Taken from Auxiliary Out Thanks Drew!
Nasa - High Cube
Got a blistering package from Jesse DeRosa’s (of the inimitable Grasshopper) Baked Tapes imprint awhile back and I took a particular liking to these two burners.

The last I heard from Orlando’s NASA was a tape a couple years back on Not Not Fun. Haven’t listened to it in forever but I remember it having sludgy riffs galore. High Cube has that and more.

The first of two tracks on Side A, finds a bluesy riff materializing in a fuzzy feedback fog. The trio rolls along evoking mellow classic rock haze amidst the gnarly distortion. The jaunty noodling guitar lines are ditched for some synth sustain and pitch-shifted metallic percussion. Without warning they launch into a slamming groove with potent cowbell and disembodied vocals. The band jams along seemingly semi-improvised with more thick fuzzy riffs. The effected vocals take center stage for a while. The second track is pretty close to a straight up song. A grooving fuzzy jam with nice riff and barely there vocals. They ride the groove for a while throwing in the occasional curveball. Once again without warning there’s an abrupt shift into some kind of amazonian 80s jam with buoyant drums, squiggly electronics and what sounds like a hybrid of a keyboard and a guitar. This abruptly shifts into a heavy marching jam, with multiple percussionists (I think) and some ray-gun histrionics in there too. Sousa eat your heart out. Hell of a jam.

The second side tops the first though. Starting out with some rock n’ roll riffs pushed through thick fuzz, the rhythm section gives the track a nice swing as it gradually builds in volume. The jam gets gnarlier by the minute, shifting into a minimal stomper, while NASA continue to ride the groove hard. They can actually be a pretty tight band when they want to be. There isn’t much variation to the riff which is the beauty of it. From there they move into a cloudier bit with plenty of effects and layers of guitar and drums burbling underneath. A last minute change-up brings a surprisingly clear-headed blue rock tune which NASA goes out on nice and easy.

I dig how NASA takes the heavy psych thing and flips it a little fitting it into a collage tape. I’m headed to Disney World in May, hopefully I get a chance to feel these guys’ jams in person.

Driphouse - Romati & Gains
I feel like I’ve heard Driphouse before though I can’t say for sure. I do know that it’s a project of Daren Ho (formerly of Trash Dog/Raccoo-oo-oon) and when I popped this tape in it was love at first sight. The A-side “Romanti” is just tremendous. There’s a gliding synth that makes you feel totally weightless. Ho marries the smooth interspace love theme he’s got cooking with a mellow, hobbling drum machine set to “downbeat tape mode.” Ho further layers and expands the keyboard melody and the spacey sound effects. Elaborating on the repeating theme Ho dips his fingers into cosmic filter sweeps and wandering synth-strings. The jam wraps unexpectedly by phasing out the theme for an even more tripped smattering of keys and blips. A hypnotizing stunner to say the least. Bask in its glory.

The flipside, as you might glean from the title, is “Gains.” Unlike the previous side, “Gains” takes a couple minutes to cast its spell. It doesn’t hold the same rhythmic emphasis of “Romanti” instead opting for wide open outer spaces. Alright, enough with the space stuff, you get the point. Over glistening, glacial waves of synth, Ho meanders on the keys with variations of the same melody. After shifting the pitch at various points, he hits on a great section of a nearly-tinkling barrage of keyboard stabs and slowly introduces stuttering drum machine throbs. This makes for a potent bed on which Ho tinkles the synthetic ivories with more melodies/solos. Swell stuff. I will definitely have to keep an eye on the project.

Both tapes are still available and each is an excellent pickup depending on your disposition.

Both in editions of 60.

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Millions - Shredded Heaven Taken from Foxy Digitalis Thanks Elliot!

MILLIONS “Shredded Heaven” (Baked Tapes)

Millions is the recording project of Brooklyn-based sound-artist David Suss. He’s self-released a ton of CDRs, put out some more via Obsolete Units and Abandon Ship (et al), and this c30 scorcher, limited to 60 copies, was released by Baked Tapes. The deep earth-digging/shaking drones that come alive on the two sides of “Shredded Heaven” will appeal to gloomy-depressives and the hopeful alike, as the sounds are absolutely suitable for either wall or sun-gazing, or whatever may lie in-between. Both tracks are fully absorptive, washing over the listener with thick, contemplative waves of seductive sonic pulse-fuzz.

