – the rolling clouds, the gentle sway of forests and the thought of the intricacies involved in both of natures wonders. An appreciation of the epic and a respect for the details involved seems to be the theme…. sit back and let it wash over you, or dive head-first into the world that ASC has created.

Truth be Told is available on Silent Season June 1st.

 
 

Download

I was lucky enough to have a chat with James over email, as well as get an exclusive mix as part of the isolatedmix series. This is the first isolatedmix without a tracklist, but with sacrifice comes great pleasure – it’s a mix packed full of new material, exclusives and work that James has only just finished this week. An exciting time for him, for his label, and his new production ventures – an indeed a great pleasure for me to host such an amazing producer on the site, and as part of the isolatedmix series.

Hello James, what are you up to as you answer my millions of forthcoming questions? Anything exciting?

ASC: I’m taking a break from working on music for an independent sci-fi film score. I had a little break after the LP but I’m never one to rest on my laurels, so I usually move on to the next project pretty quick. I find this helps me to stay motivated.

As a fellow English export in the USA now, I’m interested to hear how your move come about – was it music related?

ASC: Kind of. I was playing a gig in San Francisco and I met my now wife up there. I decided to pack up and move to San Diego and give it try. 10 years later, I’m still here, so it paid off.

What do you enjoy about San Diego? Does it have a decent music scene?

ASC: To be honest, the music scene in San Diego is pretty poor. Me and a few friends ran a night for about a year, called 170SD. It was to showcase the music I was pushing with Autonomic and Auxiliary. There was a small core of people who loved it, but for the most part, people never took the chance and it never caught on, so we decided to put an end to it. I love the city itself though. Life here is very laidback and that suits me a lot. I’d much prefer that to a decent music scene, as I can always travel up to LA to catch most names I have any interest in seeing.

I think it was your Resident Advisor mix that introduced me to you. I remember them using the term ‘Autonomic’ which was brand new to me at the time. Can you tell us the background to that sound?

ASC: I look back on that mix with fond memories too. It was a great showcase for the music that was happening at that time. Autonomic was a name given to what we were doing. I think Damon from Instra:mental came up with it. Anyway, yeah those guys and dBridge teamed up and started focusing on a fresh style of music, loosely associated to drum & bass. I say loosely, as it we used the framework for drum & bass, but mainly at half-tempo, but the music was influenced from 80’s synth stuff and 90’s IDM, also stuff like Kraftwerk, Drexciya etc. I’d been talking to Instra for a while and they were into what I was doing too, so I ended up working closely with them for Autonomic and recording exclusively for their Nonplus label for the duration of Autonomic. It was an exciting time for music.

It was quite exciting for me to hear something completely new at the time. When was the last time that happened to you?

ASC: I guess it kind of did with Autonomic, but since I was part of creating that sound, it never felt ‘new’ in the sense of being a listener and hearing something you had no idea existed for the first time. I think the last time that happened actually was when I heard of Chain Reaction and what Basic Channel were doing with Rhythm & Sound etc. Recently catching Voices From The Lake play a live PA in Los Angeles was a special night.

I saw them up in Seattle a few months back. Probably the best party I’ve been to for years. Are you still one for the club scene or do you keep it on the down-low now? Anyone else you’ve caught recently who blew you away?

ASC: Every now and then. If it’s someone I haven’t seen before or someone that I’m really into then I’ll usually go out or even travel up to Los Angeles to catch a show. For the most part, I prefer the quiet life and don’t go out too much these days.

You’re also synonymous with ambient music as much as the ‘Autonomic’ sound. Has ambient always played a big part in your life or is it a more recent thing?

ASC: It’s always been with me since day one. I’d gravitate naturally to the more laidback tracks and more atmospheric music and found that to be what I’d look for. I recall the first ambient track I heard was by Moby, track 4 on the Move single. That was definitely the gateway into ambient and experimental music for me. I ended up buying Moby’s Ambient LP in 1993 and being blown away by it. First time I’d ever heard this sort of music in a long player format. A year later, Global Communication released 76:14 and that killed me. Still does to this day.

