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Henry Cow
Unrest

Henry Cow — Unrest (May 1974)

               Henry Cow — Unrest (May 1974)
♦π♦   Sean Kitching speaks to Chris Cutler for a very personal appreciation of Henry Cow's Unrest album and has some recommendations to make for further listening.
Location: The Manor, Oxfordshire, England
Genre/Style: Free Jazz / Art Rock / Prog Rock
Album release: May 1974
Recorded: February–March 1974, The Manor, Oxfordshire, England
Record Label: Belle Antique Japan, BELLE–152407
Duration: 
Tracks:
01. Bittern Storm Over Ulm      2:18
02. Half Asleep; Half Awake      7:59
03. Ruins      12:10
04. Solemn Music      1:11
05. Linguaphonie      5:31
06. Upon Entering The Hotel Adlon      3:04
07. Arcades      1:57
08. Deluge      5:24
09. Silence      1:00
Bonus Tracks:
10. The Glove (Unrest ESD Version Bonus)      6:31
11. Torchfire (Unrest ESD Version Bonus)      4:57
12. Introduction (The 40th Anniversary Box Set Version)      1:52
13. Ruins I (The 40th Anniversary Box Set Version)      6:35
14. Half Asleep; Half Awake (The 40th Anniversary Box Set Version)      4:11
15. Ruins II (The 40th Anniversary Box Set Version)      0:59
16. Heron Shower Over Hamburg (The 40th Anniversary Box Set Version)   2:29 
Personnel:
Henry Cow
♦π♦   Tim Hodgkinson — organ, piano, alto saxophone, clarinet
♦π♦   Fred Frith — stereo guitar, violin, xylophone, piano
♦π♦   John Greaves — bass guitar, piano, voice
♦π♦   Chris Cutler — drums
♦π♦   Lindsay Cooper — bassoon, oboe, recorder, voice
Production:
♦π♦   Phil Becque — recording engineer, mixing engineer (side 1)
♦π♦   Andy Morris — recording engineer
♦π♦   Mike Oldfield — recording engineer (part of "Ruins")
♦π♦   Henry Cow — mixing engineers (side 2), producers
♦π♦   Ray Smith — cover art
♦π♦   Matt Murman — remastered 1999 CD reissue
Content:
♦π♦   When Henry Cow began recording Unrest, they found they did not have enough composed material to fill the LP. Because of studio time constraints, they were forced to "improvise" and developed a "studio composition" process that involved improvising to tape, tape manipulation, loops, layering and overdubbing. The balance of the LP (tracks 2 to 5 on side 2) were "composed" in this manner. On parts of "Ruins" and "Linguaphonie", the bassoon, alto saxophone, drums and voice were recorded at half or double speed.
♦π♦   The Fred Frith composition "Bittern Storm over Ülm" was a "perversion" of one his favourite Yardbirds songs, "Got to Hurry" (1965) into which he added bars, beats and half–beats. For "Ruins", Frith used Fibonacci numbers to establish beat and harmony, after reading about Hungarian composer Béla Bartók's use of the Fibonacci series. "Solemn Music" was from Henry Cow's music for John Chadwick's play, The Tempest, and is the only piece from that suite to be released.
♦π♦   The vocal/piano piece at the end of "Deluge" is sung and played by John Greaves. 
Cover art:
♦π♦   The album cover art work was by artist Ray Smith and was the second of the three "paint socks" to feature on Henry Cow's albums. Smith was an old friend of the band from Cambridge who had worked with them on two dance projects and had often supported them in performance art at concerts. Smith came up with the idea of the woven sock and insisted that the band's name should not appear on the front cover. As Cutler later explained, in a 2011 interview, the idea was extended through the whole album series, with the sock changing "to suit the temper of the music".
REVIEW
Robert Christgau;  Score: A–
Unrest [Red, 1979]
♦π♦   Finally released in the States five years after it came out in Britain, this demanding music shows up such superstar "progressives" as Yes for the weak–minded reactionaries they are. The integrity of Cow's synthesis is clearest in "Bittern Storm Over Ulm," based on the Yardbirds' "Got to Hurry" — instead of quoting sixteen bars with two or three instruments, thus insuring their listeners another lazy identification, they break the piece down, almost like beboppers. Though the saxophone is still second–rate and the more lyrical rhythms flirt with a cheap swing, the band is worthy of its classical correlatives — Bartok, Stockhausen, and Varese rather than Tchaikovsky and predigested Bach. A– ♦π♦   http://www.robertchristgau.com/
REVIEW
Sean Kitching, April 8th, 2014 07:45
♦π♦   The 'progressive' tag is a divisive and often misleading one to anyone unaware of the many variable forms of musical expression labelled as such may take. Although the term has gained (and occasionally lost again) a number of unfortunate associations over time, in itself it merely implies a form of music with aspirations beyond the limiting structures usually associated with rock, folk or pop. It is a form of critical laziness to suggest any kind of uniformity of stylistic output across bands that have been labelled progressive, just as it is a form of ideological tyranny to insist that musical invention can only legitimately exist if expressed within certain, immutable configurations.
♦π♦   Punk may have provided the necessary impetus to altering the musical status quo of the late 70s but it's generally accepted that the more eclectic post punk template which followed in its wake produced the more interesting musical innovations. Public Image Ltd, who had such diverse influences as Can and Van der Graaf Generator, were always a more intriguing proposition than the Sex Pistols as far as I'm concerned. Bands such as King Crimson had little in common with the likes of Yes, or Emerson Lake and Palmer. Henry Cow, perhaps the most progressive of all English bands, were influenced by early Frank Zappa, as well such figures as Bela Bartok, Edgard Varese, John Cage and Sun Ra, and were about as far removed from the mainstream 70s prog bands as it was possible to be. Although their uncompromising music and defiantly anti–commercial stance meant they brought little financial success to Richard Branson's Virgin label, which eventually dropped them when it began focusing on more commercial acts in 1977, Henry Cow spawned a genre all their own (Rock In Opposition or RIO) and produced an almost bewildering number of excellent spin–off projects and associated bands that influenced many subsequent generations of musicians.
♦π♦   When I first met Cardiacs' Tim Smith after a gig at the Crazy House in Liverpool in 1998, they were the first of many names he gave me when I inquired of his musical influences. I was in the middle of an intense Krautrock phase at the time but it was evident from talking to Tim that he was more interested in composed than improvised music. I had heard the name Henry Cow but not their music. I was aware of the Soft Machine at the time and Bartok's wonderful Concerto For Orchestra was already a favourite, so they made total sense to me when I picked up their first album after his recommendation.
♦π♦  Henry Cow were formed in 1968, whilst its core members Fred Frith and Tim Hodgkinson were attending Cambridge University. Violinist and guitarist Frith, who was studying English Literature, met Hodgkinson, a social anthropology student, in a blues club at the University and proceeded to bond during a spontaneously improvised hour of violin and alto saxophone that Frith later recalled as "a ghastly screaming noise". Hodgkinson introduced Frith to a range of new music, most notably the work of Charles Mingus and Ornette Coleman. Soon the pair were performing their "dadaist blues" regularly together and played their first gig as Henry Cow supporting Syd Barrett's incarnation of Pink Floyd at the Architect's Ball in Cambridge on 12 June 1968.
♦π♦  Although the popular apocryphal reasoning behind the band's unusual moniker was that it was derived from a shortening of the name of the American composer and theorist, Henry Cowell, the band themselves have always denied this was the case and Hodgkinson claimed instead that it was merely "in the air" and without connection to anything else. After that, the band underwent a number of personnel changes that exposed them to different influences along the way. Early bass player Andy Powell was studying music at King's College under the British–Australian composer Roger Smalley, who is said to have provided the spark of inspiration behind the idea of writing lengthy and complex musical scores intended to be played within the context of a rock group.
♦π♦  Bassist John Greaves joined the band in 1969, and with Hodgkinson doubling on organ as well as reeds, the band played Glastonbury Festival, which also featured Gong on the bill, in June 1971. A number of drummers came and went during these early years and it was not until Chris Cutler joined in September 1971, that the group finally settled into its long–term incarnation of Frith, Hodgkinson, Cutler and Greaves. ♦π♦  The band moved to London and recorded their first session for John Peel in 1972 after entering the Radio 1 DJ's 'Rockortunity Knocks' competition the previous year. ♦π♦  During the years that followed, the band worked on projects for theatre (including Euripides' The Bacchae and Shakespeare's The Tempest), played support for acts as diverse as Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac, the Velvet Underground, Faust and later Captain Beefheart, and recorded five studio albums and one live double.
