mercredi 30 novembre 2022

Electraumatisme du 30/11/2022

Ne pas trop faire gaffe à l'actualité, flâner dans la CDthèque un peu au hasard au risque de (re)découvrir de bonnes choses. C'est ce que l'on propose de faire toutes les 2 semaines dans ces éditions régulières d'Electraumatisme.

TC75 - Dying Culture
Matt Hart - Terraform
And One - Second Voice
Pain Station - Hate
Comp C3 - Steelvoices
L.I.N. ‎– OnLine (Moda Mix)
Himmelsfahrt - ...Abwege Einer Seele
Chrome Corpse - The Feeling Is Mutual (It's Nothing Personal Mix)
Phobos Reactor - Superspreader
Jihad - Retrospekt
Tau Factor - Motionless
Whitar - Taint Belief

Release of the week:


 








Download : http://electraumatisme.info/broadcast/20221130.mp3

dimanche 27 novembre 2022

Kitchen Notes : erehwoN on ...Cable Bends Steel, X trackT, N/NOR

Pour la première fois dans Electraumatisme, une Kitchen Notes qui aborde 3 projets aux couleurs très différentes pourtant issus du même cerveau. erehwoN opère depuis la partie la plus industrielle de la Croatie et il nous partage ses méthodes pour chacune de ses 3 productions récemment sorties pour Cable Bends Steel (dark electro épurée), X trackT (ambiant indus rafinée) et N/NOR (coldwave electronique minimale en prise directe). Enormément d'informations pratiques passionnantes qui peuvent inspirer les bidouilleurs sonores en chambre, en espérant voir sa musique diffusée à une plus large audience car elle le mérite...

For the first time in Electraumatisme, a Kitchen Notes about 3 projects with very different colors yet coming from the same brain. erehwoN proceeds from the most industrial part of Croatia and there he shares his methods for each of his most recent productions for (refined dark electro), X trackT (polished ambiant indus) et N/NOR (electronic minimal live recorded coldwave). A huge amount of enthralling informations that would inspire many bedroom sound fixers, hoping to see his music spread to a larger audience because it deserves it.


Gears and software

What gears/software did you use for the 3 very different projects ?

10-channel mixer "BERINGHER EURORACK MODEL MX1804X" that goes into "TERRATEC" PC card.

Main DAW I migrated to now is "Cockos Reaper". I can't praise this enough, from portability, sound engine is great, routing options, LIGHT on CPU, and many more. Every once in a while I discover some new small thing that works great.

Synths used are ROLAND JUNO-106, KORG Polysix and choice of VSTs.

My sampler for now is VSTi VEMBER AUDIO Shortcircuit. Empty sampler, just feed it with your sounds, as the sampler should be, no 1 GB banks of wind instruments or such. Only downside is small number of audio outputs. Oh, yeah, did I mentioned it is FREE?!?!

https://plugins4free.com/plugin/1104/

And there are differences for each project I do;

In "CABLE BENDS STEEL" I try to capture energy / equivalent of emotional state I'm writing in that particular period. I'm happy with "reduction" in sound; more bass / beat oriented, there's less and less "padding" that drowns the mix.

"X trackT" is most exploratory sound-wise and arrangement-wise, because, usually I don't have to plan arrangement for vocal later on, so everything is sound design / flow orientated. "Trajectory" is the best song I did (so far?) for Xt and is example for this.

"N/NOR" is my newest project and technically most interesting; I try to recreate conditions of my idols from late-half 70's / early 80's electronic music. Deliberately, I work with limitations, monophonic lines, stripped-down arrangement, pattern based arranging.

I make some sequence and record on the fly; mute / solo channels, manipulate cutoff or delay, distortion etc.

Resulting wave recording is, for example, 7min long which I edit down to manageable 4min

Most N/NOR tracks I can't recreate again same as they were recorded, there's no automatization, separating tracks, just recording on 4 channels max and that is the backbone of every N/NOR track. After that I start with vocal on top.


Your favorite gear(s)/software(s) ?

There are some "mythical" pieces of gear that I've never seen "in flesh" let alone tried / used and it is out of my price range.

What I do have is; I just gave "ENSONIQ ASR-10" for a repair / modification (USB instead of floppy), this is something I love (its Phaser alone is so melodic-metalic, it works well with everything.