So is that how you got into this type of music? What’s your production background?

ASC: I’m self-taught for the most part. I studied piano and French horn in school for a few years, but at about 12-13 years of age, I’d got heavily into the hardcore/breakbeat/rave scene that was happening all over the UK. This would have been around about 1992-1993, so yeah, I’m showing my age now! Around this time, me and few friends all started messing with tracker software on the Atari ST and Commodore Amiga. I had a 1040 STE and my friend had the Amiga 500+. There were a few shareware programs floating about called Protracker (Amiga) and Noisetracker (ST). We’d sample all sorts and just try and work out how to put together loops at first. Eventually, we started making full ‘tracks’. I use the term loosely, as back then, we had no real grasp of it and were just messing around. I had this cheap sampler for my ST which you plugged into one of the side ports. The quality was so crap, but I was in awe of it back then. It just felt so exciting to be able to record samples and then put them into my own compositions. After that, I picked up a program called Trax for the ST, which was a very crude early Cubase clone, from what I recall. I started to DJ on pirate radio stations with my friend Chris and we’d spend hours dissecting the music we loved and trying to recreate ideas on our computers. I was hooked from here on and I knew it was going to be a huge part of my life.

How would you describe your productions to anyone new to your music?

ASC: That’s a really tough question to answer, as I’m constantly evolving from track to track. I’d say the emphasis is most definitely on atmosphere and usually more darker/melancholy than uplifting. I’m a bit of an emo in that respect! I prefer the sad heart-wrenching strings and pads to the ones that make people smile.

You’ve worked with some amazing artists these past few years – two of which are big heroes of mine (Ulrich Schnauss and bvdub). How did these partnerships come about?

ASC: I was into Ulrich since his first album on CCO. That really struck a chord with me, especially Nobody’s Home and Molfsee. He contacted me out of the blue one day on Facebook and wanted to buy some spare vinyl I had left over from an old drum & bass label I used to run, called Covert Operations. It turned out he was a fan of my music, which really made me happy and we struck up a good friendship. We kept in touch and decided that we’d work on some music together at some point and that’s how the 77 EP on Auxiliary came about. That EP was so effortless for both of us too. All the tracks just seemed to come together with no problems. Everything we both did worked first time and the tracks that came out are pretty much the first takes, give or take a few arrangement tweaks. We’ve talked about doing an LP together at some stage, but it’s about having the time to fit in the work that we’d have to undertake for a big project like that. We’ll see what happens!

Brock did this mix for mnmlssgs called Waiting For The World To Go By, which still, to this day, is my fave ambient mix by anyone ever. I’d met Chris from mnmlssgs while I was in Tokyo for a few gigs and we got to talking about it. He said he’d put me in touch with Brock via email, so we got to chatting pretty much on a daily basis. We started sharing a lot of music with each other and both said it would be cool to see what happens if we collaborated. I’d just started up the Symbol series with Auxiliary and thought it would be a the perfect outlet. Again, with that release, it all came about without any effort. I think that’s what happens when you get two like-minded producers with the same common goal. My work with Sam KDC also falls into this category [ASC + bvdub – Symbol #2]

I remember that mix. Stunner. Would playing live with any of these guys ever interest you?

ASC: Well, me and Ulrich did chat about performing live together when he is over here next, but again, the plan was to try and finish more material first, so we’d have more music to choose from, rather than the solitary four tracks we’ve done together so far. Again, it’s just timing and both of us are busy. It looks like the stars need to align for that to happen.

What about your relationship with Silent Season? Did you always have an ambient album in mind when you started producing?

ASC: That came about via Russell, who runs the Labyrinth festival in Japan. I’d met him playing in Tokyo also. Chris had asked me to play an ambient set at the mnmlssgs Sound Garden party they threw at Orbit in Sangenjaya. I’d played tracks from The Light That Burns Twice As Bright and the first disc of Time Heals All. Russell suggested I get in touch with Silent Season, as it would be a perfect fit for my music. Chris then put me in touch with Jamie and we’ve been working together ever since.

