Saying I Love You, I Continue to Curse Myself cover

Saying I Love You, I Continue to Curse Myself

Released

This live release on the Blast First label is unique and worth hearing because it’s one of only a few records documenting Keiji Haino’s interest in Indian music and instruments. It features two untitled tracks, the first of which is a 44-minute endurance test. It’s nominally a solo guitar piece, but it sounds more like a calliope or pipe organ pushed through such a thick layer of distortion that it’s like you’re hearing it coming from the next house over while your own house burns down around you. The second piece is its complete opposite: an 18-minute performance on the rudra veena, an Indian instrument that consists of seven or eight strings running across a cylindrical fretboard, with two globular resonators attached. Haino strums the instrument in a steady, mournful pattern while improvising lyrics in Japanese that have a wailing, almost ritualistic quality. It’s a stark and powerful performance, and after what comes before it feels like being washed in cool water.

Phil Freeman

Suggestions
Rhino XXL cover

Rhino XXL

Infinity Knives, Brian Ennals
Black Beings cover

Black Beings

Frank Lowe
Saturn Sings cover

Saturn Sings

Mary Halvorson Quintet
Liberty cover

Liberty

Dayna Stephens Trio
New York Art Quartet cover

New York Art Quartet

New York Art Quartet
Wisdom of Elders cover

Wisdom of Elders

Shabaka & the Ancestors
The Complete Machine Gun Sessions cover

The Complete Machine Gun Sessions

The Peter Brötzmann Octet