Showing posts with label Adderall Canyonly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Adderall Canyonly. Show all posts

ADDERALL CANYONLY / YVES MALONE
“Split” C65 (905 Tapes)



Don’t be a shit. I see you looking at me like that – if you’re wondering why I’m dressed like a killer owl with a third eye, look no further than the cover of this tape, the new Adderall Canyonly/Yves Malone split. Then listen no further than this new tape, front to back. Then look at me again. Pretend like you haven’t been transformed. Pretend like you’ve never heard of Adderall Canyonly or Yves Malone. I dare you. I triple dog dare you. You can’t, because you know why? You’ve been in the presence of greatness. Maybe even in the presence of the Almighty himself. Or at least a minor deity. Probably a minor deity. An owl deity. With a human skull in its talons.

Why so melodramatic, you ask? Because this tape is the bomb-digga-saurus, the tip top of my favorite tapes that have come out this year, or at least in a while. Adderall Canyonly has released a wacky amount of material. Yves Malone has also released a wacky amount of material. Together, they form a synthesizer Voltron of wackiness, and send me into paroxysms of blissful wonderment. Listening to this tape is pure indulgence. Seldom have two such likeminded artists been presented on a split release, and even more seldom have both sides of the split been worth a damn. I believe each side at least warrants that much value.

Adderall Canyonly expands upon his wide-ranging synth soundscapes over four pieces, titled “I” through “IV.” Vangelis and John Carpenter collide with Dieter Moebius (in heaven now) and Klaus Schultze, and by the time you get through his contribution, you’re just freaking loving every second of life you could possibly have. For those in the know, that feeling isn’t an unusual one to get while listening to Adderall Canyonly music – he practically transports you to that plane every single time.  At once bucolic and retrofuturistic, Canyonly’s everything to everybody, and everywhere at once. It’s transcendent.

Then you flip it. Flip that shit, flip it real good. Yves takes all that goodwill and tanks it with “Momes Rath,” a raging minor-key synth clanger that knocks you right out of your state of intense meditative being and into a dark, grotty side street, running from whatever. He doesn’t let up on the midnight vibes, and even manages some great horror soundtrack excursions (“Blackest Ever Was,” “Death’s Lovely Assistant”), to which he is not unfamiliar. And then, check this out – he does a serious Future Islands impersonation (without the Sam Herring part, of course) with the excellent “Til the Eyes Turn Red, Shall the River Bed,” and by the final track, “Last Angeles,” he’s mimicking the incidental detective music from Fletch. (Fun fact: Fletch takes place in Los Angeles, and Fletch himself is a huge Lakers fan.) I can forgive him for busting Adderall’s mood – he kicks all comers to the curb on his side, in his unique way.

So uh – buy this tape. Have you figured that out yet?

And for some reason I’ve decided to dress up like the album cover constantly, and it’s not even that close to Halloween. Who can blame me? Don’t be a jerk about it.


--Ryan Masteller


Field Hymns: In Seven Parts

Field Hymns is a label based in Portland, OR and one of the slickest operations I've seen going in the last couple years. They are one of the best organizations releasing analog synth, Tangerine Dream influenced, electro-esoterica and 80s slasher flick soundtrack inspired tapes in the US. In fact I don't think I've handled better designed or packaged tapes...and they release so many!! Recently I found a box of seven cassettes in my mailbox. I was enthused by the sheer quantity and I knew the quality would be high. Since I want to feature every tape, I thought it best to do short reviews of each release all on the same post instead of breaking it up or spreading them out over time. Bottom line: Listen to the music put out by Field Hymns...you won't regret it.
Foton's Omega is a time capsule. It sounds like something from the early 70s and that isn't likely to be an accident as the label describes this album as a, "...soundtrack of a journey to the farthest reaches of the universe, circa 1971." Somewhere HAL 9000 has regained power and is lording over a doomed astronaut.
Oxykitten's Octagonal Wax is easily the most fun synth album I've ever heard. Hands down awesome. Beats and analog whizz whurrz and tune titles like, "I Got Your Digits in My Pocket Calculator" and "Warm Smell of Fajitas," immediately got me in the mood to smile higher than any normal man. Great, GREAT, listening. Plus the art is cool.
Described as, "music so kraut it's still cabbage," Grapefruit's looping synth bleeps trip the night away. This is analog heaven for synth-heads. Be advised to spend a long weekend with this release...and a few friends...and a light show.
The Cutting Room is a split by Adderall Canyonly and Oxykitten. Again a soundtrack for a film that never was or ever will be, this album bubbles with light touches of spinning keys and calliope dreams. I'm lost in a sci-fi B movie. I don't want to get out either.
Susurrus' eponymous tape is 31 minutes of drone, “…in two parts, composed of feedback, ground-loops and other various unintended ephemera endemic to electronic instruments and the recording process.” Definitely intended for introspective headphone listening, this composition is meticulous and well-crafted. Damn, wish I thought of it!
Detainee's Vital Organs is rapid fire gaming music in technicolor. Controllers and joysticks are covered in pizza grease and the Pepsi has gone flat, but the music still slams.  Far out.
This album by Eyes has already been expertly reviewed HERE on Cassette Gods so I won't have the pleasure of being the first to write about it. Actually, I pretty much agree with the past review...so...well, shit...All I want to add is this is one of the most satisfying psyche-revival Hawkwind-esque albums I've ever heard...If you only buy one tape from Field Hymns, let it be this one.

Buy and Listen HERE.

Kösmonaut/Adderall Canyonly - "Split" (Ethereal Mother Tapes) c60


America, you unpredictable saucy bitch! Sure we all know the coasts are killing it with their spaced out synth mind meltdowns, but central Texas?? I'm pleased as punch to be a madman from Austin, but now after hearing Kösmonaut (from San Angelo freak the brain electric, Tejas...hell, his is mushroom music w/plenty of kraut on the side for taste) I'm thrilled! Kösmonaut is a fan of the post-Berlin School, pre-rave sound of synth psyche club mix OUT THERE tones. K is Patrick R. Pärk and he describes his music thusly, "...propulsive retro-ish psych-prog electronics. A lone explorer of myriad psychic vistas, Kösmonaut channels experiential knowledge of Time’s secrets into trance inducing kosmische-electronic excursions." This split with Adderall Canyonly (put out by Kös' own label) is magnificent. Pro-look, pro-sound - 'nuff said. Both sides are wonderful excursions for those so inclined to lift off. I got my hands on this tape courtesy of Field Hymns 'cause they're distributing the title and it was part of a huge box of review tapes which I'll write about soonish. Of the 100 dubbed only 6 remain at EMT's Bandcamp (as of the last time I checked, that is) so don't wait on this Saga Genesis cosmic technicolor dream coat. 

Buy and Listen HERE.