Monday, December 24, 2007

Lucid Culture reviews "13 Blackbirds"


17 Pygmies
"13 Blackbirds"
2007 Trakwerx

17 Pygmies is the name of the band. Former Savage Republic-an Jackson Del Rey and Louise Bialik’s long-running West Coast outfit started out as a skewed new wave/pop band but has gravitated toward art-rock since. This new cd has been a long time coming, and it’s been worth the wait. It’s a beautifully rustic, mostly acoustic record with vocals generally by Bialik, austere fingerpicked guitar, autumnal melodies and light percussion in places. Think of it as the thinking person’s alternative to Hem. It picks up steam as it goes along.



The understatedly memorable opening theme, Heavenly Intro is reprised at the end of the initial tracks as Heavenly Creatures. In between, we get the pretty title cut and the absolutely gorgeous Tree of Life (if this is about pot, it must be seriously hydroponic). After that, the stately waltz Get Out!, the haunting 6/8 ballad Water Carry Me with its pastoral blend of guitar, piano and violin and then truth in advertising with A Brief Interlude – more 6/8 time with beautiful fingerpicked classical guitar, sounding like a good baroque classical piece. The next song, 125 History has ghostly vocals set to stark strings; Lila Paosa, which follows, is another quiet pretty song with ringing overtones from the guitars and organ adding just a tinge of disquieting dissonance. Strings come in toward the end and build to a crescendo. Ubi Sunt (Latin for “where are then”) and Heavenly Creatures feature both piano, voice and strings. There are three bonus tracks on the first cd – quite possibly left over from a previous project – which make a good triptych in 6/8: an instrumental with piano and strings, an original song, and a cover of the McCartney chestnut from the White Album followed by a piano instrumental to close it.

This is a double cd: the second one is called 13 Lotus which (seems to be) 13 remixes of the song from 13 Blackbirds. It’s pretty much all hypnotic, sleepy, downtempo, mostly instrumental trip-hop variations except for a rather disturbing version with sirens phasing from speaker to speaker which will quickly have listeners rushing to the window and then wondering where all the emergency vehicles are. It’s all well worth owning and comes in a charmingly illustrated, Edward Gorey-esque double cardboard sleeve. CDs are available at better retailers and online.

Saturday, December 22, 2007

The Big Takeover Reviews 13 Blackbirds + Battleship Potemkin






Del Rey & The Sun Kings
Battleship Potemkin (CD & DVD)

17 Pygmies
13 Blackbirds (Double CD)

The return of '80s L.A. underground fixture Jackson Del Rey (AKA Philip Drucker) has been welcome. Known for his membership in Savage Republic, Del Rey eventually split off to pursue 17 Pygmies, and is represented on LPs by both. Dropping out for 15 years, he resurfaced two years ago with the solo I Am the Light. And from these two releases, both out a while (apologies, I missed them before), and two more out now, he is even more prolific than he was.

Battleship is his most fascinating work ever. A new score for early USSR director Sergei Eisenstein's 1925 propagandist masterpiece of early cinema, it reinvigorates the instrumental music backing the historical tale of 1905 revolutionary mutiny against Tsar Nicholas II's naval officers, and the Odessa street massacre that followed. The music is repetitive, circular, and full of tones in sequential, near -Eastern drones, the bed for orchestral lines lined on top. (Great example: "All for One and One For All"). It's impossible not to visualize the movie's slaughter, new to cinema, when hearing the death knells and terrified synths of "Suddenly...The Czarist Soldiers" - even if you just listen to the CD. But watch the DVD instead, it's an incredible movie(!), and like Tom Verlaine's recent solo guitar soundtracks for pre-talkies, you get the full effect of the aural massage. Otherwise, even on CD, Del Rey's work is like a film in of itself, sparking wild imagination. Good pressed cardboard sleeves for both, too.

As for 17 Pygmies return after 17 years gone (fitting), this finds Del Rey picking up not where early, well-admired, more clashing works such as Jedda By The Sea left off, but more later works with lovely voiced Louise Bialik such as 1988's penultimate Welcome (only without that LP's breaks). The backgrounds are playful, just as full of an unnoticed lushness, and (again) repetitive backgrounds underneath Bialik's cooing. Few groups manage such immediate songs with such artistic backing tracks, yielding new possibilities and sounds every time you delve deeper into them. Only a faithful, hidden bonus cover by Paul McCartney's White Album Beatles acoustic track "Blackbird" is exactly what it seems on first blush. (The second disc is 13 remixes of one song, "Lotus" - highly creative, though way too exhausting. Another artful pressed sleeve too.)
As we went to press, Del Rey completed a new soundtrack, this time for F.W. Murnau's 1922 vampire horror classic Nofseratu, and a new LP under the modified name The 17th Pygmy. Wanna bet they are both inspired, too? (trakwerx.com)

BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN REVIEWED IN HARP MAGAZINE




Del Rey & the Sun Kings
Battleship Potemkin Trakwerx
Del Rey & the Sun Kings, Battleship Potemkin

Jackson Del Rey was a founding member of L.A. experimental rock combos such as Savage Republic and 17 Pygmies. If you’re familiar with these bands, you’ll understand this gives him a very good pedigree for undertaking his new project – creating a soundtrack for Sergei Eisenstein’s 1925 silent film about a shipboard food protest that results in carnage, and brings the seeds of revolution to the port city of Odessa. Instrumental, incorporating a variety of Del Rey’s expected pan-national musical influences, and relentlessly dark, this is wonderfully crafted chamber prog of the highest order. The disc is beautifully packaged, and a great addition to Del Rey’s canon. He was off the music scene for a decade and a half, and it’s nice to have him back.
By Byron Coley

First printed in November 2007
Search CD Reviews
Harp on

* Del Rey & the Sun Kings

Americana-UK reviews "Ballade Of Tristram's Last Harping"


Giants in their field?

I like it when everything about a CD is in perfect harmony - the band name, the title, the Aubrey Beardsley illustrations, the poem in a scroll, the sleeve-notes, the song titles (how about ‘Just Like Brian Jones’) and the music. Have you guessed it yet? We’re in psychedelic territory.

The songs don’t disappoint, they’re perhaps a little more reflective than you might think and the guitars little more Roger McGuinn – which is certainly not a bad thing. There’s a slow-burning quality to many of the songs: ‘Beautiful Lie’ and ‘Last Train’ take the time to explore themselves. The worse thing you can say about ‘Just like Brian Jones’ is that it sounds just like you’d expect it to, indeed it sounds a little like ‘Let’s Spend the Night Together’ twisted in a paisley cravat.

Gentler poppier songs fare well ‘It’s Only Love’ with its sitar sounding guitar gently scrapes away at the underbelly of the summer of love. Retro it may be, enjoyable it certainly is.


Date review added: Friday, December 21, 2007
Reviewer: David Cowling
Reviewers Rating: 6 out of 10
Related web link: A quest for the tribe

Monday, December 17, 2007

New review for Cult With No Name

Cult With No Name - Paper Wraps Rock (Trakwerx) Cult With No Name were formed in London by Erik Stein (lead vocals/piano) and Jon Boux (lead piano/vocals). Sounding strangely like those semi-classical 80s artbands like Japan, The Blue Nile or maybe even later era Talk Talk but without the guitars, the "post-punk electronic balladeers" have released this great late-night debut. From the gentle drone/avant-garde instrumental opener The Morning After The Night Before Last, we are lured into a world of piano balladeering with a twist. With More Of The Same the (electronic) drums set in, making a nice change. Stein's singing style is slightly affected, which is something you either love or hate. Most of the track hover around a slow, reflective pace, so slightly more upbeat tracks like Business Is Good or Product Of are a nice change. The keyboards in Operation Failed are a welcome addition to the sparse instrumentation on this album. In the end, Paper Wraps Rock is a good debut album though it would have benefited from a bit more variation in pace and instrumentation. Personally speaking, I like my albums what these days would probably be considered "short" - say 35 to 40 minutes max. With 55+ minutes, Paper Wraps Rock is in my opinion too long. Some trimming would have made the album more cohesive, but that is minor quibbling. A strong debut, with lots of possibilities for an even better follow up in the future. File under semi-classical lounge-pop with an avant-garde twist (FK)
www.trakwerx.com

Airplay for Trakwerx artists on KKFI.org

Retro Red-Eye Express Playlist Blog
Monday, December 10, 2007
Playlist Dec 8, 2007 (+update)

Due to icy weather conditions and a pending ice storm threat, R2E2 pre-empted The Justice Files and did a 5 hr show. However, look for Michael T. to return next Sunday morning at 1am!

