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phloam
redaktör / tetra
 
Inlägg: 16078
Blev medlem: 2006-03-25
Ort: Stora Mellby

Inläggav phloam » 2011-04-09 05:01

En serie ambitiösa dubbelsamlingar med weird dansorienterat ambientflum eller vad man ska kalla det, även i hopmixad form under ledning av James Holden, M.A.N.D.Y, Agoria, Claude VonStroke.

Med namn som Apparat, Plastikman, Midimiliz, Fennesz, AFX, Kalkbrenner, Stavöstrand, Trans Am, Kate Wax, Plaid, Efdemin, Gui Boratto, Villalobos, och en massa MASSA andra okända pärlor... mysko men bra, spana in förutsättningslöst..!!!

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http://open.spotify.com/album/73HRG3TYykP9KyGq2pFTWa


Det finns alltså fler (4 tot) i samma serie; At the controls:

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http://open.spotify.com/album/73bpAnSZTsKuUTn0YT0Mf3

http://open.spotify.com/album/1Mbr57fS8DkhNciKNcH8Ie

http://open.spotify.com/album/1UL9znt1Kmy8cOYJCnZgNV

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FalloutBoy
Musiktipsens mästare
 
Inlägg: 1594
Blev medlem: 2007-06-14

Inläggav FalloutBoy » 2011-04-18 15:49

Det ena av två aktuella album från Liz Harris finns nu på Spotify:

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Grouper - A I A : Alien Observer (2011, Yellowelectric)

In her newest two-part release, AIA: Alien Observer / Dream Loss Liz Harris (Grouper) abandons the once-familiar ascendant vocal presence heard on Dragging A Dead Deer… in favor of a sentimental reversion to old styles in the vein of Wide, Way Their Crept, or Cover the Windows… The only exception is the title track to the first of the two LPs, “Alien Observer”, which slakes the casual listener’s longing for something short, accessible and emotive. In an excerpt from an e-mail she wrote to Pitchfork Media about the album, Harris wrote:

“Dream Loss is a collection of older songs, mostly written before a hard time. Alien Observer, for the most part, is made of songs recorded after that time. Each has a song that belongs thematically on the other, a seam stitching them together. Both albums… explore otherness. Being an other to one’s own self, to other humans; ghosts and aliens, both literal and metaphorical; and other worlds to escape to (beneath the water, in the sky). Thinking about people who have died…

The process of making these albums reacquainted me with what I want to explore in music: friction, exploration of something large and outside of me, describing and traveling to intangible objects and places, unseen movements and connections between people and spaces. Songs that move on their own, that have an autonomous monstrous quality, songs from another world.”
-- http://zentapes.com/2011/04/grouper-a-i ... ream-loss/


http://open.spotify.com/album/1Q3tz4mFWpkOiNjkZt0X74

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FalloutBoy
Musiktipsens mästare
 
Inlägg: 1594
Blev medlem: 2007-06-14

Inläggav FalloutBoy » 2011-04-18 16:02

En annan aktuell elektronisk godbit:

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Matthewdavid - Outmind (2011, Brainfeeder)

Leaving Records boss Matthewdavid drops his debut album proper on Flying Lotus's Brainfeeder label. California's louche, post-modern psych-hop scene is in overdrive right now, and this collection of sun-stroked, lopsided beats from respected freak Matthewdavid is one of its most convincing offerings to date. Matthewdavid collaborated with Sun Araw on the breathtraking Livephreaxxx!!!!! cassette, and he certainly operates in a similarly dubbed-out and hazy field to Cameron Stallones; however, as befits his new home on Brainfeeder, our man is a little more inclined to the dancefloor. It means that Outmind is, at its best, a truly beguiling blend of post-dubstep and heady hypnagogia. FlyLo himself contributes to the marimba'd astral jazz interlude 'Group Tea', which comes over like Alice Coltrane, Roland Young and Dylan Ettinger sharing a brew, while 'Today, The Same Way' sounds like Dam-Funk's good-times boogie fed through a cement mixer. As the album progresses, MD's default setting of hyper-edited, glitchy trip-hop can tire a little, and for us some of the most memorable cuts are the most ambient and abstract - pay special attention to the gaseous, haunting 'Floor Music’ and the prismatic, chiming closer 'No Need To Worry / Mean Too Much'. Fans of heat-spoiled head music -from James Ferraro and Sun Araw to Gonjasufi and Mount Kimbie - get involved.
-- http://boomkat.com/downloads/387389-mat ... id-outmind


http://open.spotify.com/album/3we12yLsWqiauEUZnu6nzu

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FalloutBoy
Musiktipsens mästare
 
Inlägg: 1594
Blev medlem: 2007-06-14

Inläggav FalloutBoy » 2011-04-18 16:13

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Panda Bear - Tomboy (2011, Paw Tracks)

Noah Lennox's Panda Bear project has always been about making "difficult" music scan as almost radio-friendly, to translate experimental moves to a broad audience with little interest in such things. It's a strategy he learned, at least in part, from sonic forebears like Arthur Russell and Brian Wilson, along with the avant-techno types he reveres. Like those disparate influences, Lennox has used potentially off-putting compositional and textural ideas to craft some of the most inviting music of his era. In turn, he's inspired more of his own followers in the last four years than anyone might have guessed. Lennox has found himself the unwitting king of the chillwave nation, hero to a whole generation of underground kids drawn to his mix of heavy reverb, sun-woozy synths, droning kraut-surf-ambient-pop songs, high childlike voice, and psychedelic-cum-nostalgic sleeve art.

Tomboy, Lennox's fourth solo album as Panda Bear, was mixed with Pete "Sonic Boom" Kember of Spectrum/Spacemen 3. And again, in a way there's little here that's any further out-there than the blissful psychedelia and dream-pop Spacemen 3 and their peers were playing in the late 1980s, a lineage that stretches right back to stuff we now consider classic rock. With its angelic choirboy harmonies over an unchanging synth buzz, even "Drone", the album's roughest song, is a dead-ringer for the way Spacemen 3 songs like "Ecstasy Symphony" merged the pop high of Beach Boys with the woozy downer feel of the Velvet Underground.

