Podcast 767: Alien Communications

Growing up in Newcastle, England, Simon Bays’ (better known as Bays, and head of the Space Dust label) first experiences of dance music culture were at parties such as Shindig and venues like Cosmic Ballroom and World Headquarters, before he moved to Edinburgh for university aged 18. There, he discovered venues like Cabaret Voltaire, where he’s been a resident DJ for more than decade, and this has led to him playing other clubs, starting his own parties, and eventually forming Alien Communications with DJ Rise, a fellow DJ-producer based in Scotland, also known as Age of Hyperion, in 2019.

“The whole project came about very organically,” Rise says. “Bays and I were both living in the same city, DJing at the same club, and we shared strong views on the culture as a whole.”

At the root of those shared views, namely to create the best sets and parties, was an ambition to “push forward every aspect of electronic music,” Bays says, and they were inspired by artists like Drexciya and Gerald Donald. Though it began as a curated party series hosted in London and Edinburgh, where they would both DJ back-to-back, Alien Communications now encompasses a record label and a recording project, which have been inextricably linked since the first release, 2020’s Ozone 22.

Then, a year later, they jumped into writing Synthetic Memory Systems, their debut album comprising 16 tracks with their ‘90s-tinged, futurist aesthetic, all of which are sure to blast your mind into deep space. The label has since welcomed the work of Omega Men and Bolam, and they’ve released Goodbye Esmond. Hello Kevin, the debut album from Modus. More recently, they curated the 36th edition of XLR8R+, sharing a bundle of previously unheard tracks that define their signature electro sound.

As 2022 draws to a close, Alien Communications have pieced together an XLR8R podcast. Recorded in Edinburgh earlier this month, it follows on from a full summer where they’re been as busy as pretty much any artist we can think of, touring, promoting, and producing. You can consider this the full-stop of that period, with which they’ve selected their favorite tracks they’ve played out and mixed them together for us to enjoy. What you’re going to hear is just over an hour of weird breaks, techno, and electro from two of the UK’s finest electronic music curators of the moment.

01. What have you been up to recently?
It’s been a really busy summer, with Alien Communications being our DJ-production alias, record label and party.

As promoters, we’ve recently hosted some larger-scale shindigs at Village Underground, The Cause, and Edinburgh’s Cabaret Voltaire. As always, we’ve booked a musically and socially diverse range of DJs, including Move D, DJ Masda, Vlada, OMAR, and Adam Pits, and live acts such as Schatrax, Sansibar, Dopplereffekt, and DMX Krew. At the same time, we’ve really enjoyed our ongoing monthly residency at The Lion & Lamb, where we’ve invited the likes of Ogazón, Innershades, and Andrew James Gustav to share the booth with us.

As DJs, we’ve played some great festival shows at Otherlands and Terminal V, as well as trips to Barcelona and Berlin alongside our regular bookings in London and Edinburgh. In between gigs, we’ve been working in the studio on new material to follow up on our debut album, as well as readying releases on the label from some amazing artists, such as Modus, Polytunnel, Koloah, and Domenic Cappello.

02. What have you been listening to?
There’s so much great new music being released from within the UK at the moment, with EYA Records, X-Kalay, and Craigie Knowes all putting out a constant stream of “buy on sight” material. We’re also loving the EPs on Hardacre’s self-titled imprint, which haven’t left our bag all summer!

Further afield, we’ve noticed a lot of amazing records coming out of Australia recently, with labels like Salt Mines and producers like Reptant being among our favorites. On top of this, Germany’s Die Orakel and Canada’s Planet Euphorique both always hit the spot.

03. The origins of Alien Communications are a little dusty. How did the project come about?
We started hanging around together about four years ago after noticing each other’s faces at the same parties around Edinburgh. After meeting up to have a mix, it soon transpired we had similar tastes in electronic music and similar ideals regarding club culture. From there, we started spending time together in the studio and making our debut EP, which was also the first release on the label!

This really gave us the Alien Communications bug, and soon we were producing merchandise, releasing music from other artists, and promoting parties. The summer of 2019 felt like a springboard: selling 500 copies of our first release and bringing artists like Nicolas Lutz, Binh, and Francesco Del Garda to Scotland for the first time. Everything else seemed to grow from there!

