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Releases

Review – SLF

March 6, 2009
Artists, HT002, Releases, Reviews, Sonic Liberation Front
Author:  Chris Dahlen
Source: Pitchfork Media August 13, 2004
link to this article
The Sonic Liberation Front are rarely seen or heard outside their native Philadelphia, and with a name that evokes a Fallujah breakdance corps and the line-up of a free jazz ensemble, you might assume the band plays fire music in the tradition of the 1960s. Their own description of the music is harder to digest: “Afro-Cuban Yoruba Roots meets Post Modern Free Jazz and Electronica.” With all that build-up, a newcomer might wonder if the band is some kind of world music mélange, and if so, whether they pull it off: With so many influences that qualify as “exotic,” the Sonic Liberation Front could have splintered into pastiche like the menu at the Rainforest Café, or muddied the colors into a drab blend.But the band’s second album never pins them to one sound: The 11-piece ensemble proceeds with the grumbling unity of a town meeting that keeps ditching its own agenda. While the horn section evokes a mid-60s Blue Note recording on the cusp of avant-garde (especially the searching drift of “The Sirens”), the unison passages verge on dissonance, like the head on the title track that frays apart a little differently each time. The horns front a rhythm section that includes three percussionists armed with congas and bata drums, with no piano or guitar in the middle to mediate.

The instrumentalists lock intensely together, like on the taut rhumba that ends the record, while other times, the soloists have to carry on their own rants: On “Seize the Time”, a saxophone burns itself out in a fury while the percussionists amble by, minding their own business. Female voices break out in Yoruba, and Chuckie Joseph sings his “Agua Dulce” over solo guitar. But where another band would turn these interruptions into a collage, Sonic Liberation Front just throw them into the mix, and the recording– which sounds as live as a gig at the local community center– never cues our responses or tells us which argument to agree with.

With a world of options laid out in front of them, Sonic Liberation Front chose exactly the right ones. Exceptionally written and arranged, Ashé a Go-Go runs through compositions that are as terse and muscular as they are diverse, and every new turn fits the band’s voices. While it’s not always right to judge music by the engineering, the engagingly physical sound is this album’s clincher: It’s exhilarating for its own sake, but too matter-of-fact to summarize a band that barely tries to describe itself.

Review – SLF

March 6, 2009
Artists, HT002, Releases, Reviews, Sonic Liberation Front

Author: Patrick Coffee
Source: Prefix
link to this article

Despite the imposing title, the Sonic Liberation Front is not a noise-pirate assembly with a public agenda but a regiment of post-modern jazz infantrymen. Ashe A Go-Go, the second release from the Philadelphia nine-piece, further documents a studied mastery of structured and improvisational music, all anchored by an Afro-Cuban percussion trio.

Organizer and percussionist Kevin Diehl worked under longtime drum talent Sunny Murray, and though impulsive dialogue between a four-horn frontline permeates the entire album, Ashe A Go-Go‘s defining facet is the persistent hammering of conga and okonkolo. Several tracks incorporate melodic tribal mantras, and in brief moments the set resembles an abstract take on Art Blakey’s ethnic fusion standard The African Beat.

The record’s success lies in its tonal variety, from the masterfully scored countermelodies of “The Sirens” and the quiet electronics lining the title track’s periphery to an immaculate Caribbean guitar adaptation of the African hymn “Agua Dulce.” The group often shares billing with beat-heavy turntablists and comparable units like the Chicago Underground family, and their sound never devolves into the abrasive commotion so inaccessible to the casual jazz listener. Ashe A Go-Go is a restrained exercise in contrasting influences, a remarkable listen for anyone interested in modern variations on a timeless style.


Review – SLF

March 6, 2009
Artists, HT002, Releases, Reviews, Sonic Liberation Front

Author: Tom Hull
Source: Village Voice Tuesday, December 21st 2004
link to this article

Jazz Top Ten 2004: Sonic liberations and elements of style
#1 SONIC LIBERATION FRONT: Ashé a Go-Go (High Two) Yin and yang—fierce avant-sax and friendly folk songs united by shifty Afro-Cuban beats

Review – SLF

March 6, 2009
Artists, HT002, Releases, Reviews, Sonic Liberation Front

Author:
Source: Jazz Times

link to this article

Ashe a Go-Go (High Two), by Philadelphia’s Sonic Liberation Front, is a challenging yet engaging album. Playing free jazz over a grooving rhythm is nothing new, but not many bands do it as well or as uniquely as SLF. For one thing, SLF’s music isn’t based in funk or jazz. It’s Afro-Cuban in concept, combining bata drumming with jazz horns, ambient electronics and vocals. The multiple percussionists concoct extraordinarily complex grooves. The horn players can’t help but be inspired by the hotness of the rhythm section. Tenor saxophonist Terry Lawson stands out; his particle-accelerator of a solo on “Init” made the hairs rise on the back of my neck. Give credit where it’s due: leader/percussionist Kevin Diehl is an outstanding contextualist. His band reminds me somewhat of Peter Apfelbaum’s Hieroglyphics Ensemble, only earthier. Arthur Blythe’s Bush Baby trio from the ’70s also comes to mind, only instead of using just one horn and one percussionist, SLF uses a bunch of each. The sound is bigger, but the grit and heat are the same. -Chris Kelsey


Review – SLF

March 6, 2009
Artists, HT002, Releases, Reviews, Sonic Liberation Front

Author: Jason Ferguson
Source: Orlando Weekly July 1, 2004

“…everything jells together beautifully, with the sort of pan-global fervor that’s been missing from the jazz scene for a long time now … missing, that is, everywhere but Philly.”

