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-   -   Sonic Youth amongst the guests on the new Future Pilot Aka album (http://www.sonicyouth.com/gossip/showthread.php?t=9923)

porkmarras 01.17.2007 12:17 PM

Sonic Youth amongst the guests on the new Future Pilot Aka album
 
I hope this will win Future Pilot Aka some new fans.

Sonic Youth are amongst the guest collaborators on the latest album from Future pilot AKA, 'Secrets From The Clockhouse.'

The 16-tracked album due out on February 5, also features the talents of Belle & Sebastian, Can, Stooges, The Go-Betweens and karine Polwart.

'Secrets From The Clockhouse', is the fourth album conceived, written and produced by Sushil K Dade and is the follow up to 2004's 'Salute Your Soul' which also featured an eclectic range of artists.

Glasgow based, Future Pilot AKA's debut album 'A Galaxy of Stars' was highly acclaimed in 1999 and in recent years has recorded with everyone from Cornershop to Alan Vega and Mikey Dread, James Kirk, Vic Godard, Philip Glass, Pastels and Bill Wells to name a handful of others.

To coincide with the album's release, Future Pilot AKA will be performing a rare live date on January 28 at the Old Fruitmarket, City Halls in Glasgow.

'Secrets From The Clockhouse' is to be released through Creeping Bent Records.

noumenal 02.06.2007 03:19 PM

Pitchfork Review:


Future Pilot AKA
Secrets From the Clockhouse
[Creeping Bent; 2007]
Rating: 7.2


 

Even without knowledge of the collaborations that comprise Secrets From the Clockhouse, each song feels like the work of a supergroup. From the get-go, opener "Nothing Without You (Tery Bina)", the listener is flooded with the image of close to a dozen musicians hanging out together under the baton of Sushil K. Dade (Soup Dragon, Telstar Ponies, BMX Bandits). Since 1997 Dade has been writing work drawn from dozens of collaborations and here Belle & Sebastian's Stuart Murdoch, and Sarah Martin, Sonic Youth's Thurston Moore and Kim Gordon, Damo Suzuki, and many more align their experiences to suit Dade's reverential folk vision. The result is a series of elegant interludes, infused as much with Dade's vision as with the oeuvres of the musicians he's brought on board. "Nothing Without You", a twinkling folk rendition of Pakistani song by Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, makes a fine opening point for a record full of songs with similar languorous flourishes. The angelic counterpoints between guitar, banjo, and reverbing vocals are thank-you notes to a 1960s folk rock aesthetic, implacably nostalgic without being trite. What directly follows, "The City of Lights", is a robust song with a piano as its backbone: The fluid chordal movements across the keyboard even get their own cadenza in the midst of a jam that's, in the end, another interlude. A BMX Bandits fan site astutely calls Dade "the bloke who puts those great interludes" on BMX Bandits albums, and indeed, the brevity and fluidity of Secrets' tracks ensures their standalone, episodic nature.
One of the longer tracks, "Nuclear War", is a free jazz undertaking, with short, percussive utterances, muttered lines like "Kiss your ass goodbye," slippery special effects, and a smattering of saxophones and bass reaching through a smoky, whirling atmosphere commit themselves rapaciously to our memory without the slightest affectation and little tonal emphasis. One of the most improvisational tracks, the song is an interlude within an interlude, a piece of thought reflection less traditional than its companions.
Dade posits "Shenandoah", an early 19th century sea chantey (elsewhere covered by Bob Dylan), within the highland tradition, emphasizing in spite of the song's Stateside origin that much of this album and its contributors are culling their inspiration from the flavors of the British Isles. The c&w flavor of "A-N-U-R-U-D-H", with a looping guitar trot in 2/2 and a wash of slide guitar throughout, draws in cool, aerated female vocals lost in the fog of subtle effects and quiet additions from an organ, making it a gem that stands out, but not isolated from its relatives.
As emphasized by the hilarious track "Word Association", Dade's interest is in the playful interlocutions between his special guests; what's furthering these interlocutions are homages to traditions that succeed in part because of the guests' longstanding relationships to them. The genre hoarding and blending exemplified by the pairing of say, the tingling pop song "Eyes of Love" (featuring two Belle and Sebastians) with the free-form "Nuclear War" emphasizes this album's progressive flavor; its historical celebration is created by seasoned believers and innovators, whose evident pleasure in referencing a colorful trajectory is the only requirement-- besides talent-- of making this work relevant.
-Liz Colville, February 05, 2007

porkmarras 02.06.2007 03:35 PM

Thanks,that's a very interesting review.I reccomend also 'A Galaxy Of Sound'which is one of the best records i've bought in the 90's and it feels more like a compilation of musicians under the loose and benevolent supervision of Mr Dade.Every song is joint together by a female robotic voice announcing the flights(i.e. track numbers) and the music itself is a gloriously schizophrenic amalgam of styles and musics.


Tracklisting:
CD1.01The Gates To Film City Featuring - Two Lone SwordsmenCD1.02Pink City Featuring - Bill WellsCD1.03Indians At NASA Featuring - Brix SmithCD1.04Rest And Be Thankful Featuring - James KirkCD1.05World Wide Web Featuring - Ranjit Nagar All StarsCD1.06Teri Mitti Bani Featuring - CornershopCD1.07The Departure Lounge Featuring - Digital CowCD1.08Pink Returns Featuring - Bill WellsCD1.09The Innocent Railway Featuring - James KirkCD1.10Meditation Rat Featuring - Alan Vega , Revolutionary Corps Of Teenage Jesus, TheCD2.01Theme From Buzz Featuring - 50 HtzCD2.02Fresh Milk! Featuring - ScannerCD2.03Night Flight To Memphis Featuring - Kim FowleyCD2.04Pink Money Featuring - Bill WellsCD2.05Japan Featuring - SuckmonsterCD2.06Message From Control Tower Featuring - Jowe HeadCD2.07Hurricane Fighter Plane Featuring - Pastels, TheCD2.08Lee Jun Fan Featuring - Inyo SanCD2.09Pink Prophet Featuring - Bill WellsCD2.10Sterling Featuring - National Park

sonicl 02.07.2007 04:25 AM

Which one of those features Kim and Thurston?

porkmarras 02.19.2007 09:33 AM

The one on the first post of this thread.

sonicl 02.19.2007 09:53 AM

Sorry, badly phrased question. Which track on the new album features Mr and Mrs Moore?

porkmarras 02.19.2007 10:00 AM

I wouldn't know as i haven't bought the album yet.Lee is online.Should we ask him?He might know.

sonicl 02.19.2007 10:06 AM

Nah, he's shy. We don't want to scare him off.


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