Media Roots Music – Atop Mix #3

Media Roots Music – Atop Set #3 by Media Roots

MEDIA ROOTS– In this week’s set I try to discredit the notion that electronic music is not organic or emotional. Most electronic music that has been integrated into contemporary music sounds robotic and lifeless. The tracks I chose for this week’s set feel organic, yet maintain the unique timbres and intonations of electronic music.

This set is for people who may still think that only traditional instruments make the only acceptable sounding organic sounds available to us. With the invention of the computer, and the blending of real instrumentation with electronic ones through sampling or playing, I feel this attitude is no longer relevant.

I love electronic music, because of its infinite nature- with the right amount of imagination, an electronic song can be just as beautiful and engaging as any traditional instrumentation. All the featured music on the mix can be found through searching discogs.com or by emailing me: [email protected].

Akkad the Orphic Priest aka ATOP

Artist List:

ISAN – Salamander
Marcus Intalex – TB or not TB?
Instra:mental – Thomp
Pixelord – Kiwi Dream
Kryptic Minds – Alone
Fluorescent Grey – Gomez Childs Shult
Boxcutter – Moon Pupils
Amon Tobin – Bedtime Stories
Prefuse 73 – The Only Trial of 9000 Sons
Freeform – Saigon
Jake Mandell – Pan Culture Workup
Autechre – 6852

Listen to last week’s Media Roots Music Fluorescent Grey Mix, an Interview with Songwriter John Vanderslice, or a broadcast about Fukushima: Coverage and Break Down of Radiation.

Media Roots Music – Fluorescent Grey Mix #1

Media Roots Music – Fluorescent Grey Mix #1 by Media Roots

FG: If you are an avid listener of Media Roots Radio, you may have noticed our frequent use of obscure electronic music in our intros, and segweys. This mix is dedicated to the electronic music that influenced me as a child. I was born in 1981, so a lot of this is from before my time. However, echoes of these songs can be heard throughout 80s film and television. 

I was introduced to Joel Van Droogen Broeck’s ridiculously prescient song ‘Robot Tiger’ when I was halfway done making this mix by Reid Dunn AKA Wisp from Rephlex Records. In one fell swoop, Mr. Van Droogen Broeck invents minimal techno the same year Dj Pierre was writing ‘Acid Trax’, pulls the rug out from under Rustie- not just with a time machine but by being bad ass, and takes Aphex Twin’s balls out of his wife’s purse on ‘Space Line’ (this is not actually a reference to RDJ, but to one of the best lines in ‘The Burbs’ who’s opening title song closes out this mix). We don’t want to forget about great groundbreaking artists like Tom Ellard AKA Severed Heads, who covers all genres of electronic music before they were even invented (perhaps Ellard is Van Droogen Broeck’s long lost Australian cousin).

I have to also personally confess that the main reason Dawn of the Dead is such a memorable movie for me is because of the film’s use of Goblin’s synth masterpiece ‘La Caccia’ in the film- not the political commentary or gore.  So kick back, take a break from your Oneohtrixpoint Never marathon and dive like Scrooge McDuck into a sea of actual retro 70s and 80s electronic music gems.

Fluorescent Grey

Artist List:

Roedelius – Von Ferne Her  (1981)
Roedelius – Von Fliegen (1981)
Harold Grosskopf – Emphasis (1979)
Tangerine Dream – Rubycon part 1 (1975)
Jerry Goldsmith – Rec room  (1981)
Li De La Russe – Quest Fast (1972)
Giorgio Moroder – Utopia (1977)
Yellow Magic Orchestra – Behind The Mask (1979)
Synergy – Phobos And Deimos Go To Mars (parts I & II)  (1978)
Alan Hackshaw & Brian Bennett – Driving Force (1974)
Goblin – La Caccia  (1978)
Harold Faltermeyer – Fletch Theme (1985)
V.D.B. Joel – San Diego Industry (1988)
Severed Heads – All Saints Day (1989)
Tom Ellard – Cheesecake 3  (1982)
V.D.B. Joel – Space Line  (1987)
Joel Van Droogen Broeck – Robot Tiger (1987)
Skinny Puppy –  Splasher (1984)
Joel Van Droogen Broeck – Drum Program  (1987)
John Carpenter – The President Is Gone (1981)
Tangerine Dream – Love on a Real Train (1984)
Frank Zappa – Night School (1986)
Alan Silvestri –  Elaine (1984)
Trevor Jones – Into The Labyrinth (1986)
Giorgio Moroder – Fantasia  (1984)
Jerry Goldsmith – Night Work (Main Title)  (1989)

