You can hear a lot of pure ambience on See You Someday, however, most of the time it is infused with ambient pop aesthetics, some big string arrangements, and straight up psychedelia.
Tag: Ambient
Morphtables & Raveny :: Bosporus Acident (Mestnost)
Mind-bending modular layers, stretching as far as the eye can see, are carefully curated—surrounded by organic and atmospheric movements.
s475e :: next stop earth EP (Self Released)
In this captivating Vangelis-inspired extended player, shifting synths, modular panoramas, subdued vocoders, and widescreen percussive elements interact succinctly, creating a pleasantly drifting voyage.
Mick Chillage :: Skywave Transmissions (Self Released)
These transmissions are on just the right frequency for slowing down and finding your own signal in the noise. Comprising of two pulsating long-form pieces it is easy to get lost in these tones that undulate between earth and sky.
Joachim Stiller :: Music For Wireless Telegraphs (Mahorka)
The best course of action is to just jump in and take in the vast scenery that is offered here. Joachim Stiller offers extended synth strands and micro-sound abstractions, reminiscent of vintage Subotnick experiments.
Joseph Auer :: Shanghai Gateway (Rednetic)
A meditative album featuring tracks of ambient electronic loops that lull a listener into a state of relaxed awareness.
Federica Deiana :: Faith EP (Home Normal)
The 5-track release entitled Faith brings deep peace and beauty in the form of music, which the listener can easily relate to film scores as a rich set of scene imagery comes to mind automatically.
SubtractiveLAD :: Brutalist (Self Released)
Brutalist is an intriguing and varied collection of electronic tracks that reflect a smorgasbord of sub-genres, the most of which are readily identifiable by attentive listening.
Pink B :: A Close Connection With Your Soul (Wireframe Clouds)
Thanks to Pink B for this break from the action in an overstimulated world, and to bright days of true connection that await ahead. This […]
Field Lines Cartographer :: Portable Reality Generator (DiN)
The modular maven channels something of an early TD sound-feel via post-Kosmische textures, motifs, and rhythms; new projections in the head cinema, strangely familiar, yet otherworldly.
An interview with Don Slepian from The Radio Phonics Laboratory
Material from the following interview with Don Slepian was used in Justin Patrick Moore’s new book The Radio Phonics Laboratory: Telecommunications, Speech Synthesis, and the Birth of Electronic Music from Velocity Press and available on Bookshop.org, Amazon, and fine bookstores everywhere.









![F~M :: Fose (Old Technology) — [concise]](https://igloomag.com/wp/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/fm-fose_feat-75x75.jpg)







