imomus: (Default)
imomus ([personal profile] imomus) wrote2004-11-14 07:39 am

2004: the year in music

Well, we're just six weeks or so from the end of 2004. I thought I'd get my 'year in music' entry in early.

This year it feels to me as if I've produced more than I've consumed. 2004 began with the release of 'Summerisle', the record I made last year with the amazing Anne Laplantine. Anne and I both love the record. I honestly expected it to sell 20,000 copies. (It didn't.) I spent spring and early summer recording my own new album, 'Otto Spooky', which saw a 'return of the repressed' in the form of relatively coherent pop songwriting. Mid to late summer was spent playing concerts in Japan and Hong Kong (the year also saw concerts in Russia and Spain) and for the last two months I've been composing and performing music for a theatre production with students of Berlin's Ernst Busch School.

My favourite album of the year is 'Random Veneziano' by Hypo (Active Suspension).



It's slightly embarrassing that I actually sing on this record, because it makes my endorsement look like self-hype. But you'll hardly recognize my voice, and even if Anthony Keyeux hadn't asked me to participate, I'd still love his record just as much. 'Random Veneziano' is a postmodernist pop masterpiece, a pleasure palace of illusory surfaces. Perhaps this fantastic tack-attack is retro-pomo; imagine My Bloody Valentine's 'Loveless' played on thrift store Casio and Yamaha sampling keyboards in a room in Venice filled with gaudy, angular acid blotch-applique Memphis furniture. Imagine the whole thing spliced and edited so much that instead of breaking the flow, the constant changes become a new sort of flow. Imagine horrible textures becoming something lovely. Imagine the cheap becoming the noble, and making everything else sound lame and cliched. Imagine a love for pop music that goes so far it comes out the other side, straight into hate. This record is great.

It's also embarrassing that the pop record I'm currently listening to more than any other is my own forthcoming 'Otto Spooky', which I think is terrific. It's much more poppy than 'Oskar Tennis Champion', and yet it retains Oskar's strangeness and pleasurable disorientation. The record is accessible yet challenging, with John Talaga's amazing morphs scattering an electro-magnetic paper trail between songs to bluff your radar. I'm sure it's destined to sell a measly couple of thousand copies here and there and get hardly any reviews, like most of my other records, and indeed like the records of the people I consider my peers: Hypo and Toog and Anne Laplantine. But whether the world listens or not, it's fabulous to live by music, and to make music you love. It's even not so bad being poor and relatively unknown, as long as you're fulfilled and free.



To be honest I didn't like Toog's 2004 album 'Lou Etendue' (Karaoke Kalk) as much as his previous records. I could hear too much Gainsbourg in this release, and the nice thing about Toog before was that he only sounded like Toog. I also prefer to hear him singing about cyclopses, shopping at the garden centre, or having sex with God than being in love and linking love with terrorism. It seems both too soppy and too topical, too personal and too apocalyptic. Toog used to be almost classical in his wry detachment, but he suddenly went romantic. Anne Laplantine's 2004 releases 'Dicipline' and 'Hambourg' (Tomlab) were incredibly strong. She's my favourite lo-fi baroque composer, and her compositions take me to strange and lovely worlds where clumsiness and grace rub shoulders.



I continue to think that the Paris scene around the Active Suspension and Clapping Music labels is one of the most promising in the world. New albums by o.lamm ('Hello Spiral'), My Jazzy Child and Konki Duet were enjoyable, if not so great that they made me want to steal any ideas (my ultimate mark of respect). New records from old favourites like DAT Politics and Kahimi Karie passed me by. Somehow I just wasn't terribly interested any more. I paid appreciative attention to the new folk scene -- people like Devendra Banhart, Vetiver and CocoRosie, but in the end found something suspect about them. I feel much closer to the folk generation that preceded them -- Adam Green, Kimya Dawson, The Moldy Peaches. It's something to do with irony and sincerity, and exactly where these artists locate them. It may be that I think of the Moldy crew as sharp art students, whereas I think of the Banhart gang as fuzzy trustfunded hippy kids. I might be quite wrong, though.



