Review by tineJul 10, 2006(edited over 3 years ago)
This one might be one of my favourite Goodiebag/Demonbag, the Per Høier track is amazingly good, but what I really like is the Tordis Berstrand track, which just creates a flowing texture of crusty tunnel vision. I’m usually not much into noise music but with this piece I have found myself playing it over and over again, something strange is happening in the vinyl grooves, something is trying to get out.
On the flip side there is a Lucky Kitchen track from the time were they did still use the name Alejandra and Underwood to present their work. This is a bit of layered, naive, skipping sound files and though this might not be one of their greatest tunes it has this freshness of computer music. I believe it is one of the first pieces of music they ever released and you can hear the excitement and thrill of the possibilities the computer medium was giving them in those days. A haunted record, nothing less. So if you ever see a copy somewhere GET IT.
Starting as a collaboration with V/VM, The Faro´s Gaeoudjiparl has left planet earth on a mission to inflict strangeness and quirky pop on the record buying public. Edition #1KY features Lucky Kitchen´s Alejandra and Underwood, Tordis Berstrand and Per Hoier supplying the lo-fi electronics, home recordings and all-round fuzz documentation. very Recommended.
Starting as a collaboration with V/VM, The Faro´s Gaeoudjiparl has left planet earth on a mission to inflict strangeness and quirky pop on the record buying public. Edition #1KY features Lucky Kitchen´s Alejandra and Underwood, Tordis Berstrand and Per Hoier supplying the lo-fi electronics, home recordings and all-round fuzz documentation. very Recommended.
On the flip side there is a Lucky Kitchen track from the time were they did still use the name Alejandra and Underwood to present their work. This is a bit of layered, naive, skipping sound files and though this might not be one of their greatest tunes it has this freshness of computer music. I believe it is one of the first pieces of music they ever released and you can hear the excitement and thrill of the possibilities the computer medium was giving them in those days. A haunted record, nothing less. So if you ever see a copy somewhere GET IT.