♦π♦  The band's first album Leg End, a reference to its cover featuring the first of three sock paintings by artist Ray Smith, was more noticeably influenced by the Canterbury jazz–rock scene than the recordings that followed and is undoubtedly the best place for curious beginners to start. The album has a number of high–points, including the wonderfully titled 'Nirvana For Mice' whose scampering time signature conjures up the patter of thousands of tiny rodent feet, the beautifully expansive 'Amygdala,' and the uplifting and epic 'Teenbeat'. The only non–instrumental track, 'Nine Funerals Of The Citizen King,' to which the whole band contributes vocals, is the first explicit example of the band's political stance: "If we live (we live) to tread on dead kings/Or else we'll work to live to buy the things we multiply/Until they fill the ordered universe."
♦π♦  Chris Cutler once amusingly said (although one wonders how much humour was intended): "Others experimented with drugs; we did it with radical politics." ♦π♦  Their abstract avant–garde approach to music, allied with their own extreme take on left–wing politics led to disagreements with some individuals who also posited themselves within that part of the political spectrum, most notably the composer Cornelius Cardew. Henry Cow themselves refused to accept that reaching the working class meant having to revert to the simplest of musical forms. Which is not to say that they were dismissive of other forms of music, or as elitist as some descriptions of their own music might sometimes make them sound. Fred Frith has always been forthright about the influence that blues musicians like Howlin' Wolf and Muddy Waters had on his guitar playing when he first heard them as a young man. He has also acknowledged the debt his music owes to Eastern European folk music. As he stated in a 2012 interview for Psychedelic Baby blog — the first time he heard any musician other than Dave Brubeck playing in "something other than 4/4" was when a Yugoslavian schoolfriend played him some traditional Balkan folk music.
♦π♦  Henry Cow's music, whilst not for everyone, is certainly unique, although I wouldn't describe it as elitist in any sense. An amalgamation a wide range of influences, it was borne more of an aesthetic decision to discover their own path, away from any existing genre or any kind of mainstream and eventually into some kind of pagan sounding, abstract wilderness that few (perhaps none) had walked before. Already unique in comparison to other bands of the era, by the time of 1975's In Praise Of Learning and 1979's Western Culture, they truly sounded like no one else.
♦π♦  'The Decay Of Cities' from the latter, utilising Derek Bailey style guitar and a terrifying, almost industrial sounding passage, indeed sounds like its title suggests. In practical terms, the band's politics manifested itself in traveling and often living communally, with very little in the way of available finances. Of necessity, putting on alternative shows for themselves and other bands who similarly existed on the fringes. ♦π♦  The first Rock In Opposition festival took place on March 12, 1978, when Henry Cow invited Stormy Six (from Italy), Samla Mammas Manna (from Sweden), Univers Zero (from Belgium) and Etron Fou Leloublan (from France), to play at the New London Theatre. The aims of the movement were defined threefold; as the pursuit of musical excellence, a desire to work outside the confines of the music business and with a commitment to the social aspect of performing rock music. Although, as in any musical movement, far more diversity of idea existed amongst participating groups than was implied by the umbrella term, certain themes and influences can definitely be discerned amongst them. The influence of Zappa, Bartok, modern takes on chamber music and the many forms of Eastern European folk music are recurrent threads that run through all of those group's music.
♦π♦  The term RIO has today become a way of identifying a form of experimental rock music and its influence can be heard in groups such as Thinking Plague, 5uu's, Sleepytime Gorilla Museum, Miriodor and Guapo. The RIO festival was restarted in 2007 and continues to be held annually in Carmaux in France every September. This year, Christian Vander's Jazz/Rock/Minimalist veterans Magma are set to headline, and the festival website carries a prominent image of Kavus Torabi (Cardiacs, Gong, Knifeworld, Monsoon Bassoon) who also recommended Henry Cow to me years ago after a gig, who has seemingly become a poster boy for the progressive genre.
♦π♦  Unrest was recorded at Virgin's Manor Studios in February and March of 1974 and was dedicated to Robert Wyatt and Guru Guru/Neu!/Faust and Spacebox bassist Uli Trepte. The classically trained Lindsay Cooper joined the band on oboe and bassoon in 1973, augmenting the core members of Frith, Cutler, Greaves and Hogdkinson. Having recently come off tour with Faust, it soon became obvious that the group lacked enough written material for a full length LP. Due to time constraints, but also taking Faust's use of the studio as compositional tool as inspiration, the band experimented with processes that exploited the possibilities of tape manipulation as applied to improvised pieces. The general critical consensus was that the composed pieces, comprising most of the first side of the LP, were the most successful. Indeed, they represent some of the best music the band ever recorded and there is much beauty to be found amongst the unusual time signatures and atonality also present. Although the improvised pieces are more varied in their strengths and weaknesses, the importance of those studio experiments should not be underestimated. In the same interview referred to above, Fred Frith (who was also the most prominent band member in terms of writing the composed pieces), said: ''Making Unrest was a wonderful and radical experience... it set the tone for everything I've done in the studio since, giving us a deep understanding of the possibilities of the medium."
♦π♦  As one of the (often valid) criticisms of the progressive genre is that over reliance on musical virtuosity can result in a stifling of creativity, strategies employed to work against this tendency are all the more important. The kind of spontaneity engendered by group improvisation allows for ways of thinking outside the box, which may be why Fred Frith deploys such unlikely methods of guitar attack as chains and handfuls of rice when currently performing live.
♦π♦  The album opens with the Frith composition 'Bittern Storm Over Ulm', in which he takes apart the Yardbirds' 'Got To Hurry', putting it back together with additional bars, beats, half–beats and deceptively 'pop' sounding hand claps — all within the space of a little over two minutes. It starts simply with laid back, rolling drumbeats and sustained guitar notes, the music initially full of spaces but narrowing the gaps as it progresses, Cutler's drumming slowly winding the increasing pace, precise yet loose, clockwork being stretched like taffy and Cooper's bassoon adding deeper, earthier tones. A similarly successful deconstruction of a blues tune appears as the first track on the second album by Belgian avant–rock band Aksak Maboul, with Frith and Cutler guesting on the re–imagined Bo Didley track 'A Modern Lesson'. Next up is John Greaves' 'Half Asleep Half Awake' — one of the album's loveliest tracks. A gentle piano motif stirs as if slowly shaking off the shackles of sleep, a beautiful pastoral–sounding oboe melody takes the track to the halfway mark before the whole thing explodes with Cutler's wonderful, octopoid drumming and Frith's stretched out guitar notes, returning finally at the end to the gorgeous piano refrain fading slowly out.
♦π♦  Inspired by Bartok's use of the Fibonacci series, Frith developed the harmony and beats of 'Ruins' by similarly utilising the numerical series. Fibonacci numbers are closely related to the golden ratio, used in art and architecture, and can also be found in natural biological formations such as the branches of trees, flower petals or the spiral of a snail's shell. Like most of these tracks, a strong melody is established early on, then broken down into a more chaotic sounding middle section before being reestablished at the end.
♦π♦  Side two opens with the short 'Solemn Music,' taken from Henry Cow's music for John Chadwick's version of The Tempest, which is the only section of the that piece to have been released. Although I was unaware of the connection at the time, its eerie ambience taps a similar vein to Art Bears (a later Cow–related project) tracks that I used to accompany my Shakespeare theatre production project in my first year at university. The rest of the tracks on the album are the improvised numbers using the studio as compositional tool. Although I think it would be fair to say that these tracks seem rather bewildering at first, given the strength of the composed tracks that precede them, there is still much that rewards an open–minded and attentive listener. ♦π♦  The chaotic 'Upon Entering The Hotel Adlon' and the beautiful, slow reveal of 'Deluge', that ends with a lovely, melancholy piano and vocal by John Greaves, are entirely memorable in their own right. The 1991 East–Side Digital reissue contained an extra two bonus tracks taken from the original sessions, 'The Glove' and 'Torchfire'. I had this version for years, and it always struck me how quiet the sound level on the CD was. Recently I picked up the audiophile vinyl reissue on Chris Cutler's own Recommended Records and the sound quality is far better. When I asked Cutler to comment on his experience of recording Unrest via email, he had this to say:
♦π♦  "Lindsay had just joined and we'd had little time to rehearse or write new music with her in mind, so we went into the Manor with nowhere near enough music to complete an album. But, after our experience with Leg End we were fairly confident that, one way or another, we could assemble new material in the studio through a process of improvisation, selection, discussion, editing, overdubbing customised writing, processing and mixing. Which we did. It was an experience that probably did more to bind the band together than anything since our marathon month writing for The Bacchae; and we were very pleased with the result. For us it was a breakthrough. We were so pleased, in fact, that we invited the Virgin staff to a listening (it was still operating as a kind of family then), and were pretty crestfallen when no–one seemed to be very enthusiastic. ♦π♦  In fact, management's general lack of interest in the band was what made us pull out of the Agency and start organising our own tours and concerts soon thereafter.
