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#Jean-Paul Sarte Experience
bandcampsnoop · 9 days
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5/19/24.
First, thanks to Ian Henderson for writing about this release on Pop Lib. I saw that Flying Nun was reissued this several years ago, but never got around to learning about the band or the release.
Turns out Superette (Auckland, New Zealand) rose from the ashes of Jean-Paul Sarte Experience. Seriously, JPSE keeps growing as a favorite more and more. I was smart enough to buy Fire Records "I Like Rain" 3 LP compilation and it remains a go to.
When JPSE broke up in the early 1990s, Dave Mulcahy formed Superette and released "Tiger". You can hear JPSE in the DNA of this music. Other members include Ben Howe (founder of Arch Hill Recordings) and Greta Anderson.
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bandcampsnooper · 3 years
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1/12/21.
First, I’ve noticed that the 2021 releases are coming fast and furious and great.  I’ve bought more music in the last 4 days than I did in the previous 2 months.  Almost everything being posted is also being bought.
Ally Records (Raleigh, North Carolina) somehow has a direct connection with Graeme Jefferies - they’ve issued what appears to be a new Cakekitchen album, and are reissuing Jefferies “Messages for the Cakekitchen” (originally released in 1987 on Flying Nun).
Graeme and his brother Peter were members of Nocturnal Projections (recent reissue by Dais Records) and This Kind of Punishment (reissued recently by Superior Viaduct). 
To me it’s very hard to pinpoint either Jefferies.  Their voices and instrumentation are so unique.  Of all the Flying Nun bands, I would say Jean-Paul Sarte Experience is the most accurate comparison.
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Fives!
I was tagged (sooo long ago jfc what is wrong with me lol) by @spacegayofficial thanks comrade!!
Five favorite books:
Cold Mountain- Charles Frazier
Anna Karenina- Leo Tolstoy
The Great Gatsby- F. Scott Fitzgerald
Jane Eyre- Charlotte Bronte
Between the Bridge and the River- Craig Ferguson
Five favorite drinks:
Rum and Coke
Dr. Pepper
Lemonade (like real lemonade not the crap mixes)
Lake Erie Monster IPA from Great Lakes Brewing Co.
Iced coffee
Five favorite songs atm:
“Make This Go on Forever”- Snow Patrol
“Enjoy the Silence”- Depeche Mode
“Papillon”- The Editors
“Sorrow”- The National
“I’m an Outlaw”- Kurt Vile
Five favorite quotes:
“How do you find someone to hate for a thing that just was? What would be the cost of not having an enemy? Who could you strike for retribution other than yourself?”- Cold Mountain, Charles Frazier
“He had not eaten bear of such youth before, and though the meat was less black and greasy than that of older bear, it still tasted nevertheless like sin. He tried to name which of the deadly seven might apply, and when he failed he decided to append an eighth, regret.”- Cold Mountain, Charles Frazier
“Evil does not question itself, only hope questions itself. Even the incorruptible are corruptible if they cannot accept the possibility of being mistaken. Infallibility is a sin in any man. All laws can be broken and are. Often. Like when a bumblebee flies or an ancient regime is toppled.”- Between the Bridge and the River, Craig Ferguson
“You said it would be painless. It wasn’t that at all”- The National, “Pink Rabbits”
“And you know what wickedness is, and shame, and fear. There were days when you peered into yourself, into the secret places of your heart, and what you saw there made you faint with horror. And then, next day, you didn’t know what to make of it, you couldn’t interpret the horror you had glimpsed the day before. Yes, you know what evil costs. And when you say that I’m a coward, you know from experience what that means. Is that so?”- No Exit, Jean Paul Sarte
Five favorite fictional characters:
Oberyn Martell
Loreali Gilmore
Anomander Rake
Ethan Chandler
Hannibal Lecter
I’m tagging @keeper0fthestars @pajamasecrets @pascalispretty @themandadlorianbod @someplace-darker @takemepedropascal and anyone who wants in on this!
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felinevomitus · 3 years
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Sebastian Melmoth: Imaginary Futures
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Sebastian Melmoth l-r: Laura Michelle Smith, Peter Jordan, Ilia Rogatchevski, Tomoko Matsumoto. Photo: Artem Barkhin.