America produced some of the most innovative music on the planet this year in the form of bands like Animal Collective (and related solo projects) Lightning Bolt and Black Dice. Actually, I say America, but I mean the disenfranchised blue state coasts. If places like Brooklyn and Providence were producing a scene inspired by Japanoise bands, California had an equally weird take on hip hop in the form of the Anticon collective, with the CloudDead record being a highlight. And it was nice to welcome Brooklyn's Jason Forrest, aka sample insurgent Donna Summer, to Berlin as the latest American refugee. Expect a Momus / Forrest collaboration in 2005.

I noted a Shibuya-kei revival going on in Tokyo, but can't claim to be terribly excited by bands like Console, Plus Tech Squeezebox, Macdonald Duck Eclair, Dahlia, Migu, and Spank Happy. The latter approached me for some production work only to be told that I simply couldn't muster the required enthusiasm. The people I've been impressed with in Japan this year are on the experimental / noise scene. People like Cosmos (Sachiko M and Ami Yoshida) and the Off Site collective, especially Toshi Nakamura. Rumour is that he's collaborating with Kahimi Karie now; Shibuya-kei may be coming back, but the original Shibuya-kei artists are way off in left-field. Actually, I have been experiencing some 90s nostalgia recently. I discovered a cache of old video 8 tapes made by a teenager in 1995. They mostly consist of shots of Pizzicato 5 records -- white vinyl, clear vinyl, plush graphics -- spinning on a Cornelius turntable. Sometimes the camera pans to the window, and the Tokyo skyline. It sounds boring, but in fact these tapes are the most beautiful thing I've seen all year, and bring back in a vivid rush the incredible atmosphere of Tokyo in the 90s; the transcendental glamour, the sophisticated irony, the sense that style could save us all. Although I don't think the Shibuya-kei revival can ever touch the original movement, my Tokyo blogger friends Jean Snow and Marxy have a different view and can keep you up to date on developments.



My favourite live event of the year took place in August in a traditional Japanese tea house in Omihatchiman, on the shores of Lake Biwa, Japan. It involved a fusion of tea ceremony and laptop electronica / performance art, and featured my current favourite Japanese artist, Yuko Nexus6. The event was organised by Phirip, who's also worth watching. The best demo I was given this year came from Kaori Mitsushima. There was something fresh, simple and experimental about the Mon Minou CD she handed me at my Tokyo concert. Since Kaori was moving to Berlin to live with her Finnish-American boyfriend Mika, I headhunted her to work with me on the music for the Martin Crimp play I'm doing. If you're in Berlin, come along and hear the results. Performances are on 16th 18th 19th, and 20th November, and then there are two or three shows between November 22nd and 28th and a few in early January.



Some other kinds of music impressed me this year. First, there were the snatches of Tatar folk music I heard when I was in Izhevsk, which had me thinking, for a while, of making my next album 'tatartronic'. Then there was the fabulous Cantonese Opera I saw at the Sunbeam Theatre in Hong Kong. I bought a lot of old vinyl in markets in both Japan and Berlin, and it was mostly of the horspiel type -- dramatic productions using kabuki music, or old German children's records on the communist Litera label. I downloaded a lot of contemporary classical music from a file sharing service I can't tell you about -- stuff like the unreleased Lamonte Young concerts from the early 60s. And I discovered that I really like Alejandra and Aeron, founders of the Lucky Kitchen label.

[identity profile] cakewalks.livejournal.com 2004-11-14 06:45 am (UTC)(link)
hypo is so great, especially karaoke acapella

intentional?

[identity profile] gorillabiscuit.livejournal.com 2004-11-14 06:54 am (UTC)(link)
hahahaha
what a funny entry....


-tomas

Re: intentional?

[identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com 2004-11-14 06:58 am (UTC)(link)
Sorry, there was some 'irreparable markup error' shit going on for a while.