♦π♦  "I think side two of Unrest is still one our better achievements; I'd select 'Deluge' as a great piece of music even now; and it's a piece that could never have been scored; it was a pure product of realtime playing and collective assembly. It's made of no more than a 50 second loop, some of 'Ruins' played at half speed, several layers of minimal overdubbing, a mix–idea and a concept that grew out of itself. Working this way, you learn to listen differently. And think differently. The way side two reads is... complex; it fits together in a kind of narrative way, and it also makes a lot of unintentional commentary on different kinds of musical form; it's a snapshot, and it couldn't be made today. For us improvisation was essential, and at least 40% of any gig would be improvised. it may be harder to listen to, but it can be more rewarding too; there's a truth there."
♦π♦  After Unrest, Henry Cow continued in typically eclectic fashion, releasing a collaborative LP with Slapp Happy (Anthony Moore, Peter Blegvad and Dagmar Krause's 'naive pop' group) entitled Desperate Straights, before attempting to combine both groups under the Henry Cow banner for In Praise Of Learning, and finally slimming back down to a quartet for Western Culture. After the band had split, Cutler, Frith and Krause continued under the more song–based guise of Art Bears. Revisiting their music as I write this piece, I find that 15 or so years after my first exposure to it, it still has an incredible power and totally unique sense of identity. It also represented for me, an opening into a world of music I had only previously suspected might exist, and which continued to reveal itself to me in a whole host of subsequent releases by Henry Cow affiliated musical projects.
♦π♦  There really are far too many to mention but at the very top of a list of other truly great 'connected' albums/projects, I would have to choose The Fred Frith albums, Gravity and Speechless and also the amazing film about Frith by Nicolas Humbert and Werner Penzel — Step Across The Border. John Greaves' Kew. Rhone — which I only discovered whilst writing this piece. The Art Bears' The World As It Is Today, and the two albums by News From Babel. Further stylistically afield and most interestingly for me, connecting to the kind of New York avant–garde vibe that Frith encountered when he moved there in the early 80s, there are his bands Massacre (with Bill Laswell and Fred Maher) and Skeleton Crew (with Tom Cora and Zeena Parkins), and of course, his participation of perhaps the greatest avant–garde 'supergroup' of recent memory, Naked City. Frith is currently Professor of Composition in the Music Department at Mills College in Oakland, California and continues to play in a number of groups, including Maybe Monday (with saxophonist Larry Ochs and koto player Miya Masaoka) and Cosa Brava (with Zeena Parkins, Carla Kihlstedt, and Matthias Bossi). Cutler produced a book on the political theory of contemporary music, File Under Popular, in 1984, and continues to run his independent record label Recommended Records, whilst participating in a wide range of groups that have included Cassiber, The (ec) Nudes, The Science Group and HeXtet, as well as working with such figures as Pere Ubu's David Thomas and The Residents. Tim Hodkinson formed his post punk outfit, The Work, in 1980 and is also known for his involvement in the free improvisation group Konk Pack and the 'shamanic jazz' troupe K–Space, as well as a number of solo albums. John Greaves, who was also a member of the Canterbury–scene inspired groups National Health and Soft Heap, likewise released a number of solo albums and performed Kew. Rhone in June 2007 at the Tritonales festival in Paris. Despite being diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in the late 70s, Lindsay Cooper co–founded the Feminist Improvising Group, released solo records such as Rags and The Gold Diggers, as well as writing scores for film and television. She sadly passed away in September of last year and her obituary in The Guardian recalled her "imaginative, spirited, humorous and courageous approach to life". ♦π♦   http://thequietus.com/
Chris Cutler interview about Henry Cow, Art Bears, Cassiber...
♦π♦   http://psychedelicbaby.blogspot.com/2011/12/chris-cutler-interview-about-henry-cow.html
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Henry Cow
Unrest

 

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MARTIN GORE ‘THE THIRD CHIMPANZEE E.P.’ 12”
A.O. Gerber — Another Place to Need (May 22, 2020)
Deerhoof — Future Teenage Cave Artists (May 29, 2020)
MATT SWEENEY AND BONNIE ‘PRINCE’ BILLY — „SUPERWOLVES“ (18TH JUN
The Growlers — Natural Affair (25th Oct. 2019)
His Name Is Alive — Ghost Tape EXP (Dec. 8, 2020).png
James Taylor — American Standard (Feb. 28th, 2020)
Alogte Oho and his Sounds of Joy — Mam Yinne Wa (Nov. 8, 2019)
Sam Gendel — Satin Doll (13 Mar 2020)
Kaleidoscope — Faintly Blowing (11 April 1969, Reissue, Remaster
Motorpsycho — The All Is One (2CD) (28 Aug., 2020)
Ryan Adams — Ryan Adams (September 8, 2014)
Roman Hampacher — Bílá Vrána (December 6, 2020)
Trees Speak — Ohms (3rd April, 2020)
Nadine Shah — Kitchen Sink (June 5, 2020)
Skinny Pelembe — Dreaming Is Dead Now (May 24, 2019)
CLT DRP — Without The Eyes (Aug. 28th, 2020)
Broken Social Scene — Live at Third Man Records (Feb. 28, 2020)
Perfume Genius — Set My Heart On Fire Immediately (15th May 2020
Ryan Adams — Wednesdays (Dec. 11, 2020)
Deerborn — Where Demons Hide (Aug. 28, 2020)
Brendan Benson — Dear Life (April 24, 2020)
Harvestman — Music for Megaliths (May 19, 2017)
Kolna — Smrtí zatepla (Nov. 30, 2020)
Marc Ribot’s Ceramic Dog — „Hope“ (June 25th, 2021)
Lucia Cadotsch — Speak Low (Feb. 26, 2016)
Perfume Genius — No Shape (5 May, 2017) BC
Dinosaur Jr — „Sweep It Into Space“ (April 23rd, 2021)
Perfume Genius — No Shape (5 May, 2017) FC
Cocteau Twins — Victorialand (April, 1986, Reissue 2020)
Wolf Alice — „Blue Weekend“ (4th June, 2021)
Isbells — Sosei (March 1, 2019)
Sons of Kemet — „Black to the Future“ (May 14, 2021)
The Feather — Room (10 July, 2020)
Songs for the Late Night Drive Home (Feb. 5, 2016)
Last Days of April — „Even the Good Days Are Bad“ (May 7, 2021)
Benoît Pioulard & Sean Curtis Patrick — Avocationals (2019)
Spc Eco — Dark Matter (Nov. 20, 2015)
Juliana Hatfield — Weird (Bonus Edition) (Jan. 18, 2019)
Caribou — Suddenly (Feb. 28th, 2020)
Sam Tudor — „Two Half Words“ (May 7, 2021)
SPC ECO — June (June 1, 2020)
Waxahatchee — Saint Cloud (March 27, 2020)
Florist — Emily Alone (July 26, 2019)
Chapelier Fou — Deltas (Sept. 22, ​2014)
The Boomtown Rats — Citizens of Boomtown (13 March, 2020)