As for having an ambient LP in mind, not really. It was only when speaking to Brock and he was surprised that I’d never really written beatless ambient music before, so his encouragement and pushing me to do it was what really got me started. His LP White Clouds Drift On and On influenced me a great deal in terms of composition and was a good reference point for some of the early experiments I did.

‘The Light That burns Twice as Bright’ and ‘Time Heals All’ both had some rave reviews. Were you happy with how they went? And did you know you’d have another on the horizon this soon?

ASC: Oh totally. I think for people who bought both, you can definitely hear the progression from one album to the next, which I feel is important. I think as soon as Time Heals All was out and it started getting great reviews, I was already planning Truth Be Told in my mind. Like I said earlier, I never just sit back and rest on my laurels. My work ethic is such that I want to get my teeth into whatever’s next instantly, so I started to write down ideas in a notepad about ideas and stuff – most of which is nonsense if you were to see it.

What’s the idea behind your latest album ‘Truth Be Told’?

ASC: It’s a follow on from Time Heals All. A true spiritual successor and continuation of the themes from that album. I was on such a roll with Time Heals All, that it could have easily been a 3 x CD album, but I decided to curb my enthusiasm on that, because a double CD LP is more than enough for most people and perhaps too much for some. Truth Be Told picks up where that left off, with a mixture of the vibes from both discs.

So do you have a bunch of tracks still waiting to go on another release? Or do you discard them for not making the cut?

ASC: I usually start fresh with any project. If I have tracks left over, that’s what they are – leftovers. They didn’t make the cut for one reason or another, so I’ve never liked the idea of tracks that weren’t good enough in my mind, forming the basis of a new album. Incidentally, the first track on the mix is a leftover from Truth Be Told. It’s not a particularly bad track, but it just didn’t fit with the vibe of the album, so it got left out.

Can you give us an idea of how you approach your ambient albums, both in terms of the techniques you use and equipment?

ASC: It’s hard to put into words. A lot of my planning and approach for this is just floating around in my head and only makes sense when I sit down in the studio and let it all flow out. My workflow and techniques for the ambient stuff are a bit different to the more beat-laden music I write. I tend to create a lot of the pads from my synths, run them through effects units and then record them down to samples. Once I have amassed a collection of tones and other things, like background FX, field recordings etc, then I start to layer samples, adding and subtracting until the overall sound is similar to the original vision I had. I don’t think I’ve ever wrote a track that has matched the original idea I had though, as I constantly making changes, mistakes, trying other things as one sound sparks another idea etc.

Do you ever stray into unfamiliar territory? Music you never thought you’d make? Or do you try stick to a ‘style’?

ASC: Quite often. I think anything is unfamiliar territory until you’ve tried it. Over the years, I’ve written Drum & Bass, House, Techno, Electro, Ambient, IDM, Experimental/Abstract and stuff that I can’t begin to categorise. These days, I tend to stick to 3 styles, which is Ambient, Techno and whatever people want to call the Auxiliary half-tempo stuff, since it’s kinda nameless genre-wise.

As the man behind the infamous Auxiliary label, i’d love to get to know it a bit more. I’m surprised at how relentless Auxiliary releases are – you must be busy! How are you juggling it all?

ASC: I’ve slowed it down a lot this year. We’ve only done one CD release and one digital release, which was just a compilation of 3 previously vinyl-only releases. The last few years have been pretty relentless, but that’s due to the amount of insanely amazing music I had lined up by the artists involved. Going back to what I said about San Diego having a poor music scene, this is kind of a blessing in disguise, in the fact it means I have a lot more time to plan releases and juggle my own personal production work too.

And as a purveyor of finely coloured vinyl releases why do you continue this theme on the label (i know it’s expensive!) Do you see a real ‘collector’ trait with auxiliary fans?

