Showing posts with label Met with Indifference. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Met with Indifference. Show all posts

25 August 2017

new mixes of my Bandcamp release are up

A couple years ago I posted my first batch of original songs to Bandcamp. I always dug the music, but wasn't really happy with how I mixed them.

So I revisited them all recently, threw all the faders to zero, dumped all the automation and started over.

Of course, in the years since their release, I've amassed a bunch of new synths and effects, so I ended up adding a bunch of sounds to the songs and tweaking them to new dimensions. One song I pretty much discarded and rebuilt from the ground up, and I added a song at the end.

Free / pay what you want.


01 August 2014

My first batch of original tunes is finally up on Bandcamp



Seriously, I've been working on and off on these songs for a couple years, and I could go on remixing and remixing and remixing and remixing them until the end of time, but I finally just said to myself 'ok, enough' and threw them up on Bandcamp. Six tracks of gloomy, pounding, orchestral, soundtracky, martial industrial with a healthy dose of glitchy synths. Pay what you want.

Hear/buy them here.

Video for one of the tracks-

07 April 2014

finishing up my first batch of original songs

So I'm finally getting around to finishing up the tracks for my debut release. The stereo mixes of the six tracks are done, and now I'm starting on the surround mixes of those same tracks plus a bonus track for the dvd. Aiming for a summer release, pay-what-you-want on Bandcamp. Surround sound .ac3 files will be pay-what-you-want, and I figure the physical dvd with surround mixes will be 5 bucks or so.

In the meantime, I uploaded one of the tracks to my Soundcloud as a teaser. Complete song, and this one is a bit more uptempo than the others. Generally speaking you'd call it martial industrial, orchestral, soundtracky, electronic, gloomy, dark, uneasy listening.

Imagine if In The Nursery teamed up with (Pax Britannica / Goddodin era) Test Dept. with their entire batterie of junkyard percussionists, and they set out to put together an album of the most apocalyptic doom and gloom industrial songs in the vein of In Slaughter Natives, filtered through all the wonderfully noisy digital signal processors of today.