Showing posts with label Netlabels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Netlabels. Show all posts

Saturday, 8 June 2013

Our next release - Storms

We think that the music Secret Archives of the Vatican makes is interesting. Although there are now many, many artists from around the world mixing Western electronica with non-Western musical genres, we don't sound like any of them. That's not entirely deliberate - we've tried to sound like others but we're not actually able to!

Anyway, you may or may not be aware that there's not a great deal of actual playing of musical instruments in our music. We use a lot of sampling, a lot of programming, a lot of digital audio editing to come up with the rhythms and tunings and sounds that are our style.

Why don't we play the instruments ourselves? Well - all members of the Archives crew are musicians. We all play more than one instrument. However, much of what we want to achieve in the studio is beyond our technical abilities, hence the computer based approach to music making. In particular, we're currently exploring Middle Eastern tuning systems, so most Western instruments simply can't play the notes. I do have a fretless guitar but don't have quite the playing experience with it or confidence to achieve the ideas I want to.

I guess we could record guest musicians. The problems with that include lack of money to pay anyone, our studios being in our homes so times we can make noise are limited and that many of the musicians we'd love to collaborate with are in other countries or just too far away in this country.

Our next Secret Archives of the Vatican release will be called Storms. The title relates to the Turkish Storm Calendar and that is the thread that connects all the tracks. The tunes are based on Turkish traditional rhythms and makam tunings although they won't necessarily sound particularly Turkish. Like I said, we try to do these things but it always coming out sounding like us.

Release is expected to be at the end of July 2013 but here's a track to be getting on with. Click on the link to hear it.

It's in a 9 beat rhythm, Afr-Mawlawii, divided 4-2-3. It is tuned to Makam Hicaz Zirgule, which means the second and fifth notes in the scale used are not tuned as they would be in Western music.

Friday, 25 January 2013

Storms on the horizon...

The next Secret Archives of the Vatican release will be called Storms. The tunes, although independent of each other, are based on a theme, the Turkish Storm Calendar. We first came across references to this in a most excellent (and highly recommended) science fiction book set in Istanbul in the near future. The Dervish House by Ian McDonald provides no details of the calendar, merely mentions it. We were intrigued but found very little information on the internet - three or four webpages with incomplete or hard to interpret listings of the weather changes through a Turkish year. The names of the storms are evocative, however, and we decided to record a set of tunes related to them. We have, for a long time, been interested in the tuning systems used in Middle Eastern music, particularly Arabic music, but we decided to research the Turkish makamlar tradition which is similar but not identical. We found some good websites with details of the modes and scales used in Turkish music (makamlar). We then had to figure out how to make our synthesisers and samplers play the detuned notes that don't exist in our usual tempered Western musical scales. The makamlar tradition includes some melodic expectations and we were unable to find enough information to do justice to these, so our music is definitely not Turkish music and we haven't tried to make it so. It is our music, influenced by Turkish music. Not many people have used microtones in our world of electronica, so for many of our listeners, it will be their first exposure to music with a different tuning system. Many of the makamlar only have one or two notes that are detuned, so we think the music sounds natural and not hard for a Western audience to grasp. There are copious online sources of transcriptions of Middle Eastern hand drum rhythms, so we have used frame drums (which we love!) as well as drum kit sounds to programme our rhythms based on these and most, if not all, of the tracks on Storms are therefore not in common four-four time. Once again, we don't believe this makes the tunes inaccessible - many of these uncommon time signatures are rooted in ancient forms of dance music after all. We also haven't abandoned our flirtations with the Cronx's indigenous folk music, dubstep, and there are bass electronica sounds supporting the orientalist melodies throughout. We have a few tracks finished and some still in the pipeline so we don't have a release date yet. However, we'll be enthusiastically pimping Storms on all of our many online platforms in due course, so you'll know when it's out.

Monday, 3 September 2012


New release from Broken Drum Records:  Nine Ships by Thousand Yard Prayer. Middle-Eastern rhythms and tunings collide with dubstep-inflected Croydonian bass music. Eclectic esoterica for the musically open-minded.



Sunday, 19 February 2012

Souq Dragon

Souq Dragon banner  
Souq Dragon is the latest release on Broken Drum Records by...Souq Dragon. You can download this album free from Bandcamp.

  Souq Dragon cover  

Tracks
  1. Tagine for a Ninja
  2. It is a Good Day
  3. Souq Rats
Souq Dragon back
Souq Dragon was born at a very early age in a small village just out of Earshot. This is his first moombahton-influenced release. Follow Souq Dragon on Facebook.

Friday, 25 November 2011

Corty Meets…New release from Angel Dust Records

Corty Meets...

Netlabel Angel Dust Records has just released its fifth release; the label has a plan for one release a month.  

Corty Meets... is the first release from French dubster, Corty. Based in Rennes, Corty has collaborated with some of the finest and most prolific dub artists across the world: Revolushan (Strasbourg, France), Solo Banton (London, England), Bongo Chilli (Nottingham, England), Leah Rosier (Amsterdam, Netherlands) and Preecha Kungo (Massachusetts, USA).

Corty has been playing guitar since he was nine years old. He started using his computer to create dub in 2003 and hasn’t stopped since.

He says: 'I like the possibility of playing with different artists' voices, by using samplers. I want to continue with these kind of collaborations with many artists. All vocals are welcome!'


Corty Meets... (back)

The album has eleven tracks, mostly with an upbeat, raggamuffin vibe.

Monday, 31 October 2011

Pete Townsend gets it SO wrong

I've just listened to the inaugural annual BBC John Peel lecture, given by elderly rock dinosaur Pete Townsend.

