
A last minute announcement for next Thursday at Coventry Uni, School of Arts and Creative Industries – aka the Delia Derbyshire building. PuttyRubber will be providing visuals for a DJ set of mine after Andy Votel has cranked everything to eleven at the afterparty of Industry Night at the college. Admission is free if you register online
Doug Shipton

Well, the big news is obviously the forthcoming Boards of Canada album, their first in 13 years, the ‘Inferno’ will be on us in less than a month! (cue a million fire-based descriptors in the reviews and any interview headlines). If you caught the ‘Tape 05’ video teaser you’ll know it’s going to be good. Angine De Poitrine are still rocking my world and album No.2 doesn’t disappoint, their rise is seemingly unstoppable although Boards did turn a few heads away from their microtonal loop riffs this month. Another new favourite is Studio Kosmische with their ‘Electronic Meditation for Inner Space Travel’ album which mixes ambience with saxophones and shouldn’t work but does exactly what it says on the tin. I’m slowly checking out the rest of the Dreamlord Recordings catalogue and there are some gems there. Nihiloxica are back with a stomping remix EP, heavy on the beats, and I slid a little Tom Scott reconstructed edit out last month that chops it into oblivion.
In the wake of Angine de Poitrine, several people started posting ‘if you like this then you’ll love this’-type pieces across the web and at least one of them measured up at least in part for me. Meule are really closer to what King Gizzard were doing five years ago than Angine but a microtonal guitar and two drummers is always going to sound interesting. I wasn’t sure about the lyrics first time round but it’s growing on me. Turbulent Space is a new project by Brian ‘Humanoid/FSOL/Yage’ Dougans, that runs the gamut between trip hop, acid jazz and, dare I say it? big beat in places. Cate Brooks has got the 303 out and seems to be conjuering up an album of business funk electronica from the three tracks previewed. Finally, Luke Vibert unearths another stash of unreleased mid-90s Plug cuts across a triple vinyl set for De:tuned. I had the pleasure of assembling the artwork with good friend and stencil artist supreme, Pablo Fiasco – look him up, he’s doing something very unique.

We’re overdue another Torre Pentel aka Alejandro Torrecilla appreciation post and his latest post today is reason enough as he’s broken the mold somewhat, leaving his hip hop and jazz heroes for something totally differnt; King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard!
I’ve pulled a load of other content from his Instagram page too, the De La Soul below is quite old, before he started mining the Jack Kirby visual lexicon and it’s fascinating to scroll through an artist’s account and watch their progress.







Apologies for so little content here of late, I’ve been so busy with work, some of which I can’t wait to share but don’t want to spoil with even the smallest of glimpses. Gigs are picking up too, I seem to have patches where I’m super busy, then very little. The Open City Documentary Festival party at Rich Mix the other week was great fun, loads of great liquid light visuals. This weekend I’m in Glasgow with Andrew Divine and Spacial Awareness (an ambient Belle & Sebastian offshoot) and then I’m back again on the 23rd for the Knockengorroch World Ceilidh festival, south of the city.
Between those (and not formally announced yet) I’m in Coventry for Deliaphonic at the Delia Derbyshire building alongside PuttyRubber who will be providing visuals to my DJ set on May 14th. Aside from those gigs I’ll largely be chained to my desk either designing, mixing or writing as well as organising the Extended Turntablism gigs this summer (Bristol is happening on July 17th – again, not announced yet). There will no doubt be carboots, record shops, galleries and the odd film showing happening to fit in as well now that the good weather is upon us.
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.

