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        <title>Cyclic Defrost</title>
        <description>Australian electronic music magazine</description>
        <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/</link>
        <lastBuildDate>Sun, 06 Jul 2008 02:26:40 +0100</lastBuildDate>
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            <title>Cover Design - Bim Ricketson (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1224</link>
            <description>Interview by Alex Crowfoot

Designer Bim Ricketson wears so many hats he could start a shop - film director, animator, exhibition designer, packaging and graphic designer and – since being commissio</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Deepchild (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1320</link>
            <description>Interview with Rick Bull by Chris Downton

Sydney-based (at least for now) producer Rick Bull (aka Deepchild) is someone likely to need little introduction to Australian Cyclic readers, having maint</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Winduptoys (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1322</link>
            <description>Interview by Dan Rule 

Accidents happen, right? Well, yeah. But few people – let alone musicians, producers or sound engineers – embrace the odd mistake or slip-up with the same enthusiasm as Rober</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Post (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1335</link>
            <description>Interview by Simon Hampson

For James Wilkinson his new project Post marks a distinct break with the past. “I was happy for many years playing the trombone and collaborating with my friends, but onc</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Astronomy Class (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1336</link>
            <description>Interview by Bec Paton

Astronomy Class is the result of friends sharing their dreams, their experiences brushing up against and bouncing off each other and music as a way of life. Sounds heard, col</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Matt Warren (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1330</link>
            <description>Interview by Scot Cotterell

I had been aware of Matt Warren's quiet but prolific presence amongst Hobart’s small but active alternative music/art scene for a few years now. Matt makes music in a nu</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Rebel MP (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1337</link>
            <description>Interview with Julian Macpherson by Matthew Levinson 

Lismore is about as far from east London’s towering inner city tenements as you can get, but the northern NSW town is just as grimy, according </description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Rune Grammofon (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1326</link>
            <description>Interview by Oliver Laing

Rune Kristoffersen spent the eighties playing bass in Norwegian pop outfit Fra Lippo Lippi, signed to Virgin and had an album produced by Walter Becker from Steely Dan in </description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Nico Muhly (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1328</link>
            <description>Interview by Angela Stengel

Nico Muhly should be a pop star. The 25 year old New Yorker started having piano lessons when he was thirteen, is friends with people in Grizzly Bear and has worked on f</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Kid Koala (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1327</link>
            <description>Interview by Tim Colman



Kid Koala's artistic endeavours have always involved some endearingly nutty ideas. His recorded work is often accompanied by self-penned comics detailing the tragic love</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Shannon O'Neill Selects (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1324</link>
            <description>Shannon O’Neill Selects

