Milwaukee-based multi-instrumentalist, composer, painter, and filmmaker Max Devereaux explores the tactile, physical potential of the turntable on Aguja. Through fragmented vinyl manipulation, layered improvisation, and sonic collage, Devereaux transforms noise and decay into structured chaos, echoing the experimental minimalism of artists like Oval and Alva Noto.
Tag: Glitch
exm :: F T (Self Released) — [concise]
exm (Jeroen Bax) returns with F T, a 29-minute continuous composition that blurs the line between structure and entropy. Immersive and ever-morphing, it unfolds as a single, hypnotic current of glitch, melody, and abstract machinery—an intricate study in controlled sonic chaos.
Maps and Diagrams :: Clearwater (ROHS!)
With Clearwater, Maps and Diagrams (Tim Martin) crafts a hypnotic meditation on erosion, decay, and the quiet instability of sound. Blurring the line between ambient composition and sonic disintegration, the album drifts through fractured loops and dissolving textures, revealing beauty in impermanence and space.
TOKEE :: Путешествие Remixes (Mahorka)
With Путешествие Remixes, the evolution of ЛЕЯ continues—fifteen artists reinterpret the original’s emotional and textural depth through their own sonic prisms. The result is a unified yet kaleidoscopic reimagining, where each remix expands the source material into new dimensions of rhythm, mood, and atmosphere.
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.
Skurken :: Nótt (Touched Music)
Skurken’s Nótt marks a striking evolution in Jóhann Ómarsson’s sound—retaining the emotive depth of earlier works while exploring a broader, more varied electronic palette. Released on the ever-reliable Touched Music, it’s a cohesive and heartfelt journey through texture, rhythm, and reflection that both honors the past and points clearly toward the future.
Somaticae :: ENIAC EP (Evel) — [concise]
Evel remains unwavering in their pursuit of fringe electronics and mangled sonic artifacts, sustaining the IDM undercurrent with an ear for the abstract and the arcane. Somaticae’s ENIAC is a two-track, sixteen-minute plunge into disjointed circuitry and alien signal paths—where noise, rhythm, and atmosphere collide in cryptic harmony.
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.
Dr. Nojoke :: Inpi Mari EP (CLIKNO)
Frank Bogdanowitz, aka Dr. Nojoke, delivers Inpi Mari, a minimal techno suite that blends mournful beauty with urgent environmental consciousness. Through four immersive tracks, the EP reflects on the tension between synthetic pleasure and ecological responsibility, crafting a hypnotic soundscape that calls attention to the silent tragedy of plastic waste.