Also, a relatively new feature of the KKFI.org website is that you can now view the prior week's playlists for all your favorite KKFI programs! Go to KKFI.org, click on On-Air Guide, and navigate to your favorite program's page by selecting the day and time it airs as listed in the guide. Here's mine: Retro Red-Eye Express. I'm not sure what day of the week these lists are posted.

Title / Artist / Album / Label

- Maslow's Dog / Cult With No Name / Paper Wraps Rock / Trakwerx

- She Gets High / The 17th Pygmy / Ballade of Tristram's Last Harping / Trakwerx

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Mick Mercer Reviews "Ballade Of Tristram's Last Harping"


THE 17TH PYGMY
BALLADE OF TRISTRAM’S LAST HARPING
Trakwerx

By rights I should be considering forwarding my medical expenses to our pygmy chums as I had to have a whole emergency back-up team monitoring my health while this was on, the resuss squad jittery, almost nervous. I get physically sick when exposed to the Sounds Of The Sixties, which is why Punk made so much sense to me. Sergeant Pepper needs putting up against a wall and that era of milky pop and bearded men, it makes me shudder to this very day. Well, the emergency passed and I am of an essentially forgiving nature, so I will go easy on The 17th Pygmy, mad though they are, because this is a bizarrely beautiful record. I don’t approve of it, as I am sure the same ideas and melodies could have been crafted in another manner completely, but I do recognise its delicately gleaming quality.

Apparently the title comes from an actual poem, by one Gertrude Bartlett in 1916, and there’s Aubrey Beardsley illustrations involved to boot. I never liked the name Aubrey, it even sounds suspicious, like the name of a spy. (Tristram’s okay, conjuring up the image of someone feeble, but loyal.) There’s also, as you’ll see from my scan, a small scroll included but I haven’t opened that in case I can’t close it again. Anyone know what’s inside, is it some dastardly spy trick?

Anyway, they admit to being folk rock and psychedelic so I’m not blaming them although I did think today was Wednesday, in part because I thought yesterday was Tuesday, but that’s probably down to them as well. These people have no conception of time, it’s all the drugs, taken by the shovelful, don’t forget. And they’re old, being Jaxon Del Rey (Savage Republic), Meg Maryatt (Swivelneck) and all of Jeff Brenneman, Tony Davis and Drummer Dirk Doucette coming from something called White Glove Test. Without an ounce of shame they fully admit to elements of the following being heard on this record; Phil Spector, The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, the Kinks, The Doors, Jefferson Airplane, Janis Joplin, Neil Young, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin and Nick Cave(?), on what they claim is a musical pastiche. Pastiche my arse, he roared, not entirely sure what the term relates to. Let us explore.

‘New Generation’ gets us off to a sickeningly sweet start, dreamy and flowerchild-like, which should set alarm bells ringing; insidiously, obscenely catchy. ‘She Gets High’ is just as hideously effective, and in the same mould, like a Nesmith Monkees outtake, and apparently she, who I have always been led to believe is ‘the cat’s mother’, gets high in the velvet sky, whatever that is. ‘Last Train’ is less hidebound to Hell and has a leisurely acoustic majesty all of its own, instantly captivating stuff.

‘Beautiful Lie’ is a romantically curdled lament over doomed emotions, and while it trundles along there is something unnervingly hypnotic about it which probably means the drugs are in the ether by now. ‘Let It Shine’ twinkles easily with Meg calmly marshalling the soppy sentiments, ‘Just Like Brian Jones’ gets the old guru vibe going for its weird existence, and then ‘Dig It (Quentin’s Theme)’ simpers skilfully like a Madchester dance thing combined with groovetastic Kylie, but adhering to strict Sixties principles too, so it’s got a triple-puke thing going on, and yet it makes it all work, which is insane! Where’s my lawyer?

‘It’s Only Love’ is a plainer thing but no less charming with cooler male vocals, and then Meg returns to set ‘Paint Me’ oozing along with both a dour side and an uplifting sense of optimism, which is not you could really say about the closing lilt of ‘Like This Train’ which has our protagonist threatening to come after someone, even though it seems a reluctant hunt of convenience. He doesn’t sound threatening exactly, more like an irritation, although everyone in America has guns - I read that somewhere – so you never know, but this achieves a weird, slowly deflating end to a very strange and horribly successful record. Seriously, it is utterly brilliant despite the form it frequently takes, so I shall huff petulantly and hate them for it.

Sunday, December 2, 2007

ITALY'S BLOW UP MAGAZINE INTERVIEWS JAXON DEL REY

DECEMBER 2007 ISSUE
BLOW UP MAGAZINE interviews Jaxon Del Rey and plays "She Gets High" on PODCAST

See Ghost Rock #5 di Stefano I Bianchi.
http://www.blowupmagazine.com/radiozine.php


http://www.blowupmagazine.com/

The 17th Pygmy & The Spirit Girls Downtown Holiday Spectacular

WHAT: The 17th Pygmy Record Release Party & Holiday Spectacular with the Spirit Girls
WHERE: Dangerous Curve, 1020 E. Fourth Place, LA, CA 90013, 213-617-8483
WHEN: Saturday December 15, 2007, 7:00 p.m.
COST: $10.00 Suggested Donation

LOS ANGELES- After a possibly symbolic 17 year hiatus, influential L.A. postpunk band 17 Pygmies has regrouped under the name of The 17th Pygmy. Now with "Ballade of Tristram's Last Harping" (Trakwerx) they release their second CD of 2007, a follow up to the well-reviewed "13 Blackbirds." Still led by guitarist/provocateur Jaxon Del Rey (late of Savage Republic), the new name reflects the growing influence of late 1960s psychedelia and early 1970s classic rock.

Of their live show, Lucid Culture raves "If it's possible for a sometimes quirky, often transcendentally beautiful art-rock band toslay, [the 17th Pygmy] slayed, bringing to mind other great, artsy jangle bands like the Church, the Byrds or Fairport Convention. Mixing major and minor chords, verses that built slowly to towering refrains and then subsided again, the band held the audience spellbound. If the live show is any indication, the new album must be amazing. This is a
band you should get to know."

Appearing with The 17th Pygmy at their record release and holiday spectacular is The Spirit Girls, multimedia artist Marnie Weber's experimental pop combo whose Noh-style masks and ghost girl gowns lend an eerie visual impact to their avant-prog compositions. Billed as "something of a cross between Sonic Youth, King Crimson and 17th Century French Romantic paintings," the Spirit Girls present songs from their recent Trakwerx release "Forever Free." Reviewing the album, Jack Rabid of The Big Takeover says "Not quite goth, this still conjures the post-Bowie/Eno Berlin collaboration '80s, when dark-chilly post-punk employed murky, doomy edges against textural beauty, like The Cure, Red Temple Spirits, Strange Times Chameleons,
and Shiva Burlesque. This is a tribal ritual and child nightmare about scary hobo clowns, haunted horses and worried bears; music that makesyou feel strange."

