Unknown Tone is a burgeoning, mom and pop experimental ambient operation out of Tulsa, Oklahoma. Like the best family businesses, they hand pick their stock […]
Tag: Electroacoustic
ZOHARUM :: 3View
A dark forest, an entire region covered in darkness, a small, dark space that continually contracts and expands. Zoharum’s release schedule is fast and furious, embracing […]
SEALT RECORDS :: Future Echoes
Sealt is less concerned with the club, instead it is the armchair which is the focal point. The other week I got some records from […]
V/A :: Eilean 53 (Eilean Rec.)
Eilean 53 is a fine example of precision despite the challenges of each artist doing their own thing in different parts of the world. Compilation […]
Build Buildings :: A Generation of Books (Audiobulb)
A pleasant sounding collection that ultimately proves unchallenging and transient in that it moves across your sonic field to other places without really sticking. A […]
SONIC EXPOSURE :: John Lemke
“Bringing an audience to tears at the beginning of the show is maybe not an ideal way to start a concert, but it did amaze […]
Lawrence English + Stephen Vitiello :: Fable (Dragon’s Eye)
Tempered field recordings and instrumental detritus (Vitiello) meet peculiar modular tweaks and harmonized electronic efflatus (English) to create a collage commingling a widely sourced tonal palette, […]
Andreas Brandal :: Seance (Twice Removed)
At times pleasantly discomfiting, as befits a real dungeon or seance, at others sooty and hellish as a 19th-century mill. Electronica by gaslight. Outside overcast, the […]
Chris Herbert :: Constants (Room40)
An immersive sequenced whole of ever-shifting textures, constantly unfolding over ten tracks, many bleeding one into another. Somewhat stifling for some, perhaps, the density of […]
Leigh Toro :: L’Esprit De L’Escalier (Eilean Rec.)
It would seem that L’Esprit… has, by virtue of discovering perfect inspiration, become one of the more satisfying coherent and rangy of Toro’s records. His […]
Grzegorz Bojanek :: Analogue (Twice Removed)
While making a virtue of a necessity, Analogue is the somewhat perplexing soundtrack to a disorienting, buried-alive ordeal. For Analogue, Grzegorz Bojanek eschews all things […]
















