15 April 2025: Yezda Urfa “Sacred Baboon”; Parallel Worlds “Modular”; "Ubikuitous" Music Inspired by Philip K. Dick's Dystopias

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Sacred Baboon by Yezda Urfa

Sacred Baboon is the second, and only officially released, album by the American progressive rock group Yezda Urfa. The album was recorded in 1976, but not released until 1989.

In 1975 Yezda Urfa made a demo EP, Boris, but since no interest was generated by it, they decided to go for a second album that would be released on their own label with the hope that after it generated enough interest, it would attract the attention of a record company.

Yezda Urfa funded the project themselves, and just before finishing, they almost had a deal with a small label in Chicago, but the deal fell through. After completing the recording, but short of cash, they abandoned the idea of releasing the album and shelved the master tape.

Some time later, the band was discovered by Syn-Phonic and the album was released in 1989.

This album was recorded in about two weeks, in two different studios. They had started using the same studio as for the Boris album, but switched to another, more modern studio shortly after they started recording. In the time that had elapsed since recording Boris, their music had evolved. Some of the material that appeared on Boris was reworked for this album.

Track listing

Side 1

  1. "Give 'em Some Rawhide Chewies" – 3:50
  2. "Cancer of the Band" – 6:48
  3. "Tota in the Moya" – 10:14

Side 2

  1. "Boris and his Three Verses" – 2:50
  2. "Flow Guides Aren't My Bag" – 4:45
  3. "(My Doc Told Me I Had) Doggie Head" – 5:02
  4. "3, Almost 4, 6 Yea" – 8:39

Produced & recorded at Universal Studios, Chicago and Hedden West Recorders, Schaumburg, Illinois.

Personnel

 


Machines used:
Eurorack modular (including modules by Qu-Bit, Synthesis Technology, Make Noise, Verbos, Instruo, Xaoc Devices, Intellijel, Frap Tools, Doepfer, 4ms company, Noise Engineering and others)
Analogue Systems RS-Integrator modular
Korg SQ-64
Korg Volca Modular
Korg Wavestate
link: facebook.com/parallelworldsmusic
 
mamonulabs "Modular Stories" explores two distinct sonic moods, at times merging effortlessly, while at others drifting apart into their own expansive spaces. It elegantly combines melancholic IDM with sprawling ambient drone textures, Listen to "Slow Motion" for golden era Fax drones for example or the first track for idm electronica bliss Favorite track: Transcedent.
 

credits

released April 8, 2025
FreeForm Radio thanks Bakis Sirros for a complimentry copy of this release.
Thanks to: friends and family, John Sirros, Alessandro Vaccaro, Mamonu, Ingo Zobel & Dimitris Pavlidis.
Mastered by Lorenzo Montana'
Designed by LoMo
 
 
 