For more on Trakwerx and the 17th Pygmy, visit
http://www.trakwerx.blogspot.com
http://www.trakwerx.com/label.htm
http://www.myspace.com/17pygmies

For more on Dangerous Curve gallery, visit http://www.dangerouscurve.org

Jaxon Del Rey (AKA The 17th Pygmy) is available for interviews, and review copies of the 17th Pygmy's "Ballade of Tristram's Last Harping" and the Spirit Girls' "Forever Free" are available upon request.
Contact Meg Maryatt at Trakwerx, info@trakwerx.com

Saturday, December 1, 2007

WPRB plays "Beautiful Lie" Nov 7, 2007

Jon Solomon on WPRB : 11/7/07 : 19:00 - 22:00 pm ET :

The Rub - The Death Of Pop - Bikini Gospel

Smart Remarks - Falling Apart - Teenline 102 - C
Clint & Amy - Doubles - S/T - Lovely.
Normal Love - The Signal’s Coming From Pittsburgh (Part One) - 2007 - N
Health - Heaven Stems - mp3 - Pink Skull remix.
Iron & Wine - House By The Sea - The Shepherd’s Dog - N
5 Miles Out - Super Sweet Girl Of Mine - Absolute Funk - C - 1972.
Psychedelic Horseshit - Nothing Is Revealed - Magic Flowers Droned - N

The Lame Drivers - Change Your Mind - mp3
Tom Brosseau - Instructions To Meet The Devil - Cavalier - N
Villa Allegre - Theme - Songs From TV’s VIlla Allegre 1
The Swimmers - We Love To Build - Fighting Trees
Limp Wrist - I Love Hardcore Boys, I Love Boys Hardcore - Thee Official Limp Wrist Discography
The Wishniaks - Wishful Thinking - Teenline 105 - C
Tre Orsi - The Illustrator - 45 - N

Red Eyed Legends - Live on WPRB - 28:41 - 4.3.05

Violent Minds - Bloodsucker - S/T - N
Marlena Shaw - Woman Of The Ghetto - Psychedelic Jazz & Funky Grooves - C
Rob Sonic - Brand New Vandals - Sabotage Gigante - N
Os Mutantes - Tempo No Tempo - S/T
Om - Bhima’s Theme - Pilgrimage - N
Tracy Jordan - Werewolf Bar Mitzvah - mp3
Eddy Current Suppression Ring - Precious Rose - S/T - N

Teengenerate - Pushin’ Me Around - The Early Ones - C
Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings - Nobody’s Baby - 100 Days 100 Nights - N
Ted Pauly - Your Mix Tape Broke - mp3
The Underpainting - What Am I Going To Do Now? - S/T - N
The 17th Pygmy - Beautiful Lie - Ballade Of Tristram’s Last Harping
??? - Rocky Theme - Flaming Hotz 001
Circles - Away With The Tide - Where The River Floods - N

Jim Robinson - Atlanta Blues - Economy Hall Breakdown - N
Sian Alice Group - Contours (Second Mix) - mp3
The Kyle Sowashes - The College Try - What’s Important & What’s Not
Shark Quest - All Ball - Man On Stilts

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Aural Fixation plays "New Generation" on WMBR

wmbr 88.1 fm
community radio at MIT
cambridge ma usa

November 17, 2007

2. The 17th Pygmy New Generation Ballade of Tristam's Last Harping 2007 Trakwerx

http://auralfixradio.org/index.html

Monday, November 19, 2007

LIVE SHOW with The 17th Pygmy & The Spirit Girls at Dangerous Curve



Sunday December 15th 7:00 p.m.

For more details go to http://dangerouscurve.org/

Sunday, November 18, 2007

An Unruly Conductor reviews "Paper Wraps Rock"

CULT WITH NO NAME...album review here.
Current mood: exanimate
Category: Music

Cult with no Name

PAPER WRAPS ROCK .(post-punk/downtempo)

LABEL ; TRAKWERX.....released 10/31/2007

CULT WITH NO NAME hail out of London,....the self professed 'post-punk half drunk electronic philharmonic atmospheric balladeers'...do exactly what they say on the tin!

The first cd sent to me for scrutiny...I sat back and took in the album with no prior expectations (I had heard them on their page, but only casually).

At the start of 'PAPER WRAPS ROCK' a trickle of piano leads us gently into a smokey room full of half drunk pints and a silent game of dominos. Aparent are the classical influences in this opener, as it winds up unfazed and presents you the unravelling flower of this album. 'Blame it on the Oil' is the second track on this 15 track cd, and the first to introduce the vocals of Erik Stein. Chopped with a more emotional piano line, this track gives you more of a picture about what the London duo are about...intellegent but vunerable, masters of their art although insecure. There are a few influences spinning in my head...the vocals sound hauntingly familiar, or is that the tone and subject merely arriving home. The rest of the album takes you on a hopeful taunt, tight-roping over the impending melancholy with spikes of high piano directing your attention upwards into the glow of empathy.

To say this album is a lounge album, is true, but I like the bravery of it's layout....instead of hitting you in the face with the big 'singles' from the album...it takes it's time...delivering a mature theme to the proceedings, building up with electric piano and drums n' effects in time...then to glug back under the drink from wenst it came. The stand out tracks from 'Paper wraps Rock'...are 'Operation failed' with it's striptease of mood and cafe ease.....and my favourite track on this title 'Girl'...like a steam engine sat at the station, releasing the pressure and readying for the remains of this journey!

I wish Erik Stein (lead vocals/rhythm piano) & Jon Boux (lead piano/rhythm vocals) the best of luck on their passage through this musical adventure...and no doubt I will be reviewing further releases and dates for this rising band! So if you like your indie to down their guitars and ease on the pedals of a piano or two, this band are for you...destined for some greater expose.

CULT WITH NO NAME - PAPER WRAPS ROCK - DEBUT ALBUM

(POST-PUNK/PIANO) a TRAKWERX release....available now!!!!

for more info & a listen to their album goto

www.myspace.com/cwnn

or for bookings/promo/cd

www.trakwerx.com

Thanks for the cd guys....I will treasure it!!

FOR MORE REVIEWS ON LITTLE KNOWN ACTS & SOME HIGH PROFILERS.....SUBSCRIBE TO THIS BLOG.

ELECTRO/INDIE/TECHNO/HAUS/BREAKBEAT/ELECTRONIQUE/DUB

UNRULY TIMES.....CALLING FOR SOME UNRULY MEASURES!!!!!!!

regards

A . U . C

Sunday, November 11, 2007

JACKSON DEL REY'S BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN ON YouTube

"MEN AND THE MAGGOTS" scene from Battleship Potemkin


MICK MERCER REVIEWS "PAPER WRAPS ROCK"


CULT WITH NO NAME
PAPER WRAPS ROCK
Trakwerx

More strangeness? Oh, okay then, as long as you don’t mind something strange seemingly all but entirely normal; chaste and rarefied in a subtly disconcerting manner. They admit to being post-punk electronics, but also with a thing about ballads, which may scare you, because who wants an alternative Coldplay? Erik Stein and Jon Boux (‘rhythm vocals?!!) don’t entirely go that route, as there’s no pompous masquerading as heartening quests or explosive emotion. What they do verges on light orchestral musing, with peculiar lyrical disenchantment.

Having been struck by their track on the 17 Pygmies album a while back I think this album will go down well with true 80’s indie aficionados, and people today who want a little more meat on their ambient bones, as that’s what it comes closest to in my eyes, the feel of modern ambient music, but with that trapped inside the melodic muscle of more conventional songwriting, creating interesting and cement-hard, credible compositions. The album also comes in a cunning card cover, with a cute illustration of the band I shall have to include here, with sleeve like a depressed digipack, the CD placed in a slot in the inside back cover, the lyrics simply printed all over the card, like a latterday version of the early Savage Republic card covers.

In ‘The Morning After The Night Before Last’ I’m tempted to say his troubles seem so far away but it’s a delightful piano at work, like something crossed between the accompaniment to a romantic silent film, and a flow which makes you become lost in thought, oddly reassuring. Liquid vocals accompany piano through the tricky, winsome ‘Blame It On Oil’ and you’re with a duo who can play immaculately and sing likewise. They’re like the Anti-Coldplay; musicians woken at a time of musical tedium, come amongst us to perplex.

‘More Of The Same’ is as compelling as any of the rubbish major label nonentities spew out, and should be something major indies look for, even though they might not know what to do with it. Plinky percussion behind the keyboards and vocal guile, it’s a deftly desirable piece.
‘Business Is Good’ even has a souped-up Eltonesque cadence but overall it’s more of the same, almost casually catchy, and the press release mentions bands which probably give you a better illustrative set of comparisons than I manage – Associates, Tuxedomoon, Erik Satie, Keith Jarrett and Shriekback. Throw in Furniture, at their most fragrant, and Stephen Poliakoff too please, because I like the effect, and then play these two back to back again, they’re so beautiful.

