The Peel Sessions (Limited Clear Vinyl LP)

Limited Clear Vinyl LP

As a member of the likes of Slint, The For Carnation, and now Gang Of Four, David Pajo has been the secret weapon in too many magnificent projects to name. His solo work, however, has often been shrouded in an element of mystery, perhaps never more mysterious than his Aerial M solo moniker. This just-reissued 1998 Peel Session may only consist of three songs, but across thirty slowly sprawling minutes, M asserts his instrumental authority, reminding us why he's the guy everyone wants as their guy. - Flying Out

For those of you who’ve mislaid your history goggles, this archival release recalls an ancient time in the world of recorded music. Yes, back in the dinosaur days of the 1990s, a creature known as Aerial M walked the earth, before evolving into Papa M and PAJO and beyond and back. 

Even then, the music of M had a next-wave vibe, walking upright among the knuckle-draggers (and having drinks in the evening with others of its genetic detatchment). It was too much to last very long, of course — but some things end up lasting forever, don’t they? Fuck! So it is today that Drag City, an organization largely set up to bring you the best of all available M recordings, is proud to be there for the release of the only Aerial M session ever recorded for John Peel’s BBC Radio One show, as it was originally recorded on 3rd March 1998 and broadcast on 2nd April of the same year.

The studio versions of these songs, which appear on Aerial M’s self-titled album and Papa M’s Hole of Burning Alms comp, were played by “M” himself (now revealed to be David Pajo!), which makes this album a rare alternative view of the canonical M, played by an actual Aerial M band who, all too briefly, embodied the sound for a year or so before Papa brought a brand new bag.

This Session found them fortuitously roadburned from several weeks in the European Theatre. So much the better for our archival ears, as OG-M’s signature minimalist long-fuse sizzle is thrillingly intact here; in fact, even more so, as the tunes are jammed out past the studio versions’ originally delineated borders, reaching rudely across the table in moments of liveness that the studio-bound project might have decided against when conferring only with the walls.

Tracklist:

1. Skrag Theme
2. Vivea
3. Safeless