Showing posts with label Age of Disinformation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Age of Disinformation. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Amazing Caves, Age of Disinformation in Sound Projector

We love the U.K.-published Sound Projector, which really is the best challenging music mag out there, going a step beyond The Wire and its ilk into the true underground.

Happily, the Sound Projector loves us too, evidenced by this, published in the latest, greatest, and highly recommended issue #19 (2011):

Zanzibar Snails
Journey Into Amazing Caves!
USA MAYYRH RECORDS MYH06 CD + DVD (2009)

Zanzibar Snails are the noisy improvising crusaders built around the core duo of Nevada Hill (guitar) and Michael Chamy (oscillators and tone generators), well represented on this "concept" CD + DVD double-pack. The music disk, where they're joined by percussionist David Lee Price and sax player Mike Forbes for one track, presents their distinctive brand of uglified electronic feedback and oscillating spillages recorded in 2006-07, producing slowly swelling sounds that are every bit as craggy as the stalactites they purport to depict. Not since Stockhausen descended into the caves of Jeita in 1969 to give his infamous live concerts has avant-garde noise exhibited such an intimate relationship with the world beneath the ground (excepting of course the famous 1974 LP by Rick Wakeman). It's quite a sprawling listen - the title track alone is 20 minutes long, with a three minute coda following directly afterwards – but it's good to hear the Snails stretching out and giving themselves sufficient leeway to thoroughly explore this imaginary interior space. My initial impression, especially on the opening cut, is that it's Hill's guitar that makes most impact, where his characteristic restraint allows him to punch home every discordant note with the assurance of a skilled riveter. Minimal figures, odd shapes and droney strums slightly enhanced with robust echo and reverb effects are thrown off from his freeboard; his stabs and swipes act like shards of light from the helmets of this spelunking team, occasionally illuminating the wonders of the cave world. As for Chamy, it's his task to create the virtual walls of said cave, and he provides a very convincing simulacrum with his incredibly heavy analogue tones, effectively summoning up not just the sheer weight of the rock pressing down upon us. but a clammy, claustrophobic atmosphere that almost seeps into your very lungs. This is a slow, abstract and relentless journey, and if played in the dark will probably induce very oppressive effects in your mind, causing screams and helpless gasps for air.

'Gilded Stars & Garters' offers us a breath of fresh air above ground for some 6-7 minutes, unless we've simply entered a volcanic grotto where the phosphorescent glow of microbes clustered on the rocks is creating an eerie impression of daylight. The subtly-filtered electronic tones shift up and down, gradually thickening the air, and the performance is darkened further by the snarly uncertain saxophone effects from Mike Forbes. Then it's back to the lower depths once again, with a 23-minute version of the theme, this time with added violence and paranoia - fragments of scrabbly noise, discordant guitar attacks and volcanic electronic bursts that suggest the whole expedition is taking a turn for the worse. Much more variety across this version of the 'Caves' saga (with added "pepth derception", according to the subtitle), which still sustains the grim and bleak mood of this place where danger lurks in every tunnel. You'll emerge from the experience to find you have adopted all the characteristics of a mole: little slitty eyes for seeing in the dark, body structure like a spade, and powerful claws for digging. Dig?

The release comes with a DVD called Carbage Goma, a more recent musical performance by the Snails enhanced with wild visual additions from David Lee Price; Seth Sherman brings his acoustic guitar, and there's also a welcome return from Josh McWhirter and his diabolical viola. You won't see much of the band on this mind-murking visual explosion from Price, but you will see plenty of dazzling computer effects, colour-field experiments, and surreal close-ups of ill-fitting objects that produce a memorable psychedelic broth.
ED PINSENT
www.mayyrh.com