‘Waiting For The Punch Line’ is, seemingly, a love affair with technology, and could herald a sectioning order and the demure ‘Operation Failed’ is a form of club noir, with a very soft underbelly, a bit like Bill Pritchard on manoeuvres, everything fluid but somehow just ambling, and this is richly enveloping music of simple tones, which could be minimalist but for the huge, rich reach of the pieces. It’s also a bit weird, as the lyrics are fairy oblique, you just hope you know what’s going on. ‘In Every Way But One’ could be Baby Bird all grown up and flying, but it’s so short. Some people would develop something this enticing through various verses to spiral upwards, but often CWNN don’t hang around long enough for such ideas. They tie up another pretty parcel and shift onwards on to the next track.



It really is very close to tradition at times. ‘Start It Again’ is phlegmatic and ironic pop, as if by waspish daydreaming cousins of The Beautiful South, but ending with an airport departure lounge ambience. ‘Girl’ has an elaborately traipsing sound but couldn’t be simpler with observations of implied regret in the girl and her life, only this is mawkishly close to Ally McBeal soundtrack material.

Then the boundaries blur again, and back again. ‘Maslow’s Dog’ is filled out, almost crooning its odd lyrics over idling piano, ticking rhythm and florid, introspective sound. ‘Wormwood’ is very unusual and with some serious disquiet trapped in the words there around the graceful piano; still a fresh bloom to something intrinsically rotting. ‘Product Of’ seems too close to orthodox indie so the weary words may be clever with their accusatory terms, but it’s an elegant plod. ‘That’s The Power Of Television’ is strange in its pleasant manner because the singer doesn’t exactly sound let down by the loss of his love, whereupon he kicks the woe around a bit more through ‘Jenny’s Tongue’ and if not morose at least it feels rueful, its solemn air quietly seductive. ‘Yes People’ is a thoughtful suicide after more resigned defeatism, and then it’s gone.

An unusually captivating record, it is an indie treasure, one of those albums where after a few listens you believe you’ve had it years.

http://www.cultwithnoname.com
http://www.myspace.com/cwnn
http://www.trakwerx.com

Organ Magazine mentions Cult With No Name Release




ALSO CHECK OUT
CULT WITH NO NAME - mellow, warm two piece balladeers with warm, subtle electric piano/keyboards and a Scott Walker flavour or two to add to their Pet Shop feel. They’re from London, they have a certain restrained dramatic style that’s worth a moment or two - www.cultwithnoname.com

Monday, November 5, 2007

Cult With No Name Receives Favorable London Press



Nosferatu DVD Coming Soon



Jackson Del Rey does it again...He writes a new film score for the 1922 silent horror film Nosferatu, eine Symphonie des Grauens ("Nosferatu, a Symphony of Horror"). As in Battleship Potemkin, Del Rey & The Sun Kings perform the dark haunting music for the original adaptation to Bram Stoker's Dracula. Directed by F.W. Murnau.

Due to be released in November 2007, check the record label website for more details: http://trakwerx.com/label.htm

HARP REVIEWS BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN CD


Jackson Del Rey was a founding member of L.A. experimental rock combos such as Savage Republic and 17 Pygmies. If you’re familiar with these bands, you’ll understand this gives him a very good pedigree for undertaking his new project – creating a soundtrack for Sergei Eisenstein’s 1925 silent film about a shipboard food protest that results in carnage, and brings the seeds of revolution to the port city of Odessa. Instrumental, incorporating a variety of Del Rey’s expected pan-national musical influences, and relentlessly dark, this is wonderfully crafted chamber prog of the highest order. The disc is beautifully packaged, and a great addition to Del Rey’s canon. He was off the music scene for a decade and a half, and it’s nice to have him back.

By Byron Coley
First printed in November 2007

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Battleship Potemkin Review Hits Top 10!


Del Rey & The Sun Kings "Battleship Potemkin" has just been featured in RODEO ITALY (Milan) as among the best 10 Records of the month.

With "Nosferatu" being released later this month, they are sure to receive more attention in Italy.

Monday, October 1, 2007

17 Pygmies is NOW The 17th Pygmy




Approximately eight months from their last release (Groundhog Day to Halloween to be exact) The 17th Pygmy has indeed released Ballade of Tristram’s Last Harping their second full length CD in less than one year (somewhat different than the band’s previous 17 year hiatus between releases, eh?) Formerly and perhaps to be known again someday (you never know) as 17 Pygmies, the seventeenth pygmy (Jaxon Del Rey) decided that The 17th Pygmy (are you still following?) was a name that better reflected the ‘60s Psychedelic -70’s Classic Rock direction of the new recordings. Think The 17th Floor Elevator or perhaps The Exploding Plastic Inevitable Pygmy. Consisting of original 17 Pygmies and Savage Republic member Jaxon Del Rey, Jeff Brenneman (formerly of White Glove Test) on Guitars, returning classical Guitarist and now vocalist Meg Maryatt, former Swivelneck and White Glove Test member Tony Davis on Bass, and Drummer Dirk Doucette from you guessed it…White Glove Test, The 17th Pygmy have combined their unique talents to create a musical tribute to the style and inventiveness of some of their favorite music, namely ‘60s Psychedelia and ‘70s Classic Rock. Specific musical touchstones will be found in Phil Spector, The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, the Kinks, The Doors, Jefferson Airplane, Janis Joplin, Neil Young, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin and although somewhat out of the box, but to be honest, Nick Cave (the band just loves the guy) are all paid homage to in one way or another as part and parcel of the musical pastiche that is Ballade of Tristram’s Last Harping.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

17 Pygmies slated to play IPO Los Angeles

International Pop Overthrow 2007 - Los Angeles

See details below

Tuesday, August 7: Spaceland
1717 Silverlake Blvd.
Los Angeles 323 661-4380
www.clubspaceland.com
$8

8:30 Io Perry
9:00 The Unbearables
9:30 17 Pygmies
10:00 The Red Button
10:30 Astra Heights
11:00 The Prix

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

17 Pygmies YOUTUBE Videos on Brainwashed

17 Pygmies REVIEWS, VIDEOS AND MORE...

Check out the link below to see live interviews with Jackson Del Rey, WZBC live performances and the LIVE SHOW at P.A.'s Lounge in Boston.

http://brainwashed.com/

lucidculture REVIEWS 17 PYGMIES LIVE SHOW IN BOSTON

Concert review: 17 Pygmies at PA’s Lounge, Somerville, MA 5/25/07
May 27th, 2007

Following Randi Russo and her band is never easy, but long-running California act 17 Pygmies proved more than worthy of the task. The band setup for the current tour includes three guitarists, including Jackson Del Rey (ex-Savage Republic) on Strat as well as a 12-string acoustic player and their frontwoman switching back and forth between acoustic guitar and accordion. If it’s possible for a sometimes quirky, often transcendentally beautiful art-rock band to slay, 17 Pygmies slayed.


They opened with a couple of tunes set to a pummeling surf beat, the second with a ridiculously long title (edited version: Sammy Hagar Saves Los Angeles from Godzilla). It didn’t sound anything like the Hag or Godzilla – in fact, it was a dead ringer for Misirlou up until the chorus – but it was the perfect opportunity for Del Rey to show off his devious wit. Then they got serious.


The rest of the set was mostly new material from their new album 13 Blackbirds (their first release since the 80s), as well as some unreleased songs. 17 Pygmies alternated lush, ornately arranged art-rock anthems with quieter, introspective, pastoral fare featuring a lot of fingerpicked classical guitar. With the clang and chime of the 12-string carrying the melody and Del Rey’s nimble, sometimes minimalist leads and fills hovering and circling around, they brought to mind other great, artsy jangle bands like the Church, the Byrds, Fairport Convention or the late, great Wirebirds. Mixing major and minor chords, verses that built slowly to towering refrains and then subsided again, the band held the small but attentive audience spellbound. If the live show is any indication, the new album must be amazing. This is a band you should get to know.
They ended their hourlong set with a psychedelic Kinks cover and then a suitably volcanic, seven-minute take on the Neil Young classic Cortez the Killer which Del Rey attacked with appropriate frenzy when it came time to solo, chopping at the fretboard with a fury that would make Old Neil proud, using his effects pedal to get a watery, chorus effect that effectively set this version apart from the millions of others.


http://lucidculture.wordpress.com/2007/05/27/concert-review-17-pygmies-at-pas-lounge-somerville-ma-52507/

Friday, May 4, 2007

17 Pygmies Available on iTunes




CLICK ON THE LINK BELOW TO DOWNLOAD "13 BLACKBIRDS"



iTunes

Sunday, April 29, 2007

RARE LIVE 17 PYGMIES PERFORMANCE IN BOSTON!!



