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Music Reviews

Réka Csiszér & Radwan Ghazi Moumneh: Le Révélateur

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Artist: Réka Csiszér & Radwan Ghazi Moumneh (@)
Title: Le Révélateur
Format: LP
Label: Asadun Alay Records (@)
Rated: * * * * *
Le Révélateur is not a soundtrack in the conventional sense, but a shared breathing space between Réka Csiszér and Radwan Ghazi Moumneh and Philippe Garrel’s 1968 silent film. It doesn’t accompany the image; it behaves like a second current running underneath it, occasionally surfacing, occasionally swallowing it.

The film itself is built on absence - dialogue stripped away, narrative reduced to a wandering child and parents moving through a desolate landscape. Csiszér and Moumneh respond by refusing anything that would “fill” that absence. Instead, they extend it, making it audible. Both artists are already fluent in unstable sonic languages. Moumneh, through Jerusalem In My Heart, has long worked at the intersection of electronics, voice, and Middle Eastern instrumental traditions, often allowing friction and fragility to remain audible rather than corrected. Csiszér, across projects like VÍZ, approaches voice and composition as shifting material states - something closer to weather than statement. In combination, nothing settles into a single identity. Everything remains slightly in negotiation.

The instrumentation - cello, buzuq, rababa, voice, electronics, and field recordings - functions less as ensemble and more as a shifting ecosystem. Nothing stabilizes for long. Strings don’t resolve into harmony so much as hover, tense and exposed. Electronics don’t build atmosphere in a cinematic sense; they fracture it into unstable layers. Voice appears not as narration but as fragile emergence, often dissolving into texture before it can settle into meaning.

What’s central here is not fusion but friction. Each element retains its identity just long enough to be recognisable, then drifts into something less fixed. This creates a listening experience that mirrors the film’s emotional condition: movement without arrival, presence without certainty, continuity without resolution.

The connection to Garrel’s work is not illustrative. There are no musical “translations” of scenes, no thematic cues. Instead, the music inhabits the same psychological weather: disorientation, suspended threat, and a persistent sense that something is always about to be revealed but never quite is.

The structure - eight movements titled simply with ordinal numbers in Arabic from one to eight - reinforces this logic. The absence of descriptive titles removes narrative framing entirely. What remains is sequence, progression, duration. Not stories, but positions in time.
Across the album, silence is not empty space but active material. It presses against the sound, shapes it, sometimes even leads it. The result is a score that feels less composed than uncovered, as if it already existed inside the film and was slowly extracted rather than written.

By the end, Le Révélateur doesn’t resolve the film’s opacity. It intensifies it. What remains is not interpretation, but sustained instability - an audio environment that refuses to settle into explanation, and instead stays close to the film’s original condition: moving, quietly, through a world that never fully becomes legible.



Mark Cain: Threads

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Artist: Mark Cain (@)
Title: Threads
Format: CD
Label: Parenthèses/Tone List (@)
Rated: * * * * *
Mark Cain’s "Threads" behaves like someone emptied the inside of a soprano saxophone onto the floor and decided that was already enough composition. Fifteen solo pieces, all improvised in single passes, recorded in sequence like a diary written while walking with no map and questionable footwear. No edits to smooth the edges, no studio polishing to pretend uncertainty isn’t part of the deal.

Cain comes from a long habit of bending breath into architecture. Before the saxophone fully took over, there was the didgeridoo - an instrument that already sounds like it remembers the earth more clearly than we do. That lineage matters here. The playing often feels less like “notes” and more like sustained weather systems: pressure, release, then something briefly resembling melody before it dissolves again into air friction and overtones. The soprano sax becomes less a lead voice and more a nervous organ of the room itself.

There’s a stubborn refusal of decorative excess. Even when fragments of lyricism appear, they arrive like half-remembered instructions - then get folded back into multiphonic density or breath-noise textures that sit somewhere between wind, reed, and overheard machinery. The improvisations don’t chase climax. They circle it, forget why they were going there, and end up somewhere more honest instead.

The inclusion of Monk’s "Ask Me Now" is almost mischievous in this context. Not a cover in the comforting sense, more like a familiar object left outside during bad weather. The tune’s skeleton is there, but it’s been stretched through Cain’s vocabulary of breath and instability until it behaves like a memory of jazz rather than jazz itself.

