The Child of A Creek – Hidden Tales…
£7.00 Original price was: £7.00.£3.50Current price is: £3.50.
Hidden Tales and Other Lullabies is a 6song completely instrumental ambient/abstract/electronic/postrock record I’ve recently written, composed, performed and recorded with synthetizers, piano, field recordings, acoustic and electric guitars. Mixed and mastered in a recording studio near home. I have a particular love for this record and for its dreaming touch, gloomy sounds, circular waves, reverbs and echoes, various processed field recordings (paper, glass etc..)
Out of stock
Add a Review
Be the first to review “The Child of A Creek – Hidden Tales…” Cancel reply
This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
Sold out

Indian Weapons – Labyrinth (Tape)
Sale, Tape
Brad Rose, Nathan Young and Eden Hemming Rose take us on a journey of radical synth spirits from dark and heavy through to a blissed euphoric finish.
Sold out

Birds of Passage – Winter Lady
Sale, Tape
Perfect for the wintertime, Alicia Merz’ Birds of Passage project comes from another world, separate from our own. This is an world similar to ours, but everything is just slightly off. A constant overcast sky, filled with birds drifting through these skies leaving long trails of gold and blue ribbons. It’s a fantastic and ethereal plane.
Sold out

Damian Valles – Fixtures (Tape)
Sale, Tape
Fixtures’ contains 9 tracks that expand on the darker, more noisier elements found in the droning/ambient soundscapes Valles has been experimenting with as of late.
A blend of distorted sounds, dusty acoustic guitars, old pianos, and field recordings mixed with slowly evolving tones and brooding passages.
Released in an edition of 50 copies in cassette format & beautifully packaged in a 2 colour screen printed slipcase. Released through the Australian imprint Left (field) Recordings.
Sale

Mohave Weapons – Smoked Mystics (Tape)
Sale, Tape
Anthropological audiophiles feared that all forms of smouldered geometric sound magic had died away when Europeans reached far in to the desert wilderness of western America. Although this sand based kahuna was never officially outlawed, the decline of native culture saw many forms of sonic sorcery die out as the acoustic conjurers were unable to pass on their wisdom to new aural apprentices.

Reviews(0)
There are no reviews yet.