Age Of Disinformation
Age Of Disinformation
USA MAYYRH RECORDS MYH08 CD (2009)
Nothing to do with the English art project Disinformation, Age Of Disinformation was a onetime collaboration between six Texan players from similar-minded underground music ventures, The six calling themselves a 'lucid nightmare supergroup'. Michael Chamy, from Zanzibar Snails, is one contributor; the others are Aaron Gonzalez, Mike Maxwell, Jon Teague, Kenny Withrow and Kim Corbet, members of marginal groups around Fort Worth, Denton, and Dallas, all of them playing many electronic instruments, keyboards, percussion and guitar; wherever possible doing so quite intuitively and all at the same time. Voices, both narrated and sampled, also form part of the dense infusion. At the instigation of Gonzalez, these six gathered to play at a certain locale in 2008, and issued with vague and stark performance instructions by the leader, whose aim was to make a subconscious statement about the contemporary problem we all face in society: information-bombardment, and the damage this saturation of data may be causing to our collective spiritual condition. These seven tracks may have been edited down from a much longer continuous session of ambient free-form spiraling and spinning. What results from all the above is a slowly rotating whirlpool of over-filled musical and verbal gibberish, with no clear guidance to the listener about how to navigate around this swamp of vaguely unpleasant fetid noise.There is, I think, some benign intention to improve mankind's lot through this experiment; one hoped-for outcome is "the formation of the eternal Unimind", which may sound a little Mr. Spock, but at least it's more constructive than wallowing in a pessimistic state of anticommunication, or plotting destruction of the world through harsh electronic noise. The intended sensations of confusion, jumblement and disarray are further expressed in the colourful collage sprawl on the front cover, and the curlicued, nigh-unreadable texts on the interior.
Quite compelling.
ED PINSENT
www.mayyrh.com

Saturday, July 31, 2010

Age of Dis, D & N 2 in Terrascope Online

The venerable psychonaut waxes about the Mayyrh clan in this month's Terrascopic Rumbles, penned by some combination of Ian Fraser, Steve Palmer and Stefan Eck:

"Maybe the most weird and original cover, if not ever at least for a very long time: The easy part is the vellum sleeve with screen-printed text on. But then, the CDr is wrapped in “mysterious sebaceous animal fleece”. Phew! What about the band, the music and sounds? Well, it’s D & N with their debut full-length release “2” (or D & N 2’s self titled album, how could I know?). D & N is not our old friends Damon and Naomi but a collaboration between Nevada Hill and David Lee Price, both from North Texas improve/drone collective Zanzibar Snails. When I’ve emotionally recovered from opening the cover, I could concentrate on the music and it’s sounds. The vellum sleeve’s explanation of the technical procedures of the CD (improvisations during two days etc, then all cut into two pieces placed over each other on varying volumes) has been read and understood. But, still, the music and sounds? Well, it’s improvisations of the kind we use to hear from Vibracatheral Orchestra, Pelt, The A Band and such, that means it’s good and interesting with a lot of stuff happening all the time. And the two members of D & N of course sounds like a bigger band with the treatment of the recordings. List of instruments used: 2 acoustic guitars, melodica, modified Yamaha keyboard, modified drum machine, contact microphone, looping pedal, modified musical elephant keyboard, field recordings, 2 x 4 beards (and here I’m a bit disappointed the coverage of the CD wasn’t human hair instead of animals furs), ice chest, something tubes, rock house…… One 39 minutes piece sliced into nine parts of various characters. www.mayyrh.com"

"Age of Disinformation is a sort of super group gathered together by surrealist impresario Aaron Gonzalez consisting of members from Zanzibar Snails, Tidbits, Yells of Eels and a lot other. At midnight May 23, 2008, they entered the stage at an event. The only instructions given were “an improvisation on the current state of psychological and spiritual breakdown as it relates to viral ecosystem of economies of information”. Yeah, that’s rock ‘n’ roll! The ensemble set away on an improvisation trying to sound wise visualise the instruction and I must say they succeed a lot. Not to say I would have understood the instruction if it was I who should play, but the ensemble present a 47 minutes set of psychedelic sound sculptures, ambient, drones, musique concrete, etc – music free in spirit and in mind where the players interact in the best way and succeed with the most difficult art of being an improviser: The Art Of Listening To Each Other and out of that contribute with some good playing. The piece is split into seven on the disc even though it actually is just one single piece. The character of the tracks varies from harsh moments to silent patterns of electronics and buzzes where small talking voices breaks through like from radio waves. The competence and the experience of the players make this piece of cake really tasty. The album is self titled and limited to 200 copies. As always with Mayyrh Records the cover is beautiful and great. Here it’s designed by Nevada Hill. www.mayyrh.com"

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Age of Disinformation reunites for NMASS festival in Austin, TX

Age of Disinformation is reuniting for its second show ever on Friday, June 18, as part of the 3-day whirlwind NMASS festival, curated by Austin's Church of the friendly Ghost.

