Wordless

The other day I was going over my personal discography and came to the realisation that despite being a singer, pretty much most of the music I’ve created and released over the years is actually instrumental.  I jotted down a few thoughts on why I’m drawn so much to instrumental music, and in particular the more left-field forms of instrumental rock music.

Thoughts on Instrumental Rock Music

To read more, go to http://www.danielknowler.co.uk/instrumental-music/some-thoughts-on-instrumental-rock-music/

If you have any recommendations for good instrumental albums, let me know in the comments!

Tunefruit – The Hotness Playlist

One of my instrumental pieces, Claw Vapour, was recently featured in Tunefruit’s playlist of recommended new music.

Tunefruit is a new site providing high quality music for film and video projects.  To see this week’s full playlist go here. If you’d like to use my work in your project via Tunefruit, click here!

Using an original Mbox with Cockos Reaper

Those of you who still use one of the original Mbox audio interfaces may know that there’s a nifty software driver available from Ploytec which enables the Mbox to be recognised by Snow Leopard (and newer operating systems) and allows the Mbox to be used with almost any audio software.

If you’ve ever tried to use your Mbox with the excellent Reaper software however, you may have noticed an awkward silence…

It turns out that all you need to do is to open the Reaper preferences and tick “Ignore running change notifications (may be required for some devices)”.  Like so:

I don't know why I didn't just google this earlier...

And your old blue box will play nicely with Reaper.  I was using a somewhat clunky work around involving smoke and mirrors Soundflower until it dawned on me that I’d never actually bothered searching for a proper solution on that Google thing they have now.  This answer turned up right there on the Reaper forums.

No idea why I didn’t check there ages ago.. I can be alarmingly stupid sometimes.  Anyway, hopefully (if you’re as inept at the interet as I am) you’ve found this useful!

If you’d like to hear some of the stuff I’ve recorded recently, I’m giving away a selection of instrumental tracks here: www.danielknowler.co.uk

 

Black Triangle Video

Some of my music appears in this video by film maker Douglas Caldrow about the disability rights campaign group Black Triangle.

 

To find out more about the work of Black Triangle, visit their website http://blacktrianglecampaign.org.  More of Douglas’ work can be seen on his Vimeo page here: http://vimeo.com/douglascaldow

If you would like to license any of my music for your film or video project, you can do so via http://www.beatpick.com/artists/daniel_knowler Or get in touch with me directly via the contact form at Actual Size Music.

And if you like what you hear in the video, you can download a few songs from my recent albums for free, here: www.danielknowler.co.uk

Silvery Beast

My second album of instrumental music, ‘Silvery Beast’ is released on Monday 12th August. Have a listen and download the album here:

 

The music on these solo records is quite different to my work with The Infinite Three; It’s more intricate and obsessively orchestrated, with the acoustic guitar being the backbone of many of the pieces.

The cover art is from a painting by my good friend (and fellow Leisur Hive alumni) Maria Vellanz.

You can download the album from bandcamp right now, but it’ll be available on itunes and some other places (and possibly a limited CD release) from next Monday.  If you like what you hear, please do click that share button!

EDIT: You can also download a selection of tracks (including one song from Silvery Beast) for free, here: www.danielknowler.co.uk

New Noise

I’ve just completed work on my next solo instrumental record.. But more on that in a future post.  Last Tuesday, myself, Sam McLaughlin and Paul Middleton assembled ourselves at a studio in northeast London to record the new album for The Infinite Three.  More details on our blurting of new, repetitive drone-rock can be read here: http://theinfinitethree.co.uk/the-external-employment-of-manipulable-environmental-objects/

The Infinite Three recording

The new single by The Infinite Three is available to download, free, from www.theinfinitethreemusic.com

Alive In The Belly of The Mother

My band, The Infinite Three (the one which tends to involve loud, repetitive blocks of noise and long incessant drones) is doing “it” in public this Saturday at Mother Live, Old Street, London.

If you fancy having your inner self pummelled by entropic oblongs of sound, take a look at this post over at The Infinite Three website for more info… There’s some free booze in it for you, if you come early.

And if you’ve not done so yet, go over to www.theinfinitethreemusic.com to download our latest single, free.

Work In Progress 2013

I’ve uploaded two new acoustic songs from the follow up to my instrumental solo album which I released in 2011.  You can listen to them in the player below. The next solo record should be out by the Summertime.  Both songs are free downloads, but of course donations are always helpful when recording a new album!

 

Those of you whose ears are stimulated by noisier things might be interested to know that there’s a new record by The Infinite Three also due around Summer as well as more from Slunq (my project with Peter Dahl Collins and Chris Collins)

As ever, let me know what you think.. Cheers for listening!

By the way, you can download a selection of tracks from my instrumental albums for free, here: www.danielknowler.co.uk

METZ – Album review

The self-titled debut by Toronto band METZ has already appeared on several of the more adventurous end-of-year lists, and within the first few seconds of album opener, Headache, it’s easy to see why it’s made such a strong impression: Few other releases of 2012 quite match this album’s level of sustained volume.

Metz - Metz

It all kicks off with a satisfyingly immense drum sound and rusty-edged caveman riffing with the vocals sounding like someone being thrown down a wind-tunnel. The kind of mechanized echo reminiscent of Godflesh’s Justin Broadrick, albeit far more haggard. It’s definitely rock n roll, but it’s disciplined, fast and streamlined. All sharp, well defined angles with nothing of the slacker-fuzz inherent in many of their contemporaries. In fact, despite the US noise-rock references which tend to show up in other reviews of METZ, there’s a certain confidence in the slab-like shapes their rhythms make that brings to mind a more European, post-industrial lineage (I can hear splintered bits of early Killing Joke in this for example). Knife on the Water begins like Test Department covering a Phil Spector ballad before falling over itself at precise right-angles so as to eventually collapse into a perfectly cuboid avalanche of no.

On Wet Blanket the bass guitar sounds like it’s being played with a knife rather than a plectrum, and builds on a droning repetition that really pummels. But it’s otherwise one of the more straightforward songs on the album. And for my tastes this band are at their best when the songs sound more like gargantuan architectural constructions than anything resembling standard rock music. For example on Wasted where it sounds like one half of the band are assembling scaffold while the other half are tearing it down with equal precision. Or in the verses to The Mule, where brutal rhythmic stomps are industrially bolted onto the wall with a pneumatic drill.

METZ is a confident, bloody-minded, loud, brutal polygon of a debut album and if they can shake off those last few tiny rags of vanilla indie rock, then its successor is bound to crush everything in its path. Not that there is really anything vanilla about this record. It smells of iron and chrome. This is ‘Metal’ music in the sense that it literally sounds as though the songs are made out of large pieces of hard shiny metal. One of the most exciting blocks of noise to drop from the Sub Pop label in a long time.

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By the way, if you’d like to hear even more noisy, angular, left-of-centre noise-rock, my band The Infinite Three are giving away our new single ‘Sharpy‘ for a limited time right here: www.theinfinitethreemusic.com

Large Blue Blocks of Sound

Last night I dreamed that I was holding Logic audio regions and lowering them into the waters of a warm shallow stream.  As the large blue blocks of sound hit the water, they disintegrated and turned into hundreds of tiny winged insects.

Not sure what this says about the state of my creativity at the moment..  It probably just means that I’ve been staring at the Logic arrange page for far too long this week.. In any case the new songs are sounding good and I’m looking forward to bending them further with the other members of The Infinite Three..

Speaking of which… If you’re in or near London, then you should come to this on Monday night:

Stay Ugly @ The Black Heart