I also love my "KORG Polysix" mostly used for riff / bass lines. It cuts its way thru the mix, it just clears its path thru other instruments, it lifts the whole arrangement immediately. This sound of electricity, that moves is like no VST I've heard. I was uncertain of that synth for a while, because it had no MIDI so I didn't know for what to use it and almost sold it at one point, but after I started to actualy use it; it was valuable addition!

Also, friend of mine had a "YAMAHA DX21" and it was used at my place for a period of time ago. Bass preset (SOLID BASS) is very punchy it lifts everything in a arrangement. Always stuck in my mind for those italo, early house, new zone, EBM in late 80's, etc...

It had some grainy decimating decay in sound that sounded as nothing else. I'd love to get that one day again.

And for now, lately, I found it much rewarding to use those tone-based rhythm-machines that have adjustable paramenters for individual sounds (for example, Kick has vaweform, tone, decay, attack and so on...) so I don't depend on samples alone, you can fine-tweak every sound (example "CABLE BENDS STEEL - We Are"; kick & snare)

Any evolution in your setup ?

Evolution is, economicaly-based. As a pre-amlifier / overdrive (mostly for vocal), I started to use old cassette player on "record". Noisy, but at high recording level sounds like "MINISTRY - Stigmata".

I finaly managed to get old delay and spring reverb, everything you put thru it is instant "Sleeping beast" (...and "PORTION CONTROL", and "JOHN FOXX" etc....) Used mostly on N/NOR (for example, track "Dystopian")

Also, "ELECTRO-HARMONIX Big Muff" pedal. I love how it can beautifuly distort sound from whisper-level to max input.

 

Sound Design

Do you use/tweak presets  ?

Whenever I try something new, I browse thru presets first, just to get the idea what this is capable of.

If I like it, I start to fiddle knobs to get into the workflow, to familiarize myself with architecture.

Almost never use presets provided, at the writing stage I use tweaked preset as a temp just to get the arrangement notes / timing going. After that I layer / change sounds, record manipulation (for example, cutoff thru song) put thru FXs, etc.

As I mentioned above, for "N/NOR" I approach as if there is no presets. As the sequence is running, I tweak everything related during recording "on the fly" (delay feedback, cutoff of a synth line etc...)

Do you design you own sound  ? On which synth/plugin in particular ? 

Oh, yes! To me, that's the most interesting thing in all umbrella electronic underground genres.

By recording voice, outside found objects, effects, then editing it to use in musical enviroment with all kinds of manipulations, combining it with something else. (Hammond organ on "X trackT - Opium", or "X trackT - Trajectory"; those percussive "shot" sounds from the beginning are originaly from taps on a microphone)

So, there is a library of my own created sounds, from one-shot hits, fills to sequences, atmospheres (from synths, random noises etc...)

And, for example, other half of drums track on "X trackT - Controller (warped)" is recorded thru old reel-to-reel with a used tape. So, anything that works and gives some special timbre / effect is usable.
 

Personal synth story

Hmmm? It's not much, but when a friend of mine went to buy second-hand synth (KORG M1), guy who owned it tried to use the selling point that it's great synth for folk music. :)
Like I said, not much.

Writing/composing method

What would be your main writing/composing method ? Do you start classical rythm/bassline then arrange around it ? Do you already have structure in mind ? Do you improvise, record sessions then select ? ...

As mentioned above, I am "pulled" into writing by a sound first. Either interesting sample being sequenced, or a vocal stab thru FX pitched / reversed / cut-up or any number of things. Or a melodic line that I start to fill with other elements. After that I multiply that in time, add something new erase boring repetitive elements and so on.

And I forgot about the bass guitar; I play it more /and record.

Producing/mixing method

Do you produce/mix in the box or do you use mainly external gears (effect/comp/eq...)

Maybe 50-50. Outboard mixer is great for leveling (and it is "physical") before inputting something as a part of arrangement. And after I record everything in comp, I mix it and output it.

For "CABLE BENDS STEEL - Old skin" track, I put the final mix thru Overdrive pedal. So, I avoid to end up with the same trodden path as with previous thing.

Btw, CD player I bought recently, "ARCAM" has digital inputs for its DA converter. I'll try this next as a final stage.


What is your most painful / enjoyable step in track production ? Sound design, arrangement, mixing, mastering ?

That first start of writing; when I record something brand new thats so inviting. It could be just 8 bars or it could 1min or more. That buzz then that makes you energetic when listening to that and you start to get options what direction it could go to. Then, the day after you hear it again and it's not so hot as you thought....!

