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12" + CD
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INF 018EP
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"Prism Split (A Scrying Song)" invokes comparisons with pioneers such as Muslimgauze or contemporaries like Shackleton, while staking out sonic territory of its own with field recordings, mixed-media samples, and delicate drum programming and instrumentation. More club-oriented and jubilant yet suitably tense, "Reunion of Two Bodies" sheds Eastern influences in favor of dubbed-out, classic electronic realms, reminiscent of Warp circa Artificial Intelligence. Bonus CD's brooding 50-minute "Terms of Propaganda" fuses musique concrète ideals with modern bass music stylings; its drum recall the The Apocalypse Now Sessions by Grateful Dead players the Rhythm Devils. Music to go up the river to.
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12"
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INF 013EP
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Infrastructure presents the debut record from Campbell Irvine, the outsider talent who hails from Australia and has recently re-located to Berlin. Part industrial mantra, part musique concrète, this captivating debut continues Infrastructure's re-launch, bringing genuine new talent to the table. The classically-trained violinist, who until recently had little background or experience in electronic music, has put together a deeply ritualistic study in textural, layered compositions inspired by Middle Eastern traditions and rhythms. With a nod to the influential work of artists such as Muslimgauze, Irvine has constructed a complex world of electro-acoustic elements, carefully processed and arranged field recordings, acoustic percussion and Arabic sound-bytes.
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