I’m currently in the process of scanning and archiving print articles, interviews & reviews from over the years. More will be added to the site as time allows. Once enough have been collected, a chronological directory will created for easier access. Below are the first two I’ve archived. | ||
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Trajectories 2008 [1.90MB PDF] | EI Magazine 2005 [600kb PDF] |
social [net.work music] performance now archived
On Thursday evening june 25, 2009 at 8pm [EST] [-5GMT] a live set of SOCIAL [net.work music] was broadcast from my studio in Baltimore. The entire performance is now archived in the “work” section here at jasonsloan.com. To listen to and read about the project visit the link below.
Listen here [LISTEN]
*Update July 15: SOCIAL [net.work music], was selected to be part of Rhizome’s ArtBase collection. Rhizome is an affiliate of the New Museum of Contemporary Art.
stillstream concert now archived
If you missed my live performance Saturday night on Stillstream, I’ve archived the entire 60 minute concert in the .sound section of this site. I’ll also be adding a few more radio concerts from the archives throughout the month of July.
Listen here [LISTEN]
enjoy.
incantations verse one & two review
a new review of the final dolmen albums incantations: verse one & verse two. dolmen has been an ethno-ambient side project of mine for the last eight years with cleveland based artist steven k. smith.
both of these discs are available for purchase both as download or tactile cd in my store. they are also available in all good digital retailers like itunes, emusic, amazon, rhapsody etc.
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…”this is a Hypnagogue Highly Recommended CD. In fact, it’s more than that. It’s a disk I will absolutely insist you should not go without. Experience this music. Succumb to it.” – Hypnagogue
“I found out about Dolmen–the duo of Jason Sloan and Stephen Smith–late. Late as in this, their final album together. And now I need to go back and find everything they’ve done. Because the power and imagery that drives this two-disk set quite frankly stunned me. Too strong? Not at all. Incantations Verse: One and Verse: Two are built on dark, dense guitar-based drones and clashing, unapologetic noise paired up with aggressive tribal rhythms and longform drifts carved from shadow. These disks seethe with a sense of the ritualistic, an irresistible calling to a sensually dark and potentially dangerous place inside of ourselves. Mesmerizing, challenging and, in the end, compelling stuff that makes for one of the best offerings of the year. Disk one rises out the drum-and-static genesis of “Christ’s Burnt Monolith,” to immediately sets the listener on notice that this will not be a simple ride. “Calling Our Dead Ones Home” builds on the driving percussion that underlies much of the work here, a pulse that’s so integral that when the beat drops out, it’s like something’s been taken from you. That’s the kind of draw the disk has–this is music that hits you on a personal level because it’s connecting to some unspoken thing that you understand. “Exile from Purgatory” drifts by uneasily before hiding itself in dark noise. Feedback and rhtythm empower “Forgotten Ritual” as distorted vocal samples curl around the sound, demonstrating how well Sloan and Smith balance infectious rhythms and beats with storms of dense sound. Melodies struggle against the sound, aching to be known. It’s like hearing a secret message in the sound. “Signal Lights” is a short, comparatively calm respite of soft pads leading into the grimmer feel of “Colored Wound of Autumn.” In “Residual Haunting II” a rising beat and chanting vocal sample give way to the repeated muffled voice of a young girl. It’s like being witness to an arcane calling, and it’s hypnotic stuff. Verse: One ends with “A Past Life Reconstructed,” a 15-minute excursion where that beat-beneath-noise concept hits its stride, building itself in layers as Sloan’s guitar muscles its way forward, twisting itself around Smith’s airy swirls. And at the 8-minute mark, it just cuts loose with a sense of grim ecstasy–the culmination of the first incantation. And that’s just half of the ride…”
read the full review at: hypnagogue