Painful would be not enough time to sit and finish something.

 

erehwoN's tips

It's nothing revolutionary, but I started using different time-bases occasionally; 3/4 or 7/8, etc, it makes you think differently rhytmicaly ("N/NOR - HeartLess" has both, and a tempo speed-up change in the middle)

Cheap-ass overdrive TIP!

For example, mix loop with sine wave and put this thru some sort of limiter / saturation so that the wave "mangles" the loop out of zero-axis while sinusoid wave is barely hearable. MAKE SHURE TO USE some highpass filter for protecting against over-excessive low-end on output. (around 20-25 Hz).

[also in reaper] I recorded a TEMP vocal just to hear how it would fit and part of it ended up great "for keeping"
Trouble is, it was noisy (planned to be Temp) and I tried to clean it up. It was impossible, until I tried one trick with Reaper.
I took lonely part of wave with "noise" and took a "print" and linked dry/wet parameter to audio loudness.
The louder the wave (part with vocal), the less the effect will "mix in wet" to avoid the "destruction" of effective part of sound.
Result is much better than a few Denoisers I tried.

Contact info

sinisa.lupis@gmail.com

mercredi 23 novembre 2022

Playlist Electraumatisme du 23/11/2022 - s'aligner en rang en face du DJ ou rouler à gauche

Un public entièrement tourné face au DJ comme dans n'importe quelle soirée techno signe-t-il la fin de la spécificité des soirées dark ?
Dans cette édition d'Electraumatisme on essaye de discuter des causes de cette situation (si vous avez des idées ou un avis, commentez) avant de monter dans la Mini-Cooper pour parcourir un bout de discographie venue du Royaume-Unis.

 

Soft Crash - Count To Zero
Triode - Dream
NEIKKA RPM - No Flow
Sigue Sigue Sputnik - Welcome To The 21st Century
Brion Gysin - I am this
Headbutt - Through the Slides
Libitina – Painted Whiter Than White
In Death It Ends - Veil Of Clouded Verse
Inertia - Obsession
In the Nursery - Electric Edwardians - Opening credits
Sigue Sigue Sputnik - Love Missile F1-11 (UK extended version)
Johnson Engineering Co. - Thug
Rhombus – Timeless And Elegant


Release of the week:

Soft Crash - Your Last Everything

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Download : http://electraumatisme.info/broadcast/20221123.mp3


lundi 21 novembre 2022

Kitchen Notes : Protectorate on II

Pour le second assaut de son projet solo Protectorate, Kalle Lindberg a balancé 8 titres d'electro-indus dévastateurs aux frontières du métal dans leur composition mais suivant des méthodes de production qui pourraient bien vous surprendre. Kitchen Notes passionnantes pour un retour réussi au son crossover des années 90 avec les moyens d'aujourd'hui.

On the second assault of his solo project Protectorate, Kalle Lindberg fired away 8 blasting electro-indus tracks on the edge of metal in their structure but following production methods that might surprise you. Fascinating Kitchen Notes for an accomplished come back to the crossover sound of 90's with today's tools.

 


 

Gears and software

What gears/softwares did you use for II ?

intel i7 with RME 9652 and MOTU 896mk3, 828mk3, 8pre, Ultralite as converters and a micro lite for midi.
Adam A7X
Nektar Panorama P4
Steinberg CMC-AI

Cubase 9 - 11 on Windows 7 and 10
Groove Agent 5, Halion 6
Arturia Collection, FX collection
d16 lush-101, silverline
chipsound OPS7
Slate Digital Virtual Mixrack, Tape, Bus Comp, Console Collection, Tubes, Distressor
Eventide H3000 Factory
PSP Audioware (VintageWarmer, 2445 EMT, N2O, Delays)

Waldorf Pulse 1&2, Rocket, MicroQ, MicroWave II
Korg Monologue, Minilogue, Volca FM, Volca Modular, Volca Sample
Behringer DeepMind 6, K-2
Arturia MicroFreak
Roland Jx-8p

Patchbox Modep on a Raspberry Pi4 (@96khz)
Korg NTS-1

Electric Bass and guitar


Your favorite gear(s)/software(s) ?

I think my favourite is Cubase. All my hardware is setup as external instruments in Cubase, it's really convenient to be able to process the hardware synths ITB with latency compensation. The oldest songs on "II" I started to write in 2016 with maybe cubase 9 or something and I was able to finish the songs eventually with C11 without any problems, so the compatibility is good too. Arturia has those cool vintage sampler emulations which got used a lot on the album. The OPS7 is a really good DX7 emulation, I used it as a programmer for the Volca FM, worked really good together with a midi out mod installed on the Volca FM.