Listen to last week’s Media Roots Music Mix by Atop, an Interview with Songwriter John Vanderslice, or a broadcast about Libya, Nuclear Power & Religious Environmentalism.

Blockhead – The Music Scene

Blockhead’s The Music Scene

  MEDIA ROOTS- An extremely psychedelic and visually explosive animated video for Blockhead’s The Music Scene directed by Anthony Francisco Schepperd. The video encompasses a lot of interesting themes and explores a post human world where animals and televisions rule.

 

Media Roots Music – Atop Mix #2

Media Roots Music- Atop Set #2 by Media Roots

MEDIA ROOTS– With my second set for Media Roots Music, I continue to explore my different musical obsessions. At the beginning of the mix there is a sense of technology’s distance and coldness with the sounds. The end of the set ends with the more tangible essence of hands on instruments and voices bending the air. I feel there is a connection between both that can be felt from beginning to end. I hope you all enjoy it.

All the featured music on the mix can be found through searching discogs.com or by emailing me: [email protected].

Akkad the Orphic Priest aka ATOP

Artist List:

EPROM – Rubber Sheets
Little Jinder – Polyhedron (Knifeshow Remix)
Boxcutter – Allele
BD1982 – VHS Nite (Rewound Version)
Leekon – Tricut
Astrobotnia – Time Shifting Window
Christodoulos Halaris – Hymn to the Sun
Papa M – Wedding Song No. 3
Panda Bear – Slow Motion
Mice Parade – Wave Greeting
King Creosote & Jon Hopkins – Bubble
Boduf songs – pitiful shadow engulfed in darkness
Bill Callahan – Babyís Breathe
Psychic TV – The Orchids

 

Listen to last week’s Media Roots Music Mix by Atop, an Interview with Songwriter John Vanderslice, or a broadcast about Libya, Nuclear Power & Religious Environmentalism.

Fluorescent Grey – Antique Electronic / Synthesizer Greats 1955-1984

(Free album download below)

“Perhaps within the next hundred years, science will perfect a process of thought transference from composer to listener. The composer will sit alone on the concert stage and merely ‘think’ his idealized conception of his music. Instead of recordings of actual music sound, recordings will carry the brainwaves of the composer directly to the mind of the listener.” – Raymond Scott, 1949

MEDIA ROOTS- In early 2010, what would eventually become Antique Electronic Synthesizer Greats was simply a concept for a live set. Fluorescent Grey, aka Robbie Martin, cut almost a thousand tiny samples and loops from works dating from 1955 to 1984, limiting his sources to strictly electronic and/or synthesized recordings.

His rules allowed for non-synthesized compositions (e.g., Delia Derbyshire’s tape cutting based tones) as well as synthesizer audio of any kind, including the Hammond Novachord. And far from simply a stolen sample collage, or meta-mash-up project, Robbie wanted to allow the mix he composed to preserve and highlight the eras’ best sounds in a comprehensive backdrop.