Age of Disinformation lineup: Aaron Gonzalez, Mike Maxwell, Kenny Withrow, Kim Corbett, Michael Chamy, and Mark Church (taking the place of Jon Teague this time)

members of: Yells at Eels, Tidbits, Zanzibar Snails, New Bohemians, SUBkommander, the Watchers, Akkolyte, Welby, etc etc

Here's the lineup for our evening/venue:

SVT MAIN STAGE:
7pm Polydactyl Hemingway: (Alex Coke Sax/Flute; Tom Benton - Bass; Bryan Breaux - Drums; Tim Doyle - Guitars)
8pm AGE OF DISINFORMATION (Dallas/Ft.Worth) http://www.mayyrh.com/
9pm SANDY EWEN & YET (Houston) http://www.myspace.com/sandyewenmsyet
10pm OMAR TAMEZ & TATSUYA NAKATANI http://www.hhproduction.org/TATSUYA_NAKATANI_WORKS.html
11pm MFM collective ( Chicago, Dallas, Philadelphia, Lancaster ) http://www.facebook.com/posted.php?id=99032906794

FULL LINEUP HERE:
http://nmassfest.org/

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Womblife on Age of Disinformation, D & N, Zanzibar's "ViTiLiGo"

Excellent & interestingly-penned reviews from the ever-prescient Womblife blog.....

On Age of Disinformation (Mayyrh):
"These mutating oscillations, surges and crackling tones make me think of the frothing pools of analog electronics glimpsed on those early Cluster and Tangerine Dream records, along with hints of harsher noise, radio sounds and early industrial grime worked into the mix. The results are a dark, enveloping mind swirl that ebbs and flows with primordial currents every step of the way. Perfect for rewiring the synapses for a more celestial perception of the absolute. Welcome to the new dark age, my friends."

On D & N2 (Mayyrh):
".... a fractured web of odd found sounds, broken guitars, harmonicas and the like which together sound more raw and abrasive than the excellent debut 3" CD-R and lands them in the same jagged terrain found on Richard Youngs and Simon Wickham-Smith's mythical Lake (which basically sounds like Jandek gone prog)."

On Zanzibar Snails "ViTiLigo" (Tape Drift):
"Boundaries, barriers, matter itself is obliterated within their dark currents. These five tracks offer the expected scrape and scrawl dementia designed to fuck with minds and obliterate egos, and they're pretty spooky at times. In fact, the end results are some of the most cathartic raw noise excursions I've heard from the 'Snails to date .... as the ensemble alternates between cryptic Dadaist noise intervals and full on brain bleeding sonic mayhem"

Thanks to Lee Jackson for the kind & suitably oblique words

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

More Age of Disinformation reviews + reunion???

Rumors of an Age of Disinformation reunion at the New Media Art & Sound Summit (N.M.A.S.S.) in Austin this summer ....

Here are a couple of new reviews:

