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Loren Mazzacane & Kath Bloom - Sing The Children Over LP

There’s far too much hyperbole in the record biz, but it’s no exaggeration to call this one of the deadstock finds of the century. Hidden away for forty years on an island in Maine called—we kid you not—Vinalhaven, boxes of original copies of Loren Mazzacane and Kath Bloom’s formerly scarce 1982 LP Sing The Children Over have now been unearthed and are plentifully available at Ergot Records.

A singer and songwriter from New Haven, Kath Bloom’s place in the pantheon of crestfallen folk is undeniable. Largely eschewing metaphor and allegory, her songs cut straight to the core like real, direct communication between lovers, unrestrained by the bridles of prudence—not confessional, but absolutely vulnerable. Between 1978 and 1984, she released ten tender records in collaboration with Loren Mazzacane, years before he adopted the surname Connors and became widely recognized as one of experimental music’s singular guitarists. All of these recordings are great, but Sing The Children Over stands out for containing what might be the duo’s signature song in “The Breeze / My Baby Cries.” From its arresting opening line—“I’d like to touch you, but I’ve forgotten how”—the song unfailingly causes time to stand still as its titular breeze breaks hearts left and right. Accompanying Kath, Loren’s contorted impressions of Delta and country blues are entangled with wordless, mournful vocal utterances, hummed and moaned in imitation of the dogs that passed by his window—as Kath sings, “my puppy howls with the moon.”

Alongside six intimate original songs, the duo’s sole LP for the short-lived Ambiguous Records acknowledges their roots with five traditional numbers and one tune each penned by C. Austin Miles and Robert Johnson. Contemporary listeners might recognize some of this material as having been featured in DJ Sundae’s 2024 entry into the Tabi Tapes series or “The Breeze / My Baby Cries” from Bill Callahan’s excellent cover.

Near mint, unplayed copies, most of which are still in (open) shrink.

11/7: Ron House, DJ Vinnie Martini

 

Ron House
DJ Vinnie Martini

Friday, November 7
8:30pm


Ergot Records

$10 at the door


Three years ago, we hosted Columbus legend Ron House for a solo performance at the shop, and November 7th we’re doing it again.

Ron is perhaps best known as the frontman for Thomas Jefferson Slave Apartments, whose incendiary 1995 debut Bait and Switch was one of just seven albums released by Johan Kugelberg’s American Recordings subsidiary Onion Records. As a member of Great Plains, Counter Intuits, Psandwich, and—with Jim Shepard—Ego Summit, he’s living proof that Ohio has always been punk rock’s fertile crescent. For 40 years, Ron’s inebriated, primordial snarl has provided literate urgency to visions of an underground populated by negative guest lists, philosopher queens, loser record collectors, baffling interscene couplings, and bars where anything is possible. Yet even at his snottiest, Ron’s infectious bravado and sardonic wit belie a poignant tenderness especially potent in the solo, acoustic mode we’re lucky to have in store for us.

Ron is pictured above (left) beside Tom Lax (center) of Siltbreeze Records, who issued Thomas Jefferson Slave Apartments’ Negative Guest List EP, and DJ Vinnie Martini (right), who will be returning to the 1s and 2s for this occasion.

9/18: DJ Sundae

 


DJ Sundae

Thursday, September 18
7-9 pm

Ergot Records


Free, with sundaes courtesy of Superiority Burger



DJ Sundae first came on our radar when Tommy McCutchon of Unseen Worlds insisted we check out the Sky Girl compilation Sundae had assembled with fellow French digger Julien Dechery around the time of its 2016 reissue by Efficient Space. An intimate collection of private press songcraft circa 1961-1991, Sky Girl has been close to our hearts ever since; the caliber of innocent sincerity, tender sensitivity, and melancholic aura it evinces so subtly potent as to rank it alongside the Anthology of American Folk Music as an evergreen channel of access to a(nother) vanishing era.

In his liner notes to Sky Girl, Ivan Smagghe goes through verbal contortions to avoid using the word “curator”—in this day and age an admirable omission which also conveys some of the magic of DJ Sundae’s work. Whether within the context of his monthly No Weapon Is Absolute NTS Radio show with Cosmo Vitelli or the mixes he’s made for The Trilogy Tapes and Tabi Tapes, there’s a real sense of humility at play in Sundae’s transmissions, which unfold like a treasured mixtape made by a dear friend, sequenced with love.