[identity profile] nickink.livejournal.com 2004-11-14 07:10 am (UTC)(link)
I'm quite enthusiastic about the Anticon stuff. I liked The Passage and Hymie's Basement this year, as well as cLOUDDEAD.

I like the isea of Lightning Bolt, but I just can't make it through more than about a minute before I have to turn it off and reach for the Neil Halstead. Terrible, I know.

[identity profile] nickink.livejournal.com 2004-11-14 07:10 am (UTC)(link)
By the way, I love the cover of Otto Spooky.

[identity profile] masnomas.livejournal.com 2004-11-14 07:44 am (UTC)(link)
Whoa...

I need more information about "Japanoise".
Best word ever, AND I'm really excited about the prospect of the music.

Could you give me some leads (names of bands and/or websites about the genre to be quick, thoughts/opinions if you have a moment).

I'mma run off and google, but I'll be bound to be flooded with information.

[identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com 2004-11-14 08:23 am (UTC)(link)
My google search turned up the superb phrase 'latent japanoise envy (http://cmsienkofoundation.tripod.com/dolor.htm)' to describe some of the new American bands:

Needles' Sound Effect Of Excellent Dope was an attempt by imaginary mayor Emil Beaulieu to shore up and stare down his latent japanoise envy, with a good old dose of beat 'em/join 'em. Glass mentions that for all intents and purposes, this is a japanoise record, "unless you are held by the idea that japanoise records should actually be made by japanese people"

Japanoise is the way we Japanize the world!

Some of the big names: Merzbow, Acid Mothers Temple, Boredoms, Guitar Wolf, Masonna...

http://www.releasemagazine.net/spotlightjapanoise.htm

http://www.9-n.de/japanoise.html

(no subject)

[identity profile] jimyojimbo.livejournal.com - 2004-11-14 12:36 (UTC) - Expand

(Anonymous) 2004-11-14 08:06 am (UTC)(link)
Funny thing, I was just intending to refresh my memory about which god Momus was, and would up spending the whole night at your site, which I've briefly visited in the past (making a mental post-it to return soon, never heeded)... particularly your 'year end music reviews' through the photo index section, which encouraged me to use up my emusic quota to fill gaps in my Stereo Total collection (is buying at emusic a bad thing? Without the cheap downloads I fear I'd have no new music until I work again...) And while I was at it, I also stole some music, I'm not a saint, Robert Wyatt's recent track with Björk, and from the same cd the Japanese a capella group's cut); found Nobukazu Takemura and Rechenzentrum at emusic as well, though the latter in a different release than the one you endorsed (Director's Cut). I will have to live with these latter two a while before I can thank or damn you.

I was about to explore your "pink and white" year when I see you've given us another year-end essay. You seem much more at ease in the role this time around. Speaking of the 90s, and that old man's disease, nostalgia...what happened to that nice little pop group the margarines? I am still listening to the same 4 tracks I pulled off the net in 1998.

Time for sleep, I have to regulate my behavior as I am likely to be working at Macy's for the holidays in a few days. Or perhaps someone will shoot me.


(Anonymous) 2004-11-14 08:41 am (UTC)(link)
Momus i love you and your new record will be amazing! I can't wait to hear it finished!

Adam

[identity profile] sarmoung.livejournal.com 2004-11-14 12:19 pm (UTC)(link)
In a slightly gushy moment, can I add how much I enjoy Summerisle also? I DJ various psych/acid folk/whatever events from time to time and love playing it to keep people on their toes amidst the more known parts of the canon. Bugger the canon, anyway...

Japanoise the World. There's a thought for the day.

bjork

(Anonymous) 2004-11-14 01:29 pm (UTC)(link)
your thoughts on "medulla"?