04. What’s the overarching aim of the project?
Without having a real “end goal,” we see the project as more of an outlet through which we channel our love for electronic music and club culture. We put our hearts into everything we do, whether it’s our productions, parties, releases on the label, merchandise, or DJ mixes. That’s something we hope you’ll be able to feel in this one for XLR8R.

05. Where and when did you record this mix?
Edinburgh, Scotland. September 2022.

06. What can the listener expect?
The mix is packed full of real ecstasy tracks, with weird breaks, techno, and electro. We’ve tried to include lots of our favorite records, most of which we’ve been playing out all summer, to give the listener a taste of what it’s like to hear us play in a club. There’s some old records and some new records, but we believe they all have a timeless sound.

07. How did you go about choosing the tracks you’ve included?
We both went through the bags we’ve been taking to our gigs over the past few months, picking out staples from our sets, and then merging our selections. It was difficult to whittle this down to just 18 tracks, but we’re really happy with the outcome. If you’ve seen us play out at any point throughout summer, you’ll definitely have heard some of these records. It’s a pretty accurate representation of what it’s like to hear Alien Communications in the flesh.

08. What setup did you use?
Two Technics 1210s, an Allen & Heath Xone:92 mixer, plus one CDJ, specifically so we could end the mix with that digital-only track under Aphex Twin’s AFX alias!

09. What’s next on your horizon?
As much as we love throwing parties and putting records out on the label, we’ll be putting more focus on ourselves as artists. Since the release of our debut album, we’ve been stacking up tracks and have another wave of Alien Communications music ready to be released. We’ll also be continuing our monthly residency at The Lion & Lamb, plus regular slots at The Cause, Village Underground, and Cabaret Voltaire.

XLR8R has now joined Mixcloud Select, meaning that to hear the podcast offline you will need to subscribe to our Select channel to listen offline, or subscribe to XLR8R+ to download the file. The move to Mixcloud Select will ensure that all the producers with music featured in our mixes get paid. You can read more about it here.

Full XLR8R+ Members can download the podcast below. If you’re not an XLR8R+ member, you can read more about it and subscribe here.

Tracklisting

01. Lazer Worshippers “Lazer Worshippers Theme” (EXperimental)
02. Bigeneric “Electrophoria” (The Spacefrogs)
03. Technical Onslaught “Eyes of the Mind” (Allabi Records)
04. Groove Quantize “Mind Trax” (Synewave)
05. Scape One “Ectosphere” (Satamile Records NYC)
06. EON “Absorbed” (Longhaul)
07. Friedrich Ernst “Class Beat” (Self Learning System)
08. Hardacre “Control” (Hardacre)
09. PQ17 “Beyond the Horizon” (Electro Music Coalition)
10. Hardfloor “The Life We Choose (E.R.P. Remix) (Hardfloor)
11. Sedgwick “Metal Detector” (Potatoheadz)
12. No Moon “E Then Q” (Saltmines)
13. James Shinra “Automatic” (WIDE)
14. Neuro-D “Artificiality” (Poeta Negra)
16. T.E.W. “Superficiality” (Habitat)
17. Hoax Believers “Guerrero” (Distrito 91)
18. BufoBufo “Remote Viewing” (Emotec)
19. AFX “T16.5 MADMA” with nastya+5.2 (Warp Records)

The XX’s Oliver Sim Shares Debut Album

Oliver Sim—best known for his work as songwriter, bassist, and vocalist of The xx—has released his debut album through Young.

Produced by bandmate Jamie xx, Hideous Bastard is the culmination of two years of writing and recording, inspired by Sim’s love of horror movies and his own life experience, unpacking themes of shame, fear, and masculinity.

Several of the songs will soundtrack the forthcoming short film “Hideous,” starring Sim and directed by Yann Gonzales.

Tracklisting

01. Hideous feat. Jimmy Somerville
02. Romance With a Memory
03. Sensitive Child
04. Never Here
05. Unreliable Narrator
06. Saccharine
07. Confident Man
08. GMT
09. Fruit
10. Run The Credits

Hideous Bastard is available now.

Rrose and Lucy Return as Lotus Eater

Lotus Eater, the collaboration of Luca Mortellaro (a.k.a Lucy) and Seth Horvitz (a.k.a Rrose), will release a new album in November.

Plasma is the second album the pair have released. Over nine original tracks, the album “unfolds with exacting precision by exhibiting a point of focus and expanding on it,” we’re told. It uses a single, throbbing pulse to generate a constellation of sounds and rhythms that form around it “like a volcanic eruption in slow motion.”