Shannon O’Neill has always been fascinated by outsider music and art, sampling and the friction between art and intellectual property. I first met him at high school, he was</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Automotive - The Digil Parker Project (Couchblip) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1348</link>
            <description>Automotive are an incredibly prolific Dutch duo who also operate under a bunch of other names (Funckarma/Quench/Cane) in other styles, though here are intent on existing somewhere in the dreamy ether </description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Bola - Shapes (Skam/Inertia) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1349</link>
            <description>Darrell Fitton’s earliest work appeared on Warp’s venerable Artifical Intelligence II compilation from 1994, and Shapes was recalls this era in electronic listening music. Originally released anonymou</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Clark - Body Riddle (Warp/Inertia) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1350</link>
            <description>The first thing you notice about Chris Clark’s third album, Body Riddle, is that it is loud. On the very edge of distortion, Clark manages to craft some amazingly spacious tracks around sampled live d</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Duopandamix - Infrarojo (Static Discos) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1351</link>
            <description>Mexican duo Guillermo Guevara and Gabriel Acevedo certainly love their old video games. Usually so-called ‘chip music’ celebrates the 8-bit melodies of the Commodore 64, but Duopandamix go even earlie</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Kid 606 - Pretty Girls Make Raves (Tigerbeat6/Stomp) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1352</link>
            <description>San Diego’s Miguel Depedro usually comes across as a restless child, so it’s no suprise he’s made another leap with the punningly titled ‘Pretty Girls Make Raves’. Instead of happy-hardcore-it’s-okay-</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Severed Heads - Viva! Heads! (LTM Publishing/Inertia) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1353</link>
            <description>UK-based label LTM were recently responsible for reissuing Severed Heads’ 1989 commercial sales high-watermark album ‘Rotund For Success’, and this Roxy Music-punningly monikered collection ‘Viva! Hea</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Snog - The Kings Of Hate (PsyHarmonics) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1354</link>
            <description>Whilst local outfit Snog are creating controversy with their lyrical finger pointing and politically charged video clips they are also working at a freakish rate. Their album of a few months back Snog</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Squarepusher - Hello Everything (Warp/Inertia) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1355</link>
            <description>Except for Squarepusher’s debut Feed Me Weird Things (Rephlex) his albums have been ultimately disappointing. Of course each album has had some amazing tracks and his EPs have been consistently reliab</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Tujiko Noriko -Shojo Toshi (Mego) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1356</link>
            <description>Blurred In My Mirror saw Tujiko Noriko mucking it up in the grimy material realms of dub and house, two realms which tantalized the senses with a barrage of ragged arpeggios, grinding, persistent tech</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Various Production - The World Is Gone (XL/Remote Control) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1362</link>
            <description>The almost anonymous duo of Adam Phillips and Ian Carter, being Various Production, were responsible for a series of absolutely fantastic limited vinyl releases over the last two years. So diverse it </description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Wisp - Honor Beats (Sublight) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1363</link>
            <description>From the outset, it’s pretty obvious that this second album on Sublight from New York State-based IDM / breakcore producer Wisp (real name Reid Dunn) isn’t going to be your run of the mill listening e</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Amanda Handel &amp; G.L. Seiler  - Ghosts And Angels (Feral Media/Fuse) (source : Cyclic ...</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1364</link>
            <description>Greg Seiler is certainly already well-known for his solo electronic explorations as Comatone, but ‘Ghosts And Angels’ shows him collaborating with classical composer Amanda Handel to create an evocati</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Anonymeye - Anonymeye Motel (Half Theory) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1365</link>
            <description>Late last year I was sitting in an apartment in Berlin. My friend had put on a record picked from our host’s vast collection. A series of spindling guitar tones sprang from the stereo, creating an end</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Gail Priest - Imaginary Conversations In Reverberant Rooms (Metal Bitch) (source : Cyclic ...</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1366</link>
            <description>Gail Priest’s work over the past five years has covered some fairly divergent territory. As if seeking out key areas of interest for her sonic pursuits, each of her performances and recording projects</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Grundik Kasyansky - Light and Roundchair (Creative Sound Recordings) (source : Cyclic Defrost ...</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1367</link>
            <description>Grundik Kasyansky is a sound artist composer and sound designer who apparently divides time between Moscow Tel Aviv and New York City. In 1995 he formed Grundik and Slava with Slava Smelovsky in Israe</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Hydatid - Studies In Particle Motion (self-released) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1368</link>