Philip K. Dick's narratives are a cornerstone of dystopian literature, delving into complex and unsettling visions of the future where the boundaries of reality blur, personal autonomy is undermined, and humanity is redefined. His worlds are characterized by an intricate exploration of societal control, the fragility of identity, the consequences of drug use, and the implications of virtual reality. These themes, often presented with a prophetic tone, resonate with contemporary anxieties and challenge the reader to confront unsettling questions about existence and power. In Dick’s dystopias, control manifests in both overt and covert forms, often executed by shadowy corporations or authoritarian governments. The oppressive mechanisms in his stories are not limited to physical coercion but extend deeply into psychological and technological domains. In A Scanner Darkly (1977), for instance, surveillance is depicted as a pervasive force that erodes privacy and individuality. Similarly, Minority Report (1956) examines pre-crime policing, where individuals are apprehended for crimes they have not yet committed based on predictive technologies. Dick’s prescient depiction of predictive surveillance technologies foreshadows modern debates over data privacy, algorithmic governance, and the balance between safety and liberty. A recurring theme in Dick’s works is the elusiveness of reality. His characters frequently grapple with the question: What is real? This ontological crisis is central to Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? (1968), where the distinction between humans and androids becomes increasingly ambiguous. In Ubik (1969), reality itself becomes a mutable construct, shifting and deteriorating in ways that disorient both characters and readers. The titular substance, Ubik, represents a stabilizing force amidst this chaos, yet its true nature remains enigmatic. Dick’s exploration of reality extends beyond philosophical musings; it serves as a critique of consumer culture, media manipulation, and the fragility of consensus reality in an age of rapid technological change. Dick’s personal experiences with drug use inform much of his work and play an important role in examining the previous themes, lending authenticity to his depictions of altered states of consciousness and their societal implications. Drugs in Dick’s narratives often serve as a means of exploring alternative realities or as tools of control. In The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch (1965), the hallucinogen Can-D allows users to escape their grim existence in a dystopian off-world colony, yet its promise of transcendence is complicated by the emergence of a rival drug, Chew-Z, which binds users to the will of the enigmatic Palmer Eldritch. In this regard the concept of virtual reality is central to Dick’s exploration of identity and control. In The Penultimate Truth (1964), humanity is deceived into living underground, believing the surface world is uninhabitable, while a privileged elite manipulates them through fabricated media. This narrative anticipates concerns about the power of virtual environments to shape perceptions and obscure truths. We Can Remember It For You Wholesale (1966), adapted into the film Total Recall, investigates memory manipulation, where implanted memories blur the line between genuine experience and artificial construction. The protagonist’s struggle to discern his authentic identity highlights the vulnerability of the human psyche in the face of advanced technologies. Dick’s dystopias resonate because they reflect not only a fear of technological overreach but also a deep understanding of human frailty. His exploration of control, reality, drug use, and virtual environments serves as a mirror to contemporary anxieties, urging readers to question the systems that shape their lives and the definitions of humanity they take for granted. In the end, Philip K. Dick’s work remains a cautionary beacon, warning of the perils of unchecked technological and societal evolution while affirming the enduring complexity and resilience of the human spirit.

In this compilation of disorienting aural landscapes, Unexplained Sounds Group and the contributing musicians pay a heartfelt tribute to the dystopian visions of the great American writer. A guiding light for current and future generations of artists, his work challenges all who seek to uncover the hidden layers beneath the surface of apparent reality.
 

credits

released April 10, 2025

Non Psychogenic Ambivalence courtesy track by Adi Newton (2024, Anterior Research London, Publishing Mute Song, London).
FreeForm Radio thanks Raffaele Pezzella for a copy of this release.
Curated and mastered by Raffaele Pezzella (a.k.a. Sonologyst).
Layout by Matteo Mariano.
Published by Unexplained Sounds Group
Cat. Num. USG106.
© 2025 All rights reserved.
 
 


08 April 2025: Steven Wilson "Alterview"; Polypores "I Wish There Was a Place Like That" Quiet Details 31

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Tonight I'll also be hosting Rural Electric right after the Island Messenger at  7 pm until 9 pm.

This week's Rural Electric theme is "being poor."    


 A bonus CD from a Special Edition of The Overview featuring 60 minutes of music (called The Alterview) not included on the final album and an specially commissioned orchestral version of the 23 minute long ‘Objects Outlive Us’ (called ‘Orchestral Objects’)

Polypores - I Wish There Was a Place Like That                                                                

Credits:
Music by Stephen James Buckley
Mastered by Alex at quiet details studios
Artwork by quiet details in collaboration with Stephen James Buckley
Design by quiet details
© quiet details 2025 all rights reserved
FreeForm Radio thanks Alex for a complimentary copy of this release.

For the next edition in the quiet details series we have a wonderful interpretation from the UK-based synth master craftsman, Stephen James Buckley, here as Polypores.

An essential element of the British electronic music scene, Polypores’ expansive albums and electric live shows have cemented him as one of the most loved and admired exponents of esoteric and endlessly original modular synthesiser sound-worlds at work today.

With releases on a slew of labels, including Castles in Space, Frequency Domain, Miracle Pond, Woodford Halse, Waxing Crescent Records, DIN, Aural Canyon and more - plus loads of self-releases - his unstoppable creativity knows no bounds.

