(Artefacts (Equations (Replicas))) is the third volume of the four part series.
The audio archaeology of the TLO archive continues. Outtakes, experiments and live jams from the past six years have been collaged together to form new works that are free from the conceptual restraints of the more focused album projects. A more intimate, playful and perhaps more emotional side is on display across the series. Collect them all!
The coastline comes alive at low tide on a full moon. This one is for all the followers. I hope you EMjoy this Liquid Mix as my special gift to you with a FREE download code available in the community post for this album release. Thanks for listening. This mix includes music from the following releases:
Jack Hertz – Cover Art, Mix, Composition, and Production.
Jack Hertz is fascinated by all aspects of creating sound. From the earliest instruments to the present day hardware and software innovations. More at JackHertz.com
Aural Films is an online record label (netlabel) that releases high-quality soundtrack albums for movies that do not exist. We cover a wide range of music styles ranging from ambient to experimental to popular to soundtrack musics. Often on the same albums. You can find our complete catalog of releases online at AuralFilms.com
Here we are – Vol 11 of the ” Two Halves ” series ~
While I enjoy collaborating with others directly ( And am particularly happy with my track on this volume ) one thing that I also really enjoy is combining the sounds of other artists in my mind – Sometimes it’s a ” Styles Clash ” sonic mash up, other times a Sympatico Through-line vibe. But it’s always something that generates heat, excitement to ponder. And almost always, it comes back sounding different and often even better than expected. Another curious artifact, which I think is manifest on this volume, is that theses tend to have, in my view, the consistency of a album by one group / person- It seems somehow connected. I was tempted to write it off on the first couple of volumes but it’s consistent enough now that It bears mentioning – I don’t give the pairs any sort of direction or theme to work with, apart from technical issues when first paired putting in touch, I take a hands off approach. And only a few times have results not come in ( Mitigating Circumstance & All ) So, Some food for thought as a peek behind the curtain.
Hope you enjoy these sounds, and again – Thanks so much to the artists participating for taking this leap of faith & delivering such stellar results ~!
“Explores ancient, unseen worlds…immersed in mythological recollections…Yoga packs countless ideas into these pieces, but the album flows with an underlying narrative, searching for new living pathways.” Foxy Digitalis
Solo Indonesian ambient producer Yoga Nugraha Usmad joins Phantom Limb’s Spirituals imprint for new album Gurnida, an aqueous and archipelagic collection filled with ruminative pathos, ancient mythology, and carefully applied grit.
Yoga Nugraha Usmad began the creative process that yielded new album Gurnida at the once-sacred Boyong River in Yogyakarta, Java. “A river that once carried myths, prayers, and daily rituals,” he writes. Now a centre for aggressive and destructive sand-mining, the river’s beauty is being eroded. “It is slowly losing its flow, drowned out by the roar of machines and the dust of exploitation,” Usmad laments. The music of Gurnida asks: “do the spirits that once dwelled within it disappear, migrate, or linger restlessly among the remnants left behind? Do they seep into the earth, seeking refuge elsewhere, or remain in silent defiance?”
Through looping bamboo flutes, reflective harmonics, undulating drones, and nocturne synthesis, the music of Gurnida speaks not only of physical loss but also of the fading spiritual and ecological bonds between humans and nature. It is an album “composed of soundscapes from geographical and symbolic realities. A place that holds souls and spirits that continue to resonate between existence and memory,” writes Usmad. Field recordings taken on location at such environments haunt his musical spaces like these spirits, their ghostly ephemera lacing Usmad’s arrangements with fragments of ancient stories, sometimes real and sometimes imagined.
Opening track and first single “Old Trees” is at first groaning and low-lit, an eldritch dusk rising over the metallics and machinery of an ecosystem shattered by industrial landstripping. But as a scintillating, wooden flute melody snakes through to its surface, the spirits of the old river begin to find their voice. They call and conjure in a multitude that drowns out the destruction, the place that we have found ourselves revealing a pristine and perfect state of ancient reverence.
