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So Close Yet So Far Out

MARTIJN DE KLEER

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Cover ImageRelease date and tracklist

2002
US 2xLP Beta-lactam Ring Records mt055a

2003
CD Beta-lactam Ring Records mt055b

side A

  1. The Time Has Come
  2. Delayed Chemistry

side B

  1. New
  2. Jet Lag
  3. What Happened to a Young Man in a Place Where He Turned to Water

side C

  1. Once Upon a Guitar
  2. You Are…

side D

  1. The Apple Crumble Trail

Credits

  • Martijn de Kleer- Guitar, Bass, Synthesizer, Organ, Drums, Sounds [Additional], Vocals, Lyrics, Producer
  • Ryan Moore- Bass (A2, B1, B3, C2)
  • Evan St. Syr- Bass, Harmony Vocals (A1)
  • Mark Edelman- Drums (A1)
  • cEvin Key- Drums (A2, B1, B3, C2)
  • Raymond Steeg- Engineer, Edited By, Mastered By, Producer, Other (Patience)
  • Ernst Bunders- Engineer, producer (A1)
  • White Mountain Apache- Lyrics (B2)
  • Phil Knight– Synthesizer (synth loop) (A2)

Notes

LP: Pressed on 220gram audiophile vinyl, limited to 500 copies, first 100 copies included a signed insert.

This music was recorded on different occasions and several locations somewhere in the nineties; somehow it all came together.

Warning: prolonged listening may cause a certain level of intoxication.

The pictures on the sleeve were taken by the Hubble space telescope showing the nebulae from which stars are born.

 

Flow (Songs & Pieces)

MARTIJN DE KLEER

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Cover ImageRelease date and tracklist

2001
US CD Soleilmoon Recordings SOL110CD

  1. Beginning
  2. Once a Road
  3. Moon in Water
  4. Birds
  5. High Street
  6. Sin
  7. Invitation
  8. Sunflower
  9. Not Blind?
  10. Daydream
  11. Reflection
  12. End

Credits

  • Martijn de Kleer- Voice, guitar (acoustic), fiddle, banjo, percussion (handdrum)
  • Raymond Steeg- Other sounds, mastering

artwork by Erik van Os


Notes

Recorded at home with 2 microphones & tapedeck, March 2000.

 

Dub Voyage

TWILIGHT CIRCUS DUB SOUND SYSTEM

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Cover ImageRelease date and tracklist

15 May 2000
NL CD M Records CD-190
NL LP M Records LP-190
NL MP3 on Bandcamp

  1. Acetate
  2. Dub Boyage
  3. Heavy
  4. Wareika
  5. Depth Charge
  6. Fast
  7. Blaster
  8. K2000
  9. Slicer
  10. Silver
  11. Massive

Credtis

Produced, Performed & Mixed by Ryan Moore

Studio Twilight, The Netherlands & The Miller Block, Vancouver, Canada
Album design: Ania Rachmat


Review

Twilight Circus is the dub-centric recording project of multi-instrumentalist/producer Ryan Moore, a ubiquitous Nettwerk Records studio contributor and longstanding member of the Legendary Pink Dots. Dub Voyage, the Amsterdam resident’s seventh platter under the moniker, hovers in purist Jamaican dub territory – impossibly thick, woofer-threatening bass lines slathered in all manner of slippery echo and compression effects, punctuated by lilting fragments of organ, melodica, and skittering percussion. As the album progresses, Moore injects more space and grime into the mix, stretching and contorting tracks such as “K2000” and “Silver” into thoroughly modern-textured dubscapes. Throughout, Moore’s reverence for the form ensures a refreshingly warm, live feel, even when the echo box settings are pushed to alien extremes.

