Each musician displays their own knack for agitated electrical mayhem, some dive into grittier industrial spaces, while others venture into modular fizz-fuzz acrobatics.
Tag: Abstract
Christ. :: Blue Shift Emissions (Remastered) (Ambidextrous)
Relying on his ability to produce an album of lush electronics that will leave you with a warm glow inside and a smile on your face long after the last note fades away.
shimura :: Transmission (Petite Victory Collective)
From peculiar vocal samples, to sputtering noises, drones, and dystopian soundtracks, these are transmissions from the farthest edges somehow understanding each other.
Nemerov :: Ballet for Four People (Self Released)
Ballet for Four People cuts a section through a myriad of found-sounds and bubbling synths, where broken notes and low-end rumbling grooves flutter, spark, and eventually explode.
Neuro… No Neuro :: Liminal Moments (Self Released)
Neuro… No Neuro captures five minuscule sound bytes where obscurely formed electronic shapes become invisible and peculiar.
Parallel Worlds :: Reflections (Móatún 7)
What I hear is existing simultaneously, a pattern is gathered and then begins cycling, with improvisations with how the pattern is expressed, trading solo jams within the marching machine cadence.
Manuel Carbone :: Coral Melodies (Adventurous Music)
A seriously clustered musique concrète two-tracker that packs enough mysteries as a full-length collection.
Sumner :: Post Apocalypse Now (Heterodox)
We can hear distant voices tethered to crumbled industrial beats and bass as Sumner (aka Ramon Mills and Jason Cesarz) deliver Post Apocalypse Now, mastered by none-other than Robert Galbraith of Component Records.