Re: bjork

[identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com 2004-11-14 01:52 pm (UTC)(link)
It's funny, because I was toying for a while with the idea of making an a capella album too! Listening to 'Medulla', I'm sort of glad I didn't. There's something slightly disgusting about the idea of a record made entirely with people's mouths. I like Bjork, but there tends to be just one track on each of her albums that I really love. On 'Debut' it's 'Venus As A Boy'. On 'Vespertine' it's 'Generous Palmstroke' (which I think was only on the Japanese release!), and on 'Medulla' it's 'Ancestors'. But, you know, there's just something a bit hyperbolic about Bjork's emotions. Bjork on 'Medulla' makes some approaches to Meredith Monk's work. I adore Meredith Monk, but there's a coolness and objectivity about it which makes it, finally, extremely touching. Bjork eggs the pudding a bit, and leaves me cold by being emotionally a little... obvious.

Re: bjork

(Anonymous) - 2004-11-14 17:50 (UTC) - Expand

(Anonymous) 2004-11-14 02:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Have you heard of the groups Baba Zula, Fairuz Derin Bulut, Replikas or Zen?

Mehmet U

(no subject)

(Anonymous) - 2004-11-14 14:49 (UTC) - Expand

2004 - a great music year

[identity profile] klasensjo.livejournal.com 2004-11-14 03:11 pm (UTC)(link)
Praise to Random Veneziano and the surreal bastard son of "Relax Max MSP", TimeCode (http://www.imomus.com/timecode.mp3).

Seventeen year old Khonnor (http://www.khonnor.com) (wunderkind) released a magnificent record and so did Testbild! (http://w1.864.telia.com/~u86422773/testbild.html) and Shugo Tokumaru (http://shugo_t.at.infoseek.co.jp/). GoTeam! (http://www.thegoteam.co.uk/super8.html) had a fun hit.
Can't really dismiss some of these new J-pop bands either. SoCoPo (http://www.usagi-chang.com/socopo.html) are just magnificent. Check out their contribution to "Soundtrack for Virtual Architecture" (http://www.room-composite.com/va/) (Click on Route and Node).
Lastly Anne Laplantine, featured in die Zeit (http://www.zeit.de/2004/22/Franz_9asin_in_Berlin) magazine is (drumroll) my fave music person of the year. What's wrong with Cherry Red's distribution of Summerisle? Just scrap those football projects and murky, old punk videos and focus on the essentials.

Image (http://www.twisterella.com/artikel.php?id=505)

Re: 2004 - a great music year

(Anonymous) 2004-11-14 03:38 pm (UTC)(link)
Godbless Shugo Tokumaru's "Night Piece." Everyone should hear this album.

Re: 2004 - a great music year

(Anonymous) - 2004-11-15 16:55 (UTC) - Expand

Hörspiel!

(Anonymous) 2004-11-14 03:32 pm (UTC)(link)
Personally, I would like to compliment you (and Anne, of course!) on "Summerisle Hörspiel", which i found on the wonderful web site Ubu.com. http://www.ubu.com/sound/momus.html.

A lovely piece of music!

As for Ubu.com in its entirety, it's an unfathomable treasure chest...

[identity profile] panarchist.livejournal.com 2004-11-14 04:03 pm (UTC)(link)
My personal favorite record of the year is also a hörspiel - Hans Appelqvist's "Bremort":
http://www.komplott.com/catalogue/hans_appelqvist_-_bremort.asp

Reissue of the year (and - for me - discovery of the year) - GHEDALIA TAZARTES "Diasporas/ Tazartès" (Alga Marghen)

http://www.forcedexposure.com/artists/tazartes.ghedalia.html

The Konki Duet live show is 100x stronger than their record - they should let their Russian violin player sing more, she has this gorgeous Nico-like voice; - I was lucky to catch them (as well Hypo's DJ set, Domotic and O.Lamm) at Point Ephemere Club in Paris last week.

[identity profile] klasensjo.livejournal.com 2004-11-14 04:34 pm (UTC)(link)
The Konki Duet live show is 100x stronger than their record

You lucky son of a gun. I was just wondering if you had emigrated.

