Shots: Any Second Now / Bana Haffar / Goldston – Jones – Kelley – Larkin / Awakened Souls / Yui Onodera

ANY SECOND NOW – Any Second Now

This album of synth pop genius was released in December but only hit my inbox recently. A London duo of vocalist Steve Olander and synth whizz Alex Hall, Any Second Now take their name from one of the most subtle Vince Clarke-penned moments on Depeche Mode’s 1981 debut, and Any Second Now is resolutely faithful to electronic pop’s best vintages. Containing songs written over the last four decades but which were never recorded, these thirteen songs are filled to bursting point with crystalline, haunting one-note synth melodies and skeletal drum machine rhythms. With the opening and closing instrumental tracks (‘Peking Sunrise’ and ‘Peking Sunset’), Any Second Now isolate the early 1980s’ fascination with travel and far-off, exotic places, while the semi-detached, almost spoken emotional vocal of key tracks ‘Plastic World’ and ‘No Face’ serve as useful reminders of how easily early synth pop evolved out of punk. These songs are all poised perfectly between darkness and lightness, with ‘Who Killed Kennedy?’ tackling one of the most-asked questions of all time with a cheerful, if unresolvable, levity, while the title track is easily one of the most infectiously joyous pop tracks you’ll ever hear. Simply brilliant.

Any Second Now by Any Second Now was released December 17 2022.

https://anysecnow.bandcamp.com/album/any-second-nowanysecnow.bandcamp.com/album/any-second-now

BANA HAFFAR – intimaa’ (Touch)

intimaa’, the latest album from Montreal-based sound artist and modular electronics pioneer Bana Haffar, can be thought of as a sensitive and delicate collision of styles. On the one hand, key pieces like ‘Elemental’ and ‘Lifter’ highlight the vibrant and often unpredictable pathways that can be established by patching a bunch of magical sound-making boxes together; on the other, they are infused with structures, shapes, rhythms, atmospheres, field recordings and melodic detail that nod to traditional Middle Eastern music. As a listener, you can listen intently for these moments, or just appreciate intimaa’ as a richly textured ambient masterpiece.

intimaa’ by Bana Haffar was released May 19 2023 by Touch.

https://banahaffarreleases.bandcamp.com/album/intimaabanahaffarreleases.bandcamp.com/album/intimaa

GOLDSTON / JONES / KELLEY / LARKIN – Miasms (Full Spectrum Records)

Miasms brings together Lori Goldston (cello), Greg Kelley (trumpet), Al Jones (electronics) and Austin Larkin (violin) for four improvised pieces, recorded in 2019. The occasion was an exhibition focused on the remains of a piano which had been dropped from a helicopter onto musician Larry Van Over’s farm in Duvall, Washington in 1968, an extreme artistic gesture that carried more than a whiff of Fluxus about it. The four musicians here are, in part, responding to the visual stimulus of the piano’s shattered remnants, but the main jumping-off point came through Jones attaching various electronic devices to the piano itself. Each piece contains an intense and intricate soundworld that fluctuates between the quiet and the dissonant. On ‘Two’, thick drones emerge from a turbulent, volatile squall of strings, while the comparatively calm ‘Three’ concerns itself with smaller gestures before a disruptive trumpet blast from Kelley forces the adaptable players into a more strident formation.

Miasms by Goldston / Jones / Kelley / Larkin was released August 4 2023 by Full Spectrum Records.

https://fullspectrumrecords.bandcamp.com/album/miasmsfullspectrumrecords.bandcamp.com/album/miasms

AWAKENED SOULS – unlikely places (Past Inside The Present)

awakened souls are a duo of Cynthia Bernard (voice, guitar) and James Bernard (bass, synths, guitar). Inspired by the idea that we can all find creative impulses in the least likely of places if only we took the time to stay present, this collection of ten pieces is perhaps one of the most delicate, contemplative albums I’ve heard. Reassuring and comforting, pieces like ‘waiting’ are nevertheless poised and purposeful, not exercises in empty ambient drifting. An oscillating synth tone on ‘fall asleep, dream’ floats determinedly over soft, undulating sounds and Cynthia’s ethereal vocals, collectively guiding your awareness and providing clarity to the disorganised clutter of your mind. Beyond beatific, and a joy to be in the company of.

unlikely places by awakened souls was released August 16 2023 by Past Inside The Present.

pitp.bandcamp.com/album/unlikely-placeshttps://pitp.bandcamp.com/album/unlikely-places

YUI ONODERA – Mizuniwa (Decaying Spheres)

For Mizuniwa, sound artist Yui Onodera recorded sounds while visiting the Tochigi Prefecture, a landlocked area lying 80km to the north of his Tokyo home. A beautiful, tranquil location encompassing mountains, national parks, water falls and, on the basis of this album, ample sources of inspiration for Onodera. The six pieces here have a life-affirming warmth, full of rich, constantly-moving yet subtle synth layers and naturalistic water sounds. For me, key pieces like ‘Mizuniwa 2’ and ‘Mizuniwa 6’ are sonic embodiments of the concept of shakkei, whereby a background landscape is incorporated into the design of a garden. In this way, Onodera’s pieces encompass distant horizons and close-up details, making for a truly transcendent listening experience.