Next, “Fluid and Solid” is founded on field recordings from Yogyakarta’s Plunyon River, a landscape traversed by lava from Mount Merapi’s last eruption. “In this track,” writes Usmad, “I imagine the dual nature of lava—its destructive force that devastates natural habitats, topples trees, and disrupts wildlife, as well as its regenerative power. Despite the destruction, lava also creates opportunities for the emergence of a new ecosystem.” Lava is here represented by throbbing synthesis tuned directly into geologic frequencies, sometimes flowing at engulfing speed and sometimes resting and breathing, on the earth, while the birdsong and insect chirp of the Plunyon forestry coagulates around its stream.
An aural exploration of the solar system by Sonologyst, using data from NASA’s probes.
On the latest album by Sonologyst, raw data from radio waves, electromagnetic fields, and plasma fluctuations, utilising data sonification files provided by NASA, are transformed into a haunting soundscape, unveiling the ambient music of planets, solar winds, and the cosmic beyond.
As the newest addition to Sonologyst’s series of sonic documentaries, this work deepens his exploration of the sonic spectrum, converting cosmic phenomena into immersive auditory experiences.
Double CD in a matt-finish gatefold ecopak, with a bonus disc of the raw source material from NASA’s probes.
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NASA and other space agencies have captured “sounds” from the cosmos by recording non-audible signals like radio waves, electromagnetic waves, and plasma (ionized gas that’s prevalent in space) wave fluctuations. These are converted into audio frequencies we can hear using a process called data sonification. Spacecraft like Voyager, Cassini, and Juno are equipped with special instruments (e.g., plasma wave antennas, magnetometers, radio wave receivers) to detect radio waves, plasma waves, and electromagnetic fields.
These signals can provide data on phenomena like solar wind, planetary magnetospheres, and charged particles. Since many of these signals are outside our hearing range (radio waves might have frequencies far below the audible range (20 Hz to 20 kHz) or far above it, while magnetic and plasma waves are often in the range of milliHertz (mHz) to kilohertz (kHz), also outside human hearing.), they are converted using various techniques, including frequency scaling, sampling, filtering, and amplitude modulation. Some events, like plasma wave bursts, happen over long periods. Scientists may speed up the playback so we can hear the changes in a shorter time frame.
After conversion, the resulting sounds are often enhanced to make certain patterns, pitches, or changes in intensity more noticeable. This may involve amplifying certain frequencies or adding layers to represent multi-dimensional data. This processing helps bring out subtle differences that might otherwise be hard to discern.
Data sonification files provided by NASA. Analogue synthesizers, sampling, and processing by Sonologyst. Recorded and mastered at Sonologyst studio from July to November 2024. Graphic design by Abby Helasdottir.
Caldon Glover presents their third album for Cryo-Chamber: Eternal Night Radio, a reflection on the uncanny dream, the waking nightmare, and the place between dreaming and waking where the world feels more unbearable than the darkest dream.
You’re walking down a street at night. To your left there is nothing you can see, just the sound of running water. To the right houses line the street, mostly dark, but a few lit from within. Figures stand at the windows in silhouette, their faces obscured. Above you are streetlights, separated by deep shadows and yet there are no stars. Behind you walks a stranger, but you can not turn to see him.
In the Night, everything has disappeared.
All music written and recorded by Caldon Glover except where noted “All of Them” Vocals and additional sounds by Tabitha Celani “The Outside The Night” Vocals by Adam Stanton Cover art by Randal Collier-Ford Mastering and CD interior art by Simon Heath
KOMPULS is the solo project of tim kniep, best known as one half of the industrial duo synapscape. a longtime figure in the german electronic music scene, kniep is recognized for his intense vocal delivery, complex rhythmic structures, and innovative sound design.
‘interaltro’, the debut album by KOMPULS, is an intricate fusion of depth and complexity, where rhythmic noise provides a dynamic foundation. the relentless pulse serves as a canvas for eclectic sonic threads, capturing the spirit of the times with subtlety and nuance.
balancing raw intensity with refinement, the album ventures into experimental territory, propelled by broken beats and technoid influences that create a surreal auditory experience. kniep’s sound design intertwines electronic, idm and glitch, creating a constantly shifting klangteppich – a sound carpet – where timbres evolve and fragment in perpetual motion.
ultimately, ‘interaltro’ stands as a cohesive artistic statement, inviting the listener into a layered exploration of structure and fragmentation, where sound unfolds with intellectual rigor and unpredictability.