ASC: Auxiliary was born out of the Autonomic scene and up until release phase two of the label, from 007 onwards, we’ve become our own entity. It’s gone from being on the cusp of what you could class as DJ music, to appealing just to vinyl lovers and collectors now. I think the coloured vinyl became a selling point at some stage. Labels like mine and Samurai were really doing some interesting combinations and people were reacting to it. I think it’s become very common place now and perhaps not as important. Keeping the cost down and providing the music on vinyl is the main thing. Recently, I’ve been seeing labels charging a LOT of money for say a 2 x 12″ EP and saying it’s because it’s coloured/clear mix. I know as a consumer, if I had the choice between a regular priced vinyl or the same release on coloured vinyl for 4 times the price, I’d just go for the black.

I know what you mean. I tried keeping the cost of ‘Uncharted Places’ down as much as possible, but I think people appreciated the transparent vinyl – it added to the overall aesthetic (I think anyway) I own quite a few of the colored vinyl from the ‘Symbol Series – what was the idea behind this and why did it stop?

ASC: The Symbol series was something I set up to encourage the artists I was working with for Auxiliary to focus less on DJ friendly music and stop worrying about how it would sound on a dancefloor. It was any anything-goes approach in some ways, as long as it was deep and emotional. In many ways, it was the blueprint for what the label has become now. It stopped because from a design aspect, I’d never envisioned it going beyond number 9, as I didn’t think a double digit number looked right in the design.

 

Wow, you hold yourself to some high standards!! So what does the future look like for the label?

ASC: The future is more about the core of the label, mainly the artists that make Auxiliary what it is. It’ll focus mainly on music by myself, Sam KDC, Synth Sense and Method One. Central Industrial and Vaccine are also key figures too, but have other commitments, so they aren’t nearly as prolific as the aforementioned artists. The future of the label is to continue doing what we do really, as there’s no other label that sounds like us, or can provide what we do and that’s important for our identity we feel.

How do you feel about running a label in today’s music industry? Do you still see them as a valuable asset despite the ability for artists to ‘do it alone’? What do you think is Auxiliary’s strongest appeal as a label?

ASC: It’s certainly a tough task, especially for the more smaller specialised niche labels, such as Auxiliary, but ultimately, it’s a still a very rewarding experience. I think labels are still important as it’s a quality control filter. Anyone can just release anything these days, especially digitally. A label is important in curating a style, a voice, a vision. When a consumer buys into that and becomes a fan, then there’s a special bond, as the label becomes important to them, almost as much as the music in a way.

So what’s next? And what’s in the future for you as an artist?

ASC: We’ve got a Sam KDC single up next, which is gonna shock a lot of people, as it’s such a different sound for Sam. It’s some of my favourite stuff he’s done though, so I’m eager to see what sort of reaction it gets. It’s definitely a darker sound for Sam, but still all the magical hallmarks of his sound. After that, we’ve got a full length ambient LP from Sam also, as well as a 12″ from Synth Sense and a bunch of other things up in the air. As for me, I’m working on a new LP for Samurai at the moment, which is nearly done. There’s also another 12″ for Samurai’s vinyl-only imprint, Horo. I think both will see a release some time this year. Other than that, I’ve been working on a film score I’m wrapping up at the moment and I’ve also got another one which I’m waiting to start on very soon. I think that’s where my future as an artist lies, or at least, that’s what I’d like to be doing more of from now on.

I think that’d be one of my dream jobs. What is it you enjoy about doing film scores?

ASC: Putting music to visuals ultimately. Being inspired by a good picture that really brings out the best in your ability is something that is truly enjoyable to me. It’s also a very different way of working for me. After 18 years of writing music in my own way, my own routines and time frames, writing to someone else’s specifications and deadlines is a welcoming challenge.

What are some of your favourite scores?

ASC: Clint Mansell – The Fountain & Moon, Vangelis – Blade Runner, Thomas Newman – American Beauty & The Shawshank Redemption, Jon Brion – Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind, Cliff Martinez – Solaris, Wicker Park & Traffic, Plaid – Tekkonkinkreet, Graeme Revell – Aeon Flux, Dustin O’Halloran – Breathe In.

Lastly, can you tell is a little about your isolatedmix, how it was put together and the idea behind it?