I Wish There was a Place Like That sees the signature Polypores freewheeling and completely unique approach take a deep and psychotropic leap - dense and highly detailed textures swirl and emerge from the ether, melodies grow and branch across the spectrum like fractals, always shifting and becoming something new.

Layer upon layer of glistening harmonics mesh and unravel themselves as time edges forward, time slows and quickens, headspace shifts.

Each track started as an extended improvisation, edited down to its essence then carefully shaped into the finished pieces. As Stephen says:

I took the best sections of these and used them as the basis for the tracks, adding a few extra parts to develop them and add to the texture. There's a lot of repetition here - I experienced audio hallucinations during a lot of these recordings.
Voices emerging from the music. Hopefully the listener will experience some of this too.
Using the trio of semi-modular synths from the visionary Make Noise, perfectly designed to live together as a self-contained system - augmented with a few choice additions - this focused setup allowed Stephen to explore their symbiosis to its fullest, an incredible example of how these tools can be used to create pieces that are both wildly experimental and deeply musical.

This is some of the finest synthesiser music we can have the pleasure of experiencing - kaleidoscopic, consciousness-expanding and life-affirming - huge thanks to Stephen, a beautiful addition to the series.

The artwork was made as always influenced by the music and idea behind the album - originating from a photo from Stephen which was then captured with analogue photography and processed here at quiet details studios.

As usual, the album is presented on the physical edition, a custom six-panel digipack with a separate fine art print too.

The CD also has a special long-form continuous mix of the album, representing the music in its purest form.

polypores.bandcamp.com 
 

credits

released March 12, 2025

license

all rights reserved

01 April 2025: An Evening with Jethro Tull featuring "Aqualung" & "Curious Ruminant"

 
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The music you hear on tonight's show is available on the artists' Bandcamp pages and websites. (links below) 

We urge you to support the musicians you hear on FreeForm Radio.

 


Aqualung is the fourth studio album by the English rock band Jethro Tull; it was released in March 1971 by Chrysalis Records. Though it is generally regarded as a concept album, featuring a central theme of "the distinction between religion and God", the band said that there was no intention to make a concept album, and that only a few songs have a unifying theme.[4] Aqualung's success signalled a turning point in the career of the band, which went on to become a major radio and touring act.

Recorded at Island Records' new recording studio in Basing Street, London, it was their first album with keyboardist John Evan as a full-time member, their first with new bassist Jeffrey Hammond, and last album featuring Clive Bunker on drums, who left the band shortly after the release of the album. The album utilises more acoustic material than previous releases; and—inspired by photographs of homeless people on the Thames Embankment taken by singer Ian Anderson's wife Jennie Franks—contains a number of recurring themes, addressing religion along with Anderson's own personal experiences.

Aqualung is Jethro Tull's best-selling album, selling more than seven million units worldwide. It was generally well-received critically and has been included on several music magazine best-of lists. The album spawned two singles, "Hymn 43" and "Locomotive Breath".[5]

Production

An early version of "My God" was recorded on 11–12 April 1970, followed by "Wond'ring Aloud, Again" on 21 June, both at Morgan Studios.[6][failed verification] After an American tour, bass player Glenn Cornick was fired from the band,[7] and was replaced with Jeffrey Hammond, an old friend of Ian Anderson.[8] Aqualung would be Hammond's first album with the band. It would also mark the first time John Evan had recorded a full album with the band, as his only prior involvement was to provide several keyboard parts on the previous 1970 album, Benefit. In December, the album became one of the first to be recorded at Island Records' newly-opened recording studios on Basing Street in London. Led Zeppelin did some recording for Led Zeppelin IV at the same time, though in the smaller of the two studios in the converted chapel.[9] In an interview on the 25th anniversary edition of the album, Tull's bandleader Ian Anderson said that trying to record in the larger studio was very difficult, because of its "horrible, cold, echoey" feel.[10] The orchestral segments were arranged by Dee Palmer, who had worked with the band since 1968's This Was, and would later join as a keyboard player. The master reels were assembled at Apple Studios on 2 March 1971. Aqualung would be the last Jethro Tull album to include Clive Bunker as a band member, as he retired shortly after recording to start a family.[10]