The Flaming Lips — The Soft Bulletin (Nov. 29, 2019)
Emile — The Black Spider / Det Kollektive Selvmord (May 1, 2020)
Larkin Poe — Self Made Man (June 12th, 2020)
Delilah Montagu — „This Is Not a Love Song EP“ (Feb. 5th, 2021)
Wesley Gonzalez — Appalling Human (June 12, 2020)
Pottery — Welcome to Bobby’s Motel (June 26th, 2020)
Mint Field — Sentimiento Mundial (25 Sept., 2020)
Art d’Ecco — „In Standard Definition“ (April 23rd, 2021)
Cosmo Sheldrake — Galapagos [Original Soundtrack] 2019
The Telescopes — Hidden Fields (August 7th, 2015)
Eyvind Kang — Ajaeng Ajaeng (May 1, 2020)
Django Django — „Glowing in the Dark“ (2021)
Eyvind Kang — Ajaeng Ajaeng (May 1, 2020)
The Antlers — „Green To Gold“ (March 26, 2021)
Kyrie Kristmanson — Lady Lightly (Jan. 10, 2020)
Yorkston/Thorne/Khan — Navarasa : Nine Emotions (24th Jan. 2020)
Hey Colossus — Dances / Curses (Nov. 6, 2020)
OWEN PALLETT — ISLAND
Ralph of London — The Potato Kingdom (19th June, 2020)
Kilbey Kennedy — „Jupiter 13“ (March 5, 2021)
Sigur Rós — Odin’s Raven Magic (Dec. 4, 2020)
Arca — „Madre“ (22 Jan., 2021)
Cotatcha Orchestra — Bigbandová elektronika / Bigband Electronic
Locate S,1 — Personalia (April 3, 2020
HMLTD — West of Eden (7 Feb., 2020)
OLYMPIC — „Kaťata“ (October 30, 2020)
Noveller — Arrow (June 12, 2020)
Sugai Ken | Lieven Martens — „KAGIROI“ (March 29, 2021)
Chapelier Fou — Meridiens (Feb. 28, 2020)
HMLTD ©Dean Hoy
Cathedral Bells — Velvet Spirit (March 6, 2020)
Vladislav Delay, Sly Dunbar, Robbie Shakespeare — 500~Push~Up
Orwell — Parcelle brillante (24 April 2020)
Tarotplane — „Horizontology“ (February 8, 2021)
Tame Impala — The Slow Rush (Feb 14, 2020)
REBECCA FOON — WAXING MOON (21st Feb., 2020)
Noveller — Arrow (June 7, 2020)
Virginia Plain — Strange Game (Dec. 13, 2019)
Blinker the Star — Juvenile Universe (20 Nov., 2020)
Teho Teardo — Ellipsis dans l’harmonie (March 6th, 2020)
Signe Marie Rustad — When Words Flew Freely (Nov. 15, 2019)
Stian Westerhus — Redundance (March 5, 2020)
Beck — Deep Cuts (March 2020)
Keeley Forsyth — Debris (17 Jan., 2020)
KeiyaA — Forever, Ya Girl (March 27, 2020)
John Craigie — Asterisk the Universe (June 12, 2020)
Ellipsis dans l’harmonie BACK COVER
Paul Weller — „Fat Pop (Volume 1)“ (14th May, 2021)
Horse Lords — „The Common Task“ (March 13, 2020)
Half Japanese — Crazy Hearts (4th Dec., 2020)
Lavender Diamond — Incorruptible Heart (Sept. 2012)
MARY — Die Before Death (September 4, 2020)
The Belmondos — Memory Lane (Nov. 20, 2020)
Troi Irons — Flowers (Sept. 25, 2020)
The Dears — Times Infinity Volume One (September 25, 2015)
The Album Leaf — OST (March 20, 2020)
Joensuu 1685 — ÖB (09 Oct., 2020)
Black Tape For A Blue Girl — „Ashes In The Brittle Air“ [Remaste
Jack Peñate — After You [Expanded Edition] (2020)
Thomas Dybdahl — The Great Plains (Feb 24, 2017)
Lavender Diamond — Now Is the Time (Dec. 4, 2020)
Bowerbirds — „becalmyounglovers“ (April 30th, 2021)
Grimes — Visions (2012)
Grandbrothers — All the Unknown (15 Jan., 2021)
Jessie Ware — Glasshouse (Deluxe; 20 Oct 2017)
Kavus Torabi — Hip to the Jag (May 22, 2020)
Adrian Crowley — „The Watchful Eye of the Stars“ (30th April, 20
Bella White — Just Like Leaving (Sept. 25, 2020)
Pharoah Sanders — „Live In Paris (1975): Lost ORTF Recordings“
Oddfellow’s Casino — The Raven’s Empire (2012)
Calexico / Iron & Wine — Years to Burn (2019)
Chris Potter — There Is a Tide (Dec. 4, 2020)
Amanda Palmer — Forty~Five Degrees: Bushfire Charity Flash Rec.
Veneer — Recovery (April 15, 2020)
Chris Potter — Circuits (Feb. 22, 2019)
Sara Serpa — Recognition (June 5th, 2020)
BECK — Uneventful Days (St. Vincent Remix)
God Is an Astronaut — „Ghost Tapes #10“ (Feb. 12, 2021)
Oddfellow’s Casino — Burning! Burning! (7 Aug., 2020)
This Will Destroy You — Vespertine (June 9, 2020)
Scoundrels — Music From The Arch (Sept. 11, 2020)
Teen Daze — Morning World
Sara Serpa, Ingrid Laubrock, Erik Friedlander — Close Up (2018)
Rufus Wainwright — Unfollow the Rules [Deluxe Version] (July 9,
THE DEARS — ‘Lovers Rock’ (May 15, 2020)
Greenslade — Time and Tide (2 cd, 1975/2015)
Bellows — The Rose Gardener (Feb. 22, 2019)
Ariel Pink — House Arrest (2002/Mar 2011/April 24, 2020)
The Jayhawks — XOXO (July 10, 2020)
Béla Fleck & Toumani Diabaté — The Ripple Effect [2LP, March 27,
Budokan Boys — So Broken Up About You Dying (2 Oct. 2020)
John Vanderslice — „Time Time is Lonely“ (June 12th, 2001)
Sonny Landreth — Elemental Journey (May 22, 2012)
Laura Fell — Safe from Me (Nov. 20, 2020)
Laura Perrudin — Perspectives & Avatars (Oct. 9, 2020)
CocoRosie — Put the Shine On (6 March 2020)
Anthony Moore — Out (20 Nov., 2020)
Soho Rezanejad — „Perform and Surrender“ (Dec. 04, 2020)
Whyte Horses — Hard Times (17th of Jan., 2020)
Tindersticks — Distractions (Feb. 19, 2021)
„Mojo Presents Steve Marriott, Small Faces, Humble Pie: Afterglo
Jessie Ware — What’s Your Pleasure (June 26, 2020)
Corb Lund — Agricultural Tragic (June 26, 2020)
Scott Matthew — Ode to Others (April 20, 2018)
Thurston Moore — „screen time“ (Feb. 5, 2021)
Raed Yassin — Archeophony (Nov. 27, 2020)
Thomas Dybdahl — Fever (March 13, 2020)
Born Ruffians — Juice (April 3, 2020)
Growing Up Live — 3LP Half Speed Remaster (Nov. 27, 2020)
Michael Landau — The Michael Landau Group Live (Oct. 31, 2006)
The Weather Station — Ignorance (Feb. 5, 2021)
Marc Ribot’s Ceramic Dog — What I Did On My Long ‘Vacation’ EP
The Beths — Jump Rope Gazers (July 10th, 2020)
Coultrain — „Phantasmagoria“ (April 9, 2021)
Carissa Johnson — A Hundred Restless Thoughts (Dec. 18th, 2019)
Anna Calvi — „Hunted“
Christine Ott — Chimères (pour ondes Martenot) (May 22, 2020)
Eleanor Friedberger — Rebound (May 4th, 2018)
Smashing Pumpkins — Cyr (27th Nov., 2020)
Calexico — Seasonal Shift (Dec. 4th, 2020)
Futurebirds — Teamwork (Jan. 15th, 2020)
Emmy the Great — Second Love (March 11, 2016)
My Morning Jacket — The Waterfall II (Aug. 28, 2020)
ELEANOR FRIEDBERGER — NEW VIEW (January 22, 2016)
Cornershop — „England Is a Garden“ (6th March, 2020)
Negativland — The World Will Decide (Nov. 13, 2020)
Kill The Dandies! — Your Blood My Veins (Feb. 5, 2021)
Chris Brokaw — „Puritan“ (Jan. 15, 2021)
Cormons Jazz & Wine of Peace festival 2008 ©Ziga Koritnik
Andrej Šeban — Triplet (March 22, 2019) inner cover
The Heliocentrics — Infinity Of Now (Feb. 14, 2020)
Jenny Lewis — On the Line (March 22, 2019)
Dungen — Live (March 13, 2020)
Jake Blount — Spider Tales (May 29, 2020)
Andrej Šeban — Triplet (March 22, 2019) cover
Sonny Landreth — Blacktop Run (Feb. 21, 2020)
Læetitia Shériff — Pandemonium, Solace And Stars
Gerald Cleaver — Signs (March 27, 2020)
The Crossing & Donald Nally — James Primosch: Carthage (05/2020)
The Drums — Brutalism (April 5, 2019)
