COSMO SHELDRAKE

Today’s recommendation is so fine that he had us questioning what music itself actually is. Is it just a sequence of sounds? Is it just a process of rhythms? Are melodies just noises tapped out in an arranged series? Are harmonies just wavelengths that sound nice? How can a chain of vibrations become music? More poignantly with today’s artist, how can some people suggest what is and isn’t music? Without many traditional instruments in sight, except for keyboards plump with samples, here is a new male solo artist making truly enjoyable music almost solely from looping sequences. We’d love him just for his inventiveness and creativity, but make no mistake, he is packing some deadly music, real music, in his box of tricks.

Welcome to the world of Cosmo Sheldrake, an impossibly creative 22 year old solo artist originally from London but now living in Brighton. Here is a musician in the traditional sense of the word. If you consider that perhaps cavemen created the first songs in human history by banging sticks onto stones, then Cosmo is doing the modern equivalent, with samplers and computers as his contemporary tools. There’s no need for guitars, or drums, or any common normality, instead we meet someone mastering loops and sounds. Cosmo is the conductor of his own limitless ideas and this leads to some remarkable creations.

Consider what Beardyman does when he loops samples of his own beat boxing, but remove the comedy routine. Imagine what Grimes does when she layers up electronic sounds and twisted vocals into beautiful ice structures, although Cosmo has a warmth and a lightness not seen since Lemon Jelly. When he uses vocals they are delivered as either samples of others, chopped into new shapes, or sung by him in a babbling use of mostly unintelligible words. The songs are built up layer by layer, in a style so organic you scratch your head to imagine how computers and electronics can possibly achieve results like this. It’s more like he is using machines that wind up using a handle hidden at the back, as if they might run out of energy before the end, as beats constantly verge on collapse. This is the farm-produced end of the sampling spectrum if we consider Grimes is the stylish, modern independent boutique. This point is further proved when you see him literally performing to a batch of pigs in their sty in this enjoyable video.

Cosmo is the son of the renowned author and biochemist Rupert Sheldrake, which may go some way to explaining how his music feels like weird science in action. The family links continue as we learn that we was originally spotted busking with his brother, Merlin, in Dalston, by none other that Mercury Prize nominee, Sam Lee, who asked them both not only to perform with him, but to remix his song, The Ballad Of George Collins (see below). He has also been seen performing in a side project alongside Merlin in the band, Gentle Mystics. Musical connections continue when his biography reveals that he went to school with Bombay Bicycle Club and the guys from the band Theme Park, both of whom jammed alongside Cosmo during school sessions.

It’s the solo work that fires the synapses though, as tracks such as the smooth and endearing Rich, which features the pixie-like vocals of Anna Roo, sounding like Mr Scruff covering Aluna George. If Rube Goldberg made alternative pop music this is what would be produced. The song, Prefusify, delivers another set of samples that blur the lines between keyboards and vocals, both of which he can manipulate like Playdough. New tune, The Fly, continues his magic musical jewellery box theme, with another pop song that has instant appeal. His lyrics are decipherable this time, although just as strange, seeming to be sung from the point of view of a happy fly.

Here is a true multi-instrumentalist for the computer generation. He creates impossibly delightful symphonies, as if the mice in Bagpuss had reached out beyond children’s television, and it’s a refreshing sound in a music industry dominated by safe clichés. The genre of beatboxing doesn’t quite do this samplist justice, as although there are hip hop elements to this, we actually have a middle-class, countrified application of the Beatboxer’s new technology. He played jazz and classical piano from the age of 4 years old and has been known to play the banjo, the drums and even the double bass, so Cosmo is perfectly capable of using traditional instruments, it’s just that electronics allow him the freedom to explore his ideas that bit further. You can see him here on a TED talk, the globally-popular events designed to spread innovation and ideas, mostly using British birds as his sampled sounds. And this runs at the heart of why Cosmo is worth your attention. It’s the same reason why that Caveman picked up some sticks a few millenniums ago. Music is about play, it’s about improvisation, it’s about ideas and it’s about nonsense. Essentially this is what music is all about. It’s not about contemporary instruments, traditional band setups, or any ideas that have arrived in the last century, it’s about human nature and the desire to fuck about. And Cosmo Sheldrake fucks about better than most. (MB)

COSMO SHELDRAKE – THE FLY

COSMO SHELDRAKE – RICH (feat. ANNA ROO)

SAM LEE – THE BALLAD OF GEORGE COLLINS (COSMO SHELDRAKE REMIX)