Sebastian Melmoth has seen various stages of activity since I established the project back in 2006. Intended to operate as a conceptual antithesis to popular music, to begin with, the group existed in name only. At the time, I was mildly obsessed with the life and work of Oscar Wilde and, upon discovering that Wilde took up the pseudonym of Sebastian Melmoth during his self-imposed exile in France (1897-1900), decided to call my imaginary band in his honour. 
The name is referential. It is a combination of Saint Sebastian and Melmoth the Wanderer. The former was an icon for the underground gay community in Victorian England and the latter, a Gothic novel by Wilde’s great-uncle Charles Robert Maturin, first published in 1820. Due to his own castigation by polite society, it is likely that Wilde greatly empathised with both Saint Sebastian’s martyrdom and Maturin’s central antagonist (a man who takes to wandering the Earth after selling his soul to the Devil in return for immortality). 
The literary nature of Sebastian Melmoth was the project’s founding principle. The first few years were littered with attempts at writing sincere songs that pointed towards literary hallmarks. Sunshine Blues, for example, namedrops Rodion Raskolnikov, the anguished protagonist of Fyodor Dostoevsky’s Crime & Punishment (1866), while Manskinner references a peripheral character from Haruki Murakami’s The Wind-up Bird Chronicle (1994). 
This way of working was typical for us. Books were read in parallel to the creation of the music, lyrics and visual artwork. Each activity informed the other, creating a fluid symbiotic network of overlapping information. Like is often said of Sonic Youth, I wanted Sebastian Melmoth to operate as an obscure gateway drug to other works of literature, pop culture and art with each release having a tight conceptual idea supporting it.  
Sebastian Melmoth began life in earnest as a high school four-piece, with myself on rhythm guitar and vocals, Miranda Collett on lead guitar, Joe Dibb on keys and Elias Razak on drums. Peter Jacobs replaced Elias after a while, but before long the group downsized to an acoustic anti-folk duo in the vein of the Moldy Peaches. The underlying theme of our debut album, Insanity’s Insanity (self-released, 2010), was the absurd nature of everyday reality. This is evidenced by the title, which was lifted out of Eugène Ionesco’s 1959 play Rhinoceros.
While looking for a job on Gumtree, I came across a psychedelic indie outfit called Clinker (at that time a quartet, but now a duo consisting of Peter Jordan and Tomoko Matsumoto). They were advertising for extras to cast in their new music video So We Say (Dir. Ambrose Yalley, 2009). We became friends and eventually started making music together. They produced Insanity’s Insanity and even remixed a few of the tracks from that album, but our collaboration didn’t realise its full potential until a little later.
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Sebastian Melmoth - Sunshine Blues (DTT Mix)
Our next releases, In der Tiefe (self-released, 2011) and The Nausea of Being (self-released, 2012), were at the same time more ambitious and conceptual than our first long player. Pointing their fingers at the works of Carl Jung and Jean-Paul Sartre respectively, these companion albums broadly concerned themselves with existentialism. In der Tiefe (German, in the depths) took drug psychosis as its principal theme. Not unlike Gaspar Noé’s Enter the Void (2009) the central protagonist uses psychedelic drugs to delve deep into the rabbit hole of his psyche in an attempt to capture and control his ‘shadow self’. The German title was appropriated from Fritz Lang’s silent sci-fi classic Metropolis (1927) and, in its original context, referred to the bottom level of the titular tiered city: the domicile of the working classes.
The Nausea of Being expanded on these ideas, rising, as it were, from the depths and surfacing on a desolate landscape of social destitution, political corruption, alcoholism, murder and religious dogma. Sartre, Albert Camus and Samuel Beckett all greatly influenced me around this time. I remember reading Sarte’s 1938 novel Nausea, where the narrator experienced crippling anxiety in the face of everyday interactions, and thinking that his experiences were not far from my own. Tracks such as Waiting for Godot, Paintstripper Blues and Godemiché echoed the work of the authors above and attempted to illustrate what I saw, at the time, as the core elements of the human condition: alienation, despair, lust, self-destruction. 