Playing with our sense of time and weight, Plasma feels “simultaneously slow and urgent,” Stroboscopic Artefacts, the label says, while also “spacious and immense.”

Officially formed in 2017, Lotus Eater came to life through several collaborations over a number of years, and finally blossomed with the release of Desatura, a debut album that Lotus Eater toured live between 2018 and 2019. The project uses synthesised sound and feedback as fundamental sources to generate both textural and percussive elements, and a sense of tension and weight emerge from sources that cannot be easily pinpointed.

Tracklisting

01. Pendulum
02. Lost Conductor
03. Wishing Well
04. Tunnel
05. Intracluster
06. Stars
07. The End Of Words
08. Filament
09. Pray

Plasma LP is scheduled for November 11. Meanwhile, you can stream “Lost Conductor” in full below, and pre-order here.

Rødhåd and Vril Return as Out of Place Artefacts

Rødhåd and Vril will release a new album as Out of Place Artefacts.

As its name suggests, II is the second album the German pair have worked on together, following 2020’s self-titled outing. On this occasion, they venture “significantly deeper” into the spheres of electronic music, we’re told, exploring a wide range of drums and breaks, as well as focusing on flickering sound sketches and elusive noises “whose origin will have to remain a mystery for the listener.”

The album’s 13 tracks aim to leave the listener in the “inexplicable realms between the dancefloor and deep listening,” featuring layered, intricate arrangements that “become their own microcosms, forming a radiant universe as a whole album.”

For more information on Vril, check out his XLR8R podcast here; meanwhile, you can read a studio feature with Mike Bierbach, better known as Rødhåd, here.

The album lands on Rødhåd’s WSNWG label.

Tracklisting

01. PANGAEA
02. WELTRON
03. NIMBUS MM
04. ASTROLABIUM
05. UNIVERSIAN
06. BLACK GOO
07. MELIORISM
08. NIBIRU
09. CLARION
10. SECURITY LOOP
11. VANITAS
12. KOSMOGENESIS
13. TRISKAIDEKA

II LP is scheduled for September 22 release, with a vinyl copy following on October 22. Meanwhile, you can stream “NIBIRU” in full below and pre-order here.

Jimmy Edgar to Unleash New Album

Jimmy Edgar will release a new album in November.

LIQUIDS HEAVEN, an 11-track release, is the US artist’s first solo album since Cheetah Bend, released last year on his own Innovative Leisure. We’re told to expect a “psychedelic canvas of future R&B, euphoric bass, mutant tear-the-club-up rap, foundation-splintering noise, and gossamer soul.”

On a surface level, the album is a “starburst of avant-garde fusion,” but for all the high energy propulsion there is a counter-balance of melancholic beauty. “The genius of it is that for all its cerebral intent, it remains replete with raw and visceral emotion,” the label adds.

Inspired by liquid matter and the physicality of digital art, the album features several collaborators, including rappers Trinidad James, 10k.Caash, and ZelooperZ. There’s also Toronto-based singer MILK.

Raised in Detroit, with stints in Berlin, Los Angeles, and New York, Edgar’s list of close collaborators includes Hudson Mohawke, Danny Brown, and Machinedrum as J-E-T-S.

Alongside the release, Edgar has shared two “mind-melting, genre-bending” tracks, blending funky electronic motifs, futuristic RnB, and techno.

For more information on Edgar, check out his J-E-T-S. XLR8R podcast here.

Tracklisting

01. EUPHORIA feat. LIZY2K
02. EVERYBODY feat. 10k.Caash & ZelooperZ
03. DREAMS 1000000 feat. MILK
04. SLIP N SLIDE
05. BITE THAT 2 feat. Trinidad James
06. SIDEROOM
07. BUNNY LAVA feat. VIRGEN MARIA
08. NO ANTIDOTE feat. RIPPARCHIE
09. STATIC feat. BANSHEE
10.- – YA! feat. 645AR
11. NEVER LEAVE feat. MILK

LIQUIDS HEAVEN LP is scheduled November 11 release. Meanwhile, you stream “SLIP N SLIDE” and “STATIC” feat. Banshee in full below and pre-order here.

Plaid Next on Warp with 11th Album

Plaid, the British duo of Ed Handley and Andy Turner, will release a new album on Warp in November.