… FROM THE ASHES (the Phoenix Project Collective zine)
AGE OF DISINFORMATION
(Mayyrh)
Aaron Gonzalez of Oak Cliff is a busy fella. When he's not playing blinding grindcore thrash in the duo Akkolyte with his drununer-brother Stefan, he's exploring the frontiers of free-jazz skronk with Stefan and their trumpeter-father Dennis in Yells At Eels, or touring the U.S. and Europe with Portuguese guitarist Luis Lopes' Humanization 4tet (which also includes Stefan and saxophonist Rodrigo Amado). But that's not all. Under the rubric Inner Realms Outer Realms, he's released recordings (YAB's Geografia being the first) and promoted shows (rustic avant-gardist Eugene Chadbourne at theLounge on Elm St. last December, yo). In collaboration with Michael Chamy of Zanzibar SnailslMayyrh Records/DallasObserver fame, Aaron brought the forward-thinking No Idea festival of improvisation to the Metro-mess, managing to draw a decent crowd in Fort Worth on St. Patrick's Day, no less - even after a last-minute venue change. Now he's released Age ofDisinformation -- a live recording from a May 2008 performance at the Bathhouse Cultural Center by an all-star lineup of ambient improvisers - on Chamy's Mayyrh label, known for releasing challenging sounds in gorgeous packaging, often featuring artwork by Chamy's Zanzibar bandmate Nevada Hill. (In this case, it's a colorful mixed-media piece by Aaron on the outside, signature topsy-turvy lettering by Nevada on the inside.) Besides Aaron and Chamy, the participants include Mike Maxwell of SUBkommander/Aphonic Curtains on electronics; Jon Teague-whose current band The Great Tyrant has distilled the heavy-jazzy-prog psychodrama of his previous unit Yeti to its vital essence - on modular synths rather than his usual drums; and two members of the group Tidbits, multi-instrumentalist Kim Corbet and guitarist Kenny Withrow (who was a New Bohemian back in Deep Ellum's heyday).The music on Age of Disinformation has a lot of antecedents: Sun Ra's majestic space-scapes, Gyorgi Ligeti's music from the 2001: A Space Odyssey soundtrack, Ummagumma-era Pink Floyd's interstellar sprawl. Basically, it evokes the sound of traffic at a very busy space station in some distant galaxy, replete with throbbing electronic pulses, phantom radio transmissions, wildly oscillating feedback, and random static. It's a haunting, nebulous sonic bath, with moments of surprising lyricism and new details that reveal themselves with each listen. Heard at volume, the intensity can be overwhelming at times, but not in a threatening, assaultive way. Immerse yourself in it, and you might just glimpse infinity - or something damn near like it.
Cop from Mayyrh at http://mayyrh.blogspot.com/or ask Aaron for one.
-Ken Shimamoto

FOXY DIGITALIS

This ended up being more of a critique on the premise behind the improvisation. If you’re into literary critique or being amused people who take things overly seriously you might dig this.

This project was assembled by Aaron Gonzalez, from the Dallas underground noise scene. He led this group of six musicians in a conceptual improvisation and named it Age of Disinformation. This is said to be a “lucid nightmare supergroup”. They played a live performance at midnight on may 23rd 2008. This seems to be of importance because they emphasize on this in the liner notes and press release. Blame it on the abundance of information they provide (or the lack of it), but I really don't see how this relates to the music...But I'm sure this was a great show. And I probably would have liked to be there. There's only one downside to this, I doubt it was necessary to release it on cd. Furthermore, to promote it. It's released in a limited edition of 200 cdr, and a smaller print could have made a good souvenir for the player's and the people attending the show. And we wouldn't be here talking about it.

The concept behind the show, and I'm not sure about the meaning of all this, was: “an improvisation on the current state of psychological and spiritual breakdown as it relates to viral ecosystems of economies of information”. Euh... Great exercise in conceptual improvisation, but is it suppose to make the music more interesting? All the players involved int his come from the same scene, so they probably share a similar philosophy on life and music. But from an outsider point of view, it appears a bit too pompous. Also when I read a press release as pretentious as this, I'm not sure where this is getting to : “...a 45-minute cloud of transmogrifying cadmium clouds with mercury lining..” Say what?!

It's actually a cloud of keyboards, electronics/samples, radio transmissions, blurred vocals, trombone and electric guitars. For a live recording the sound is pretty decent though; you can hear the dynamics between the players and there's depth in the overall sound (good job on the mix). The music is not that bad and there's some interesting moments. But most of it appears as some sketched ideas that are not totally exploited. For example, I liked when the drum programming comes in at some point. But every time it comes in, the person playing it is really not sure if he should be doing that; it's hesitant, amateur, and not really as exciting as it could have been. Same thing when the trombone and the electric guitar breaks the uniformity; great melodic lines that could have brought this recording somewhere else, but it fails to do so. It's a cloud alright, a cloud of messy distorted sounds and good ideas not coming to term. And like a rain cloud, too much of the same color: gray.