Side A rips in with a static bath that completely soaks the space until a celebratory ray of light peeks in through the dense pattern. The trance that Suss produces here is undeniably joyful and flowing, as if a devastated body/soul is rising up from the thickest sludge of Being. Side B establishes a more eerie and apocalyptic mood with a whirring siren that spins around the minefield. The organ shimmers above a cavernous bass hum, materially grounding the gloom for a delayed guitar phrase to smoothly loom on. A monstrous static wall gradually builds, disrupting the open space, transforming the drone into a vertical ride toward everlasting night. No worries, though, because the lights get bright enough here to shine out even the darkest of roads. 8/10

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Driphouse - Romati & Gains Taken from Impose: The Future Thanks Jeremy!

DRIPHOUSE “Romati & Gains” (Baked Tapes)

Driphouse is Darren Ho, the guy who played in Racoo-oo-oon but not the mutated duo-form of that band, Wet Hair. Instead here’s his solo dream scores, Driphouse.

This tape was home recorded in Brooklyn in August 2009 “straight into computer soundcard,” with a Roland Alpha Juno-1 and a sweet delay pedal. The world’s basically at Mr. Ho’s finger tips with that potent one-two punch, and here he conjures barren landscapes and slow moving spirit vessels riding his woeful harpsichord melody. Like if Clockwork Orange was about sensitive kids driving around looking for meaningful new experiences instead of rape victims.

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Nasa - High Cube Taken from Tabs Out Thanks Mike!

NASA “High Cube” c32 (Baked Tapes)

I straight up don’t think man has ever landed on the moon. It may be the only fringe conspiracy bullshit that I get behind, but whatever, I’m not ashamed to say it. I just don’t believe it, and basically chalk it up to some macho-alpha-country shit we had going with Russia back when them Ruskies meant business, you know? So we faked that shit and got the space race blue ribbon. USA! USA! Flash forward about 40 years. The 2011 budget is announced and NASA are all being doofuses about getting some cuts. Now, let me be straight, I’m totally about space exploration and advancing our collective scientific understanding about the universe and dark matter and all that shit, but ya know… Maybe just chill for a few years until our money is done melting. Anyway, I’m listening to Fleetwood Mac and thinking about that, and then I think “Didn’t I get a package in the mail from Baked like two weeks ago with some tape called Nasa High Dudes or something like that”? When I found this bright colored banger glowing on my desk I had an intense self-debate on what would be a more prudent venture; listen to this tape or watch Capricorn One (a 1977 non-classic in which OJ Simpson and friends fake a landing on Mars). This cassette won out. After pressing the play button I sat back hoping I made the correct choice. So much was riding on this moment!

The name of this project is simply Nasa, “High Cube” being the title of the cassette. My hasty jog around the interweb would have me believe that Nasa is comprised of three dudes, Floridian in origin, who have released a scattering of cassettes and CDrs over the last 3 years, give or take. “High Cube” a 32 minute burner, revs it’s psychedelic engines with a consciousness-expanding canopy of guitars, some plucking away at twinkled notes, others seeping like a rainbow oil spill. Nasa does an excellent job segregating those ideas, while still highlighting them both. Very reminiscent of earlier Growing material, albeit less “produced” or whatever, but still mega-rich and tantalizing. That segment devolves into primal jam session of sorts; total basic riffing, echoed chants, and… And cowbell? Is that cowbell? I goddamn think it’s cowbell. Dudes totally Shyamalan’d me! The next track dives further into the jam band land that Nasa was, in a way, hinting at. A steady drum beat keeps shit semi-traditional, while weirdo effects and mood swings fuck with your head. It’s all a little sloppy, but in the right mindset (that being really stoned and thinking about space) its a perfect partner in crime.

The B side didn’t rope me in right away, at least not like the flip side material. The start off was a tad to… I don’t know… Structured? As far as coupled with the prior zone out that is, I just wasn’t feeling it to a large degree. A clouded aura of hippie/blues/flannel/mustache “basement to boombox” got deep into my brain and I just couldn’t let it go. It’s not that the shit was bad, it just wasn’t the conclusion I was looking for. Kind of like the season opener to Lost. Did anyone watch that? It was kind of disappointing, but I’m still gonna check out more. As I probably will with these dudes.

