Symbion Project – TRYPTYCH (Speed Of Dark Music)

“Through our eyes, the universe is perceiving itself. Through our ears, the universe is listening to its harmonies. We are the witnesses through which the universe becomes conscious of its glory, of its magnificence.”
~ Alan Watts

TRYPTYCH is the 12th Symbion Project album from electronic musician, composer, and producer Kasson Crooker. The three long-form songs seamlessly blend into each other and feature layers of lush strings and woodwinds, haunting sound design, French horns, percolating synthesizers, Japanese koto, and field recordings.

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released January 1, 2025

Composed, orchestrated, mixed, produced, and mastered by Kasson Crooker

French horns played by Gus Sebring (Boston Symphony Orchestra
Japanese koto performed by Kasson Crooker

Copyright and published by Speed of Dark Music 2025 (BMI)
Released on FOIL Imprints

Bad Sector & Astro – Idio Blast (Self-Released)

Label Description:

Collaboration between Massimo Magrini and Hiroshi Hasegawa

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released February 12, 2025CD release by Insofar Vapor Bulk (IVBCD10)

Editors note: This release features a version of the original artwork. Originally released in 2005 by Insofar Vapor Bulk, and distributed by Loki-Foundation (Power & Steel) and Malignant Records.

Dylan Houser – Your Personal Swarm (Self-Released)

Label Description:

Cold night on Valencia, the only spirit drifting throughout. A long-lost companion is feral yet lurks in the shadows still.

Recorded between December 2023 – January 2025

Instruments used: voice, keyboard, shortwave radio, rumble of ancient times, livestreams, running water, tiny plastic guitar, acoustic guitar, steel drum, wind chimes, synthesizer and sampler apps, outdoor field recordings, various assorted percussion, Chef Jakether speaking

Thank you to Bowman, Bevis, Bishop, and Billingsley

Is this phase two of a light that always goes out?

Disinformation and S.E.T.I. – Disinformation + S.E.T.I. at ORF Kunstradio 22-04-1999 (Self-Released)

Label Description:

Disinformation + S.E.T.I. – broadcast from the studios of ORF Kunstradio, Vienna, 22 April 1999.

Special thanks to Susanna Niedermayr, Peter Rehberg (RIP) and Mike Harding.

Artwork – photomontage copyright © Joe Banks 2025.

Cousin Silas & aka:man – Cousin Silas & aka:man (The Cousin Silas Emporium)

Label Description:

This release sees the album by aka:man, Ambient: Light, get the rework/refit treatment from myself. And then, it’s nicely topped off with 6 of our previous collaborations

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released February 14, 2025

Artwork by Ross Ackerman

akaman.bandcamp.com

Ossa – Early on 2004-2008 (Waxing Crescent Records)

Label Description:

Ossa returns to Waxing Crescent after joining forces with Global Goon for 2023’s Bruit Électrique. Here, Ossa serves up some of his favourite previously unreleased material.

Hardware:
Korg Monopoly
Korg MS2000
Korg Electribe EMX-1
Korg KPR-77
SH 101
Roland TB303
Roland TR505
Roland R-8
Roland Cr-80
Tascam DR-05X

Software:
Sonar Systems 2002/2004
Audiomulch (Australia)
Ableton Live 2-11

Tape Loop Orchestra – PSALM019: Sabbat De Voix (Phantom Limb)

Label Description: “A haunting combination of strings and field recordings. There’s a strong sense of sorrow coming out of these aged tones, crying out quietly with no real beginning or end.”
Anthony Fantano, The Needle Drop

“A gorgeous process: meticulously composed, looped, developed, and finally broken down. Hargreaves is a master.”
Tiny Mix Tapes

Manchester composer and musician Andrew Hargreaves (a founding member of The Boats) brings his acclaimed Tape Loop Orchestra project to Phantom Limb’s Spirituals imprint with the hissed-out choral elegance of new album Voix de Sabbat.

“The voice is something I keep returning to,” Hargreaves writes. “Disembodied voices, secondary vocalisation, borrowed voices, and the reproduced voice. Can a machine be made to reproduce something that is made to seem human but isn’t?” Like a spectral choir communing from a transversal plane, Hargreaves’ newest outing under his Tape Loop Orchestra guise Voix de Sabbat is an uncanny and experiential immersion into strange but beguiling depths. It explores “the gap between a sound and it being heard, and where meaning is encoded in this process. The shadow of a sound, and how something can be reduced, distorted, but still carry the essence of its message and intent.”

Over two longform pieces, Voix de Sabbat traces repetition, gradual dissolution, repetition, gradual dissolution, and the narrative interplay that binds the two together. Throughout, Hargreaves’ characteristic mist-laden shimmer and subtle employment of shadow, apparition, and lassitude breathes life into a gently nuanced interzone between spectral choral voice and impressionist tape blur. A subtly unsettling nostalgia unfolds through the ghostwatching, while motes and artefacts of melodic pathos appear in distant, half-imagined, or near-imperceivable whispers. “Sometimes we need something outside ourselves to remind us of our connection to the world and each other,” Hargreaves offers. Though part of this music, or at least its compositional palette, is derived from voice, Tape Loop Orchestra’s treatment and process renders it meaningfully and arrestingly(sic) beyond the human.

Opener “Voix Figées” revels in foggy moor hermitude and a detached romanticism, its cycles of hiss and echoes osmosing between the corporeal and spiritual. The “frozen” voices of its title are glassy, lucid, and runic, filling a space in which time has stopped. Haunted string lines and eventually reverberate piano join, and the piece could be mournful, or even majestic, but instead it occupies a sacred place, both mysterious and knowing.

Next, “Voix Empruntées” reflects the “the process of preserving sound and the additional artefacts (surface noise, hiss, hums etc), reminding us that we are listening to a “real fake, made from real elements but constructed” (to borrow a phrase from Luc Ferrari).” It is more outwardly elegiac than its sibling, centred on lilting and lamenting piano phrases conjured from an ancient and holy unreality. As disembodied choral voice enters, so does a light, and Hargreaves’ effortless harnessing of wistful remembrance floods the senses.