Colin Helms, CMJ

 

Dub Plates Volume Two

TWILIGHT CIRCUS DUB SOUND SYSTEM

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Cover ImageRelease date and tracklist

15 September 1999
NL CD M Records CD 180
NL LP M Records LP 180
NL MP3 on Bandcamp 

  1. Bord Plate
  2. New Rockers
  3. Shaka Version
  4. Trinity
  5. Dance Plate
  6. Binshaker Dub Plate
  7. Iguana
  8. Kik Plate
  9. Killer Version
  10. Filter 13 (Ultra Dub)

Credits

  • Ryan Moore

Review

Since that night in 1967 when selector Ruddy Redwood spun a vocal-less acetate in a Kingston dance hall and the midnight ravers demanded “Rewind!” dub scientists have been perfecting the art of 21st-century soul tonic;) But while King Tubby’s progeny – from hip-hop to house, dance hall to drum’n’bass – have gone forth to mutate pop’s subconscious, mother [sic]

If only innovators like Wimbish could shake the cultural prejudice that insists. Tubby, Perry and Hudson must tower over ’90s sound-boys. Enter Ryan Moore, the Legendary Pink Dots escapee behind Twilight Circus, who wrestles with history’s titans and leaves the ring commanding ’nuff respect. In his kaleidoscope world a feather weighs a ton, colors cut corners, and time eats itself. Dub Plates Volume Two- a vinyl-only collection of rare acetates that doubles as a greatest-versions set – should be a landmark in post hip-hop sonic engineering. “Filter 13 (Ultra Dub)” is as explosive as Krust, as sophisticated as Philip “Fatis” Burrell, and as riveting as DJ Premier. “Dance Plate”, a tribute to Black Uhuru’s 1981 depth probe “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner”, splits the riddim and boggles your ear cavity. Follow the bass or follow the drum; Mama’s calling you home.

Jeff Chang, SPIN

 

Horsie

TWILIGHT CIRCUS DUB SOUND SYSTEM

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Cover ImageRelease date and tracklist

02 May 1999
NL CD M Records CD 170
NL LP M Records LP 170

2013
NL remastered MP3 on Bandcamp 

  1. Romy
  2. Dance
  3. Horsie
  4. Kik
  5. Ergmm
  6. Oats
  7. Bord
  8. Carousel
  9. Binshaker Dub
  10. Rock Salt

 

Credits

Produced & mixed by Ryan Moore

All instruments: Ryan Moore

Recorded at Studio Twilight

Graphics: Ania Rachmat


Reviews 

“Dub revivalism at its most irie.

Perhaps the best of all the millennial dub reggae revivalists, Twilight Circus Dub Sound System is in fact a one-man show: Ryan Moore, a goth refugee (Skinny Puppy, Legendary Pink Dots). Maybe his background gives his dub the perfect balance of analog mixology and noir mood; certainly, unpredictability is his trademark. 1999’s Horsie, Moore’s sixth release, catches him searching for a way to wed his rock background with his reggae interests. “Oats,” for instance, seems to find the midpoint between Krautrock and dub. On “Romy,” he works with three completely different themes: a Scientist-like space station under attack by electro-termites, a drifting Duane Eddy-ish guitar line, and a monster nyabinghi-tinged undercurrent. “Dance” floats “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner” into a liquid techno-style groove. “KIK”‘s drive recalls classic Revolutionaries at Channel One, but is suspended in an ambient chamber of glockenspiels. On Horsie, Moore pushes the element of surprise measure for measure so, unlike so many rote digi-dubbers, his thunderous riddims and subtly formed sounds disintegrate nostalgia into a landmark in post-modern dub”. Jeff Chang – eMusic

***

Admittedly Ryan Moore is a nut. He’d have to be, considering the folks he’s spent his years practicing his musical wares with…an impressive list of who’s who in the Skinny Puppy and Legendary Pink Dots camps. Performing entirely on his own as the Twilight Circus, Moore’s enthusiastic goofiness and truly uplifting nature lends greatly to the music, which is a hybrid of electronics, traditional dub, airy arrangements that allow for plenty of echo, and simply excellent sense of relaxation. If you are already familiar with his work in the Twilight Circus, Horsie contains nothing but a more expansive progression into his style. Very recommended and enjoyable. John Chedsey – SSMT

