remst8 – Coalescence (Bluesanct)

FROM THE PRESS RELEASE:

A mild-mannered engineer by day, Michael Carlson is an experimental computer musician who focuses on drone ambient music and field recording; revolving around tracker programs since the early ’90s, informed and inspired by the eclectic styles of music he listens to. The results sometimes hold the listener in stasis, other times guiding the listener through undefined vistas, always with the intent to reward patience.

‘Coalescence’ is the culmination of several years of exploration, experimentation, and revision. Clocking in at just over 4 hours, it also marks the most ambitious remst8 effort to date. Carlson first composed and assembled the music in quadraphonic using a tracker program. He then re-mixed those tracks in stereo for digital distribution, then re-mixed them again in Dolby Atmos™ for this limited edition USB cassette. Finally, Carlson re-mixed select tracks in 5.1 surround-sound for music videos.

Each format serves its own purpose, and each presents the same journey in its own distinct way.

This long-form journey embodies themes of stasis, dissociation, and ultimately resolution. The listener is cast adrift, held aloft, and immersed in sonic environments that reflect nature and the unnatural. The journey ends as it begins, encouraging the listener to repeat the cycle.

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After finishing my live set to close the 2017 Electro-Music Festival in Indianapolis, IN, I was surprised to find Mkl Anderson (Drekka) standing in front of me, expressing interest and appreciation for my music. I had been a fan of his work for a couple years, so it was a pleasant shock that he would approach me.

In that conversation, he suggested I make a long-form piece for his Bluesanct label; something that could be looped endlessly. If I recall correctly, he framed the request as “I want to play it on repeat so I can zone out for hours”.

We have collaborated on a handful of releases since then, sharing field recordings and source materials for the other to build on, re-work, or re-purpose. And Mkl would gently remind me of his original request for the much longer piece.

Several diversions and a pandemic later, I finally pulled all the pieces together into Coalescence. The result represents several years of learning and growth as an artist and as a producer, and I’m proud to finally share it.

  • Michael Carlson (remst8), December 2025

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credits
released May 22, 2026

Bluesanct (INRI099, 22 MAY 2026)

  • FLASH DRIVE CASSETTE = ltd to 50 copies
  • DIGITAL = unlimited

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remst8 “Coalescence”

01 – Buoy v1.33 . 02 – Halcyon v1.32 . 03 – Gravitation v1.47 . 04 – Respite v1.44
05 – Modulator v1.53 . 06 – Unmoor v1.23 . 07 – Pensive v1.67 . 08 – Return v1.24

Total run time: 4:07:48

Includes:
Stereo continuous mix in MP3 and FLAC, individual tracks in Dolby Atmos™ MP4, and select music videos in 5.1 Surround Sound

Serving suggestion:
Play the continuous mix or gapless tracks on repeat while wearing comfortable headphones.

Bluesanct
INRI099

Eden Grey – Timewarp (Triplicate Records)

AVAILABLE ON CD & VINYL
elasticstage.com/triplicate/releases/timewarp-album

TIMEWARP ZIP-UP HOODIE
triplicaterecords.com/products/unisex-heavy-blend-zip-hoodie

EDEN GREY’S SYNTH SAMPLE PACK INCLUDED WITH EVERY DOWNLOAD

Modular synth expert and creative force behind the CV-Freqs modular community Eden Grey returns to Triplicate Records with her fourth release entitled “Timewarp”. 10 certified bangers. Cool & slick with classic electronic grit.

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INTERVIEW
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George Ernst (Triplicate Records): It’s been a while, so I’ll simply ask, how are you and what have you been up to?

Dr. Chelsea Bruno (Eden Grey): Been pretty good, thanks.. working on a lot of projects, the CV FREQS events, teaching, writing articles, modular synth workshops and composing. I released my last album in August of 2025 called “In the Forest of Fangorn” with EC Underground. I’ve also been working on my doll project quite a bit, making and showing my handmade dolls, and some of them have found new homes. I love the doll project because it is another place where I find peace in their stillness and silence, where I find a different kind of sound meditation in exploring sounds I create with my modular synth.

GE: How did the Nomadic collaborations come about? They’re excellent! I hope you two can work together again!

CB: Nomadic is an old friend who played one of the first electro shows I ever booked, and he resurfaced again in my sphere after more than a decade. I suggested he should send some drums, which he did with a few synth sounds mixed in and I just spent a lot of time adding to them and making a nice arrangement for both of the tracks that he is featured on. It gives another personality to my work to collab, to see what comes out, collabs often work out really nicely, so I am sure we will be working together again.

GE: Seeing Space in the Finite is a real trippy and heavy title. Can you talk about what that sentence entails to you, and the broader musical themes of Timewarp?

CB: This track I made with the intention for it to represent a Boards of Canada style beat. I made the beat very much inspired by their tracks and then I wanted it to sound like the other synth themes were also familiar too. Coincidentally they have resurfaced this year, when I made this track in the holiday season to also give it some of that nostalgic feel. Space is forever, and what is finite, is not forever. Phosphorescent also reminds me of my early inspiration from Boards of Canada. I am interested in the ways we experience time differently as individuals in our environments. It is a somewhat mysterious concept.

GE: Do you think an elephant would stand and politely sway their trunk to Timewarp? I reckon they would.

CB: Yes, I do think, and a manatee would swim with it underwater too…

GE: Night Tripper is one of my favorite things I’ve heard you make, or heard in general in fact. Can you talk about that one and the effort that went into making it? I’m being selfish I realize but whatever, I like this song a lot and I wanna hear more about it!