Review – SLF

March 6, 2009
Artists, HT002, Releases, Reviews, Sonic Liberation Front

Author: Kevin Le Gendre
Source: Echoes
September 2004
“Imagine incisive and impassioned composition and improvisation threaded around the irrepressibly trance-like pulse of the bata drum… the man-machine hybridity of sound… the sweat of a palm sizzling on AC/DC humidity… Very possibly the album of the year.”

Review – SLF

March 6, 2009
Artists, HT002, Releases, Reviews, Sonic Liberation Front

Author: Ben Watson
Source:
The Wire , Aug 2004

“SLF reject the motifs that have congealed into cliche, and come up with a music where intuitive rhythm and analytical intellect jostle each other and become one… ludicrously superb.”

Review – W+C

March 6, 2009
Artists, HT023, Releases, Reviews, Whales and Cops

Author: Doug Wallen
Source: Philadelphia Weekly
Link to this article

Whales and Cops, Great Bouncing Icebergs EP (High Two):
Only ex-Man Man folks could make a racket this batty.


Review – W+C

March 6, 2009
Artists, HT023, Releases, Reviews, Whales and Cops
Author: Luke Johnson
Source: Blogcritics February 23, 2009
Link to this article

In listening to Whales and Cops’ Great Bouncing Icebergs, I can’t help but think of Roadside Monument’s swan song, I am the Day of Current Taste.  Few remember such albums, and it’s a shame.  Some albums are just too inventive for their own good.  Great Bouncing Icebergs shares the math rock, post-punk tendency of I am the Day of Current Taste, but Whales and Cops do all their work through loops, blips, and electronic hiccups.

Even likening Great Bouncing Icebergs to anything else doesn’t quite work other than to allow a window into bits and pieces of its makeup; it’s not precise enough.  For instance, “Bent Cop” doesn’t really have anything to do with math rock.  It floats on organ and flute as if it should sit on a Death Cab for Cutie record – at least for the first minute or so of its play time.  The percussion is diverse and reckless.  Hand drums sit along what sounds like trash cans and chimes.

The instrumentation on Great Bouncing Icebergs doesn’t sound mechanical.  Flute, violin, clarinet, cello, sax, and – oh yeah – flugelhorn all weave squares of color into the quilt.  It’s organic first and foremost, an electronic album that doesn’t sound like electronica.

The stand out track, the flagship of the album, is “Suave Homeless Asshole”.  At nine-plus minutes, it’s neither too long nor too smug.  It’s nearly wordless.  At times cacophonous, gothic, cheery, spacey, “Suave Homeless Asshole” reminds that making a song over five minutes long can be done well.  In fact, Great Bouncing Icebergs sounds like a cohesive album more than an EP.  It’s hard to believe that the EP is only twenty-one minutes long.  So much is packed in there.

I had never heard of Whales and Cops before now.  I don’t think many outside of Philly have.  On the strength of Great Bouncing Icebergs, however, if there’s any justice in the record biz – and I’m not sure that there is – Whales and Cops will keep making records.  What’s more likely is that talent like this will delight a select few audiophiles and will be completely ignored by anyone with money to throw behind such a unique band.

As far as recommendations go, this one goes without saying.  It’ll cost you little, and it’s worth a lot.  This will most likely be on a short list of my favorite listens of 2009.

Link to article

Review – W+C

March 6, 2009
Artists, HT023, Releases, Reviews, Whales and Cops

Author: Doug Wallen
Source: Philadelphia Weekly, Umm…Drop
Link to article

Puzzle-pop doesn’t get much more puzzling than on Great Bouncing Icebergs, the long-awaited album by the madcap Philly troupe Whales and Cops. It’s packed with intimate shivers and hulking revelations and everything in between, beeping and blurring while virtuosic players with fake names wrangle vivid new life from their instruments.

Maybe that sounds like hyperbole, but this band’s sonic extremes are enough to shock even listeners weaned on years of Man Man, from which Whales and Cops were an offshoot. A more kindred spirit these days might be Make a Rising, an equally batty ensemble with two albums on the local label High Two, which will soon release Great Bouncing Icebergs.

Just finished, the album doesn’t have a track listing yet. That and the absence of real names increases the disorienting experience that is Whales and Cops’ ambitious jazz- and classical-damaged art-pop. Vocals are an iffy quantity at best, although one track finds a sublime voice stepping in as if to sooth a sobbing child. But it lasts less than a minute, and in other places the singing is mercurial at best.

As with Man Man, the drumming and other percussion is stunning. Constantly evolving but always involving, it holds down the fort for a most erratic array of sounds. Yet there’s a very real undertow of pop here, from wind-swept strings and pristine female backing vocals to buzzing and bouncing synths. Having multiple multi-instrumentalists is key for Whales and Cops, and Great Bouncing Icebergs certainly benefits from so much rapid-fire scene-changing and many kaleidoscopic build-ups.

Whales and Cops Thurs., July 17, 9pm.
$5.
With Sexy Thoughts.
Inciting HQ,
940 N. Delaware Ave.
www.myspace.com/inciting

But hey, if you still think these guys can’t possibly be as eye-poppingly strange as described here, head to their warehouse show and let their friends cut your hair. Yes, they’re offering free haircuts before the show. Why? Because they can.


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