Oh Mr James’ I’m Not Here is a tight, retrofuturist ride through breakbeats, electro, and braindance, fusing nostalgic circuitry with crisp modern form. Across six tracks, it distills decades of electronic experimentation into sharp, rhythmic vignettes that hum with robotic soul and sci-fi flair.
Tag: Breaks
Winchester :: Liquid Crystal State EP (Mindwaves Music / G.DUBS) — [concise]
Rooted in Bristol’s dub and breakbeat heritage, Liquid Crystal State plunges into a shadowy realm of low-end pressure and sonic disorientation. Across four immersive tracks, Adam Winchester molds found sounds and heavy textures into a murky, rhythmically fractured journey that blurs nostalgia and the avant-garde.
Ven Diagram :: You Are My Context EP (Detroit Underground)
Ven Diagram’s You Are My Context EP on Detroit Underground is a compact yet potent blast of glitch-driven electronics, where each track balances on the edge of chaos and control. Across three selections, the release fuses experimental textures with rhythmic finesse, crafting a sound that’s as abrasive as it is addictive.
V/A :: Remixes EP (Fourier Transform)
Fourier Transform dive into their archive, blending past releases with fresh reinterpretations across house, techno, and electro. Featuring original works from Dark Male, G-Prod, Inkipak, and The Vast Profound, the Remixes EP showcases five distinct remixes that span moods from introspective to floor-focused.
aenemonae :: both of us alone EP (Black Magic) — [concise]
Black Magic Recordings bursts onto the scene with aenemonae’s dazzling debut—a tight, three-track suite where retro soul collides with future-facing sonics. In just 15 minutes, electro, breakbeat, and braindance melt into a seamless, electrified voyage.
Multiplex :: Colour Kinetica (Bricolage)
After decades of quietly shaping the electronic underground, the Dormon brothers return with Colour Kinetica—an album that distills their legacy into a vivid, forward-facing statement. Multiplex’s latest stands as both a culmination and a rebirth, earning its place among the best of 2025 with precision, emotion, and enduring vision.
Ert :: Denmark EP (People Can Listen) — [concise]
Denmark is a six-track journey through ambient-inflected IDM, where emotion meets machine in concise, richly textured vignettes. Blending fractured rhythms, synthetic warmth, and glitch-laced nostalgia, it captures fleeting moods with both precision and heart.
Somatic Responses :: Glynnph EP (Photon Emissions) — [concise]
John Healy returns with a blistering five-track suite steeped in distortion, mechanical pressure, and digital disarray. From the ironclad march of the title track to the fractured geometries of “Monomat,” Healy sculpts a world of warped percussion, ambient debris, and glitch-ridden chaos. Dense and disorienting, it rewards those willing to navigate its alien circuitry.
Yclept :: Yclept (Noided Media) — [concise]
A beautifully dysfunctional journey, Yclept is a warped homage to the experimental electronics of yesteryear, filtered through a distinctly modern, fractured lens.
Eoism :: Live (funkscapes) — [concise]
Eoism – Live is a 60-minute surge of raw electro, recorded in Jena (April 2024). Blending acid, breaks, and techno on Korg Electribes, the duo delivers bass-heavy grooves, glitchy textures, and futuristic intensity—a sharp, mechanical journey through abstract electro and rhythmic experimentation.
