Some of those painstakingly found and excised snippets may be all but indiscernible to most, while some tease with their familiarity (Depeche Mode bass drum? YMO hi hat?), and some are nakedly in homage (synth lines from Vangelis, Giorgio Moroder). All are as playful as the puzzling track names, one of the most obvious of which are pieces that re-imagine the sound of John Carpenter’s best synth-centric movie scores. From the uneasy sounds of horror to the sweet spot of vintage synth-pop and industrial, to the brief satisfyingly bizarre vocal cameos by Alan Vega and a Spanish industrial/noise outfit, it runs the gamut of its chosen time period exhaustively.

One might wonder, why stop at 1984? or 1983 (the original cutoff)? In all honesty, the cut off year was first altered to make one Zoviet France record eligible. But why is it so important to draw the line in the early 80’s when many classic and important electronic albums came out between 1984-1990, Skinny Puppy’s Bites or DJ Pierre’s Acid Tracks. The answer is simple, until 1984 most music that was ‘electronic’ relied primarily on synthesizers.

Around mid-1983 romplers/samplers become par the course. The techniques sent waves through the electronic music production circles and arguably diluted the powerful earlier sound of acts like Tangerine Dream and Kraftwerk (ie electric cafe). Maybe most notably, the Klaus Schulze album ‘Dig it’ that proclaims the death of  analog on it’s opening track. Additionally the rules were not set yet, before rave culture took hold there was a more playful less specific purpose to it all. Lending itself automatically to a more varied feel.

Given the uncannily nostalgic or modern moods evoked, it can be all too easy to forget that the entire mix is comprised solely of an endlessly rotating roster of up to 15 isolated loops, all at least a quarter of a century old, some twice that age. On some songs, you could imagine a DJ dialing into the sounds of AFX or Mr. Oizo, an amusing stunt for some of the source material sounds unmistakably dated in a way that has yet to be retrofetishized. Proto-electronica futurism captured in Chris Carter’s sequences or Morton Subotnick’s Autechre-like FM synth splatters, works that indisputably sound futuristic in their own right. Dated or not, the novelty factor of an overwhelmingly corny synth brass sample is sometimes too good to resist, making it nigh impossible to prevent that old fashioned sound from antiquing the whole mix.

This pastiche is offered up in both a mix and an individually tracked album for maximum utility. Use the cover art and the hidden messages contained herein as a resource for your own Antique Electronic Music search.

Acroplane Records Presents:

Artist:  Fluorescent Grey
Catalogue no.:  ACP077
Release date:  15.03.11
Format: digital / free

1. Dacca Thermotensile Loony Smut Syst
2. Baba Rube Drone Lions
3. Ice Age Fire Loving Zool; Troy
4. Ramadan Greek Winter Trek (aka Coricidin)
5. Chicken Hypnotism
6. Abc Condom Motorist = Trunks Tony
7. Juanita Ciardelli
8. Basal Metabolic Rate Niggle Vishnu; Intr. Slur
9 . Cinema Isn’t Soul Sorn
10. Gomez Childs Shult
11. Gunner McRagburn
12. Dead Pink Sphere Pussy Envy
13. Leaf-Laden Amber Hued GUI
14. Abaca Cede, Love to Lie……… Iris Truly
15. Johnny Rocket-Ball
16. Endless Saccharic Acid Deed… Every Show Oozy
17. Calcium Cyclamate: Eighteen Helix Horn Worms
18. Arcjet Penhorn
19. Applebaum Watersnake
20. PPink Sun, Venial Gypsies
21. Where From Tape Deck Ked
22. Would You Say I Have A Plethora Of Piñatas?
23. Rick Santorum Smokes Salvia Divinorum
24 .Abadox
25. Québécoise Italo

26. Pierce Molten Dog Rose
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Mixcloud link to beat-matched version of the album.

320kb/s MP3

Download tracks and mix together

Download tracks only

Flac

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Wav

Download tracks and mix together

Download tracks only

Stay tuned for an exclusive Media Roots interview with Fluorescent Grey. To find out more about Fluorescent Grey and his label Record Label Records go to www.RecordLabelRecords.org.

Written by Laurie Kirchner