DJ Sundae also runs the Idle Press label, which has released music by HTRK’s Jonnine and a mix by Time Is Away, both of which are available, in addition to the Sky Girl LP, at the shop.

4/12: Christoph Heemann, Zosha Warpeha, Matt Krefting, DJ Daniel DiMaggio



Christoph Heemann
Matt Krefting
Zosha Warpeha 
DJ Daniel DiMaggio

April 12, 2025
7pm

Presented with Shared Shapes

Secret Williamsburg residence
(address TBA to ticket holders)

SOLD OUT

In 1983, Christoph Heemann co-founded HNAS (Hirsche Nicht Aufs Sofa), a surrealist industrial group whose absurd tape collage reached its apotheosis on classic albums Im Schatten Der Möhre (Dom, 1987) and the Steven Stapleton-produced Melchior (United Dairies, 1986). Foregoing the humor inherent in HNAS’ music, in 1993 Heemann’s practice turned to recording extended suites of deep, crepuscular drone—which he has called “ear-films”—assembled with a delicate, oneiric touch that is truly alchemical. He has been a sometime member of Organum, Nurse With Wound, and Current 93 and collaborated with the likes of Jim O’Rourke and Edward Ka-Spel (as Mimir), Andrew Chalk (as Mirror), Timo Van Luijk (as In Camera), Will Long (as Hollywood Dream Trip), and Merzbow. This will be the German musician’s first New York performance since 2012.

Matt Krefting is a writer and musician based in Holyoke, Massachusetts. His writing has appeared in The Wire, The Huffington Post, Bull Tongue Review, and elsewhere. A member of Son of Earth, The Believers, Idea Fire Company, and Sunburned Hand of the Man, he also creates his own solo music for cassettes. His music has been published by Open Mouth, Kye, and Ultra Eczema, among others.

Zosha Warpeha is a composer-performer working in a meditative space at the intersection of contemporary improvisation and folk traditions. Using bowed stringed instruments alongside her own voice, her long-form compositions explore transformations of time and tonality. She performs primarily on Hardanger d’amore, a sympathetic-stringed instrument closely related to the Norwegian Hardanger fiddle. Her current work is informed by the cyclical forms, rhythmic elasticity, and the physical momentum of Nordic folk music.

12/7: Af Ursin, Sarah Hennies, DJ Vivid Oblivion

 



AF Ursin
Sarah Hennies
DJ Vivid Oblivion

December 7, 2024
7pm

Presented with Shared Shapes

Secret Williamsburg residence
(address TBA to ticket holders)

SOLD OUT


Over nearly three decades, the Belgium-based Af Ursin has released a steady stream of alchemical recordings both solo and in collaboration with the likes of Anne Gillis, Christoph Heemann (as In Camera), and Andrew Chalk (as Elodie). With antecedents within both the more esoteric strains of industrial musick and the classical avant-garde, it would be tempting to call Af Ursin a torchbearer for a hallucinatory approach to expansive sound if not for the hushed, chamber ambience of much of his output. Candlebearer seems a more apt metaphor for the blurred timbres of his structured improvisations; a music that passes intimately through darkness without entirely illuminating it.

In addition to his La Scie Dorée imprint, Af Ursin runs the Metaphon label, dedicated to publishing electronic and instrumental music from the 20th century, with a focus on Belgian composers as well as the music of Michael Ranta—an American composer and percussionist best known as a performer of choice for Stockhausen, Jean-Claude Éloy, and Luc Ferrari. Ranta serves as the connective tissue linking Af Ursin with Sarah Hennies, who has undertaken a recording project documenting never before heard Ranta chamber works mostly composed in the 1970s while he was living in Taiwan. This November, Important Records issued Transits: Volume 1, the first in this series.

Sarah Hennies is a composer and percussionist based in upstate New York whose work is concerned with a variety of musical, sociopolitical, and psychological issues including queer and trans identity, psychoacoustics, and the social and neurological conditions underlying creative thought. As a scholar and performer she is engaged with ongoing research about the percussion music of Iannis Xenakis. She is currently a Visiting Assistant Professor of Music at Bard College and her work has been released by Blume, Black Truffle, and New World Records. For this event, she performs with cowbells and singing bowls given to her by Michael Ranta.

