Thursday 26 April 2012

Urban Psychetecture





The Psychogeographical Commission's latest release is a free to download album called 'Urban Psychetecture'. It contains a selection of tracks off their first two albums as well as a few previously unreleased covers including this cover of Coil's 'Lost Rivers of London'

Lost Rivers of London - The Psychogeographical Commission from Psychogeographical Commission on Vimeo

1.Antenociticus reawakens
2.The Lost Rivers of London
3.Gutterbright to the Starres
4.Alphalude 6
5.In Every Dream Home a Heartache
6.Fires of London
7.Fertile Omnipitence of the Underside
8.Hotel Room
9.Have you ever?
10.Cities
11.Alphalude 7
12.Meet you in the Subway
13.The Ones Who Walked Before
14.Walking with Omega

Total time: 66Mins




Free to download from Bandcamp

Monday 9 April 2012

Widdershins Review from Musiquemachine.com

The inner circle of the Glasgow Subway system doesn’t immediately suggest a venue for ritual. Its modern carriages merely ensure busy people reach their desired destination efficiently, unaware of their precise location until a big, clear sign rushes in to view. It’s a collectively ignored experience, an interim between A and B, where most seem encouraged to block out the environment by book or rag, phone or ad, as they’re herded beneath the city surface.
And yet, as the mysterious Psychogeographical Commission point out, the anticlockwise travelling of the subway’s inner circle can be viewed as a constant banishing ritual first performed in the late nineteenth century when an accident that stalled its opening provided a blood sacrifice distributed circuitously ever since.

With ‘Widdershins’ the duo of S.: and Hokano once again seek to address this disconnect they perceive between urban dwellers and their local mythologies. However, while their previous releases have more generally encouraged listeners to re-evaluate city situations through treated layers of ambient guitar and electronics to soundtrack exploratory strolls along lost rivers and secret historical tramways, ‘Widdershins’ is a straight recording of the noise of travelling on Glasgow’s underground.

Or is it? Through concentrating on the sounds of this 24 minute journey with its beeping electronic doors bookending the rhythmic rush of wheels as the engine accelerates and decelerates, one starts to perceive a change in mood, or a subtle presence, as the detail of the once familiar noises starts to reveal new qualities. Have The Commission deftly tweaked the tube sounds to invoke a sense of dread and otherness or have they merely separated the sound from its source and presented it in such a way that we finally take notice of what was there all along?

Either way it makes for a compelling listening, especially when using similar transport, bathing a journey in its altered light. Indeed, the duo apparently played the recording back into its source on a subsequent late night round trip and, in doing so, inspired aggression in those passengers who erroneously responded to its beeping doors as the recording fell out of sync with the train and, perhaps, the protection afforded by Glasgow’s secret banishing ritual.

4/5

http://www.musiquemachine.com/reviews/reviews_template.php?id=3710

Saturday 21 January 2012

The Psychogeographical Commission go LIVE!



The Psychogeographical Commission will be appearing as the first chapter of 'A Psychocinematic Ritual' in conjunction with The Arches and Glasgow Film Festival. Also appearing as part of the ritual are the Wyrding Module and OV



Thursday, 23 February 2012 at the Old Hairdressers, Renfrew Lane (opposite Stereo), Glasgow. Tickets via GFF12