An Hour Of The Flightpath Estate AW61 Afternoon Set

This is my hour’s set from last Saturday afternoon at AW61 at The Golden Lion, Todmorden, re- created at home. The photo above shows my view from the DJ booth as my set ended and the auction and raffle began- you may recognise some of the faces getting ready to bid on items from Andrew Weatherall’s studio. 

Once we’ve got all the other sets and the evening’s rotations recreated we can upload the entire thing but I thought I’d share mine in the meantime. It comes in at over an hour and I only played for an hour on the day- from memory, I mixed Biosphere’s En- Trance out because the file seemed very quiet (even for an ambient track) and it is in the mix below too. I think I mixed out of Underworld’s 8 Ball halfway through as well but just left it playing in full here because, really, what sort of person mixes out the second half of 8 Ball? I’d just faded the GLOK Starlight Dub of A Mountain Of One’s Star in when Gig, the Golden Lion’s legendary landlady, took the mic to start the auction (along with Lizzie and Sofia) so that track was left mostly unplayed- you’ll have to imagine the auction and raffle taking place when you reach that point in my set (unless you were there in which case replay it in your mind). I played Emotionally Clear as the raffle ended and to provide my handover to Dan who was waiting in the wings. 

Adam’s Flightpath Estate Afternoon Set At AW61

  • Coyote: Western Revolution
  • Durutti Column: Bordeaux Sequence
  • Psychederek: Test Card Girl
  • Four Tet: Loved
  • Rick Cuevas: The Birds
  • Biosphere: En- Trance
  • Underworld: 8 Ball
  • Wixel: Expressway To Yr Skull (Long Champs Bonus Beats)
  • This Mortal Coil: Edit To The Siren
  • Bjork: One Day
  • James Holden: Common Land
  • A Mountain Of One: Star (GLOK Starlight Dub)
  • David Holmes and Raven Violet: Emotionally Clear

Western Revolution is Coyote’s sublime edit of Gil Scott Heron’s The Revolution Will Not Be Televised. I had half a mind to start with Lonely, which is from the same vinyl only EP out last year, Magic Wand Special Edition Vol. 2, but Mr Holmes played it the night before. 

Bordeaux Sequence was on The Durutti Column’s 1987 album The Guitar And Other Machines, a moment of genuine beauty from Vini Reilly. It is a re- recorded version of Bordeaux from 1983’s Another Setting. A couple of people in the room gave me a ‘thank you for playing Durutti Column’ look.

Psychederek is from Stretford, just up the road from me. Test Card Girl was a digital only single from 2023 and I’m not over it yet

Loved was a single from Four Tet, also from last year and is now the opening track on his Three album. Another 2023 song that has stuck around well into ’24. 

The Birds is by Rick Cuevas, from a self – released, private pressing album called Symbolism that came out in 1984, an album described on Discogs as ‘soft rock/ AOR’. I wouldn’t necessarily call The Birds either- a friend once described it as ‘Durutti Column on steroids’ which I’m happier with. I’m fairly certain I only know of this song because of Andrew Weatherall referencing it in an interview or playing it on a radio show. 

Biosphere’s En- Trance is ambient/ techno from Belgium in 1994, an album called Patashnik. It’s just some synth drones and an acoustic guitar- I say ‘just’, it’s much more than that obviously. Shame this WAV file I have is so quiet. 

Underworld’s 8 Ball was on the soundtrack to The Beach, the Leonardo Di Caprio film from 2000. 8 Ball is a nine minute low key epic with fluid guitar playing and some of Karl’s loveliest singing, lyrics about men with empty whiskey bottles and walkie talkies and flaming 8 ball tattoos on their arms, a man who eventually throws his arms around him. They gave this away to a soundtrack, a soundtrack where it was overshadowed a little by All Saints and Moby- most bands would kill for a tune this good and would make it a single or the track they built an album around. Someone in the Lion asked me what this was and took some convincing it was Karl on vocals.

