On the cover: Warren Ellis: As a key collaborator with Nick Cave, the leader of Dirty Three and an esteemed composer in his own right, Warren Ellis has built himself a sturdy outpost on the margins of rock. A new work with vocalist Marianne Faithfull offers further evidence of his versatility. By Emily Pothast
Inside:
Nazar: Currently based in the Netherlands, the Angolan producer has pioneered his own style of rough kuduro in order to confront the conflict, corruption and poverty of his petrostate homeland. By Ray Philp
Once Upon A Time In Watts: From his arrival in Los Angeles in 1940, trumpeter Don Cherry traversed the vibrant suburbs of the city in search of the new thing. By Gabriel Bristow
Invisible Jukebox: Mike Paradinas × Lara Rix-Martin: The founders of Planet Mu and Objects Limited test each other with a mystery record selection
Nakul Krishnamurthy: Carnatic resonances from the Glasgow based vocalist. By Daniel Spicer
Ann Rosén: Swedish composer sculpts the sound of silence. By Julian Cowley
Kohsuke Mine: Post-bop and free music collide in the Japanese master’s reissued catalogue. By James Hadfield
Rizomagic: Non-hegemonic beats from the Colombian duo. By Russ Slater
Unlimited Editions: Murailles Music
Unofficial Channels: Etudes
Global Ear: Our regular column continues to report on music in the time of pandemic. This month: festival strategies from The Hague’s Rewire and Newcastle’s TUSK
The Inner Sleeve: William Parker on The Ornette Coleman Trio’s At The “Golden Circle” Stockholm
Epiphanies: Val Wilmer discovers the spiritual roots of jazz in Harlem church congregations
Print Run: New music books: Miss Pat’s reggae empire, Richard Thompson’s folk voice, Steve Beresford’s toys, and more
On Screen: New films and DVDs: Tori Kudo’s Tori Kudo: Archive; Stacey Lee’s Underplayed
On Location: Recent live events and streams: Lafayette Gilchrist, Patricia Brennan, Elysia Crampton, Laraaji, and more
On Site: Recent art shows: Atom Egoyan’s They Will Take My Island; Das Musikgeschäft
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Includes Wire Tapper 55 CD.
Out of Stock
On the cover: Warren Ellis: As a key collaborator with Nick Cave, the leader of Dirty Three and an esteemed composer in his own right, Warren Ellis has built himself a sturdy outpost on the margins of rock. A new work with vocalist Marianne Faithfull offers further evidence of his versatility. By Emily Pothast
Inside:
Nazar: Currently based in the Netherlands, the Angolan producer has pioneered his own style of rough kuduro in order to confront the conflict, corruption and poverty of his petrostate homeland. By Ray Philp
Once Upon A Time In Watts: From his arrival in Los Angeles in 1940, trumpeter Don Cherry traversed the vibrant suburbs of the city in search of the new thing. By Gabriel Bristow
Invisible Jukebox: Mike Paradinas × Lara Rix-Martin: The founders of Planet Mu and Objects Limited test each other with a mystery record selection
Nakul Krishnamurthy: Carnatic resonances from the Glasgow based vocalist. By Daniel Spicer
Ann Rosén: Swedish composer sculpts the sound of silence. By Julian Cowley
Kohsuke Mine: Post-bop and free music collide in the Japanese master’s reissued catalogue. By James Hadfield
Rizomagic: Non-hegemonic beats from the Colombian duo. By Russ Slater
Unlimited Editions: Murailles Music
Unofficial Channels: Etudes
Global Ear: Our regular column continues to report on music in the time of pandemic. This month: festival strategies from The Hague’s Rewire and Newcastle’s TUSK
The Inner Sleeve: William Parker on The Ornette Coleman Trio’s At The “Golden Circle” Stockholm
Epiphanies: Val Wilmer discovers the spiritual roots of jazz in Harlem church congregations
Print Run: New music books: Miss Pat’s reggae empire, Richard Thompson’s folk voice, Steve Beresford’s toys, and more
On Screen: New films and DVDs: Tori Kudo’s Tori Kudo: Archive; Stacey Lee’s Underplayed
On Location: Recent live events and streams: Lafayette Gilchrist, Patricia Brennan, Elysia Crampton, Laraaji, and more
On Site: Recent art shows: Atom Egoyan’s They Will Take My Island; Das Musikgeschäft