An elegant dialogue between nostalgia and nuance, where electronic music breathes with a steady, human pulse.
Recent Posts
France Jobin :: Modulisme Session 123 (Modulisme)
In a series that has already delivered so many innovative performances, Jobin’s contribution feels both essential and personal. Modulisme Session 123 is a fascinating addition to her already stellar discography and a testament—proof that in the right hands, modular synthesis can become pure poetry.
Vague Lanes :: Divergence And Declaration (Viasonde / Swiss Dark Nights)
The second coming of Vague Lanes (aka Mike Cadoo and Badger McInnes) comes as a moody, dark, and also insanely catchy collection of darkwave tunes. The group nails the one thing I always appreciate when listening to music: the foundations. If your grooves aren’t solid, there’s a good chance the music is going to fall flat.
Aidan Baker :: & You Still Fall In (Gizeh)
Known for his prolific output and textural sensitivity, Baker delivers one of his most resonant and affecting works to date—a slow-burning, immersive experience that quietly commands attention.
Cratje :: Osmosis, discovery
Joeri Bruyninckx engages in a brief yet insightful conversation with Jonathan Cant—better known as Cratje, the Brussels-based sonic alchemist and co-founder of the transmedial electronic label Montage—to delve into the latest chapter of the evocative Songs From The Gutter series.
Essay by Oliver Stummer (1974-2024)
Oliver Stummer (Oct 13, 1974 – Dec 3, 2024), most notable with his Tomoroh Hidari alias and releases, passed away suddenly in early December 2024. He […]
Phil Western :: Afterflash: A Remixed Tribute (Map Music)
One can only hope more material to remix will be unearthed and that Western’s musical legacy will find further incarnations such as this collective masterpiece. Throughout the record, Western’s uncanny knack for pure invention shines through, guiding us along one more late night journey of blissful inner exploration.
Aelk Minsur :: Want For Naught EP (Self Released)
The entire work pulses with a hauntological current, drawing from distant memories yet telling a story utterly untold. With warped instrumental frameworks and surreal compositional craft, Aelk Minsur and Devvin Giorgio prove themselves as masterful architects of otherworldly sound.
Moat Bells :: Nap Bud (A Person Disguised As People)
Gently corroded synth figures, filtered field recordings, and soft tape hiss assemble into scenes that feel lived-in rather than composed. These aren’t tracks in the traditional sense so much as zones—delicate, slow-form atmospheres tuned to the rhythms of stillness and peripheral awareness.
Kraftwerk Multimedia Tour 2025 :: 50 Years of Autobahn (Live in Portland)
Fifty years after Autobahn, they’re not reinventing themselves—they don’t need to. The ideas, sounds, and structures they laid down decades ago still feel relevant, even […]
Kettel :: Dubio (Aquatic Ape)
Every bit as eclectic, nuanced and playful as all of his previous work, Dubio is still Kettel, but reforged in a glittering new image. One that takes time to slither into the subconscious, but grows more compelling with each listen. One that compels a reevaluation of his entire oeuvre.
