But despite Tomboy's shorter songs and more conventional structures-- especially compared to the loose percussive jams of Lennox's 2007 solo breakthrough Person Pitch-- he's still committed to pushing his music to strange places. And few of his chilled-to-the-point-of-entropy acolytes can match Lennox for warped hooks. Forget comparing his gorgeous voice to their mumbling. Unlike many chillwave and dream-pop artists (and Spacemen 3), Lennox is blessed with the ability to actually sing, and he knows enough about crafting harmonies to do more than vaguely nod in the direction of 60s pop. So Tomboy is a pretty singular mix of the eerie and the inviting.

Despite the murk and terror and noise of Animal Collective's earliest music, there's never been anything particularly ugly about Lennox's mature solo work, starting with 2004's Young Prayer. But even then, he wasn't comfortable playing the laid-back hippie stereotype that's been laid on A.C. by detractors in recent years. Young Prayer might still be the most emotionally wrenching album in the Collective's catalog, an album written by a young man wrestling with some heavy shit. Lennox's father was dying of brain cancer while Young Prayer was being written. "[My father] got to read the lyrics, which was the most important thing to me," he told me in 2005; Young Prayer was a last attempt at confirming the good his father had done for him.

Musically, the album was the least bleak, least difficult thing an Animal Collective member had recorded to that point. But the unembellished recording-- you could almost hear the empty rooms in which it was recorded-- only heightened the fragility of the songs. "I didn't want to spend a lot of time producing it or thinking about how I wanted to get it to sound," Lennox said in that same interview. "I just wanted to get it out quickly." Tomboy is a much more considered record, with thickly layered psych-style production. There's also another heavy dose of dub, the most studio-bound and effects-driven music of the last 50 years, with the kind of extreme echo that plays like an overt tribute to the very different Jamaican psychedelia of King Tubby and Lee Perry.

But Tomboy's also something of a return to the simplicity, if not the emotionally blasted vibe, of Young Prayer after the ornate structures and epic lengths of Person Pitch. Instead of a Young Prayer we now have a "Surfer's Hymn". Instead of a naked guitar and a lot of blank space in the recording we get a wall-of-sound rush and percussion that's like Steve Reich by way of IDM. But the spare droning quality and devotional feeling of the music remains. There was plenty of church music in the Beach Boys and Arthur Russell, too, and Tomboy has a similar quality of embracing both summer fun and hushed spirituality.

The trouble with recording a ramshackle epic like Person Pitch is that you set up a portion of your audience to expect the next album to be at least as grand in both scope and design. There are certainly no obvious peaks on Tomboy like "Bros" or "Good Girl/Carrots", where the 12-minute lengths announced them as attention-demanding stand-outs. So Tomboy's smoothness will likely be mildly divisive among Lennox's fans. Many might have hoped that Lennox would have recorded something less accessible to separate him from the beach-obsessed glut of bedroom pop. But the scaling back on Tomboy in no way represents a scaling back of ambition on Lennox's part. In a way, what he's pulled off here is even more difficult. He's condensed the sprawl and stylistic shifts of Person Pitch into seemingly tidy songs. The fact that he's able to make music that's both otherworldly and familiar-on-first-listen is something that all of his followers would like to achieve, and very few have the chops or inventiveness to pull off.
-- http://www.pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/15299-tomboy/


http://open.spotify.com/album/4ii8Me3xykmM836KfBgmRa

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Alexi
 
Inlägg: 16537
Blev medlem: 2003-03-19
Ort: Stockholm

Inläggav Alexi » 2011-04-21 11:29

Guillemots nya Walk the River finns nu på Spotify:
http://open.spotify.com/album/1xBct1RFKVWu7KV1Kia8fk

kulturbloggen skrev:Den här gången har de verkligen överträffat sig själva och gjort sin mest melodiska och finslipade skiva hittills. Varje spår är unikt och återspeglar galant olika känslor samtidigt som de som vanligt är inne och nosar på olika genrer. Som till exempel de tydliga post-rock influenserna på "Sometimes I Remember Wrong" medan låtar som "The Basket" och "Dancing In The Devil's Shoes" verkar innehålla inslag av britpop och till och med synthpop.

Låtarna bygger upp en helhet som garanterar en musikalisk resa att drömma sig bort till, och som kan tillfredsställa även den mest krävande musikälskare.
Var med och grundade Faktiskt.se, men är inte involverad i nya .io

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FalloutBoy
Musiktipsens mästare
 
Inlägg: 1594
Blev medlem: 2007-06-14

Inläggav FalloutBoy » 2011-04-22 14:29

Kompletterar med det andra aktuella albumet från Liz Harris:

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Grouper - A I A : Dream Loss (2011, Yellowelectric)

http://open.spotify.com/album/5oRP9M6sgnzQWroKiNRWyE

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shifts
Med fasen rätt!
 
Inlägg: 11251
Blev medlem: 2007-08-17
Ort: Stockholm

Inläggav shifts » 2011-04-25 06:34

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Explosions in the sky - Take care, take care, take care
http://open.spotify.com/album/4lrd6mzglWeT4cSoP0iC1G
2021 maj på Spotify

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zidanefromhell
 
Inlägg: 468
Blev medlem: 2009-04-13

Inläggav zidanefromhell » 2011-04-30 11:05

Oj, hittade en gammal goding, inte så gammal men det var några år sen jag lyssnade iaf.

Lambchop- is a woman
http://open.spotify.com/album/3WQcAU0V7WauzZmqMBbxal
"stewie just said that!"

