Varg Reveals Double EP for Northern Electronics

Jonas Rönnberg (a.k.a Varg) has revealed a new double EP for Northern Electronics, due out on vinyl and digital on May 3. 

We’re told that the EPs—entitled Sky City: Even in the Heart of Heaven, Angels Can Still Feel Fear and Sky City: A Weak Heart to Break (Spit)—further Rönnberg’s way of storytelling and illustrate his deft and agile take on techno. “Minimalism spars with blissed out programming, unafraid to pepper sedate hooks with intricate percussions,” the label explains. 

Rönnberg’s vast catalog spans heavily across Northern Electronics, the label he runs together with Anthony Linell (f.k.a Abdulla Rashim), and the Danish label Posh Isolation.  These will be his third and fourth releases of the year, following a Posh Isolation cassette and a two-track single with AnnaMelina. His last solo appearance on Northern Electronics came with 2017’s Nordic Flora Series Pt.3 (Gore​-​Tex City).

This new double EP was recorded in Stockholm, Copenhagen, Mexico City, Taipei, Paris, Tbilisi, Lyon, London, Berlin, and Skellefteå. 

Artwork comes from David Von Bahr, with logos by Chris Magnusson.. 

Tracklisting, Sky City: Even in the Heart of Heaven, Angels Can Still Feel Fear

A1. Cyclone (Even in the Heart of Heaven, Angels Can Still Feel Fear) 

A2. Crush the System / Soak.Create_Soak_Party_Situation

B1. Death.Toggle / CheatingIntensityBuff_Fearless ft. Fatal & Chatline 

B2. Green Flames Covering the Winter Sky (Västerbotten)

Tracklisting, Sky City: A Weak Heart to Break (Spit)

A1. A Weak Heart to Break (BD 4-Ever)

A2. The Fallen Star Was Just a Man / Buff_Depressed

B1. Spit! / CheatingIntensityBuff_Passionate (Motherlode)

B2. This Wretched Light ft. Patrick Quick

The double EP lands on May 3, with “A Weak Heart to Break (BD 4-Ever)” streaming below. 

Premiere: Hear a Psychedelic Tribal Remix by DJ Khalab

DJ Khalab has remixed a cut from fellow Italian producer Waxlife‘s debut album, Patterns.

Patterns was released via Ghost Records back in November, and features 14 deep and varied electronic explorations, from tripped-out electro to pop-infused house, and everything in between.

Now, the album returns in the form of DJ Khalab’s remix of album cut “Wistful Wire,” twisting the swinging, bass-heavy house grooves of the original into a psychedelic, Afro-beat journey. 

You can stream DJ Khalab’s remix below, with the full album available here.

10 Discogs Gems of March

In support of XLR8R+ and independent music, we’re compiling 10 of our favorite Discogs gems into an easy-to-digest list each month; all submissions come from independent labels. You’ll perhaps know some but you’re unlikely to know them all—but these are some of the tracks that are on repeat week after week in the XLR8R offices. 

XLR8R+ is a monthly subscription service to complement the main XLR8R site. By subscribing, you’re helping to allow us to continue doing what we’ve been doing for over 25 years: finding, curating, and serving the best electronic music out there, without paid influence. Each month, we share three unreleased tracks from three different artists that we feel are pushing the scene forward in inspiring ways. These tracks will be available for download in high-quality WAV format for the duration of one month; subscribers for that particular month will have them. They will not be available anywhere else and there will be no access to archived material—join our movement to keep independent journalism alive. You can find information on the latest edition of here. XLR8Rplus 009 features cuts from DVS1, Vladislav Delay, and Convextion.

SUBSCRIBE TO XLR8R+ HERE or DONATE HERE.

Derek Carr “Destiny” (2003)

Geek Records 

Derek Carr is one of the unsung heroes of UK house and techno, and it’s a pleasure digging through his back catalog, unearthing gem after gem. “Destiny” was originally self-released before being picked up by Leeds-based label Geek Records in 2003. It’s a simple and beautifully effective deep, driving house track. Keep your eyes out for a 17 track LP containing re-issues of Derek’s old tracks coming out later this month from the label, For Those That Knoe.

