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NOW 03 PARKING NON-STOP / TEMPLE OF THE BEEHEADS - Split-LP

front cover / back cover
Bands: PARKING NON-STOP + TEMPLE OF THE BEEHEADS
Bands origin: Wales / Germany
Record title: Split
Format: longplay vinyl 12"
Release date: December 30, 2009
Edition: 100 copies / handmade covers / black vinyl
Artwork: Joachim Gaertner
Photo: Thomas Arnolds
Tracks:
- PNS - COLD STAR (19:12)
- TOTB - AMIGA MANDALA (18:40)
Musicians on this record:
- PNS: Dewi Evans Alan Holmes Zoë Skoulding with special guest: Gregor
Podlogar
- TOTB: Jens Pauly
Recording informations:
PNS: vocals and subterranean ambience recorded in the RAF bomb depot,
Llanberis, Wales, 9th February 2007 further vocals and all percussion recorded in
Dul Mayrau coal mine, Vinaice, Czech Republic, 16th August 2006
moog & bass rhythms
recorded at PN-S HQ, Menai Bridge, Ynys Môn, Wales over New Year 2005 / 2006, with
additional instrumentation and voices recorded April - September 2009
Gregor Podlogar recorded
in Ljubljana, Slovenia, 5th August 2008
TOTB: composed, played & recorded by Jens Pauly
Downloads: here
Homepages: PNS TOTB
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Review
Parking Non-Stop/Temple Of The
Beeheads Split LP
Pure Pop For Now People
Along comes the latest release from PPFN, the label run by Joachim Gaertner of German
psyche/kraut powerhouse group S/T, and its another that explores the territory
somewhere on the borders of electronica and a peculiar concept of pop music. As with most
of PPFNs releases, the album is a heavyweight vinyl LP with equally characteristic
high-quality hand-made covers.
In this case its a split release in a limited pressing of 100 copies. On one side is
Amiga Mandala by Cologne group Temple of the Beeheads. Not having heard them
before I cant say where this track sits in terms of their other work. Enough to say
that it slowly builds up into a wall of keyboard/synthesiser phrases in the loping,
ponderous major key style of, perhaps, early post-Syd Pink Floyd, circa Ummagumma. The
recording/compositional approach reminds me of Mike Oldfields plodding
constructivism. Theres nothing wrong with this if you are prepared to forgive the
group taking the easy road implied by the technology they are using but Id have like
to see more sand poured into the cogs of the machine.
The other side of the vinyl reveals a very different proposition. Parking Non Stop as a
project is driven by Alan Holmes, of sterling (as in why hasnt everyone heard
of them?) Welsh noise-psyche group Ectogram, along with poet Zoë Skoulding and Dewi
Evans. Their debut album Species Corridor was released on the Klangbad label in August
2008 and introduced listeners to their singular approach to location recordings. Rather
than the usual focus on psychoacoustics and ambience PNS managed the rare feat of
organising location recordings (with only the slight help of more traditional
instrumentation) to suggest an emerging mutant form of pop music, full of the sort of
kaleidoscopic detail that results from careful use of location sources but harnessed to an
extremely melodic and lyrical sensibility. On the Klangbad album this sensibility is
served up in well defined song-writerly chunks but here we are treated to an epic
variation on the method, in which it is stretched and distended into something more
immersive and, I think, even more convincing than on that excellent original release.
Cold Star employs recordings made in the RAF bomb depot, Llanberis, Wales, and
in Dul Mayrau coal mine, Vinaøice, the Czech Republic, and features a guest appearance by
the Slovenian poet Gregor Podlogar recorded in Ljubljana in 2008. Logically, the piece is
another PNS essay in psychogeography and a heavily cathected sense of place. The track
opens with lullaby vocals singing a descending refrain that cant help but evoke the
sometimes kindergarten music-box electronica of Nurse With Wound. At this point were
still in the realms of song and the electronics mostly serve to bolster this sense, but
already there are flickering, gargling patterns of sound that rise up from the mix. Slowly
this extraneous material starts to take over and we are shifted, first, onto the border
that separates the inner song from the gauzy noise that wraps it then, at around the
half-way mark, were finally ejected out into a realm of pure electro-acoustics, all
breathy electronics and laser-like insertions. From there on in everything becomes
suitably tentative, and the definite sense of place that we started out from dissolves,
suggesting something finally unshackled.<
-Andy Wilson-
www.freq.org.uk |
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