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FalloutBoy
Musiktipsens mästare
 
Inlägg: 1594
Blev medlem: 2007-06-14

Inläggav FalloutBoy » 2011-05-01 14:53

Mike Sheerans nya album bjuder på riktigt trevlig "chillwave". Perfekt vårmusik!

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Blackbird Blackbird – Halo (2011, Ufolk Records)

Halo debuts what is seemingly a more outwardly evident pop orientated direction, whilst maintaining the dream-like principles that last years Summer Heart LP was based upon. The vocals are more poignant and emphasized, alongside a muscular beat, primarily composed of hand claps and tambourines. All in all, a fantastic indicator for what is to come from this impressive young artist.
-- http://www.crackintheroad.com/music/526 ... -blackbird


http://open.spotify.com/album/7tgcm9EKUKD8s22SjaiFoN

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FalloutBoy
Musiktipsens mästare
 
Inlägg: 1594
Blev medlem: 2007-06-14

Inläggav FalloutBoy » 2011-05-03 14:02

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Should - Like A Fire Without Sound (2011, Words On Music)

It has been 13 years since Should's last album proper, the complex shoegaze/postrock haze of 1998's Feed Like Fishes.

While much time has passed, the core elements of Should have not wavered: the ultra-sweet male/female vocal melodies, the penchant for the unexpected, and the ability to find beauty in the minimal.

The band's immaculately crafted third album, Like a Fire Without Sound, infuses the pop sensibilities of Eno and Yo La Tengo while maintaining the personal eccentricities and atmospheric flourishes that have always set Should apart.

Like a Fire Without Sound was conceived and recorded over a five-year period, and infuses idiosyncratic indie flair with pleasing pop sensibilities. Bookended by Eno-esque tributes "Glasshouse" and "The Great Pretend," the hook-laden record is simultaneously spacious and intimate.

Eschewing the fashionable trend of burying production in cavernous lo-fi reverb and fuzz, Like a Fire Without Sound is not warmed-over 1990s-era Should. The layers of fuzzed guitar have been peeled back and the pop quotient is dialed up considerably, aiming instead to balance the twin peaks of soundcraft and songcraft.

The end result of these efforts is an unpredictable record that — like Eno's early pop albums — endures and is not easily ascribed to a particular era.

Timeless yet out-of-place, it's the unwavering soundtrack to daydreams of life's losses and loves.
-- http://www.words-on-music.com/WM32.html


http://open.spotify.com/album/35xC5mUt93M8ZPZZro7EWm

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FalloutBoy
Musiktipsens mästare
 
Inlägg: 1594
Blev medlem: 2007-06-14

Inläggav FalloutBoy » 2011-05-05 18:23

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Thao & Mirah - Thao & Mirah (2011, Kill Rock Stars)

In the early 2000s in Olympia, Wash., it was not uncommon to see Mirah sitting in the back of a show, knitting. To her credit, this was years before the ubiquity of Stich 'n Bitch and Etsy and "Urban Craft Uprisings" and that one woman at the gym who knits while riding the stationary bicycle (hate). No way of proving this, but Thao Nguyen doesn't come across like much of a knitter. Where Mirah's best songs feel handmade and soft to the touch, Thao's with the Get Down Stay Down tend to be a bit more serrated and electrically charged.

The least you expect when a pair of singer/songwriters gets together is that they be harmonious, that their voices don't clash horribly or that one doesn't just steamroll the other under their usual style. The most you hope for is that each player will bring to the table something the other lacks-- that, rather than conflict, their differences will synthesize into something greater than the sum of their parts. Thao and Mirah are two of the more distinctive and accomplished voices in Kill Rock Stars and K Records' neighborly families, and, happily, they also turn out to be massively complimentary collaborators.

Mirah is the more senior of the two artists, and in fact she has a long history of playing well with others, from early recordings with the Microphones/Mount Eerie's Phil Elverum to later works with Black Cat Orchestra and Spectratone International. But on most works bearing her name, she's the main, and often only, voice. It is an incredible voice-- a versatile coo that can flit from low, sultry tones to high, airy falsetto in one breath-- but on recent albums, it's been deployed in service of increasingly staid songs and arrangements. Thao is a less ranging, though just as emotive, singer-- a low, husky alto-- but she's an adventurous musician, as comfortable with exuberant pop fanfare as with twangy, metallic blues, and her songs with the Get Down Stay Down are animated by a level of energy that Mirah's most recent work has rather lacked. Together, they've produced an album that ranks alongside the best of either artist's individual endeavors.

The album begins on the high note of "Eleven" (presumably as in the amp setting), a fire-cracking rhythm of drumstick clicks and handclaps and crowd shouting underpinning rich synth squelches and what sounds like an electrified mbira melody while Thao and Mirah trade lines or come together for the chorus, "When love is love/ Don't let it go away"-- the whole thing is nothing short of jubilant. The song was also co-written by Thao & Mirah co-producer/guest musician Merrill Garbus of tUnE-yArDs, and it has her loopy, Afro-pop fracturing fingerprints all over it.

The rest of Thao & Mirah could just coast on the goodwill from that song, but of course it doesn't. "Folks" takes a simple, twangy waltz-time guitar and adds seeping brass. "Little Cup" has Mirah's voice going from high and hollow-boned to downy and enveloping over fluttering, finger-picked guitar and a whispering a cappella, almost beatboxed rhythm. "Rubies and Rocks" expands a jazzy upright bass and snare groove to include low-swinging big band horns. Thao's measured singing breaks into an unexpectedly robust chorus on "Teeth", over dexterous guitar and a subtly upbeat rhythm of handlcaps and thigh slaps.

