Friday 30 September 2011

Here Be Dragons!

Here's a new mix we've just added to our MixCloud page: Here Be Dragons

  Here Be Dragons  

Tracks
  1. The Green Dragons - Amtronic
  2. I Dream of Dragons - Retrotation
  3. The Dragon - Stagga
  4. Dragons (Instramental) - White Gorilla
  5. For Glory, And Dragons - Gerbertgold
  6. Black Dragon - Kasket
  7. Dungeons&Dragons - Eazyprophyt
  8. Purple Moon Dragon - Krusadr
  9. Dragons - Puracane
  10. Royal Dragon Sir - Tipper
  11. Dragon's Dance - ScholarMan
  12. Dragons and Lions - XiJaro
    thing

Wednesday 28 September 2011

Review: Friglob - Life is Inna Riddim

Excellent netlabel Angel Dust Records has released a third album and it maintains the high standard set by the previous two releases.

This one is from a Croatian artist called Friglob Skowski. The deep, spacious, bassline and dub siren that opens the first track sets the tone for the other tunes in this finely crafted collection - mostly instrumental, downtempo, tasteful, restrained.




Friglob  

Tracks
  1. Nuf a Dem Suffering
  2. Aerocore
  3. Amorphous Criteria
  4. Make a Turn
  5. Mamica su Štrukle Pekli
  6. Life is Inna Riddim
  7. Love Music
  8. You Waited Too Long
Friglob back

You can download Life is Inna Riddim free from HERE

Tuesday 27 September 2011

Facebook and Spotify

I've been saying for ages that Spotify is a bit crap and is essentially the old music industry masquerading as part of the modern world. The plot thickens.

In the same week that I found out that they pay different rates to independent record labels than to the old majors and that they won't tell anyone how much less they're paying the indies, the BBC reports that from now on anyone opening a Spotify account must also have a Facebook account.
Read the BBC news item HERE

Now, although I'm a big fan of Facebook for many reasons, this strikes me as just plain wrong. I have a sneaky suspicion that as Facebook's longer term plans become better known, we'll find huge pressure from Facebook subscribers to sign up to the risible Spotify.

Once again, the old industry tries a flanking maneuver to deceive people into buying back into the crap music the major labels churn out. Watch Facebook closely, people...

Sunday 25 September 2011

Elder Daze -Secret Archives of the Vatican Podcast 64

Podcast 64

Episode 64 of the Secret Archives of the Vatican Podcast is now available from


Thing

Tracks

  1. The Apostate
    FLeCK
    http://soundcloud.com/fleckathens/fleck-the-apostate-free 

  2. Ghostly Caravan      
    Dubtrak
    http://soundcloud.com/dubtrak/dubtrak-ghostly-caravan 

  3. Ghostly Dub      
    DuBoLoGy
    http://soundcloud.com/dubology-2/dubology-ghostly-dub 

  4. Dans la Grotte d'Aretousa                
    Sex Drugs and Rebetiko
    http://netlabelsnoise.wordpress.com/2011/07/06/sex-drugs-rebetiko/ 

  5. Cat Skillz                  
    Beats Antique
    http://www.relix.com/news/2011/09/23/beats-antique-cat-skillz 

  6. Meeting the Emperor             
    Fabled Enemies
    http://soundcloud.com/fabled-enemies/meeting-the-emperor-free 

  7. God Hates Dub                            
    Stereo Assassin
    http://soundcloud.com/stereoassassin/god-hates-dub 

  8. The Freeing of Baghdad       
    Jordan Reyne
    http://jordanreyne.bandcamp.com/track/the-freeing-of-baghdad 

  9. Future Will Be Dark (Medium Remix)     
    Clusta
    http://congarecords.bandcamp.com/track/221-future-will-be-dark-remix 

  10. Messenger (DJ Melo Remix)               
    Second Sky
    http://soundcloud.com/azdjmelo/second-sky-messenger-dj-melo 

Also check out:
Ginger Shinobi, the ginger ninja
http://www.mixcloud.com/gingershinobi

Secret Archives of the Vatican Podcast

Wednesday 21 September 2011

What is music?

SAotV

What is music? I don't mean the question technically, with definitions of rhythm or melody. Nor do I mean it philosophically - I have no interest in philosophy, generally deeming philosophers to be clever but bone idle people, too lazy to apply their immense brains to more purposeful activities.

No, the question arose from some observations and a quote.

 I pretty much live for music. I make it, buy it, steal it, blog about it, pimp it, opine about it and even listen to it. A lot.

Recently I went through a short period when I couldn't be bothered to put music on at home to listen to or to dial it up on my phone to provide a soundtrack to my daily commute to work. This got me worried - had I reached the age when people seem to just give up on all interest in music? In the end, I figured I was just very, cumulatively, tired from work and life in general. Sure enough, I took some time off work to rest and within a couple of days I was planning the next Secret Archives release and playing music very loudly in my flat as it was the daytime and my downstairs neighbours would be out.

Around the same time I met up with a friend who I hadn't spoken to for about a year. He'd always been a huge music fan - we'd booked artists together and run events and he'd often played me good music he'd been listening to. When we were catching up, he mentioned that he'd completely lost all interest in music and hardly listened to any now. In the previous year he'd been through a lot of pressure with his work and told me he'd suffered some mild depression. I threw in the idea that maybe it was because of that he'd lost connection with music and that maybe as he got more settled, his interest would revive.

Well, that very evening he spent a lot of time enthusiastically playing me tunes from YouTube, confirming my suspicion that losing interest in music is often connected with tiredness, depression and a general loss of the joie de vivre.