Described by Warp as “playful and wondrous,” Feorm Falorx is Plaid’s 11th album. Though it’s generally gentler than the dark angularity of its predecessor, Polymer, it’s no less deep, and maintains the same melodicism.

Here the duo manage to sound “cutting edge, but also warm, human, and nostalgic, purveying a sort of high-tech-retro-futurism,” we’re told. Across the 10 tracks, there’s a a line traceable right back to the early hip-hop of their youth and the sounds of the ’60s and ’70s that inspired them.

The album lands on the cusp of the pair’s 30th year with Warp. It was made with the assistance of AI tools, as were the album artwork and press photos.

For more information on Plaid, check out their XLR8R podcast here.

Tracklisting

01. Perspex
02. Modenet
03. Wondergan
04. C.A.
05. Cwtchr
06. Nightcrawler feat. Mason Bee
07. Bowl
08. Return to Return
09. Tomason
10. Wide I’s

Feorm Falorx LP is scheduled for November 11 release. Meanwhile, you can stream “C.A.” in full below and pre-order here.

Podcast 766: Gigi Masin

Born and raised in Venice, Italy, Gigi Masin is among the most quietly innovative and singular artists working across experimental and ambient music, but it’s only in the last decade that people have cottoned on to his work. Outside of his solo releases on Melody As Truth, Apollo Records, and Ants, he’s put out music with Jonny Nash and Young Marco as Gaussian Curve, releasing their debut album, Clouds, in 2015, and Lifted, a group spearheaded by Future Times founder Andrew Field-Pickering. Two albums have landed on PAN, besides singles on Dekmantel and Light In The Attic.

Masin’s first experiments in music came in the late 1970s when he made sound collages with tape loops and field recordings. Discovering a new language to express himself, he moved on from his early ambitions to be a guitarist and violinist, and in 1987 he released Wind, a debut album of mesmeric minimalism, so stripped back that it’s almost alien in its stillness.

Though under-appreciated at its release, Wind was later re-released by Dutch label Music From Memory as part of a retrospective of Masin’s output, and it’s only since then that his sounds have been revered by the wider world. After a long hiatus from music, Masin released Calypso, a masterpiece of ambience, on Apollo. Later this year, he’ll release its follow up, a tribute to his late wife, who sadly passed away last year.

Ahead of the album, which we’ll announce soon, Masin has recorded an XLR8R podcast. We’ve been trying to lock him down for some time and now it’s here—over two hours of downtempo and jazz, but also some pop and house. Press play for a glimpse into the mind of one of ambient music’s great minds, recorded on the fly one September afternoon.

01. What have you been up to recently?
I was in the beautiful countryside around Huntingdon in England and then in the studio with Greg Foat, Moses Boyd, and Tom Herbert. I enjoyed hours of beauty with great musicians.

02. What have you been listening to?
Just a little radio while driving the car. Every now and then I take a period of “silence” after playing or recording for a long time. The sound of nature is sometimes surprising and enchanting. I always have a CD that I want to listen to again or something new to discover, but sometimes I pull the plug, to distance myself and find peace.

03. You’ve got a new album on the way. What can you tell us about it?
It is a sort of a “feminine” work, that came from the idea of reacting to the death of my wife; of looking ahead, doing it with tenderness and with a desire to speak from the heart.

04. Where and when did you record this mix?
On a wonderful September afternoon, during the warmth of summer, when the grapes are ok but the days of light will soon begin to shorten.

05. How did you go about choosing the tracks that you’ve included?
Fantasy, inspiration, and what else? There is no book that can teach you what is a sweet mystery; after decades of music it remains a beautiful game, to select a record, then another, and another!

06. What’s next on your horizon?
There is a project with Greg Foat that I care a lot about and I hope to continue to travel the world with my concerts. Then at the end of the year I will start working on the next record. The music never stops!

XLR8R has now joined Mixcloud Select, meaning that to hear the podcast offline you will need to subscribe to our Select channel to listen offline, or subscribe to XLR8R+ to download the file. The move to Mixcloud Select will ensure that all the producers with music featured in our mixes get paid. You can read more about it here.

Full XLR8R+ Members can download the podcast below. If you’re not an XLR8R+ member, you can read more about it and subscribe here.