Some songs are more clearly led by one singer or the other-- Mirah's mournful unreeling on "Spaced Out Orbit" or Thao's rusty guitar slide and junkyard drum clatter of "Squareneck", as opposed to the back-and-forth of "How Dare You", on which the two trade lines like negotiating lovers over a cruddy drum machine beat. But everything on Thao & Mirah feels of a cohesive collaborative piece, separate from either artist's solo work, a combination that synthesizes their individual strengths to outstanding effect.
-- http://www.pitchfork.com/reviews/albums ... hao-mirah/


http://open.spotify.com/album/6muxQrr4lZqeFHOvhGNgfT

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Ton
 
Inlägg: 1044
Blev medlem: 2007-01-08

Inläggav Ton » 2011-05-10 18:20

Pat Jordache har släpt en av årets bästa med albumet "Future Songs". Eller som ngn skrev:
Jordaches musik låter som ett efterblivet Joy Division, magiskt helt enkelt.

http://open.spotify.com/track/0ssCClcuyq0Czd2WP59NIl

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Ton
 
Inlägg: 1044
Blev medlem: 2007-01-08

Inläggav Ton » 2011-05-10 18:22

Falloutboy, Thao & Miras + Panda Bears nya är verkligen guld :)

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Ton
 
Inlägg: 1044
Blev medlem: 2007-01-08

Inläggav Ton » 2011-05-10 18:48


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Ton
 
Inlägg: 1044
Blev medlem: 2007-01-08

Inläggav Ton » 2011-05-10 18:59

tUnE-yArDs som samarbetar med Thao & Mirah :)

http://open.spotify.com/track/3WQScg57KuTsPE1Iuwb0Zr

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FalloutBoy
Musiktipsens mästare
 
Inlägg: 1594
Blev medlem: 2007-06-14

Inläggav FalloutBoy » 2011-05-12 15:08

Ton skrev:Pat Jordache har släpt en av årets bästa med albumet "Future Songs". Eller som ngn skrev:
Jordaches musik låter som ett efterblivet Joy Division, magiskt helt enkelt.
Den hade jag missat (trots att den är släppt på ett av mina favoritskivbolag).
Riktigt bra! Tackar för tipset! :D

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FalloutBoy
Musiktipsens mästare
 
Inlägg: 1594
Blev medlem: 2007-06-14

Inläggav FalloutBoy » 2011-05-12 15:12

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Mark McGuire - A Young Person's Guide to Mark McGuire (2011, Editions Mego)

Last year, guitarist Mark McGuire stepped away from the busy production schedule of cosmic drone-rockers Emeralds to craft Living With Yourself, a fine and overlooked album that drew on autobiographical source material. It may have been the first time most people had considered McGuire in a solo context, but he'd actually been equally busy in that realm as well, issuing tracks on an assortment of limited CD-Rs, cassettes, and compilations. A Young Person's Guide gathers highlights from these small-run releases, offering a nice overview of what McGuire's solo work is all about.

Tracks here generally fall into one of a few different types. There are the spacey meditations where single notes are plucked to create a hypnotic effect that nods to minimalism and kosmische explorations that bring to mind in particular the landmark Inventions for Electric Guitar by Ash Ra Tempel's Manuel Göttsching. On tracks like "Radio Flyer", "Explosion Alarm", and "The Marfa Lights", McGuire uses bits of delay and overlapping patterns of cleanly picked tones to create music that feels weightless and airy and meditative.

Other tracks use harder strumming and looping chords and veer closer to the world of rock proper, and here the focal point is exploring the possibilities of a single chord progression. "Dream Team" has a steady pulse, harmonized leads bathed in distortion, and distant vocals, and the way it builds and gradually shifts creates a mood of uplift and even triumph. "The Path Lined With Colorful Stones" takes an even simpler strummed pattern as its base, which allows McGuire to spin out tendrils of melody on top that feel loose and ragged but without clear direction but that nonetheless manage to resonate. Here, McGuire's music feels partway between the thick, mantra-like approach of Roy Montgomery and the fluid melodicism of the Durutti Column's Vini Reilly. And then there are bright, pastoral instrumentals like "Icy Windows" and "Time Is Flying", which have a loose grounding in folk but take on a more mesmerizing quality through repetition.

Tracks vary in length from interludes that last barely over a minute to the 17-minute "Dream Team". Many of the pieces fall into spaces between these loose categories, but taken together, over the course of two packed CDs, they give a good idea of the range of McGuire's interests. It's not an especially wide range, but it is executed very well. He knows where he wants to go and what it takes to get there.

Is almost two and a half hours of guitar-based, mostly instrumental music overkill? It's really not. The way McGuire's music functions, I don't detect an upper limit for when it might grow tiresome. The longest tracks would also work fine even if they were longer; it's music that strives for endlessness in the best possible way. So this is the kind of record you can just put on at moderate volume when you are doing things and it fills a room nicely with warm, inviting sound. And then, when you're in the mood for more intense engagement, you can add another quarter-turn to the volume knob and take in the full force of McGuire's arrangements. The music shows remarkable flexibility.

Part of it is up to the fact that dynamic range is limited. There's little that is jarring or surprising. This is music that wants to wrap you in an affectionate embrace and serve as a companion, to either some other activity or to a more focused journey into of the further reaches of consciousness. And where the dream-driven music scenes that McGuire sometimes finds himself lumped in with can feel like a bummed-out retro hangover, this music is almost uniformly positive and optimistic, seeming to celebrate the restorative possibilities of elemental chord changes, repetition, and carefully sculpted textures. It's music that wants to find its way into your life and do some good, and I can't think of any good reason to resist it.
-- http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/154 ... k-mcguire/


http://open.spotify.com/album/027XqbhEHzGcK0M0SsUG9N

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FalloutBoy
Musiktipsens mästare
 
Inlägg: 1594
Blev medlem: 2007-06-14

Inläggav FalloutBoy » 2011-05-16 18:19

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City Center - Redeemer (2011, K Records)

Born of the bedroom recordings of Saturday Looks Good to Me and His Name Is Alive member Fred Thomas, City Center's primary introduction to listeners came in the form of a self-titled 2009 album on UK ambient label Type. While ostensibly a pop album, City Center's debut nonetheless existed in a decidedly more ambient and arty realm, with Thomas creating song formations out of lo-fi loops a la Panda Bear, largely moving away from the more classic pop sounds that marked his work in other bands. A sample of artistic breakthrough in chrysalis, the album wasn't quite the show-stopper it could have been, but certainly showed promise, its ethereal songs suggesting something greater to come.