Mizuniwa by Yui Onodera was released August 4 2023 by Decaying Spheres.

yuionodera.bandcamp.com/album/mizuniwa

Words: Mat Smith

Thanks to Graeme.

(c) 2023 Further.

Touch: Isolation

Touch: Isolation. Photograph by Jon Wozencroft.

As things like self-isolation and social distancing became phrases and concepts the majority of the world has quickly become accustomed to, it’s been the art of the hasty pivot that has characterised lockdown: businesses that relied on face-to-face interactions suddenly thrust themselves into the hitherto unknown territory of digital engagement, restaurants suddenly offered take-out where they previously relied on seated diners, wholesale retailers suddenly became direct-to-customer operations; we have moved from the need to see, touch and meet people to drinking espresso and gin over video conference, walking in the middle of the road to bypass another pedestrian walking toward you, and following authoritarian one-way systems around supermarkets. None of this we could have conceived of a few months ago, yet we are now all – mostly – suddenly expert.

The way we consume and enjoy music was almost immediately disrupted by the measures governments put in place. Gigs and festivals were cancelled; release dates got put back; pressing plants shut down; critical calendar entries like Record Store Day were postponed; venues were almost immediately shuttered. These are existential events for artists, bands, labels, designers and the countless individuals and businesses that support the music industry.

In response, all manner of COVID-19 projects quickly sprang up: compilation releases to support frontline essential workers; isolation playlists were hastily assembled, often comprising lots of soothing ambient music; live-streamed solo bedroom gigs delivered your favourite artist into your front room; noodling Soundcloud tracks appeared with high velocity, the product of idle fingers, a need for expression, boredom and the advantage of a broadband connection.

One very special and highly distinctive project to emerge from this is Touch: Isolation, announced last week by Touch. “The pack of COVID-19 cards came down quite quickly, and we wanted to respond to some immediate problems many of our artists were experiencing,” says Jon Wozencroft, who founded the label 38 years ago, later bringing in Mike Harding to work with him.

Available through Bandcamp for a minimum £20 subscription, all of which is divided up among its contributors, Touch: Isolation consists of at least twenty tracks from Touch artists, each one mastered by Denis Blackham – that, in itself, an example of the label’s dependable obsession with quality presentation despite the speed with which the project was conceived and realised. At the time of writing, releases have already come through from Jana Winderen, Chris Watson, Bana Haffar, Mark Van Hoen and Richard Chartier with tracks incoming from Howlround, Claire M Singer, Fennesz, Oren Ambarchi, Philip Jeck, Carl Michael von Hausswolff and others who have issued released material through Touch.

chriswatson_gobabeb
Touch: Isolation – Chris Watson ‘Gobabeb’. Photograph by Jon Wozencroft.

“By the nature of what we do, it’s quite hand-to-mouth,” Wozencroft continues. “For Mike and I, the project is also a declaration of intent in a personal sense because we’ve both been experiencing some highs and lows in recent months.” Those lows are self-evident and are common to most of us, yet uniquely personalised to our own lives; the Touch highs include recent releases like Eleh’s brilliant Living Space, nurturing new artists on the label and Hildur Gudnadottir‘s success at the Oscars. Wozencroft justifiably calls it the “culmination of years of collaboration and shared ambition”. The idea of Touch going on hiatus just because normal life has been paused would thus have been a terrible, terrible notion.

“Between Mike and I it was kind of a Eureka decision to step ahead and do this,” he continues. “In effect, we pressed the switch in the third week of March and in no time we had a strong response from almost everyone we asked.”

A critical signifier of Touch has always been Wozencroft’s photographic accompaniment to the imprint’s releases, which presented a challenge for Touch: Isolation. “I had to think hard about how the Isolation series could be given a visual counterpoint, given the lockdown restriction,” he says. The result is a series of photographs of trees, leaves, pools, each one of something strangely quotidian yet now, thanks to the lockdown, mostly off limits; each one was taken on March 25 on Hampstead Heath’s West Heath and Golder’s Hill areas, just as the lockdown began.

“I’d been going to Hampstead Heath since being a teenager growing up in North London,” Wozencroft continues. “It was always a special trip, and so it was a challenge to make this familiar space reflect a certain unreality; the suspended state of beauty in the full gleam of the recent sunshine. But also its rarity and rawness as an urban environment in the current conditions. I was also remembering the damage of the Great Storm of 1987 – seeing the evidence of regeneration and a landscape transformed, and that sense of faith in the future.

“For me,” he concludes, “it’s about hope and detail, the hidden and its brilliance.”

Support Touch: Isolation at touchisolation.bandcamp.com

Thanks to Jon, Mike and Philip.

Interview: Mat Smith

(c) 2020 Further.