17 PYGMIES will be performing live for the first time in over 15 years at PA's Lounge, Somerville, MA on Friday May 25th.
345 Somerville Avenue
Somerville, MA 02143
8:30 p.m.
617-776-1557
For advance tickets go to:
www.paslounge.com

Sharing the bill is the talented, indie rocker Randi Russo and Amolvacy (from Volcano The Bear).

It should be a fun night and we are all looking forward to seeing Boston for the first time!

Saturday, April 28, 2007

SEPIACHORD PICKS "Squadron Sighted" for Song of the Day


12:50 am
4/25/07

sepiachord
4/25 Song of the Day
"Squadron Sighted" by Del Rey & the Sun Kings is the Sepiachord song of the day.
Del Rey & the Sun Kings

http://sepiachord.livejournal.com/

MICK MERCER REVIEWS "FOREVER FREE"


THE SPIRIT GIRLS
FOREVER FREE
End Is Here

Some people are so out there you’re genuinely glad you’re not with them, and this is the case with these surreal harpies. Creating a record which is fascinating rather than enjoyable they present something of an experience, which will have you gawping at the lyrics and staring at the confusing images of circus folk and bears and cows, of girls with a deathly pallor, making sure you have all exists covered. These people could be anywhere, and you wouldn’t know it.

At first all seems calm enough with ‘Anthem For Ophelia’ with twittery, swirly synth, a strong hazy vocals sound and drifting cello, especially as it slowly gathers form, shunts forward rhythmically somewhat severely, while the vocals really press forward, like a resentful ghost. Vinegary Ethereal with bluster you might say, and I wouldn’t contradict you. ‘Milk Maid appears, as simple a bleary wilting folk song about a cow as can be imagined, with other sounds slopped in to fill up the spaces. ‘The Hunted Little Green Grass Girl’ makes you realise they’re not quite on the same territory as kitsch melodic terrorists Flaming Fire, but utilising wobblier sub-dance squiggles, with brash, blaring guitar and genuinely weird vocals, big and slow. A quiet, almost graceful farmyard sing-along. Why?!!

‘Comforting The Bears’ is even stranger, with sweeping lines coursing through a serious synth moan, tough splodges of drums splattering morose detached indie and an oddly demanding vocal drone. ‘Small Town’ is instrumental, from buzzy atmospherics to a collision of crumpled drums and angry, determined guitar which is suddenly all there is there. ‘Airstream Dream’ could be an ethereal grunge experiment by Patti Smith, except that it questions why you’d question a pig bottled-fed by a clown. (“You think you’ve lost your mind It was gone all the time.”)

‘Haunted Horse’ clomps away dowdy and cloudy, ‘Graveyard Song’ sets idle, twanging high guitar to a fog of distorted vocals; a convincingly bare artistic drama, and then ‘Song For The Spirit Girl’ is almost a conventional delight of mottled, brooding pop with yammering vocals., vibrant grubby guitar, captivating strings and strident drums. ‘The Ship Gong’ disappoints as a farewell song, being a bit drab, but by then you’ve withstood it all and feel pretty damn virtuous.

So if you’re concerned for the whereabouts of women capable of setting up a nativity scene in a miniature replica of the Bates Motel don’t worry. They’re here.

http://www.marnieweber.com/spiritgirls.html - great pics!

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

ITALIAN MAGAZINE BLOW UP REVIEWS "13 BLACKBIRDS" & "BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN"

If you can read Italian, enjoy!

Thank you Blow Up for your support...

17 Pygmies
13 Blackbirds / 13 Lotus • 2CD Trakwerx [www.trakwerx.com] •
30t-129:22
Del Rey & The Sun Kings
Battleship Potemkin • CD Trakwerx • 16t-70:33

È durata poco la pausa che si sono presi i 17 Pygmies: solo 19 anni. Ma dacché la ragione sociale non è altro che un moniker dietro cui si nasconde Jackson Del Rey (nome d'arte di Philip Drucker) è difficile definirla uno scioglimento a cui segue un'inaspettata reunion. Quindi oggi l'uomo che fu una delle colonne dei Savage Republic torna in pista col progetto personale e lo fa proprio mentre riemerge anche la band che fu di Bruce Licher, per giunta in arrivo dal vivo proprio qui da noi (occhio però che da quel che ho capito mancano sia Licher che Del Rey): che si torni a parlare ancora una volta di 'trance californiana'? Troppo lungo recuperarne la memoria nello spazio di una recensione (vi rimando a BU#58 per saperne di più), considerate solo che i 17 Pygmies ne erano la componente più folksy e delicata, a tratti quasi eterea. A quel tempo Del Rey s'accompagnava con Robert Loveless e Debbie Spinelli, oggi con un mucchio di vari ed eventuali tra cui spicca Tanya Haden (violoncello) ma il concetto, se non i risultati, sono molto simili: "13 Blackbirds / 13 Lotus" è un disco di canzoni folk cameristiche dalle punte classicheggianti e dagli arrangiamenti molto moderatamente elettronici. Il canovaggio si ripete con minime variazioni per tutte le tracce, arrivando a punte d'eccellenza quando la voce (sono tutte femminili ma musicisti non sono accreditati) è più corposa e negroide che par di ascoltare un gospel ultraterreno (accade con la splendida Precious Hearts On Fire) o se s'aggiunge una cauta batteria elettronica e quindi la metafisica è quella di un trip hop alla Dead Can Dance (Lotus). Tutto il CD, evanescente e impalpabile, è comunque estremamente suggestivo: quando rilascia un esangue, delicatissimo folk in punta di piano (Water Carry Me), quando s'abbandona sulle ali di un unico violoncello (923 History), quando scivola sulle acque di una limpidissima fonte barocca (Ubi sunt), quando una fisarmonica lo trasporta sulle rive del Danubio (Heavenly Creatures). E poi, visto che il tempo perduto è stato veramente molto, Del Rey ha voluto fare le cose veramente in grande e ha inserito un secondo CD titolato "13 Lotus" in cui sono stipati 70 minuti di Lotus in tredici differenti versioni remix con ospiti come Lea Reis (la mixer di Tupac) lachanteuse newyorkese Jo Gabriel. Facile immaginare come suonino: battute più o meno basse e ammenicoli elettronici ma anche notevole differenziazione. Si va dalle versioni etno-dub del Runch Mix e del Distressed Mix agli outer beats dello Squeezebox Mix e di Beloved Mind Glitch, dalle prove dance titolate Electropygmies LA Adventure e Broken Lotus Living Mix a quelle astratte e ambientali di Siren Lotus e dell'Electric Mermaid Mix, dalle scariche d'elettricità di A Lotus On New York Streams alla minimal techno del Floating Petals Mix. Nel complesso "13 Blackbirds / 13 Lotus" si dimostra quindi un ritorno di veramente grande spessore, forse riservato ai pochi che ricordano la scena di riferimento ma almeno per loro un immancabile scrigno di sorprese. E non finisce mica qui. Del Rey è così in forma che se ne esce anche con un altro disco titolato "Battleship Potemkin", nel quale omaggia il classico film muto di Eisenstein redigendone una personale soundtrack (ovviamente strumentale). Non è facile capire i titoli e i nomi dei musicisti che prendono parte al CD - le parole sono tutte traslitterate in caratteri cirillici - ma la musica, almeno quella sì: in larga misura sono suoni cameristici di vaga ascendenza etno-folk che starebbero benissimo in un disco dei Rachel's (The Men and The Maggots, The Odessa Staircase) e che, detta la funzione di soundtrack, talvolta si muovono come marce (Drama In The…, Join Us Brothers!) o commenti ambientali (A Happy Day In The City) o mastodonti in odore d'industrial (la formidabile The Ship Guns Roared, veramente troppo breve) o bozzetti chitarristici rinascimentali (Meeting With The…). La più bella musica strumentale ascoltata da molto tempo a questa parte e stupore per il rientro di Del Rey a questi livelli.
(8) secco a entrambi i dischi. Stefano I. Bianchi

Thursday, April 5, 2007

Outsight Radio plays Trakwerx releases

3/11/2007 7-9:00 pm

17 Pygmies - "Lotus" Original Mix
The Spirit Girls - "Milk Maid"
The Spirit Girls - "anthem For Ophelia"
Del Rey & The Sun Kings - "The Men & The Maggots"
Del Rey & The Sun Kings - "Main Title"

Thanks OUTSIGHT RADIO!!!



http://www.outsight.mu/playlists/playlist_393_348.html

Wednesday, April 4, 2007

Rear Window Radio plays "LOTUS"

ON AIR!!!

