Type: Experimental

New Arrivals

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    Everlutionary
     
    Call, Vol. 1
    Bring down the ancestors in this powerful CALL of rasp-ready vocals, chanting, industrial science beats, thundering drums, and an avant-garde fusion of harps, flutes, tablas and words that inspire, enlight, fuel, and pierce the fabric of existence.
    Moods: Type: Experimental
     
     
    The Milk Man
     
    Still Grindin'
    A Bay Area influenced hip hop project, featuring the beautiful voice of singer songwriter Amanda Larsen. Real hip hop with moving lyrics that can make you dance and think. Influenced by the old school New york hip hop and the bay area sound .
    Moods: Type: Experimental
     
     
    Mats Bergström, Christian Berg, Emma Nordlund, Georg Gulyás & Patrik Karlsson
     
    Moose Imitating Moss
    Moods: Type: Experimental
     
     
    Önd
     
    For Influence Blooms of the Subtle Wing
    "...darkambient radiations contaminated by analogical psychedelia and interstellar ambient."
    Moods: Type: Experimental
     
     
    Flipping the Pig
     
    My Heroic Cadences/You Get The Idea
    A musical playfulness that’s equal parts upbeat, odd, layered, melancholy, stripped down, acoustic, and synthetic. A densely lyrical focus on loss, regret, catharsis, redemption, and the inevitable acquisition of Eddie Deezen’s autograph.
    Moods: Type: Experimental
     
     
    monkey ass
     
    SAP
    An insightful vision into what is and what could be -- the winds of nature seem to affect each listen, and it doesn't stop. This is one of those continuously changing albums.
    Moods: Type: Experimental
     
     
    Super Pancho Combo
     
    Fast Awake
    Moods: Type: Experimental
     
     
    Garth Stevenson
     
    Alpine
    Alpine
    Moods: Type: Experimental
     
     
    Zii
     
    Zii Dimensional
    Now Playing
    Moods: Type: Experimental
     
     
    The Probe
     
    You Know You Want It
    HEAVY EXPERIMENTAL ROCK MUSIC
    Moods: Type: Experimental
     