Any evolution in your setup ?

Setup is constantly evolving. Just recently after finishing the album I swapped the JX-8p on my setup to a Yamaha SY77. I also had to upgrade the computer because the motherboard died. With the new comp I'm hoping to be able to transition to 96khz as the MOTUs support it and the new comp has a second RME 9652 installed and working.

 

Sound Design

Do you use/tweak presets  ?

I use an multisampled acoustic drumkit layered under the electronic drum samples. It's mostly used for the room and overheads, also for the cymbals and toms. Theres a couple of sounds on the album from Arturia SQ80 from the Ensoniq Factory set for that vintage flavour. Theres some original factory samples from Emulator V and Fairlight V.

Do you design you own sound  ? On which synth/plugin in particular ? 

Most of the sound design I do myself. I mostly use hardware, those I program from the hardware interface, it's quick and inspiring. When I do use software instruments, I use my Nektar Panorama P4 mapped to the plugins so that's fast and hands on too.

Personal synth story

I've seen some talk about the use of guitars on a couple of reviews of the new album and thought it might be interesting to elaborate on the matter a bit. There is very little actual electric guitar on the album, just a couple of lead guitar melodies in the end on the track Asymmetric, Lethe, Tribunal and Deathbringer. The kind of palm mute type of sounds are actually from MicroWave II ran through a amp sim. There's also distorted electric bass on the album, usually layered with a bass synth. Just to give it all a bit of grit and aggression.
Old Ministry (twitch-mind is a terrible thing to taste era) was a big influence on the album, so it kinda requires some chorus and distortion on the electric bass. I also used the Behringer K-2s ESP with a guitar to play some synth pads on a couple of tracks. It tracks really good for what it is. I also like the way that pitch becomes organic when using a string as pitch source for the synth.

Writing/composing method

What would be your main writing/composing method ? Do you start classical rythm/bassline then arrange around it ? Do you already have structure in mind ? Do you improvise, record sessions then select ? ...

Sometimes a have an idea beforehand but the composition always includes some amount of improvisation/jamming. Some of the tracks on II were initially written using an electric bass (Asymmetric, Teargarden) while on others a synth was used for the initial bass lines. I tend play every track (I do quantize though) in with a keyboard, drum pads or you know a stringed instrument, rather than programming with a mouse or step input.
I don't really have a structure in mind beforehand, I like to go where the track takes me, but I do have a somewhat of a rigid idea what a song structure can be, so this way I can avoid too similar song structures between the songs by not thinking ahead too much.

Producing/mixing method

Do you produce/mix in the box or do you use mainly external gears (effect/comp/eq...)

My mixing is done In The Box using Slate Digital Virtual Mix Rack, Tape and Bus Comps. Every channel gets an instance of the Tape emulation and a console emulation followed usually by an SSL EQ (for cutting) - VCA comp - Neve EQ (for boosting). The Slate Distressor emulation gets quite a bit of use too.
For distortion and modulation I use D16 Silverline plugins and Arturia FX Bundle. Master Bus (Red), Drum Bus (Gray) and Vox Bus (Vari-MU) get a Slate Virtual Bus Comp each.


What is your most painful / enjoyable step in track production ? Sound design, arrangement, mixing, mastering ?

The hardest thing for me in the process is writing the lyrics. That takes most of the time. Other than that, at least with Protectorate II, maybe the final mix was a bit hard for me, but I think that it was mostly because I was kinda burned out by that point by all the work I had done for the album.
I guess there is sometimes a bit of a challenge when composing a track at the point where you have to come up with a chorus, but I wouldn't call it painful, the missing part just sometimes takes a bit of time to manifest.
Other than that, sound design is fun, arranging is fun. I tend to mix a bit early on in the production, so final mix is more of tidying everything up and giving the track the final 10%.I don't know if this is really a tip, but what has helped me a lot in the mixing department, was to try to kind of emulate an old school analog setup using the tape and console emulations. Mostly I think it adds a bit of distortion to every track, but it kind of reminds me how things used to work and sound when I was using a tape 4 track as a kid.
Another useful thing is to have as much physical control on synths when doing sound design. Easier to find sweet spots on synths with physical controls on hardware or software synths, doing automation is simpler and I get results before I get bored. 