Fans immediately set about trying to decode the tape and decipher the muffled spoken word or identify the brief visible images which include a sign saying ‘I Love Jesus’, images of televangelists Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker and what appears to be a 3D rendeing of a hexagaon made up of smaller hexagaon, the same logo printed on the label of the VHS tapes. The audio seems to have been identified as coming from what may have been a radio advert for a magazine (Moody Monthly, that does exist) from the Moody Bible Institute AD, a religous organisation from Chicago, originating in 1886. Their website states; “Moody exists to proclaim the gospel and equip people to be biblically grounded, practically trained, and to engage the world through gospel-centered living. In short, we prepare people for their purpose and calling!”
The unconfirmed audio source also mentions hexagonal flexi discs several times but no trace of a flexi disc associated with the magazine has been located yet. What is odd is, as a collector of flexi discs (and odd formats in general) as well as religious records, I have NEVER seen a hexagonal flexi disc. I have a couple of hexagonal vinyl discs but not a flexi as you’d have to cut down a larger disc to achieve the shape and the largest flexi I have is a 10″. Is someone trolling us with this supposed interpretation of the muffled audio clip or have BoC inserted new audio into the ad to sow more seeds? Is a 7″ hexagonal flexi disc the next thing to look for? Possibly on Record Store Day this weekend? At the time of writing approx 30 VHS tapes had been identified, all seemingly the same in content but in both PAL and NTSC formats.
Friday night/Saturday morning saw pictures of four posters bearing distressed ‘children of the damned’ type images on them start appearing on streets in London, Barcelona and LA. Each poster had only the same hexagon symbol as the VHS tape in one corner, nothing else, seemingly confirming a connection at least. I spent part of Sunday afternoon in Soho, looking for posters with my partner and managed to snap these images, firstly sitting in plain sight on a hoarding on Oxford Street.




The posters below were some of the first to be found and posted online, nestling down St. Anne’s Court, a side alleyway off Wardour Street in Soho. To me, these could all plausibly be connected to a new release from Boards and I’m looking forward to what they do next…


The first of several gigs this summer under the banner of ‘Extended Turntablism’.
Graham Dunning: Mechanical Techno pioneer, building turntable towers that trigger an array of rhythms with each layer. Modular synths, light-reflecting prisms and even ping pong balls come into play.
Furrowed: The Vinyl Tattooist, literally at the cutting edge via homemade record cutters creating loops in real time.
Duplokit: Lathe cutting journeymen on a quest to further the exploration of rhythm, sonic groove theory and the boundaries of turntablism. Their UK debut, all the way from Aotearoa, New Zealand!
…and myself (with my Quadraphon turntable) will be descending on The Rose Hill Tavern in Brighton for a night of experimental turntablism
Ticket link : Extended Turntablismtherosehill.co.uk
We’re working on Bristol and London dates too and if you’re interested in putting on this line up in July or early August then please get in touch.

A bit later to this site this month but lots of great music around right now or just on the horizon and the list is boosted to 12 this month. From the top, The Def Boys are Awkward & MC Roughneck Jihad, the beats and scratches are lo-fi the tracks short and sweet. Angine De Poitrine’s second album dropped last Friday and I am excited! Their internet infamy seems to grow by the day and they’ve just announced more UK dates, I hope they don’t burn out. A new album on Astral Industries is always welcome and even more so by Multicast Dynamics, no previews as yet but past glories bode well.
Hawksmoor’s latest is a trip in every sense of the word, his experiments with a form of DMT informed the album and he underwent ‘a complete reset’ in his own words. Look up current interviews with him, there’s a great backstory to go with this one. Clocolan’s latest is darkly beautiful as ever and Dor Wand’s ‘Alchemy of Being’ dovetails nicely with the intent of Hawksmoor’s in that it’s a meditational drift.
On completely the opposite end of the spectrum, Lone’s new LP, ‘Hyperphantasia’ is rave-tastic, turned up to 11, multi-coloured, vocal-tinged, happy hardcore filtered through a sparkling prism. Chilled out it is not, contender for album of the year it is. Graham Dunning’s new tape is out soon so I have to give him the big up for his inspirational mechanical techno creations plus he’s just completed his PhD so I can call him ‘Dr. Dunning’ now. We have a rare outing together this July in Brighton at the Rose Hill Tavern alongside Furrowed and Duplokit. 310 are back with a new album, the first since member Joseph Dierker passed away, completing material he worked on and their music is always worth your time.
The ‘Part Time Archivists / Part Time Forgers’ compilation comes out of Thessaloniki, Greece on a new label, Necessary Unfold, and showcases contemporary techno and acid from the scene over there. Cavs from King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard releases his second solo album in late April and, as you’d imagine, it’s drum-heavy but previews include bass, guitar and synths so I’m interested to hear the full thing. Seefeel return to Warp for the first new material since 2024 and the sole preview track sounds very promising.

