3CD digipack + 84 page booklet, 2013 ed. Sub Rosa (Belgium) SR300
Henry Jacobs, Tziga Vertov, Bebe & Louis Barron, Luciano Berio, Bülent Arel, Don Preston, Slavek Kwi + Siobhan Mcdonald, Benjamin Thigpen, Helmut Schäfer, Novi_Sad, Saule, E.L. Scott De Martinville, John Oswald, Sin:Net, Israël Quellet, Alan Courtis, Fausto Romitelli, Justin K., Broadrick, Storm Bugs, E.A.R., Henry Cow, Osso Exotico, Eugeniusz Rudnik, Eduardo Polonio, Cabaret Voltaire, Mika Vainio, Alma Laprida + Juan Jose Calarco, Klangkrieg, Gintas Kraptavicius, Warong Rachapreecha, The New Blockaders, The Haters / The Rita, To Die, Agro, Jamka, Erin Sexton, Gustavo Serpa, Anonymous Noise
'Sub Rosa's 7th and final Anthology of Noise & Electronic Music glides down from the heavens on a golden beam of light'.
Tiny Mix Tapes
The best comparison I can come up with for the Noise & Electronic Music Anthology is the Harry Smith Anthology of American Folk Music (1952). Like Anthology of Noise's, Smith's collection could never hope to be absolute; that is an impossibility. It could present the curator's best vision of the music though, in a very personal, and in its own way, perfect manner. Volume Seven is the crown jewel of the set for me, but the whole thing is a masterpiece. I cannot recommend it higher for those with any sort of an interest in the history of this music.
Henry Jacobs, Tziga Vertov, Bebe & Louis Barron, Luciano Berio, Bülent Arel, Don Preston, Slavek Kwi + Siobhan Mcdonald, Benjamin Thigpen, Helmut Schäfer, Novi_Sad, Saule, E.L. Scott De Martinville, John Oswald, Sin:Net, Israël Quellet, Alan Courtis, Fausto Romitelli, Justin K., Broadrick, Storm Bugs, E.A.R., Henry Cow, Osso Exotico, Eugeniusz Rudnik, Eduardo Polonio, Cabaret Voltaire, Mika Vainio, Alma Laprida + Juan Jose Calarco, Klangkrieg, Gintas Kraptavicius, Warong Rachapreecha, The New Blockaders, The Haters / The Rita, To Die, Agro, Jamka, Erin Sexton, Gustavo Serpa, Anonymous Noise
'Sub Rosa's 7th and final Anthology of Noise & Electronic Music glides down from the heavens on a golden beam of light'.
Tiny Mix Tapes
The best comparison I can come up with for the Noise & Electronic Music Anthology is the Harry Smith Anthology of American Folk Music (1952). Like Anthology of Noise's, Smith's collection could never hope to be absolute; that is an impossibility. It could present the curator's best vision of the music though, in a very personal, and in its own way, perfect manner. Volume Seven is the crown jewel of the set for me, but the whole thing is a masterpiece. I cannot recommend it higher for those with any sort of an interest in the history of this music.
- Category
- Electronic
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