(no subject)

[identity profile] panarchist.livejournal.com - 2004-11-14 16:37 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[identity profile] aienn.livejournal.com - 2004-11-14 20:41 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[identity profile] panarchist.livejournal.com - 2004-11-14 20:45 (UTC) - Expand
(deleted comment)

(no subject)

[identity profile] panarchist.livejournal.com - 2004-11-15 15:51 (UTC) - Expand

[identity profile] rebirtha.livejournal.com 2004-11-14 04:09 pm (UTC)(link)
Thanks for the mention of Anticon. cLOUDDEAD (I'm also fond of Themselves in particular).... It's frustrating when music doesn't quite 'get there,' and although I haven't had any luck localizing 'there' or what mode of transport we're using to go, they have a knack for approaching unexpectedly and at the most unusual angles. Appreciate the recommendations.

rgds.

Fashion Flesh collab with Donna Summer...2004

(Anonymous) 2004-11-14 05:33 pm (UTC)(link)
Funny coincidence Nick...I've already done some collaboration stuff with Donna Summer/Jason Forrest this year just a couple months back. Is that in fact just a mind-boggling coincidence or a friendly game of social leapfrog? Both are perfectly fine and respectable in most circles I hear and am quite certain, but I'm just not used to playing unnanounced twister in my sleep.

all the love,
john flesh

www.fashionflesh.com

(Anonymous) 2004-11-14 07:13 pm (UTC)(link)
Does anyone who owns these albums have any recommendations for where to get them online, particularly from an English or American merchant? Thanksss!

Robyn hitchcock

[identity profile] hateforblayne.livejournal.com 2004-11-14 07:44 pm (UTC)(link)
Speaking of ironic folk, The new robyn hitchcock collaboration with gillian welch and david rawlings is pretty good. Accousto-Robyn with a little bit of backwoods america.

(Anonymous) 2004-11-14 08:55 pm (UTC)(link)
Proclaimers: "Born Innocent"

The real thing:

http://www.proclaimers.co.uk/procstore02/The_Proclaimers_CDs.htm

[identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com 2004-11-14 09:29 pm (UTC)(link)
The Proclaimers! I'd forgotten all about them! Now produced by Edwyn Collins, no less! Okay, hold the front page, scrap the Hypo recommendations, let's proclaim the Everly Brothers of proddy-puritan geekdom kings of the year!

(no subject)

(Anonymous) - 2004-11-14 22:06 (UTC) - Expand

[identity profile] twoheaded-boy.livejournal.com 2004-11-15 03:31 am (UTC)(link)
Nick: I wonder if you've heard Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti (album called The Doldrums just released on Animal Collective's Paw Tracks label)? It put me off at first but quickly became one of my favourites of the year. It reminds me a little of Avey Tare & Panda Bear's first album, also of the Cure and Kate Bush (and a little of the Magnetic Fields), but the remarkable thing about it is how the production is part of the songwriting. The way it's recorded is like the audio equivalent of Guy Maddin's cinematography: it's aged and distressed in a way that goes beyond lo-fi in that it's not aiming to capture a raw immediacy, but to create a hallucinatory haze. The music seems insubstantial and oneiric, like a radio station in a dream or a cloud of condensed nostalgia. It has a very un-trendy vibe, a weird nugget generated without reference to any scene. Ariel himself (I met him last week) is equally charming and creepy. Seems like the sort of fellow that lives in his parents' basement, or in a motor inn with a low ceiling.

Anyway, whether you like it or not, I think your response to it would be interesting. "Among Dreams" is one of the better songs.

