Cold, desolate and thickened, these shadows of curious ambience conceal those automated impulses of our lives and offer, instead, a surreal solution filled with curiosity.
[Release page] In the dailiness of life, it’s easy to get lost in the shuffle chores and routines we’re seemingly obligated to do. As these tasks become almost automated, some of us revert to music to pacify life’s speed-bumps. This is where Brek Zarith’s Incursore fits right in. Shields of cooled drone-scapes, stretched to the absolute breaking point, are evenly dispersed causing for a complete sense of in-depth auditory exploration. Cold, desolate and thickened, these shadows of curious ambience conceal those automated impulses of our lives and offer, instead, a surreal solution filled with curiosity. Fragmented, altered and frozen may be the key words describing these pseudo-industrial escapes from reality, however, letting these disjointed pieces fall into place as they penetrate your everyday is perhaps the best antidote for loosening the shackles we’ve put on ourselves. Breaking away from the mundane, Incursore delves into the fabric of our memories and temporarily transplants them. Replete with strains of electrical complexity, Erik Zarith (also known as audio-visual sculptor Eric Smit) has inadvertently highlighted in charcoal ink the nature of our surroundings and counterbalanced it with deeply evolved ambient creations.
Incursore is out now on Maschera. [Release page]