Slept Ons: 2023
Reverend Kristin Michael Hayter
If you write for Dusted, you listen to music all the time and you try, at least within your general area of interest, to stay current with whatâs current. Ask any of our significant others, and theyâll say we listen to too much music, to which we inevitably reply âWhatâs that, this âtoo muchâ you speak of?â We listen to music while weâre eating, while weâre working, while weâre exercising, while weâre driving from one place to another, even while weâre brushing our teeth sometimes; though, admittedly, the sound quality is not that great in the bathroom.
Even so, we miss things. Here, in what has become an annual tradition, we revisit some of the albums that slipped away in one fashion or another, the ones that we kept putting off until it was too late, the ones we somehow didnât catch wind of until well into January, the ones we discovered tardily on other peopleâs lists and year-end podcasts and radio shows. So here are our late finds, a favorite or two each that we never got the chance to write about. Fortunately, unlike bread and fresh fruit and bunches of cilantro, albums donât go bad if you let them sit for a while.
Die EnttĂ€uschung und Alexander Von Schlippenbach â Monkâs Casino Live At Au Topsi Pohl (Two Nineteen)
This record wasnât so much slept on as patiently sleuthed. Die EnttĂ€uschung, the long-running German quartet (their name translates as The Disappointment, an appellation that says more about their sense of humor than the quality of their ever-buoyant reimagining of bebop and early free jazz) started selling it at gigs in the spring of 2023. I bided my time, and when I made it to Berlin last fall, scoring a copy was on my agenda. To this day, the record and the internet are near strangers; while you can buy it from Bandcamp, thereâs no download, streaming or videos. So, youâll have to just take it from me that Die EnttĂ€uschungâs reunion with now-octogenarian pianist Alexander von Schlippenbach will take wrinkles off your brow. The first time that these musicians recorded together as Monkâs Casino, back in 2005, they performed every one of Thelonious Monkâs compositions over three CDs; pith was essential. The repertoire hasnât changed this time, but the approach is looser. Crammed into the intimate confines of the now-shuttered Au Topsi Pohl just as Omicron started ruining parties, the five musicians goose the tempos, spike the solos with impertinence, and veer around Monkâs sharp angles with a combination of intimate familiarity and belt-busting abandon.
Bill Meyer
Reverend Kristin Michael Hayter â SAVED! (Perpetual Flame Ministries)
Not slept on so much as avoidedâ and why, at this point I am not entirely sure. When I saw Kristin Hayter perform under her previous Lingua Ignota moniker back in December of 2022, she opened with a set of devotional songs on piano, a variety of metallic objects set and chains draped across the instrumentâs interior string works. It was extraordinary, and SAVED! features the same basic set of raw, austere elements: that prepared piano, Hayterâs remarkable voice and the problematics of faith. The avoidance may stem from my own fraught relations to the sort of grim Protestantism Hayter reimagines; I spend some time around fire-and-brimstone Baptism as a child, and it left a mark on me. She wove some of that language and those textures into the excellent Lingua Ignota record Sinner Get Ready, but there they were much more symbolic, and largely couched in specific fundamentalisms (Amish and Mennonite) that distanced them somewhat. The sounds and spiritual gestures on SAVED! are a good deal more familiar to me, and they haunt. Likely the haunting is the point. Certainly âAll of My Friends Are Going to Hellâ and âI Know His Blood Can Make Me Wholeâ smolder and then burn with varieties of hellfire I have smelled before. One can also hear those songs more metaphorically, and âI Will Be with You Alwaysâ (the best thing on the record) is replete with images and intensities that call to multiple levels of meaning, simultaneously and sublimely. SAVED! is a hard record for me to listen to, and thatâs why I have come, somewhat belatedly, to prize it so highly.
Jonathan Shaw
Illusion of Safety â Pastoral (Korm Plastics)
Daniel Burke has been carefully and consistently nurturing his Illusion of Safety project for 40 years, and Iâve been embarrassingly ignorant of the output until now. Burke released multiple audio artifacts in 2023, including a 40th anniversary ten-cassette box set, so choosing a single album to write about for the Slept On column was a daunting undertaking. Pastoral is unique in that it shows off a more delicate and expansive side of the Illusion of Safety oeuvre. Itâs also one of the few music-focused objects that the stalwart Korm Plastics label has released in years; the imprint focuses on the written word these days. Sonically, Burke has established a series of vignettes that follow a similar pattern. The music flows from short, sharp attacks into lengthy sustained quietude. Burke unleashes his jarring, frantic salvos both percussively and synthetically, and these brief but unsettling periods morph into slowly churning drone swarms. Given that this is just one example of Burkeâs sonic vernacular, Iâm excited to hear more. Thankfully, when it comes to Illusion of Safety, Iâve been a veritable Rip Van Winkle.
