The Lo-Fi Spirit of Linda Smith
A couple weeks ago, I deeply enjoyed reading the profile Claire Biddles wrote in the March issue of The Wire about Linda Smith, the beloved nineties home recording songstress. While […]
March 28, 2024 | Blog
The Lone Composer and Technology as Collaborator
For this blog, I set out to write a little profile on Osmo Lindeman, the Finnish electronic composer who was at the forefront of digital electronic music in the late […]
March 4, 2024 | Blog
The Art Ensemble of Chicago — Columbus, OH, February 3, 2024
On Saturday night, I was able to go to a concert I hadn’t thought I’d ever get to hear. The long-running, immensely influential Art Ensemble of Chicago performed at the […]
February 10, 2024 | Blog
“The Acoustic Synthesizer”: The Organ in Current Experimental Music
As I was perusing some of the notable experimental releases of last year, along with looking ahead to 2024, a little trend jumped out at me. Releases by Sarah Davachi, […]
January 23, 2024 | Blog
“The Evergreen Dilemma of the Empty Page”: Isaac Karns’ Infinite Directions
In 2023, Cincinnati-based musician and recording engineer Isaac Karns released Infinite Directions, a set of cards to “stimulate your creative process.” Featured on the cover of Tape Op magazine and […]
January 5, 2024 | Blog
Experimental Folkways: Preserving and Innovating the World of Sound
Recently, I’ve been thinking a lot about Folkways’ experimental records. First, my interest was piqued with their recent release of Matmos’ Return to Archive on the label, which features the […]
December 21, 2023 | Blog
“A Jewel of an Instrument”: The Folk Minimalism of Dorothy Carter’s “Trapezoids”
About a year ago, I wrote here about the German composer Robert Rutman, most known for his steel cello, a handcrafted instrument that he deemed an “American Industrial folk instrument.” […]
December 1, 2023 | Blog
Documenting a Third Place: The Continuing Relevance of Ernest Hood
About a month ago, I selected Ernest Hood’s Back to the Woodlands, an archival release from last year, as my weekly staff pick. I found myself lulled by its gentle […]
October 2, 2023 | Blog
Vivien Goldman and the Immersive Creative Self
Most often, there is an assumed distinction between musicians and critics in the music industry. This distinction is more blurred in certain genres of music where it is more common […]
August 15, 2023 | Blog
The Present Inside the Past: Hauntology and the Disintegration of Public Memory
When I listen to “Wildlife Analysis,” the opening track of Boards of Canada’s Music Has the Right to Children, it resonates within me in a way that transports my mind […]
July 2, 2023 | Blog