Three very exciting events are happening next month in London as part of the Open City Documentary Festival. On April 16th the ICA will show a selection of light show-related films curated by Sophia Satchell-Baeza whose book, ‘Sensual Laboratories’ has been on Strange Attractor‘s release list seemingly forever and may at last see the light of day this year. The selection ‘focuses on British and North American work from the 1960s and 1970s, bringing together early films by Barbara Hammer, John Smith, Jud Yalkut, Jerry Abrams, Scott Bartlett, and Mark Boyle and Joan Hills’ and is followed by a Q&A with Jarvis Cocker and John Smith. Tickets here.
The following night is the offical festival party at Rich Mix where I’ll be playing alongside NTS’ Mark Leckey with light shows from Insight Lighting, Turbulent Light and Heavy Flow – I’ve also designed the flyer you see here and it’s a pay what you want fundraiser for Gaza Formula Fund – book tickets here.
On Sunday 19th there will be a workshop with Sophia and light artists Julian Hand and Heena Song on the history and making of light shows. So if you want to get your hands dirty with ink and slides then that’s the place to be. Tickets are only £5 – book here for limited places https://richmix.org.uk/events/making-liquid-light-shows/


Yesterday saw the debut of an exclusive new Float mix for NTS radio to accompany your Sunday morning lie-in, run, breakfast, hangover… This mix was based around various instructional self-help records, now available to listen to again.
Track list:
Singing bowl intro featuring Timothy Leary
Sisterlove – The Hypnotist (OK Mr Mogul)
Giles Swayne – Cry (excerpts)
Sven-Erik Back – Walls / Thou Shall Reach the Jordan in the end or.. (edit)
Tomita – The Sea Named Solaris
David Bowie – Space Oddity (acappella)
Artemiev & Yu Bogdanov – Motion
Henry Jacobs – Audio Collage
Field Lines Cartographer – Information Alchemy
Bengt Hambraeus – Tides (excerpt 1)
Dick Mills – Ascending Asteroids
Occulta Series – The Fortunes of Taurus
Mike Herting – Algodoal
Tomita – The Unanswered Question (edit)
Bengt Hambraeus – Tides (excerpt 2)
Marshall Jefferson – Yellow Meditation For The Dance Generation (Joakim’s Horizontal Remix)
Bengt Hambraeus – Tides (excerpt 3)
Jo Johnson – Variance Remnant 1
Bernie Krause – Once Below A Time
Bengt Hambraeus – Tides (excerpt 4)
RP Beesley – An Instructional Record for Meditation
Electronic Concept Orchestra – Wichita Lineman
Singing bowl outro / Henry Jacobs – Interview with Sholem Stein
I had the pleasure to chat with DJ Darren the other week for his podcast ‘The Liverpool Connection – Music & Football’ – although I know absolutely nothing about football so it’s all about the former. As well as a huge array of DJs and musicians from across the dancemusic spectrum, Matt Black has also done an episode and supposedly Funki Porcini and Ollie Teeba are in the pipeline.

This month has been all about Angine de Poitrine, discovering their music (and unique look) was a bit of a revelation and I immediately hoovered up everything on Bandcamp. There’s a new album coming in April and UK live dates in May. The main problem after hearing their music is that there’s not much of it and not a lot else like it so I’ve found myself going back to earlier King Gizzard albums to get a fix of similar sounds rather than listen to them on a loop. Not to diminish other releases this month but there’s been a nice selection of breaks and acid forthcoming; last month’s Radiamax release finally made it to Bandcamp a few days after BC Friday and good friends Fundamental Frequencies released two long lost UK Breakcore 12″s, my favourite being 2XDEF‘s ‘First & Last’. Two legends of the rave scene teamed up for a 12″ on De:tuned that I had the honour of designing – 808 State vs Humanoid‘s ‘In Place of Language’ is a 4 track release that spans all areas of electronica with standout track ‘Raid’ coming off like the son of ‘Cubik’. Jem Stone is at it again with the 3 track Boneshaker EP, my favourite being the moody ‘Wish Bone’.
There’s another release I can’t add to the playlist for some reason (Buy Music Club does this sometimes when there’s no streamable digital audio as part of the package) and that’s a cassette version of my Kraftwerk Kover Kollektion mix from 2004. First made for Solid Steel and showcasing cover versions, tributes and tracks that heavily sample the German four-piece, it became the first of eight (so far, there will be more) volumes of the weird, wonderful world of music inspired by the band. For this I’ve gone back to the original audio and made a logical split in the middle – not just a fade out – and reworked the original cover art I’d designed to fit the cassette format. Along the way I’ve updated and corrected several track listing errors now that we have the beauty of Discogs at our disposal to check these things. You can pre-order the very limited tape from Delic Records here
Another blast from the past, reformatted onto cassette (or should that be kassette?) and available from Delic Records in Japan for pre-order. This is the first mix in the eight volume series (so far) it may be joined by others later…
I know this has been doing the rounds on socials for a couple of weeks but I only just got round to watching it. WOW! That they can do this is insane but dressed up like that too? Un-fucking-believable. My new favourite band. Some of the best bits of King Gizzard, minus the terrible lyrics and the dodgy country blues direction they’ve been taking of late. As someone said in the comments, we’re safe from AI when stuff like this exists.
Their music has me transfixed at the complex time signatures and dextorous looping, immediately wanting to see them live and I wanted to applaud at the end of every song. It’s rare that something comes along at my age that knocks my socks off like this does, glad to know there are people out there this crazy.
Their music is on Bandcamp here but the joy of watching them perform live is the real treat.