Bryon Hayes
Malla â Fresko (Solina)
So slept on was Malla Malmivaaraâs second solo album that even the normally reliable Beehype missed it, but even if you did happen to notice its inclusion on my midyear list, overstating how well-crafted and immersive Freskoâs dance-pop tracks are is hard to do. It makes sense given sheâs better known for her acting career, but Mallaâs been in the Finnish music game for a long time, too â first in the short-lived mid-aughts house trio Elisabeth Underground, then as herself with 2019âs âSabrinaâ single (which got a Jori Hulkkonen remix, a guy who once redid M83) that ended up paving the way for her self-titled 2021 debut full-length. Despite using similar synth arpeggios and a healthy dose of vocal reverb as she did on Malla, Fresko is a little bit darker, moodier, more down in it. Lead single âMoiâ (âhiâ in English) tells the tale, its perfectly crafted video full of young Rolf Ekroth models doing things like looking impossibly cool in ridiculous outfits and having fashion shows with ATVs in snowy back alley Helsinki parking lots are a perfect marriage of audio and video, images and a melody burned in my brain the moment I saw it. It is very much a dance record flush with tech-house tweaks and no grander artistic ambitions, but Mallaâs barely crested 40; now that sheâs pledged more time to her music career, itâs entirely possible Fresko is but a warmup for something bolder â and even if itâs not, you could do much worse than a third album full of body movers like this. Hi is right.
Patrick Masterson
Kevin Richard Martin â Black (Intercranial)
Ostensibly a eulogy to Amy Winehouse, Kevin Richard Martinâs Black is a deeply humane expression of isolation, loss and grief. Built from the ground up, the bass deep and warm, swathes of glacial arpeggiated synths and beats that hint at the club. Notes echo and ripple away to create silhouettes of solitude, a tangible manifestation of absence. Despite the deep weight of his music, Martin imbues Black with an incredible delicacy. His abstract architecture allows the mind to roam and the listener to connect with emotional truths. Itâs the balance Martin finds between the particular and universal that gives Black itâs power. In the strutting bassline of âCamden Crawlingâ smeared with narco/alcoholic fuzz, the looming threat of âBlakeâs Shadowâ and the bleary saxophone in âBelgrade Meltdownâ there are the faintest echoes of Winehouseâs sound which emerge from the depths of Martinâs echo chambers. A work of terrible sadness, great beauty, empathy and comfort.
Andrew Forell
Derek Monypeny â Cibola (2182 Recording Company)
Cibola eased into the world as 2022 turned into 2023, but it took me nearly a year to get to it. Monypeny is a confirmed westerner, having lived in Arizona, Oregon, and (currently) the California desert, and an awareness of both the wrongfulness and the good fortune of living in that neck of the woods infuses Cibola, which is named for one of the American southwestâs legendary cities of gold (helpful hint; if you ever encounter a conquistador looking for gold, tell them itâs somewhere else). Monypeny alternates between guitar, shahi baaja, and on electric autoharp the LPâs seven tracks, and Kevin Corcoran contributes time-stopping metal percussion to one of them. The music likewise toggles between stark evocations of space and swirling submersions into nether states. In either mode, Monypeny effectively suggests the gorgeous immensity and pitiless history of the land around him.
Bill Meyer
The Sundae Painters â S-T (Flying Nun)
One minute, The Sundae Painters are churning wild screes of noisy guitar, the next they construct airy psychedelic pop songs of a rare unstudied grace. The band is a super group of sorts â Paul Kean and Kaye Woodward of the Bats, Alex Bathgate of the Tall Dwarfs and the late Hamish Kilgour of the Clean â convening in loose-limbed, joyful mayhem in songs that glisten and shimmer and roar. âHollow Wayâ roils thick, muddy textures of drone up from the bottom, the slippery bent notes of sitar (thatâs Bathgate) and Woodwardâs diaphanous vocals floating free of a visceral murk. âAversionâ lets unhinged guitar shards fly over the thump of grounding drums as Kilgour chants inscrutable poetry. The two HAP tracks, I and II, stretch out in locked-in, psychotropic grooves, relentless forward motion somehow dissolving into an endless ecstatic now. This full-length, sadly the only one weâll ever have from the Sundae Painters now that Kilgour is gone, is as good as anything that its esteemed participants ever did in their more famous bands, and thatâs saying a lot.
Jennifer Kelly
U SCO â Catchinâ Heat (Self Released)
Hereâs the extent of what I currently know: Someone I have on Facebook posted a link to it as one of his favorite records of the year, and someone I donât know responded that they bought a copy of the cassette before the first track even finished. U SCO are Jon Scheid (bass), Ryan Miller (guitar), and Phil Cleary (Drums) and they are from and/or based in Portland Oregon. According to Discogs and Bandcamp Catchinâ Heat is the first thing theyâve released since 2016. Thatâs it! I started listened to this with the same box-checking, due diligence energy I tend to have for the dozen or so records I hear about one way or another after Iâve already done my year-end writing; most of them, every year, I donât even make it through one play (the fatigue has fully set in by this point in the process). But sure enough before the end of that first track, I knew this was going to have to be the record I slept on. Itâs perfectly structured, with extra-long, absolute blowouts beginning and ending the record, the second and second-last tracks being the two shortest and the only moments of relative calm, and the middle two making up a strong core that both brings in some elements not found elsewhere on Catchinâ Heat (the vocals on âtrrremâ) and is just the most straightforward version of the absolute burners U SCO can clearly summon up on command (âwoe dimensionâ). As great and arresting as that opening track is, though, the closing âabyssal hymnâ might be the real highlight here, bringing in clarinet and saxophone to add a whole new layer of skronk to what theyâre cooking. Iâve listened to this record about 10 times in a couple of days, and they deserve to sell out of that run of cassettes.
Ian Mathers













