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Half Dead Ganga Music
Fassle - (3:03) 75 BPM
Review: Platform 23 Records' meandering and sporadic journey continues, digging up archival treasures of known and unknown sonics. The label's close association with Paris-based 'ethno-industrialists' Vox Populi! continues, here returning to their most heralded and possibly cohesive album, Half Dead Ganga Music. The beautifully apt title precedes their most intense trip, pushing the boundaries away from the percussive psychedelic of albums 'Mystcitismes' (1985) and 'Aither' (1989) to create a dark ambient masterpiece that flows as one. The musique concrete background of founder Axel Kyrou is most apparent here, partner Mythra's vocals adding a voodoo ritualism and creativity, together physical and mystical extolling a parallel realm. Occult music of no pretense, mellow-drone aromas, dark ambience, obscure bass mumbles, as layer upon layer of tape processing and hazy vocal glossolias are oddly uplifting, a beauty distilled. The trip transports via drone and sparse drum machine pulses, vortices and swirl, but never settling, instead segueing to further hallucinations. The group's mercurial, spiritual surrealism sets them apart for the inclusion of folk instrumentation embedded in the industrial heart, the sprawling 3-piece live finale mix bubbling electronics of partially formed art song crescendo drenched improvisation that makes them so special.
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PLA 034
26 Jan 24
Ambient/Drone
Ethniques Psychedliques
Various
Laurent Pernice - "Plan De Coupe" - (4:24) 59 BPM
Mistery Plane - "Disturbing" - (3:54) 57 BPM Hot
Review: Platform 23 reunites once more with Vox Man Records to dig deep into their archives and shine a new light on. In the past they have done some mega well loved Alternative Funk compilations which got the label off to a fine start and now they dig into an array of cult cassette releases to bring us treasure from Audiologie N-4 - The Independant Psychedelic Trip and Audiologie 5 et 6 - Ethniques Urbaines. This is music from the avant-garde and post punk scenes that draws on wave, spoken word, dark dub and industrial for its eerie yet alluring charms, all with a real edge. Ethnic, idiosyncratic and psyched out, this is another great overview.
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PLA 032
24 Nov 23
Coldwave/Synth
Music For Hippies
De Fabriek - "Lullabye" - (10:37) 55 BPM Hot
De Fabriek - "Lullabye" (Dunkeltier 'Hey Robot' mix) - (7:27) 55 BPM
Dunkeltier - "Tik Tok Goes The Clock" - (7:27) 55 BPM
Review: Platform 23 again explores the dense voids, this time with a touch of the funk with a reissue of Dutch experimentalists De Fabriek and two tracks from their Music For cassette series, this time calling all Hippies. Featuring both original and reinterpretations from modern-day heads Dunkeltier and Khidja, this EP is something of an oddity, showcasing the bands' expansive range, moving away from the noise, drone and industrial soundscape releases they had become known for and crafting here, free flowing, groovy longform jams. Active since the late 70s to today, De Fabriek (The Factory) have never considered themselves a real band, also being a label too, with an evolving and irregular line up centred around Richard van Dellen, they present their music and output as a kind of work-union. With literally four decades and dozens of releases across all formats, 1988's cassette release Music For Hippies has become something of a cult curio, with the long improvisational tracks, Lullabye and Coming Down eschewing the rougher, industrial experience for something completely different. In opener Lullabye, we go full leftfield P-Funk meets Motorik undertones. An incessant beat is laid from the start and doesn't cease for over 10 minutes, while spoken vocals call closer to the Krautrock realms of Can and hark to Liebezeit's stylised grooving best. Analog, echo washed, with touches of glam and wrapped in simple effects pedal work, the secrets are passed to Dresden / Berlin inhabitant Dunkeltier aka Sneaker DJ aka Thomas Smorek. His darker moniker, appearing on obscure edits for Macadam Mambo and the much-missed Bahnsteig 23, his Hey Robot mix adds bass, percussion, strings and synth to remold Lullabye into a late night, red light, basement denzien. This is followed by an additional, bonus reimagining, creating an all-new time piece, an ear worm of the best kind with Tik Tok Goes The Clock. Come Down is a more resembling De Fabriek werk, edited to fit, the darkness is entered as snapshot vocal quips, oscillations and synthesised mutations are laid over a lazy, relentless ostinato rhythm where cymbals crash on the bar. Inviting, calling, De Fabriek's aptly titled downer is in fact, a joyous journey. To complete, label affiliates, Khidja take a break from finalising their debut album to unfold their Psychebabble Mix, a dozen plus minutes of warped, twisted, cassette machinations that suck the listener further along the trip. Added bass propels their edit suddenly to a new direction, a hook for mind and for the open willed, the body.
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PLA 043
14 Apr 23
Ambient/Drone
Myscitismes
Omid - (2:33) 66 BPM
Delome - (5:14) 79 BPM
Review: Vox Populi!'s cult and highly sought after debut LP is finally reissued here after 30 years. Recorded after their first single - Ectoplasmies (1983) - between 1984 and 1985, the original band of Mitra and her (then) 14 year old brother Arash and Axel Kyrou, evolved from 2 early cassettes and the 7"s' rudimentary, idiosyncratic and improvisational structures to more cohesive edges. Living together, but with no formal music education, the nature of the disparate elements led to a sparseness of the recordings. Influenced by his mother, the concrete music pioneer, Mireille Kyrou and her work at GRM (State Institute for Musical Research), Axel challenged his creativity by utilising their Vox Man studio as an instrument. Building on minimal synth, rhythm box, hand percussion and Persian poetry, they experimented with tape manipulation - layering the music with forward, backward and echo simultaneously - creating a leap in the band's development. The dark nature Myscitismes was reflected in their increasing interest in industrial and ethnic music, with a great fascination for the religious traditional music of Tibet. Ceremonial, gothic, drone-folk, the progression is apparent; onward perceptions.
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PLA 038
11 Sep 20
Coldwave/Synth
Automaton
Dreams Of Tunnels - (2:00) 51 BPM
Review: The music of Chel White is celebrated in Automaton, a collection of mostly unreleased recordings from 1985 to 1991, by this innovative animator, film maker and visual artist.