Now a duo comprising Thomas and fellow SLGTM member Ryan Howard, City Center have signed with K Records and expanded their scope on second album Redeemer. Still awash in dreamy effects and warm, cozy aesthetics, Redeemer is a greater push toward pronounced hooks and memorable melodies. This isn't experimentation in pop so much as pop with occasional experimentation. Thomas and Howard have brought with them a group of ten songs that retain the debut's sense of textural playfulness, but imbue them with a more direct, accessible quality.

Opening with the sound of flowing water, the outstanding "Puppers" begins the album with a gentle, shoegazer-style progression of guitar and effects, slowly blooming into a breathtaking anthem of blissful sonic immersion. "Obvious" finds the duo taking a similar tack, with trippy samples washing over some fairly simple and clean guitar chords, ultimately finding very solid footing when a surprisingly hard-hitting drum beat arrives in the song's final third. All of a sudden the bedroom pop project begins to sound more like a rock band, more explicitly so on jangle pop songs like "Thaw" or the peppy, upbeat indie rocker "Modern Love." In the latter, the band sounds vastly more like The Pains of Being Pure at Heart than Panda Bear, yet on the whole the album seems to bridge those two artists, finding a common harmony between abstract ambient pop and warm, fuzzy indie rock.

While Redeemer ultimately finds City Center painting with similar hues as those found on their debut, their works have taken on new, more interesting shapes. The duo injects a healthy dose of hooks throughout the album's ten tracks, at times more or less abandoning their more abstract instincts altogether and hammering out an immediate pop tune. And when the pop songs end up as good as "Modern Love," there's no reason to obscure them with needless dressing.
-– http://treblezine.com/reviews/3768-City ... eemer.html


http://open.spotify.com/album/2FkKgv7jLMviQK2xt1dhK0

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FalloutBoy
Musiktipsens mästare
 
Inlägg: 1594
Blev medlem: 2007-06-14

Inläggav FalloutBoy » 2011-05-17 15:52

Blytungt! 8)

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This Will Destroy You - Tunnel Blanket (2011, Monotreme Records)

När Fredrik Strage i tidningen Pop 1997 intervjuar Jason Pierce från Spiritualized utformar han i texten ett närbesläktat förhållande mellan bandets senaste album, Ladies and Gentlemen We Are Floating in Space, och Francis Ford Coppolas djungelscener i Apocalypse Now. 14 år senare släpper postrockbandet This Will Destroy You sitt andra album och fullkomligt reformerar inte bara de stagnerade konturerna av en redan abstrakt genre - och därigenom också synen på dem som band - utan återkopplar dessutom till ovan nämnda vansinnesverk.

Texasbandets tidigare alster, undantaget två dronestycken som släpptes på EP under förra året, präglas av simpla instrumentala melodier draperade i svävande uppbyggnader med avslutande crescendon, inte sällan med elektroniska inslag och samples, vilket gjort att de fått leva med att refereras till som Explosions in The Skys arvtagare (eller kopia - beroende på vem du frågar). Cineastiska stycken som omfamnats av såväl tv-produktioner som evangeliska kristna grupper som använt musiken i propagandasyften, utan tillstånd eller ersättning. Milt sagt var det kanske inte riktigt denna situation de föreställt sig när någon presenterade namnidén. Därför är det svårt att se Tunnel Blanket som någonting annat än en mullrande motreaktion mot allting som tidigare varit. Det här är nämligen ingenting som kan tonsätta en ny harmlös storsatsning i tv-rutan eller användas för marknadsföring av den lokala kyrkan. Denna gång lever kvartetten på allvar upp till sitt namn.

Inledningen, den 12 minuter långa Little Smoke, är ett stegrande inferno där pedaleffekterna och de enorma gitarrmattorna lagerstaplas på varandra tills de konvergerar samman i en vacker helhet av kompakt oväsen. Skivan tar en stund. Som när synen vänjer sig vid ett mörkt rum eller ett framkallande av en polaroidbild. Så urskiljs detaljerna steg för steg, och ljudbilden som till en början kunde beskrivas som ett vattenfall av bly får ett betydligt mer mångfacetterat djup. Black Dunes är atmosfäriskt ett återupplivande av den mörka andradelen på Sigur Rós (), Killed the Lord, Left for the New World kontrasterar med sin tillbakalutande ambientstruktur och i Hand Powdered urskiljs doomiga jazzinslag á la Bohren & der Club of Gore. Men mest av allt är Tunnel Blanket en domedagsljudande helhet som inte bör styckas upp i låtpartier.

Precis som på Spiritualizeds 90-talsmilstolpe är det överflödet som slutligen öppnar upp. Pierce berättar i intervjun att de undvek att spela för många toner. Det var viktigare att ljudet var kraftfullt. Primitivt likt slutdestinationen i Apocalypse Now. "Ljuden jag spelar har en tendens att fara iväg åt vilka håll de vill", säger han. "Jag vet inte hur man stoppar dem. Jag är bara musiker."

Orden skulle lika gärna kunna vara tagna från någon av medlemmarna i This Will Destroy You. Det är dags att omvärdera synen på postrock - Tunnel Blanket återför det okontrollerbara kaoset.
-- http://gaffa.se/recension/48417


http://open.spotify.com/album/5UlTHc2giaUIYxgeejXjWu

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Inläggav shifts » 2011-05-19 10:03

FalloutBoy skrev:Blytungt! 8)

This Will Destroy You - Tunnel Blanket (2011, Monotreme Records)


Oj, indeed! Hade helt glömt bort det namnet. Har bara hört öppningsspåret
än så länge, men det var verkligen hur bra som helst.
2021 maj på Spotify

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Inläggav FalloutBoy » 2011-05-19 16:12

shifts skrev:Oj, indeed! Hade helt glömt bort det namnet. Har bara hört öppningsspåret än så länge, men det var verkligen hur bra som helst.