Following our last piece about the wonderfully exciting and massively hyped artist, Flume, you would be forgiven for thinking The Recommender might have turned into a hit-chasing buzz blog, seeing as we’re now about to recommend yet another artist that’s recently gained plenty of blog inches. Hopefully regular readers will be aware that we prefer to search out new music independently, only ever writing up someone with integrity intact. We like to list artists that have not only caught our attention, but that have genuinely stolen our hearts, and just because today’s recommendation has been playing the heartstrings of others does not reduce her chances of getting coverage on the pages of this blog too, as dismissing an artist purely because she’s excited other blogs would be foolish. Hot or cold, if you’re good enough, you get on. However, the real interesting points in question with today’s artist will be to see if they’re worthy of the buzz in the first place and ultimately to ask if they have enough talent to survive it?

is a new solo artist from Denamrk, making alternative electronic pop. She’s so very nearly a new Karen O, seeing as her real name is Karen Marie Ørsted, although the comparisons she lists of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs on her Facebook remains only a tiny hint at her own sound. So why all the excitement? Well, over the last few weeks she’s earned some fantastically useful coverage on sites such as The Guardian, which assessed her comparison to Grimes, as well as blogs such as Disco Naivete, which declared her to be “the new girl in town” who may “finally be the perfect crossover between pop and indie“. There’s a wonderfully exciting sense of buzz building, but it’s not just with her ability to write music with enjoyably sharp edges that occupies an alternative space behind the pigeon holes, but it’s actually how she harnesses a sense of accessible pop that is most likely to continue the momentum long term. After all it’s pop that dominates the all-important radio waves. Elsewhere, Dre Albert mentioned comparisons to Shakira on her article for The Line Of Best Fit, whilst Paul Lester brought up similarities to Lana Del Rey on his piece for The Guardian’s A New Band A Day page. This isn’t just exciting, this is lethal.

If the British used to fight out the ownership of alternative pop music with America, then the new battleground can now be seen between Canada and Scandinavia, as the likes of Grimes or Lykke Li carve out commercial careers whilst still sounding like the future. The ease, fluidity and freedom with which electronic pop productions can be made, such as with those that have poured out from cities such as Toronto or Copenhagen in recent years, seem to have pushed indie music further and further into the background. Whereas the guitar once seemed the instrument of choice, with it’s seemingly endless boundaries, it now seems restrictive when compared to the laptop. Sure we’ve had interesting arrivals in 2012 with the likes of Pins and Savages carving out a new breed of guitar-based cool, but they both seem reflective in their sounds, whereas the likes of MØ, or Grimes before her, seem to harness something far fresher. This is music with a future – a future they’re designing for themselves.

Two songs currently exist online for MØ. The track Maiden seemed to arrive back in May, blending stuttered beats, rapid cymbals and an incandescent guitar sample, whilst she delivers a crooning vocal with a dark centre, singing “where can I start, when all of you find me crazy, coz I have a black heart“. Vocals sung as if playing a character are nothing new of course, although she chooses not to make the words unrecognisable in the same glossolalial way that Grimes does, this is more akin to how Lana Del Rey emphasizes the sexual flirt with the listener, channelling Jessica Rabbit more than she is Liz Fraser. The tune, Pilgrim, arrived more recently and seems to slow things ever so slightly, with heavier basslines and giant handclaps for a beat. There is a scaled-up size to her sound, escalated by her dominant vocals, the samples of brass and the layers of additional voices. She’s earned her attention by blending the alternative with the accessible, leading to what seemed like a packed show for the Yours Truly party at New York’s CMJ music marathon last Friday, where getting into the room seemed like the hardest thing for most attendees – a case of the accessible turning out to be inaccessible.

The key thing with buzz is that it is ultimately very difficult to survive it. How do you maintain interest when it’s this mountain-sized before you’ve even released an official single, let alone carry it all the way through to the actual debut album? On the flip-side, rushing the album, Lana Del Rey-style, can create a false-start, so there’s dangerous ground to be covered which ever way they play it. Pressure is something you just have to get used to if you write fantastic music, but we hope she has the strength to continue developing, and lines such as those she sings in Pilgrim, “All the time I just want to fuck it up and say urgh to hell with it“, don’t become statements she expresses to her record label. In truth, all the attention should set things up wonderfully well for MØ in 2013 as she sets about releasing more music, but get the timing wrong and the flame of buzz which burns so bright will not burn long. Hype gives an artist the desired traction required to get going and to ultimately get signed, but the pace at which those same commentators move their attention on will also mean she needs to work hard to maintain the excitement. The trick over the next few months will be how she capitalises on the buzz, turning attention into sales – a good start is only a good start after all – but because her alternative modern pop is so immensely strong she can not only look forward to those next steps but take them with confidence. (MB)

MØ – PILGRIM

MØ – MAIDEN