Roots Manuva “Next Type Of Motion” (1995)

Sound Of Money 

Rodney Hylton Smith (a.k.a Roots Manuva) is a rapper and producer from London. His flow is immediately recognizable, and he combines this with intricate wordplay, mixing the surreal with the everyday. His beats range from dancehall, hip-hop, experimental, electronic, techno, and anything in between. Next Type Of Motion was his first EP, released in 1995 at the age of 23 on London-based hip-hop label Sound Of Money, which also helped the launch the career of Blak Twang. This is the title track. 

Convextion “Untitled AA” (1995)

Matrix

One of the most elusive characters in electronic music, Convextion is known for his minimalist, futuristic, and timeless records. With only one brief interview to his name, it’s impossible to find anything personal on him, except that his real name is Gerard Hanson, he was born in 1972 in Dallas, Texas, and that he’s been releasing as Convextion and E.R.P. (meaning Event Related Potential) intermittently since the mid-‘90s. His first release, the self-titled Convextion, appeared in 1995 featuring “Untitled AA,” a driving electro cut. Convextion has given us a track for the latest edition of XLR8R+, subscribe here to get it.

D Base “Believe In Yourself” (1999)

D Base

Mike Millrain (a.k.a D Base) was a huge influence in the garage scene between the late ’90s and early 2000s, and was also a member of The Streets up until 2011. He set up his own label Soul Revolution Records in 2014 and continues to release music. “Believe In Yourself” is a jungle and garage hybrid with strong break and vocals.

Vladislav Delay “Lumi” (2007)

Huume

Born in 1976 in Oulu, Finland, Sasu Ripatti (a.k.a Vladislav Delay) is known for his experimental productions. The composer/producer has marked himself as one of electronic music’s most unique artists with his music transporting you into a deeply cerebral, meditative state. “Lumi” was released in 2007 on the Whistleblower album through Ripatti’s own Huume. It’s a beautiful ambient track that stands alone, but we recommend finding a comfy spot and listening to his albums all the way through. Vladislav Delay has also just released a track for the latest edition of XLR8R+, which you can download by subscribing here. 

Two To The Power “Soul 4 Love” (2001) 

Oblong Records

The label Oblong has a string of great releases with artists such as 100HZ, Nathan Coles, Stopouts, and many more. The idea behind the imprint started when Lewis Copeland owned a specialist record shop in Soho called Vinyl Junkies. Two To The Power was made up of Lewis Copeland himself and friend Tam Cooper, who is also one-third of Precision Cuts.  Released in 2001 in the glory days of early tech-house, “Soul 4 Love” has a groovy bassline with building piano chords, and is a record that any tech house or deep house fan should want to have in their collection.

DVS1 “Black Russian” (2014)

Klockworks

Legendary DJ-producer and Berghain resident DVS1 (a.k.a Zak Khutoretsky) has been one of the most prominent voices in the preservation of true club culture. He first found international acclaim through his production work, which opened the doors to touring as a DJ.  “Black Russian” was released on Ben Klock’s Klockworks in 2014 and is an emotive techno floor filler, the type of tracks DVS1 has become known for. Download an exclusive track of his now by subscribing to XLR8R+ to here.

Fugue “Contrapoint” (1994)

Likemind

There is a very little known about Fugue (a.k.a Nurmad Jusat.) He had a string of releases from 1993 to 1996 as either Fugue, Nuron, or his own name, and all of them are worth a listen but it’s “Contrapoint” that has stayed with us the most, released in 1994 on Likemind Records. 

Terry Francis “Bonjour Charles” (2002)

Groove Pleasure 

Legendary UK DJ-producer Terry Francis is a name synonymous with house music, and he has been a resident of iconic London club Fabric since 1999. “Bonjour Charles” was released in 2002 on Groove Pleasure, and is a tech house banger, perfect for the club. To hear this on a proper system is something to behold!