Wixel are from Belgium (with hindsight, there’s a bit of a Belgian theme running through this mix) and put out a cover of Sonic Youth’s Expressway To Yr Skull in 2008, part of a seven track EP of Sonic Youth covers. The Long Champs edit turns it into a shimmering, semi -ambient haze that led to a couple of enquiries in the pub- and if you turn a couple of people onto something new to them, that’s what it’s all about isn’t it. 

Edit To The Siren is an In The Valley edit of Song To The Siren, This Mortal Coil’s signature cover of Tim Buckley’s song. Someone once told me this was sacrilege but for me its got a dubby/ Balearic splendour and is perfect Saturday afternoon vibes. 

One Day is one of the key early Bjork solo songs, from 1993’s Debut. The dubby bassline, house shimmer, Nellee Hooper’s production and Bjork’s delivery are all superb. 

Common Land was one of the tracks on James Holden’s 2023 album Imagine This Is A High Dimensional Space Of All Possibilities, an album I still go back to a year later. The burbling synths, birdcall, techno- ish drums and warbling sax combine to create something very heady and transportative. It’s also a tribute to the free party movement and early 90s rave and felt quite fitting for the Lion and Todmorden.

A Mountain of One’s Stars Planets Dust Me was one of my favourite albums from 2022. Andy Bell’s GLOK remix is a spaced out, sun- baked treat. 

Emotionally Clear is from David Holmes’ Blind On A Galloping Horse, 2023’s number one Bagging Area album. Seeing David Holmes bidding at the auction at AW61 from behind the decks will take some beating in 2024. 

Half An Hour Of Liz Fraser

Liz Fraser’s voice, whether with The Cocteau Twins or guest appearances with other artists, is a unique, almost miraculous thing. Trying to describe it is fairly pointless. It swoops and soars and has a magical, otherworldly quality. Sometimes it’s gossamer thin, distant and a part of the shimmering, hazy swirl of the Cocteau Twins records, the lyrics difficult to work out and impressionistic. Sometimes it’s much bolder and in the foreground, clear and insistent. Here’s this week’s half hour mix (actually thirty eight minutes) of Liz Fraser’s voice, variously with Cocteau Twins, This Mortal Coil, Ian McCulloch, Massive Attack, Harold Budd and Felt. 

Half An Hour Of Liz Fraser

  • Cocteau Twins: Pearly Dewdrops’ Drop
  • Cocteau Twins: The Spangle Maker
  • Ian McCulloch: Candleland
  • Massive Attack: Teardrop (Mad Professor Mazaruni Vocal Remix)
  • This Mortal Coil: Song To The Siren
  • This Mortal Coil: Edit To The Siren (In The Valley Re- edit)
  • Cocteau Twins: Cherry- coloured Funk
  • Felt: Primitive Painters
  • Harold Budd, Simon Raymonde, Robin Guthrie, Liz Fraser: Ooze Out And Away, Onehow

Swim To Me

The days are very strange at the moment. Wake up early, everything crashes back in a millisecond later. The anxious knot reappears in the stomach, the tightness in the chest. The realisation that emotional pain can be so physical, so bodily present. Lie in bed for ages because it seems better than facing the day. Then the morning disappears, you shake yourself into doing something and then suddenly it’s going dark. Evening stretches out and it’s bedtime. Repeat.

The funeral was attended by huge numbers of people, the wake too, and we gave him the send off he deserved. It was all consuming but now it’s done- the planning, organisation and the detail and the tenseness of waiting for it- we’re left the dealing with the absence of him. And Christmas less than a week away. I’ve only just really twigged that it’s December. Time seemed to pause on the last day of November and now someone’s unclicked the pause button and it’s the 20th December. 

My unplanned Elizabeth Fraser vocal trip took me down to the inevitable end of that road yesterday when I played Song To The Siren, a three minute and thirty second wave of sadness and loss. 

Song To The Siren

This re- edited version by In The Valley is depending on your point of view either a crime or a beautifully Balearic, slightly dubby re- imagining of This Mortal Coil’s cover of Tim Buckley’s song. I’m going with the latter. 

Edit To The Siren