In 2008, the core trio that make up Woven Skull began gathering together in the home of two of the members, set deep in the bogs and forests of County Leitrim: an empty, sparse area in the northwest of Ireland known for its myths of shee, tales of lake monsters, and calls of otherworldly beings in the still of the night. Several years experimenting with combinations of instrumentation, kitchen utensils, seashells, footsteps, chimes, recordings of cats purring and frogs mating led to their current sound which combines densely propulsive guitar, distorted mandola and endless cyclical rhythms. Woven Skull strip and scrape what they can out of minimal instrumentation to teeter on the brink of total sonic meltdown creating engulfing, raw primal drones and damaged rock manoeuvres. This sound draws on the influences of the combined backgrounds of the trio with Aonghus (guitar) and Willie (percussion) born and bred in Dublin and Natalia (mandola) born in Ukraine and raised in Baltimore, Maryland. Of their most recent LP, Isaac Olson wrote that it was, “More serious than Sun City Girls and more playful than Bardo Pond... a great introduction to your new favorite cult band.”
A selection of sounds that we brought to listen to in the van during our last tour.
Agathe Max—Gypsy In a Church (Greasy Trucker Records)
A Gypsy In A Church by Agathe Max
Agathe Max and I first met when we shared a bill at a Baba Yaga's Hut gig in London. She was with her duo Mésangeand I became completely bewitched by her playing. Live, whether with a band or on her own, Agathe creates a mesh of violin magic mixed through a mastery of pedals. No action seems superfluous. Her violin bow might thump off the neck during a section that is fed into a loop and you wonder if it was maybe an accident only to find that the build up of the rhythm created by that slight thump singularly drives the whole next passage. It is meticulous. The Gypsy in a Churchalbum is Agathe solo and acoustic with two long improvised tracks. It came out on cassette in 2016 on Bristol's Greasy Trucker Records. Side A is recorded in Bristol in St. Thomas's church and Side B is from St. Leonard's in London. The spaces creep into the recordings. It makes good driving music because you get lost in time as the violin bounces around the church walls and suddenly the day has faded, twilight is spilling across the sky and and that night's venue is just around the corner. (Natalia)
Patrick Farmer & David Lacey—Pell-Mell the Prolix (caduc. Recordings)
Pell-Mell the Prolix by Patrick Farmer & David Lacey
A really tightly structured, interruptive and continually surprising concrète-ish composition by this duo of percussionists. Beautiful wood-block and dub segments deserve a mention. I found ‘Pell Mell’ to be more accessible than their earlier recording ‘Pictures of Men’ (equally worth checking out but perhaps more dense and angular in places). Ephemera of personal obsessions lumber up against indistinguishable rumblings, a passage is carved between the figurative and the unknowable. (Aonghus)
When you're stuck in traffic on the M1 between Brighton and any other part of the UK and you start to wonder why in the hell did we come to this country on a bank holiday, it's time to fire up the dashboard kettle, make a press pot of joe and throw on some Classic 'Zamrock' from 1974. This is hard rock coming straight outta Zambia, thankfully made available on vinyl at an affordable price courtesy of Mississippi Recordsin Portland, Oregon. This has become one of my Desert Island records. Sabbath infused riffs dipped in some 13th Floor Elevators psych with an explosiveness that's purely African. Before you know it, three tightly packed lanes of English Midlands holiday makers turns into three lanes with one else around. (Willie)
Tadlaouia—moul el koutchi rouicha et tadlaouia
I like to play the same albums both in the shower and in the van. I'm not quite sure why. Maybe these activities send me into the same zone? This tape gets a lot of listens in both places. I love the melding of Tadlaouia's voice with Mohamed Rouicha's string playing action. I know nothing of Tadlaouia aside from this album but I keep on eye out cause I’d love to hear more. I picked this tape up at a stall stacked floor to ceiling with cassettes. I choose it purely based on the cover. It coulda gone either way but sure, look at that shimmer in her smile. You know it's gonna be gold. (Natalia)
Three super-focused improvisations for violin, piano and zither. Shimmering drones and creaks set against more melodic playing. Moves slowly from one area to another, acoustic instruments sound like electronics and at other times like themselves. Angharad Davies played at the same festival as us a few years back, performing a piece which consisted of her bowing a single tone while gradually unwinding the string accompanied by a really subtle tape element (or that’s what my hazy memory tells me), ruled! (Aonghus)