Enrico Mantini “What You Want” (1994)

UMM

Enrico Mantini’s name has already been mentioned in this series but his tracks are just too good. One of the founders of the deep house movement, Mantini’s longevity is due to the fact that whether you’re listening to his tracks from the early ’90s or his more recent releases, he has continued to consistently release quality. “What You Want” was released in 1994 on Naples-based label UMM and is a beautiful deep house number with soulful vocals. An uplifting and inspiring masterpiece. 

Modern Love’s Young Americans Launches Repress of Daphne Oram’s ‘Oramics’

Modern Love imprint Young Americans has launched a vinyl repress of the expansive Daphne Oram set originally released in 2010, Oramics. The collection runs 155 minutes and is an exact reproduction of the last pressing in 2013. It comes housed in a heavyweight, 300gm gatefold sleeve that features rare archival photographs and extensive information behind the content. 

Throughout her life, Oram was a wildly original musician, inventor, and theorist. She was the founder of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop and is cited as the first woman to build an electronic musical instrument, one that worked around the “drawn-sound” technique whereby strips of 35mm film would be manipulated before being fed into her home-made “Oramics” machine, which would convert and “read” the film into sound. Oram’s work remained largely unknown to the wider public until Clive Graham compiled this set for a CD release in 2007. 

Spanning 44 tracks, it demonstrates Oram’s work as some of the most varied and groundbreaking electronic music ever made. Grab a copy here and listen to “Rotolock” below.

Tracklisting

01. Introduction

02. Power Tools

03. Bird Of Parallax

04. In A Jazz Style

05. Purring Interlude

06. Contrasts Essconic

07. Lego Builds It

08. Pompie Ballet (Excerpt)

09. Intertel

10. Adwick High School No. 1

11. Look At Oramics

12. Rotolock

13. Purple Dust

14. High Speed Flight

15. Studio Experiment No.1

16. Four Aspects

17. Kia Ora

18. Dr. Faustus Suite

19. Adwick High School No.2

20 Tumblewash

21. Studio Experiment No.2

22. Snow

23. Rockets In Ursa Major (Excerpt 1)

24. Food Preservation

25. Studio Experiment No.3

26. Bala

27. Episode Metallic

28. Studio Experiment No.4

29. Adwick High School No.3

30. Fanfare Of Graphs

31. Studio Experiment No.5

32. Brocilliande

33. Mary Had A Little Lamb

34. Incidental Music For Invasion (Excerpts)

35. Costain Suite

36. Rockets In Ursa Major (Excerpt 2)

37. Passacaglia

38. Missile Away

39. Pulse Persephone4

40. Adwick High School No.4

41. Nestea

42. Rockets In Ursa Major (Excerpt 3)

43. Conclusion

44. Studio Jinks

Nick Garcia “Sleepless” (Original Version)

DC-based producer and DJ Nick Garcia is well versed in house music, having managed Yoshitoshi Recordings for the last four years. His approach to music and sound design is unrestricted by genre affiliations, and this approach has landed his records on labels like PUZL Records, Night Vision Music, Lifted Contingency, and more. 

Up next is a contribution to SPECTRUMS, a compilation series from LAMP—Los Angeles Music Project—focusing on artists who are re-envisioning some of their favorite music, exploring the genres that inspire them, and pushing the boundaries of their creativity with sounds. Periodically, LAMP will select tracks that span multiple genres across the spectrum of electronic music and showcase them in this compilation series.

In support of this upcoming compilation, out April 5, we’re offering Garcia’s “Sleepless” as one of today’s free downloads. Grab it now via WeTransfer below, or here for EU readers due to temporary GDPR restrictions. 