Musical style

The songs on the album encompass a variety of musical genres, with elements of folk, blues, psychedelia, and hard rock.[11] The "riff-heavy" nature of tracks such as "Locomotive Breath", "Hymn 43" and "Wind Up" is regarded as a factor in the band's increased success after the release of the album, with Jethro Tull becoming "a major arena act" and a "fixture on FM radio" according to AllMusic.[12][13] In a stylistic departure from Jethro Tull's earlier albums, many of Aqualung's songs are acoustic. "Cheap Day Return", "Wond'ring Aloud" and "Slipstream" are short, completely acoustic "bridges", and "Mother Goose" is also mostly acoustic. Anderson claims his main inspirations for writing the album were Roy Harper and Bert Jansch.[10]

Themes

Aqualung has generally been regarded as a concept album with a central theme of "the distinction between religion and God".[4] The album's "dour musings on faith and religion" have marked it as "one of the most cerebral albums ever to reach millions of rock listeners".[12] Academic discussions of the nature of concept albums have frequently listed Aqualung amongst their number.[14][15][16]

The initial idea for the album was sparked by some photographs that Anderson's wife Jennie took of homeless people on the Thames Embankment. The appearance of one man in particular caught the interest of the couple, who together wrote the title song "Aqualung".[17] The first side of the LP, titled Aqualung, contains several character sketches, including the character of the title track, and the schoolgirl prostitute Cross-Eyed Mary, as well as two autobiographical tracks, including "Cheap Day Return", written by Anderson after a visit to his critically ill father.[18]

The second side, titled My God, contains three tracks—"My God", "Hymn 43" and "Wind-Up"—that address religion in an introspective, and sometimes irreverent, manner. However, despite the names given to the album's two sides and their related subject matter, Anderson has consistently maintained that Aqualung is not a "concept album". A 2005 interview included on Aqualung Live gives Anderson's thoughts on the matter:[19]

I always said at the time that this is not a concept album; this is just an album of varied songs of varied instrumentation and intensity in which three or four are the kind of keynote pieces for the album but it doesn't make it a concept album. In my mind when it came to writing the next album, Thick as a Brick, was done very much in the sense of: 'Whuh, if they thought Aqualung was a concept album, Oh! Okay, we'll show you a concept album.' And it was done as a kind of spoof, a send-up, of the concept album genre. ... But Aqualung itself, in my mind was never a concept album. Just a bunch of songs.

Drummer Clive Bunker believes that the record's perception as a concept album is a case of "Chinese whispers", explaining "you play the record to a couple of Americans, tell them that there's a lyrical theme loosely linking a few songs, and then notice the figure of the Aqualung character on the cover, and suddenly the word is out that Jethro Tull have done a concept album".[10]

The thematic elements Jethro Tull explored on the album—those of the effects of urbanisation on nature, and of the effects of social constructs such as religion on society—would be developed further on most of the band's subsequent releases.[20] Ian Anderson's frustration over the album's labelling as a concept album directly led to the creation of Thick as a Brick (1972), intended to be a deliberately "over the top" concept album in response.[21]

40th anniversary adapted edition: Remixed and mastered by Steven Wilson (2016)

The 2016 edition was remastered by Steven Wilson of his 2011 remixed material as he did not like Peter Mew's mastering.

CD 1: Steven Wilson remaster and stereo remix of the album
No.TitleLength
1."Aqualung"6:38
2."Cross-Eyed Mary"4:11
3."Cheap Day Return"1:23
4."Mother Goose"3:53
5."Wond'ring Aloud"1:56
6."Up to Me"3:17
7."My God"7:13
8."Hymn 43"3:19
9."Slipstream"1:13
10."Locomotive Breath"4:42
11."Wind-Up"

Review of the new Jethro Tull studio record – ‘Curious Ruminant’

by Geoff Bailie

Like many prog bands who formed in the late 1960s, Jethro Tull’s early years involved a new album release every single year. That pace slowed in the 1980s, and with J-Tull Dot Come in 1999, the band (name) went to hiatus. Ian Anderson however kept making music, and this brought us Thick As A Brick II and Homo Erraticus, both excellent albums which it’s hard not to think of as Tull albums, such is the imprint of Anderson’s DNA.