Ja, de visar verkligen var postrock-skåpet ska stå. :)

---

Men nu över till något mer minimalistiskt, nämligen cellisten Julia Kent:

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Julia Kent – Green And Grey (2011, Important Records)

The solo work of cellist Julia Kent deals in different ways with concepts of borders and of spaces which are neither one thing nor the other. Her first solo record, Delay, was based on that most modern (and Eno-esque) of limbos, the airport. Having crossed the globe in a number of different ensembles, most famously as a member of Antony and the Johnsons, but also with a range of more leftfield acts such as Rasputina, Burnt Sugar, Angels Of Light and Stars Of The Lid, she found she was spending rather a lot of time trapped in those places, and elected to use them to her advantage. She made recordings in airports, and used them as the foundation for Delay, naming the resulting tracks after the airports in which they were recorded. The title of her second album for Important suggests she has found the way out, but only to another place betwixt and between: the place where the grey of the city meets the green of the countryside. And exactly how much of an escape that turns out to be is open to question.

Green And Grey opens and closes with cicadas, stridulating in the evening air, with Kent’s looped cello building upon the samples to create the compositions. In between, there are tracks named after trees (“Ailanthus”), water (“Acquario”), landscape features (“Overlook”) and constellations (“Pleiades”), but also in one case, a building (“Spire”). It seems at first listen that Kent is outside, recording the sounds of the natural world, in order to inspire her work. The natural rhythms of those insects, the gurgle of water, the patter of raindrops, all find a musical echo in the tracks which follow them. So in a number of ways, the modus operandi hasn’t changed from Delay, it is just the location (or rather the locations) which is different. What is most telling here, however, is just how unobtrusive the recordings are. They are but brief snatches of very quiet sounds, the merest hints of the ambience of the outside world.

Leaving aside Eno (whether she draws from him intentionally or not), you have an album which takes similar cues as the likes of Johann Johannsson and Max Richter, or perhaps Hildur Gudnadottir with her more diaphonous cello work Without Sinking: modern, melancholic, minimalist, classical. However, in a sense trying to pigeonhole her records goes against their very essence: they seem to be born of a desire to break out, to escape. The short, churning rhythmic loops which underpin so many of these pieces act like an anchor, these ostinati counteracting the melody line’s desire to take the piece into different landscapes.

The more you listen, the more it begins to feel like, despite first impressions, this is less a record about the physical border between the city and the country, and more one about a mental border. The sound of echoing footsteps in “Ailanthus” suggest we haven’t even left the building, while the water heard in “Acquario” may even be the sound of a fishtank, rather than a stream. The cicadas are just as likely to be heard through an open window; let’s face it, you aren’t going to be plugging in a looping pedal in the park. As the surge of those song-like melodies is once more halted in its tracks, you feel that on Green And Grey Kent is as trapped in the city as she ever was in the airport. With the urge to escape to nature being defeated time and time again by more mundane concerns, sometimes all a city dweller can do is dream of leaving.
-- http://www.theliminal.co.uk/2011/02/jul ... -and-grey/


http://open.spotify.com/album/1qjmgvj6IHwh4GpoXpiLLr

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Inläggav FalloutBoy » 2011-05-26 19:46

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Efrim Manuel Menuck - Plays "High Gospel" (2011, Constellation)

Efrim Manuel Menuck is best known as co-founder of Godspeed You! Black Emperor, leader of agit-chamber-punk group Thee Silver Mt. Zion, and member of the Vic Chesnutt Band (2007-2009); he has a combined thirteen albums under his belt with these three groups. He is also co-founder of Montreal's Hotel2Tango recording studio, with dozens of recording, arranging and guest playing credits to his name, for a list of artists as diverse as British Sea Power, Carla Bozulich's Evangelista, and Grant Hart.

Fans of Menuck will be well versed in his highly original and constantly evolving approach to the sound of the electric guitar – a unique combination of short and long analog delays, biting compression and blown-out clouds of pink noise distortion. His recasting of various folkways through the lens of uncompromising punk-rock is also well-documented in the discography of Thee Silver Mt. Zion, with that band's use of poetically political group singing set against a hybrid of damaged blues, waltz, klezmer and folk instrumental tropes.

Perhaps less appreciated is Menuck's work as an inventive signal-bender and sound-sculptor, with an overriding commitment to analog processing, tape manipulations, re-amping and other iterative strategies. Efrim's aesthetic and techniques remain about as diametrically opposite to the dominant Pro-Tools and DSP culture as it gets for someone working in contemporary multi-tracked rock composition and production.

Efrim Manuel Menuck Plays "High Gospel" rallies all of these talents and sensibilities to deliver a powerful and personal album that serves as an ode to his adopted Montreal hometown (where he has now lived for two decades), the passing of great friends (Vic Chesnutt, Emma) and new fatherhood. Entirely self-produced and tracked at various Montreal locations, the album offers a confident, focused, humble and enveloping song cycle.

The droning, mangled electric guitar beds that underpin group-vocal melodies and dive-bombing electronics on the album’s opening track, and the hauntingly processed field recordings and ominous tape-delayed sound-sculpture of "a 12-pt. program for keep on keepin’ on", establish Menuck’s inimitable sonic palette in uncompromising and inspired style. "12-pt. program" ends in a glorious squall of soaring tones and distorted breakcore beats that yield to the ensuing song's intimate yet wide-screen suite for electric guitar and violin (courtesy Silver Mt. Zion bandmate and partner Jessica Moss). "heavy calls & hospitals blues" closes Side 1 with a simple piano-based ballad that harkens back to Efrim's vocal debut on the first Silver Mt. Zion album in 1999.