Eli Winter — „Unbecoming“ (21 Aug 2020)
Laila Sakini ‎— Into the Traffic, Under the Moonlight (10 Dec.,
DAGMAR VOŇKOVÁ — ARCHA (2020)
Immigrant Union — Judas (June 19, 2020)
KMRU — Peel (18th Sept., 2020)
Spy Machines — Spy Machines (April 3, 2020)
Negativland — True False (25 Oct., 2019)
David Cross & Peter Banks — Crossover (17 Jan., 2020)
Jake Blount — Spider Tales (May 29, 2020)
EELS — Earth To Dora (Oct. 30th, 2020)
Art Feynman — Half Price At 3:30 (June 26th, 2020)
Jorge Elbrecht — „Presentable Corpse — 002“ (28th May 2021)
Jerskin Fendrix — Winterreise (April 17, 2020)
Julianna Barwick — Healing Is a Miracle [Japan Edition] (2020)
Joy Division — Closer (40th Anniversary) [2020 Digital Master] (
Jorge Elbrecht — „Presentable Corpse — 002“ (28th May 2021)
Sophie Tassignon — Mysteries Unfold (April 24, 2020)
Anika Nilles — For a Colorful Soul (Jan. 10, 2020)
Ospalý pohyb — Ostrava (October 17, 2016)
Deradoorian — Find the Sun (Sept. 18, 2020)
All The Best, Isaac Hayes (A Spoken Word Album)
Ospalý pohyb — ø (May 24, 2016)
James Harries — Superstition (Jan. 31, 2020)
Zoongideewin — Bleached Wavves (June 19, 2020)
Nitin Sawhney — Live At Ronnie Scotts (Nov. 17, 2017)
HOUPACÍ KONĚ: SOULKOSTEL 8 11 2019 (April 25, 2020)
Recondite — Dwell (Jan. 24, 2020)
Kacey Johansing — No Better Time (Nov. 20, 2020)
Yoko Ono, Kim Gordon & Thurston Moore — YOKOKIMTHURSTON
Com Truise — Persuasion System (May 17, 2019)
Kazuomi Eshima & Masahiko Takeda — Inheritance for Soundscape
Erik Griswold — All’s Grist That Comes To The Mill (03/20, 2020)
Caspian — Dust and Disquiet (Sept. 25, 2015)
SLY & THE FAMILY DRONE FC (17, 2020)
Låpsley — Through Water (March 20th, 2020)
Sarah Longfield — Dusk (April 22, 2020)
Soundwalk Collective with Patti Smith — Peradam (Sept. 4th, 2020
M. Caye Castagnetto — „Leap Second“ (Jan. 22, 2021)
Erik Griswold — All’s Grist That Comes To The Mill (03/20 2020)
Circa Waves — Sad/Happy (March 13th, 2020)
Bob Dylan — Rough and Rowdy Ways (June 19th, 2020)
Kurt Wagner of Lambchop. ©Picture Joanna Bongard
Art d’Ecco — „In Standard Definition“ (April 23rd, 2021)
Sol Seppy — The Bells Of 12 (June 21, 2019)
930 x 827 tmavší podklad.jpg
P/\ST — /Expedice do vnitrobloku\ (Oct. 5, 2019)
Roland Tings — Salt Water (Nov. 8, 2019)
Eamon O’Leary — The Silver Sun (Jan. 15, 2021)
Martin Barre — „Live At The Factory Underground“ (Feb. 14, 2019)
M.Ward — Migration of Souls (April 3, 2020)
33EMYBW — Golem (25 Sept., 2019)
The Third Mind — The Third Mind (Feb. 14, 2020)
CocoRosie — Restless (Feb. 12th, 2020)
Sean Henry — A Jump from the High Dive (Nov. 1, 2019)
Mike Cooper — Playing With Water (Nov. 6, 2020)
Ben Featherstone — Prisoner to the Wind (Dec. 20th, 2019)
Ailbhe Reddy — Personal History (23 Oct., 2020)
Thomas Köner — Motus (Feb. 20, 2020)
Lanterns On the Lake — Spook the Herd (21 Feb., 2020)
A Winged Victory for the Sullen — The Undivided Five
Nick Hakim | Roy Nathanson — „Small Things“ (April 16, 2021)
The Telescopes — Songs of Love and Revolution (Feb. 5, 2021)
Of Montreal — Ur Fun (Jan. 17, 2020)
Ryan Adams — „Big Colors!“ (June 11, 2021)
Lanterns On the Lake — Spook the Herd (21 Feb., 2020)
Seaway — Big Vibe (Oct. 16th, 2020)
Surprise Chef — Daylight Savings (Oct. 16, 2020)
Ryley Walker — „Course in Fable“ (April 2, 2021)
Sega Bodega — Salvador (Feb. 14, 2020)
Klara Lewis — Ingrid (1st May 2020)
Vivienne Wilder — Postromantic (June 12, 2020)
Prophecy Playground — Comfort Zone (Feb. 15, 2020)
Kurt Vile — Speed, Sound, Lonely KV EP (2nd Oct., 2020)
Steve Earle — Townes (May 8, 2009)
Neil Young & Crazy Horse — Colorado (Oct. 25, 2019)
Oiseaux~Tempęte — From Somewhere Invisible (19 Dec., 2019)
Hamilton Leithauser (The Walkmen) — Dear God (Aug. 2015)
Steve Earle & The Dukes — Ghosts of West Virginia (May 22, 2020)
Nitin Sawhney — „Immigrants“ (19 March, 2021)
Real Estate — The Main Thing (28th Feb., 2020)
Myopia Exclusive Crystal Clear Vinyl
The Kills — Ash And Ice (June 3, 2016)
James Harries — Before We Were Lovers
Irena and Vojtěch Havlovi — „Melodies in the Sand“ (March 5, 202
ANNA CALVI — HUNTED (March 6, 2020)
Elysian Fields — Transience Of Life (May 7, 2020)
SOFIA TALVIK — Paws of a Bear (Sept. 27, 2019)
Badge Époque Ensemble — Self Help (Nov. 20, 2020)
Ali Holder — Uncomfortable Truths (April 10, 2020)
Sungazers — Wasting Space (May 18, 2020)
Really From — „Really From“ (March 12, 2021)
Neil Young — Homegrown (19th June, 2020)
Lightning Bolt — Hypermagic Mountain (October 18, 2005, March
Sixth June ‎— Trust (17 Jan 2020)
Bellows — The Rose Gardener (Feb. 22, 2019)
Tatsuhisa Yamamoto 山本達久 — Ashioto (Oct. 21, 2020)
From Atomic — Deliverance (April 2020)
Cermaque — Lament (22nd May, 2020)
Alfie Templeman — „Forever Isn’t Long Enough“ (May 7th, 2021)
Tatsuhisa Yamamoto 山本達久 — Ashioto (Oct. 21, 2020)
Laurel Halo — Raw Silk Uncut Wood (July 13, 2018)
Anna von Hausswolff — Dead Magic (March 2018)
Moses Sumney — græ Part 1 & 2 (May 15, 2020)
Lauren Lakis — Daughter Language (Jan. 22, 2021)
Elizabeth And The Catapult — Like It Never Happened (24/01/2014)
David Thomas Broughton & Juice Vocal Ensemble — Sliding The Same
Marissa Nadler — unearthed (March 20, 2020)
Lake Street Dive — „Obviously“ (March 12th, 2021)
Jaye Jayle — Prisyn (Aug. 7, 2020)
Sweet Trip — You Will Never Know Why (Jan. 22, 2021)
PETR KALANDRA — Petr Kalandra & ASPM 1982 — 1990 (Feb. 26, 2020)
Justine Vandergrift — Stay (Feb. 7th, 2019)
Iceage — „Seek Shelter“ (May 7th, 2021)
Hamilton Leithauser — The Loves of Your Life (10 April 2020)
Bombay Bicycle Club — Everything Else Has Gone Wrong (01/24/20)
Gráinne Duffy — Where I Belong (Sept. 19, 2017)
Anthony Gomes — Containment Blues (2020)
Sports Team — Deep Down Happy (5th June, 2020)
Nonlocal Forecast — Bubble Universe! (March 1, 2019)
Lionel Loueke — HH (Sept. 11, 2020)
Al Di Meola — Across the Universe: The Beatles, Vol. 2 (2020)
LENKA NOVÁ — DOPISY (21.03./24.04., 2020)
Genesis Revisited: Live at The Royal Albert Hall — 2020 Remaster
Tedeschi Trucks Band — „The Fireside Sessions [Episode One / Epi
Kim Myhr & Australian Art Orchestra — Vesper (17.04. 2020)
Veronica Swift — „This Bitter Earth“ (March 19, 2021)
The Electric Soft Parade — Stages (Jan. 8, 2020)
Villagers — The Art Of Pretending To Swim (03/19, 2020) DELUXE E
Mountaineer — Bloodletting (May 22nd, 2020)
Ólafur Arnalds — Some Kind Of Peace (6 Nov., 2020)
Steve Hackett — Under A Mediterranean Sky (Jan. 22, 2021)
Anna von Hausswolff — All Thoughts Fly (Sept. 25, 2020)
Tara Fuki — Motyle (Nov. 13th, 2020)
Peel Dream Magazine — Agitprop Alterna (3rd April 2020)
Nicholas Cords — Touch Harmonious (Nov. 6, 2020)
Destroyer — Have We Met (Jan. 31, 2020)
John McLaughlin, Shankar Mahadevan, Zakir Hussain — Is That So?
