Friday, 26 September 2025

ODG224 : The Sad Bandits / Sayonara Onijiji


Cover art by Silas Plum


ODG224: The Sad Bandits / Sayonara Onijiji

Since their second album (see also ODG167, ODG191 and ODG194), The Sad Bandits started to have a big following in Japan and a fan club from Hiroshima invited them to perform in their live place and stay for 2 weeks in the city.

The Ribero brothers being huge Japanese enka music and old Ozu movies fans were excited at the idea to visit Japan and try to record their new album.

They made the foundation of 10 new tracks mixing enka, dialogues and street noise.

Back in their native Mexico they asked again Alinovsky and John Americus Witt to help them finishing, adding music and mixing the album.

The title of the album 'Onijiji' is an hommage to Onibaba (鬼婆), a Japanese movie from Kaneto Shindō, released in 1964.

Alternate cover for the digital providers

And the first proposal by Silas Plum

Digital release on the 26th of September 2025.

Track listing:

1: Ohayo
2: Miss Fumikichi
3: Meeting Fujimoto San
4: Interlude 1 - Ichiban
5: See you in Shibuya
6: Lost in Osaka
7: Interlude 2 - Niban
8: Manakai (Realtime rework)
9: Goodbye Ozu San
10: The one and only Shintaro Katsu
11: Interlude 3 - Sanban
12: Nan no hanashi nan deshoka ? Pachinko vs Osaka 70
13: Interlude 4 - Yonban
14: Kyoto in the blue
15: Dancing with Reiko
16: Soyonara Onijiji

Itunes, Apple Music, Deezer, Amazon, etc.:


And on Bandcamp:

Friday, 19 September 2025

ODG223 : Marc Van Eyck / Tamtamtams

 


Cover art by A.L.


ODG223: Marc Van Eyck / Tamtamtams

After 'Tamtams' with Pierre Vervloesem (see OVD057), Marc Van Eyck is back with 'Tamtamtams', another album based and composed around his drums patterns and beats.
This time inviting Guy Segers from Univers Zero fame and so many other Belgian and international bands.
Enjoy!

credits

Marc


All tracks performed and composed by Marc Van Eyck except 4, 5 & 9 performed and composed by Guy Segers & Marc Van Eyck and 8 performed and composed by Stéphane Odrobinsky & Marc Van Eyck.
Track 3 uses a bass line from Vince "Turtle Bass".

Specials thanks to Pierre Vervloesem and Alain Lefebvre.
Digital release on the 19th ofSeptember 2025.
Track listing:

1: Tilly Haut
2: The Shooting Season Continues
3: French Turtles
4: Dance With The Toms (feat. Guy Segers)
5: Garland (feat. Guy Segers)
6: Indian Mirage
7: Indian Moon
8: Nivelles (feat. Stéphane Odrobinsky)
9: Marshmallow (feat. Guy Segers)
10: Traintrain & Mildiou
11: Tilly Bas
12: Waouw
13: 77 A
14: So Long Largo

Itunes, Apple Music, Deezer, Qobuz, Youtube Music etc.:

https://bfan.link/tamtamtams

And on Bandcamp:

Friday, 12 September 2025

OUC051 : Arash Azadi / Ballet No. 1

 


Cover art By Arash Azadi



OUC051: Arash Azadi / Ballet No. 1


“Ballet No. 1” by Arash Azadi (see ODG105 and ODG213) is not a ballet in any traditional sense, but rather a conceptual dismantling and reimagining of the form. Constructed entirely as a fixed-media electroacoustic composition, this twelve-movement cycle weaves acoustic and electronic textures into a nonlinear, psychological narrative—an abstract dramaturgy for the ears rather than the eyes. The work exists in the charged space between installation art, radio play, and symphonic storytelling, and was first premiered in an immersive 8-channel format at Vienna’s Floating Sound Gallery in May 2023, under the curation and spatialization of Anton Iakhhontov.

Composed during the politically and psychologically turbulent years of 2021–2022 while in residence at the Garage Museum of Contemporary Art in Moscow, Ballet No. 1 inhabits a world where sonic material becomes metaphor, and where traditional forms are deconstructed to interrogate the present condition of the human soul.

Each movement is a self-contained vignette, yet together they form a fractured arc of transformation across trauma, power, memory, mysticism, and eventual catharsis:

Track listing:

I. Treatment of Mental Disorders introduces the work with violently fragmented percussion, distressed orchestral gestures, and fractured voices, portraying the disorienting cycles of medical and psychological intervention.