Podcast 585: Bogdan Raczynski

Coming from Bogdan Raczynski, this mix is as out-there as you’d expect—a thrilling, fast-paced 45-minute sonic adventure of irregular rhythms that comes with a tracklist that’d you’d expect from a mix at least five times times its length (not one of these plays out to the end.) It opens with two tracks from the same artist—Danny Breaks, a British drum and bass DJ better known as Sonz Of A Loop Da Loop Era—and closes with an album’s worth of clattering jungle from Soundmurderer + SK-1. But Raczynski has never been one for convention. 

Raczynski was born around 1977 in Poland before moving to the United States with his family. He attended art school in Japan but later dropped out and eventually became homeless and living on the streets of Tokyo or living in friends’ homes. He arrived on the scene in 1999, rumoured to have been discovered by Aphex Twin whilst sleeping rough. He released three albums in quick succession that year alone—think happy hardcore, gabba techno, and drill-n-bass—and more followed, all through Rephlex, the latest album coming in 2007 in the shape of Alright!. He’s also collaborated with ​Björk​ and remixed Autechre for Warp’s ​10+3 compilation, but things have been quiet for over a decade. 

To celebrate to upcoming release of Rave ‘Till You Cry—an 18-track archival album of joyous sugar-rush tunes—Raczynski compiled a mix of some of his favourite records. It’s intense and and frantic, hardly something to put on in the background, but it’s certainly fun and exciting—a grower if you’re in the right mood. Grab it now via the WeTransfer button below, and read more on Rave ‘Till You Cry here ahead of its release on Disciples, a Warp-affiliated label. 

What have you been up to recently?

I’ve been running various reverse time-stretch experiments. That is, a few years ago, I connected an array of EMF and ultrasonic microphones in, around, and under a nearby 100-year-old barn. The goal is to record how this building lives, decays, breaths, and otherwise exists within its environment. 

If you can imagine the floorboards in your house creaking, but on a slower, less interrupted scale. There are so many factors at play that affect the end result. For example, there is no foundation on the barn so the changing seasons impact the soil which has a direct yet microscopic effect on the wood, not to mention the fact that the barn itself is sinking ever so slightly each year. Animals occasionally use the barn too, which affects the air quality, accelerates decay, and otherwise impacts what does and does not happen in and around the barn, etc.

And those are just a couple of the physical factors solely related to the barn itself. 

There are also many recordings of the barn to take into consideration, various sources, methods, and locations. And then you also have a plethora of algorithms to process the sound, for example from a three-year recording to something listenable like a five-minute clip.

All of this obviously requires a hefty amount of computational power, storage capacity, and, most notably, time. But imagine if one day there was a technology that could record entire decades with ease: cities, rooms, mountains, and you had the means to recontextualize the recordings with ease. Or perhaps there would be even more layers, something spectral perhaps.

It’s a beautiful metaphor for all of the influences in a song. We generally focus solely on the aesthetics, the instrumentation, a song’s place within a time and place. Sometimes there’s an effort to piece together some kind of emotional puzzle. 

But rarely do we consider the fact that we are all actually instruments in the most beautiful sense that all of our lived experiences differentiate how you would create a song as opposed to someone else. Not just your musical training, or lack thereof, but your conversations, your parental relationships, your fears and joys. The ground you’ve walked on, the smells, all of the times you’ve been sick, the affection you’ve received or haven’t. The wrongs you’ve committed and the guilt you’ve built up. Your heart of hearts.

You’re set to release Rave ‘Till You Cry. Tell me the story behind it.

I’ve become a bit obsessed with algorithms as I don’t think we are appreciating how big of a role they will play in our future. We like to focus on privacy issues, large scale hacks, and their impact, and other easily understandable consequences of our interconnected lives. But I imagine a future where some kind of processing unit will be so vast in its power and ability that it can hoover up an entire century of content, all of the lived, experiences, photos, every book contained during that time, data on weather, wars, traffic, technology and so on as a means of … well.. whatever its mistress/master wishes. Perhaps the goal will be benevolent. Perhaps functional. Perhaps bad.