The continuation of that trajectory has been what is now three Jethro Tull albums in quick succession from January 2022’s The Zealot Gene, April 2023’s RokFlote and now in March 2025, Curious Ruminant – that’s a pace of output that even few younger peers are able to match… and reminiscent of a 1970s release schedule.

The stable JT core band members, David Goodier, John O’Hara, and Scott Hammond are joined by new guitarist Jack Clark, with contributions from previous members Andrew Gidding and James Duncan (the boss’s son making an appearance on drums). While the last two albums had specific thematic cores in Biblical references and Norse legends, this one is packed with Anderson’s ruminations on manipulation, contemplation, change, and bereavement, with the clever and thought-provoking lyrical approach that’s unchanged over the decades. Musically the album is similar in tone to the previous two, not overproduced, with lots of space when needed. While the overall tone is quite mellow, there are many “gut punch” moments either in song or in words.

“Puppet and the Puppet Master” kicks the album off with a speedy rock beat, acoustic guitars and the rasp of trademark flute – Anderson’s dexterity with this instrument still superb. We also get some trading off between Jack Clark’s guitar, the flute and a Hammond organ. Dig into the lyrics and I’m hearing a reflection on the role of the stage performer as both a puppet and a puppet master – as a minstrel of many years experience, Anderson will, of course, know all of the techniques to engage his audience.. and yet he’s the one dancing to their tune – perhaps a reflection on the role of a “heritage act” where the audience will demand certain songs and behaviors from the band. If that all sounds heavy, don’t worry – you can easily get lost in the jaunty melody … but there’s also lots there if you want to dig deeper! The piano led “title track” is next – it’s a song that couldn’t be anyone but Tull, so distinctive is its sound. This one is a song about curiosity, and those who think about the big questions in life… but ultimately end up changing their mind on a regular basis or indeed sit on the fence. Neither is criticised and you get the feeling that Anderson is reflecting his own personality in this lyric more than he would when, say, he’s wrapped in a character. Yet another shout for some great guitar work on this one.

In “Dunsinane Hill,” it seems that Anderson’s Scottish roots lead him to “The Scottish Play,” mixing elements of Macbeth with the equally murderous world of politics. More great flute playing on this one and in fact the track could also work well as an instrumental as Anderson’s vocal is part-recitation. The recent trilogy of albums has seen Ian settle into a comfortable vocal style, part spoken, part sung which suits his timbre at this point in life. The roar, sneer and snigger of past Tull tracks wouldn’t necessarily fit what he writes today, and yet with the voice and the flute you’re never in any doubt who you’re listening to!

“The Tipu House” is a folksier track, followed by “Savannah of Paddington Green” which returns to themes of climate change which certainly has been a familiar subject since the days of Stormwatch. “Over Jerusalem” starts with a bouncing Celtic folk theme and has a brilliant instrumental mid-section which overall gives it an epic feel. But when it comes to epics, well the prog fans ears prick up when they see a song that lasts longer than 15 minutes. So “Drink From The Same Well,” arguably the second longest track in the Tull canon if you treat Thick As A Brick as a single track, is one of interest. Some of the musical ideas stem from music created for Hariprasad Chaurasia, exponent of the bansuri, an Indian bamboo flute and appeared as instrumentals that Tull played live 20 years ago. Gathering those ideas together with lyrics themed around unity, it’s a showcase of instrumental styles covering jazz, folk and rock as well as Eastern styles – a real musical journey with superb playing throughout.

The album closes with “Interim Sleep”, a spoken word piece, written about the passing of a loved one. It’s a mellow ending track, which finishes the album by staring into eternity.

