It’s interesting, I think we have a very different perception and relationship with our own music compared to that which others have with it - I find myself so much more focussed on the intricacies that I’m sure I lose a perspective. My favourite remix I ever did was the one liked least by the band I did it for…some of the more popular tracks I’ve made make me cringe so much I’d like to disown them…

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Foom/Foam ‘S/T’

Available Today!!!
Co-Released with Feeding Tube Records!

Byron Coley has the first word:!

Documentation of a rare summit meet by two of New England’s stranger musical figurines, recorded at the Whitehaus in Jamaica Plain, MA back in 2012. The piece was created as a sort of dub battle showdown, with FOOM’s turntables and Foam’s cassettes & doodads all plugged into a 4 track and lit the fuck up.

The jams here are languidly-paced, in comparison to a lot of contemporary assemblage, and the instant compositions unfold in way that puts one in mind of classic work by the L.A.F.M.S. Too often these days, music with some of the same experimental approach as is heard on FOOM & FOAM is either done at breakneck cartoony speed or stretched out endlessly. And while I like a good head-snapping or an excuse-to-nap as much as the next guy, I prefer it when artists doing abstract work allow you the space to ponder their plunder without making you wallow in it. With that in mind, this album unwraps itself like a precious gift for all to enjoy.

By using previously recorded sounds as source, the artists eradicate both the ability and the necessity of trying to identify the instruments or objects producing the noise here. These are just sounds, freed from their original sonic context by the initial act of recording, now existing as naught-but-signals, to be interpreted by our brains as they see fit to interpret them.

The F&F duo seem to understand this implicitly. And it allows them to manipulate the surface representations of previously-captured events in ways that recall Dennis Duck Goes Disco, Steve Fisk’s 448 Deathless Days and even Orchid Spangiafora’s Flee Past’s Ape Elf. These confusional classics are all of a piece with the work here.

Timeless beauty. All for less than the price of a good over-the-knuckle leather thimble. I’m not sure what you’re waiting for, but get over it.

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Oh how I wish there was a tape release of this.

should have been on both formats, but finances would not allow - feel free to dub up a bootleg, promise we won’t sue!

ONE MORE!
Attilio Novellino & Collin McKelvey
“Metaphysiques Cannibales”
OUT TODAY!

Following up their recent Hypehunt released via Random Numbers, Attilio Novellino and Collin McKelvey take us with Métaphysiques cannibales to a further stage of their collaboration – which started in 2014 – adapting to their work some of the key conceptual assumptions of Eduardo Viveiros de Castro’s same titled essay.

Acoustic instruments, analog synthesizers, modular synthesizers and tape recordings have been used in a composing, editing and mixing procedure typical of musique concrète , combined through different steps with electronic processing and granular synthesis. Rather than expressing a rationality that is strictly informed by rules and syntactic procedures, sound organization is here conceived as both as a dispositif of creation and a practice of knowledge: a triggering device to activate a liberatory dynamics to the recognition of mental patterns and new cognitive habits as the first steps of a transition towards a territory that is free from the narcissistic presence of the observer, and therefore immune to the dominant knowledge paradigms.

Sound as a device to subvert the anthropological habitus , which in fact recalls Eduardo Viveiros de Castro’s point towards a “permanent decolonization of thought” by exposing the authenticity of man’s predatory and cannibalistic acting.

Métaphysiques cannibales , which is out June 1st 2018 through Weird Ear and Kohlhaas, comes in a 300 copies edition on black vinyl, featuring cover artwork by Matteo Castro.

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It’s a deal with 20 characters.

Here’s my new record, available to order from today. Only a short run press of 30 copies :grimacing:

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A sort of 101 for short runs in vinyl would be so handy…

I haven’t found any place in Europe with the availability to do runs of under 100 copies / don’t know any place near me that presses vinyl (based in Spain).

I don’t want to start a new thread for this so I figured I’d chime in. Though a separste thread would be useful in case this gets lots of feedback (?)

ps - @Molotov that’s so beautiful

Under 100 copies you might be better off looking at lathe cut releases… even with like 200+ copies of a pressed record almost the whole price is the setup costs. I think with a run of 100 you’d effectively be paying for them to throw some excess copies away

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https://www.discogs.com/various-The-Date-Fork-Seeps-The-River-Volume-3/release/7556050 I have a handful of copies of this for sale if anyone is interested. ultra-weird short tracks/sounds/noise + locked grooves compilation on which I have 6 endless locked grooves :slight_smile:

I’ve been blessed to self release two Vinyl’s on my label I set up

Does pressing 100 12 inches, never completing the art for them and sticking them in a closet count? I’m waiting for the trendsetting estate sale crowd to catch on.

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short runs of vinyl is indeed a bit tricky. but in the niches that we operate in a necessity.
i still have to see the modular bedroom producer who sells 300 12" on his/her own …

one provider of short runs i came across is http://vinyl.express/packages12/
ordered a run of 50 from them a few weeks back, will report once they are here.

https://www.mobineko.com seems to have a good reputation.

http://discarchive.de in berlin does beautiful lathe cuts.

hope that helps …

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I went through Gotta Groove who were fantastic especially as a first-timer. They will do runs of 100 for a reasonable price. (They also seem familiar with weirdo music and put time into making a record full of clicks, screeches and drones sound really nice!)

Now that I have it, doing something with it is something else altogether but the record was well handled IMHO.

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Yeah, I’d agree it is a necessity.

I was mainly asking because I have seen lots of independent bandcamp musicians selling fancy short runs and always wondered how they got around to getting it in vinyl. Would look forward to your comments on your batch of 50.

I see lathe seems the way to go, but alas I’d kind of feel bad selling something that I know will degrade in time idk.

@lettersonsounds looks good!

Current lathe cuts can be just as durable as commercially pressed records, just have to go to a good place and get good quality materials.

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The wonderful new album by Paperbark was released today via my label. And I’m utterly proud to be able to share it with you.

Made with various Ciat Lonbarde instruments, a Buchla Music Easel, a Verbos modular system and Elektron Octatrack.

It is available on Vinyl & Tape. And downloads are free for the first two weeks. Thank you!

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I posted this in the new releases thread, but as a vinyl re-issue it should probably go here instead :face_with_hand_over_mouth:

For those interested, this could be considered an antithesis of gear fetishism, as the entire album was composed using one open source VST instrument as the sole sound source.

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the first vinyl release on my new label, greyfade:

the label will be focusing on vinyl + high-resolution digital editions of algorithmic composition, experimental electronic, and minimalist forms of acoustic and chamber music. (more info)

the first vinyl run of 150 units was pressed at microforum in toronto – i was very happy with the cut, the printing, and the quick turnaround time.

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Here’s a new one I’m putting out very soon:

It’s a lathe cut edition of 30 copies. Although the per record cost is expensive, I’ve found the lathe cut option to be a good fit for me. I usually hand make the packaging and have been happy with the results.

A word of advice about lathes - look for someone using a current production lathe. The old lathes are all mono and usually produce cuts that are high in surface noise. I’ve used both Personal Touch Vinyl in Montreal and Vinylizer in Toronto. Certain they use the same machine (the Souri lathe), which cuts in stereo and produces really good sounding records. I’d say almost as good as factory pressed, maybe a bit more surface noise, but only a touch.

For bigger runs (100 copies) I’ve used Gotta Groove too and was happy with the results. I’m preparing another release for 2020 that I think I’ll go all out for and press 100 - there seem to be more places offering this now at fairly reasonable prices. This page should help: https://vinyl-pressing-plants.com/

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