New design for two giants of the dance music scene – 808 State vs Humanoid – what an honour!
4 track 12″ on black or voodoo orange vinyl available to pre-order from De:tuned records now via Bandcamp

I went through many elements for this design before presenting the artists with different options which they then whittled down to the final images here. If I get time I’d like to put together a short video of all the different options as it felt like I created a world for them.





Steve Cook has now posted fourth and fifth installments of his trip to see the Jack Kirby retrospective currently showing in LA – but it’s ending in March so be quick! Check his Secret Oranges substack for much more in high resolution.






I’ve just released the first of several cassettes on my Infinite Illectrik label – Graham Dunning and myself playing at Robin the Fog‘s Fogfest in 2023 alongside several unheard rehearsal jams. For those not familiar with these kind of sets, we’re using modified turntables to build up soundscapes and rhythms using locked groove records that loop, FX and in Graham’s case, all manner of sounds triggered by his stacked turntable assemblage. Everything is improvised, a live set that sits partway between DJing and hardware performance, plus you can dance to it.


‘E-x-t-e-n-d-e-d Turntablism Vol.1’ is limited to 50 copies, totals 73 mins and comes with a full colour foldout mini-zine insert. I’m looking at several gig options this summer and there will be several more cassette releases this year from Duplokit, a collab with Furrowed, a label compilation and a second volume of ‘Extended Turntablism’.

Digital is also available and it’s Bandcamp Friday tomorrow so if you’re going to go for one then maybe stick it in your basket and wait until after 8am tomorrow?


If you want to witness Graham in the flesh with his Mechanical Techno set up, he’s playing at the new Iklectik site in the Peckham Levels in March via Baba Yaga’s Hut. Tickets are only £10 too!


That was a long month and a little bit quiet on the music front for me but I’ve managed to find nine things that touched a nerve musically in the grey, wet January of 2026.
First up is David Harrow‘s rendition of Terry Riley‘s ‘In C’ which, although it has been around for some years now (the edition on Bandcamp is from 2020), has just got a vinyl release on Transmat of all labels! No wonder as it’s a fantastic electronic interpretation that flitters all over the place and is ranked high in my list of favourite versions. Heliochrome is the second release from new label Silkzoo and channels 90’s electronica in fine style whilst Ruth Anderson‘s name popped up in two different places over the Xmas period, leading me to Bandcamp to purchase. Firstly she was mentioned in Matthew Blackwell‘s excellent Plunderphonics book which just snuck onto my end of year list at the 11th hour, then a track from her turned up on Jon Nelson‘s Some Assembly Required show, a repository of everything cut up and sample-based. Check her work out, tape collages and drones from the 1970s. A wonderful 45 by Penza Penza turned up on Misha Panfilov‘s label mid December and the event release of Jan was undoubtedly the long-awaited James Adrian Brown album on Castles In Space. I like its grit and nothing outstays its welcome, I think James benefits from coming to electronic music via a live band scenario, a very original record.
I have to highlight my friend Forsaj‘s new release with Lu_x2 under the name Radiamax on Never B Alone Records, it’s a 3-tracker of the best retro breakbeat acid I’ve heard in a long time, imagine Meat Beat Manifesto mixed with LFO and a good dose of 303 action. I really hope this is getting a vinyl release but at the moment it’s digital only. John Davis aka Datasette released the second volume of his ‘Offal’ compilations recently and this one is a huge 200 tracks(!) covering a smorgasbord of experiments, remixes, mashups, versions and lost oddities going back to the 90s in some cases, you have to dig but there’s gold in there. Graham Dunning and I have finally put the recordings of our first collaborations onto a cassette tape on my Infinite Illectrik label. Entitled ‘E-x-t-e-n-d-e-d Turntablism’ (also the name of a short burst of shows coming later this year) it features highlights from the Fogfest 2023 set plus unheard rehearsal jams and is the first in several volumes we’re preparing for release. Lastly, Tristan Perich & James McVinnie released their ‘Infinity Gradient’ opus last year, consisting of hundred speakers wired to the Royal Festival Hall organ, relaying an unfurling minimalist piece in seven movements, it’s got to be heard with no distractions.
Here are some shots and footage from last night’s Laserium show, presented by Funki Porcini at the Limehouse Town Hall in East London. It was a fantatic event, full of interesting people who connected socially between sets and showcased several homemade visual and audiovisual creators working in the field, old and new.