Peter programmed the drums, played bass and, along with Tomoko, pretty much moulded our sound on these two albums, but the next couple of years saw a period of transition, both in terms of lineup and musical direction. Laura Michelle Smith joined us on drums, adding much needed rhythmic power to the live band dynamic, while Miranda left a short time after that to pursue other interests. Her parting contributions can be heard on Emetophobia (self-released, 2013). This eight-track EP was recorded entirely on GarageBand using drum presets and the inbuilt laptop mic for live instrumentation. Stylistically drawing from Atlas Sound’s Bedroom Databank series and the Brian Jonestown Massacre’s more lo-fi output, Emetophobia is still one of my favourite Sebastian Melmoth albums. The lyrics may be a touch naive and the sound imperfect, but these elements contribute to the album’s overall charm. 
Being now in the business of making difficult music we found a couple of labels sympathetic to our way of thinking. After listening to an unsolicited copy of The Nausea of Being, Thomas Martin Ekelund commissioned us to compose thirty minutes of new music for his tape label. The result was In Ruins (Beläten, 2014), which is probably our best and most consistent work. It was described in one review as sounding “like a Britpop version of the Velvet Underground filtered through everything rock saw during the 70s, 80s and 90s”. 
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Sebastian Melmoth - Miet Mitzvah
While on the surface In Ruins may appear to be a breakup album, at its core, it is actually a complex study of fanaticism, personality cults and terrorism. Vincent Bugliosi and Curt Gentry’s account of the Manson Family murders, Helter Skelter (1974), and Stefan Aust’s The Baader-Meinhof Complex (1985) both fed into the album’s sense of isolation. The latter book, which recounted the history of the Red Army Faction - a far-left West German militant organisation - was particularly influential. 
After becoming increasingly fascinated with their story, I rechristened each of us after the main Baader-Meinhof members: Andreas Baader, Ulrike Meinhof, Gudrun Ensslin & Jan-Carl Raspe. At concerts we wore all black, save for a red armband adorned with an inverted white triangle, and performed theatrical psychedelic noise rock to the general bewilderment of all. While playing Wrong Side of the Sun, for example, I would typically invade the crowd and strangle myself with the microphone cable. This performance had roots in Viennese Actionism, but also functioned as an extension of Guy Debord’s push for the Construction of Situations. What we were trying to say was that all forms of fanaticism are dangerous, irrespective of their ideological origins, but I’m not certain whether this came across particularly well. 
By this time we were regularly rehearsing in a garage underneath the A104 in east London. It was a cold, dark and unforgiving place. Apparently, the space had been an illicit marijuana farm before it became a rehearsal room. With notable latency, this knowledge trickled down to the local gangsters and the garage was broken into on a few occasions. Finding nothing but piles of cheap guitars, broken amplifiers and no marijuana our new friends left the place alone, but not before holding our besieged landlord up at knifepoint. Tensions in the band were also on the rise. Laura and myself were becoming more interested in musique concrète, graphic scores and improvisation, while Peter didn’t like this new direction at all, feeling that our strengths lay in songwriting and the traditional band dynamic. 
It was against this background that our last two full length albums were recorded: Felix Culpa (OKVLT, 2015) and Kupa Piti Kungka Tjuta (Must Die Records, 2016). We worked on these projects in parallel in an attempt to appease our diverging interests. 
Kupa Piti Kungka Tjuta is a garage rock record that nodded to our punk rock influences while also including elements of surf, psych and noise. The record title is a reference to a council of Senior Aboriginal Women from the town of Coober Pedy, South Australia who protested against the Australian government dumping radioactive waste on their land. Coober Pedy, which translates from the local Aboriginal language as “white man’s hole”, is not only famous for its opal, but also the fact that many of its residents live underground to escape the scorching daytime heat. Having spent our fair share of time writing music underground, we felt companionship with these people. Peter wanted an accurate reflection of the band as a live unit and, I suppose, the album manages to achieve that (some of the drum tracks were actually multitrack recordings from our concerts). The production is far from perfect, but the energy is there, which, in the context of a garage rock album, is probably more important than fidelity. 
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Sebastian Melmoth - Rooftop Surfing
Felix Culpa (Latin, happy fall) took on a slightly different approach. The majority of these songs were created during intense and heated sessions. Improvisation played a key role in its construction, but so did William Burroughs style cut-ups, digital manipulations and field recordings. At its heart, Felix Culpa explored the nature of the Fall: a condition of living in a permanent state of exposure; of opening oneself up to the Other. According to Slavoj Žižek, "the ultimate Event is the Fall itself, the loss of some primordial unity and harmony which never existed, which is just a retroactive illusion" (Event, 2014). Just like Kupa Piti Kungka Tjuta, this project also served to reflect what the band was at that particular moment in time: fractured, vulnerable and on the brink of disbanding. The album cover shows Gerhard Halbritter’s photograph of Andreas Baader’s death mask, which hints to the viewer that the creative drive behind Sebastian Melmoth had largely ceased to operate. 
