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Beautiful new disc by Newcastle drone-improv legends Jazzfinger, this is one of their most dilapidated and beguiling sets yet. If ever a band's 'sound' was simultaneously hauntingly pastoral yet at the same time grindingly industrial then it would be Jazzfinger, and here we have them pushing that paradox to the max; This is either a warm hazy bliss-out stained with autumnal colour or a scraping, wheezing, gasping torture-wheel of sound made of bones and muck, depending on which way you look at it. Or both. It's fascinating stuff... music which seems very alive. The artworks bloody brilliant too!

"Taking their influences from sources obvious (early Danzig, Ozzy) and not so obvious (avant garde chanteuse Catherine Ribeiro, over-the-rainbow psych-folk savant Bobb Trimble), the band, led by the beautiful and commanding goddess Jex, follow their muse wherever it leads them. The band is not afraid to take cues from progressive rock and folk, and the band's debut album (which follows an EP released under the name Totem) marks a huge step forward for the trans-national group. From the vociferous opener "Nothing Left To Die," a statement of intent that begins with Jex singing "You think you know me/ but you won't believe your eyes," to an ambitious cover of Bobb Trimble's psychedelic masterwork "When The Raven Calls," Jex Thoth is out to prove they are peerless when it comes to intrepid, bone-shaking rock and roll. Reverent while maintaining a defiantly original sound, Jex Thoth embraces all that is good about the past and shuttles it defiantly into the future." -- I Hate Records

This is the cdr that made us all fall in love. 20+ minutes of perfect home spun folk magesty.

Wonderful sister release to "Little Life" more four track recordings of lo fi folk songs from Josephine around the time of the Born Heller release.

Documenting an early solo performance from featuring fragile and sparse renderings of some of her best tunes.

Brand new materials from Josephine, this is her first self released item since before "Hazel Eyes" with a great cover pic based on a poster from Jeff Garcia

What a far out release from Josephine Foster, we can barely describe the unusal mixing and melting on her newest self released effort. From the fire noise guitar blasting prelude to all manner of elegant folk musings and musical enchantments performed with piano, percussion, guitar, and Josephine's amazing and unique voice. Including many original compositions, improvised songs, Japanese folk songs, and a couple jam-backed spoken word performances, a very ambitious and captivating release!

Live EP from Josephine with her psych folk rock band. Great songwriting with lysergic damaged jam aspects.