Carrie & Lowell – 10th Anniversary Edition
March 31st, 2025 , by Asthmatic Kitty
Asthmatic Kitty Records celebrates the ten-year anniversary of Carrie & Lowell with an expanded double-LP album that includes seven previously unreleased bonus tracks, a 40-page art book, and a new essay by Sufjan Stevens.
Read the Rest...Truly Gone
April 26th, 2017 , by Asthmatic Kitty
This limited edition 7 inch marks the signing of Angelo De Augustine to Asthmatic Kitty Records. “Truly Gone” will appear on a forthcoming record, while “Magical” is exclusive to this 7 inch. Includes digital download. Limited to 100.
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Island Universe Story: Selected Works
February 16th, 2016 , by Asthmatic Kitty
Human and machine also grow closer in Helado Negro’s Island Universe Story: Selected Works. Created alongside his recent performed work, the album compiles songs chosen from three “Island Universe Story” cassette tapes released between 2012-2014. If the tapes represent the subconscious exploration of other worlds in Helado Negro’s imagination, then this record, with its clear vinyl embedded with tinsel, suggests a certain leakiness between those dimensions. Some of the records contain silver threads, the sheddings of his Tinsel Mammals that have joined him on stage in cities far and near. Other records in this limited edition series contain the remnants or rumor of further realms, with the blue, gold, or multi-colored metallic sweepings left behind by creatures we haven’t yet met and can only imagine. Perhaps the tinsel itself recalls the actual, ionized tape, pulled from their original cassettes.
The album begins with a soft march in “We Will You,” building louder and joined by a fully present being pronounced in marble mouthed vocoder. Recognizable as spoken language, yet indecipherable, this voice meets another, legibly human, and we’re game for more, “you’re a strange impossible feeling, let’s go strange impossible stealing.” From here each song offers a sketch of a unique land within the same cosmos. On “Enfocando“ Lange dreamily repeats the Spanish word for “focusing,” perhaps unconvinced that he should find gravity through the jaunty distractions of a spacy lounge or field of blooming curiosities. All electro save for Lange’s well-deployed heavy breathing, oohs and ahs, “Detroit” evokes an exhilarating night drive on empty wide-laned roads, while “Mamember” and “Salve Nada” each find at times a softer squish and ooze, an organic, fleeting, tactility. While primarily composed in solitude, the intimate wandering continues in the orchestral swarm of “Stop Living Dead,” created with composer Trey Pollard and a double string quartet and “Mitad del Mundo” featuring the talents of Wilco’s Mikael Jorgenson.
Limited to 1,000 pressings of a variety of colors with art work by Paul Coors, the album immediately suggests a relic loosed from a dream. Set into motion Island Universe Stories: Selections carries us into the dark to find galaxies within galaxies, the human, the machine, the space between. We let go of charting the stars in resolute focus, and greet mysteries with wonder.
I Had Grown Wild
April 21st, 2015 , by Asthmatic Kitty
Limited Edition (500) Translucent Blue vinyl available Fall 2015.
I Had Grown Wild is the cumulative EP in a series of releases that began in 2014, and is the followup to the success My Brightest Diamond’s 2014 full-length This Is My Hand. This EP of six tracks includes two new original songs from MBD, and a remix of “This Is My Hand” in both English and French.
The EP begins with a minimalist but driving remix of the LP’s title track, “This Is My Hand,” sung in French. “Say What”, inspired by a poem by Staceyann Chin, recontextualizes images from Billy Holiday’s “Strange Fruit” and issues a challenge to compare and contrast the experience of black and white Americans. Continuing on the subject of children, “Bronze Head” lets off the steam with text taken directly from William Butler Yeats’ poem by the same name. Birth, the body, and the afterlife all take their places on this EP, with the concluding song “Apparition”. Since first singing Stephane (2 accents needed) Mallarme’s poem set by Claude Debussy for the song cycle “Quatre chansons de jeunesse” in college when she was studying classical voice, Shara fell in love with the image of the ghost who with glowing hair who leaves behind a trail of white bouquets of perfumed stars.
Bonus tracks include an English version of the remix of “This Is My Hand,” and a remix of “Lover Killer” by The Hood Internet.
