Buzzbands shares the new warped, mangled version of GANGI's hit "Animals"

PREMIERE

“‘Animals Figure 427’ is revelatory — imagine if 2008 visitors from a distant galaxy got just close enough to Earth to pick up warped snippets of the song ‘Animals.’” Thanks a million to Kevin Bronson at Buzzbands.la for the reveal of another cut from the first official release from GANGI in a decade!

“Animals Figure 427” is from the upcoming 𝘈𝘴 𝘍𝘢𝘬𝘦 𝘌𝘴𝘵𝘢𝘵𝘦𝘴, a nod to the duo's name going forward. The limited (100 copies!) vinyl of this release (with etched B-side!) is an actual artifact.

These pieces were pressed, then stored, when the songs were originally recorded and “mangled” ten years ago. They were gone once. They'll be gone again!

Pre-order here. 𝘈𝘴 𝘍𝘢𝘬𝘦 𝘌𝘴𝘵𝘢𝘵𝘦𝘴 is out August 5 via Office of Analogue and Digital.

Los Angeles duo GANGI to finally release limited-edition vinyl EP pressed and stored more than a decade ago.

NEWS

“As Fake Estates” by Los Angeles-based duo GANGI arrives on Aug. 5 via the band’s Office of Analogue and Digital label, streaming on all digital services, and also as a vinyl release with etched B-side.

These very limited vinyl copies are artifacts, having been pressed and stored at the time that the original recordings were made a decade ago, only to be released now.

Previously praised as “dark and rich” (Los Angeles Times) for its “aural collage that seems aimed at warping any expectations” (LA Weekly) or more esoterically, “a soundtrack to cognitive dissonance” (Under the Radar), GANGI’s “electro-psych evolution has been years in the making” according to SPIN, writing in the summer of 2012 about the Los Angeles-based duo’s second album.

Now, “making” is made as GANGI (Matt Gangi and Eric Chramosta) lands in the future with a three-song suite of sonic disturbance from the past.

The material on “As Fake Estates” was recorded around the same time as the 2012 GANGI album gesture is, and is mostly comprised of what Matt Gangi describes as “mangled” versions of songs that date back to the debut GANGI album A, released in 2007. “We sampled and re-constructed our own re-recordings to make most of it,” he explains.

Chramosta terms the new release “a multiple-decade long lineage of assembly, disassembly and reassembly” or the re-examination of “that which had been left to collect digital dust. Two men’s trash can be the same men’s treasure.”

The elements that call back GANGI’s psych-pop past are heavily spliced and fed through myriad electronic components, channeling the anarchy of The Pop Group and melting warble of DJ Screw. Other influences include Black Dice and Salem.

Stream Pacifico's new EP - 17 years in the making - now via V13

PREMIERE

I’ve been listening to the rough mixes of the next Pacifico record and wow, this record sounds BIG. You'll have to wait, but today V13 has helped us reveal the entire ‘05/‘22 EP, which will stream everywhere tomorrow via Pacifirecords.

As the story (and title) goes, this batch of songs was started in 2005 and completed in 2022. V13 reports: "It was a very interesting recording experience, because it required Matthew Schwartz, now an experienced, professional musician, to reconnect with his former self, a young man just trying to find his way in a world he wasn’t familiar with."

Click for your life!

Spill Mag shares the second single from Pacifico's upcoming EP

TRACK PREMIERE

The second single from the upcoming Pacifico EP ‘05/‘22 drops tomorrow. Hear it today at The Spill Magazine! That's the team work that makes the dream work, kids!

"Sonically and lyrically, the song reflects Schwartz’s variety of rock and songwriting influences, from Radiohead and Weezer to Jeff Buckley and Jeremy Enigk."

Out June 3 on Pacifirecords. Click 4 ur lyfe!

2014 discussion about how artificial intelligence could produce music evolves into very human bass and vibes-driven duo CLIFFWALKER

NEWS

CLIFFWALKER is not just a cool name for a band.

The Portland, Oregon-based instrumental duo of Cliff Hayes (Bass, Keys) and A. Walker Spring (Vibes, Drums, Keys, Guitar) are just lucky to be named that way. To take the serendipity a step (sorry, had to) further, the sound of the pair’s upcoming “Painted Gray Sky” EP (out June 24, 2022) is also edgy.

We can dispense with the puns now, let’s talk about the music:

It’s like if a sexy Kraftwerk had joined in on the sessions with jazz legend Don Cherry and composer Ron Frangipane scoring Alejandro Jodorowsky’s “The Holy Mountain.”

Or maybe they picked up John Carpenter on the way to Tangerine Dream’s studio to make the music for Michael Mann’s neo-noir heist action thriller “Thief.”

The repeating riffs of minimalist composers such as Steve Reich, Philip Glass, and Terry Riley are also touchstones, and for those born more recently, Hayes and Spring suggest that the instrumentation on “Painted Gray Sky” is in the vein of Tortoise, but driven by bass lines a la Death From Above 1979.

The genius of composer Paul Slavens shines from "Naomi" to "Zelda" on brilliant "Alphabet Girls, Vol. II," out June 24.

NEWS

Alphabet Girls, Vol. II by Paul Slavens (June 24, State Fair Records) is the crystallization and distillation of the Nebraska born, Denton, TX-based artist’s long, varied, and accomplished career, complete with all of the requisite breakthroughs and disappointments.

On record, Slavens’s endurance is a listener’s treat. Alphabet Girls, Vol. II plays like the product of a “been everywhere, seen everything” guru-type somehow fitting all of his experience and education onto five lines of musical staff like some kind of trippy Tetris.

Funny, but serious. Jazz, but pop. Quirky, but grounded. Alphabet Girls, Vol. II (the title isn’t a red herring, the “girls” of Vol. I showed up twelve years ago) is all of these things and more.

But not.

“My goal was to make beautiful sounds,” Slavens said.

Read the full Paul Slavens bio here.