R4NT Magazine

Author

Jon Freer

17 posts · 4 blog posts · hearingisbelieving.blogspot.com

A reading

Inventory

21 posts across R4NT magazine (17) and companion blog (4), spanning 2006–2010. Contributions lean heavily electronic, house, disco, broken beat, and world music — consistent with R4NT's curation aesthetic.

Voice & sensibility

Freer writes with disciplined enthusiasm, favoring descriptive precision over gimmickry. Reviews employ a distinctive lexicon — "soul-kissed," "pulsating," "ethereal," "cosmonautic" — applied with earnest specificity. He balances technical observation (synth textures, percussion patterns, structural choices) against emotional impact. Phrases like "genuinely escapist yet paradoxically resonates deeply with real life" reveal a critic attuned to paradox and nuance. The tone avoids cynicism; even mild reservations come clothed in respect. Sample construction is deliberate: opens with artist biography or label context, moves into track-by-track highlights, closes with a value judgment.

Topic mix & evolution

Early work (2006–2007) establishes eclecticism: seasonal compilations bundling 20–30 albums across house, funk, soul, Latin, indie, and downtempo. A city guide to York (2006) shows range beyond music. By 2008–2009, focus narrows into artist profiles and individual album reviews, suggesting deeper engagement. The "Influences" and "Artist Profile" series emerge as signatures. Late material (2010) includes festival reportage — Sónar coverage balances firsthand observation, historical context, setlist detail. A throughline: infrastructure matters. He privileges context — label history, artist background, sonic genealogy — before diving into present records.

Standout pieces

  • Sónar 2010 — Barcelona, Spain — His magnum opus, a 3,000-word festival essay blending atmosphere, artist critique, and personal stamina. Captures venue layout, crowd demographics, emotional peaks, logistical friction.
  • Jon Freer's City Guides — York — Architectural and historical travel writing showcasing versatility; orderly, informative, generous.
  • Artist Profile: Glass Candy — Traces the Portland band's genealogy from no-wave (1996) through synth-pop reinvention, contextualizing hype as charisma. Reveals his method: deep-catalog thinking.
  • Artist Profile: Calm — Celebrates a producer with marginal Western visibility, mapping discography across pseudonyms (Farr, KeyFree, Japanese Synchro System) and sublabels. Pure advocacy.
  • Jon Freer's Autumn Selection (Part 1) — Showcases his gift for curating across boundaries — José Padilla, Prince Fatty, Jazzanova, Waajeed — with crisp intel on each.
  • The Best of Mr. Bongo — Label history woven into review; celebrates South American championing and social impact (Street Angels, AfroReggae).

Throughlines & fun details

Fun detail: geography and activism matter to him. The Mr. Bongo review credits charitable work; the York guide privileges accessibility and infrastructure over tourist cliché. He's a materialist — attentive to venue, location, crowd composition, logistics. Throughline: label culture. Freer treats imprints as protagonists. Sonar Kollektiv, Mr. Bongo, Disorient, Compost, BBE, NRK — he tracks their trajectories and aesthetic commitments. Another throughline: world-music respect. Latin, Brazilian, Cape Verdean, Japanese, African artists receive equal footing with electronic experimentalists. Finally, a quiet refusal of hype: he admires charisma without condescension and pursues obscure producers with the same rigor he applies to LCD Soundsystem. R4NT's strength — cosmopolitan curation — lives in his work.

Every post

ARTICLE

Jon Freer's Autumn Selection (Part 2)

by Jon Freer

Part 2 includes: Kenny Dope, Keb Darge, Gilles Peterson, Tiger Stripes, Mayra Andrade, Nancy Elizabeth, Ethipiques, Wildstyle, Shawn Lee, Federico Aubele, Karizma, Electric Conversation, Circle Research, Pig & Dan, The Glimmers, Bob Marley and various other artists...

ARTICLE

Jon Freer's Autumn Selection (Part 1)

by Jon Freer

So much music we've had to split the feature! Part 1 includes: José Padilla, Prince Fatty, You Say Party! We Say Die!, Jazzanova, Karizma, Miguel Migs, Ananda Project, Waajeed, Eddy Meets Yannah, Tweek, The Broken Family Band, The Spirals, and various other artists...

ARTICLE

Jon Freer's Early Summer Picks

by Jon Freer

Featuring 25 pimpin' albums from the likes of: Louie Vega, Lust, Joey Negro, Dimitri From Paris, Sally Shapiro, Âme, Adam Freeland, Kitsune, Simian Mobile Disco, Slam, DJ Kicks, International DJ Gigolos, Lefties Soul Connection, Shady Bard, and various other artists...

ARTICLE

Super Spring Sonic Selections

by Jon Freer

Featuring: Mistical, Makossa & Megablast, Freshly Composted Vol 2, Deerhoof, Ame...Mixing, Spirit Catcher, Arnold Jarvis, Secret Love 3, Luz Mob, Frank N Dank, Miguel Migs, Ron Trent, Sister Funk 2, Simian Mobile, The Rurals, Ben Mono, The Mitchell & Dewbury Band, GusGus, Thomas Mapfumo.

ARTICLE

Top-Drawer Musical Picks

by Jon Freer

Jon Freer is back at it again, this time with even more aural delicacies to serve. Hot on the plate this month we've got a mix of some South Port Classics, Wunmi, Kerri Chandler, Pulp Fusion, OM Winter Sessions, 4hero, Clara Hill and Lucky Pierre. Jump inside and take a listen!