And I guess the whole concept turned me off. The idea that our society is living a time of spiritual crisis is getting worn out. It needs to be thought out differently and acted upon in new ways. Proposing disinformation as the way of evolution ( as proposed by Age of Disinformation) is just the other side of the same coin. Disinformation is information. Computers paved a new world and we're getting thrown in without being aware of what's going on. And like information, music is also more accessible. If we don't want to get caught in the crap, we need to teach critical thinking. 5/10 -- Frédérick Galbrun (3 March, 2010)

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

New reviews

On the Sound Projector website, (Mayyrh's favorite annual/semi-annual UK magazine of the arcane and obscure) editor Ed Pinsent noted in their "New Arrivals" section the trio of recent Mayyrh records releases, including Zanzibar's double CD // DVD "Journey Into Amazing Caves!":

....................

From Texas, the Mayyrh Records label has been busy and produced three more limited-edition releases since we last checked in, all of them packed in nice colourful screen-printed or Xeroxed card wallets inside permatrace envelopes. Zanzibar Snails are the noisy improvising crusaders built around the core duo of Nevada Hill and Michael Chamy, well represented on a new set called Journey Into Amazing Caves! (MYH06) This offers a CD of their uglified electronic and oscillating spillages recorded in 2006-07, producing slowly swelling sounds that are every bit as craggy as the stalactites they purport to depict. The release comes with a DVD called Carbage Goma, a more recent musical performance by the Snails enhanced with wild visual additions from David Lee Price (who also joins the band here); there’s also a welcome return from Josh McWhirter and his diabolical viola. You won’t see much of the band on this mind-murking visual explosion from Price, but you will see plenty of dazzling computer effects, colour-field experiments, and surreal close-ups of ill-fitting objects that produce a memorable psychedelic broth. Also from the label, Age Of Disinformation (MYH08), a collaboration between six Texan players from similar-minded underground venturers, calling themselves a ‘lucid nightmare supergroup’. Playing lots of electronic instruments, keyboards, percussion and guitar, their aim was to make some sort of subconscious statement about the contemporary problem we all face of information-bombardment, and the possible damage this may be causing to our collective spiritual condition. How ambitious…what results is a slowly rotating whirlpool of over-filled musical and verbal gibberish, with no clear guidance to the listener about how to navigate around this swamp of vaguely unpleasant fetid noise. Very compelling! Also out: D&N 2 (MYH07), a collaborative effort between Hill and Price, not yet spun as I can’t bring myself to get past the strange hirsute contents of the envelope.


ALSO in the Sound Projector magazine, issue #18 (ZE'V cover), a full review of Zanzibar Snails’ Phantom Limb release “Vanadium Dream” (only a handful of these still in circulation):

Zanzibar Snails
Vanadium Dream
USA PHANTOM LIMB RECORDINGS
ARM 025 CDR

Zanzibar Snails are from Texas, but like Hearts Of Palm are another on-the-edge improvising and performing combo who are carving out their own private niche in the rock of culture's enclaved cliffs and mountains. I have characterised them before in the improvising section of the magazine, but on this record at least they are emerging as uncategorisable brand of slow, grunged-up organic ensemble playing. The quartet here includes Michael Chamy with his electronic tone generators, Nevada Hill with his guitar, Mike Maxwell on electronics and shortwave radio, and Seth Sherman on guitar and percussion.
I've enjoyed the cataclysmic mayhem that slowly rolled out of their last release (it seemed to be the soundtrack to a road accident played in slow motion), but Vanadium Dream is a much more stark and considered basket of woodchips. Recorded in one cold afternoon's session, it feels like a continuous performance divided into three
long titled segments; on the first one 'Om Isotope', establishing the stern mood, the quartet just seem to be staring at each other with the beady eyes of snakes and lizards, in a constant stare-down battle. The concentration on this task is so intense that the four young men are no longer at full liberty to play their instruments; in particular the guitars have been severely constricted, only issuing an occasional strangulated note at great personal cost to the players. Throughout, humming and buzzing electronic sounds create a strong atmosphere of seething hate. Only the bravest listener should enter this snake-pit of negative reverse-current improvisation.
Segment two, the title track, features brushed percussion and bowed cymbals, deepening the overall sound of the day's work such that it now feels like swimming in an ocean of molten copper. The wine-dark seas of Hector had nothing on this. One of the guitarists now makes bold to set up a constant low murmuring through a cold, antiseptic stroking of his lower strings, causing these tightly-wound eels to' complain like angered bees.
Harmonic overtones fill the air but still do nothing to soften the concrete jaws of these four Texan toughsters as they sink deeper into their lethargic sulk. By the time of segment three, 'In V, the minimal guitar playing has evolved to the point where the upper strings are permitted to emit listless whimpers and whines, much like the pitiful cries of small soft animals. Over 37 minutes, this is a document of a remarkably disciplined performance, amongst players to whom 'minimalism' is a lot more than just a buzzword they can glibly add to their press releases -- for Zanzibar Snails, it's a test of their endurance skills and a method by which they can successfully restrict any inherent excesses in their playing. This combo have certainly come a long way since the tentative beginnings of their first CDR Introdewcing in 2006,
ED PINSENT 26/07/2009
www.mayyrh.com
www.myspace.com/zanzibarsnails


