On The Turntable

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    Stereolab

    Stereolab :: Emperor Tomato Ketchup

    Thirty years old this month, Stereolab’s 1996 breakthrough record Emperor Tomato Ketchup was equal parts transitional and revolutionary. Upon three decades of reflection, the retrofuturism bridgegap keenly foreshadowed the self-coined groop’s prolific trajectory, spanning all the way through last year’s comeback album Instant Holograms on Metal Film.

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    Belle and Sebastian

    Belle and Sebastian :: If You’re Feeling Sinister

    Bookish and wry, beautifully but mutedly arranged for guitar and piano, Belle and Sebastian’s second full-length was out of step with a music industry just recovering from grunge. It came from a group of people who shunned the publicity cycle, doing no interviews, releasing no singles and shunning TV and radio appearances. It came out late in 1996 on the small Jeepster label and very slowly built a following …

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    Linton Kwesi Johnson

    Linton Kwesi Johnson :: Bass Culture

    May 1980, London: Dub poet Linton Kwesi Johnson drops Bass Culture on Chris Blackwell’s Island Records, the first of two LPs he’d release that year. Jamaica-born and Brixton-raised, the album finds Johnson distilling Babylon’s heavy hand into deep, subterranean basslines laced with incendiary street-level missives — “muzik of blood, black reared pain, rooted heart geared, all tensed up.”

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    Tilaye’s Saxophone With The Dahlak Band

    Tilaye’s Saxophone With The Dahlak Band :: ((የጥላዬ ሳክስ ከዳህላክ ባንድ ጋር))

    Released sometime in the late 70s, Tilaye Gebre’s album as a featured performer was taken from a one-take, single microphone live recording during their residency at the capital’s Ghion Hotel. Unfolding across nine, slow-burning tracks, the band feels woozily cool, locked in a groove that feels unconscious. There’s a telepathic current running through the players that fashions a sound both nocturnal and bright but a little grizzled by its stripped-down recording texture too.

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    Dagmar Zuniga

    Dagmar Zuniga :: DaIn Filth Your Mystery Is Kingdom / Far Smile Peasant In Yellow Music

    One of the most striking records from 2025 finally gets its deserved vinyl release with AD93’s issuing of Dagmar Zuniga’s in filth your mystery is kingdom / far smile peasant in yellow music. The pluricultural artist’s debut was also assembled in a pluricultural environment, across Norway and Greece and Georgia, and found a rapid, cult-like admiration within a certain Brooklyn scene of lo-fi and experimental art—featuring Zach Philips, its success would eventually lead Zuniga to tour with Mount Eerie.

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    SOYUZ

    SOYUZ :: KROK

    Tracked live to tape at Sessa and Biel Basile’s São Paulo studio, Krok captures the Belarusian outfit in a moment of transition, stretching the sinewy tendrils of their earlier work into something more expansive and self-possessed. Where their previous LP steeped itself in the gentle saudade of Brazil’s Clube da Esquina, Krok pulls the lens back as the palette broadens and horizons turn transcontinental.

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    Dark

    Dark :: Dark Round The Edges

    Though there are antecedents to Dark’s sound—think Cream or Jefferson Airplane at their haziest—there’s something singular about Dark. Opener “Darkside” is lithe but muscular, and like early Sabbath, there’s a jazziness to it that suggests an alternate universe where Impulse put out the first heavy metal records.

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    David Lee Jr.

    David Lee Jr. :: Evolution

    New Orleans — birthplace of the syncopated rhythm splinter known as the second-line. Cut to 1974. Drummer and composer David Lee Jr. quietly releases his lone solo LP, the Afro‑futurist Evolution, privately pressed to just 400 copies on his own Supernal Records imprint. A percussive spiritual meditation in motion, the record folds intricate polyrhythms into hypnotic, repetitive loops that sound as urgent and on-point today as they did half a century ago. Four hundred copies. Infinite resonance.

Brion Gysin :: Dreamachine (1984/1992)

Dreamachine gathers Brion Gysin’s cult recordings in a blend of ambient, spoken word, avant-garde, minimalism, and afrobeat, mimicking the art device by translating its effects into an audio experience. Produced by French artist Ramuntcho Matta in the late ’80s and early ’90s, the 32-minute track summons Gysin’s artistic ethos to a haunting perfection, building on an enveloping trance-like cadence to achieve an effect that evokes the alpha wave state induced by the original invention.

All One Song :: Ira Kaplan (Yo La Tengo) on “Big Crime”

Welcome to All One Song season two. We kick off this exploration of the Shakey-verse with Ira Kaplan of Yo La Tengo. The indie trio has a long history with Neil—the b-side of their second single was a sweet cover of “For The Turnstiles.” But Kaplan doesn’t want to talk about an old classic, but rather the most recent Neil song, as of the time of this taping at least. Strap in for “Big Crime.”

John Andrews & The Yawns :: STREETSWEEPER

On his fifth solo record with backing collective the Yawns, the ever-talented John Andrews channels a number of personal and regional anecdotal experiences within the mellow dazzle of STREETSWEEPER. From hockey to a part time gig working for the NYC Parks Department, the imagery of the record jumps off the screen like one of the artist’s painterly animated works. With a bevy of talent including Luke Temple, Star Moles and the Cut Worms rhythm section, it’s a bright and optimistic accomplishment with a signature, natural DIY spirit.