Tracklisting

01. Karstern Houmark Quartet “Sirens Song” (Storyville Records)
02. Charles Mingus “Tijuana Gift Shop” (RCA Victor)
03. Sixpence None The Richer “Kiss Me” (Authentic)
04. Gigi Masin “Marlene (Somewhere In Texas)” (Language Of Sound)
05. Esbjorn Svensson Trio “Seven Days of Falling” (Act Records)
06. David Sylvian “Silver Moon” (Virgin)
07. King Creosote & Jon Hopkins “Bats In The Attic” (Domino Recordings)
08. Damu The Fudgemunk “Conversation Peace” (Def Pressè)
09. Gigi Masin “Valerie Crossing” (Language of Sound)
10. Arooj Aftab “Mohabbat” (Verve)
11. The Band “Rag Mama Rag” (Capitol Records)
12. Clifford Thorton “Mahiya Illa Zalab” (America Records)
13. Abdullah Ibrahim “Calypso Minor” (remix) (Enja Records)
14. Fleetwood Mac “Albatross” (Reprise Records)
15. Gigi Masin “Barumini” (Language of Sound)
16. Alfa Mist & Emmavie “Energy” (Anti Records)
17. Don Cherry “Brown Rice” (A&M Records)
18. Gigi Masin “Vahinè” (Language of Sound)
19. Herbie Hancock/Pat Metheny “Cantaloupe Island” (DOL Records)
20. Michael Henderson “Solid” (Sony Music)
21. Bonnie Raitt/Bruce Hornsby “I Can’t Make You Love Me” (Capitol Records)
22. Gigi Masin “Shadie” (Language of Sound)
23. George Benson “Deeper Than You Think” (WEA)
24. Ron Trent “Admira” (Night Time Stories)
25. Gigi Masin “Malvina” (Language of Sound)
26. Quinn Oulton “Solid Air” (Deep Matter Records)
27. Oddisee “That’s Love” (Mello Music Group)
28. Stringspace Quartet “Running Up That Hill” (Stringspace)
29. Marvin Gaye “Inner City Blues” (Tamla Motown)
30. Hatfield & The North “Share It” (Island Records)

Podcast 765: Daniel Avery

British artist Daniel Avery should need no introduction given he’s one of contemporary techno’s most revered DJ-producers. Since he released his debut album, Drone Logic, in 2013, he’s helmed a DJ-Kicks mix CD, resided over a monthly show for NTS Live, and collaborated with Nine Inch Nails synth specialist Alessandro Cortini. Oh, and that’s besides his other studio albums, including Song for Alpha, Love + Light, and Together in Static, released in collaboration with Phantasy and Mute. (In 2018, he also shared a gorgeous ambient work through XLR8R.)

Sitting at the intersection of home listening and club music, Avery’s sonic vocabulary spans these sorts of celestial ambient lullabies but also mesmeric psychedelic techno, defined by contemplative moods and woozy atmospherics. On Ultra Truth, his latest release, coming in November, Avery has revisited the art and sounds that inspired him as a teenager, from Deftones and Portishead to Nick Cave and the films of David Lynch. We’re told to expect an “intentionally heavy and dense album,” with its hooks often “hidden in dusty corners,” far away from the “misty-eyed euphoria” of his earlier work. The release features the work of HAAi, SHERELLE, Kelly Lee Owens, and Manni Dee.

In part to celebrate the album, Avery has recorded a much-anticipated XLR8R podcast, his first studio mix in years. Across its one-hour runtime, it aims to captures the essence of his latest full-length—so press play for one hour of grunge, ambient, and IDM that looks directly into the darkness rather than running away from it.

It’s been a rush to get back on the road DJing and also debuting the new live show. In the studio it’s felt like the world of ‘Ultra Truth’ has been continually expanding and there’s so much more to share than solely the album itself, which is the idea I wanted to capture with this mix. It features a lot of the artists who first lit this path for me alongside a stack of my new music. The ‘Ultra Truth’ is now. — Daniel Avery

XLR8R has now joined Mixcloud Select, meaning that to hear the podcast offline you will need to subscribe to our Select channel to listen offline, or subscribe to XLR8R+ to download the file. The move to Mixcloud Select will ensure that all the producers with music featured in our mixes get paid. You can read more about it here.

Full XLR8R+ Members can download the podcast below. If you’re not an XLR8R+ member, you can read more about it and subscribe here.