10/16 - 11/13: Conrad Schnitzler - The Cassette CONcert exhibition and performance at Ergot Records

 



Conrad Schnitzler: The Cassette CONcert

an exhibition organized with Gen Ken Montgomery 


October 16 - November 13, 2024


Ergot Records

32 E. 2nd St.

New York, NY 10003



Conrad Schnitzler was born in 1937 in Düsseldorf and studied sculpture with Joseph Beuys before abandoning all of his sculptures in a grassy field and turning his attention to experiments with synthesizer and tape. He was an early member of Tangerine Dream and a founding member— alongside Dieter Moebius and Hans-Joachim Roedelius—of Kluster, with whom he recorded three LPs before leaving in 1971, prompting the changing of the spelling of their name to Cluster. He also founded a short-lived Krautrock super group called Eruption, with a revolving membership that included Klaus Schulze and Manuel Göttsching as well as members of Embryo, Agitation Free, and Amon Düül.


A non-musician in possession of one the first Synthie A synthesizers in 1970, Schnitzler turned to cassettes as a means of layering various single-voiced tracks to create larger compositions that were distinct and recognizable, yet constantly in flux. He first created the Kassettenorgel (cassette organ), consisting of two large black cabinets containing six stereo tape decks, all internally wired to a stereo output through which he could feed pre-recorded cassettes of his choosing. This concept was extended to mobile cassette actions, often carried out in public spaces, during which Schnitzler would wear a belt of walkmen wired to a megaphone built into a metal helmet worn on his head.


These practices culminated in the creation of the Cassette Concert, which Ken Montgromery has defined as:


a method of composing and performing electronic music in a dynamic way [consisting] of a group of recorded cassettes containing single tracks of a larger composition, intended for live performances that can be given anywhere in the world, at any time, by anybody. When these groups of cassettes are played simultaneously, the combined sounds constitute the basic, although variable, form of the composition.


One of Schnitzler’s closest collaborators, Montgomery was the first authorized conductor of the Cassette Concert. In 1989, he created his own performance venue, Generator Sound Art Gallery—located at 200 E. 3rd St. in the East Village—featuring an octophonic sound system specifically designed to conduct Schnitzler’s Cassette Concerts in a weekly series, presented in pitch black, called Music in the Dark.


Shnitzler was prolific until his passing in 2011, releasing hundreds of recordings of idiosyncratic electronic music on labels like Edition Block, Egg Records, Sky Records, and Generations Unlimited—a label he founded in 1987 with David Prescott and Montgomery. He dreamed of a Thousander Program, a Cassette Concert for one thousand cassettes, which has yet to be realized.


The exhibition features a selection of photos, collages, ephemera, and a drawing related to Schnitzler's Cassette Concert project and collaborations with Montgomery.


To mark the opening of the Conrad Schnitzler: The Cassette Concert, Gen Ken Montgomery CONducts a Cassette CONcert at the shop on the evening of October 16th.

10/1: Bridget St. John live at Ergot Records

 


Sunday, October 1st at 8 pm

Bridget St. John
with DJ Robert McNeill

Ergot Records
32 E. 2nd St.
New York, NY 10003

SOLD OUT


In 1969, legendary BBC DJ John Peel founded Dandelion Records to release the debut LP by Bridget St. John. Produced by Peel and featuring John Martyn on second guitar, Ask Me No Questions would be the first of three astonishing folk records for the label by the English guitarist and singer-songwriter, possessed with a husky voice that might evoke that of Nico’s if not for its generous warmth and emanation from a place of intimacy and connectedness. Still, St. John’s is surely a Sunday morning music, one that finds calm and delight in life’s elemental cycles. Her sage mantras, both original and borrowed, have the power to be at once cathartic and gently enlightening. Alongside ageless themes of love and loss, her songs explore a city/country dialectic, finding a pastoral tranquility within urban life that can prove especially therapeutic for New Yorkers on the grind. Indeed, after recording a fourth album for Chrysalis in 1974, St. John moved to Greenwich Village in 1976 and has kept a relatively low profile ever since. In addition to her own music, St. John appears on Kevin Ayers’ Shooting at the Moon, Michael Chapman’s Deal Gone Down, the Nick Drake covers compilation Green Leaves, and, most recently, CS + Kreme’s Orange. She is absolutely a peer to each of these artists, a member of the continuum of great British folk masters, and we’re honored to be hosting her at the shop.