And, in the latest fort Worth Weekly, Ken Shimamoto reviewed Age of Disinformation thusly:

Age of Disinformation
Wednesday, 11 November 2009
By Ken Shimamoto

Since coaxing their trumpeter-father Dennis Gonzalez out of musical retirement a decade ago and forming Yells at Eels, brothers Aaron (bass) and Stefan Gonzalez (drums) have been performing ever more impressively. (YAE's full creative brilliance has finally been captured on disc, on Ayler Records' The Great Bydgoszcz Concert, released earlier this year.)
The brothers continue to play assaultive grindcore as the duo Akkolyte. The connection between genres is explained in the title of an early YAE tune: "Free Jazz is Thrash, Asshole."
Aaron has also ventured into more cerebral realms. Besides helping to bring the No Idea Festival of avant-garde improvisation to Lola's Stockyards last spring, he convened Age of Disinformation - a sort of Metromess underground supergroup - for a one-time performance at Dallas' Bathhouse Cultural Center in May 2008. With Aaron on growling vocals and conducting, the band included a couple of Zanzibar Snails (Michael Chamy and Mike Maxwell), The Great Tyrant's Jon Teague on modular synths instead of his usual drums, and two members of Dallas' Tidbits (multi-instrumentalist Kim Corbet and ex-New Bohemians guitarist Kenny Withrow).
You won't hear a discernable melody on Age of Disinformation's debut eponymous album, nor is there a pulse you can dance to (except in your mind). The sounds extemporized by the sextet run the gamut from ethereal to industrial. While the program notes call the single album-long piece "an improvisation on the current state of psychological and spiritual breakdown as it relates to viral ecosystems of economics of information," that's really just hazy boho jive. These are some spacy jams, equally influenced by Sun Ra's saturnalia and the more kosmiche aspects of Krautrock. Not for the faint-hearted, but if you immerse yourself in this sonic bath, you may emerge psychically rejuvenated. Cop via www.mayyrh.com.


...aaaaannnnnnd last but certainly not least, our favorite Portuguese blog, OSAMAsecretLOVERS reviewed D & N 2

Here it is in Portuguese then through an Internet translation engine:

PORTUGUESE:

Nevada Hill (dos Zanzibar Snails) e David Lee Price juntaram-se para fazer um disco experimental baseado em gravações improvisadas e posteriormente trabalhadas em estúdio. O trabalho é feito de sons íntimos e fantasmagóricos, como a chuva no Texas (o que tem ajudado neste Verão prolongado), algum ruído branco controlado para não atrofiar (como acontece com os Zanzibar, diga-se) e alguns barulhos de mecanismos simples (ou serão instrumentos?). No fundo parece mesmo que uns músicos friques invadiram uma quinta de instrumentos em punho e puseram-se a experimentar que sons é que poderiam sair dali. Talvez por isso que a embalagem do CD-R seja um simples saco com a ficha técnica serigrafada e dentro do saco para além do disco apareça lã de ovelha encharcada em óleo. É curioso que muitas vezes as embalagens e imagens dos discos transmitem o que está para se ouvir, é mesmo curioso...


