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Fourth "Ego Death", far from actual death, yet its breath can be heard all the same. Uun gets close and personal with "On The Concept Of Irony" and "The Tangled Web", bringing in the hard minimal techno that'll scrap the rust chips off of any steel venue while preying on the audience, before phasing existence with "The Other" and "Absurd Existence", leaving them with only sorrow and gratitude, and a parched throat.
Favorite track: The Other.
Nathan Phouthavong
I played Tangled Web in my car and my life changed and so did the stranger that heard the trembles of the bass when I drove passed him lololol
Favorite track: The Tangled Web.
12" Vinyl version in a black sleeve with an 11x11 cardstock insert featuring the cover photo. Vinyl was cut by Dietrich at Complete and pressed by Archer in Detroit.
Includes unlimited streaming of Ego Death 004 via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
Includes unlimited streaming of Ego Death 004
via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
Uun returns to his imprint Ego Death with an EP that showcases his progression in both sound design and atmosphere.
The A side kicks things off with On The Concept Of Irony, a broken beat assault which serves as a mission statement with it’s scattered snares and vocal samples. The Tangled Web continues this mood but with a more intense structure, heavy on hypnotic synths that weave in and out of the tracks percussive framework.
Where as the A side is the logical extension of the first three Ego Death releases, the B side serves to showcase a deeper atmosphere while maintaining Uun’s preference for dense arrangements. The Other features a haunting ethereal pad that floats above a broken kick pattern and a bed of clicks, pops, and field recordings. The closing track, Absurd Existence, forges all the elements of the artist’s sound into perhaps his most melodic work to date.
“It is therefore senseless to think of complaining since nothing foreign has decided what we feel, what we live, or what we are.”
- Jean-Paul Sartre
Supported by Blawan, Paula Temple, Schlomo, Artefakt, Alex.Do, Sigha, Bas Mooy, Charlotte de Witte, Tensal, Exium, Boris, Joe Farr, Ame, Henning Baer, Marco Bailey, Electric Indigo, Monika Kruse, Jeroen Search, Gary Beck, Kessell, Nihad Tule, Stephanie Sykes, Thomas Hessler, Juho Kusti, Konstantin, Abstract Division, Arnaud Le Texier, John Osborn, Etapp Kyle, Amelie Lens, Benjamin Damage, Post Scriptum, Jon Hester, Rebekah, Samuli Kemppi, Eric Cloutier, I/Y, Amotik, Sev Dah, Lag, Antonio De Angelis, NX1, Keith Carnal, Lucy, Svarog, Karl Meier, Roberto Clementi, Alfredo Mazzilli
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