Sunday 14 March 2010

Brian Lavelle - Lambent


SOR is delighted to announce the release of 'Lambent' by Brian Lavelle: a haunting, minimalistic and mystical dream-narrative inspired, very loosely, by Viscount Samuel's book 'An Unknown Land' (London, George Allen & Unwin, 1942).

Guitar, electronics, field recordings: recorded in Edinburgh, Autumn 2009

The album is limited to 50 copies & available from 22 March.

The CDR release costs 5GBP and is available for pre-order now. POSTAGE & PAYPAL INFORMATION - CDRS - In the UK, please add 50p towards p&p for one disc, £1 for 2 or more. Outside the UK, please add £1 towards p&p for one disc, £2 for 2 or more. Paypal is preferred - the address is sonicoysterrecords (at) yahoo (dot) co (dot) uk.

Wednesday 3 March 2010

Scott McKeating Visits Driebergen-Zeist


Tex La Homa "Driebergen Zeist" CD-r
Sonic Oyster

While “Driebergen Zeist” might be named after a place in the Netherlands, the record itself doesn’t so much offer a sense of place – as a sense of senses. This record is a diary of a journey captured in sound, taste and sight, and a release that delivers these ideas through audio. Commencing with the sound footsteps through snow, Tex La Homa (aka Matthew Shaw) reveals a kind of European air across the record. Or maybe more specifically there’s a Gallic tone here, created by the affectionate tones of an accordion. The instrument is lightly buttered and coaxed in reverb, moving the tones of the accordion out of the ordinary into the hinterland of memory or into the peripheral. There are trails of less easily identifiable sound too, snaking tones and the waft of chimes that colour the record - the music here moves with a charming insouciant swoon along its hazy course. Unlike many other artists who incorporate field recordings into their records, the sources here don’t jar the listener back to reality – they’re stitched into the fabric of this new other reality that Tex La Homa have created. And that’s one this record’s main feats; it feels much more like a creation than a construction. “Driebergen Zeist” ends as it began, with the crunching of snow underfoot. Take a trip… 9/10 -- Scott McKeating (3 March, 2010)