Fumes
July 28th, 2014 , by Asthmatic Kitty
As the sisters have grown as people and artists, so has their sound evolved. The scope is broadened here. The music is expansive, the instrumentation multi-layered. This is an entrancing production that allows both singers to stretch out in new directions.
Read the Rest...Being
May 28th, 2014 , by Asthmatic Kitty
CD and LP include immediate download of full album in 320kbps MP3.
LP also includes download coupon to MP3 and FLAC.
“Being is a fracture. A note between thought and expression. When I wrote this record I was riding a wave of light and dark; I still am. It’s not a twisted path but one that aspires to harmony. In all the little bits that make up the bulk of the ‘songs’ of this album is a jump. Every step in the process of this record felt like, and continues to feel like a jump. From the bass line to the album ‘description.’ So here I am jumping into your mercy, a leap I will never forget. I feel the future can only bring better or worse and definitely not the same. So this record is a thing that will never happen again. I hope you enjoy it.” – Caila Thompson-Hannant
Canadian? Buy it from our friends at Paper Bag Records here.
Making The Saint
April 7th, 2014 , by Asthmatic Kitty
CD and LP include immediate download of full album in 320kbps MP3.
LP also includes download coupon to MP3 and FLAC.
Making The Saint is my newest full-length record. I recorded it inside a cabin in the San Bernardino mountains of California. The owners told me to keep an eye out for ghosts. When I started driving up into the mountains, I didn’t have any new music prepared. I’d just finished an East Coast tour with my Psychic Temple band; six members strong on the road and twelve musicians back at home. A big band for sure. We’d already booked another tour with the guys, each of whom have their own bands. As I drove, I found myself yearning for an intimate, unpolished sound. Even though Psychic Temple is a big deal, I love small records. When I say “small record,” I think of Sandy Bull’s Fantasias for Guitar and Banjo, Bill Evans trio albums at the Village Vanguard, Fripp & Eno’s No Pussyfooting, or Thelonius Monk’s sublime Solo Monk. Each of these albums is simple and direct. Making The Saint is a small record too. I didn’t belabor it. Everything came together quickly. I followed my instincts. Making The Saint is also a spiritual retreat; a healthy and necessary separation after so many strong collaborations. If you’re Sufist, you’d call this khalwa. In Japanese Zen Buddhism, it’s known as sesshin. The Santerian process of Asiento requires the initiate to dress in white garments and avoid physical contact for one year. Like so many have done before me, I forced myself into solitude and found something new. I recommend listening to this album on a Sunday morning before the day makes an imposition. I hope you enjoy it. – Chris Schlarb
Flying Scroll Flight Control
March 31st, 2014 , by Asthmatic Kitty
CD and LP Include immediate download of singles, with full album MP3 download emailed upon release date.
LP includes download card for additional formats.
Custom slipmat available – perfect for the pop-bottle clear edition!
Half-handed Cloud’s John Ringhofer began writing songs for what would become Flying Scroll Flight Control a few months after the release of 2010’s Stowaways album. He’d married, moved out of the Berkeley, CA church he’d lived in since 2003, and into an Oakland, CA co-housing community.
In the summer of 2011, Ringhofer’s wife accepted a temporary post-doc at a Brussels, Belgium museum, and the couple relocated to Europe for six months. Thanks to the intricacies of international bureaucracy, John was not permitted to seek formal employment in Belgium, so his days were filled with songwriting and making rough demos with the few instruments he’d been able to pack. He improvised arrangements on what was available to him: rhythms on boxes, ziplock bags, the radiator. He made field recordings of Belgian crosswalk tickers and pond ducks. He tuned the dings of a microwave oven. After the couple returned to California in early 2012, John began to re-record some of these demos into songs on a 16-track ½” reel-to-reel tape recorder, then mixed and embellished them in Brooklyn, NY with Sufjan Stevens in September 2013. These tunes became Flying Scroll Flight Control.
This album presents Dada interior-architectural songs, in the mode of Kurt Schwitters’ Merzbau, the sound of Robert Rauschenberg’s cardboard combines, interrupted by Futurist noise intoner music of collision. They’re integrated with the radiant flicker of Stan Brakhage’s domestic/personal 1960s art films, the mechanized music of Conlon Nancarrow, Mister Rogers’ avant-garde children’s operas, and the methods of grunge-era home-taping alchemists Eric’s Trip, with scriptures giving voice to the unknown.