What’s striking is the discipline hiding inside the apparent looseness. “Spontaneous” often becomes an excuse for laziness in improvised music. Here it reads more like exposure therapy. Each track is short, contained, but part of a larger continuum that slowly sketches a shifting psychology of sound - fragile, alert, occasionally amused at its own instability.

By the end, "Threads" doesn’t feel like a collection of pieces so much as a single long filament repeatedly cut and re-tied. Nothing is resolved in the usual sense. It just keeps breathing, stubbornly, as if silence would be the real failure.



Fireground: Refreshing part 2

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Artist: Fireground (@)
Title: Refreshing part 2
Format: 12" + Download
Label: Tresor (@)
Rated: * * * * *
Few labels have shaped the language of techno as profoundly as Tresor Records. For more than three decades, its catalogue has treated the dancefloor less as a place of escape than as a laboratory where repetition, pressure and space continuously redefine one another. Fireground's "Refreshing Part 2" fits comfortably within that lineage while refusing to become merely another exercise in industrial severity. If "Refreshing Part 1" hinted that the duo had found an elegant balance between muscular functionality and subtle emotional depth, this sequel refines that formula with remarkable confidence.

Fireground, the project of Angela and Daniele, was born in Naples before relocating to Berlin, where the duo has become a distinctive presence within the city's techno landscape. Known for their hardware-based live performances and releases on labels such as Tresor and Ilian Tape, they have built a reputation for treating techno as a living, breathing process rather than a sequence of pre-programmed events. Their music privileges physical interaction with machines, allowing rhythm, texture and tension to evolve organically in real time. That performative mindset is audible throughout "Refreshing Part 2", even in its recorded form.

The duo describes "refreshing" not as starting over but as recalibrating one's direction, and that philosophy quietly informs every track. Rather than chasing novelty for its own sake, "Refreshing Part 2" explores how familiar materials can reveal unexpected possibilities through careful adjustment. There is something almost architectural about the record. Every percussion hit, every filtered resonance and every carefully sculpted delay feels positioned with the confidence of someone removing unnecessary bricks rather than adding decorative ornaments.

Opening cut "The Way" wastes no energy on prolonged introductions. A lean framework of percussion and low-end pressure gradually acquires psychological weight through microscopic variations. Fireground understands one of techno's oldest secrets: repetition is never static if the listener is paying attention. Like waves returning to the same shoreline, each cycle carries tiny differences that slowly reshape the terrain.

"Elisir" provides the EP's most fascinating contrast. There is an unexpected buoyancy beneath its disciplined surface, allowing luminous textures to drift above the relentless groove without diminishing its momentum. The track demonstrates that funk need not announce itself with exaggerated swagger. Here it operates almost molecularly, hidden within the syncopation and the subtle elasticity of the percussion.

The second side ventures further into kinetic territory. "Activate" embraces propulsion without surrendering to excess, proving that intensity is often the product of restraint rather than accumulation. The groove tightens gradually, driven by layered rhythmic interactions that interlock with mechanical precision while retaining an unmistakably human pulse.

Closing piece "Family Tree" broadens the emotional horizon. Its title evokes ancestry and continuity, and the music follows suit, subtly acknowledging techno's lineage without becoming nostalgic. Echoes of Detroit minimalism, hypnotic Berlin functionality and contemporary deep techno pass through the arrangement, yet none of them dominate. Fireground treats influence as fertile soil rather than inherited doctrine.

The digital-exclusive "Fixed in Flux" extends the EP's conceptual framework with a title that perfectly encapsulates its philosophy. Stability and transformation are presented not as opposites but as complementary states. Remaining present within change, rather than resisting or surrendering to it, becomes the record's quiet manifesto.

Production throughout is exemplary. Every frequency occupies its own space, allowing kicks to retain physical impact while metallic percussion, evolving atmospheres and restrained harmonic details breathe naturally around them. The mix values depth over sheer loudness, inviting repeated listening where previously unnoticed details gradually emerge from the grooves.

One of the most compelling aspects of "Refreshing Part 2" is how naturally it reflects Fireground's identity as live performers. Even in the controlled environment of the studio, the music carries the subtle tension of real-time decision-making. Patterns shift almost imperceptibly, textures bloom unexpectedly, and transitions feel guided by instinct rather than automation. In an era where electronic music can sometimes become a victim of its own perfection, these qualities restore a welcome sense of immediacy.

Fireground never appears interested in demonstrating technical sophistication for its own sake. Their confidence lies in trusting rhythm, space and gradual transformation to carry the narrative. That patience rewards attentive listeners just as surely as it energises a dancefloor.