Featured This Week

james brown syndrome - snakes of god
the strange - utah living
patrick shea - in
battle creek - the lion's tail
the ride theory - hey sugar
say ah! - call you name
jerry leger and the situation - winch the killer
raha - tick tock diner
aaron stout - the coronation
lokixximo - bundlemouth
gay for johnny depp - shhh, put the shiv to my throat
hermajesty - open up your arms
apes and androids - radio
nervous cabaret - grand palace of love
a place to bury strangers - ocean
kendra foord - bloody cabaret
alabaster theatre - average man
accepting silence - growing up
asado - endure
sam chown - untitled
17 pygmies - lotus
william campbell - regret school
stone foundation - coming up for air
pony da look - dirty nails
the unibrows - i'm lazy
windchimes - the mayor is dead
ian mcglynn - how did i get here
fisher kane - razor sharp claws
leviride - night of the drive-by
the postage stamps - to no one

Thanks for the music.

Enjoy the show and spread the word!

Ian & Mike
Rear Window Radio
not in london Productions
www.notinlondonproductions.com

EAR CANDY Reviews "Forever Free" & "Battleship Potemkin"

Music Reviews: March 2007
The Spirit Girls,"Forever Free"
(Trakwerx / End Is Here Records)

This album has one disturbingly freaky looking cover. I thought for sure I had a cd full of hardcore or nu metal songs by a female version of Slipknot or something. But, as the case may be, I was way off the mark. This gets a bit weird at times but it’s much mellower than Slipknot. This band project grew from a rock opera by noted L.A. artist Marnie Weber. The opera is about a group of ghost girls on a journey to find a place to perform their songs and tell their stories. The music is much more like the soundtrack to a surreal dream or nightmare. Favorite track: “Comforting The Bears”. _www.trakwerx.com _
Rating: 3 out of 5 (Moments of Brilliance)
Review by J.R. Oliver


Del Rey & The Sun Kings,"Battleship Potemkin" (Trakwerx)
Director Sergei Eisenstein was a man with a vision. He wanted a new score to be written every ten years for his silent film Battleship Potemkin. His thinking was that this would keep the film updated enough that subsequent generations would enjoy his work. Eighty three years later we have the latest score to hit the masses. Admittedly, I have not seen the film but the first thought I had after listening was that it sounded like the soundtrack to the raising of the Titanic. Well, if the raising of the Titanic had a soundtrack. This is intense. _www.trakwerx.com _
Rating: 3 out of 5 (Moments of Brilliance)
Review by J.R. Oliver

Amazing Sounds Reviews Trakwerx Releases!

THE SPIRIT GIRLS:
"FOREVER FREE"
Trakwerx
The Spirit Girls are an interesting band born thanks to a Rock opera created by the versatile artist Marnie Weber, about the ghosts of five girls. The band is constituted by Marnie Weber, Tamara Sussman, Debbie Spinelli, Tanya Hayden and Dani Tull. The image presiding the cover of the album, the first one by the band, where five girls appear in the image of corpses, fits perfectly well with the music, a kind of Gothic Pop-Rock, with mysterious female vocals and dark electronic textures.
ALEJANDRO HINOJOSA

http://www.trakwerx.com

DEL REY & THE SUN KINGS:
"BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN"
Trakwerx
In this interesting album, Jackson Del Rey pays homage to the director of mythic silent movie "Battleship Potemkin", as if it were the soundtrack for the movie. It is soon appreciated that this project has been given the best of creative energy, taking care of even the slightest details, all that in the spirit of this legendary film, and taking into account the artistic guidelines of Sergei Eisenstein. The result is no doubt impressive. The album is overflowing with very original instrumental music, with classical and industrial reminiscences merging in an absolutely natural manner, as well as a great power in all compositions.
EDUARDO FONTANA

http://www.trakwerx.com

17 PYGMIES:
"13 BLACKBIRDS / 13 LOTUS"
Trakwerx
The band 17 Pygmies, which became a thorough success in the 1980's, has returned after 17 years of silence, with this new double album. In the new stage of the band we find Jackson Del Rey, Jeff Brenneman, Louise Bialik, Meg Maryatt, Jean Sudbury, Tanya Haden and Jacquie James. The work, displaying a careful presentation which includes graphic art with an impressive effect of weathered photograph where only true mildew is missing, tends towards a Pop-Rock with Gothic trends, but we also find experimental touches, dark electronic textures and a suggestive orientation toward neofolk and romanticism.
ALEJANDRO HINOJOSA

http://www.trakwerx.com

Monday, February 26, 2007

High Bias LiveJournal Reviews "Battleship Potemkin"

Del Rey & the Sun Kings - Battleship Potemkin
DEL REY & THE SUN KINGS
Battleship Potemkin
(Trakwerx)
A member of experimental music outfits Savage Republic and 17 Pygmies, instrumentalist/composer Jackson Del Rey pays tribute to the iconic Russian motion picture Battleship Potemkin by contributing a new score. Original composer Sergei Eisenstein claimed he thought the film needed a new soundtrack every ten years or so, and Del Rey has taken up the challenge. He easily rises to it, creating music that’s evocative, sensual and, when the mood calls for it, harrowing. Of course, how often you might listen to it is dependent on your tolerance for music made to accompany visuals (or your fixation on ambient work). That said, if you’ve got a copy of the film lying around, put it on your monitor, turn down the sound and play this disk alongside it for a no doubt fulfilling experience. Michael Toland

New adds on Ear Candle Radio

Fri, Feb. 2nd, 2007 8:17 PM
earcandleproductions.com News

Hi gang,

Usually, we like to slip new songs into our playlist discreetly and let them be a surprise to our regular listeners, but I have to tip my hat to 17 Pygmies for sending this exquisite package in the mail containing three CDs and a vinyl single (which contained a small ornamental card with directions on where to download the single's songs as mp3s). I have not yet listened to everything, but I'm adding a track each from the new 17 Pygmies album (and if you don't remember 17 Pygmies from the 80s, go to their myspace page and get schooled. They were a classically-tinged band that grew out of Savage Republic and are still doing great music today) and a mind-blowing new score for the Russian silent film Battleship Potemkin by Del Rey and the Sun Kings, a 17 Pygmies side project. Got some other good new stuff too:

"Vakulinchuk Acts" - Del Rey and the Sun Kings
"Water Carry Me" - 17 Pygmies

Enjoy, and keep listening.

Ear Candle Radio

Lunar Hypnosis Review of Del Rey & The Sun Kings

Del Rey & The Sun Kings - Battleship Potemkin
Trakwerx Records - 2006
1. Main Title
2. The Men & The Maggots (Extended Version)
3. The Soup
4. Drama in The Harbor (Excerpt of Alternative Version)
5. Vakulinchuk Acts
6. The Death of Valulinchuk
7. A Dead Man Calls for Justice
8. All For One And One For All: The Rebellion Begins
9. The Odessa Staircase
10. A Happy Day In The City
11. Suddenly The Czarist Soldiers
12. The Ships Guns Roared (Extended Version)
13. Meeting With The Squadron
14. Squadron Sighted: Prepare For Action (Excerpt)
15. Join Us...Brothers!
16. Bonus Track: Original Piano Theme (Solo)

As with the film after which it is named, this music beautifully projects montages of sorrow, hope, and joy. Because I have seen and studied the movie at length at one point in my life, I cannot help but hear this music in black and white, with every tone of grey ablaze in between. This CD is a glorious exercise in just how painterly sound can be.