            <description>The thinking behind Studies In Particle Motion – the latest CD-r from David Loose (aka Hydatid) – is as dense, opaque and frighteningly complex as it sounds. Finding its grounding in Quantum physics a</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Ian Cho - The Waking Woods (Tovian Records) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1369</link>
            <description>If a forest could sing, what would it sound like? This is the question that Ian Cho, a 20- year old composer/animator from Queensland set out to resolve. With just a guitar, piano and quirky keyboard </description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Lawrence English &amp; Phillip Samartzis - One Plus One (Room40) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1370</link>
            <description>It’s huge, this giant mechanical, pulsating, booming repetitive, skipping electronic beast that blunders along gathering speed, wheezing, spurting, moaning before fading out into flecks of static. Vin</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>London Sinfonietta - Warp Works &amp; Twentieth Century Masters (Warp/Inertia) (source : Cyclic ...</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1371</link>
            <description>When Aphex Twin released Selected Ambient Works Vol 2 back in the early 90s the press were making references to the apparent influence of Cage and Stockhausen - in part to canon-ise and ‘approve’. Aph</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Midori Hirano - Lush Rush (Noble) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1372</link>
            <description>Noble’s abilities to uncover the more interesting end of post-pop electronica from Japan’s various urban centres has placed them firmly on the radar of labels and musicians outside Japan alike. Their </description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Phillip Samartzis  - Unheard Spaces (Microphonics) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1373</link>
            <description>Melbourne sound artist and academic Phil Samartzis has built a career on his uncompromising approach to working with sound. In the main he utilises field recordings as the raw material to layer, shape</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Phillip Samartzis &amp; Kozo Inada - h() (Room40) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1374</link>
            <description>The first collaboration between Samartzis and Japanese minimalist composer Kozo Inada is a tense almost austere episode of music concrete. Beginning with a steady warm electronic drone complete with c</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Richard Chartier &amp; Taylor Dupree - Specification Fifteen (Line) (source : Cyclic Defrost ...</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1375</link>
            <description>Both Chartier and Dupree have earned reputations for various excursions into the realms of digital minimalism – Chartier through sound field and Dupree via his restrained compositional approach. Unite</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Ronnie Sundin - The Amateur Hermetic (Komplot) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1376</link>
            <description>Swedish born sound artist Ronnie Sundin uncovers the darkness lingering in music concrete in this incredibly evocative and quite troubling 41 minute piece. It seems he’s begun with his own voice, a gr</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>All India Radio - Echo Other (Inevitable Records/MGM) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1377</link>
            <description>Don’t you think it’s lovely to have waking dreams whilst listening to music that inspires colours and shapes? If your answer to this question is ‘yes’ then perhaps you will find some space in your ima</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Animal Collective - Hollinndagin (Paw Tracks) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1378</link>
            <description>Rescuing their obscure 2002 live album from eBay hell, The Animal Collective have re-released Hollinndagin on their own Paw Tracks imprint. It harks from their 2001 live shows alongside Black Dice, wh</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Balun - Something Comes Our Way (Brillante) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1379</link>
            <description>For a band based in Puerto Rico, Balun are a world apart from the popular sounds of reggaeton, Ricky Martin and salsa. Instead they have developed a cult following with their distinctive electro-acous</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Broadcast - The Future Crayon (Warp/Inertia) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1380</link>
            <description>For many music snobs, pop is sugar coated candy – devoid of class or staying power: disposable, throwaway. But what if you’re making pop music, it’s not sugar-coated candy, and you’re not in the pop c</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Feathers - Synchromy (Home Tapes) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1381</link>
            <description>Eddie Alonso, Matt Crum, and Eric Rasco make a wondrous melodic noise as the Miami based trio, Feathers. Self described as “two Cubans and a drunken redneck”, Feathers are a tight little unit speciali</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>First Nation - First Nation (Paw Tracks) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1382</link>
            <description>This weirdo folksy tribal poppy beast is a three piece from New York that seem to exist in a similar kind of world to the likes of Animal Collective and Gang Gang Dance (who are mentioned in the liner</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Grizzly Bear - Yellow House (Warp/Inertia) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1383</link>
            <description>“She came to New York City to be a singer in the 1930s, failed, and drank herself to death in the 1940s,” recounts Edward Droste about his great aunt Marla. Her aura radiates seventy years later – a s</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Nuuro - All Clear (Soundsister Records/Poni Republic) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1384</link>
