Bardo Pond & Tom Carter – 4-23-03

here is the NFO file from Indietorrents

*—#indie.torrents—*

Artist: Bardo Pond + Tom Carter

Album: 4/23/03 [Three Lobed, 2004]

Label:

Year: 2004

Genre: Psychedelic

RIAA Radar Status: SAFE

Encoder: iTunes v10.2.2

Sample Rate: 44.1 kHz

Codec: LAME MP3

Avg Bit Rate: 320 kbps

Posted by: ZGASPEN

Description / Review:

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Track Listing

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[01/05] 17:40 (17:40)

[02/05] 4:15 (4:15)

[03/05] 10:24 (10:24)

[04/05] 19:43 (19:43)

[05/05] 13:07 (13:07)

Total number of files: 5

Total playing time: 65:09

Generated: Saturday, November 10, 2012 1:15:55 AM

Created with: #indie.torrents NFO Generator (Mac) v2.3b1

Uploaded by Helgruel 2 days, 22 hours ago

this is my own rip.

Album info

Brilliant Bardo record I forgot I had due to packaging that hides itself on the shelf. This is the 2004 CD, not the 2012 2LP reissue with additional material.

Bill Meyer/Dusted at the time of original release:

The simple fact that this collaborative venture has been commercial released on a “real” CD attests to its makers recognition that they’ve come up with something special. After all, both the Philadelphian quintet Bardo Pond and San Francisco-based guitarist Tom Carter have issued plenty of music on limited-run CD-Rs. 4/23/03’s five unnamed tracks are the product of a rehearsal-room jam, but they don’t feel tossed-off; rather, their spontaneously generated coherence signals that this is a salutary meeting between complementary minds.

Bardo Pond, whose regular releases on Matador and ATP have mined murky rock riffage for psychedelic gold, have done this sort of thing before. In 1995 and 1997, under the name Hash Jar Tempo, they joined forces with New Zealand-based guitarist Roy Montgomery to make two excellent albums for Drunken Fish that combined Bardo’s lysergic atmospheres with Montgomery’s well-documented flair for cinematic sound painting. The liquid, echoing guitar figures that course through 4/23/03’s second track evoke mental images of primeval forests and dusk-shaded canyons and echo that earlier alliance.

But elsewhere Carter’s personality exerts a powerful undertow that, like his work on his own and with the band Charalambides, plumbs depths of the psyche. The doleful guitar notes that open the album could darken a well-lit room; once the rhythm section kicks in and Isobel Sollenberger’s violin commences sweeping like a reaper’s scythe, the guitarists’ playing tightens and darkens yet further, like melancholy turning to grim resolve. On track three, simmering amp buzz and rhythmically tapped fretboards chart a course from anxiety to reflection, then flare into a brief moment of clarity.

Carter, unlike Montgomery, rarely commands the foreground. It’s often hard to tell his contributions from those of the Pond’s two guitar players, John and Michael Gibbons, especially on the ensuing ghostly 20-minute epic. It begins with a ghostly sequence in which Sollenberger sings barely-heard words through her flute and the guitarists, like hooded acolytes, tug their strings in sullen response. Then the pulse quickens and the music rises, like mist lifting into clouds on a full moon night. The record ends on a drifting note, with detuned guitars drizzling over Clint Takeda’s bass figures like forgotten memories receding into the furthest corners of unconscious memory.

By Bill Meyer