Kevin Kettle grew up in Lincoln, UK, and came to electronic music through the wreckage of a post-punk band around 1982. What he built in its place, under the name Cacophony '33', was a remarkably sustained one-man bedroom operation: 20 tape releases over seven years, almost all produced on his own Park Holme Recordings label in ultra-limited editions with handmade packaging, circulated through the global "Swap a Tape" network that connected isolated DIY musicians across continents without any commercial infrastructure at all. His method was patient and systematic — the name of the label was literally the name of the home studio, a domestic space transformed into a remarkably consistent archive of sound.
This LP and 7-inch set (Park Holme Recordings 1983–89, VOD138.13) draws from across the full run of Kettle's tapes, presenting the best of a catalogue that the Audiophile Man described as having "an almost Music Hall quality" — playful and English, but also claustrophobic and strange. Boomkat and Forced Exposure both compared the output to The Legendary Pink Dots: minimal synth laced with psychedelic patience, songs that hover just outside conventional structure. Limited to 200 copies individually and 300 within the VOD Minimal Synth Wave Vol.3 box set, each copy with a hand-numbered certificate.