Each of our studio releases aimed to depart from the last. Not repeating ourselves was another key principle of the band. Towards the end, however, I began to feel that we were doing just that. I also felt that my songwriting had become contrived and breaking out of that mould was not an option supported by everyone. Additionally, I became uncomfortable with some of the characters in my lyrics. Songs such as Prosopagnosia or Foedi Oculi employ elements of sexism, sadism, oppression and violence in order to highlight the abhorrence of such actions. Even though I saw the explorations of these themes as a contemporary take on Maturin’s gothic horror, as time went on, it became increasingly difficult for me to justify them. 
Our last show was at a tiny Clapton bar called Biddle Bros, in the summer of 2017. In my opinion, the show went better than expected. At that point we hadn’t rehearsed much or played live in a while. Peter disagreed. He felt that we lost something crucial along the way. Where once we had been theatrical, now we were just plodding along. I wasn’t convinced. Theatre is an open-ended format that can allow for modest gestures as well as flamboyant ones. We were coming from different directions and refusing to meet each other halfway. Peter was citing David Bowie and I was referencing Fluxus and Bertolt Brecht. At its core, this argument - not our first or last, but certainly our most public one - was saturated by our personal and professional expectations of one another. These expectations weren’t always met and neither of us were open to what the other person wanted. Whatever odd bits we had recorded around this time were self-released as an outtakes compilation called Devotional Songs for the Digital Age, in late 2018.
Not long after all of this, Olf van Elden aka Interstellar Funk reached out with a proposal to compile our more electronic cuts together on vinyl. We christened this new album The Dynamics of Vanity (Artificial Dance, 2019). The title is both a comment on culture's obsession with rehashing the past - the subject matter of Simon Reynolds's book Retromania (2010) - and our own personal navel-gazing. The title references a collage I had made as an art student that mocked the fashion industry's depiction of male underwear models. To my mind, they resembled intricate amphorae paintings and Hellenistic bronzes of Greek antiquity.
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Sebastian Melmoth - Icarus
Although The Dynamics of Vanity is not a studio album, we approached its production with the same attention to detail as we would any other record. For the cover, we wanted to get across the stark, archaic beauty of the human body in motion. Stripped, Rammstein’s appropriation of Leni Riefenstahl’s Olympia (1938) was the main reference point, but so too were Andy Stott’s album covers, namely Luxury Problems and Too Many Voices. After some initial back and forth, the Amsterdam-based Australian designer Steele Bonus rendered these ideas in a post-punk fashion suited to our sound and aesthetic.    
As we dug through our hard drives compiling the album, we unearthed a few unreleased remixes made by Peter and Tomoko. We decided to weave these rediscovered tracks into a new project, Imaginary Futures (MFZ Records, 2020), a record that reimagined our back catalogue as a suite of rave-ready dancefloor fillers.  
While the album title, which alludes to the lost potential of disparate creative outcomes, was borrowed from Richard Barbrook’s 2007 book charting the emergence of the internet, it was the production, remix and DJ work of Andrew Weatherall that was the key inspiration for the our approach. The album’s flow and concept loosely mirrors Weatherall’s treatment of Primal Scream’s source material for Screamadelica, which itself resulted in their pivotal marriage of rock and acid house. The idea for the album was set before Weatherall’s passing, but his departure helped to calcify the direction of the mix. 
Musically, our last two albums are pretty cohesive, despite the fact that they are both compilations and the material on them isn’t strictly new. They are collections of snapshots, taken over our decade-long recording history, that are bridged together by new contexts. The Dynamics of Vanity was curated by Olf and the bulk of Imaginary Futures was remixed by Peter and Tomoko, and my personal contributions to these projects was limited to administrative tasks, design and artwork consultation. That being said, they are fair representations of who we were: not ‘Best Ofs’ or ‘Worst Ofs’, but ‘Sort Ofs’. 