The next week I caught an episode of an American TV series called The History of Rock'n'Roll. Americans, of course, use the term to mean 'all music after 1952', so the series covered hiphop and other styles as well as rock. One snippet caught my attention. It was the legendary Joe Strummer:

'I think Rock n Roll, or hiphop, exists to deliver this truth that needs to be constantly delivered.... It reminds us, like this unspoken message is that, it is FUN to be alive.... It's a hell of a lot better than being dead'

And that, my friends, sums what I'd been pondering and trying to grasp. Music is a celebration of being alive. That explains why, when we're tired or struggling with life, it can be hard to get excited about music. But, at the end of the day, it's better being alive than being dead!

SAotV

Saturday 17 September 2011

Autumn Moon - Secret Archives of the Vatican Podcast 63

Autumn Moon - Secret Archives of the Vatican Podcast 63 is available from:


Podcast 63

Tracks


  1. Baghdad
    Squid Ninjaz
    http://www.squidninjarecords.com/

  2. Batkallim (David Starfire Remix)      
    Natacha Atlas
    http://sixdegreesrecords.bandcamp.com/track/batkallim-david-starfire-remix

  3. The Ancient Ceremony         
    Spoonhead
    http://spoonhead.co.nz

  4. White Guys with Dreadlocks     
    AreHouse
    http://soundcloud.com/crossroadsrecordsmusic/arehouse-white-guys-with

  5. Shakuhachi                 
    Killawatt
    hhttp://soundcloud.com/surus/killawatt-shakuhachi-ep

  6. Ghosts of Shaolin     
    Cranium Breach
    http://soundcloud.com/craniumbreach

  7. Dark Chapel       
    DJ SnipaZ
    http://soundcloud.com/bun_snipaz

  8. Saladin                   
    Torky Tork
    http://torkytork.bandcamp.com/album/torky-tork-syria

  9. Why We Exist                        
    Loop Stepwalker and Sinister Souls
    http://soundcloud.com/720bass

  10. Griami                 
    Pan Agnostix
    http://soundcloud.com/okulus/griami-by-pan-agnostix-okulus

  11. Ziad ft. Iggy Pot       
    Torky Tork
    http://torkytork.bandcamp.com/album/torky-tork-syria

  12. Judgement Come            
    Manwel T
    http://manwelt.com/


SAotV Podcast

Kutmah

As some of you will know, the Secret Archives of the Vatican empire started back at the tail end of the tape trader scene at the end of the 80s. We wrote a little about it in an earlier post HERE.

One of the exciting aspects of that scene was the use of innovative marketing techniques, crazy ideas and truly counter-cultural ways of doing things. Today I was in Rough Trade, one of our last remaining independent record shops, and found something that genuinely excited me. I can understand if you think 'what's so exciting about that?' but it got my attention and it got me thinking.
Kutmah CDR

I found a CDR by Kutmah, famously deported from the US in 2010 and now residing here in his country of birth, England. He had been unable to get to a Japanese radio station for some reason and had instead recorded them an hour long mix containing, among other things, unreleased tracks by Flying Lotus, Gonjasufi and Madlib.

The mostly non-existent packaging includes some stickers and the mix is on a silver CDR that has been beautifully hand illustrated. There are only 20 copies and it was on sale for £9.99. I couldn't afford it but bought it anyway.

This is art! £9.99 for a CDR with crap packaging? It's value is not based in the cheap CD or the scanty packaging but in the fact that it is unique and there is a human quality in this item that bridges the divide between modern digital music and a physical, hand-crafted form of presentation. It's also a superb collection of musical creativity!

It got me thinking of maybe producing some very small run, special, unique Secret Archives releases that we'll sell for cold, hard cash. Only joking! Well, kind of....I love the idea so we'll have a think about what we might do along those lines.

Tuesday 13 September 2011

How do we market our new album? Part 9

Barbary Lion

Well, here’s the final post on how we’ve marketed the Barbary Lion album. We’re not stopping, of course, but all the obvious main activity has happened and I’ve written about it.

We’ve gone past 300 downloads from Bandcamp and about 10% of downloaders have chosen to pay. The interest raised by this release has also led to a significant number of additional downloads of our back catalogue – there’s always a trickle but it ramped right up recently. We’ve also had a pleasing amount of plays of tracks from Barbary Lion in podcasts around the world. There seems to be no let up in Russian download sites bootlegging us but I don’t think that will really have made any difference to our own downloads.


Barbary Lion

I’ve sent marketing blurb and direct download links with friendly covering emails to lots of bass music and electronic music blogs over the last month but we’ve seen little response. I admit to being a little at a loss to explain this. They seem to be writing about, and reviewing, a wide range of related music and should, therefore, be interested in covering ours. I know it’s nothing to do with the quality of the release – we know it’s damned good. In some cases, the blogs are connected with people we know so it’s a little sad that there hasn’t been much interest. However, I’m a firm believer that it’s their call, not ours. We have to respect their decisions. I guess I don’t write about everything they do either.

We’ve learned a lot from this release. I believe the name-your-own-price model works well for us. It might work even better for those working in more mainstream musical genres. We’ve developed several of our musical ideas too and have already started planning the next couple of releases.


Secret Archives of the Vatican

How do we market our new album? Part 8
How do we market our new album? Part 7
How do we market our new album? Part 6
How do we market our new album? Part 5
How do we market our new album? Part 4
How do we market our new album? Part 3
How do we market our new album? Part 2
How do we market our new album? Part 1