Rave ‘Till You Cry is steeped in algorithms. Not just the compositions themselves but their order, their sequencing, the samples, etc. Ultimately, that is what all music appears to be, some kind of vast, otherwise unimaginable beast that crumbles into atoms if you attempt to pick it apart too much.

Why are you releasing it now?

Now is the time. There is no other time to release it.

“….if you can stomach the whole thing then perhaps, just maybe, you’ll be revved up to do something to help humanity.”

What can we expect with this mix?

This mix is a 45-minute, 63-track micro-rave. Dance, close your eyes, or hang your head in blissful, temporary ignorance, whatever. But, if you can stomach the whole thing then perhaps, just maybe, you’ll be revved up to do something to help humanity. If not, this mix has failed its purpose and our future denizens may consist of those whose billionaire asshole ancestors built bunkers and sorted themselves the fuck out.

Is there a particular theme or idea behind it?

People become obsessed with gear, but I’ve always been obsessed with software. Cutting, splicing, shifting, rearranging.

How did you choose the tracks that you included?

Vibration. Energy. Sound power.

First, you pick the tracks that give you tingles. Memory tingles, knee jerk, whatever makes your synapses visibly fire. Then, sequence. Think about it, but don’t overthink it. Focus on energy.

Step outside of your shell a bit. If it makes you a bit uncomfortable, then you’re on the right track.

If it’s not interesting to you, then why the fuck should it be interesting to anyone else?

What’s next on the horizon?

I’m working on a new album, looking for a label to release it on, and also trying to get over to Europe this summer for some shows, to smell some different air and test out some new experiments I’m prototyping. 

Enough time has passed and I’ve stayed sufficiently disconnected from any scene that I don’t feel any particular influence. But it’s me, it’s electronic, and it’s as close to the pure energy, literally and figuratively seeping out of that barn as I can get.

Due to temporary issues regarding the GDPR, EU readers can download the podcast here.

Tracklisting

01. Sonz Of A Loop Da Loop Era “What The…”

02. Sons of a Loop da Loop Era “Breaks the Unbreakable”

03. Bay B Kane “Wake Up”

04. Austin “Unity in Dub”

05. Austin “Unity in Dub”

06. Acen “Close Your Eyes” (‘XXX’ Mix)

07. Acen “Trip II The Moon” (Kaleidoscopiklimax)

08. Omni Trio “Renegade Snares”

09. EQ “Total Ecstasy” (remix)

10. Acen “Window In The Sky” (DJ DMS Mix)

11. Swoopes “Firin’ Times”

12. Omni Trio “Mainline” (Techno Mix)

13. Cloud 9 “Mr. Logic”

14. DJ Crystl “Warpdrive”

15. DJ Mayhem “Inesse” (Ray Keith Remix)

16. Krome & Time “The Slammer”

17. Engineers Without Fears “Spiritual Aura”

18. Omni Trio “Feel” (Feel Good)

19. D-Force “Original Bad Boy”

20. Q Project “Champion Sound”

21. DJ Rap “Digable Bass”

22. Ray Keith “Phizical” (Moody Mix)

23. Bay-B-Kane “Hello Darkness” (remix)

24. Bizzy B “Slow Jam”

25. DJ Hype “Weird Energy” (Hells Bells Mix)

26. Johnny Jungle “Flammable”

27. Rhythm For Reasons “The Smokers Rhythm”

28. Renegade “Something I Feel” (2 Bad Mice Remix)

29. NRG “I Need Your Lovin'”

30. Tango “Project 1” (Remix)

31. Noise Factory “Can U Feel The Rush” (Remix)

32. DJ KP “Stoned”

33. Open Skies “Ozone Nights”

34. FBD Project “Terminate”

35. Boogie Times Tribe “Dark Stranger” (Origin Unknown Remix)

36. Origin Unknown “Valley Of The Shadows”

37. 4 Horsemen Of The Apocalypse “Drowning In Her”