There’s no doubt that Ian Anderson’s creative well has not run dry, and his output in this decade alone has been of a very high standard. Curious Ruminant is perhaps the strongest of the three Tull albums released on InsideOutMusic, and it’s exciting to hear an artist who’s still producing music of this quality after so many years. For those who enjoy strong lyrical themes and subjects, there’s lots to dig into… and musically it’s full of great playing and virtuoso flute in particular.

Check out our interview with Ian Anderson here.

Released on March 7th, 2025 on InsideOutMusic

https://jethrotullband.lnk.to/CuriousRuminant-Album

The full tracklisting is as follows:
1. Puppet And The Puppet Master 04:04
2. Curious Ruminant 06:00
3. Dunsinane Hill 04:17
4. The Tipu House 03:31
5. Savannah of Paddington Green 03:13
6. Stygian Hand 04:16
7. Over Jerusalem 05:55
8. Drink From The Same Well 16:42
9. Interim Sleep 02:33

The band consists of:
Ian Anderson – Flutes, vocals, acoustic guitar, tenor guitar, mandolin, odds and sods, bits and bobs
David Goodier – Bass guitar
John O’Hara – Piano, keyboards, accordion
Scott Hammond – Drums
Jack Clark – Electric guitar

The album also features:
James Duncan – Drums, cajón, percussion
Andrew Giddings – Piano, keyboards, accordion


25 March 2025: Finnforest; "fields we found" , quiet details 32; The Great Old Ones - "Lands of Azathoth"

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You can now listen to the livestream of the show through the KMXT app; it's available through the Mac App Store or Google Play. The stream is also available at www.kmxt.org

Please support FreeForm Radio and KMXT by going to www.KMXT.org and pledging your support.

The music you hear on tonight's show is available on the artists' Bandcamp pages and websites. (links below) 

We urge you to support the musicians you hear on FreeForm Radio.

Tonight I'll also be hosting Rural Electric right after the Island Messenger at  7 pm until 9 pm.

This week's Rural Electric theme is refugees/borders/immigration.



Finnforest was a Finnish progressive rock band, formed in 1972, from Kuopio, Finland.[1][2] The band was established by twins, Pekka (guitar, bass) and Jussi Tegelman (drums), together with Jukka Rissanen (keyboards, synthesiser) and Aaro Mustonen (vocals). They started as a jazz fusion band and drew their influences from Mahavishnu Orchestra.[3] The released a single, "Tyhjyyteen, Syvyyteen" in 1973, soon afterwards Mustonen left and the band started playing instrumental music.

Their debut eponymous album, released in 1975 on Love Records, was considered to be their most prog rock-oriented album.[4] Rissanen left the band, to study classical music in Hungary, before they started recording their sophomore album. At that point the band had two additional keyboardists, Jukka Linkola and Peretti Pokki, an additional bassist, Jarmo Hiekkala, and a string quartet. Lähtö Matkalle was released in 1976 on Love Records and is considered by some to be their best release.[3] They released a single, "Ketto" / "Tekee Meisseliä", from the album.



From Alex, founder of the quiet details series:

Very pleased to share with you my first publicly available interpretation of the quiet details idea as fields we found.


Bandcamp link/code and private streaming link below, and please find the press release with the full details attached. Full release 2nd April 2025.

As well as running quiet details and my work as a mastering engineer, I’ve released music on beautiful labels such as Home Normal, Seil Records, Handstitched*, Ambientologist, Frequency Domain and others. Also numerous self-releases, including the new resolve / relate series of long-form deep-listening pieces, and the contrasting rhythm structures series focused on percussive music inspired by my time on dance-floors over the years.

in your hands was made in the last few months of 2024, a year which completely changed my perception of music. As you may know from my previous writings, last February I was diagnosed with lymphoma, then went through intense treatment, which worked as well as we could have hoped, and now I’m in remission.

Music was a panacea in these times, long listening sessions were truly healing. I learnt a lot and knew it was important that my own music came out of it, this album is the result.

