DWARFS OF EAST AGOUZA, THE
SASQUATCH LANDSLIDE (CONSTELLATION)
180g Vinyl. The Dwarfs trio of Maurice Louca (Lehkfa) + Alan Bishop (Sun City Girls, Sublime Frequencies) + Sam Shalabi (Land Of Kush) returns with a focussed set of rhythmic psych-trance free/improv: their first for Constellation, following releases on Sub Rosa, Akuphone, and Nawa Recordings.
Recorded by Emanuele Baratto (King Khan, Elder, Father Murphy); mixed by Jace Lasek (Elephant Stone, Sunset Rubdown, The Besnard Lakes); artwork by Mark Sullo.
Pick a small spot (a point) in front of you (a small knot of wood a dog down the way). And tightly focus on this spot.
And now slowly unfocus your gaze. Widen your gaze. Pan out without moving your eyes. Take it all in.
A smeared and pixelated surface, swelling of contour and light. (Monet's seepages of light, Altman's overlapping nomadic dialogue.) Once you have unfocused with little to no center of attention, slowly close your eyes.
And please feel very free to notice the light. All of the light that your eyes knocked back as you dilated your focal point.
This exercise can be repeated a few times. Unfocusing does not always come easily. And it is probably best to not put too much effort into it.
Best to not employ too much pressure. And we will not put too much pressure on this exercise to help us explain away the saturatedly and humidly psychedelic canopy of moan-`n-twang and slackelastic-groove of The Dwarfs of East Agouza's Sasquatch Landslide.
Mitch Hedberg has a great joke about the Sasquatch: "I think Bigfoot is blurry. That's the problem.
It's not the photographer's fault. Bigfoot is blurry! And that's extra scary to me, because there's a large out-of-focus monster roaming the countryside." Sasquatch Landslide.
A landslide of hazy configurations. Blurriness, far from a lack of detail, is an embroidering of detail, a horizontal expansion of surface and swarms of light.
The name "Sasquatch" derives from the Salish word se'sxac, which means "wild men." And Sasquatch Landslide is wild.
Everything is unravelling. Offset. Décallage. A whole host of slippery tempos and pulses as the organs, guitars and saxophones loiter and lope over a skipping hop of beats, and everything emerges always mid-stream.
It is all middle with no halfway point, no dead center, no bullseye. Everything twangs, moans, sweeps, slips, swings, skitters, slides and grooves out of nowhere.
And the almost-human voice with no mother-tongue. There is something ecstatic (an elatedly miniscule frenzy) going on here but it is pushed beyond the ecstatic: a joyous-grotesque rolling right past trance to dance.
Psychedelias appear out of the infra-spaces in between the apparitions and overlapping `regimes' and registers_pushed and squeezed far beyond the recognizable.
And these spaces groove joyously hard like some kind of illusive House music, houses completely submerged in molasses.
BigFoot-work? (Oh my!) There is not a place to throw your anchor here in the furrowing humidity.
That does and it does sound like some kind of landslide. A psychedelic encounter is a brush with the marvel of otherness.
The point from which we speak of other, becomes other itself, in an ever-storm of other-production that shreds ideas of knowing and understanding what we think is going on.
Time unhinged from the clock. Space unhinged from the frame. An unpinpointing hallucination, a hot get-down, an untethered throw-down of oscillations, fiercely, joyously, exuberantly incomprehensible.
Listening to Sasquatch Landslide, a wildly unhinged reverie.