38. EQP “Crackman The Return” [DJ Ron Remix]

39. Cloud 9 “You Got Me Burnin'” (Original)

40. DJ Hype “Going Out For Da Loot”

41. Engineers Without Fears “Rhythm”

42. Renegade “Terrorist” (PA Mix)

43. 4 Hero “Journey From The Light”

44. Foul Play “Open Your Mind”

45. Foul Play “Being With You” (Foul Play Remix)

46. H.M.P. “Runnin’s”

47. The Invisible Man “You Don’t Know”

48. The House Crew “Euphoria” (Nino’s Dream)

49. Soundmurderer + SK-1 “Fathom”

50. Soundmurderer + SK-1 “Badman”

51. Soundmurderer + SK-1 “Stylee”

52. Soundmurderer + SK-1 “Soundclash”

53. Soundmurderer + SK-1 “Dangerous”

54. Soundmurderer + SK-1 “Toronto V.I.P.”

55. Soundmurderer + SK-1 “Darkness”

56. Soundmurderer + SK-1 “Search & Destroy”

57. Soundmurderer + SK-1 “Call Da Police”

58. Soundmurderer “Lickshot”

59. Soundmurderer + SK-1 “Soundclash Remix”

60. Soundmurderer “Track 1”

61. Soundmurderer + SK-1 “Tel’embodanustyle”

62. Soundmurderer “Track 3”

63. Soundmurderer + SK-1 “Dreader Than Dread”

Shafiq Husayn Collaborates with Thundercat, Flying Lotus, Hiatus Kaiyote, and More on Sophomore Album

Los Angeles-based multi-instrumentalist and Sa-Ra member Shafiq Husayn has announced the release of his long-awaited sophomore solo album, The Loop

Scheduled to release March 29 on Brooklyn’s Nature Sounds in North America and London’s Eglo Records for the rest of the world, the 17-tracks across The Loop feature a unique and experimental mixture of neo-soul, R&B, jazz, fusion, and hip-hop, cast through the lens of Los Angeles culture over the last decade. It marks Husayn’s first solo release since 2009’s Shafiq En’ A-Free-Ka

A large number of artists appear across the album, including Erykah Badu, Thundercat, Flying Lotus, Hiatus Kaiyote, Bilal, Robert Glasper, Coultrain, Chris “Daddy” Dave, Anderson Paak, Miguel Atwood-Ferguson, Jimetta Rose, Fatima, Computer Jay, Kamasi Washington, Bilal, Nia Andrews, Seven Davis Jr., Om’Mas Keith, N’Dambi, and many more. 

The album comes accompanied by a series of paintings from acclaimed Japanese visual artist Tokio Aoyama, working in tandem with Shafiq Husayn to create a painting for each song on the album.

Stream the Flying Lotus co-produced track “Walking Round Town” below, with pre-order for the 2LP, CD, cassette, and digital versions of The Loop here

Tracklisting

01. The Flood

02. May I Assume feat. Jimetta Rose & Fatima

03. My-Story Of Love / Starring You

04. DMT (The Whill)

05. Between Us 2 feat. Bilal

06. Mrs Crabtree feat. Erykah Badu, N’Dambi & Aset SoSavvy

07. On Our Way Home feat. Fatima & Jimetta Rose

08. Walking Round Town prod. Flying Lotus

09. Cycles feat. Hiatus Kaiyote

10. Message In A Bottle feat. Coultrain

11. It’s Better For You feat. Anderson Paak

12. Show Me How You Feel feat. Karen Be

13. Hours Away feat Om’Mas Keith & Coultrain

14. Twelve feat. The Dove Society

15. Picking Flowers feat. El Sadiq

16. Optimystical feat. Robert Glasper

17. New Worlds Over

The Caretaker Drops Final Release, ‘Everywhere At The End Of Time, Stage 6’

The last entry in Leyland James Kirby’s (a.k.a The Caretaker) Everywhere at the end of time series has launched this month with Stage 6, once again via his own History Always Favours The Winners.