[identity profile] xchimx.livejournal.com 2004-11-15 04:59 am (UTC)(link)
the moldy peaches certainly seem like art students, though i'm not sure how sharp they really are.

i'm a little confused as to why you are alluding to a correlation between democrat minded states and the creation of quality "japanoise" music.

firstly, the names ambiguous enough as it is. do you mean it in these sense of japanese noisecore artists such as melt banana? but second, i've always been a little confused by the assumption of american mimicry of japanoise(core). I've always seen it as a coevolution of out of the japanese/american thrash and powerviolence acts - bands such as fuck on the beach or the jellyroll rockheads of japan and inhumanity capitalist casualties stateside. even when the thrashscene did evolve from inhumanity to more avant-garde acts like guyana punchline (from carolina i might add - a "red" state) or black dice it was often supported more stateside than japan. from what i've read, meltbanana originally had a horrible reception in japan - which is why they did so many US/Euro touring. i know you like to hold japan as the epicenter of all things postmodern, but when it comes to diy and noisecore music, america seems to be the secret powerhouse.

[identity profile] xchimx.livejournal.com 2004-11-15 05:14 am (UTC)(link)
scratch that blackdice comment. i was unaware they had reinvented themselves in the past few years. the last release i had heard of them was their 2001 ball/peace in the valley 7" which sounds completely different than what you must be describing as japanoise.
(deleted comment)

(Anonymous) 2004-11-15 11:33 am (UTC)(link)
No words for your friend Scotish Franz Ferdinand?
Yossi

(Anonymous) 2004-11-15 11:53 am (UTC)(link)
Yo Yossi! Ze Franz rox ze sox off ze cox wiz PC box!!! Yo z Tel Aviv - Avigdor (Ahoy Nahum Kibbutz Yagur)

(no subject)

(Anonymous) - 2004-11-15 12:59 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com - 2004-11-15 17:07 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

(Anonymous) - 2004-11-15 17:53 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

(Anonymous) - 2004-11-15 18:06 (UTC) - Expand

Your Music

[identity profile] reflejos.livejournal.com 2004-11-15 02:46 pm (UTC)(link)
I began reading you because you were in a friends list of a friend (jozefpronek). Then I became a fan with your post about Derrida and Jelinek. And now I read it everyday. But I had not listened to any of your songs. Yesterday I got into your page and dowloaded the free ones. They are all great. Here in Colombia is imposible to find your cd's, but I will go soon to Barcelona, I hope I can find them there. Also your reccomendations. Are not there also old reccords that you discovered this year? or that you rediscovered and found you listening to them every day?

Re: Your Music

[identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com 2004-11-15 05:10 pm (UTC)(link)
My two favourite old records this year were 'The Wicker Man Soundtrack' by Paul Giovanni and 'Musique Arabo-Andaluse' by Atrium Musicae.

2 recent projects w/ David Sylvian cameos

(Anonymous) 2004-11-16 10:30 am (UTC)(link)
Have to say my faves this year were "Venice" by Fennesz and the latest Takagi Masakatsu (Though that Masakatsu didn't match her previous, and in my book essential, "Re:Home" ). Both of those CDs featured walk-ons by David Sylvian. I never got into him before but his spots on those discs really makes me consider re-evaluating his earlier work. Trying to listen again.

Momus....are you familiar with these discs? Any comments.

oh and rounding out my top 5 The split Cd that DJ/Rupture did w/ Muttamusik , Supercar, and the string of singles by M.I. A. i heard on fluxblog in the past few months. There's alot of exciting stuff out there, isn't there?

Justin Lincoln

(Anonymous) 2004-11-16 03:01 pm (UTC)(link)
Any chance of a reprise with Anne Laplantine in future?

[Someone who bought Summerisle]

More american music...

(Anonymous) 2004-11-17 11:26 pm (UTC)(link)
I have to agree that the Animal Collective and Black Dice albums were quite strong. Probably the best live show I've seen this year as well.
Worth exploring is the new Brother Danielson (of Danielson Famile) album. Beautiful, shambolic muisic. Also Maher Shalal Hash Baz's most recent. Sufjan Steven's Seven Swans album was breathtaking. Deerhoof's Milkman was a conceptual nightmare set to fireworks - brilliant as always. Also, and I'm sure momus disregarded this strictly based on commercial appeal, but Elliott Smith's final album is heartbreaking and gorgeous. I still lament the loss of this great artist every day.