Particularly encouraged by German Fluxus artist Joseph Beuys’ desire to unite spirit and science, Ringhofer identifies Flying Scroll Flight Control’s arrangements with the most basic building blocks of life, the structures of atoms: mostly empty space and a dense core, around which thinner layers wind—tiny, slippery, whirring, fly-by electrons, perpetually in motion. The lyrics are primarily based on the most ancient, foundational, and audacious of Christian texts (possibly early hymns), quoted in the letters of Paul of Tarsus.
The album features a 5-person female choir, manipulated recording tape, fuzz bass, clarinet, some piano, a child’s Magnus air organ, rhythmic zipper, trombone, a cushioned stylophone stick, and intermittent backpacker guitar. As a holdover from the Belgian demos, Ringhofer and friends also frequently repurposed objects into instruments for homemade sound effects—not unlike Beuys’ use of honey, fat, or hare’s blood as painting mediums.
Flying Scroll Flight Control exhibits a restored perception of mystery, the magnetic draw of arcane and peculiar visions. It gathers sound and supplies it with structure, harmonizing the rift between the physical and the metaphysical. These are songs that sing in multiple spaces.
The Soul of All Natural Things
December 3rd, 2013 , by Asthmatic Kitty
Linda Perhacs’ Parallelograms was created in the heart of hippy country, LA’s Topanga Canyon, by a dental hygienist who was inspired by nature and by the cultural revolution going on around her. When Parallelograms was finished, it sounded like a masterpiece, but the label had pressed it so poorly, sales were non-existent. Obscurity beckoned.
But in the internet age obscurity can be discreetly transformed into a kind of niche immortality. By 2003, Parallelograms had become a cult album.
Slowly, Perhacs began making music again. In 2010, she connected with a new generation of LA musicians attuned to her vision, including Fernando Perdomo and Chris Price, both accomplished musicians and producers in their own right. The trio began recording the eclipse song, “River Of God”, and what became a new album’s title track, The Soul Of All Natural Things.
The Soul Of All Natural Things, for all its apparent serenity, is also a subtly polemical album, full of exhortations to take a step out of our frantic everyday lives. “We get too far out of balance and we must find a way to get back to our polestar,” Perhacs says. “I have a deeper purpose. My soul is giving itself to the people; I want them to be helped, I want them to be lifted.”
The Soul Of All Natural Things is available through Asthmatic Kitty Records on March 4th, 2014.
It’s Reggae
October 28th, 2013 , by Asthmatic Kitty
CD and LP include immediate download of full album in 320kbps MP3.
LP also includes download coupon to MP3 and FLAC.
Dear Reggae,
I know it’s only been a couple days but I miss you already. There’s so much about you that I love – the way you approach situations in a relaxed and positive way, the way you absorb whatever strange element come at you and you just fold it into your nature. I admire you and your ease in the world, but it also stirs my anxieties about life – why can’t I be so cool, relaxed, so positive? I’m always wrapped up in my crazy modern brain and life. But then I wonder, are you too? Maybe you’re just as conflicted and human, but everyday you make the choice to express yourself in an uplifting and unselfconscious way. Can you show me how to do that? I love you, Reggae, and I want to learn.
love forever, Rafter
(for our 3rd anniversary Lizeth and I went to Maui. we drove around in our rental jeep listening to the FM radio and it reminded me of the awesome spirit of reggae… cause that’s ALL that’s on the air there… bad local reggae music… i remember a chorus that went “i appreciate my life… whoa”. the song was terrible but i was so happy for the lack of angst in it. so inspiring. i came back and started soaking in great reggae…The Congos, The Upsetters, Trojan and Studio One and Lee Scratch Perry compilations galore, so many amazing albums and such a good feeling world of music… i wanted to make a reggae record so much but it felt so very ill-advised, which of course made it that much more attractive… living in southern california there are so very many terrible white boy reggae bands! my drummer Nathan loves reggae as much as me, and one night the feeling was right and we started making this record… pounding our tracks into an ancient and huge 4 track machine from the 70s… i slowly kept working on it as the inspirations came… every step from then till now has been a total delight. i don’t think i’ve ever danced more in the studio while making a record. the music just feels so good to me. i hope it feels great to you too!)