THE SHAKING SENSATIONS — “How Are We to Fight the Blight” 2xLP
Alphaxone — Dystopian Gate (Jan. 14, 2020)
Lanterns On The Lake — The Realist (Dec. 18, 2020)
A Certain Ratio — ACR Loco (25th Sept., 2020)
THE SCHRAMMS — “Omnidirectional” (June 21st, 2019)
David Thomas Broughton — The Complete Guide To Insufficiency /re
Aimee Mann — Bachelor No. 2 (20th Anniversary Edition) (Nov. 27,
The Chap — Digital Technology (10 Jan., 2020)
Joan As Police Woman — Cover Two (May 1, 2020)
Isobutane — Mementos (Jan. 29, 2021)
The Shivas — “Dark Thoughts” (October 25, 2019)
Kim Myhr & Australian Art Orchestra — Vesper (17.04. 2020)
Lucy Railton — Paradise 94 (22 Mar 2018)
Drive~By Truckers — The Unraveling (cover)
The Shins — “Heartworms” (March 10, 2017)
Elizabeth & The Catapult — „Sincerely, E“ (March 5, 2021)
The Weeknd — Beauty Behind the Madness (Aug. 28th, 2015)
M. Ward — Think of Spring (Dec. 11, 2020)
The Shins — “The Worms Heart” (Jan. 18, 2018)
Psychic Markers — Psychic Markers (29 May, 2020)
Julianna Barwick — Circumstance Synthesis (Dec. 20, 2019)
The Weeknd — Beauty Behind the Madness (Aug. 28th, 2015)
Meredith Monk & Bang on a Can All~Stars — Memory Game (03/27/20)
Drive~By Truckers — The Unraveling (cover)
The Heliocentrics — Infinity Of Now (Feb. 14, 2020)
JACKSON VANHORN: “AFTER THE REHEARSAL”
Eivind Aarset & Jan Bang — Snow Catches On Her Eyelashes (2020)
Richard Barbieri ‎— Past Imperfect / Future Tense (Mar 2020)
Kevin Morby — Sundowner (October 16, 2020)
Paul Weller — On Sunset [Deluxe Edition] (3rd July, 2020)
EVA ROHLEDER — Babské ucho (Nov. 9th, 2020)
Laurel Halo — Possessed (April 10, 2020)
Helena Deland — Someone New (16 Oct., 2020)
Stereolab — „Electrically Possessed [Switched On Volume 4]“ (Feb
Devendra Banhart — Ma (September 13, 2019)
Field Music — Making a New World (Jan. 10, 2020)
Gráinne Duffy — Voodoo Blues (Oct. 15, 2020)
The Memories — Pickles & Pies (May 29, 2020)
Norah Jones — Pick Me Up Off the Floor (June 12th, 2020)
Highasakite — Uranium Heart (Feb. 1st, 2019)
Pearl Jam — Gigaton (March 27, 2020)
Walter Martin — The World at Night (Jan. 31, 2020)
The Tiger Lillies — Cold Night in Soho (10 Feb. 2017)
Silkworm — In The West (24 Jan., 2020)
Marillion — „Marbles“ (30th April, 2021, 3 LP)
Chavez — Gone Glimmering [Expanded Edition] (Oct. 23, 2020)
FRÀNÇOIS & THE ATLAS MOUNTAINS — BANANE BLEUE (26th Feb., 2021)
Kamaal Williams — Wu Hen (July 24, 2020)
Caspian — On Circles (January 24, 2020)
Jennifer Curtis & Tyshawn Sorey: Invisible Ritual (2020)
DAVID POMAHAČ — DO TMY JE DALEKO (Feb. 7, 2020)
Don Gallardo — The Lonesome Wild (April 2, 2020)
Damon Locks Black Monument Ensemble — Where Future Unfolds (2019
The Tiger Lillies — Edgar Allan Poe’s Haunted Palace
Mark Lanegan — Straight Songs Of Sorrow (8th May, 2020)
I Break Horses — Warnings (08 May 2020)
Maxïmo Park — „Nature Always Wins“ (26th Feb., 2021)
Avishai Cohen — „Two Roses“ (April 16, 2021)
Spiritualized — „Lazer Guided Melodies“ (March 30, 1992, Remaste
Cocteau Twins — Head Over Heels
Angel Olsen — „Song of the Lark and Other Far Memories“ (May 7,
Cocteau Twins — Treasure
Sarah Jarosz — World On The Ground (June 5, 2020)
The Innocence Mission — See You Tomorrow (Jan. 17, 2020)
Daniel Lanois — „Heavy Sun“ (March 19, 2021)
Father John Misty — „Off~Key In Hamburg“ (March 23, 2020)
M G Boulter — „Clifftown“ (April 23rd, 2021)
False Heads — It’s All There But You’re Dreaming (13 March 2020)
The Tiger Lillies — Covid~19 (April 10, 2020)
Portico Quartet — „Terrain“ (May 28, 2021)
Hawkwind — Acoustic Daze (25 Oct. 2019)
I Am Planet — „Záznamy ticha“ (30 April, 2021)
The Avalanches — We Will Always Love You (11 Dec., 2020)
Beautify Junkyards — Cosmorama (15th Jan., 2021)
Portico Quartet — „Terrain“ (May 28, 2021)
Wendy Eisenberg — Auto (Oct. 16, 2020)
I Am Planet — „Záznamy ticha“ (30 April, 2021)
TANYA DONELLY: Swan Song Series bonus tracks (FC)
Kate Amrine — This Is My Letter to the World (Jan. 24, 2020)
Liz Phair — „Soberish“ (4th June 2021)
CONCEPT ART ORCHESTRA — „100 YEARS“ (11.12.2020)
Juliana Hatfield — „Blood“ (May 14, 2021)
Wrekmeister Harmonies — We Love to Look at the Car (2020)
False Heads — It’s All There But You’re Dreaming (13 March 2020)
WHITE TAIL FALLS — Age Of Entitlement (May 29, 2020)
Susan Alcorn Quintet — Pedernal (Nov. 13, 2020)
Coloured Clocks — Flora (May 2, 2020)
Daniel Knox — Won’t You Take Me with You (Jan. 15, 2021)
Indoor Voices — Animal (Feb. 14, 2020)
Jane Weaver — „Flock“ (March 5, 2021)
ELYSIAN FIELDS — Pink Air
Midlake — Antiphon (Nov. 4, 2013)
Jonathan Wilson — Rare Birds (March 2nd, 2018)
KIESLOWSKI Tiché lásky
Fiona Apple — Fetch The Bolt Cutters (17 Apr., 2020)
Lucrecia Dalt — Syzygy (Oct. 15, 2013)
Hayden Thorpe — Diviner (24 May 2019)
Cocteau Twins — Garlands (1982, Reissue 2020)
Alessandra Leão ‎— Macumbas e Catimbós (24/05/2019)
Cowboy Junkies — Ghosts (30 Mar 2020)
Liz Simmons — „Poets“ (March 1, 2021)
Laura Marling — Song for Our Daughter (April 10th, 2020)
Wendy Eisenberg — Its Shape Is Your Touch (Oct. 2018)
Baxter Dury — The Night Chancers (20 March 2020)
San Fermin — San Fermin (Nov. 11, 2013)
Sara Bareilles — What’s Inside Songs From Waitress (11/06, 2015)
Joe Strummer — „Assembly“ (26 March, 2021)
The Heliocentrics — Telemetric Sounds (Aug. 7, 2020)
JAMES YORKSTONE — The Wide, Wide River (22nd Jan., 2021)
The Dream Syndicate — „The Universe Inside“ (April 10, 2020)
Black Sabbath: Black Sabbath (13 Feb., 1970)
Third Coast Percussion & Devonté Hynes — Fields (Oct. 11, 2019)
White Tail Falls — Age of Entitlement (May 29, 2020)
MUFF — Fatalust (Nov. 1, 2019) cover