            <description>Alejandro Ghersi is a sixteen-year old wiz kid from Venezuela that, according to net-label Poni Rebublic, “has everything young kids have been asking for”. Now I certainly don’t feel like I have any f</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Ollo - The If If (Groovescooter/Vitamin) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1385</link>
            <description>The palindromically titled pair behind Sydney group Ollo have finally released a follow up to their 2002 debut Sleeper. That album was a shifting instrumental soundscape generally influenced by produc</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Pit Er Pat - Pyramids (Thrill Jockey/Inertia) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1386</link>
            <description>Pit Er Pat is yet another interesting three-piece to emerge from Chicago’s art fuelled post-indie rocker scene. Now signed to the Thrill Jockey label, vocalist-keyboardist Fay Davis-Jeffers, drummer B</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>The Album Leaf - Into The Blue Again (Sub Pop) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1387</link>
            <description>Much as environments have been transformed into landscapes, so too has the music emanating from The Album Leaf lapsed into parody. While Jimmy Lavalle’s earlier records emphasized subtle changes from </description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Telemetry Orchestra - Empire (Silent Recordings/Undercover Music) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1388</link>
            <description>Telemetry Orchestra worked their sound up from of a palette of post-Stereolab and Clan Analogue electronics. Following a string of compilation contributions, the group released an ambitious debut, ‘Li</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Blue Sky Black Death - A Heap Of Broken Images (Mush/Stomp_ (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1389</link>
            <description>San Francisco-based producer Kingston has cultivated a considerable reputation over the past couple of years with his work on albums by Boston’s Virtuoso, Jus Allah and Chief Kamanchi and ‘A Heap Of B</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Darc Mind - Symptomatic Of A Greater Ill (Anticon/Stomp) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1390</link>
            <description>This is a very interesting release from Anticon. It’s revealing that these doyens of intellectualised hip hop infused aural aesthetics, are re-issuing a straight up Hip Hop record dating from as far b</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Def Wish Cast - The Legacy Continues (Hydrofunk/Shogun) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1391</link>
            <description>In the 14 years since Def Wish Cast released their ‘Mad Hatter’ EP, the western Sydney trio has collected a lot of trophies: first full length album, first hip hop group to tour nationally, one of an </description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>DJ Wally &amp; DJ Willie Ross - Mrs Millers House (theAgriculture) (source : Cyclic Defrost ...</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1392</link>
            <description>DJ Wally aka Keef Destefano has been a NYC beat maker since the early 90s. His earliest records were creaking trip hop which earnt him some recognition in Europe through inclusion on MoWax’s Headz 2 c</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Dr Who Dat - Beat Journey (Lex/Inertia) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1393</link>
            <description>Dr Who Dat is the latest signing to Lex records, and its lush instrumentals all the way. The beats are nice and loose, there’s plenty of gratuitous panning, lazy cuts, thick dubby bass, lots of reverb</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Drop The Lime - We Never Sleep (Tigerbeat6/Valve) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1394</link>
            <description>NYC native Drop The Lime (real name Luca Venezia) has certainly become the toast of that city’s breakcore scene since the release of his debut album ‘This Means Forever’ on Tigerbeat6 last year, and t</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Jack’s Son - Everyone Has A Kid Inside (Abolipop) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1395</link>
            <description>Wow! Where the hell did this spring from? Literally from Mexico - metaphorically from the cavernous dub station on the fringe of hip hop, soul and glitched out funk riding high with a mescalin milksha</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Eugene Carhesio &amp; Leighton Craig - Leaves (Naturestrip) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1398</link>
            <description>Everybody loves hanging out in their garden on a warm summers day. If for example you live in Brisbane and the birds are singing, the sun is shining and there is a light warm breeze, out under the tre</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>FM3 &amp; Dou Wei - Hou Guan Yin (Lona) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1399</link>
            <description>In the way a faint tinkling note can bring out the silence of a landscape, the slight permanences of Hou Guan Yin bring out change. The changes are seen through long-held organ chords, the smallest of</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Greg Davis &amp; Jeph Jerman - Ku (Room40) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1400</link>
            <description>Utilising found objects the sounds of this perplexing duo are a series of squelches, bangs, taps, creaks, rumbles and scratches. Their approach lead you to consider the sheer physicality of the object</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Near the Parenthesis - Go Out and See (Music Made By People) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1401</link>