Henry Rolls‘ Lumatron was present as a ‘chandelier’ in the stairwell and was very difficult to capture in full, I’d love to see it up close and in a darker space sometime. Sadly I missed Henry’s talk as it was earlier in the day but urge you to check out his Instagram for a timeline of his machines which he started during lockdown made from Lego. SDNA‘s projection mapping in between sets and during mine captured a whole wall, filling it with William Latham-esque animation to brilliant effect. I also missed Dr Reekie‘s talk about his Exploding Cinema which I’d ove to know more about, another book on the reading list is the history of the movement, published last year.

A Jack Kirby retrospective entitled Heroes & Humanity was been open since September at LA’s The Skirball Cultural Center and my good friend Steve Cook has been posting beautiful shots from it over three different entries on his Secret Oranges Substack.
Jack Kirby post 1. Jack Kirby post 2. Jack Kirby post 3
Being that he’s a skilled photographer, he’s managed to capture the original artwork perfectly in all its gritty, pasted up, whited-out, dog-eared glory. Below are just a selection that he graciously allowed me to repost but you should check out his original posts as well as his excellent Substack too. Even better, if you’re in the LA area you should get along to view the real thing before it closes at the end of March.











First gig of the new year and it’s only 3 weeks away! I’ll be doing some sort of AV DJ set at this on the 24th, possibly the O Is For Orange set or variation of. Funki tells me it will be a loose multimedia kind of vibe with workshops, Q&A with artists and performance. Tickets here


Happy New Year everyone, the search for new music never stops so here’s some bits I’ve been collecting over the last month of 2025 to see you into the next month and beyond. DrumTalk is the alias of my old acquaintance Nathanial Pearn formerly Natural Self and I recently made an effort to catch up with his output from the past few years – ‘The Science of Love’ being a favourite. Healing Force Project recently put out a new 4-tracker ‘D-IW: Prologue’ which bubbles with acid – maybe a prologue to something bigger? RVZN is a new alias of Markey Funk, exhuming old, unfinished drum n bass productions and releasing them anew into the world. Memorials have a new 2-track single out, always worth hearing what they’re up to. JG Thirlwell brings his 40 year+ Foetus project over the finish line with ‘Halt’, 12 years in the making, I can’t wait to hear it but am waiting for the physical objects to arrive as it will be a special listen as I’ve loved his work since I was a teen and he has been such a huge inspiration in my life since.
Fracture & Neptune are back! The dynamic duo who helped freshen DnB back in the 00s have a new single out on Astrophonica and The Gentle People‘s debut album gets an expanded reissue, worth buying for Aphex Twin‘s remix of their ‘Journey’ single alone, one of his best. Barry Adamson is also back, this time with the ‘Scala!!!’ documentary score he did a few years back, preview tracks sound like everything you’d want from this project. ES is an artist and label out of the Netherlands on Ruiger Records which is worth keeping an eye on, favourite track is ‘Food For Funk’ ironically and you’ll know why when you hear it. Misha Panfilov is so hard to keep up with, some artists seem to breath music and his ‘From Blue To Grey in May’ (not pictured above but featured below) is a kind of Terry Riley meets The Irresistible Force collection of ambient minimalism with his usual analogue edge.
