Pssst! #ForcedExposure is having a sale. 15% off on everything in stock. So… tell me, what’s something I can’t find on #Bandcamp you’d recommend checking out? https://www.forcedexposure.com/Catalog/os-mutantes-os-mutantes-lp-cd/LR.336LP.html
OS MUTANTES : Os Mutantes - LP+CD - LILITH - Forced Exposure

2024 repress. Lilith present a reissue of <B>Os Mutantes</B>' self-titled debut, originally released in 1968. With the release of their debut LP in 1968, Os Mutantes cracked the already red hot Tropicalia scene wide open. Fusing traditional Brazilian music, psychedelia, rock, and a good dose of pure experimentation, they quickly became giants both in Brazil and in the outer fringes of pop music, where they have managed to reign supreme for the past four decades. Not an easy task in such a crowded arena. <B>Caetano Veloso</B>, <B>Gilberto Gil</B>, <B>Gal Costa</B>, <B>Jorge Ben</B>, <B>Tom Zé</B>, and Os Mutantes? What do these people put in their drinking water? The band went on to release several more albums, but this one was their magnum opus. Obi "bookmark" Japanese style; 180 gram vinyl; Includes CD.

ROLAND KAYN : The Ortho-Project - 15CD BOX - FROZEN REEDS - Forced Exposure

Returning to the unreleased oeuvre of the master of cybernetic sound <B>Roland Kayn</B>, Frozen Reeds hereby unveils a new high watermark for longform electroacoustic composition, unfolding across 15 CDs in a luxurious gold-stamped boxed set. With <B>Jim O'Rourke</B> applying his signature restorative touch to the audio, and <B>Robert Beatty</B> taking his cryptic cybernetics-inspired artwork several steps beyond the label's previous Kayn box, <U>The Ortho-Project</U> (2007) finally sees a fitting release. In 1970, Roland Kayn began a decades-long period of research, development and creation at the Instituut voor Sonologie in Utrecht. In the mid to late '90s, Kayn retired, relocated to the Dutch countryside, and began to realize new electronic works at Reiger Recording Studio -- his modest home facility. "I finally came to the conclusion," he would later point out, "that I no longer needed studios to construct my own electronic music." The working methods Kayn arrived at individually -- without the room-filling synthesizers, mixing desks and signal-processing equipment of Sonology at his disposal -- saw him turning his own career into a cybernetic process. From the hours of recorded sound amassed in prior decades, he began processing and assembling a mountainous quantity of new music. His works of this period are focused on reabsorbing and recontextualizing his life's work to produce yet another series of utterly alien landscapes. From his retirement until his death in 2011, Kayn was wildly prolific, leaving an archive of dozens of finished electronic pieces. Earlier source material is often resculpted using the technology Kayn had available to hand, while other techniques such as sampling radio broadcasts or the plunderphonic quotation of others' works occasionally intercede. No notes accompany any of this music -- no word of explanation or expression of intent. Only the works and their titles remain, the latter often simply deepening the mystery. Their durations range from around 20 minutes to almost 18 hours. <U>The Ortho-Project</U>, presented here in its entirety, is among the longest. At this scale, Kayn's music is perhaps at its most immersive; the listener senses they are being invited to envelope themselves in a rich environment of diverse timbral physicality rather than a programmatic work. This is simply electronic music as you have never experienced it before.<br><br><I>"The mystery, the grace, the boundless invention -- Kayn's machine music is a vast catalogue of very human wonder."</I> --<B>The Guardian</B>

If you missed out on this incredible #Shizuka album last year, there’s been a repress and #ForcedExposure has copies. https://www.forcedexposure.com/Catalog/shizuka-iii-lp/CC.007LP.html
SHIZUKA : III - LP - CONCENTRIC CIRCLES - Forced Exposure

2024 repress. "During the 1990s, <B>Shizuka</B> self-released a series of four cassettes, barely heard by anyone outside of their inner circle. Culling together live recordings and home demos, these served as companions to the scant amount of proper Shizuka releases at the time (including the recently reissued <U>Heavenly Persona</U>). Concentric Circles is now presents the third and most anomalous cassette from Shizuka, simply titled <U>III</U>, on vinyl for the first time in an edition of 500 copies. Formed by guitarist and singer <B>Shizuka Miura</B>, alongside husband <B>Maki Miura</B>, who'd previously played with both <B>Les Rallizes Dénudés</B> and <B>Fushitsusha</B>, the group known as Shizuka started in the early '90s with <B>Jun Kosugi</B> (also of Fushitsusha) on drums, and a revolving cast of bass players, including <B>J.J. Junko</B>, whose sole recorded appearance with the band is here on <U>III</U>. Devoid of any of their trademark noise and bombast, <U>III</U> feel distinct from their studio and live albums of the era, largely due to its fragility; haunted and spare, the songs revolve around Shizuka Miura's gentle, unforced sighs, and Maki's flickering, flinty guitar. The first side of the album features four songs which will be well-known to Shizuka fans from previous recordings, but the drastically understated renditions here are particularly moving for their quietude and intimacy. The second half of <U>III</U> consists of a side-long duo session, just Shizuka and Maki Miura together at home, circling around the simplest two-chord motif for twenty minutes, Shizuka singing the most heavenly melody, strung through the sky of this lengthy improvisation. It's an astonishingly beautiful performance, one that stills time through its becalmed repetition, pointing towards the endless forever. In this respect, it feels like an ultimate extension of <B>Opal</B>'s early recordings, <B>Big Star</B>'s third or even <B>Galaxie 500</B>'s quietest moments. <U>III</U> lifts the darkness away, allowing for a softer, more-gentle Shizuka to shine through, bringing with it a side to the band that most never knew existed. A lovely discovery if there ever was one."