Read a BBC report HERE

Watch the lecture HERE

I expected him to ramble on about how great the old record industry was and to whinge about piracy and modern distribution methods for music. Well, fortunately he don't do quite what I expected. Unfortunately, though, he still delivered a rambling, incoherent and confused set of contradictions.

He went into some detail about how John Peel (pbuh) had acted as a filter, an introducer, a source of glorious random discovery of unexpected but brilliant music. He then went on to assert that such a person or process didn't exist in the modern digital music economy. He then went on to list many of the ways it actually DOES exist in the modern digital economy. Like I said, confused and contradictory.

He clearly had no real idea about podcasts or music blogs, despite talking about them.

Like everyone from the dying music industry or the radio industry, he made no mention of netlabels. They are not mentioned so often in discussions about the music industry that it has to be deliberate.

Next year, let's hope the BBC picks a speaker not because he was a member of some old band who made some good records 40 years ago but someone who actually has a finger on the pulse of emerging creative music. They're out there, BBC.

To use modern parlance, epic fail BBC! What a sadly wasted opportunity.

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

Sunday, 17 July 2011

How do we market our new album? Part 6

Barbary Lion has now been out for about three weeks. Downloads are in triple figures and about one in seven downloaders is choosing to pay. Most seem to be paying about $5, which is roughly what we would have expected to receive from a sale of a CD through a shop back in the days of physical product.

Barbary Lion

As well as using Bandcamp as our main outlet, we use a company called Tunecore to place the album on the commercial download sites. It takes a variable amount of time to show up on the sites, for example, iTunes was very quick indeed, Spotify and Napster were pretty quick and we're still waiting for it to show up on Amazon US or Amazon UK.

iTunes gets a lot of stick but they do pay one of the best rates back to the artists.

We've not much in the way of reviews yet, just one on the Netlabelism site by well-known podcaster Pete Cogle and one on a Hungarian site. We're starting to have tunes played on podcasts, though, which is great. The podcasters and their listeners are enthusiastic music fans so we know the tunes will be listened to - people don't tend to use podcasts as mere background like they do with broadcast radio.

So, some positive progress!

Barbary Lion

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

Sunday, 10 April 2011

Poulp It Up!

PCP#346... Poulp It Up! ...

European podcaster of the year 2010, Pete Cogle, has released a special edition of the PC Podcast focusing on one of our favourite French netlabels, Fresh Poulp.

You can find details of PCP#346 HERE.

Direct download HERE.

Fresh Poulp

Wednesday, 22 December 2010

Friday, 3 December 2010

Mesopotamian Homesick Blues

Here's a new Secret Archives of the Vatican tune. We were holding this for the next release but we've had a harddrive failure in the studio so we're not sure if we still have the master WAV file. We've still got the multitrack recording so we can always do it again - but here's an mp3 of the original mix.

Secret Archives of the Vatican___ Mesopotamian Homesick Blues

Peace Through Superior Flowerpower

Here's a new Secret Archives of the Vatican tune. We were holding this for the next release but we've had a harddrive failure in the studio so we're not sure if we still have the master WAV file. We've still got the multitrack recording so we can always do it again - but here's an mp3 of the original mix.

Secret Archives of the Vatican___ Peace Through Superior Flowerpower

Peace Through Superior Flowepower

Transnational Trackfest

Generation Bass

Highly influential music blog Generation Bass has featured a Secret Archives of the Vatican tune and two unauthorised remixes/mashups that we put together for a DJ set by the Secret Archives of the Vatican Soundsystem a few weeks back. One of the remixes is listed as being by Yohei but that's because SoundCloud presents tunes as being by the uploader rather than the artist.

Check it out here:

Transnational trackfest

Saturday, 20 November 2010

Conscious Rasta

Conscious Rasta

Another highly recommended free release from one of our favourite labels, Fresh Poulp: France's Guitoud has released his third album, Conscious Rasta. It's a cracking album, featuring eleven tunes in classic dub and reggae style.

Full details and download link are HERE.

Conscious Rasta

Saturday, 23 October 2010

Dreams and Visions - new release from Secret Archives of the Vatican

Dreams and Visions is the new five track release from Secret Archives of the Vatican, released 23 October 2010.

Download it from HERE.

Dreams and Visions

Tracks
  1. Bint al Wazir
  2. Dreams and Visions
  3. Storyteller
  4. Spiceships of Aldebaraan
  5. Children of Mars

Includes bonus video for Bint al Wazir.

Dreams and Visions

Friday, 15 October 2010

Crazy Clown Dub

The godfather of podcasting, Mr Pete Cogle, has just released episode 85 of the The Dub Zone podcast. You can download TDZ#85 from HERE. Full details are HERE.

TDZ#85

Tracks

  1. Rupa Music Dub - DubPlay
  2. Soca Dub - Phoniandflore
  3. Peace Treaty (Jackie Mittoo Version) - DubRifles
  4. Television Dub - Liberators
  5. Kwesi Trip - Lionyard
  6. Warrior In The Dub - Dub Engine
  7. Rainbow Children Dub - Zion Train
  8. Clown Powder - Lion of Joppa

Saturday, 4 September 2010

Free music from Secret Archives of the Vatican on Bandcamp

We have been adding Secret Archives of the Vatican releases to the Bandcamp website and you can see our page HERE.

Bandcamp is great because you have a wide choice of download formats available - you're not stuck with crappy mp3s - in fact, the lowest quality mp3 available is the highest quality mp3, a 320kbps.

We've added our two most recent EP releases, The Glidepath EP and Wisdom Truth. Both are free.

Wisdom Truth The Glidepath EP

We've also added our 2009 album release, Remembering Machine, and it is now free also!

Remembering Machine

We'll be adding more tunes soon!