The cover for this nugget is an eye opener. A briiiight picture of the sun rising over Disney’s Epcot Center (the big golf ball thing) is illuminated in an orange glow with magenta text, printed on fairly heavy paper. I once heard a rumor that if you die in Disney World they wont declare you dead until you are off the property, therefore, no one can die in Disney World. Man, that anti-semite thought of everything before they froze him, huh? Baked did up 60 copies of “High Cube” and at $5 beans a pop it’s a lot cheaper than going to the moon (for the first time, for real).

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Driphouse - Romati & Gains Taken from Foxy Digitalis’s Long Decline Thanks Brad!

DRIPHOUSE “Romati & Gains” (Baked Tapes)

“I went all weepy on Driphouse once before, but “Romati & Gains” demands attention cuz it’s one of my favorite tapes of the year, for sure. Minimal electro hypnoses, flying through pristine skies with liquid gold dripping off at lightspeed. I’m such a sucker for this stuff… subtle beats galore drive everything from the backseat. Daren Ho is on fire. I dunno what parts get me more… the inspired ’70s electronic compositional aspects or the total new age vibes that float on top. It’s all mixed-up, it’s all beautiful. I love how this tape just flows from one stop to the next, never losing focus and never getting off-track. Ho’s got some serious pop hooks lurking under veil here, too – a little something for all the kids. B-side is full of heavy meditation – points of light for sure, but a thick mass of synth mud keeps it grounded in a big ball of tension. Driphouse – love it more and more every day. Driphouse vinyl plz! I need it, damnit!”

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Millions - Shredded Heaven Taken from Tabs Out Thanks Dave!

MILLIONS “Shredded Heaven” c30 (Baked Tapes)

Brooklyn resident David Suss, the man working behind the Millions curtain since roughly 2007 offers up his recent recipe Shredded Heaven, which comes to us fresh out of the Baked Tapes neighborhood oven. It’s a damn tasty treat and is well worth keeping in the Rolodex for your next dinner party. I may be wrong but I’d venture to guess that he called this one Shredded Heaven because he got as pissed as I did when he found out those fucking nebula pictures they take in space are actually doctored on a computer to look so cool. Jerks.

Side one is a cosmic drone of the highest order. While being firmly anchored to a foundation of deep, rounded synth thrumming and soft static buzzes, it is also in a constant state of slow, focused fluctuation. Suss is super zoned in here and with a sure, steady, sometimes undetectable hand, he valiantly forges an animate universe of radiant warmth and monolithic force. Ethereal wisps race through the heavenly body at warp speed and slowly evaporate amidst countless brilliant constellations singing beautifully in gracious, reverent chorus. It’s a spectacle to behold and this shit wasn’t colored by Nasa. Fucking assholes.

The flip side unearths some of the deeper buried elements of the first side and incorporates them into more subdued atmospherics. Gentle guitars echo in delicate patters, rippling through warm swelling strings and humming synthesizers. Slow airy mutations shape the backdrop, tense illuminations slowly begin to permeate the surface and a sharp, rusty stringed guitar phrase sends us off. Suss is really on a roll lately and this release is no exception. It’s still available via Baked Tapes, which I might add is also on quite a roll. Go get it and pick up a couple of their other goodies while you’re at it.

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Chaos Majik - Cry of the 12th Aethyr Taken from Foxy Digitalis Thanks Robert!

CHAOS MAJIK “Cry of the 12th Aethyr” c30 (Baked Tapes)

CM, or Chaos Majik, is Todd Brooks. He founded a group called Pendu. They promote occultism, adhocism, and eroticism in art. This is my kind of dude. “Cry of the 12th Aethyr” is the latest tape from CM, out now on the awesome Baked Tapes label.

Brooks conjures the sound of CM through the use of handmade oscillators and feedback loops. The two pieces on “Cry of the 12th Aethyr” combine high-pitched sounds with a droning low-end. The scrapes and squalls rise and fall, while the persistent rumbles provide something closer to a static element for the proceedings. Everything is drenched and delayed; effects gently draped on top of the other.

This isn’t a revelation of experimental music– but that’s okay. I’m sure this stuff is even better live, especially considering CM kicks out these jams with his equipment housed inside a green suitcase. Brooks’ DIY approach has yielded a couple of tracks of strung-out, astral plane drone on “Cry of the 12th Aethyr.” You can’t complain about that. This is a damn good tape. 7/10 — Robert Oberlander

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scanned from the December 2009 issue of Decibel Magazine

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