In a musical landscape increasingly obsessed with constant reinvention, "Refreshing Part 2" argues for something more enduring: refinement. Instead of chasing the next trend, Angela and Daniele deepen their own vocabulary, proving that genuine evolution often comes not from abandoning one's direction but from understanding it more completely. It is techno that remembers movement is not only about speed, but about intention.



Petru KSS: Kolibri Live

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Artist: Petru KSS (@)
Title: Kolibri Live
Format: LP
Label: Kolibri Space Shuttle Records
Distributor: EPM Music
Rated: * * * * *
There is a peculiar courage in releasing a live electronic album. A guitarist can always blame a broken string, a jazz musician can smile knowingly after a risky improvisation, but electronic performers have long fought the suspicion that they merely stand behind glowing boxes while laptops politely do the difficult work. PETRU KSS answers that suspicion with "Kolibri Live", a record that insists techno can be as physical, vulnerable and unpredictable as any improvised performance.

Conceived and performed live in the wilderness of Corsica, "Kolibri Live" serves as both the debut album for the producer's Kolibri Space Shuttle Records and the clearest articulation yet of his artistic identity. PETRU has steadily cultivated a reputation through immersive live sets and collaborations within the deeper end of the European techno spectrum, and this release benefits from the involvement of respected figures such as Hannes Bieger, whose meticulous mix preserves both the music's cinematic scale and its tactile immediacy. The support of artists including Dubfire and .VRIL further situates PETRU within a lineage of producers who value atmosphere as much as propulsion, but the album rarely feels like an attempt to imitate established names.

The opening "Genesis" immediately establishes the central premise. This is not techno built around explosive drops or festival theatrics. Instead, sounds accumulate patiently, as if geological rather than mechanical processes were shaping the music. Rhythms emerge from silence, harmonic fragments glimmer briefly before dissolving again, and every new layer seems less concerned with increasing volume than with expanding depth.

That gradual architecture becomes one of the album's defining strengths. "Ketarion (Rework)" and "Tuplet Puppet" introduce subtle polyrhythmic tensions that keep the body engaged while the mind wanders elsewhere. PETRU understands that hypnosis rarely comes from repetition alone; it comes from the tiny deviations that prevent repetition from becoming routine.

The centrepiece "Liminal Orbit" lives up to its title. Hovering somewhere between dancefloor functionality and ambient contemplation, it captures the sensation of suspended movement remarkably well. One can imagine it working equally effectively in a dark warehouse at three in the morning or during a solitary night drive where every motorway light briefly resembles an approaching constellation. Humans, after all, have spent centuries staring at the stars while simultaneously inventing increasingly expensive ways to avoid looking at one another.

Throughout the record, the production favours openness over density. Bass frequencies remain powerful without becoming oppressive, while melodic elements drift across the stereo field with almost orchestral restraint. Hannes Bieger's mix deserves particular credit here, allowing individual textures to breathe instead of compressing every frequency into an anonymous wall of impact. The mastering retains that sense of space, giving the album an unusually organic dynamic range for contemporary techno.

Tracks like "Trappist", "Capsule" and "Kasioppea" continue the album's narrative ascent from earthly landscapes toward imagined cosmic environments, yet the space imagery never feels like superficial branding. Rather than relying on science-fiction clichés, PETRU constructs environments through careful manipulation of resonance, delay and evolving harmonic colour. Space here is psychological before it is astronomical.

Perhaps the most refreshing quality of "Kolibri Live" is its commitment to real-time performance. Small imperfections remain intact, tiny fluctuations in timing and energy that quietly remind the listener that every transition was navigated by human instinct rather than endlessly revised automation. Those moments give the album its pulse. In an era where digital precision often becomes indistinguishable from emotional neutrality, such imperfections feel almost luxurious.

The closing pair, "Pegasus" and "Landing", complete the conceptual arc without resorting to obvious climaxes. The descent feels earned, as though the journey has subtly altered the listener's perception rather than simply delivered a sequence of increasingly dramatic peaks.
While many contemporary techno albums function as collections of DJ tools, "Kolibri Live" succeeds as a coherent long-form listening experience. Its eleven interconnected pieces prioritise continuity over immediate gratification, inviting immersion rather than distraction. PETRU demonstrates that dance music can remain deeply physical without sacrificing narrative ambition, and that electronic performance still possesses something algorithms cannot quite simulate: the quiet electricity of someone making irreversible decisions in real time.