            <description>In much the same way as Akira Inagawa’s 2005 Lambent project These Days, the debut solo endeavour of San Franciscan musical multi-tasker Tim Arndt, Go Out and See, is one of those records that just wo</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Pawel Grabowski / James Eckrippie &amp; Paulo Raposo - The Beautiful Schizophrenic / Product ...</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1402</link>
            <description>Polish born dark ambient guy Pawel Grabowski begins proceedings on the 6th instalment of excellent experimental Portuguese label Cronica’s Product series of split cds. It’s quite sombre stuff, waves o</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Seaworthy - Serrata (Celebrate Psi Phenomenon) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1403</link>
            <description>Seaworthy might just be Sydney’s top purveyors of polite music. When the trio aren’t making tunes to set your boat gently (post)rocking by the pier, they’re dabbling in considered drones, looped swell</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Tim Hecker - Harmony In Ultraviolet (Kranky/Inertia) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1404</link>
            <description>Canadian Tim Hecker (not to be confused with Mego’s Florian Hecker) was responsible for one of the best albums to come out of the final years of the seminal Mille Plateaux label - Radio Amor in 2003. </description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Tod Dockstader - Aerial #3 (Sub Rosa) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1405</link>
            <description>The invariant, ill-omened drones and ghostly striations which flit across this, Tod Dockstader’s third and final edition to his Aerial series, seem always to be overflowing, always exhausting themselv</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Various Artists - Death Before Distemper (DC Recordings) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1358</link>
            <description>It is hard to come to reconcile that Death Before Distemper really is the first label compilation from DC Recordings after 11 years and 70 releases. Established in 1995, DC Recordings has been best kn</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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        <item>
            <title>Various Artists - Pikadon Nights (Datum) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1359</link>
            <description>Perhaps I’m just out of the loop, but I had no idea that there was such quality coming out of the Brisbane electronic underground. Compiled and curated by digital all-sort Sean Taylor (aka Mute-til-la</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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        <item>
            <title>Various Artists - Refashioned 007 - The James Bond Themes Go Undercover (Groovescooter/Vitamin) ...</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1360</link>
            <description>The Groovescooter HQ is at it again. They’ve summoned the musical family together to refashion a theme and this time it’s all about espionage as classic James Bond tracks go ‘undercover’. Each artist </description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Various Artists - The Condition of Muzak 2 (Expanding) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1361</link>
            <description>Expanding Records – London’s purveyors of spectral, minimalist electronica – have certainly nurtured a distinctive sound throughout their 30-plus-release history. Releasing a high-quality body of work</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Various Artists - Chrome Children (Stones Throw/Basement Digs/Adult Swim) (source : Cyclic ...</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1396</link>
            <description>Stones Throw have teamed up with cartoon network Adult Swim for the release of this compilation. It contains 19 tracks from all the label’s stalwarts, a few lesser known signings, and a re-issue of Pu</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Various Artists - The Roots Of Dubstep (Tempa) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1397</link>
            <description>Dubstep has suddenly become huge. Maybe not massive, but big enough for the average subcultural junkie to know what you are talking about when you use it as shorthand for a sound. It is even starting </description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Sleeve Design - Fujiya &amp; Miyagi - Transparent Things (Tirk/Inertia) (source : Cyclic ...</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1344</link>
            <description>Artist: Fujiya &amp; Miyagi
Title: Transparent Things
Label: Tirk Recordings
Format: CD
Designer: Richard Robinson

If you printed the word ‘clean’ in white ink on white paper, you’d be close to ach</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Sleeve Design - Post - Post (Preservation/Inertia) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1345</link>
            <description>Artist: Post
Title: Post
Label: Preservation
Format: CD
Designer: Mark Gowing

Do you remember tangrams—the ancient Chinese moving puzzle game where you can create silhouettes and patterns? The </description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Sleeve Design - Various Production - The World Is Gone (XL) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1346</link>
            <description>Artist: Various
Title: The World is Gone
Label: XL Recordings
Format: LP
Designer: Various

Tottering precariously along the fine line between the Art Nouveau illustrations of Aubrey Beardsley a</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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            <title>Sleeve Design  - Various Artists - Art Groupie (Da Dada) (source : Cyclic Defrost Magazine)</title>
            <link>http://www.cyclicdefrost.com/article.php?article=1347</link>
            <description>Artist: Various Artists
Title: Art Groupie
Label: da dada (Groovescooter)
Format: CD
Designer: G. Zuzak

Art Groupie was an exhibition of art by music makers held at Melt Gallery in July this ye</description>
            <author>Cyclic Defrost</author>
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