Ben Watt — Storm Damage (31st Jan., 2020)
San Fermin — The Cormorant I & II (Oct. 4, 2019/April 3, 2020)
Saša Niklíčková — Zmačkaná žena (Oct. 26, 2020)
Stephen Duffy — I Love My Friends [Expanded Ed] (10 May 2019)
I Break Horses — Chiaroscuro
Sea Wolf — Through a Dark Wood (March 20, 2020)
Ezra Furman — Sex Education [Original Soundtrack] (April 24, 202
Tom Petty — „Southern Accents“ (March 26, 1985/2006)
Dan Blake — „Da Fé“ (March 12, 2021)
Yorkston | Thorne | Khan — Navarasa : Nine Emotions (2020)
Jetstream Pony — Jetstream Pony (May 22, 2020)
Anupam Shobhakar — „Dawn of Paradise“ (Nov. 13, 2020)
Genghis Tron — „Dream Weapon“ (March 26, 2021)
HAIM — „Women in Music Pt. III“ [Expanded Edition] (June 26, 202
Stove — ‘s Favorite Friend (Oct. 31, 2018)
ANASTASIA MINSTER — Father ©Michael Haley
Jonathan Wilson — Dixie Blur (March 6, 2020)
Ethel Cain — „Inbred“ (April 23, 2021)
Fruition — Broken At The Break Of Day (Jan. 23, 2020)
Weyes Blood — “Wild Time” from Titanic Rising
1600 x 1600 High Violet (10th Anniversary Expanded Edition).jpg
ROBERT FRIPP — THE KITCHEN (New York, NY) — 05 FEB 1978
Sara Bareilles — More Love: Songs from Little Voice Season One (
The Sufis — Double Exposure (Jan. 24, 2020)
ÁSGEIR: IN THE SILENCE
Martin Barre — Roads Less Travelled (26 Oct. 2018)
Loney dear — „A Lantern and a Bell“ (March 26, 2021)
Loveblind / Sleeping Visions (March 27, 2020)
Jon Regen — Higher Ground (October 4, 2019)
Walter Martin — The World at Night (Jan. 31, 2020)
Asher Gamedze – Dialectic Soul (July 10, 2020)
Frances Quinlan — Likewise (Jan. 31, 2020)
Jon Regen — Higher Ground (October 4, 2019)
Motorpsycho — „Kingdom of Oblivion“ (April 16th, 2021)
KING CRIMSON, The Night Watch
Brooklyn Raga Massive — In D (Nov. 21, 2020)
Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith — The Mosaic of Transformation (May 15, 20
Matt Berninger — Serpentine Prison (Oct. 16, 2020)
Susan Alcorn, Leila Bordreuil, Ingrid Laubrock
Rizan Said — Saz û Dîlan (Oct. 11, 2019)
Nick Cave | Warren Ellis — „Carnage“ (Feb. 25, 2021)
Ásgeir — Bury the Moon (7 Feb., 2020)
Sharon Van Etten — „epic Ten“ (April 16, 2021)
Riva Taylor — ‘This Woman’s Heart .1’ (27 Mar 2020)
Wrangler — A Situation (28 Feb., 2020)
Juraj Griglák, From The Bottom (Sept. 16, 2019)
Cheerleader — Almost Forever (Feb. 7, 2020)
Queer Jane — Amen Dolores (March 27, 2020)
BECCA STEVENS — WONDERBLOOM (March 20th 20, 2020)
Mogwai — „As the Love Continues“ [Deluxe Edition] (19/02/2021)
Juraj Griglák — From the Bottom (Sept. 16, 2019)
Einstürzende Neubauten — Alles In Allem (May 29th, 2020)
Torres — Three Futures (29th Sept. 2017)
Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith — The Kid (October 6, 2017)
Bison Bone — Find Your Way Out (Sept. 25, 2020)
Oh Wonder — No One Else Can Wear Your Crown [Deluxe Edition]
These New Puritans — The Cut (2016~2019) (14 Feb. 2020)
Vennart — „In The Dead, Dead Wood“ (6th Nov., 2020)
Laetitia Shériff — Stillness (Nov. 6, 2020)
Gillian Frame — „Pendulum“
Thin Lear — Wooden Cave (24th July, 2020)
Torres — Silver Tongue (Jan. 31, 2020)
Kings of Leon — „When You See Yourself“ (March 5, 2021)
King Khan — The Infinite Ones (Oct. 30, 2020)
Anoushka Shankar — Love Letters (7 Feb., 2020)
Free To Grow — Imperfection (Aug. 7, 2020)
Dan Croll — Grand Plan (21 Aug., 2020)
Andrej Šeban — „Zep Tepi“ (May 21, 2021)
Lilien Rosarian ~ A Day in Bel Bruit (June 9, 2019)
Form and Chaos — „Gateways“ (March 16, 2021)
Jim Noir — A.M Jazz (Dec. 20, 2019)
Brad Mehldau & Orpheus Chamber Orchestra — „Variations on a Mela
Shemekia Copeland — Uncivil War (October 23rd, 2020)
I Like to Sleep — Daymare (April 17, 2020)
Psychedelic Porn Crumpets — SHYGA! The Sunlight Mound (5th Feb.,
Kaki King — Modern Yesterdays (Oct. 23, 2020)
Bill MacKay and Katinka Kleijn — STIR (Oct. 17, 2019)
VARIOUS ARTISTS: IN THE MOOD FOR LOVE (Import)
The Mountain Goats — Getting Into Knives (Oct. 23, 2020)
Ben Sidran — Blue Camus (Oct. 2014)
Varga Marián — Solo in Concert (1. feb. 2018)
Paris Jackson — Wilted (Nov. 13, 2020)
No~Man — Love You To Bits (Nov. 22, 2019)
Death Cab for Cutie — The Georgia EP (Dec. 4th, 2020)
Blackbird & Crow — Ailm (17 Jan 2020)
Liz Longley — Liz Longley (March 17, 2015)
Van der Graaf Generator — Recorded Live in Concert
Bruce Springsteen — Letter to You (Oct. 23, 2020)
Amy LaVere — Painting Blue (27 Mar 2020)
The Chills — „Scatterbrain“ (May 14, 2021)
100 Gecs — 1000 gecs (May 31, 2019)
Devendra Banhart — Vast Ovoid (July 24, 2020)
Cold Chisel — Blood Moon (6 Dec., 2019)
Cold War Kids — New Age Norms 1 (Nov. 1, 2019)
Blackbird & Crow © 2020 Author: Megan Doherty
WaqWaq Kingdom — Essaka Hoisa (Nov. 15, 2019)
The Mountain Goats — Songs for Pierre Chuvin (April 10, 2020)
Hawktail — Formations (Jan. 10, 2020)
Morrissey — I Am Not a Dog On a Chain (March 20th, 2020)
Jack Peñate — After You (29th Nov. 2019)
Villagers — Darling Arithmetic [Deluxe Version] (April 10, 2015)
Ashley Paul — Window Flower (May 13, 2020)
Daniel Bachman — The Morning Star (July 27, 2018)
Roger Eno | Brian Eno — Mixing Colours (20 March, 2020)
Darnielle, Jon Wurster, Matt Douglas, Pete Hughes. ©Josh Sanseri
Joe Bonamassa & The Sleep Eazys — Easy To Buy, Hard To Sell
Axel Flóvent — You Stay by the Sea (15 Jan., 2021)
Preston Lovinggood — Consequences (June 10, 2018)
Martin Barre — Away With Words
Ezra Bell — This Way to Oblivion (3rd April, 2020)
All Them Witches — Nothing as the Ideal (Sept. 4, 2020)
Shafiq Husayn — The Loop (March 29, 2019)
Sinikka Langeland — „Wolf Rune“ (April 9, 2021)
Queer Jane — Home (Dec. 1, 2016)
RADEK BABORÁK a jeho ORQUESTRINA na PIAZZOLLOVSKÉ ALBUM.