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    Top Albums

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    If These Trees Could Talk
    If These Trees Could Talk
    A non-lyrical exploration of emotion.
    Akron's If These Trees Could Talk eschews post-rock's tendency toward roller-coaster dynamics -- as well as the slide-rule intricacy of math rock's post-punk wing -- for the moody majesty of June of 44. (Kent's Six Parts Seven also comes to mind.) While there are passages propelled by the frothy churn of loud/soft counterpoints -- as in parts of "The Friscalating Dusklight" -- the music's power is a product of the wonderful three-guitar interplay. But this isn't so much about chords as it is the jutting, slashing, slithering single-note intersections, whose combinations drive the melody as well as lending this music an oceanic quality. Tracks such as "Signal Tree" work a hypnotic thrum, while the psychedelic "41°4'23n, -81°31'4w," in a surprisingly economical three and a half minutes, billows and swoons like the Smashing Pumpkins. This is one of ITTCT's finest traits: Songs don't overstay their welcome; instead, they work out their idea and move along with minimal wankery. by Chris Parker Cleveland Scene Magazine Like the Six Parts Seven, another area group known for its rock soundscapes, Akron's If These Trees Could Talk proves in its self-titled six-song debut that you don't need vocals to ooze emotion. In fact, lyrics would only get in the way of the Trees' dense, flowing sound. This album emotes like Explosions in the Sky, rocks like Tool, and breaks and builds like Godspeed You! Black Emperor. The crystal-clear production and flawless musical performances make this a local instrumental album that stands high above the mire. by Joe Minadeo Cleveland Scene Magazine The mutterings of superflora isn't a subject oft-explored by instrumental bands, but If These Trees Could Talk, out of the forested Akron, Ohio, have added ritalin, steroids and Red Bull to the seedlings of some conifers, and laughed maniacally as their monster grew into a guitar-playing psychotic genius. This release shows how instrumental guitar rock need not be a dirge, but an exciting, groovy, and occasionally softening affair. If These Trees Could Talk takes a fairly continuous sequence, a 6 part song if anything, with each section bookended by washes of ambience. This structure is one of the better choices on this album, and considering the magnificence of the music itself, this is saying something. Every element on this album is enhanced by the force that drives right from the release's beginning, to its conclusion. If there was an issue, it would be that the release stops quite abruptly, without stopping the momentum behind the final musical idea. The feeling that is gathered from this, could best be expressed as "GIVE ME A FULL ALBUM". And when ITTCT delivers this, oh boy, they're going to put wide smiles on many faces. If These Trees Could Talk have an astonishing handle on how to go about presenting instrumental music correctly, with a sense of a voice in instrumental lines, tasteful use of distortion and technically proficient playing. Repetition and delay on this release is used far more effectively than the vast majority of instrumental bands. It would be conceivable to call them a math rock band with soul and or a post-rock band with an ability to play musical instruments properly. Contrasts between distortion and clean sounds are exploited throughout the piece, particularly in "Signal Hill," and this adds to the frenetic dynamic of the band. Three guitar lines sweep through and around each other supported by the outrageous grooves of the rhythm section. It is traditional post-rock dynamics, taking after Slint's Spiderland, but sped up, and given a Don Caballero-esque dosage of repeatrepeatrepeat. The end result of this rock minimalism feast, unsurprisingly, is highly arousing. Another asset of If These Trees Could Talk is their ability to pull off musical ideas with a succinctness that is so lacking in many other instrumental acts. The band works at a pace which leaves Sparrows Swarm and Sing and other such acts flailing their stringed instruments in the dust. Quite simply, the music is breathtaking, near-flawless and tight. You can tell this band hasn't had many babies. They've got it ALL, packed into a neat, bite size package. Just slam the physical equivalent to their music on a centrefold spread and they'll make millions. You just wait until their supertree grows to its full potential. by Marcus Whale The Silent Ballet
    Moods: Type: Experimental
     
    Patt Lind-Kyle
    Heal Your Mind, Rewire Your Brain
    Moods: Type: Experimental
     
    Charles Evans
    The King of All Instruments
    Moods: Type: Experimental
     
    Hypnotica
    The Attractor Factor
    Moods: Type: Experimental
     
    This Armistice
    (New Breath + New Heartbeat) = Change
    Moods: Type: Experimental
     

    Editor's Picks

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      Artists You May Know

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      Teo Macero
      Whispering Gods
      Moods: Type: Experimental
       
      DeYarmond Edison
      Silent Signs
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      Thomas Mapfumo/Wadada Leo Smith
      Dreams and Secrets
      Moods: Type: Experimental
       
      Johnny Reinhard, Terry Riley, Philip Corner, John Cage
      Ear Gardens
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      Top Songs

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      1.
      Sequence of A Machine Dream
      Edvas
      Moods: Type: Experimental
       
       
      2.
      The Train
      CELESTIAL NAVIGATIONS
      Moods: Type: Experimental
       
       
      3.
      Gant Gant Galant Gant
      Edvas
      Moods: Type: Experimental
       
       
      4.
      You're Amusing But Not My Muse
      Edvas
      Moods: Type: Experimental
       
       
      5.
      Dirty Old Silver
      Unextraordinary Gentlemen
      Moods: Type: Experimental
       
       
      6.
      Frozen Mood
      Unextraordinary Gentlemen
      Moods: Type: Experimental
       
       
      7.
      The Last Memory of Man (Remix by Pouff & Chasiti Chambers)
      Defender
      Moods: Type: Experimental
       
       
      8.
      Spirals
      Edvas
      Moods: Type: Experimental
       
       
      9.
      A Hazy Waste
      Mandown
      Moods: Type: Experimental
       
       
      10.
      Şaşkın
      Djinn
      Moods: Type: Experimental