Tracklisting

01. PJ Harvey “Horses In My Dreams” (Demo) (UMC/Island)
02. Daniel Avery “New Faith” (Phantasy/Mute)
03. Deftones “Digital Bath” (Maverick)
04. Portishead “Numb-Earth Linger” (Go! Discs)
05. Daniel Avery “Near Perfect” (Phantasy/Mute)
06. Daniel Avery “Trip” (Phantasy/Mute)
07. Daniel Avery “Higher” (Phantasy/Mute)
08. Death In Vegas “Soul Auctioneer” (Concrete)
09. Daniel Avery “Chaos Energy” (Phantasy/Mute)
10. Doss “Strawberry” (LuckyMe)
11. The Smashing Pumpkins “Lucky 13” (Constantinople)
12. Nine Inch Nails “A Warm Place” (Nothing/Interscope/Island)
13. Daniel Avery “Again and Again” (Unreleased)
14. Daniel Avery “Collapsing Sky” (Phantasy/Mute)
15. Bola “Vespers” (Skam)
16. Autechre “Second Scout” (Warp)
17. Daniel Avery “Out of Silence” (Phantasy/Mute)

Photo: Steve Gullick

Culprit Curates ‘XLR8R+040,’ with Galen, Lorenzo Dada, and Robotek Reagan

We’re ready to present the 40th edition of XLR8R+.

This month’s edition comes from America’s west coast, where XLR8R was first born, because it’s helmed by Culprit, the Los Angeles label curated by Andriy Osyka.

Founded in 2009, Culprit was forged around the famed rooftop parties thrown by the founding trio of Osyka, Justin Sloe, and Brett Griffin, together known as Droog, and it has since become an outlet for all shades of deeper dance music. For this package, Osyka has chosen Lorenzo Dada, one of Culprit’s core artists, plus two upcoming names in Galen and Robotek Reagan, who as one half of Dance Spirit has been working with Culprit since 2012.

Opening the edition is Galen with “Hi-Lo,” one of several new tracks he’s set to release over the coming months, inspired by his Sunset Sound System events, before Lorenzo Dada steps up as Tears of Blue, a project of his that fuses neo-classical and ambient with electronics. He’s delivered “Time,” a studio version of a live track originally recorded before a concert in Rome, Italy last Spring. To close, we’ve gone with Robotek Reagan and a masterfully produced piece of IDM that he finished after moving back to Los Angeles from Tahoe, where he’s been living for the last few years.

Robotek Reagan also created this month’s cover art.

All the money raised from new subscribers to this edition will be donated to support the people of Ukraine, as will the artist fees, more specifically to Razom. Culprit label founder Osyka is Ukrainian and has family currently living there, so this has personal meaning to Culprit. If you would like more information on that, please email [email protected].

Thanks, as usual, for your continued support.

The XLR8R Team.

You can check out the music and a preview selection of pages from the PDF zine below.

The full package, including the tracks, 10-page zine, and wallpaper art for both desktop and phone can be downloaded once you SUBSCRIBE HERE. If you’re already a subscriber, you can download the package below.

Editor’s note: the subscriber NFT will be available next week and a note will be sent out to subscribers.

rRoxymore Next on Smalltown Supersound with Second Album

rRoxymore, the project of French-born, Berlin-based artist Hermione Frank, will release her new album on Smalltown Supersound.

On Perpetual Now, her second album, following 2019’s Face To Phase for Don’t Be Afraid, Frank again displays her propensity for pushing the sonic envelope, blurring the lines between the electronic and the organic. We’re told to expect a “daring, unconventional album” that’s testament to “one of electronic music’s most unique producers.”

Subverting the traditional album format, Perpetual Now is made up of four extended soundscapes, each taking the listener on a journey through tempo, texture, and emotional state.

Alongside the announcement, Frank has shared “Fragmented Dreams” which, with its pulsating rhythms and fractured melodies, sees the album fleetingly “burst into life.”

Armed with a penchant for experimentalism, Frank has spent the last decade expanding the boundaries of what constitutes club music. Across a steady stream of releases, she has shifted through hypnotic left-field techno, UK bass mutations, and genre-eschewing dub oddities. She emerged with 2012’s “Wheel of Fortune,” a 10-minute epic through Planningtorock‘s Human Level label.

Tracklisting

01. At the Crest
02. Sun in C
03. Fragmented Dreams
04. Water Stains

Perpetual Now LP is scheduled for November 4 release. Meanwhile, you can stream “Fragmented Dreams” in full below and pre-order here.

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