Strategy

Albums
Bird Show
CacheFlowe
Caroline
Considerate Builders
Dday One
DJ Olive
Dub Tractor
Jimmy Edgar
Exillon
Four Tet
Guitar
Halma
Landesvatter
Don Limpio
Mariel Ito
Matinée Orchestra
Maximo Park
Mikkel Metal
Ms. John Soda
Music A.M.
Naing Naing
Nightmares On Wax
No Move. No Sound
Pillow
Ghislain Poirier
Prefuse 73
randomNumber
Rec_Overflow
Mike Shannon
.tape.
Wechsel Garland
Zucchini Drive

Compilations/Mixes
Check the Water
Futurism Ain't Shit
Idol Tryouts Two
I Love Techno
Kiki
Machine Drum
Steve Porter
Satoshie Tomiie
SRL
Quality Elect. Music

3"/7"/10"/12"/EPs
aitänna77
Jonas Bering
The Blow
Cepia
Clipd Beaks
DaFluke
Direwires
Drop the Lime
Florent
Honig/Packard
Infinite Scale
Midwest Product
Mufo
Office-(R)6
The Orb/Rice Twins
saidsound/Krilll.minima Scorn-Fury
Solenoid
Miles Tilmann
K F Whitman
Why?

Halma: Back To Pascal
Sunday Service

Retracing the haunted steps of Container Verloren Und Gesunken (Container Lost And Sunk) and Minifeld, Halma's moody third album Back To Pascal takes the listener on a nocturnal ride through Death Valley. The material is meditative, even funereal, yet still compelling in the unrelenting way it embraces its dark ambiance. Sometimes embedded in washes of atmospheric drift, electric guitars shudder and lap-steels twang over drum brush shuffles in the album's sonorous 'murder ballads.' Halma's ponderous sound recalls Labradford's at times, though the former is clearly the gloomier of the two; the metronomic “Fumarole” even appears to count off a convict's last minutes prior to execution. A shame, though, that vocals appear on only one song, as Bertermann's and Carstens' entranced exhalations on “Lands End” (“Let me travel this land / From the mountain to the sea / ‘Cos that's what I demand / For me”) deepen the tune's dramatic impact. Halma's slowcore-post-rock fusion is the perfect soundtrack for those 4 a.m. moments when disorientation sets in and various means of suicide are contemplated. In another group's hands, a song title like “Slumberland” might mean peaceful dreams; in Halma's, it more likely signifies the sleep from which one never emerges.

March 2006