Tuesday, June 23, 2009
ENVY in KL, JULY 11th 2009!!

"Japanese hardcore/experimental band, Envy, really have a lot of things to shout about. Steve Aoki (who owns the Dim Mak label and has signed on the band) has this to say about Envy: "Their live shows are like a fucking tornado leaving people crying in the crowd out of pure emotional intensity. No joke. They are the best live band around." Zomg ... we can't wait to witness the mayhem."
Hi all,Japanese screamers Envy will be hitting Malaysia soon.
Promoted by Soundscape Records, the gig will be on
11th July 2009, at
Bentley Music Auditorium. They'll be supported by local openers
Love Me Butch and
Deng Deng Etc.Google Map link here:
http://tinyurl.com/n62dkz It's at Mutiara Damansara (Near The Curve). KittyWu Records will be sorting out tickets for the Singapore fans so if you'd like to get your hands on them, hit us up at
ticketing@kittywurecords.com.
Vliëg Mòsca ; 2:06 AM

65 Days Of Static - The Fall of Math
Over ten years ago, a new sub-genre of instrumental-based music formed in the underground called “glitch music.” A mix of electronica, industrial music and other digital noises and ambient sounds, it’s been a field without a big name, until perhaps now.
65daysofstatic, on tour with alt-rock icons The Cure this year, may bring the glitch-rock genre its most exposure yet, not only via the band’s much heralded live shows, but with the ridiculously long-delayed 2008 U.S. pressing of its critically acclaimed 2004 debut CD The Fall of Math (Monotreme Records). Sure, the band has released a couple of albums (and EPs) since then, including 2006’s One Time For All Time and last year’s The Destruction of Small Ideas record. But The Fall of Math is what put this band on the map, and until this past spring, was only available as an import in these United States.
These England natives are a complex, experimental band with a penchant for dreamy sections of post-rock music. But they can simultaneously be unpredictable too, as they often go from off-beat, CD-skipping-like sounds to hard-hitting instrumental rock (a la Mogwai) before you know it. Speaking of odd sounds, the album starts out with a loud humming noise that’s the equivalent of the sound you get if you accidentally leave your electric guitar’s instrument cable half-plugged-in to its socket. This brief tune, “Another Code Against The Gone” then gets going strong with its fuzzy, noisy drums, sampled vocals and other digital creations before easing into the epic, “Install A Beak In The Heart That Clucks Time In Arabic.” Its downbeats and quiet piano licks slowly give way to soaring guitars and booming bass guitar that get progressively heavy and at times dissonant, creating a small amount of tension that gets released during the song’s loudest and heaviest moments. The glorious “Retreat! Retreat!” is probably 65daysofstatic’s most well-known song, with its yearning guitars, punishing cymbal and drum blasts, and apparently self-confident vocal sample of someone saying, “This band is unstoppable.” Comparatively, it’s like M83-meets-Explosions In The Sky, especially the second half of the tune.
Grab a copy of 65daysofstatic’s Fall of Math CD, for it is a truly adventurous and rewarding listening for all those who enjoy experimental, yet highly structured instrumental (glitch) rock music.
Labels: 65 Days Of Static - The Fall of Math
Vliëg Mòsca ; 12:52 AM
Saturday, June 20, 2009
In envy and admiration,they crave epileptic anima to breathe. Nights take form while minimalists stood, gazed in silence. Swirl your head in, breathe out..Vliëg Mòsca(fly fly).
Vliëg Mòsca ; 3:41 AM