REC 01
Charanjit Singh
Raga Bhairav
♪ proto-acid house / electronic ragaThe Bollywood session musician blended ancient Indian ragas with electronic dance beats made on then-state-of-the-art Roland gear: the Jupiter-8, TR-808, and TB-303. The result uncannily anticipated the sound of Chicago acid house by five years, an album way ahead of its time now returned via reissue.
REC 02
FATHERS
Pearl
♪ jazz/beat-tape fusionBorn from an accidental two-day session when Kiefer, CARRTOONS and Nate Smith gathered to test a new studio console, the record moves at the clipped, looped pace of a beat tape. Shatter the Standards singles out PEARL, where a light, Brazilian-influenced groove lets Kiefer deliver compact melodic cells while Carr weaves complex lines between them.
REC 03
Nathan Fake
Hypercube (Hard Version)
One of five versions on the Hypercube EP, drawn from the LP Evaporator. While early buzz gathered around the Basile3 Remix, a closer listen points to the Hard Version that opens the set: a retro bleed of breakbeats and hard trance, a summer banger.
REC 04
KINACT
Gaingai
♪ Congolese experimental / noise performanceFrom Kinshasa in Action on Nyege Nyege Tapes, the track channels the sound of overstuffed outfits made from discarded and repurposed metal used as instruments during a Kampala street fair. A closer listen offers it as vicarious access to an experience few have had.
REC 05
Mary Lattimore & Julianna Barwick
Tragic Magic
A January release that became an instant contender for collaboration of the year: a springlike set redolent of a walk in the woods, complete with a surprising cover of a Blade Runner track.
REC 06
DJ Plead
Please
♪ experimental club / dancehallThe Lebanese-Swiss producer from Sydney lays traditional Lebanese folk music over an idiosyncratic cocktail of trip-hop, dancehall, and post-dubstep. The drum samples alone justify the tune-in: as Mutek put it, this sounds like traditional Lebanese wedding music with a tough, stripped-back, clubby twist.
REC 07
SML
Roundabouts
♪ improvised jazz / krautrockPitchfork frames SML as LA's latest torchbearers of slanted jazz, spun off from the Jeff Parker/ETA lineage but openly discombobulating where Parker wanders. Captured live at Zebulon, "Roundabouts" opens on Jeremiah Chiu's tricky 5/4 synth pattern before the quintet climbs into intersecting layers of transcendent high notes, Uhlmann's nervy hammer-ons giving way to robotically muted 16th notes. Krautrock in the stew, but the destination stays up in the air.
REC 08
This Is Lorelei
Billy Came Back
♪ folk-popThe first single from The Singer In My Band, which Nate Amos calls his first "road record": ideas that incubated while daydreaming out the van window rather than home with a guitar. His father, bluegrass musician Bob Amos, rips banjo on the title track, and Nate cites a "lifelong reverence" for bluegrass and its particular rules, where songs have to stand up on melody, lyrics, and chord progression alone. Amos engineered, produced, and performed nearly everything himself.
REC 09
Steve Lacy + SZA
is it cool?
♪ alternative R&B/neo-soulThe latest single from Lacy's self-produced third album Oh Yeah? (out July 26), billed as "a record for guitar kids who love synths and synth kids who love guitars." A slow, soulful number where the romance is undercut lyrically: Lacy examines why he's "never learned to love properly" and why he cheats, admitting "I don't even trust myself." SZA plays the at-odds lover trying to work things out in the face of his infidelity.