![[PS028] adamned.age - After the Rain](http://publicspaces.me/lab/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/cover_artwork_ATR_front_s-150x150.jpg)
Trip-hop or whatever you want to call adamned.age slow beat music filled with smoke and glitches is a landmark in the netlabel scene. “After the rain” continues her path, surprisingly, in a much brighter and almost joyful way (like indicating that after the rain comes the good weather). After the rain is an album focused on rhythm, and listening to the several tracks you find Hanne exploring and highlighting several different styles.
Leaving to our imagination what the middle of this strange, but beautiful story, might sound/look like.
James Lowery presents a new musical project. This is a must listen!
For the sequel we expected nothing less but still, “Number Stations part II” managed to surprise us on all levels.
Cinchel in his “paginated overflow” ep builds a lazy album where each sound being added takes its time to be introduced and then claim is presence with sharpness.
Two Quiet Sun’s debut album on PublicSpaces Lab, “True Anomaly” takes us into a journey into the universe of these two British Composers.
There is a world inside and another outside us. It’s the collective lost of humanity and the arising of a strong destructive but also wonderful individualism.
From Ruin to Bliss is a sound script for such stories: Abandoned places, filled with stories to tell; dry and unchangeable places.
PS020 marks our 20th release. What better way to celebrate it than to have various artists contribute to it?
Nothing in “The Containment Sessions” is out of place and the same attention to detail that Paul got us used to, is here.
DigiTube brings us a new EP that it is a true showcase of his talent. Relaxed, well humored and with moments of true musical genius, “Time to Chill” points out the future of the genre. To listen to in a relaxed environment with a daiquiri nearby.
“Bright dawn sketches” is an ambient album focused on exploring different environments, from urban solitude, sirens crying, ocean waves crashing in the shores and sunbeams reflected in the clouds.
Scott LaChance brings a fine and detailed ambient EP that calls for a careful listening to be repeated over and over again.
Number Stations, if you are unfamiliar, are shortwave radio stations that broadcast strange and cryptic content, often ordered or seemingly random series of numbers repeated over and over again.
“Unbroken Lantern” is a delicate sonic work that reflects the growth of James Lowery as an artist and composer
“It is my pleasure to witness one of the most precious jewels of today’s netaudio scene coming together with one of the most caring netlabels around”
His first release, ‘Beats for the Subverted’ is primarily influenced by early DJ Shadow, Portishead and UNKLE.
“The work deals with ambiguity, diversity and is full of sub-tones and unconnected juxtapositions. As we listen to the PS010 compilation, it successfully stimulates our imagination, for we perceive inumerous signs, carefully distributed, that motivate the senses and the irrefutable will to extract more of it.”
If there were any doubts that music has a temperature, or the potential to induce the listener to perceive its temperature, listening to the tracks of the “Antarctica Files” clears those doubts and lets the cold chilled wind enter your own space, no matter where you are.
“Hidden Beneath the Soil” is a journey into a universe made of intricate textures, sensations and feelings translated into this beautiful 7 pieces of experimental electronica.
Made up of 4 volumes, this release is the result of what ambienteer describes as “an abstract audio diary“.
Between sleep deprivation and other kind of insonmia, the nightlife entity known as “No One”, offers us his debut album “Hush”, a voiceless music that is charged with images, inspired by the climate in a big city and, the sensation of being no one among the crowd.
Right after his debut album in 2008, Esfera returns with a release that is totally focused onto the most experimental side of electronic music.