***

Multi-instrumentalist Ryan Moore returns with his sixth highly rinsed plate of dub grooves. With each release, this B.C. native/ Dutch resident has added a new twist to this instrumental form of Jamaican reggae, while retaining its trademarks: deep, stomach churning bass and cracking, syncopated drum beats. Whereas 1998’s Dub Plate Selection was gigantic tower of sound, drenched in Middle Eastern melodies and with nods to electronica, with Horsie, Moore, whose main gig is as a member of the Legendary Pink Dots, has turned to the conventions of pop music. Guitars, which in the past were relegated to simply supplying some textural colour along with the keyboards, have been brought to the forefront with Moore drawing on the sad, melancholic figures of Durutti Column guitarist Vini Reilly for inspiration here. Moore has even straightened out the beats on a couple of tracks to make them more pop sounding. But these concessions shouldn’t be a cause for worry. Moore hasn’t abandoned the enveloping spaciness that has come to characterize TCDSS. Far from it. Horsie is still bathed in mountains of echo, reverb and delay that make your head swim. Once again, Moore has managed to equally confound and delight while at the same time broadening his vision of what dub should be. Richard Moule – ID Magazine, Canada

 

Dub Plate Selection

TWILIGHT CIRCUS DUB SOUND SYSTEM

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Cover ImageRelease date and tracklist

02 May 1998
NL CD M Records CD-160
NL LP M Records M 160
NL MP3 on Bandcamp

  1. The Ride
  2. New Steppers
  3. Filter
  4. Trouble Dub Plate
  5. Beneath the Valley of the Ultra Dub
  6. 808 Dub Plate
  7. Rocking Dub
  8. Lowell and Nine (Shaka Dub Plate)
  9. Sir Dub Plate
  10. Indian (Space Dub Plate)

Bonus Tracks (not on LP)

  1. Filter 13 (Party Mix)
  2. Lowell and Nine (Dub Plate)
  3. Filet 13 (Wailers Tribute Mix)
  4. Bong Loop (Paranoia Mix)

Credits 

Produced by Ryan Moore

All tracks performed & mixed by Ryan Moore

All tracks recorded and mixed at The Miller Block – Vancouver, Canada and Studio Klaverland – The Netherlands.

Additional engineering – Darryl Neudorf


Reviews 

Twilight Circus Dub Sound System come again with another modern take on classic Jamaican dub. They take the liquid feel of dub instruments to the next level, with atmospheric reverberations, live sitars and flutes as well as the traditional configurations of drum, bass and keyboards. New dub recordings often make use of the sound aesthetics that were pioneered in the ’70s and early ’80s to create sinister Illbient soundscapes but rarely does an artist relatively new to the form recapture the uplifting yet haunted feel of early dub as well as Twilight does. “Sir Dub Plate” is particularly adept at creating a positive vibe with wonderfully juicy reverb- drenched organs while “Beneath The valley Of The Dub” is a more melancholic affair with a wistful sitar dwelling beneath the echos of bass and drums. This satisfying DIY release may be somewhat hard to come by as it was released by the mastermind behind the music. Ryan Moore (formerly of the Legendary Pink Dots), himself, but is well worth searching for. All in all, this is a wonderfully spaced-out modern, dub odyssey into higher levels of eerie relaxation.

Daniel Chamberlin, URB

***

A dub plate is a unique acetate platter created specifically for a DJ sound system, but with the elementally deep bass generated by Twilight Circus’ Ryan Moore (a Canadian expatriate living in the Netherlands, who essentially is Twilight Circus), “tectonic plates” seems a more appropriate term. The bottomless bass and rubbery tempo of this music conjure images of massive primordial forces, the menace of a slow-moving lava flow. These dub plates originate from twilight Circus’ dub performances, representing both new material and unreleased remixes of older tracks. They navigate the intersecting sound-spaces of reggae-patterned dub, jungle and ambient electronica, cavorting through cavernous reverb, otherworldly electronic effects and the ocasional deconstructed melodic fragment. Delightfully, this is no gratuitous electronica samplefest – in fact it’s not a samplefest at all – because Moore avoids the usual drum boxes and electronic toys in favor of fat bass lines and real drums (supplied on three plates by no less than Sly Dunbar). So there’s blood and sweat amongst the circuitry.

– John Baxter, Option