Kalle's Tips

I don't know if this is really a tip, but what has helped me a lot in the mixing department, was to try to kind of emulate an old school analog setup using the tape and console emulations. Mostly I think it adds a bit of distortion to every track, but it kind of reminds me how things used to work and sound when I was using a tape 4 track as a kid.
Another useful thing is to have as much physical control on synths when doing sound design. Easier to find sweet spots on synths with physical controls on hardware or software synths, doing automation is simpler and I get results before I get bored.

Contact info

https://protectorateindustrial.bandcamp.com/
https://www.youtube.com/@protectorateindustrial
https://www.instagram.com/protectorate.industrial
https://www.facebook.com/protectorateindustrial

For booking: protectorateindustrial@gmail.com

mercredi 16 novembre 2022

Electraumatisme du 16/11/2022

Edition d'Electraumatisme régulière de bonne tenue cette semaine considérant la qualité des sorties récemment présentées. Et la petite annonce de bonne nouvelle pour les clermontois.

Epilepsy Morbid Rotten - Parazito
Miseria Ultima - Witch Heart Apparition
At The Heart Of The World - Ichor
Cable Bends Steel - We are
Stiff Valentine - Industrial Metal Disco
Pro-Patria - Bend the light
Object - Nowhere to Hide
Protectorate - Asymmetric
Hexadiode - Breaking it Whole
And One - Crimetime
Titan - Straight
Borderrun - LSDevil

Release of the week:

 

 








Download : http://electraumatisme.info/broadcast/20221116.mp3

vendredi 11 novembre 2022

Kitchen Notes : Pro Patria on Piercing Through the Armour

Passé de l'équipement matériel que l'on pouvait se procurer avec des moyens réduits au début des années 90 au tout virtuel actuel, PVC revient sur les moyens et méthodes de production de l'EBM bien balancée que l'on retrouve sur le dernier album Piercing Through the Armour de Pro-Patria.
Des anecdotes et détails techniques (mais il garde quelques secrets) qui rappelleront des choses à pas mal d'entre-ceux qui ont un jour craqué leurs économies pour un premier synthé.

Switching from hardware equipment we could afford in early 90s with little money to a current complete virtual system, PVC comes back to production methods and tools for well balanced EBM we now can hear on the last Pro-Patria's Piercing Through the Armour album.
Anecdotes and technical details (but he still keeps a few secrets) that will remind things to those who one day cracked and bought a first synth with all the money they could save.


Gears and software

What gears/software did you use for Piercing Through the Armour ?

I used to compose everything on an old Roland D-20 keyboard, but nowadays I only use Cubase 9 with a number of plug-ins. I believe that digital instruments have become so good that there's no more use to invest so much money in real synths anymore, especially now there's hardly any money to be made anymore in the music industry.


Your favorite gear(s)/software(s) ?

To be honest? My D-20! People usually laugh when I say this because it certainly wasn't Roland's greatest keyboard, it being a downgraded version of the famous D-50. The D-series was also more the type of synths one associated with commercial happy-flappy music rather than EBM. In my opinion, it's not about which instruments you use but how you use them. On "Back to Basics", for instance, I drove the D-20 through an old guitar distortion pedal to create some amazing sounds. Most of all, the D-20 had a great internal sequencer which allowed you to create real songs with 8 tracks plus drums. Without it, making music would probably have been out of my reach and Pro Patria would have remained a distant dream.

Any evolution in your setup ?

Yes, of course. After 34 years it's only normal that you evolve. Our first CD "Quod Erat Demonstrandum" was recorded in a professional studio where the main instruments were a Roland D-70 and a Juno, coupled to a nineties Mac with Audio Logic through one of the first digital mixing desks. I still recall how impressed I  was when I saw those sliders move up and down automatically!
When I returned in 2017 I was all on my own and I only had my D-20, that pedal and an old Alesis voice processor. I bought Cubase 7 and quickly found some nice plug-ins to complement my setup. I've been a musician for all of my life but sound producing was completely new to me so you'll understand I had to learn a lot in a very short time frame. This becomes obvious when you compare my last 4 digital albums and the way that they were produced, from ignorant amateur to someone who's beginning to understand the basics.
As from "Executioner" I upgraded to Cubase 9 and with every new album I bought a new plug-in, so the sound of each of those 4 digital albums is largely designed by the plug-in I acquired for it.

 

Sound Design

Do you use/tweak presets  ?