II. Abuse of Knowledge delves into darker philosophical territory, drawing on Slavoj Žižek’s reading of how avant-garde art has been co-opted for systems of torture. The distorted choir and brass inject institutional coldness into this sonic essay.

III. Serenade for the Healed serves as a tonal balm—woodwinds and strings breathe into a space of harmonic reprieve, offering momentary serenity after violence.

IV. Faust reanimates Goethe’s timeless paradox via Bulgakov’s lens, where orchestral grandeur meets digital hauntings in a meditation on the duality of intention and consequence.

V. Damaged Memory of Tomorrow plunges into dystopian sonics with warped strings and metal percussion—a post-traumatic reverberation of the digital age.

VI. Matthew 7 reinterprets Biblical scripture through extended string techniques and dissonant piano clusters—casting spiritual promise into an ambiguous acoustic light.

VII. Heavenly Whispers is a mysterious interlude for harp and electronics, tonal but evasive, suggesting the liminal threshold between comfort and the uncanny.

VIII. Morning Rooster of Hell is a brutalist string quartet movement, its title a provocation. Sharp textures and tense harmonies claw at the listener with ritualistic intensity.

IX. Purgatory continues the descent with sustained electronic tones and spectral synthesis, evoking an eternal stasis of introspection and unrest.

X. Light Bearer’s Battle unleashes a theatrical clash of choir, electric guitar, and heavy percussion—a mythic confrontation between enlightenment and ignorance.

XI. The Young Boy in Me is Not Dead Yet steps back from abstraction, offering a nostalgic, emotionally charged arrangement. A moment of personal remembrance, perhaps redemption.

XII. Lord Has Mercy closes the cycle with a prayer-like choral fugue. Polytonal and ambiguously resolved, it suggests both loss and transcendence—a final breath of hope in the shadow of suffering.

In Ballet No. 1, the composer constructs an auditory mythology for contemporary existence—an opera without staging, a ballet without bodies—where sound alone carries the full emotional and philosophical weight of a fractured world seeking wholeness.

Arash

Digital release on the 12th of September 2025.

Itunes, Apple Music, Deezer, etc.:

https://bfan.link/ballet-no-1

And on Bandcam:

Friday, 5 September 2025

ODG222 : Gregory Paul Mineeff / amidst. interference

 


Cover art by Gregory Paul Mineeff


ODG222 : Gregory Paul Mineeff / amidst.  interference


Gregory Paul says:

“With ‘amidst.  Interference’ I wanted to explore the sounds between sounds, the melodies amongst the ever-present soft distortions. I wanted the album to be a marriage of my solo-piano work, ambient and drone tracks and electric guitar, using distorted guitar as an ambient tool to explore mood and texture. As inspiration, I had in mind Neil Young’s Deadman soundtrack sitting side-by-side with more modern classical, felt piano explorations and melodica melodies.  All tracks were recorded at Considered Into Atrophy Studios, utilising analog instruments and recording techniques, often embracing the noise produced.”

“The album also takes inspiration from the Percy Bysshe Shelley poem Ozymandias, with its imagery of sand as a million fallen voices, a society that has fallen and future when we explore the past as our present passes us by. It also explores the notions of life and loss and the often unfinished and unexpected nature of life, so unlike the neat and tidy endings often presented in films and popular culture. It is about the moments we let pass us by without appreciating them, the human nature of always seeking more and more and better and better. It is about taking a moment to appreciate our lives, to have a cup of coffee and savour it for a moment with a loved one. To just stop. To think. I hope this album presents you an opportunity to do this.” 

Gregory Paul Mineeff is a composer and artist from Wollongong, Australia. He has released his past 2 albums with Whitelabrecs (London). He has also released 9 albums with Greece’s Cosmic Leaf Records and a solo piano album with Yellow Rose Records, covering Australia and Europe. His extensive discography also includes numerous singles, collaborations, compilations, and remixes with labels such as NOOX (London) and Tempest Recordings (Melbourne). Mineeff composes styles of music that can be categorised as ambient, drone, modern classical and post-rock.

Digital release on the 5th of September 2025.

Track listing:

1: 1a. That peace we seek
2: To remove yourself and watch from afar
3: Come this way
4: Near them on the sand
5: Two Trunkless legs of stone
6: Lament for the hopes you loved
7: Years have passed, yet you mean so much to me
8: 1b. That peace we seek with head in hands
9: To stumble, mumble, crumble
10: The final farewell
11: The wind creeps and speaks
12: Too many goodbyes
13: This joyous life

Itunes, Apple music, Deezer, Qobuz, etc.:


And on Bandcamp: