Articles
Colleen
Take and Glen Porter

Albums
Aquarelle
Victor Bermon
Bogenschutzer
Boy in Static
Celer
Colleen
Copy
Damiak
Dan Deacon
Matthew Dear
Decomposure
Elegi
Brian Ellis
The Fields of Hay
Formication
The Fun Years
Guthrie & Budd
Tobias Hellkvist
J Dilla
Library Tapes
Maps
Maserati
Mokira
Ontayso
Morgan Packard
Glen Porter
Proem
Radical Fashion
Rain-cloud
Retina.IT
Run_Return
Ulrich Schnauss
Signalform + Tachikoma
Someone Else
Take
Jedediah White
Wiley
Wolf Eyes
Yard
Zelienople

Compilations / Mixes
Ellen Allien
Famous When Dead 5
A Private Shade of Green
Speicher 3
Telefon Tel Aviv

3"/ 7"/ 10"/ 12"/ EPs
Apples & Milk
Canson / Styro2000
Chrom
Claro Intelecto
Dartriix
Death is Nothing to Fear 2
Deepchord : Echospace
Ditch
Easy Changes
Monsieur Black
Brian James
Koljah
Liviu Groza
mha
Andy Stott
Vektormusik

DVD
Packard / Ott

Vektormusik: Interfoliere EP
Rump

Vektormusik hasn't randomly selected the EP title Interfoliere as the Latin term refers to ‘interleave,' the practice of inserting blank leaves for notes or written comments between the regular printed leaves in a book. The Danish duo constituting Vektormusik, acoustic engineer Kristoffer Jørgensen (The Astro Black Freedom Orchestra member) and drummer Thomas Ahlmark (Lé Plan), likewise invites the listener to imprint his/her own mental stamp upon the EP's six diverse settings. In a style that renders them kin to Flanger and Dictaphone, Jørgensen and Ahlmark create tracks that organically merge elements of jazz, folk, and electronic styles. Electronic noises and loops add atmosphere to otherwise relaxed jazz-oriented settings where ride cymbals and acoustic bass lines anchor the freer front-line interplay of piano, clarinet, and trumpet; in some cases, the acoustic side dominates; in others, the electronic. Interfoliere opens with a nice ballad overture with an acoustic emphasis (“Intro”) and later enters Dictaphone territory with the dirge “ABC” where a somber clarinet moans against a glitch-heavy backdrop. “Carux” also features a mournful clarinet theme, makes room for some rambunctious drum heat. Sora concludes the EP with a glitch-drenched remix of “Leap2” that transforms it into a dense, loping dreamscape where drum brush patterns flutter and electronic glissandi swim.

July 2007