The album's closing slogan, "Take Your Soul Beyond Gravity", could easily have sounded like promotional hyperbole. Instead, after an hour spent travelling through PETRU's carefully constructed sonic orbit, it feels less like marketing than a modest observation. Gravity, it turns out, applies rather poorly to music that knows exactly when to lift its feet off the ground.



Kontagion: I

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Artist: Kontagion
Title: I
Format: CD + Download
Label: Zoharum (http://zoharum.com/) (@)
Rated: * * * * *
There comes a point where genre labels stop being useful and begin behaving like overworked customs officers, desperately trying to stamp passports that clearly belong to several countries at once. Kontagion's fifth full-length, simply titled "I", happily walks past the checkpoint carrying industrial metal, sludge, post-hardcore, noise, doom and post-rock in the same suitcase. It is heavy enough to flatten concrete, yet flexible enough to avoid becoming trapped inside the conventions that often weigh down contemporary extreme music.

The Polish outfit has never seemed particularly interested in satisfying the expectations of any single scene. Across previous releases, they have steadily refined a language where mechanical aggression coexists with emotional vulnerability, and "I" feels like the logical culmination of that journey. Rather than expanding outward through sheer excess, the band digs deeper into the tension between crushing density and carefully controlled atmosphere.

The opening "11" wastes little time announcing the album's intentions. It functions less as an introduction than as the slow turning of an enormous machine that has been dormant for years. Once "Balance" and "Closer" arrive, Kontagion reveals one of its greatest strengths: the ability to write songs that retain memorable structures without sacrificing unpredictability. Riffs emerge like collapsing buildings, while electronics and noise seep into the cracks rather than merely decorating the walls.

Industrial music has always flirted with the fantasy of humanity becoming machinery, while sludge has generally preferred to remind us that machinery eventually rusts anyway. Kontagion occupies the uncomfortable space between those philosophies. The guitars grind with mechanical precision, but beneath them lies something distinctly human: frustration, exhaustion, persistence. These are not songs celebrating apocalypse. They sound more like field reports from people still trying to function after the apocalypse has become ordinary office policy.

Vocally, the album marks another confident evolution. Rather than relying exclusively on abrasive delivery, melodic passages appear throughout the record with surprising effectiveness. They never soften the impact; instead, they sharpen it by introducing moments of fragile clarity before the next sonic collapse. The contrast gives tracks like "Needs" and "Across" an emotional complexity that many heavier records sacrifice in favour of relentless punishment.

"Panopticon" naturally invites associations with surveillance and invisible systems of control, and the music mirrors that unease through tightly wound arrangements that seem perpetually observed, unable to relax. Later, "Calibrate" and the monumental "Worse" stretch the band's compositional ambitions further, allowing repetition to accumulate genuine psychological weight rather than simply extending running time. The closing "Circles" offers no triumphant resolution. Instead, it reinforces the album's recurring suggestion that cycles, personal or societal, rarely end cleanly. They mutate.

One particularly admirable quality is the production's refusal to sterilise the chaos. Modern heavy music often mistakes compression for power, leaving everything equally loud and therefore strangely lifeless. Here, dynamics remain intact. Noise breathes. Silence briefly interrupts. Feedback lingers just long enough to feel like an additional instrument rather than an accident left in the mix.

Listeners familiar with industrial metal's canonical names will certainly recognise distant echoes, but Kontagion rarely sounds derivative. The band's willingness to absorb influences from post-rock's patient architecture, doom's oppressive gravity and noise music's textural curiosity allows "I" to exist as something more fluid than a simple hybrid. It is less interested in genre fusion than in emotional coherence.

Perhaps the album's greatest achievement is that, despite its considerable heaviness, it never becomes emotionally numb. There is anger here, certainly, but also doubt, melancholy and an ongoing search for equilibrium that justifies titles like "Balance" and "Calibrate". Even its most devastating moments seem driven by the desire to communicate rather than simply overwhelm.

For a record titled "I", this turns out to be surprisingly collective music. Every crushing riff, fractured texture and unexpected melodic turn suggests identity not as something fixed but as something continuously assembled under pressure. In an age where algorithms are forever encouraging artists to become more recognisable, Kontagion takes the opposite route. They become more difficult to classify with every release, and that feels less like defiance than quiet confidence. Sometimes the strongest identity is the one that refuses to fit inside somebody else's filing cabinet.