
The month rolls around so fast these days but boy is there some great music out there. As I write this, ‘Inferno’ has been released across the world and it’s boiling in London town. Kicking off June’s selection from the top left: KINACT – ‘Kinshasa in Action’ – these guys, I don’t know what to make of them. Primarily a street performance group who fashion outfits and instruments out of discarded refuse in Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It’s tribal, industrial, DIY and very original. Little Barrie‘s ‘Gravity Freeze’ has some great preview tracks although I’ve not had time to hear the whole thing yet. SML just announced a live album consisting of two long form tracks as have Move 78 from the launch event for their ‘In The Age Of Data’ album.
I discovered The Velveteers via random videos on Instagram and the combination of badass baritone guitar-wielding frontwoman and double drummers pulled me in from 30 second clips to investigate their two Dan Auerbach (The Black Keys) produced albums. If you like fuzzed-up garage rock with hints of QOTSA, the drums of Adam & The Ants and all the attitude a trio of American twenty-something’s can muster then this might be for you. Between the two of them sits the debut album from Danalogue (ex The Comet Is Coming) who has crafted a fine record with crossover points between the new Lone and Boards of Canada records, it’s out now on Castles in Space and I hope it doesn’t get passed over in the shadow of the latter’s album.
Bovine Boy‘s album contains some sublime moments or fresh acid, dark downtempo and ravey electro, worth a listen for sure. The Natural Yoghurt Band also have a new album out entitled ‘Carne’ but I prefer the previous release, ‘Biscuits’ which fits 20 tiny drum and electronics pieces over a 7″. A mention should go to Factory Floor who dropped a new single today in the shape of ‘Buzzsaw’ which is always good news but what’s going on with that artwork? Jesus, my eyes!












It’s been an exciting week for Boards of Canada fans. News broke last Tuesday of a VHS tape sent out to selected people across the world containing a brief but garbled message, very much in the style of similar transmissions around the time of the band’s last album promo campaign for ‘Tomorrow’s Harvest’. The fact that the tapes were sent from the same address used by Warp and Bleep for their distribution rang alarm bells.











Another blast from the past, reformatted onto cassette (or should that be kassette?) and 

