#ListeningClub I’m sorta multitasking right now by going through my #Bandcamp wishlist and looking for which ones #ForcedExposure has in stock while the 15% off sale is still going. This is the way.
For those of you (like me) that missed out on the 1st pressing of @billorcutt's Music for Four Guitars on vinyl, they are now back in stock over at #ForcedExposure. Go get it!
https://www.forcedexposure.com/Catalog/orcutt-bill-music-for-four-guitars-lp/PAL.068LP.html
BILL ORCUTT : Music for Four Guitars - LP - PALILALIA - Forced Exposure

2023 repress. "In a trajectory full of about-faces, <U>Music for Four Guitars</U> splices the formal innovations of <B>Bill Orcutt</B>'s software-based music into the lobe-frying, blown-out Fender hyperdrive of his most frenetic workouts with <B>Corsano</B> or <B>Hoyos</B>. And while the guitar tone here is resolutely treble-kicked -- or, as Orcutt puts it, 'a bridge pickup rather than a neck pickup record' -- it still wades the same melodic streams as his previous LPs (yet, as <B>Heraclitus</B> taught us, that stream is utterly different the second time around). Although it's a true left-field listen, <U>Music for Four Guitars</U> is bizarrely meditative, a Bill Orcutt Buddha Machine, a glimpse of the world of icy beauty haunting the latitudes high above the Delta (down where the climate suits your clothes). I've written before of the immediate misapprehension that greeted <B>Harry Pussy</B> on their first tour with my band <B>Charalambides</B> -- that this was a trio of crazed freaks spontaneously spewing sound from wherever their fingers or drumsticks happened to land -- but I'll grant the casual listener a certain amount of confusion based on the early recorded evidence (and the fact that the band COULD be a trio of crazed freaks letting fly, as we learned from later tours). But to my ears, the precision and composition of their tracks were immediately apparent, as if the band was some sort of 5-D music box with its handle cranked into oblivion by a calculating organ grinder, running through musical maps as pre-ordained as the road to a Calvinist's grave. That organ grinder, it turns out, was Bill Orcutt, whose solo guitar output until 2022 has tilted decidedly towards improvisation, while his fetish for relentless, gridlike composition has animated his electronic music (c.f. <U>Live in LA</U>, <U>A Mechanical Joey</U>). <U>Music for Four Guitars</U>, apparently percolating since 2015 as a loosely-conceived score for an actual meatspace guitar quartet, is the culmination of years ruminating on classical music, <B>Magic Band</B> miniatures, and (perhaps) <B>The League of Crafty Guitarists</B>, although when the <B>Reich</B>-isms got tossed in the brew is anyone's guess. And Reichian (<B>Steve</B>, not <B>Wilhelm</B>) it is. The album's form is startlingly minimalist -- four guitars, each consigned to a chattering melody in counterpoint, repeated in cells throughout the course of the track, selectively pulled in and out of the mix to build fugue-like drama over the course of 14 brief tracks. It's tempting to compare them to chamber music, but these pieces reflect little of the delicacy of <B>Satie</B>'s <U>Gymnopedies</U> or <B>Bach</B>'s <U>Cantatas</U>. Instead, they bulldoze their way through melodic content with a touch of the motorik romanticism of <B>New Order</B> or <B>Bailter Space</B> ('At a Distance'), but more often ('A Different View,' 'On the Horizon') with the gonad-crushing drive of <U>Discipline</U>-era <B>Crimson</B>, full of squared corners, coldly angled like <B>Beefheart</B>-via-<B>Beat-Detective</B>. Just to nail down the classical fetishism, the album features a download of an 80-page PDF score transcribed by guitarist <B>Shane Parish</B>. And while it'd be just as reproducible as a bit of code or a player piano roll, I can easily close my eyes and imagine folks with brows higher than mine squeezing into their difficult-listening hour folding chairs at Issue Project Room to soak up these sounds being played by real people reading a printed score 50 years from now. And as much as I want to bomb anyone's academy, that feels like a warm fuzzy future to sink into." --<B>Tom Carter</B> Recorded Winter/Spring 2021 at the Living Room, San Francisco. Mastered by <B>James Plotkin</B>.

#comingout #lesbian #harrasment #ForcedExposure

In my life, there were several points where I was somewhat forced by other woman to confirm that I was gay, and sometimes, it was a real bad experience. The most inappropriate question was always "Why didn't you say anything earlier!?", in a very rude tone.

But my self-confident answer was always the same: "There's no need to wear a badge 'I'm lesbian.' We had this before, and it did not work out well, didn't it?"

*crickets*

I'm German, btw.😏

Cool book from #MichaelTau. So, After reading the first chapter I am wondering what is your #LifeSavingNoise Experience? The #noise record that really helped me through a difficult time in my life is Kazuyuki K. Null's #Null - Saishiyu Bushitsu LP on #ForcedExposure from 1990. What's Yours? #LifeSavingNoise
https://youtu.be/gc3Lw2ezZzg
https://youtu.be/ye-9VziDOnY
KK Null - 最終物質 Saishiyu Bushitsu - "Ultima"

YouTube