Kirby launched the series in September 2016 aiming to present a sonic interpretation of the mind falling into the depths of dementia. Stage 6 is available now on select digital platforms and deluxe gatefold black and blue vinyl versions. The layout includes reproductions of three new paintings by longtime collaborator Ivan Seal. 

In conjunction with the new LP, Kirby has also released the digital-only album Everywhere, an empty bliss, available exclusively on Bandcamp until June 16. 

Both LPs mark Kirby’s final releases under The Caretaker, ending a 20-year run. 

Reflecting on the Everywhere at the end of time series, Kirby says: “When work began on this series it was difficult to predict how the music would unravel itself. Dementia is an emotive subject for many and always a subject I have treated with maximum respect. Stages have all been artistic reflections of specific symptoms which can be common with the progression and advancement of the different forms of Alzheimer’s.”

Order for the digital and physical copies of Everywhere at the end of time—Stage 6 is here, with a stream of the album below. The album is also available on a deluxe 4CD set containing Stages 4-6, with ordering options for that version at this link.

 Tracklisting—Everywhere at the end of time, Stage 6

O1. A confusion so thick you forget forgetting 

P1. A brutal bliss beyond this empty defeat 

Q1. Long decline is over 

R1. Stage 6 Place in the World fades away

Tracklisting—Everywhere, an empty bliss

01. Loss of want back there

02. I might be vanishing

03. Empty beyond beyond beyond

04. Losing battle of loss

05. Advanced plaque camaraderie

06. All eyes bewildered

07. Glimpses of life denial

08. Equinox eyes will stop

09. Losing loss of battle

10. Plaque advanced despair

11. Benjamin beyond bliss

12. Drifting sublime hope

13. Minimal all you are

14. Internal unravel 

15. Dusk memory fraction

16. Entanglement synapse ache

17. And bliss everywhere bliss

SLV “Dust”

Last month, Soma released the latest album from Berlin’s SLV.

Titled Berlin. Portrait In Music, the LP, SLV’s fifth outing on Soma, is a subtle and affecting collection of tender ambient that looks to soundtrack his home city and its alluring nuances. We’re told to expect an engrossing listen that places SLV’s talent for sound design at the forefront. Expertly processed field recordings and hypnotizing atmospheres intertwine with emotive piano and synth lines across a standout sophomore album that warrants complete immersion. 

With the record now on the shelves—you can pick it up here—SLV has offered up album cut “Dust” as today’s XLR8R download, available via WeTransfer.

Due to issues regarding the GDPR, EU readers can download the track here.

SØS Gunver Ryberg to Release Soundtrack Album via Cristian Vogel’s Endless Process

SØS Gunver Ryberg will release her first soundtrack album via Cristian Vogel’s fresh Endless Process label on Friday, March 22. 

The music serves as the soundtrack to Rasmus Kloster Bro’s film “Cutterhead,” which deals with a catastrophe during the construction of the new Copenhagen Metro system. The score won Best Music Prize at the French Film Festival Premiers Plans in 2019, and the film has won a number of festival awards.

We’re told that the soundtrack is challenging like the film’s subject matter, and yet the music establishes its own unique emotional impact with the listener. Fans of SØS’ soundscapes in the BAFTA Award-winning video game “INSIDE” will connect with the powerful textures that stir up profound emotions as they contrast with deceptively simple melodic motifs.

Cristian Vogel launched Endless Process earlier this year with a long-player from Danish composer/producer Bjørn Svin. 

Tracklisting

01. Cutterhead—Heaven or Hell 

02. Day after day

03. Under the surface

04. The Accident

05. Earth Pressure Balance 

06. The world outside

07. Life is waiting

08. Nightmare

09. Letting down

10. Heaven and Hell

11. The Cutterhead

12. Let go

13. Never give up

14. Last glimpse

15. Oxygen

16. Cutterhead—Tearing Worlds

Cutterhead LP lands Friday, March 22, with the opening cut streaming here

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