Diskotopia Compilation Out Today!

As of today, the new compilation from our good friends in Tokyo, Diskotopia, is available to download from Boomkat and all other good online music stores. The album features a brilliant remix of our track “You Can Take A Heart But You Cannot Make It Beat” by the label’s proprietors, A Taut Line and BD1982 (which you can download for free from XLR8R), as well as a new track from Chris’s side-project with A Taut Line, Greeen Linez (the video for which you can watch below).

Those in Japan also have the option of buying the compilation on CD (including 4 exclusive bonus tracks) from Tower Records and other retailers. It’s an absolutely fantastic album, but don’t just take our word for it. Here’s what Joe Muggs had to say about the release in the latest issue of The Wire magazine:

N.B. to accompany this release, an exclusive track by BD1982 & A Taut Line will be available to Wire subscribers next month, as part of the magazine’s Below The Radar compilation series.

Modular – Sinfonías Para Terrícolas

Our favourite band of Argentinean retro-futurists Modular have recently released their long-awaited new album on the ever-reliable Elefant Records. The album was partly recorded with the assistance of Andy Ramsay and Joe Watson from Stereolab (if any act is the rightful heir to Stereolab’s vacated future-pop crown then it’s Modular), and is just as amazing as we had hoped. To enjoy Modular’s music is to enter another world, one of utopian optimism, surrealist dreamscapes and jet-setting international intrigue. Simply put, pop dreamers everywhere need this album (and this band) in their lives!

“La Rebelión de los Robots” by Modular

Addendum: awesome new video below!

Footprints On The Moon

Also known as Le Orme, this unclassifiable and unforgettable 1975 film was directed by Luigi Bazzoni, who also made the brilliantly dreamlike giallo The Fifth Cord and…not much else. The film was photographed by Vittorio Storaro, in my opinion the greatest cinematographer in the history of film, and contains some of his finest work. It also inspired one of our songs!

“Give me that Cobra Jewel”

 

The great screen siren Maria Montez (so beloved of the underground film-maker Jack Smith) in perhaps her most famous film, 1944′s Cobra Woman. These 5 seconds of celluloid just get better and better, the more times you watch them!

Brussels Finds

This is a slightly tardy post, as I went to Brussels almost a month ago, but better late than never. One of the first things you notice on arriving in this amazing city is how incredibly seriously comics are taken – to be honest, the English word “comic” seems a bit throwaway in this context, so I feel that the French term “bande dessinée” is more appropriate really. They are literally everywhere, from the impressively housed Centre Belge de la Bande Dessinée, to the giant murals of famous characters adorning random walls around the city, to (best of all) the countless second-hand book shops filled to the rafters with works spanning the ages. Given all this, I thought it would be remiss of me to leave Brussels without picking up at least a couple of books to take home with me. Firstly, I think anyone familiar with the band and our recent album will be able to tell why I bought this one:

However, amusing personal associations aside, this is actually one of an extremely popular Belgian series known originally as Suske En Wiske and created by the late Willy Vandersteen in 1948. This is the French version, in which the central characters are known as Bob and Bobette, but I think the drawing style and content is very typically Flemish. Anyway, here are the “chasseurs” hunting some “fantômes”:

The other “bande dessinée” I picked up very much appealed to the part of me that used to read silly old adventure comics as a child, and now enjoys watching silly old exploitation thrillers. Bruno Brazil is another popular series that was originally published in Le journal de Tintin in the 1970s, and was written by Louis Albert (aka Greg) and drawn by William Vance. From what I can gather with my rather rusty French, the titular character is some sort of debonair super-spy/crime-solving hero, and in this particular story, the case seems to require him going undercover in a ’70s soul-funk band!

Many of Brussels’s second-hand bookshops also stock copious old records, and when I came across this mint-condition, seemingly self-released LP from 1980, I felt I had to take a chance on it.

The album turned out to be a one-off collaboration between the long-established, Brazilian-influenced Belgian guitarist, Stephane Martini, and a mysterious wandering poet/singer, the eponymous Benjamin. The music itself is an interesting mix of Brel-style Belgian “chanson”, hippy beat poetry, soft folk and light Latin influences. Overall, an understated, yet unusual and enjoyable listen. Someone (maybe Benjamin himself?) has put the album tracks up on the dreaded Myspace, so you can listen to them there.

I could actually write much, more about what I saw and did during the few days I spent in Brussels, but I’ll leave that for another time. Suffice to say, I highly recommend a visit!

Scala Forever

This week, we were delighted to find out about Scala Forever, “a season of films reliving the legendary Scala Cinema’s programming history and celebrating the current repertory film scene in London”. The season lasts from August 13th until October 2nd and is taking place at lots of different venues across London. Pretty much every single film that is showing is amazing, but here are some of our must-see picks:

Morgiana / Valerie And Her Week Of Wonders: a double-bill of classic Czechoslovakian dreamscapes.

Liquid Sky / Cafe Flesh: two bizarre and ultra-stylised sexy sci-fi films, as featured in our Bible, Destroy All Movies!!!: The Complete Guide To Punks On Film.

Profondo Rosso / Tenebre / Opera: three films by our favourite director and one of our biggest influences.

All three of these events are at The Roxy, a lovely bar/venue with a decidedly Lynchian vibe. We’d also strongly recommend the Portobello Pop-Up Cinema‘s screening of Russian/Armenian masterpiece The Colour Of Pomegranates and a stellar line-up of homoeroticism, sensuality and, erm, Glen Or Glenda at the Rio Cinema. All in all, should be a great couple of months. See you there!

Greeen Linez EP out today!

The debut EP by Greeen Linez, a new collaboration between Chris and Matt Lyne (aka A Taut Line), is out today on Diskotopia. You can buy this digital release from Boomkat and other good online retailers. If you want a taste of what this project is about, you can watch the video or download the free mp3 for bonus track Palm Coast Freeway:

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 188 other followers