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Sebastian Melmoth - Accidentally Grotesque (DTT Mix)
Much like the albums described above, this essay is merely a rendering of our story and far from the whole picture. The text is not intended to be canonical. Many events, people and releases have been omitted for the benefit of readability. What I hope the text does is provide some background of our origins, processes and motivations.  
As mentioned before, we haven’t played live or recorded anything new since 2017 and I doubt that we will do either of those things again. After fourteen years of nurturing the same idea, it has come to a point where I have said everything there is to say in this particular format. I have enjoyed developing this band with my many friends, and seeing it change over the years, but it’s finally time for us all to move on to other projects and for Sebastian Melmoth to cease his aimless wandering. 
The Dynamics of Vanity is out now on Artificial Dance. Imaginary Futures is available via MFZ Records. Follow Sebastian Melmoth on Facebook and Instagram.
Ilia Rogatchevski
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naufalrizky · 7 years
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Hell Is Other People.
Saya bukan seorang eksistensialis, bahkan saya tidak terlalu paham dengan pemikiran Sartre. Tetapi Sarte pernah berkata, cukup dengan seseorang merasakan malu maka ia telah menjadi seorang eksistensialis--baik disadarinya maupun tidak. Atas hal itu, saya akan menjadi “sok berani” dengan membawa Sartre dalam tulisan ini.
Saya selalu muak menjadi objek orang lain, meminjam kalimat dalam Being and Nothingness-nya Sartre.
“I am guilty first when beneath the Other's look I experience my alienation and my nakedness”
(Saya merasa bersalah saat berada dalam tatapan orang lain, aku mengalami keterasingan  & ketelanjangan)
Sartre mengisahan pengalaman itu kala ia sedang duduk sendiri di sebuah taman, bangku, pepohonan, kolam, dan air mancur menjadi objek penglihatannya. Tetapi, semuanya berubah ketika seseorang hadir dan menatap Sartre. Kini ia yang berganti menjadi objek. Orang tersebut telah merenggut dunia Sartre dengan membuatnya malu.
Munculnya rasa malu pada individu berkaitan erat dengan fenomena “Le Regard” atau “Tatapan mata”. Dan tatapan mata itu diibaratkan sebagai sebuah lubang kecil yang menyedot seluruh dunia Sartre.
Hal serupa tentu sering saya alami, sebagai seorang pemalu. Saya benci ketika orang lain menjadikan saya sebagai objek. Orang lain akan menyelami diri kita sebagai objek melampaui esensi yang sudah kita tentukan bagi diri kita. Dengan begitu, orang lain memisahkan diri kita dengan esensi yang telah kita bangun.
“Other is looking, and judging..” 
Orang lain benar-benar dapat menyebabkan saya keluar dari penilaian diri saya sendiri. Dan mereka mampu bertindak lebih dari sekedar menatap mata. Tetapi bagaimanapun, manusia akan selalu mencoba mengobjekan orang lain, tanpa mau menjadi objek.
Dan sekali lagi, saya meminjam kalimat Sartre
“Aku melihat diriku karena orang lain melihatku, sejauh ini sebagai objek dari orang lain”  -Jean-Paul Sartre (1956: 410)
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bandcampsnoop · 7 months
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11/15/23.
Purchased by Ian Henderson (Fishrider Records/Pop Lib) and Thokei Tapes, Hiss Explosion had my immediate attention. Add to it that a Bandcamp buyer added, "An all time Dunedin classic. Essential listening for disciples of Kilgour." And then there is a cover of David Kilgour's "What You Should Be Now".
While Mike Brassell clearly loved The Clean, et. al, this is clearly his own work and adds other Kiwi sounds - Jean-Paul Sarte Experience and Snapper are two other influences I hear.
Funny thing...Mike Brassell was actually from Christchurch. The drummer on this release is Peter Mitchell - formerly of The Renderers.
Sadly, Mike passed away in 2004. His son is maintaining this Bandcamp page.
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bandcampsnoop · 10 months
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7/24/23.
I figured I might as well give the Small World Experience its own post. I've already posted about Famous Mammals and Amanda X - two other recent Siltbreeze Records releases. And I really love "Shelf Life". If you like mid-80s Flying Nun (think Jean-Paul Sarte Experience), you should listen to this entire LP.