The music typically placed with the film (which was originally silent in 1925,) tends to be overtly dramatic and almost cumbersome in its desire to over-represent the film sonically. Which is a shame. What Potemkin needs least is bombast. What it gets most often is music that states the obvious. Loudly. From Edmund Meisel's glorious but hurried repetition to the Pet Shop Boys' interesting albeit somewhat sterile exercise, the music rendered for The Battleship Potemkin most often leaves me wishing to hear the film in silence and let the images sing for themselves.

Del Rey and the Sun Kings have achieved a rare feat; love of music, film and painting have interwoven to create a highly emotional juxtaposition of both traditional and contemporary audio articulations for Eisenstein's masterpiece. The accomplishment neither competes with the film nor becomes overbearing. Instead, the music seems to shimmer through the film; not an accompaniment but another facet of the montage. Exquisite.

Like the film, the music progresses in five well-constructed episodes; "Men and Maggots", "Drama at the Harbor", "A Dead Man Calls for Justice", "The Odessa Staircase" and "The RendezVous with a Squadron". This is typical of other soundtracks for the movie. What is not typical is the depth of consideration for the prose of the film itself in relation to the music. It is as if the lighting and atmosphere of the movie have been captured and remanufactured audibly. They seem inseparable; 'probably the truest mark of whether or not a soundtrack "works" for a movie.

It's nice to hear music expressed in so many layers and with such texture. Del Rey and the Sun Kings are masterful at painting sound like Anselm Kiefer's dark hopeful landscapes and Dali's endless bright horizons; Potemkin's images are a perfect fit for the heavy daubs and dashes of light at which Jackson Del Rey excels. The profound agony and the roaring aspiration of Eisenstein's masterpiece are represented here with great tenderness and respect; to have heard these recordings is to have seen the movie again with new eyes. Highly, highly recommended.

February 20, 2007
By Ginnie Moon
10 of 10

Saturday, February 10, 2007

Retro Red-Eye Express Plays 17 Pygmies

February 2, 2007

Random Duo
Lotus (Electric Mermaid Mix) - 17 Pygmies - 13 Blackbirds
13 Blackbirds

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

WUNH 93.1fm

WUNH 93.1 FM Duham, NH

ADDS to PLAYLIST JAN. 2007

The Spirit Girls "Forever Free"
17 Pygmies "13 Blackbirds"

http://newserver.wunh.org/index.php?menutype=Charts&page=charts.php

Wednesday, January 31, 2007

KVRX 91.7 plays "Battleship Potemkin"

Welcome to the KVRX Student Radio playlist archives.

University of Texas
Austin, Texas
:: current playlist ::
Phil Goetz's Nap Time with DJ No Alias :: 21:00

Battleship Potemkim "track 4" (del rey and the sun kings, on Trakwerx)
"Drama In The Harbor"

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

THE NEXT BIG THING Reviews Trakwerx releases

January 30 Posted 8:12 AM by Lindsay Hutton

“The Spirit Girls sound has been described as something of a cross between Sonic Youth, King Crimson and 17th Century French Romantic paintings”, it sez in the blurb. Well I never heard any of The Paintings stuff but I don’t recognise a lot of similarity with the other two. “Forever Free” is a concept piece that floats these souls through the imaginary landscapes en route to their billet in the afterlife. It has a folky edge tempered with that LA-pop ethic. It’s actually pretty unusual and coming as it does in some nifty digi-packaging it looks like something on Sympathy. I think it sounds like Sandy Denny just found out she was Buffy and has to deal with it… no actually that’s bollocks but I’m not sure this thing can be pigeonholed. “Milk Maid” (track 2) recalls Angel CC, mainly because of the accordion. Otherwise it has an almost classical rock feel. Not classic rock dumbass, more of a symphonic afterburn. My other immediate favourite was “Small Town” with it’s Ministry type industrial segue into Burundi drumming and back to the gothosphere. I imagine that this section is breathtaking in a live situ. “Haunted Horse” is one of the great titles, so it’s an extra that it’s a cool song also with a kind of toytown Suicideness about it. “Song for the Spirit Girls” would be Abby from NCIS’s favourite I think. The Spirit Girls have been kissed with a little of that David Lynch soundtrack fairy dust. As a whole “Forever Free” has that detached void feel pretty much down pat while still selecting the odd heartstring to pluck. Peculiar but well worth the effort. Also check out lead SG Marni Weber’s arthaus!

Del Rey and The Sun Kings “Battleship Potemkin” is a homage to the silent Eisenstien movie. The director had stated that he hoped that a new soundtrack for the film might be composed every 10 years. The film is now 82 years old or thereabouts and I think that onetime Savage Republic man Jackson Del Rey was horrified that the most recent attempt was by The Pet Shop Boys. This somewhat ambient score somehow seems more fitting and I wonder if there have actually been public screenings with this providing the sonic backdrop. As composition goes, the kraut-rockish elements interweave with more traditional instrumentation. I don’t have the credentials to even begin to tell you how this guy has succeeded in such an astronomical task. But he has.

17 Pygmies were active in the 80’s but I don’t recall them at all. Their musical stylings have been dubbed “arcanica” by themselves. Apparently it means no-hit wonders. This "13 Blackbirds/13 Lotus" doublepack isn’t something you can stick on and instantly become acquainted with. It’s intricate and practically baroque. Folk but not as you reporter is familiar with the form. The pastoral piano shards of “Bley” other-world music are better soaked up in a peaceful environment. I tried playing it loud but it made much more sense at a more gentle volume. Maybe they could come up with some kind of pod for you to climb into for best results. Like a flotation tank.

Visit Trakwerx and check out these strange, NEW, sounds for yourself. The proof of the pudding after all…http://www.trakwerx.com/label.htm

Monday, January 29, 2007

High Bias' LiveJournal Reviews "Forever Free"

January 25, 2007

THE SPIRIT GIRLS
Forever Free…
(Trakwerx/End is Here)
Rock bands that grow out of other projects—in this case a rock opera called The Spirit Girls: Songs that Never Die—are often a dicey proposition at best. Fortunately, artist/songwriter Marnie Weber’s group the Spirit Girls (which includes cellist Tanya Haden, of the well-traveled Haden clan) is no failure. Weber’s muse flits hither and yon, from acid folk (“The Hunted Little Green Grass Girl”) to industrial hard rock (“Small Town”) to gothic drone (“Haunted Horse”) to avant pop (“Airstream Dream”) to psychedelic instrumentals (“Graveyard Song”). Her serviceable melodies and forceful singing link the menagerie together, and the band brings each vision to colorful life. Forever Free… is more of a promising beginning than any kind of masterpiece, but as art projects-turned-bands go, the Spirit Girls are more substantial than ephemeral. Michael Toland

Sunday, January 28, 2007

WNEC 99.1 plays 17 PYGMIES

17 Pygmies on WNEC 99.1 "SELDOM HEARD RADIO"/ New Hampshire

Western New England College radio station in Henniker, NH
DJ Frederick plays "Tree of Life" from 13 Blackbirds release
January 27, 2007

Seldom Heard Radio - Music & Culture in the Spirit of Free Radio
Music & culture in the spirit of free radio - featuring news and musings related to my "Seldom Heard Radio" broadcasts, independent music, community radio, pirate (free) radio, shortwave listening, zines & other alternative homegrown media, and interviews with bands and others promoting DIY culture.

Thursday, January 25, 2007

Sonic Reducer review of "Forever Free"

Sonic Reducer
By Marisa Demarco



The Spirit Girls Forever Free (The End is Here Records)
If angry porcelain dolls made art rock, this is what it would sound like, though such a narrow label does this disc little justice. Lush with archetypal symbolism (ships, nests, bears, Ophelia), the chanted words yank your dream head from its murky depths. Don't listen to The Spirit Girls while operating heavy machinery--not unless you're using it to construct a life-sized dollhouse for your ghostly interior self, the one who's right at home with these pale, ethereal rock moppets. Be prepared to drift through long beds of soundscape with cellos, excessive panning and mostly tasteful vintage effects. Though not inaccessible, this album won't work for you if you're looking for something opaque, solid and tangible—in a word, easy.