The first three songs on Side 2 deploy otherwordly ambience against repeating and contrapuntal melodies filtered through various pedal chains, occupying a distinctive interzone between electronic music and instrumental rock. In the second of these,"kaddish for chesnutt”, Efrim astonishes with lyrics that convey a profound intimacy with Vic, celebrating his life and death in unflinching eulogy. The final scorched-earth solo guitar figures that introduce "i am no longer a motherless child" relent to organ and keyboard oscillations and what is perhaps the most unabashedly celebratory pop song Menuck has ever produced, propelled by a wide-eyed, joyous, deeply proud (and existentially relieved?) vocal that is all chorus: the song title sung over and over....
-- http://cstrecords.com/cst078/


http://open.spotify.com/album/4OBwnF7aesXfFHKpNFEfJB

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Inläggav FalloutBoy » 2011-05-27 20:22

Grymt bra! 8)

Bild
EMA - Past Life Martyred Saints (2011, Redeye)

Erika M. Anderson has talked about finding "true bliss and terror" in the live performances of her former band, Gowns. The pressure-cooker atmosphere she and her partner in that group (and in life) Ezra Buchla immersed themselves in had to crack at some point, and it did, fatally and finally, at the beginning of 2010. Anderson's way of propping open an escape hatch from the bruised purging of Gowns was to retreat into herself, by gathering her collective musical ideas and putting them out under her own initials. But it's immediately apparent on hearing Past Life Martyred Saints, her debut full-length as EMA, that she's still all tangled up in "bliss and terror." For the most part, it's a white-knuckle ride. There's no pretense or pose here. No pulling back from the brink to foster an air of cool detachment. Anderson's music has the power to plummet to the depths and drag you right down there with her.

There's a lack of timidity in the way this music is expressed. It's almost as though Anderson snoozed her way through the past decade and is picking up threads that have mostly lain dormant since the early-to-mid 1990s. The boldness in her language, which thematically pings back and forth between emotional and physical duress, has the same naked volatility as Kat Bjelland circa Spanking Machine or Courtney Love in her Pretty on the Inside phase. It's often terrifying, distressing stuff. There's a feeling that you're watching someone in the midst of several life crises. It's a strange kind of testament to Past Life Martyred Saints that it often feels like a daunting proposition to listen to, as if spending too much time with it will leave you as scarred as its creator.

The lyrical fixations here frequently zoom in on Cronenberg-ian body horror, with Anderson exploring the gnarly elasticity of the human frame when it's placed under threat. EMA songs often duck into little mantras; "Butterfly Knife" bears one of the most unnerving of those in its "20 kisses with a butterfly knife" line. "Marked" is similarly nauseating and obsessed with physical abuse. Over a noise that sounds like water chugging down rusty steel piping Anderson devolves into repeating: "I wish that every time he touched me he left a mark." It dwells in the same kind of unsettling territory as Goffin/King's "He Hit Me (It Felt Like a Kiss)", and the bare-bones musical arrangement heightens the severity of the message just as Phil Spector's production did on the Crystals' song.

That ability for her arrangements to acutely reflect her lyrical mood is one of Anderson's trump cards. She knows exactly when to add and subtract elements, bringing "Marked" out of the doldrums at its close with a warm organ tone that she deploys whenever things get a little too heavy (see also: "Milkman"). The opening "The Grey Ship" is one of her most ambitious conceits in that regard. It shifts in style several times, from its earthy, folk-y opening to a midsection where all the instrumentation vanishes suddenly as if the bottom just fell out of the world.

It's a sign of her confidence and ambition that she can open the record with such a multi-faceted song, full of odd diversions and unexpected twists that need multiple plays to really sink in. But the hit-rate here is high. "California" is among Anderson's best works, a stream-of-consciousness rant about displacement and alienation set to a musical backing that feels like civilization collapsing around her. "California" shows off her enviable talent for finding a comfortable place where big-topic sloganeering and personal tales can coexist. It's that sweat-soaked head-rush of repulsion, sadness, anxiety, and nostalgia you get when you feel the tug of home.

Past Life Martyred Saints is a fiercely individual record, made by a musician with a fearless and courageous approach to her art. Crucially, the desire to let such raw emotion out in song never feels forced. It simply wouldn't work this well if there was a hint of artifice, or a suggestion that Anderson hadn't regurgitated all these feelings of loss, loathing, and rejection from a pit of genuinely volatile emotion. There's a conviction to her delivery that leaves you in no doubt that this is something she needed to flush out of her system. Comparisons can certainly be drawn to artists such as Patti Smith or Cat Power, and her dry, deadpan delivery occasionally orbits the same sphere as Kim Gordon's vocal work with Sonic Youth. But this is Anderson's own brittle unease. It hits as hard as a cold slap in the face-- and will leave its mark on you.
-- http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/153 ... ed-saints/


http://open.spotify.com/album/48haSiuyZcBdSvqeQOD1Hp

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Inläggav TCM » 2011-05-30 15:10

When routine bites hard

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Inläggav FalloutBoy » 2011-05-30 18:14

TCM skrev:Bill Wells & Aidan Moffat - Everything's Getting Older

Har haft den i spellistan ett tag men inte lyssnat på den än. Får väl ta och göra det nu då. ;)
Aidan Moffat är en gammal favorit (även om jag inte tycker han lyckats lika bra solo (hittills iaf) som när han var i Arab Strap).


Ja, den var fin. Låten får mig att tänka på ett annat fint skotskt samarbete, nämligen det mellan poeten Gerry Mitchell och Little Sparta:
http://open.spotify.com/artist/1ctoMoIBiZqCVXNvgkreUV

---

Och när vi ändå är inne på skottar och samarbeten så är King Creosote aktuell med ett nytt album tillsammans med John Hopkins. Vackert! :

Bild
King Creosote & Jon Hopkins - Diamon Mine (2011, Domino Records)

March 28th sees the release of Diamond Mine, a collaborative album from Domino and Double Six artists, King Creosote and Jon Hopkins.