ASC: It’s a really mixed bag, starting with some ambient stuff, then it gets a little weird and experimental, a bit dark, then transitions into the Auxiliary sound near the end. It’s a showcase about what my musical ethos is really. I put it together digitally in the studio in pretty much the same way I do the Auxcasts and it features a bunch of stuff by me, Synth Sense and Sam KDC.

ASC on Web | Soundcloud | Bandcamp | Facebook | Twitter |

Yagya - Sleepygirls

The signing of Aðalsteinn Guðmundsson’s fifth album to Delsin Records is significant, not just for Guðmundsson, but for the genre he’s helped pioneer. Netherlands-based Delsin has been fostering well respected names like Mike Dehnert, Delta Funktionen, Redshape and Conforce for years, and has long been a beacon for techno’s elite. Despite the occasional leftfield signing (see John Beltran’s, “Amazing Things” last year), the label still very much caters to the DJ craft. This ensures plenty of deck-focused ears will be giving this record a listen and while the idea of mixing ambient-leaning techno is certainly nothing new, it’s been some time since we’ve seen it presented on this stage. With a decade’s worth of ground-breaking work under his belt, Yagya’s legacy will no longer remain quietly cherished by deep techno’s underbelly.

Sleepygirls brings forward some of the celebrated elements from Guðmundsson’s Rhythm of Snow and Rigning, revived with a fresh coat of low-end paint, live instrumentation and a couple of guest vocal performances. The album is entirely mixed and wastes no time immersing you in familiar warmth. There is such an effortless flow to Yagya’s sound and even though this challenges the album’s overall dynamic, there is a sense of reliable comfort in its consistency. Turn the album on and turn yourself off, it’s a wonderful escape.

Mid-way through we’re treated to some of Guðmundsson’s heaviest hitting material. This is still far from a club record, but there is a fresh, punchy energy to these tracks which is sure to please fans who were left longing for a bit more out of Yagya’s 2012, “The Inescapable Decay of My Heart”. There is also something about this genre and the world of jazz just seem to work so well. 8 tracks in, the pace plateaus allowing some tasteful improvisation to carry you effortlessly through. It couldn’t have been more perfectly timed and stood out as a highlight.

Fans are going to love Yagya’s fifth album. It doesn’t breakaway from tried and tested formulas of the past, but it refines enough of the edges to challenge its predecessors as the new favorite. It’s also the perfect introduction to his long line of work and fresh ears will undoubtedly be encouraged to go explore a discography many of us have been enjoying for some time.

Available on Delsin on 3xLP, CD and digital formats on 26th May.

 
 

ASIP - Accent / Sustain

 
 

I’ve been in Portland for over a year now and have met some amazing people who are pushing forward a thriving ambient/electronic scene.On May 21st, I’ve been invited to DJ at what should be one of the biggest events to hit the Portland ambient/electronica calendar, a night organised by Sanctuary Sunday and Lifelike Family, at the infamous local haunt, Holocene. It’s a night focused on the more dubby/ambient/electronic sound – somewhat of a rarity it seems, but a sound that has been bubbling up around Portland more recently. I’ll be spinning vinyl only in-between three amazing local live acts including Apartment Fox, Sunhammer and Ethernet.

Here’s a little preview, including a mix, a few words with the event organizer and a spotlight on the artists playing on the night.

Ranging from expansive ambient, to melodic dub-techno and slightly more electronic stuff, this mix was pretty fun to put together and I was lucky enough to include a track from Gidge which doesn’t come out until September (keep your eyes out for that, it’s an amazing album). Lots of stuff on here which has been covered on ASIP so it should provide a nice refresher for those familiar with the site.