Miles Davis—On The Corner (Columbia Records)
Raw minimalist soul funk jazz. Totally stripped down. Enough hi-hats and trumpet wah wah pedal to keep you fuzzed out and yer head boppin'. It is such a ballsy record. But then again, Miles could get away with anything. Perfect for a morning drive on tour to get the brain aligned when you don't know what the day will bring. (Willie)
Creedence Clearwater Revival —”Sinister Purpose”
When in a vortex of stalled traffic that makes me feel like my life is melting into nothing in front of me, I like to put Sinister Purposeby Creedence on repeat (though, in fairness, any Creedence will do). Everything always just seems better then. And should the traffic never end and the van never move again, well at least there's Jon Fogarty to sound out our impending demise. (Natalia)
Bob Dylan—Self Portrait (Columbia)
Listen on Spotify
I’ve been listening to ‘Self Portrait’ a lot over the past while. I’m not hugely knowledgeable about Dylan even though I’ve heard a lot of the oeuvre over the years. A cursory google before I wrote this text tells me it’s regarded as one of his worst... not so sure about that. Opens with the sublime “All the Tired Horses”... Dylan himself not singing on it kinda blew me away as an idea for an opener when I first heard the album. Gets into weird country crooning... his version of “Days of 49” is another highlight. Things get patchy and weird but whatever... the “Blue Moon” cover is pretty funny. I’m second-guessing myself having just seen all the negativity surrounding it and started to spin “Blonde on Blonde” just to check... nah... I still think it’s good! (Aonghus)
Samandtheplants—Flaming Liar (Them There)
Flaming Liar by Samandtheplants
A few different names and guises flock from the incredible studio of musician, artist and producer Sam Mcloughlin. This album as samandtheplantsis such an absolute joy that you can have it on repeat for hours and it gets more interesting. Two disc set of almost purely vocals and harmonium. Very lo-fi, raw and total magic. Sam's Lancashire accent coming through and adding a genuine feel to the recordings as real English folk music without it sounding too twee or dated. I'd advise anyone to go looking for Sam Mcloughlin's work, including his sound sculpture work and his N. Racker project. (Willie)
‘Fort Evil Fruit’ Cassette Label
We here at Woven Skull are all big fans of Fort Evil Fruit. Label boss Paul has a keen ear for what's what. It's handy to stock up on all the newest FEF releases before a tour and gradually listen through them while zoning out on the revolving landscape outside the window. One of my favorite things that came out on the label in the last few years was Crevice’s debut album. The trio from Cork all play in a variety of other bands and solo projects, run labels, have radio shows and add to the general awesomeness of Cork City. Roslyn Steer's vocals on Black Box kept swirling around inside my brain for weeks after first hearing this so listener beware! It’s catchy business. (Natalia)
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
✓ Live Streaming✓ Interactive Chat✓ Private Shows✓ HD Quality✓ Free Actions
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
It's probably the biggest difference that we've seen in our lifetime — and certainly my 20 years of working in this space — the ability for the criminals to reach a million people is there now with next to no cost. This super trawling technique, we've really seen the criminals perfect that since the start of the pandemic, it's really changed a lot and I think part of that comes down to cost. So you've got this vision of this criminal call centre that occupies a skyscraper in some distant land and they've called hoping they're going to get someone. (But) they've gotten smarter. Now, they're using technology to flood the community with messages and they're getting people right in that sweet spot of believability.
Scammers are using the same technology that legitimate companies use to send messages to potential customers en masse, Dr Lacey says. Except he says their strategy seems to be completely random. "We've seen it across board, where they've been impacted by a data breach or not — it's almost like a random number generator for mobiles," he says. "The crooks have got a server and they've plugged in a data-range, and they've just gone bang (and send out messages)." Casting such a wide net means scammers only need success from a tiny portion of messages to steal millions. "The sheer weight of text messages means you're going to get the one per cent of people unfortunately who are literally in the wrong place at the wrong time," he says. While the approach might seem random, the victims fall into a similar category. Over two-thirds of family impersonation scams have been reported by women over 55 years of age, the ACCC says. In total, 82 per cent of victims are in this age bracket and account for 95 per cent of all reported losses.
