Friday, 31 August 2018

1969 World's First Electronic Pop Song/Groovy Dancing

1969 World's First Electronic Pop Song
This is to good 2.48 seconds of pure entertainment.
The couple dancing at 1.47 and 2.29 have to be my favorites.
They seem so happy to be there....and they def go for it when the cameras on them. Superb.
More info on Popcorn 

Thursday, 30 August 2018

November 2018 10inch EP Release

k s audio & Belbury Music Present
Seatman and Powell
Featuring Belbury Poly
The Broken Folk 10 inch EP
Artwork/Design by Jim Jupp (Ghostbox Records, Belbury Poly)
Side 1
Broken Folk (Belbury Poly Mix)
Boxes with Rhythms in 
Side 2
Broken Folk
Mr Metronome
My Morning Ritual 
Track 1 Remixed by Belbury Poly
Tracks 2-5 Reworked and Remastered from the Albums
A Rest Before the Walk
All Hold Hands and off we Go
 
Release Date November 2018
Also Full Digi Discography can now be purchased from Bandcamp
for the super low price of £14


Saturday, 25 August 2018

Wyrd Britain: Stigma

Wyrd Britain: Stigma: 'Stigma' is one of the three non M.R. James adaptations made by the BBC for their ' A Ghost Story for Christmas ' and the ...

Tuesday, 7 August 2018

tree little milk egg book and other non sequiturs

A recent arrival round here, is the rather superb new album by The Twelve Hour Foundation.
For lovers of Library Music, The Radiophonic Workshop and Musique Concrete, this album is an absolute must (in fact even if you are not into those musical genres you really should still have a listen, and if you don't...then hold your head in shame, because you are missing out) what is instantly noticeable is the pure pop that rears it head on tracks like, Watching the Wires, Quoits, Analog Jam, In the Meantime and Canned Light, all guaranteed to get you tapping your feet and humming constantly at a later date. Fans of The Radiophonic Workshop/Jon Baker should listen to the track The Long Divison. Tree little milk egg book and other non sequiturs is out now on the Castles in Space label and is available from here. The Vinyl version of this album is released in a super-limited edition of 280 copies, pressed on “green ginger” splatter vinyl.
The Twelve Hour Foundation evoke distant, half-remembered experiences and objects ... the grouting between slabs of memory. Indeed, following live performances, audience members frequently approach the duo, saying they had been affected by the music, but couldn’t put their finger on why. The majority of tracks were built using a pair of 40-year-old synthesisers, mixed with treated field recordings and sounds created from samples of household objects: plastic tubing, bottles, corks, a wire draining rack, electrical appliances and the human body.