 
 

Download

Tracklist:

01. The Green Kingdom – Untitled [Dronarivm]
02. Markus Guentner – Ashes [Moodgadget]
03. Heathered Pearls – The Worship Bell (Foxes in Fiction Tape remix) [Ghostly]
04. Textural Being – Sept [Energostatic]
05. Martin Nonstatic – Subatomic [Dewtone]
06. Doyeq – Soundsphere [Subspiele]
07. Purl – Essence [Dewtone]
08. Yagya – Snowflake 6 [Force Inc]
09. Desolate – Endurance [Fauxpas]
10. Gidge – Huldra (Atomnation]
11. Borealis – Nightfall (Ben Lukas Boysen remix) [Origami Sound]
12. Norge – 165 minutes With You (Markus Guentner remix) [ASIP]

Coco Madrid: Event Organiser / local legend / winner of busiest party schedule

And lastly, I had the chance to ask the event organiser, Coco a few questions. As one of the biggest advocates for this type of music in Portland for many years now, it seems like everything she puts her name to is a great success in bringing the community together. I bump into her at every gig in Portland and i don’t think this lady sleeps…

What’s the idea behind the night and what can people expect?

“The idea came from the showcase I did with the Closer Festival, Tim Westcott, and Mike Jedlicka last year. One of the artists that will be playing at Accent//Sustain – Sunhammer, was pretty much the source for the inspiration. He caught us all off guard by doing a more beat oriented set where he normally would have done a sleepy drone vibe. He went a whole other direction that really stuck in the minds of myself and collaborator from Lifelike Family Jay No Parades. After months of gushing over the experience we decided that we needed to present a Dub Ambient/Submerged Techno night to the community.

You can expect a total Audio/Visual experience. The line up will consist of 3 Live PA artists and 3 DJs who will be playing vinyl only all night. We are also excited to present two analog visual artists that will be doing a TV installation and Video Synth setup. Come vibe, get a brain massage, and maybe do a little body movement”.

It’s a bigger venue than some of your other nights you put on – what pushed you to Holocene?

“Yes the Ambient/Experimental night that I organize (Sanctuary Sunday) has been in smaller venues. I really prefer an intimate setting for that particular event because of the listening only experience I wish to provide. However, I do many other larger monthly events that aren’t Ambient/Experimental that happen to be at Holocene. So of course Holocene was a natural choice. It’s my home club and whenever I can do something other than the two main nights there (SNAP! and Booty Bassment) I will always default to that venue”.

How would you describe the Portland ambient/electronic scene at the moment? What makes it different to other cities?

“I see the Portland Ambient/Experimental scene getting a revival of sorts. I used to do Ambient/Experimental events with PRA (Portland Radio Authority) and Mike Jedlicka 7 years ago. At that time many events were centered around the old Apotheke venue. With the closing of that venue I saw a downfall in Ambient events plus I took a hiatus to join the Dance Scene”

Coming back to the scene I have noticed the old heads are still working to keep things going (shouts to Daniel Menche), a bunch of young kids doing experimental basement shows that are blowing minds (shouts to Antecessor and Mike’s Basement), and then new promoters/artists (shouts to Lifelike Family) that wanna breath new life into the scene. So right now it’s still a bit disconnected but I think that it’s moving towards more intertwining of the these groups.

I do make an effort to invite all three of these groups to participate in Sanctuary Sunday. The intention is to get people from behind their computers and interact with each other IRL. It makes for am more dynamic experience and spawns more collaboration between people who wouldn’t normally meet.

As far as other cities, I can not speak to that. I have lived here for 20 years and while I have been to many Ambient/Experimental shows in other cities I really didn’t get a concrete impression of those cities scenes”.

What would you like to see change to help accelerate the amazing talent in Portland?

“Portland mostly needs more venues. The talent that is here is amazing but we just don’t have enough quality space to accommodate them all. Also more communication between Promoters/Crews in regards to scheduling events. I mean it’s going to happen but more active communication could help with cross promotion and less conflicting scheduling”.

And lastly, who are some local artists you’re excited about?

“Right now I am excited about the new releases from Lifelike Family. They will be releasing music from two people that I am very interested in, Temple Maps and Andrew Weathers. Each are completely different from each other: Temple Maps being 8-bit dungeon dub bass while Andrew Weathers explores songs from a specific old hymn book that will showcase minimal choral and guitar arrangements.

Another artist would be someone who is from the basement scene and previous Sanctuary Sunday guest, Misandrist. Dude presents a dreamy brain massage that’s best experienced in a semi dark smoke filled room and I need more of it!”