Featuring lyrics and vocals from King Creosote sung over musical backdrops arranged and recorded by Jon Hopkins, Diamond Mine is a genuine labour of love, recorded over a number of years without the pressure of deadlines, whenever Jon and KC could get together.

The album, featuring instrumental moments as affecting as the lyrical, consists of newly interpreted obscure delights picked out from 20 years of King Creosote’s treasure chest of a back catalogue. Intended to be heard as a single experience, Diamond Mine produces a near classical suite of emotion ranging from cracked despair to patched-up euphoria. Described by King Creosote as a ‘soundtrack to a romanticised version of a life lived in a scottish coastal village’, the record weaves in slices of Fife life, bike wheels, spring tides, tea cups and café chatter to produce a beautiful, unique and timeless album.
-- http://www.dominorecordco.com/uk/news/1 ... new-album/


http://open.spotify.com/album/1Xl61j4RzKINfWTojz51BJ
Senast redigerad av FalloutBoy 2011-05-30 20:39, redigerad totalt 1 gång.

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Inläggav TCM » 2011-05-30 20:25

FalloutBoy skrev:
TCM skrev:Bill Wells & Aidan Moffat - Everything's Getting Older

Har haft den i spellistan ett tag men inte lyssnat på den än. Får väl ta och göra det nu då. ;)
Aidan Moffat är en gammal favorit (även om jag inte tycker han lyckats lika bra solo (hittills iaf) som han var i Arab Strap).


Hörde den första gången idag och reagerade instinktivt ;). Jag tycker att den var lite ojämn men det finns några höjdare.

FalloutBoy skrev:

Ja, den var fin. Låten får mig att tänka på ett annat fint skotskt samarbete, nämligen det mellan poeten Gerry Mitchell och Little Sparta:
http://open.spotify.com/artist/1ctoMoIBiZqCVXNvgkreUV


Jag förstår att du kopplade ihop dom - musik och lite skotskt spoken word :). Ska lyssna mer

FalloutBoy skrev:Och när vi ändå är inne på skottar och samarbeten så är King Creosote aktuell med ett nytt album tillsammans med John Hopkins. Vackert! :

http://img96.imageshack.us/img96/781/kc ... 082933.jpg
King Creosote & Jon Hopkins - Diamon Mine (2011, Domino Records)

March 28th sees the release of Diamond Mine, a collaborative album from Domino and Double Six artists, King Creosote and Jon Hopkins.

Featuring lyrics and vocals from King Creosote sung over musical backdrops arranged and recorded by Jon Hopkins, Diamond Mine is a genuine labour of love, recorded over a number of years without the pressure of deadlines, whenever Jon and KC could get together.

The album, featuring instrumental moments as affecting as the lyrical, consists of newly interpreted obscure delights picked out from 20 years of King Creosote’s treasure chest of a back catalogue. Intended to be heard as a single experience, Diamond Mine produces a near classical suite of emotion ranging from cracked despair to patched-up euphoria. Described by King Creosote as a ‘soundtrack to a romanticised version of a life lived in a scottish coastal village’, the record weaves in slices of Fife life, bike wheels, spring tides, tea cups and café chatter to produce a beautiful, unique and timeless album.
-- http://www.dominorecordco.com/uk/news/1 ... new-album/


http://open.spotify.com/album/1Xl61j4RzKINfWTojz51BJ


Den här ska jag definitivt lyssna mer på. Lät kanon efter en snabb första lyssning. Mycket stämningsfullt
When routine bites hard

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Inläggav Jansson » 2011-06-01 08:47

I CAN´T THINK.... ..... OF ANYTHING BOW LP2

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Inläggav FalloutBoy » 2011-06-02 17:27

Bra bidrag från herr Jansson. Kände till de tre första iaf (har nog nämnt albumet med Wild Nothing i den här tråden t.o.m.).

---

Slänger in ett tips också:

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Weyes Blood - The Outside Room (2011, Not Not Fun)

Natalie Weyes Blood (originally Weyes Bluhd) has existed in the grime-ghost fringe-music catacombs since at least 2006, though originally it was in more of a crouched/hieroglyphic FX pedals style, culminating in a European tour with Axolotl. After two seasons of hibernation and a relocation to Baltimore, she materialized her 'Blood In Bluhd Out' transformation and began writing/playing the darkly haunted narcotic drifter ballads that make up "The Outside Room", her first official full-length.

Recorded and mixed by good friend Graham Lambkin, the record has shadows of The Shadow Ring in the oddly creaking ambient sounds and stark, nuanced production, which lend the eerily beautiful neo-Nico death-folk laments a more modern, art-skewed sheen. There's still echoes of her old drone/tape-ghost-clouds moods on tracks like "In The Isle Of Agnitio" and the long, bells-laden outro to "Romneydale," but the bulk of the LP is swooning and sweeping, with Natalie's gorgeous, quasi-Teutonic vox leading the way. A subtly mesmerizing long-player, very "out of time," and strangely untouched by contempo influences.
-- http://www.piccadillyrecords.com/produc ... 76046.html


http://open.spotify.com/album/3mu74KbAA5LwCwIBu1VhWs

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Inläggav Jansson » 2011-06-03 23:06

FOB

Du är som vanligt vänligheten själv.
Klart att jag missat att det.
Men som TCM så väl vet finns demens i min familj så därför ber jag dig att ha tålamod med em äldre herre.
I CAN´T THINK.... ..... OF ANYTHING BOW LP2

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Inläggav TCM » 2011-06-03 23:07

Jansson skrev:FOB

Du är som vanligt vänligheten själv.
Klart att jag missat att det.
Men som TCM så väl vet finns demens i min familj så därför ber jag dig att ha tålamod med em äldre herre.


:)
When routine bites hard

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