Aweome unearth lost vintage electronic music from Eastern Europe!!! "Strut, in conjunction with Ambassadors Reception and Future Nuggets,  presents the first ever retrospective of fabled band Rodion G.A., one of  Romania's best kept musical secrets of the last 30 years. 
 As a band, Rodion G.A. were a unique phenomenon in their homeland at the  time, operating in their own universe during a prolific period of  recording from 1978 to 1984 at a time of significant political  repression under the Ceausescu regime. Bandleader, Rodion Ladislau  Rosca, was an enigma. As half-Hungarian, half-Romanian, he lived near  the border in Cluj, a city with a healthy music culture which had  spawned important prog rock bands incuding Cromatic, Experimental  Quintet and Semnal M. Despite the political conditions, a music scene  existed in Romania, mainly within a network of festivals around the  country and in seaside towns at restaurants and clubs. 
 
 From the start, Rodion was concerned with his own style of composition  and set himself apart from the predominant rock sounds that dominated  Romanian music during the late 60s. Technically and in his compositions,  he was obsessed with every detail. His first sessions were recorded  during 1969-1972 - simple, sparse and haunting pieces using reel to reel  recorders, based around vocals, guitars and improvised drums. In  1975-6, Rosca formed Rodion G.A., the G.A. comprising band members Gicu  Frca. and Adrian Cpraru. Rosca had amassed equipment and became a DIY  tech wizard, improvising his own techniques of composing using reel to  reels. Surrounded by three or four Tesla tape machines, he would record  beats and guitar on one channel of the tape, then stop and add other  instruments on the other a raw means of multi-tracking. He would use the  other machines to add effects and delays on both instruments and  vocals. Other tools in his armoury included an East German Vermona drum  machine, a toy Casio VL Tone and a small Russian organ to which he added  phaser, flanger and delay pedals. From the start, the band’s sound was  incomparable to other contemporaries - dense electronic sounds, raw  programmed rhythms, intricate arrangements, prog and classical touches. 
 The band’s recorded output in Romania at the time was sparse. There was  only one label operating, the State-owned Electrecord, and they recorded  two tracks by Rodion G.A. for a compilation, ‘Romanian Rock Vol. 6.’ In  1981, the tracks were picked up by radio and Rodion even hit the top of  the Romanian charts for several weeks. Beyond this, no other releases  surfaced and yet the band recorded prolifically during the early 80s.  Other records nearly materialised the band scored the soundtrack to an  animated movie, Delta Space Mission in the mid-80s but the tracks were  refused by the film company who then employed prolific Romanian  electronic / pop producer Adrian Enescu for the job. The band’s only  other documented performance during their career was a show on Romanian  television celebrating New Years Eve in 1980. Rodion G.A. eventually  split in 1987 following a gig at Mangalia Festival and Rodion then  walked away from music following the death of his mother. 
 Fast forward to 2012 when the myth of Rodion G.A. came to the attention  of excellent Romanian production and DJ crew, Future Nuggets, a  collective as dedicated to unearthing Romania's musical past as they are  forging new sounds steeped in the country's traditions. As well as this  album, a partnership with Steve Kotey of Ambassadors Reception has led  to a compilation of their own studio work including their acclaimed  psych-jazz album as Steua da Mare.