Fundamental frequency relationships and interactions are a core part of this album - with the first couple of tracks using just intonation in precise ratios, then the latter moving into free tuning, chosen in an innate and instinctive way. Their development over time is the heart of this music.

Made on modular synthesisers for deeply expressive tonal and textural explorations - the ability to access elemental modulation parameters and feedback paths allows for extensive interaction between the elements to create organic and complex harmonic relationships.
Performed live directly from the machines, recorded to tape. I love this process, it’s intuitive and entirely hands-on, human and highly focused.

The other essential part of the album is the use of field recordings - usually recorded myself but as I was ill, I started asking my close family to take some to use in the music. This idea grew to close friends, and continued to expand, ultimately including many family and friends - artists, musicians and non- musicians, from all over the world.

The only direction was record something that intuitively spoke to them - the most important thing is these wonderful people were part of the music.
The results were incredible and every single one is included across the album - processed, reimagined and a completely necessary part of the work.

This album is dedicated to all of them and everyone else that helped me though - friends, family, medical staff and beyond - all incredible and I’m deeply grateful for their support. Wouldn’t be here today without them.

All proceeds from the album will go to the Cancer Centre - Milton Keynes University Hospital to support their work.

We need to hold onto the NHS, support it however we can, and keep in the hands of the people.

The artwork was made as always influenced by the music and idea behind the album - originating from a photo from I took in our garden which was then captured with analogue photography and processed here at quiet details studios.
As usual, the album is presented on the physical edition, a custom six-panel digipack with a separate fine art print too.

The CD also has a special long-form continuous mix of the album, representing the music in its purest form.

Credits:
Music by fields we found
Mastered by Alex at quiet details studios 
Artwork by quiet details
Design by quiet details
© quiet details 2025 all rights reserved
FreeForm Radio thanks Alex for this advance copy; release is scheduled for April 2

Album - https://quietdetails.bandcamp.com/album/in-your-hands 


LANDS OF AZATHOTH THE GREAT OLD ONES

Outside the ordered universe is that amorphous blight of nethermost confusion which blasphemes and bubbles at the center of all infinitythe boundless daemon-sultan Azathoth, whose name no lips dare speak aloud, and who gnaws hungrily in inconceivable, unlighted chambers beyond time amidst the muffled, maddening beat of vile drums and the thin monotonous whine of accursed flutes...

H. P. Lovecraft

The Great Old Ones present “Lands of Azathoth an exploration into the unfathomable and chaotic core of Lovecraft’s mythos. This third installment, following the albums Yog-Sothoth (2022) and The Mythos of Cthulhu (2023), summons the enigmatic dread of Azathoth, the Blind Idiot God who lies at the heart of the cosmos. The music of The Great Old Ones is so profoundly lo-fi and shrouded in dense fog that each melodic line feels submerged, as if suspended in a gelatinous substancetrapped within an alien shell, unable to fully emerge or resonate in the ears of the listener, eternally encased in otherworldly isolation. It offers a unique vision steeped in Lovecraft's portrayal of the universe as a realm of endless chaos.

Track List
1 - Altar Of Unreality
2
Music for god's slumber
3 - Otherworldly Illusions
4 - Azathoth Daemon Sultan
5 - Unlighted chambers beyond time 6 - At the centre of ultimate Entropy

Published by Eighth Tower Records and Zazen Sounds. Mastered by Raffaele Pezzella (a.k.a. Sonologyst). Layout by Matteo Mariano. Cat. Num. ETR059. © 2025. All rights reserved. 

FreeForm Radio thanks Raffaele Pezzella for a complimentary copy of this release.

eighthtowerrecords.bandcamp.com

UNEXPLAINED SOUNDS (network of aural disorientation). Corso Secondigliano 157, Napoli, 80144 Napoli, Italy.

info@unexplainedsoundsgroup.com




18 March 2025: Steven Wilson "The Overview"; Markus Reuter "Aurora Drift"; Nerthus "The Path of the Elder Ones"

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Steven Wilson releases his eighth studio album, The Overview, on Fiction Records on 14th March 2025. The two track, forty-two-minute​ album is his most audacious to date, inspired by the “overview effect” experienced by astronauts looking back at the Earth from space.

