Tag: Electronics

SPRO :: Haihat (NOCUEDO Editions)

Haihat’s sonic journey unfolds as a seamless, immersive experience—seven tracks woven into one fluid, textured narrative. In contrast, SPRO’s sonic architecture dives into raw abstraction, layering fuzz, static, and fractured rhythms into a rich, dissonant soundscape that evolves from gritty turbulence to haunting beauty.

Pabellón Sintético :: Machine for living (Cyclical Dreams)

Pabellón Sintético is the astral sound project of Argentine artist Pablo Ariel Bilbao, merging analog and digital synthesis to explore cosmic ambient and Berlin School-inspired electronics. His latest album, Machine For Living, blends cinematic textures, pulsating sequences, and immersive atmospheres into what’s been called “architectural fine electronic ambient.” Meticulously crafted, it unfolds as a luminous journey through memory, imagination, and the infinite horizon of sound.

V/A :: Echoes of the Hollow Earth (Cryo Chamber)

Hollow Earth myths and post-apocalyptic visions merge in this sonic descent into subterranean folklore, where lost civilizations and unseen beings haunt vast underground realms. Featuring artists like Dead Melodies, Beyond the Ghost, The Next Commuter, Northumbria, Dronny Darko, Claymation, and Ugasanie, these dark ambient soundscapes evoke ruined cities, cryptic transmissions, and shadowy creatures. Through dense drones and haunting textures, we’re guided into the aftermath of civilization—where memory, myth, and decay converge.

Ndorfik :: Ojala EP (Local Gods)

Ojala captures the spirit of early IDM—where emotion meets experimentation. Emerging from FM synthesis and inspired by Karelia’s landscapes, the track blends atmospheric depth with playful rhythm. First appearing on Binary Echo (People Can Listen, April 2025), this EP features the original, a gentle ballad, and three distinct reworks, each paying homage to the genre’s formative years.

Purelink :: Faith (peak oil)

Concave Reflection, Kindtree, and Millia formed the trio Purelink in 2020 to create music they couldn’t make alone. Blending ambient dub techno with glitchy textures, subtle beats, and dreamy atmospheres, their sound is slow, hypnotic, and immersive. Their latest album titled Faith deepens this style, mixing acoustic tones, brittle drum ‘n’ bass rhythms, and poetic vocals into a lush, drifting soundscape made for quiet introspection.

Onas Ueno :: Umwelt EP (Strata) — [concise]

Onas Ueno’s Umwelt EP is a haunting, immersive journey through ambient and experimental soundscapes. Blending glitch, spectral melodies, and neoclassical tones, each track unfolds with emotional depth and textural richness. From the hazy pulse of “Lo” to the ethereal drift of “What Angels,” the EP moves fluidly between abrasion and serenity, leaving a lasting, otherworldly impression.

Celine Arnauld :: Fragmented error sync (Evel) — [concise]

Fragmented error sync by Celine Arnauld (aka Pablo Miranda) is a gripping dive into glitch-laced braindance, where fractured rhythms and abrasive textures collide. Across thirteen tracks, Miranda fuses chaos and precision, crafting dense, hypnotic sequences from shattered sound. It’s a meticulously detailed journey through digital decay—jagged, raw, and irresistibly magnetic.

Halo :: The Story Behind Depeche Mode’s Classic Album Violator

By the late 1980s, Depeche Mode had found global success—but the U.S. remained elusive. Despite support from stations like WLIR and KROQ, mainstream America hadn’t caught on. That changed with 1990’s Violator. Riding the momentum of Music for the Masses and Depeche Mode 101, the band hit a creative high, delivering the album that would launch them into true worldwide fame.