Beautiful and sturdy card case with three-ante gatefold. Artwork and typeface by Hobocombo, photography by Giulia Mazza.
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Limited edition colored LP, gatefold cover
150 gr colored vinyl, gatefold cover, download card included
Moondog Mask is the second album from Hobocombo, a trio devoted to and inspired by the music of Moondog and formed by Andrea Belfi (Rosolina Mar, Mike Watt, David Grubbs) on drums and vocals, Rocco Marchi (Mariposa) on guitar, synth and vocals, and Francesca Baccolini on double bass and vocals.
The official release will be on November 4th 2013 on Trovarobato Records, distributed by Audioglobe/Digitalea.
Hobocombo’s first album, “Now that it’s the opposite, it’s twice upon a time”, surfaced in April 2010 and inspired by their first concert, was almost an “instant disc”, entirely composed of reinterpretations of Moondog’s repertoire. That first release contained some elements (the Cuban groove in Bird’s Lament, the medieval psychedelia in Witch of Endor) that anticipated further directions of their sound.
Proceeding with their concerts after the first album, the band started to develop a colourful orchestral sound (“The Magnetic Sound of Hobocombo”, to be precise), which, in turn, has created the desire to work on new original compositions and to insert deviations (“East Timor”, by Robert Wyatt) thus creating the definitive selection of tracks on this album.
The result is a reflection on the exotic, intended as “imagination” (possible worlds, possible mythologies) that paints distant fantasy locations, but always grounded to earth by field recordings (and synths) and by topics like the East Timor invasion.
The album is made of real locations like East Timor (or Berlin, or Bologna, or the Lessinia hills where it was recorded and mixed), but also imaginary locations, with the same spirit as Salgari who, while supported by perfect documentation, wrote about the Tigers of Mompracem without ever having left his native Adriatic coasts; or of Joe Meek who recorded “I Hear a New World: an outer space music fantasy” engineering 1959 technology (re?)producing the sounds of other planets.
The first Hobocombo album was a record that dwelt on Moondog’s composing methods, on Louis Thomas Hardin as a minimalist with refined counterpoint, who was frugal with his means and his musician line-ups. Instead, in “Moondog Mask” the band turns to The Viking of 6th Avenue’s imagination, to his being a “fantasy writer”, to the richness and varied timbre of his works, creating a possible bridge with exotica: a genre that reached its zenith in the ‘50s and ‘60s, when Moondog was also having his golden era.
An incentive to move in this direction was given to Hobocombo at the end of 2011 by the staff of Epsilonia, an experimental music show broadcast by Radio Libertaire in Paris. This collaboration brought Hobocombo to create “Witch of Endor”, a radio production in twelve parts describing twelve unusual and surreal soundscapes where Moondog’s urban field recordings mingle with recordings collected in those very same years by ethnomusicologists in the Italian countryside. These unpredictable combinations of Sardinian folklore, baroque counterpoint and Sixth Avenue background noise became raw material for their new album. Another of its roads leads towards exotica, using the same process as Les Baxter when he would add Amazon parrots to his big band.
This is why “The Magnetic Sound of Hobocombo” allows to touch African wax printed fabrics, to join Native American ceremonies, to dance for sun rituals and to be part of myths and rites both existing and (most often) imaginary. It includes Italian folklore instruments, Moondog sound inventions (such as the Trimba), African masks, surreal palm trees over iced lakes, cables and analogue synthesizer patches to mix and match.
Moondog rhymes with Robert Wyatt, Roberto Leydi and his collection of ethnomusicological recordings “Italia Vol.1″, Les Baxter, Joe Meek, Duke Ellington and his “Jungle Sound”, Congotronics, Loningisa, minimal music, exotica, Wendy Carlos.
Two guest musicians from the Berlin “Echtzeitmusik” scene, Nils Ostendorf and Simon James Phillips, also perform on the album. The mastering was done by Doug Henderson, who mixed Antony and the Johnsons’ “I Am a Bird Now” in 2005.
credits
released November 4, 2013
released 11 November 2013
Recorded by Obst Und Gemüse mobile studio in Berlin, Bologna and Cerro Veronese, June 2011 – July 2012
Mixed by Hobocombo at Helal et Pazari studio, Neukölln, Berlin, July 2012
Mastered by Douglas Henderson at micro-moose-berlin, August 2013
Produced by Hobocombo
Songs by
Moondog: Theme & variations, Utsu, Canon #6 and #18, To a Sea Horse
Robert Wyatt: East Timor
Hobocombo: Desert Boogaloo, Response, Baltic dance, The old Serge and the flutes, Five reasons.
Hobocombo is Francesca Baccolini, Andrea Belfi and Rocco Marchi
Hobocombo played: Alto and sopranino Recorder, Boogaloops, Bull fiddle, Dayereh, Diatonic accordion, Drums, Ekdahl Moisturizer, Eko Tiger, Electric guitar, Electric Oo, Elka ek44, Furstein upright piano, Glockenspiel, Handclaps, Hohner pianet T, Korg MS10, Lap Steel, Nord modular, Serge modular synthesizer, Shakers, Steel drum, Trimba, Voice, Whistles, Woodblock, Xylophone.
Guest musicians
Nils Ostendorf: Trumpet on Desert boogaloo and Response
Simon James Phillips: Grand Piano on Response and Canon #18 (adagietto)
Italian folk music recordings on Theme and variations and The Old Serge and the flutes from Italia Vol.1, edited by Roberto Leydi – (C) 1970 Albatros VPA 8082 – (P) 2009 Albatros Nota – www.nota.it
Hobocombo is Andrea Belfi at drums, percussion and voice, Rocco Marchi at guitar, synth and voice, Francesca Baccolini at
double bass and voice. Hobocombo re-interpretes some of Moondog's pre-minimalist tunes, canon based songs and his odd snaketime rhythms with drums, double bass, electric guitar and voices.
The result are beautiful and hypnotic songs, with a contemporary psychedelic feeling....more
These three pieces, a selection from a wider project created in June 2011 in Berlin’s Kunstlerhaus Bethanien, are new arrangements of music from the “Video Days” soundtrack. HOBOCOMBO