EVERYTHING THAT WAS WAS THERE

(12")
01 Goya's Skull
Genre Electronic & Dance
FormatVINYL
Cat. noOM21
Label OPTIMO SINGLES CLUB
Artist WHILST
Release Date24/02/2014
Carrier12"
Barcode880319651618
Tracklisting
EVERYTHING THAT WAS WAS THERE
vinyl Album or track playing
Compass Point, Muscle Shoals, Sun Studios, Studio One, Cargo Studios, Spaceward Studios : all seminal recording studios. Here in Glasgow we are very fortunate to have Green Door Studio which is a free thinking hub for wild, original creativity and great sounding analogue recordings. Several Optimo Music releases including Golden Teacher were born out of recording sessions there and indeed, this will be the 6th release on Optimo Music to be recorded at Green Door. They deserve credit as my secret A&R division occasionally getting in touch and saying, "We think you might like this„" which inevitably leads to me scraping my brain off the floor and deciding I have to release it as a record asap. This 5-track EP by Whilst was the latest transmission from Green Door that my ears fell in love with. How to describe it? I have no idea except to say that it is wildly inventive and incredibly free music made by several individuals who are unnervingly young to be making these sounds. They describe themselves as follows - Formed originally as a jam-based project in the ever-fertile analogue studio |No 'Green Door', Whilst jump seamlessly between free jazz, primitive electronics, dubby post-punk, North African and motorik stlyings, underpinning their sound with a strong punk ethos". Released February 24th 2014 on 12" with limited edition hand made silk screened sleeve and on digital. If repressed, 2nd pressing will come in a generic Optimo Music sleeve. Distributed by Kompakt. *note* OM 22 will come out a month before this due to delay with sleeve construction for this 12". Post-voodoo, intergalactic grooves. Layered and psychedelic. Hypnotic and infectious. Lose yourself. Find someone else. 01 Goya's Skull 02 Untitled From North Africa 03 Umgebung 04 Wee Moth 05 Postcard From A Robot