Nicholas McElroy, 'Australians have lost at least $7.2 million to the 'Hi Mum' scam. How does it work and why is it so lucrative for cybercriminals?', ABC
For many the scam might seem fairly straightforward. If it looks like your child is in trouble, you help them without a second thought. That's because scammers have zeroed in on the mental shortcuts we make every day, Dr Lacey says. In psychology it's called heuristics: the mental steps we take to simplify problems and avoid cognitive overload. "One of the vulnerabilities to us all is that as human beings, we cut corners when we're processing information," he says. "We will see things in our environment or hear things and then we'll go 'oh, that's that' and we won't wait for (any more information) and act."
Nicholas McElroy, 'Australians have lost at least $7.2 million to the 'Hi Mum' scam. How does it work and why is it so lucrative for cybercriminals?', ABC
David Lacey (Jackie Lacey’s Husband) Biography, Wiki, Age, Family, Net Worth, Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, Fast Facts You Need to Know
David Lacey (Jackie Lacey’s Husband) Biography, Wiki, Age, Family, Net Worth, Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, Fast Facts You Need to Know
David Lacey Biography, David Lacey Wiki
David Lacey is the longtime husband of Los Angeles County District Attorney Jackie Lacey. Jackie, a two-term incumbent, is up for re-election in a hotly contested election. On Monday morning, David stepped outside of his home and pulled a gun on protesters standing outside of his home, telling them to get off his porch.
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
✓ Live Streaming✓ Interactive Chat✓ Private Shows✓ HD Quality✓ Free Actions
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Éiríocht festival offers Londoners a radical St Patrick's Day alternative
Whether in Dublin or Durban, Munster or Mumbai, St Patrick’s Day is a by-word for raucous celebration. Yet wherever you are in the world, there’s always a risk that the craic may quickly descend into Guinness-fuelled cliché. Anyone who’s ever been cornered in an ex-pat pub by a Leprechaun-hatted drunkard whose great-great-Grandfather hailed from Cork, while a petrol station compilation of rebel songs plays in the background, will understand where we’re coming from.
Luckily Diatribe Records, Dublin’s leading label for experimental sounds, is offering London-based revellers a radical alternative this year. They’ve curated the inaugural Éiríocht festival, a weekend of contemporary and improvised music set to dazzle Dalston’s famous Vortex Jazz Club on the 16th and 17th of March.
‘Éiríocht’ is an old Irish word for sprawling pagan festivals that take place “without restraint or cares” – and this event definitely looks like it fits the bill. Featuring a diverse selection of Irish artists and their international collaborators, organisers describe it as a timely reminder “of the need for, and the value of, an ease in crossing borders”, and invite attendees to “rage against the seemingly ineluctable shut-down [and] proclaim and delight in what Irish and UK musicians make together.”
The full line-up can be perused on Facebook, but here are five performances MusicMap particularly recommends checking out:
Colm O’Hara / David Lacey
Having previously collaborated with sax player Catherine Sikora for a 2013 release on the excellent Irish tape label Fort Evil Fruit, Colm O’Hara will be taking up his trombone for another bout with David Lacey, a percussionist with plenty of unorthodox items in his arsenal.
Olesya Zdorovetska / Keith Lindsay
Ukrainian artist Olesya Zdorovetska teams up with Dubliner Keith Lindsay for a performance that will combine installation art, poetic improv and modular synths.
TRE: Francesco Turrisi / Nick Roth / Kate Ellis
This stellar international trio will be performing arrangements of folk music from Armenia and Italy alongside new music by the legendary John Zorn.
Umbra
The two-pronged sax attack of Chris Engel and Sam Comerford heads up this incendiary quintet, which is completed by the roving guitar of Chris Guilfoyle and the rocking rhythm section of Barry Donohue (bass) and Matt Jacobson (drums).
DJackulate
The crushed grooves and improvised scratching of Dublin’s DJackulate will bring things to the boil on Saturday night, with the 2017 CSM freestyle scratch battle champion and 2016 SMF Berlin Cut to Cut freestyle champion set to see Éiríocht festival out with a bang.
Éiríocht festival takes place at London’s Vortex Jazz Club on 16th and 17th of March. Advance tickets are available here.