Glitch

New Arrivals

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    Jake Mandell
     
    Scales Of Magnification
    This laptop-music pioneer, now a physician, created an array of biological melodies that collide spectacularly with alien rhythms in his fourth major album. His first major work in eight years, these microedits dance elegantly with the macro-scale.
    Electronic: Glitch
     
     
    SP-33 & Angeles
     
    Veils
    A split E.P. that shifts from dreamy piano meditations to glitch inspired interpretations.
    Electronic: Glitch
     
     
    B.C.
     
    Time Pieces Part 1 - Time Capsule
    COMBINING COMPLEX METAPHOR, TIME TRAVEL, SCINTILLATING LYRICAL GYMNASTICS, ANIME, RADICAL POLITICS, AND AN APOCRYPHAL-DYSTOPIAN COMIC BOOK AESTHETIC, RED TIDE MEMBER AND FLORIDA MC, BC, THE BLACK CHILD, DELIVERS HIS SOLO DEBUT, THE FIRST OF A THREE PART CONCEPTUAL ALBUM, "TIME PIECES."
    Electronic: Glitch
     
     
    Krzysztof Orluk
     
    Blurred reflection
    Incredibly rich, minimal ambient/glitch in the vein of Off The Sky, Blamstrain, Biosphere, Shuttle358.
    Electronic: Glitch
     
     
    0+1=everything
     
    volume 2
    Abstract post hip-hop downtempo avant poptronica
    Electronic: Glitch
     
     
    ADAPTER
     
    Placement Project
    Experimental/Ambient/Glitch Beats/Electronica.
    Electronic: Glitch
     
     
    Oppressed by the Line
     
    Kiku
    Oppressed by the Line returns with Kiku, the follow up to the critically acclaimed Soft Focus.
    Electronic: Glitch
     
     
    Wess Meets West
     
    A Collection Of Explosions And Death Threats
    A Collection Of Explosions And Death Threats is an EP from Wess Meets West. The EP consists of all B-sides from previous works. “Nothing Can Stop Chicago Ted” is a B-side from the up and coming release (The Sun The Moon The Master).
    Electronic: Glitch
     
     
    Open Work Stocking
     
    Diademia
    sweetness of ambience, melody and electronic glitches
    Electronic: Glitch
     
     
    Robert Gray
     
    Chrome
    Robert Gray is an extreme talent whether it be ambient electronica or lyrical pop. This album contains instrumentals ranging from smooth jazz style to industrial to funky, all with the excellent musicianship of a virtuoso composer / player.
    Electronic: Glitch
     

    Top Albums

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    Andre LaFosse
    Normalized
    Turntablist Guitar: A cutting-edge cut-up of funk, glitch, hip-hop, and left-field dance music - all played live, on a solo electric guitar.
    The rise of hip-hop and dance music in contemporary culture has led some people to wonder whether or not DJ's can be thought of as musicians. But Andre LaFosse is a man who asks a different question: Can a musician be a DJ? Normalized is an album of "Turntablist Guitar." A cutting-edge cut-up of funk, hip-hop, and glitchy leftfield electronic music... that just happens to have been performed live, on a solo electric guitar, with no pre-recorded material, and no sounds other than those made by bare hands on steel strings. Sound crazy? Then keep reading, as the method to this madness is explained. "I'm a guitar player first and foremost, but I grew up listening to a lot of electronic music in all sorts of genres," Andre begins. "I've combined dance and hip-hop elements with guitar playing in my music for a long time, yet I've always been frustrated by the fact that the guitar and the electronics were two separate musical aspects." "But the key to Normalized is that there is NO separation: the guitar IS the electronic element, and vice versa." The secret ingredient of Normalized is a modern style of sampling that records, loops, and chops up sound live - instantly, in real time. "I can play something on my guitar, sample it live, and then immediately have it start playing back as a loop," Andre explains. "It's sort of like being a DJ, except that I'm not spinning pre-recorded material. Instead, I'm actually playing the guitar live, and sampling myself as I'm playing. So the recording is created right then and there, in the moment of performance." If this prospect fills your mind with thoughts of endlessly-looped guitar cliches - repetitive rock riffs, droning power chords, or solos that noodle on forever - then think again: on Normalized, Andre LaFosse deals with the guitar first and foremost as a source of sound and groove. You might think you're hearing drums, vinyl noise, and a dense collage of samples from far-flung sources, but it all comes from LaFosse's six-string. Andre elaborates: "The electric guitar's a much more versatile instrument than most people give it credit for. There's a wealth of different textures to be had simply by using your hands in different ways. You can even hit the strings percussively and get noises that sound like drums. So Normalized is about thinking less like a guitarist, and more like a DJ mixing - together different beats, grooves, and textures." Fair enough. But this still doesn't quite explain "turntablist guitar." What does ultra-complex vinyl scratching have to do with guitar looping? "A turntablist uses the apparatus of a record player - the needle, the faders on the mixer, the turntable itself - to warp the sound of the record they're playing," LaFosse explains. "With the looper I use - an Echoplex - I can do the same kinds of things with my guitar." "I can drop tiny fragments of guitar into the loop, I can play the loop backwards, I can slow the loop down, I can chop the loops up... and I can do this all live, as I'm playing. It's like my guitar is the record, and the Echoplex is the turntable and mixer. Just like a turntablist uses their technique to get sounds that are far beyond what's on the original record, I can come up with noises and grooves that would be impossible to play on just an unlooped guitar." And just as "regular" dance and hip-hop records will sometimes feature vocalists gracing their grooves on a few cuts, a handful of produced tracks on Normalized cast the guitar in the roles of both "rhythm section" and "lead singer." "The produced cuts take live guitar loops, and use them as foundations for melodies and compositional structure after the fact," LaFosse says. "They're sort of like songs with guest vocalists - except that the vocal role is played by the guitar. It helps to put the record into perspective, by juxtaposing the glitchy grooves against more 'normal' things like melodies and chords. But the focus of Normalized is definitely the raw, live approach, and 14 of the 18 cuts on the album are live Echoplex solos." So this is Normalized: a sample-based album defined by performances instead of productions. A mix-tape of digital beats performed entirely on guitar, by a musician who thinks like a DJ and plays like a crate of vinyl. Stop reading and start listening, because Andre LaFosse is waiting to flip your script.
    Electronic: Glitch
     
    Modul
    Dots
    Electronic: Glitch
     
    Textual
    Dirty South Still Life
    Electronic: Glitch
     
    Krzysztof Orluk
    Blurred reflection
    Electronic: Glitch
     
    Freek Factory
    Freek Factory v.1: The Balance
    Electronic: Glitch
     

    Editor's Picks

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