Yes, I use presets but I tweak or even change them completely most of the time to get exactly the sound that I want. Most presets are nice but rarely do I find one that really nails it. They're a great help though to get started with sound design, which is a black craft in its own right.

Do you design you own sound  ? On which synth/plugin in particular ? 

Yes, of course! I'm not going to reveal all of my secrets here, but I can assure you that the two plug-ins that I use most are packed with my own creations.
 

Personal synth story

Do you know which unlikely instrument we used during our first two gigs? The Commodore 64! It had MIDI capability and it produced some awesome sounds to layer on my D-20. Unfortunately it was too much of a hassle dragging it around, especially my dad's second television (black and white) to connect the Commodore to. I'm sure that he wasn't displeased when I left it at home afterwards.

Writing/composing method

What would be your main writing/composing method ? Do you start classical rythm/bassline then arrange around it ? Do you already have structure in mind ? Do you improvise, record sessions then select ? ...

Strangely enough, most of my music comes to me at night in my sleep. Then have to I rush into the bathroom in order not to waken my wife and record myself humming it. Most of the times, these ideas already come with the exact sounds and sometimes even words. They're just loose fragments, though, and the structure only appears later when I'm amalgamating all of these ideas into a (hopefully) coherent song. I improvise a lot actually. Most of my acoustic album was improvised on the moment of recording. I love doing improvised solos such as the one on "War (till the day we die)", that's one I'm particularly proud of. Unfortunately EBM isn't a style that allows a lot of improvising as everything has to be arranged with an almost military order.

Producing/mixing method


What is your most painful / enjoyable step in track production ? Sound design, arrangement, mixing, mastering ?

I HATE mixing and mastering! As I said, I consider myself to be a musician, certainly not a sound engineer. Still I'm doing my best to mix and master everything myself because, apart from the money, I don't want to depend on others. This resulted in some painful experiences such as my first attempt at "Back to Basics", but I'm learning. Also sound design can be frustrating at times because I have the right sound in my head but sometimes I really struggle recreating that sound with my instruments. So, to answer your question, I definitely prefer the composing/arranging bit. It's there that I can unleash all of my creativity.

PVC's tips

No tips here as I'm still learning a lot myself. More in general, an advice that I'd like to give to young, emerging talents, is to listen more to your heart and less to your idols.

Contact info

 http://propatria.be/

mercredi 9 novembre 2022

Playlist Electraumatisme du 09/11/2022 - Fourscher 2022

Compte rendu complet (et bavard) du festival Fourscher 2022 qui s'est déroulé ce week-end à Erfurt.
Organisation parfaite, ambiance fraternelle et programmation digne d'un best of d'Electraumatisme.
Merci Danny & Andreas !


Object - The tormented mind
Protectorate - Teargarden
X trackT - Trajectory
Aktion:Fiasko - ??? (live @fourscher 2022)
Wülf7 - EBM Nation
Object - Shinjuku Survival Alliance
Nordarr - Never Forget
Transmitter - Hit The Max (Live @ Klangtherapie Festival 2018)
No Sleep By The Machine - Euchred
Statiqbloom - Black walks eternal
Circumpolar - Lost In Time
Mildreda - Inner Judgement
Rhys Fulber - Rogue Minority

Releases of the week:

 

 







Protectorate - II


 








X trackT - Controller OD

(contact me on electraumatisme facebook page for more info on this one)

 

Download : http://electraumatisme.info/broadcast/20221109.mp3 


mardi 1 novembre 2022

Playlist Electraumatisme du 01/11/2022 - IDM

Une édition toute calme faite pour le neurones plus que pour les guibolles cette semaine dans Electraumatisme alors qu'on a la tête dans la citrouille pour ne pas dire qu'on l'a ailleurs.

 

Pro Patria - Voices in my Head
N/N OR - HeartLess
Matt Hart - Event Horizon (original mix)
Reflection Black - Call My Name
Tangent - Delusion
Frontier Guards - Narrowest Path
The Thing With Five Eyes - Live At The Nocturnus
High Wycombe - Perturbation
He3dless - Sold
Human Vault - Foundation Hope
Mlada Fronta - SNO
Irklis – Onkalo
Jerico One - Testing
Oozish - The Feelz Good

Releases of the week:


 







N/N OR - The Law Of Love

(contact me on electraumatisme facebook page for more info on this one)

 Download : http://electraumatisme.info/broadcast/20221101.mp3