Having studied music theory in grade school, White taught himself drumming and played in a new wave band until, in 1981, together with Dan Gediman, they formed the minimal wave duo Process Blue (Alternative Funk, 1985 / Dark Entries, 2018). Here their experimentation went way beyond playing drums.

His interest in industrial music, fostered in the late '70s and early '80s while working in factories as a way to put himself through college, informed his use of electronic instruments, tape manipulation, noise and unconventional percussion.

By 1985, as a now solo artist buoyed by newly affordable audio sampling technology, White tapped into his earlier teenage fascination with the art and films of both the Surrealist and Dada movements - in particular their disparate and fragmented imagery and sound - as a means to create striking new sonic palettes.

Science & Industry - a track largely influenced by Balinese monkey chanting and the consumer excess of American in the 1980's - is a clear example of "music collage". Photocopy Cha Cha, made for the short animation film Choreography for Copy Machine (Berlin International Film Festival, 1992 / Sundance Film Festival, 2001) moved his music into the realm of early multi-media.

Experimenting further, tracks like Liquid Shadows and Pensive provide minimalist moments, before the drone-like Dream #630 and Forest Song point to a future that included music video works (David Lynch/Thom Yorke).
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PLA 037
13 Dec 19
Coldwave/Synth
November
Jayne Andrews - (1:52) 74 BPM
Review: Thirteen recordings of musics entirely produced upon 4-track portastudio for your pleasure and discourse - the sole work of Mr Robert Grant of this parish.

So states the photocopy insert from the 1985 November LP on Cordelia Records. Home to R. Stevie Moore, Rimarimba recently reissued by Freedom To Spend - and label owner Alan Jenkin's The Deep Freeze Mice, Cordelia was home to a menagerie of sound collage plucked from the ether.

Included is the only release from Concept City, spreading across 13 instrumental tracks of samples and noise. The Welsh choir and robovox meets hypnotic bass of Open The Network glides to the acoustics of Jayne Andrews and Filament, before Steam amasses TV ad cassette archives. As Etruria and Lapse Wine's Durutti meets reel-to-reel to the cold wave of War, Children and wasp synth of Helsinki, Grant slowly unfolds a masterpiece.

Looped drum samples, multiple layered to tape, sped up and slowed down for phasing, the title track is a pinnacle of 80s DiY genius. 'Crossroads' multi-sampling Meg leads to the exotica 'muzak' closings of Penetration and Friends. With just 5 albums over 40 years the music of Mr Concept can be a discovery and cherished.
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PLA 039
13 Dec 19
Coldwave/Synth
Alternative Funk: Volume 2
Various
Kosa - "For Dance" - (3:16) 56 BPM
Psyclones - "Fall In Time" - (2:22) 59 BPM
Chukk Green - "Shoes For Freedom" - (1:19) 65 BPM
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PLA 024
21 Jan 19
Indie/Alternative
Alternative Funk: Volume 1
Various
Son Of Sam - "Anti Apartheid" - (4:14) 70 BPM
From Raushenberg - "About Fritz" - (4:04) 56 BPM
Zoohtee - "Track 8" - (2:58) 67 BPM
Kosa - "Nykowe" - (1:17) 66 BPM
ONY - "Give It To Me" - (1:29) 75 BPM
Vox Populi & Man - "Megamix" - (2:14) 53 BPM
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PLA 023
03 Dec 18
Indie/Alternative
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