Articles
2007 Top 10s and 20s
2007 Artist Picks
Meissner Interview

Albums
7 Hertz
Aarktica
Alka
Axiotronic
Dale Berning
BJNilsen & Z'ev
John Callaghan
Cousin Lou
Dif:use
Disrupt
Domink Eulberg
Donna Regina
Eedl
Erstlaub
FF Burning & BC Motel
Fibla
Figurines
Fond Of Tigers
Freescha
Brian Grainger
Inhabitants
Klimek
Liquid Stranger
Low Res
Mlle Caro & Franck Garcia
Northern
Adam Pacione
Part Timer
Steve Peters
Phreakon
Pig & Dan
Pinch
Rechenzentrum
Sebastien Roux
Sciajno & English
The Seasons
Slow Dancing Society
Steinbrüchel
Talvekoidik
Translations
Ulver
Uusitalo
Tony Wilson 6Tet
Wilson/Lee/Bentley

Compilations/Mixes
15 Exitos Grandes
Steve Lawler
Pole
Sven Väth

3"/ 7"/ 10"/ 12"/ EPs
Ada
Alland Byallo
Formication
Tim Hecker
Hybernation
Karoshi Bros
Lilienweiss
Move D
Tor Lundvall
Shreber Harber Mole FW
Sun Electric
Amon Tobin
Gez Varley

Erstlaub: On Becoming an Island
Highpoint Lowlife

Operating under his Erstlaub pseudonym, Dave Fyans (aka Daigoro) challenges his listeners with On Becoming An Island, an uncompromising, forty-four minute travelogue of brooding character. That it's one single long piece shouldn't intimidate anyone, however, as it's an extremely accessible work of oft-restrained character. Of course, the title hints at deepening isolation and the theme finds its aural realization in the gradual stripping away of sound that occurs during the second half. Though one may choose to ponder the connections between the brooding work and its title, the latter can be disregarded and the piece experienced on sound terms alone.

A drone-like nucleus unifies On Becoming An Island, but the piece is far too multi-dimensional for it to be characterized as drone music per se. Over the course of the album, one encounters windswept curlicues and rumbling drones, the croaking calls of an exotic species, ghostly whistles, and subtly dissonant tonal streams. Gradually the sum-total of sound diminishes, allowing the piece to become ever more stark and eerie, until the sounds swell in the final minutes, coalescing into churning rhythms that vaguely suggest Basic Channel-Chain Reaction techno. While it's hardly a programmatic work, natural sounds of bubbling water and even volcanic activity are evoked. A veritable master class in digital processing and nuanced soundscape design, On Becoming An Island is available in a too-limited run of 100 physical copies, each one of which is neatly housed in a white DVD case.

January 2008