CB: I’m so glad you like it.. yes, it is a special song, its evolution, I like the way it changes but keeps you in the same space. Also, sometimes, oftentimes I stay up late at night working on music to get the vibe I am after. And then it has a whole new type of magic when you hear it during the day. To me, it has an equal mixture of dark and light. 

Written & Produced by Dr. Chelsea Bruno
Mastered by Michael Southard
Artwork by Ned Rush

Skeleton – Skeleton (20 Buck Spin)

Ripping forth like a dagger from the flesh of Austin, Texas comes the self-titled debut LP from the lone star state’s new wreckers of civilization Skeleton. Having plied their black market trade for several years in grime infested underground dungeons and sub-basements, 20 Buck Spin was called forth to issue Skeleton’s first LP, a cataclysmic expansion of the band’s unhallowed vision venturing well beyond its earlier borders.

Though some might be prone to lazily apply simplistic genre tags to Skeleton’s style, the reality is far more sweeping as the debut LP immediately reveals an excessively sharp metallic-charged juggernaut of severe force and high plains mayhem. War-like hymns for the soldiers of a scorched apocalypse to come, from which a bleak alternate future will emerge.

The 11 tracks comprising ‘Skeleton’ signal the black dawn of a new breed, and when the final somber strains of ‘Catacombs’ close out the album, an eerie sense of the end as the beginning lingers like a morbid premonition…

Setting – Setting (Thrill Jockey Records)

The North Carolina Piedmont-based trio of Setting bring together their substantial collective skills as musicians and their collaborative, explorative mindsets from groups such as Mind Over Mirrors, Califone, Black Twig Pickers, Pelt, Peeesseye, Sylvan Esso, and Jake Xerxes Fussell to bear in their inventive and rich improvisations. Multi-instrumentalists Jaime Fennelly, Nathan Bowles and Joe Westerlund subvert expectations while creating a sense of ease and wonderment. Their intricate interplay of synthesizers, cassette loops, banjo, keyboards, electronics, zithers, and a litany of percussive instruments form a tactile amalgam of celestial transcendence and terrestrial rhythm, a loamy pulse fluidly guiding every minute fluctuation in feel. Dedicated improvisers with years working together, the band has developed their own idiosyncratic vernacular and sense of flow. Setting’s self-titled album is a definitive statement of their improvisational acumen meeting compositional rigor, a robust wellspring of hypnagogic grooves and mosaiced textures.

Setting harnesses the euphoria of communal creation. “This is one of the most joyous albums I’ve made with other musicians. It felt like we were all in the slipstream,” notes Fennelly. Bowles adds: “Making this is maybe the easiest thing in my life; it’s not struggle music. This collaboration feels like it’s just coming out of the air, like it’s breathing.” Built on long exploratory sessions, the trio developed their own syntax and an ability to shift in new directions with finer and finer grains of detail. The pieces of Setting use that shared understanding of each other as players and the electric spontaneity of improvisation as a framework for more elaborate, impactful compositions in the studio. Westerlund elaborates, “When you keep playing together show after show, things take a different shape. The elements can be subtler and more specific, and there are more references of past performances and past discoveries to draw from.”

Fennelly’s synth programming acts as a guiding light, bending pieces into dynamic arcs and imbuing them with swirling hues, while rhythmic push-and-pull between Westerlund and Bowles lends an elasticity to each track’s warp and weft. Their working methods have found a kindred traveler in Adam McDaniel from Asheville’s Drop of Sun Studios, whose engineering and production work forms an indispensable piece of the album’s dynamism and luminescent fidelity. “Heard a Bubble” fittingly froths up from ostinatos that increasingly layer with minutely evolving patterns, evoking a tender kosmiche over Saharan-style rhythms. Syncopated grooves dance across the stereo spectrum on “Gum Bump” before synthesizers erupt into heaps of magma. The floating drone of “What Kind of Fish is a Turtle” offers a minimalist respite before the steady, lyrical “Ribbon of Moss” wraps itself in a dusky haze. The ensemble’s powerful use of momentum reaches its zenith with the freight train “Derring-do,” as piano zither and banjo apply tension to ever-ratcheting drums and flares of warped chordal organ. Across the five pieces, the trio make deft use of their seemingly infinite palettes to mold landscapes that appear familiar at first glance before glowing with vibrant new colors as the whole picture sets in.

The eponymous album from Setting is the product of three intuitive players and deep listeners, artists who use those skills to create transformative music. The trio shirk any broader categorizations, as their unique dynamic pieces are alight with arrangements urgent and smoldering, patient and emotive.

All tracks composed, improvised, and performed by Setting:
Nathan Bowles – Keyboards, Banjos, Tapes, Percussion
Jaime Fennelly – Synthesizers
Joe Westerlund – Drums, Percussion, Metallophones, Zither

Produced by Setting & Adam McDaniel. Engineered and mixed by Adam M. At Drop of Sun Studios, Asheville, NC, January – March 2025. Mastered & cut by Josh Bonati. Artwork & Layout by Timothy Breen / Field of Grass. Thanks & Love to Brittany, Katie, Corrie, Adam, Emily & DoS crew. Published by Ponderous Djinn (ASCAP); Aqui The Bushwick (ASCAP) administered by Domino Publishing; Squinting Sparrow (BMI) administered by Rough Trade Publishing.

℗ 2026 Thrill Jockey Records © 2026 Setting