Damien Jurado — „The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania“ (2021)
Moonchild — Little Ghost (6th Sept. 2019)
Evergreen — Overseas (15 Jun 2018)
Mr. Alec Bowman — I Used to Be Sad & Then I Forgot (May 1, 2020)
Real Estate — „Half A Human“ (March 26, 2021)
The Waterboys — Good Luck, Seeker (Deluxe) (Aug. 21, 2020)
Dave Scanlon — Pink in each, bright blue, bright green (Jan. 15,
Ani DiFranco — „Revolutionary Love“ (Jan. 29, 2021)
CYHSY, New Fragility (Coke Bottle Clear) 2021
Maarja Nuut & Ruum — World Inverted (11th Sept., 2020)
Richard Youngs — Dissident (Jan. 25, 2019)
Kuře v hodinkách — Flamengo
Daniel Bachman — Green Alum Springs (June 6, 2020)
Midwife — Forever (April 10, 2020)
MORCHEEBA: Blackest Blue (May 14, 2021) (blue vinyl)
Kamasi Washington — Becoming (Music from the Netflix Original Do
Michal Mihok — „The Imprint“ (April 29, 2019)
Siobhan Wilson — The Departure (10 May, 2019)
Steve Harley — „Uncovered“ (21 Feb., 2020)
Kris Delmhorst — Blood Test
Martin Burlas & Musica falsa et ficta — Hexenprozesse
I Don’t Know How but They Found Me — Razzmatazz (Oct. 23, 2020)
Songdog — Happy Ending (27th March, 2020)
Zuzana Mikulcová — Slová
Holly Herndon — PROTO (Winner of Tais Awards 2020)
Rory Block — Prove It On Me (March 27, 2020)
Cate Le Bon — Here It Comes Again (2020)
Tunng — Tunng Presents…DEAD CLUB (Nov. 6, 2020)
Sean O’Hagan — Radum Calls, Radum Calls (2019)
Lost Horizons — In Quiet Moments (Dec. 4, 2020/2021)
The Black Keys — „Delta Kream“ (May 14th, 2021)
Sweet Trip — „A Tiny House, in Secret Speeches, Polar Equals“ (M
Nicey Nice World — Obelisks and Asterisks (Sept. 22, 2020)
Pink Floyd — Delicate Sound of Thunder (1988)
Robert Plant — Carry Fire (2 LP, 13/10/2017)
Ben Sidran — Who’s the Old Guy Now (Nov. 20, 2020)
Le Butcherettes — DON’T BLEED EP (14 Feb 2020)
Devin Sinha — The Seventh Season (Oct. 21, 2014)
Marillion — „With Friends At St David’s“ (Nov. 13, 2020)
Mike Polizze — Long Lost Solace Find (July 31, 2020)
Typhoon — „Sympathetic Magic“ (Jan. 22nd, 2021)
Arab Strap — „As Days Get Dark“ (March 5, 2021)
First Aid Kit — Stay Gold (2014)
Land of Talk — Indistinct Conversations (July 31, 2020)
Kuře v hodinkách — Flamengo
The League Of Assholes — „CODA“ (Jan. 20, 2021)
Luke Haines — Beat Poetry For Survivalists (6 Mar. 2020)
Suzi Quatro — „The Devil in Me“ [Japan Edition] (Jan. 22, 2021)
Devin Sinha — Liminal Space (Oct. 23, 2020)
Sarah Neufeld — „Detritus“ (May 14, 2021)
Nicole Atkins — Italian Ice (29 May 2020)
Maria Schneider Orchestra — Data Lords (24th July, 2020)
Lambchop — TRIP (Nov. 13th, 2020)
Son Lux — Learning Structures vol. 1~4 (Oct. 11th, 2019)
BC Camplight — Shortly After Takeoff (24 April 2020)
Delta Spirit — What Is There (Sept. 11th, 2020)
The Hold Steady — „Open Door Policy“ (Feb. 19, 2021)
The Magnetic Fields — Quickies (May 15, 2020)
learning structures, vol. 3 distance between us (Oct. 11, 2019)
Cold War Kids — New Age Norms 2 (Aug. 21, 2020)
learning structures, vol. 2: end firma
Suns Of The Tundra — „Murmuration“ (Nov. 15, 2019)
Becca Mancari — The Greatest Part (June 26, 2020)
learning structures, vol. 3: distance between us
Severin Bells — A Brighter Side to the Unknown (24th Oct., 2020)
The Apache Relay — Apache Relay (April 22, 2014)
Thurston Moore — By The Fire (Sept. 25, 2020)
Kurt Rosenwinkel Trio — Angels Around (May 8, 2020)
Frazey Ford — U kin B the Sun (Feb. 7th, 2020)
Lizzy Farrall — Bruise (March 27, 2020)
Alice Peacock — Minnesota (Sept. 20th, 2019)
Devon Williams — A Tear in the Fabric (May 1, 2020)
Gwenifer Raymond — Strange Lights Over Garth Mountain (2020)
LENKA DUSILOVÁ — ŘEKA (Nov. 6th, 2020)
STEREOLAB: Oscillons from the Anti~Sun
Hallelujah the Hills — A Band Is Something to Figure Out (2016)
Loveblind: Visions
Lilly Hiatt — Walking Proof (27 March, 2020)
Mekons — Deserted (March 29, 2019)
Loveblind: Visions
Throwing Muses — Sun Racket (Sept. 4, 2020)
Sean McMahon ― You Will Know When You’re There (March 1, 2019)
Deradoorian — Find the Sun (Sept. 18, 2020)
The Chats — High Risk Behaviour (March 27, 2020)
Tylor Dory Trio — Unsought Salvation (Dec. 21, 2019)
György Ligeti — Lontano (22. Oct.,1967)
Yves Tumor — Heaven to a Tortured Mind (April 3, 2020)
Cub Sport — LIKE NIRVANA (24 July, 2020)
Guranfoe — Sum of Erda (Dec. 13, 2019)
Susanne Sundfør — Self Portrait (Original Score, 10th Jan. 2020)
Ronnie Godfrey — Shades of Blue (Oct. 25, 2019)
Intocable ― Percepcion (March 15, 2019)
Kibby — „Blabracadabra“ (May 14, 2021)
Father John Misty — God’s Favorite Customer (June 1st, 2018)
Ytamo — Vacant (June 12, 2020)
Pancrace — The Fluid Hammer (09 Sep 2019/2LP)
k.d. lang — „makeover“ (May 28, 2021)
Humanist — Humanist (21 Feb., 2020)
White Lies — To Lose My Life… [10th Anniversary Deluxe Edition]
Slow Pulp — Moveys (Oct. 9, 2020)
Andrej Šeban — Rock and Roll z Rači (11. Sept., 2020)
The Go Betweens — „Liberty Belle And The Black Diamond Express“
Wrekmeister Harmonies — We Love to Look at the Carnage (2020)
Bright Eyes — Down In The Weeds, Where The World Once Was (Aug.
Hallelujah the Hills — I’m You (Nov. 15, 2019)
OWEN PALLETT — Heartland (March 3, 2014)
Siobhan Wilson — There Are No Saints (14 Jul, 2017)
Erlend Apneseth — Fragmentarium (Jan. 31, 2020)
Paul McCartney — McCartney III (18 Dec., 2020)
Amaarae — The Angel You Don’t Know (Nov. 12, 2020)
Delta Spirit — Into The Wide (Deluxe Edition, Sept. 9, 2014)