"TRANSLATION ENGINE" ENGLISH:

Nevada Hill (of the Zanzibar Snails) and David Lee Price had been joined to make an established experimental record in improvised writings and later worked in studio. The work is made of close and fantasmagóricos sounds, as rain in the Texas (what it has helped in this drawn out Summer), some controlled white noise not to atrophy (as it happens with the Zanzibar, it says) and some barulhos of simple mechanisms (or they will be instruments). In the deep one he seems same that musicians friques had invaded fifth of instruments in fist and had set to try it that sounds is that they could leave from there. Perhaps therefore that the packing of the CD-R is a simple bag with the fiche serigrafada technique and inside of the bag stops beyond the record appears wool of sheep marshy in oil. He is curious that many times the packings and images of records transmit what it is to hear, are exactly curious…

Friday, September 18, 2009

AGE OF DISINFORMATION



Age of Disinformation
Age of Disinformation
(Mayyrh) MYH08

Age of Disinformation is a lucid nightmare supergroup featuring members of Dallas/Denton/Ft. Worth area ensembles Great Tyrant, Zanzibar Snails, Yells at Eels, Tidbits, SUBkommander & Aphonic Curtains. At midnight on May 23, 2008, surrealist impresario Aaron Gonzalez assembled a 6-piece ambient group called Age of Disinformation, billing the event in advance as “an improvisation on the current state of psychological and spiritual breakdown as it relates to viral ecosystems of economies of information.”
Those were the only instructions the incoming players received. The end result: a 47-minute cloud of transmogrifying cadmium clouds with mercury lining, mutated voices meshing with dark electronic scree tempered by beautifying moments of translucent cognition, paving the way for the formation of the eternal Unimind. The way to evolution is .... disinformation?

7 tracks, 47 minutes. Limited edition 200 CDr, featuring design by Nevada Hill based on a collage by Aaron Gonzalez
Recorded by Dennis Gonzalez; Mixed by Aaron & Dennis Gonzalez. Post-production by Michael Chamy.

The Players:
Aaron Gonzalez [Yells at Eels; Akkolyte; Aphonic Curtains] (vocals)
Mike Maxwell [SUBkommander; Aphonic Curtains; the Watchers] (electronics)
Michael Chamy [Zanzibar Snails; the Watchers] (oscillators, shortwave, electronics)
Jon Teague [The Great Tyrant; Yeti] (analog patch synth)
Kim Corbet [Tidbits] (keyboards, percussion, vocals, trombone)
Kenny Withrow [Tidbits; New Bohemians] (guitar, ebow)





$8 postpaid














Audio clips at Mayyrh on MySpace


Video excerpt by Dennis Gonzalez:


Friday, August 14, 2009

Fall releases ....

COMING IN SEPTEMBER

Two more from Mayyrh Records:

D & N
D & N2

Full length debut from the collaboration between Zanzibar's Nevada Hill and David Price
"all music & sounds on this CD were recorded by Nevada Hill and David Price on a compound in Junction, Texas over 2 days in the 2nd week of July 2008. Once back home, the recordings were then put onto cassette tapes and digital files and mixed together using 2 modified tape players, 2 iPods, and an 8-channel mixer. The final mix was then cut in half, and the 2 halves were placed on top of each other at varying volumes. The final composition was then broken into 9 parts based on sections defined during the recording and mixing process.
instruments: 2 acoustic guitars, melodica, modified Yamaha keyboard, modified drum machine, contact microphone, looping pedal, modified musical elephant keyboard, field recordings, 2x4 boards, ice chest, metal tubes, rock house"

Age of Disinformation
Age of Disinformation

Nightmare supergroup featuring members of Great Tyrant, Zanzibar Snails, Yells at Eels, Tidbits, SUBkommander & Aphonic Curtains. At midnight on May 23, 2008, surrealist impresario Aaron Gonzalez assembled a 6-piece ambient group called Age of Disinformation. The results: a 45-minute cloud of transmogrifying cadmium clouds with mercury lining, mutated voices meshing with dark electronic scree tempered by moments of translucent cognition, paving the way for the formation of the eternal Unimind. The way to evolution is .... disinformation?

And a new Zanzibar Snails release on Albany, NY's Tape Drift label

Zanzibar Snails
"Vitiligo"

"Vitiligo" is the disease than turns the black man white, and accentuates the close relationship between darkness and light, luminescence and void, order and entropy
Recorded in March of 2009. Featuring vocals by Sarah Alexander.