Videodrome :: Rolling Thunder (1977)

Rolling Thunder (1977) is perhaps the most salient example of “revengeamatic” films: a grindhouse-style subgenre of revenge films characterized by a protagonist’s methodical quest for payback against those who wronged them. These films are defined by a clear path of cause and effect: an act of brutality sets the process in motion, the protagonist activates the cycle of vengeance, and the plot advances inexorably toward a climactic act of redemption. Films such as Rolling Thunder distill these elements to their most essential function, automating the story into a lean, mean, genre machine.

Luka Kuplowsky :: The Grass Grows, Antonych Grows

In his book The Life of Plants, philosopher Emanuele Coccia writes that plants are a kind of cosmic point of tension that binds us all, because they are the sculptors of our very breath. In his new record The Grass Grows, Antonych Grows, Luka Kuplowsky embodies a similar idea to adapt works by Ukrainian poet-mystic Bohdan Ihor Antonych—often written from the perspective of a bug or a flower—into heterogeneous indie jazz soundscapes that can mirror, in their latent sentimentalism, our current climate catastrophe.

Belle and Sebastian :: If You’re Feeling Sinister at 30

Bookish and wry, beautifully but mutedly arranged for guitar and piano, Belle and Sebastian’s second full-length was out of step with a music industry just recovering from grunge. It came from a group of people who shunned the publicity cycle, doing no interviews, releasing no singles and shunning TV and radio appearances. It came out late in 1996 on the small Jeepster label and very slowly built a following …

Hollywood Kenny :: Destroyer

The nom de plume of Angeleno studio veteran Kenny Woods, Destroyer is a self-described “tongue-in-cheek, post-pandemic ode to Los Angeles”. With a collected and steady prose in the mold of a modern Zevon, the charming pop songwriting eliminates any semblance of novelty from such insular, regional thematics. Topical subject matter aside, the album’s deep surveying of the city’s sprawling and ever changing shadows is an elaborate preservation act – hypothetical or otherwise. A record where Brando characters sit comfortably next to Beefheart.

The Lagniappe Sessions :: Wet Tuna

Nearly a decade into their sonic trans-dimensional sojourn, Wet Tuna’s Vast, slingshots us sidelong toward the very heart of the Tunaverse— a place where the bass is deep and the vibes flow free down that shimmering stretch of good ol’ astral highway. With this installment of the Lagniappe Sessions, Matt Valentine, Erika Elder, and Jim Bliss serve up a dubbed out Spectrasound love letter to the glorious fuzz’n’scuzz of yesterday’s underground. The Tuna guide us on a rural glam walking tour of downtown NYC with an ever-unfolding take on Lou Reed’s “Walk On the Wild Side,” an exploration of “Cortez the Killer” that detours into Daydream-era Sonic Youth, nods to venerable free folk progenitors Pearls Before Swine and Sandy Bull, and a glacially resplendent meditation on The Jesus and Mary Chain’s “Just Like Honey” that’s basically psychoactive. Many wonders abound here, so get in there and touch the sound!

Transmissions at Big Ears :: Thurston Moore and Kramer

Transmissions is back with a special episode: Tyler Wilcox in conversation with underground music lifers Thurston Moore and Kramer. On May 1, the duo release their new album together, They Came Like Swallows – Seven Requiems for the Children of Gaza, out on Ethan Miller’s Silver Current Records, and ahead of their appearance this week at Big Ears Music Festival in Knoxville, Wilcox caught up with them to discuss the new collaboration, their storied history together, and that time the Butthole Surfers freaked out Alex Chilton. They join us to kick off our Big Ears 2026 coverage.

The Inward Map: David Sylvian’s Solo Trilogy, 1984–1987

There’s a particular kind of artist who seems to step out of their time just enough to make it visible. Not outside of it, not ahead of it in any obvious, declarative way – but slightly misaligned, as if hearing the decade at a different pitch. David Sylvian, in the years immediately following Japan, became that kind of figure. Not by reinvention in the usual sense, but by subtraction. By quieting things down until what remained felt almost unguarded.

Shane Parish :: Autechre Guitar

It’s unclear what gave Shane Parish the borderline insane idea of doing solo acoustic covers of Autechre on guitar, somehow notating and rearranging the liquid textures of the experimental electronic duo into wobbly diatonic diagrams. It’s even more unclear how he was able to rigorously pull it off. Through Autechre Guitar, Parish, the head of Ahleuchatistas and a member of the Bill Orcutt Quartet, maintains the sparse, glitchy ambience of the originals while placing something else entirely in its place, with just his fingerstyle technique and the ability to, with it, form these ghostly layers of superimposing concentric circles.

Spencer Cullum’s Coin Collection 3

Coin Collection 3 marks the bittersweet conclusion of Spencer Cullum’s trilogy of collaborative Coin Collection records. Like the impetus for the collective project’s ethos established the first two trips around, Cullum’s pedal steel guitar and cast of fellow Nashville all-stars conjure up seventies UK folk balladry, seaside krautrock excursions and a healthy dose of the Wyatt/Ayers psych-prog nucleus. This time, the compositions fall under the influence of modern sociopolitical strife as well as literary stacks of homeside mythology and horror-laced folklore. Long live the Coin Collection.