The Overview sees Wilson return to expansive, progressive music, a genre he helped redefine and repopularise with both his solo and Porcupine Tree releases. The two wildly ambitious tracks are each made up of distinctive musical sections that flow from one to the other, playing out as unique and continuous pieces. Wilson’s 21st-century progressive music updates the classic ‘prog’ musical palette to incorporate everything from glistening electronics to post-rock and beyond, which brings the genre right into the beating heart of the current musical landscape.

The album also features a set of lyrics by XTC’s Andy Partridge that help drive the story in “Objects Outlive Us”.

The Overview is instantly recognisable as Steven Wilson and will stand alone as an utterly unique release for 2025. Headphones and a wide-open mind are recommended.

TRACKLIST

1. OBJECTS OUTLIVE US (23.17)
● No Monkey’s Paw
● The Buddha Of The Modern Age
● Objects: Meanwhile
● The Cicerones
● Ark
● Cosmic Sons Of Toil
● No Ghost On The Moor
● Heat Death Of The Universe

2. THE OVERVIEW (18.27)
● Perspective
● A Beautiful Infinity I
● Borrowed Atoms
● A Beautiful Infinity II
● Infinity Measured In Moments
● Permanence



Please consider joining my Bandcamp subscription: markusreuter.bandcamp.com/vip-membership

Click here to see the videos for Volumes 1-6: shorturl.at/L0ddJ

This is Vol. 7, "Aurora Drift":

"Where is this place? This temple? This ancient choir? These memories, faces, beings? What is this magic? This spell? The cast is strong, hypnotic, and then it ends as mysteriously as it began..."
(midKnight_Muse)

"Stream for Consciousness" is a concept born from experimenting with various ways to create ethereal ambient soundscapes, targeting different moods and uses. Whether it be for meditation, relieving anxiety, music to sleep or study to, this project aims to create music to ease you into reaching a conscious state, through carefully crafted melodic pieces.

credits

released February 21, 2025

Composed and played by Markus Reuter
Recorded, mixed, and mastered by Erik Emil Eskildsen
Produced by Markus Reuter and Erik Emil Eskildsen

Markus plays Touch Guitars® AU8

Special thanks to Lindsay Jones

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all rights reserved 
 

"The sciences, each straining in its own direction, have hitherto harmed us little; but some day the piecing together of dissociated knowledge will open up such terrifying vistas of reality, and of our frightful position therein, that we shall either go mad from the revelation or flee from the deadly light into the peace and safety of a new dark age." – The Call of Cthulhu.


Highly recommended for lovers of Lustmord, Schloss Tegal and early productions from Cold Meat Industry.

credits

FreeForm thanks Raffaele Pezzella for a complimentary copy of this release.

released December 27, 2024

REVIEWS

Avant Music News
avantmusicnews.com/2024/12/22/amn-reviews-nerthus-the-path-of-the-elder-ones-2024-eighth-tower-records

Igloo Magazine
igloomag.com/reviews/nerthus-the-path-of-the-elder-ones-eighth-tower

Ver Sacrum
www.versacrum.com/vs/2025/01/nerthus-the-path-of-the-elder-ones-dei-nerthus.html

Luminous Dash
luminousdash.be/reviews/nerthus-the-path-of-the-older-ones-eight-tower

This Is Darkness
’m a huge fan of all things Lovecraftian, so I was thrilled when I discovered that the ever awesome Eighth Tower Records were releasing this dark ambient / post-industrial album from Nerthus. With eerie, otherworldly tracks full of dark menacing soundscapes and creepy field recordings, this is a wonderfully dark album that does an amazing job of capturing the essential essence of the Lovecraft mythos. Fantastic!



Published by Eighth Tower Records.
Music and Mastering by Nerthus.
Artwork by Nerthus.
Layout by Matteo Mariano.
Cat. Num. ETR054.
© 2024. All rights reserved.

license

all rights reserved

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