A very clean sounding album, the sort of cleanliness you associate with early 2000s IDM. Clear, precise and deadly accurate—a very good master indeed and a classy techno album aimed at the dancefloor.
Author: James Delaney
Boxheater Jackson :: We Are One (Mighty Force)
Reminiscent of early acid house, Burns prefers to stick to acid lines that make people dance, and that’s where he’s unlike many of his contemporaries at the moment,
Part Timer :: Isolation EP (Self Released)
Part Timer somehow manages to elicit real and emotional, vivid technicolor memories of the past—and they’re all good memories, too.
Futuregrapher :: Geirþjófsfjörður (Neotantra)
As a whole, Geirþjófsfjörður has a touch of the epic without being obtuse. It’s a fine balance and finely achieved….
Paddy Thorne :: Lost Cause (Part Two) (Mighty Force)
Lost Cause (Part Two) is most definitely right up there with the Inkipak album as Mighty Force’s finest album to date. I’ve no doubt though, there’s more great things to come from the label.
Part Timer :: Interiority Complex (Self Released)
Stunningly beautiful, detailed snapshots that make you want to hear more, to know more, to feel more. It’s an album that leaves you wanting more, and that’s what makes it almost perfect.
Distant Fires Burning :: Inperspectycon Vol.2 (Audiobulb)
The album is at its best when you hear the signature Audiobulb sound of minimalist, at times almost microscopic, glitchy ambient IDM, but there’s also some reverb drenched ambient drone.
V/A :: Túngata (Móatún 7)
The album itself, which features a host of label regulars such as ReKaB, Chevron and Drøn to name a few, is in the most part ambient IDM with some delightful splashes of ambient techno that’s been superbly produced, and I can’t stress this enough. It sounds truly lush.
Sven Kössler :: D•bl Stndrds (Mighty Force)
Kössler expertly demonstrates his ability to comfortably combine various strands of acid music into a very coherent and enjoyable listening experience.