Small World Experience are a Brisbane, Australia band that recently released new material via Tenth Court. "Shelf Life" however, is their debut album released in 1994. It has a lo-fi feel that the more recent release lacks.
The Bandcamp page mentions The Go-Betweens, The Apartments and Laughing Clowns as other possible touchstones. I would add some of the "slacker" vibe of early Pavement.
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bandcampsnoop · 6 months
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12/8/23.
After a long break, Ian Henderson (Dunedin, Fishrider Records) is posting again. His "Pop Lib" has been a go-to site for albums from Australia and New Zealand. His label has been a go-to label for years. And his brother, George Henderson (The Puddle) has been a go-to musician for years.
He posted about Senica the other day. Senica is a band that checks a lot of boxes for me. Christchurch, New Zealand - check. Melted Ice Cream (label), check. The aforementioned Pop Lib stamp of approval - check. The sweet guitar sounds that recall The Jean-Paul Sarte Experience - check.
This is a short EP on cassette made by friends who have been playing together since high school. The music certainly sounds more mature than their years might otherwise suggest. The band itself cite references like Straitjacket Fits, Wilco, Brian Jonestown Massacre and Radiohead.
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bandcampsnoop · 9 months
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8/30/23.
I know we posted about a Powertool Records (Auckland, New Zealand) just a few days ago. The Fuzzies (also based in Auckland) appeared on the compilation, but I've been listening to the "Cupid" EP since, and really, it deserves it's own mention.
The Fuzzies do have a New Zealand sound. I wouldn't say it's Flying Nun necessarily, but certainly it fits with the sound of some of the 21st century New Zealand bands - frankly it reminds me a bit of The Dark Beaks crossed with Bad Sav (both on the excellent Dunedin based label Fishrider Records). And if I was going to go back to Flying Nun, I would mention The Jean-Paul Sarte Experience at their most rocking.
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bandcampsnoop · 3 years
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1/12/21.
First, I’ve noticed that the 2021 releases are coming fast and furious and great.  I’ve bought more music in the last 4 days than I did in the previous 2 months.  Almost everything being posted is also being bought.
Ally Records (Raleigh, North Carolina) somehow has a direct connection with Graeme Jefferies - they’ve issued what appears to be a new Cakekitchen album, and are reissuing Jefferies “Messages for the Cakekitchen” (originally released in 1987 on Flying Nun).
Graeme and his brother Peter were members of Nocturnal Projections (recent reissue by Dais Records) and This Kind of Punishment (reissued recently by Superior Viaduct).  
To me it’s very hard to pinpoint either Jefferies.  Their voices and instrumentation are so unique.  Of all the Flying Nun bands, I would say Jean-Paul Sarte Experience is the most accurate comparison.  The entire album for “Messages for the Cakekitchen” is available here.
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bandcampsnoop · 2 years
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5/14/22.
The Garbage & the Flowers started as a Wellington, NZ band but now reside in Australia.
This 12" EP is being released by UK label Fire Records. And from what I can tell from the two songs and the Bandcamp write up, this release showcases many the many different sides of the band. We posted about them back in 2016 and mentioned The Chills, The Velvet Underground, Jean-Paul Sarte Experience and Tim Richmond. But apparently, according to Fred Thomas' AllMusic review, the song "Red Sea", "sounds like the angriest protest song The Clean never wrote".
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bandcampsnoop · 6 years
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5/26/18.
I love Pop Lib’s “Days of May Marathon for New Zealand Music”.   Recently there’s been a great discussion about the label “The Dunedin Sound.”  A recent post of Snapper and Coyote should get you caught up on that.
Dear Time’s Waste was released in 2009, and frankly, you just need to listen to “Clandestine” to be sucked in.  I immediately thought of Jean Paul Sarte Experience. 
Dear Time’s Waste were an Auckland based band and this appears to be self-released.
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bandcampsnoop · 6 years
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12/7/17.
Shayne Carter (New Zealand) is known mostly for his work in Straitjacket Fits (I also really like Bored Games and the 7″s he released with Peter Jefferies).  This release, on Flying Nun, came out in 2016, and it seems like it must have been a singular act of devotion while he was making it.  It is so carefully crafted and honestly doesn’t really sound like anything else he made.
While this doesn’t compare directly to anything some of it reminds me of Jean Paul Sarte Experience, The Verlaines, and any Richard Davies project.
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