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Lunar Hypnosis review of The Spirit Girls

The Spirit Girls - Forever Free
Trakwerx/End Is Here Records - 2006
1. Anthem For ofelia
2. Milk Maid
3. The Hunted Little Green Grass Girl
4. Comforting The Bears
5. Small Town
6. Airstream Dream
7. Haunted Horse
8. Graveyard Song
9. Song For The spirit Girls
10. The Ship Song

This is the release CD by a band called "The Spirit Girls" which apparently have caused quite a buzz in their native California. Comprised of 5 female members, this band's music is firmly entrenched in what would be considered "avant-garde" music these days.

This band grew out of a rock opera called "The Spirit Girls: Songs That Never Die" by Marnie Weber. I had never heard of such a piece of work myself, but for some this will be familiar.

Simply judging this band by the cover should give you pretty much a good idea of what they are about, because the cover and the artwork alone remind me so much of some of the art that used to be prevalent in the 70s with some of the prog bands.

The music then more or less follows the artwork on the cover and the rest of the CD. This is pretty much music that will not follow the ordinary path and thus cannot be considered commercial. The backbone of all the songs on this CD are more or less morose and laid back vocals by most of the members of this ensemble, accompanied by all kinds of keyboards and of all things a cello, which makes the music even more laid back but also gives it a more or less restless character.

For me the song that easily stands out the most is "graveyard Song" which reminded me so much of parts of the fantastic Tiamat "Wildhoney" album with the laid back guitars and the ever present. Immediately after that song they switch to a track that reminds me of some of the experimental punk music in the 80s with bands like "Chrome" with the added ambiance by the cello sound.

If you think you will be getting a happy go along album in the vein of the old Tom Tom Club you are in for a surprise. These women can actually play and all the compositions have a very strong personality, making this an album that you have to pay attention to.

Finally, in my opinion they did a fantastic job in the actual recording of the whole enchilada. This sounds pretty much like a true stereo album, just like the ones they used to do in the 70s on vinyl. Why? Because in addition to the excellent sound across the board they actually mixed it up with both vocals and sound effects going from side to side as well as all over the soundstage the recording creates. This of course does not make it a "live" sounding CD, but definitely complements the music to perfection.

January 6, 2007
By Carlos
8 of 10

Monday, January 22, 2007

The Spirit Girls RECORD RELEASE PARTY

The Spirit Girls will be performing LIVE at the Los Angeles venue Marvimon.

To purchase tickets and learn more go to:
www.marvimon.com

Sigtronica WMBR 88.1 FM Airplay for 17 Pygmies

Cambridge, MA radio station

17 PYGMIES - 13 Blackbirds
"Water Carry Me"

http://www.sigtronica.org/category/playlists/

Friday, January 19, 2007

More WXDU Airplay for 17 Pygmies!

"we are all fuzzy robots" with michelle h.
Wednesday, January 17, 2007
17 Pygmies - 13 Blackbirds
"13 Blackbirds"

"Humpday Morning Zoo" with Jamie V.
Wednesday, January 17, 2007
17 Pygmies - 13 Blackbirds
"13 Blackbirds"

17 Pygmies loves Duke University!

http://www.duke.edu/

Monday, January 15, 2007

Battleship Potemkin Review

Under The Rainbow
Issue #96
March/April 2007
by Roger Moser, Jr.

Del Rey & The Sun Kings “Battleship Potemkin” (Trakwerx, POB 1467, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272). In this extravagantly packaged CD release, Del Rey & The Sun Kings present a mesmerizing epic update of the original score for the 1925 Russian silent film The Battleship Potemkin. It’s a magical, awe-inspiring array of lush, ambient, transcendental sounds that stir within me a deep desire to traverse the seven seas and explore every nook and cranny of unblemished earthen soil. I would then bellow from the mountaintops of Tibet and swim the frigid, ancient fjords of Norway and somewhere along the way die a content man knowing the world was all mine even though for just a brief while. A feeling of beautiful brashness abounds within the delicate splendor of each musical strand as gently swaying violins blend with trumpets and various electronic emissions. I am left to freely soar with the wind and experience true joy as a child again. (CD)-Moser

Forever Free Review

THE BIG TAKE-OVER
Review by Jack Rabid – Issue 59

The Spirit Girls

FOREVER FREE (TRAKWERX/END IS HERE)

These five ghostly women are veterans from unusual L.A. bands going back 20 years, such as drummer Debbie Spinelli from Radwaste and Party Boys, and one of the Haden sisters, cellis Tanya. Trakwerx is run by Jackson Del Rey out of Savage Republic and 17 Pygmies. (So the foldout and booklet are top notch.) Forever Free…then, is supreme genre-busting. Haden’s sweet cello contrasts Tani Tull’s dark, Breeders-gone-moody guitars, bolstering Marnie Weber’s phalanz of nine sinister synthesizers and ominous vocals. Not quite goth, this still conjures the post-Bowie/Eno Berlin collaboration ‘80s, when dark-chilly post-punk employed murky, doomy edges against textural beauty, like The Cure, Red Temple Spirits, Strange Times Chameleons, and Shiva Burlesque. This is a tribal ritual and child nightmare about scary hobo clowns, haunted horses and worried bears; music that makes you feel strange. (trakwerx.com)

Oklahoma Gazetter review for 17 Pygmies

17 Pygmies
13 Blackbirds
Trakwerx
17 Pygmies have been away for 17 years, but the 10-member 2006 version of the California consortium has returned younger than yesterday to produce its best work yet, a 30-track, two-disc beguiling behemoth.

Even if you discount the fact that disc two is 13 versions of the same song, done in wildly differing ways by different folks, the first disc is enough to satisfy even the heartiest appetites for misty, untethered folk with occasional string flourishes and, on "Lotus" .. the oft-repeated song on disc two .. heavy beats. It's as if Mazzy Star lost the blues, if Opal rode again or the Cannanes made a decent-sounding record.

The title track stands out for nice percussion and vocals that would sound equally at home at a nice wedding or a Goth funeral. Highly recommended for night driving or as the soundtrack to a snowed-in evening.

http://www.okgazette.com/news/templates/cd.asp?articleid=1092&zoneid=22

Sunday, January 7, 2007

MORE 17 PYGMIES AIRPLAY

Seldom Heard Radio
music & culture in the spirit of free radio
WNEC 91.7 Henniker NH
Playlist 1/07/2007
DJ Frederick, producer / host


Brian Auger's Oblivion Express ---- Maiden Voyage ---Live Oblivion
Floydian Slip --- In Memory of Elizabeth Reed - Boars Boots III
Brrr - Jesse Todd - 7" vinyl
17 Pygmies - Last Train - 7" vinyl
Pete Greenwood - Heavy Eva - 7" vinyl from the Great Pop Supplement
Eidas Mai - Where To Begin - 7" vinyl from the Great Pop Supplement
Reigns - The Blank Tape - 7" vinyl
Matthew Sweet & Susanna Hoffs - I See the Rain - The Pillowcase EP
Caroline Glass & Friends - Invisible Now - EP
Dewer - Surprise Me Now - promo
Rodrigo y Gabriela - Stairway To Heaven - Rodrigo y Gabriela
Greenpot Bluepot - Warraw - mp3
Hush Arbors - Sugar Mountain - mp3
Herbie Mann - Amazon River - Et Tu Flute

Friday, January 5, 2007

More 17 Pygmies airplay

From the Campus of MIT, we're on the playlist on WMBR:

12/21/06
Lotus (Squeezebox Mix)

We love you MIT!

17 Pygmies Airplay

Check out who is playing 17 Pygmies on the radio already!

WZBC 90.3 FM Newton
Boston College Radio plays 17 Pygmies Jan. 1, 2007

http://spinitron.com/public/index.php?station=wzbc&year=2007&month=Jan&find=17+pygmies&kind=artist

Songs played from "13 Blackbirds":
"Heavenly Creatures"
Lotus (Distressed Mix)
Lotus (original mix)

More news to come...