Trev’s Virtual Cassette Library 190
04 April 2026

Virtual mixtape radio for the sonically adventurous. 20 artists. Drops about three times a week. No schedule, just a passion for independent music.
Hey.
Welcome back… or maybe you just crawled in through a crack in the wall.
This is Trev’s Virtual Cassette Library. Episode one-nine-zero.
We’re still pretending it’s a radio show for the sonically adventurous.
But really it’s just me and the frequencies arguing in an empty apartment while the world outside forgets I exist.
Stream free for seven days on Mixcloud.
Background track tonight available on Trevlad’s TVCL 11. A sonic journey with a metaphysical flip at the halfway mark — perfect for a long walk, a mental wander, or a quiet moment alone with the universe.
Massive shout out to Iso Brown for spotlighting the channel — gave me about three hundred new followers and maybe one new listener. Also big love to my latest follower Alan Ranta, who’s recently done an astonishing 11 and half hour retro library mix.
Anyway
Headphones on.
Let time dissolve.
And let the frequencies claim you.
We’re bunching it tonight — four transmissions at a time. Like weird little dreams stitched into the set. No schedule. Just the mood and the margins.
Tonight’s episode is broadcasting from… healers.dominate.slices.
Eric Ericsonhallen — Event centre in Stockholm. Now it’s just a coordinate for whatever this episode is.
Let’s go.
FIRST CLUSTER
First — Apta with “Falter”. Manchester, UK,Dream-pop haze wrapped in post-punk bones.
Then Passepartout Duo — “From Belgrade”. Verona, Italy, Live-wire travelogue piece from their Pieces from Places series. Synth lines that feel like walking through the city.
Third — Pulselovers and “Timbral Awake”. Deep electronic drift from Doncaster, UK, textures that shift like light through old film stock. Via Woodford Halse.
And closing this one out: Maggie Nicols, Robert Mitchell & Alya Al Sultani — “Inner Sanctum”. Intimate, improvised vocal and piano ritual. Three voices weaving a small cathedral out of breath and keys. via Discus Music.
Here we go.
SECOND CLUSTER
Next bundle of four, fresh from the margins:
Italian artist Lorenzo Bracaloni aka Fallen — “This World is quickly Fading”. Fragile, dissolving sound that feels like the last light of an ending day. Via Bulgarias Mahorka label who I am guesting soon on their Planck Tones channel.
Then my own little transmission: Trevlad with “Retrial Twinge Memo”. Taken from the TVCL 10 vaults. A twinge of memory on retrial and a spot on the platform of my local train station.
Followed by Lorna Dune — “Void Coefficient”. Milwaukee, Wisconsin based, Sharp, precise electronic study from her Mosfet EP. Power flows and empty spaces.
And rounding it off: Hong Kong based Anita Tatlow & Runaway Horses with “lunar phase”. Gentle ambient vocal drift, like moonlight leaking through blinds. Via Echoes Blue Music.
Drift with me.
THIRD CLUSTER (pre-B Side)
Third cluster already. The night is getting loose.
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard — “Doom City”. Melbourne, Australia, Microtonal chaos from Flying Microtonal Banana. The pollution gods are laughing. Via the p(doom) label.
Then Mark Ellery Griffiths with “Synthi Sequence A”. Pure UK synth archaeology. Sequences breathing through old EMS circuitry like ghosts in the machine.
FOURTH CLUSTER (B Side)
Alright. Four more transmissions bleeding through.
Adrian Lane — “Reach For The Horizon”. Warm, horizon-staring ambient. Via whitelabrecs.
Benge — “Four Forty Two”. Precise, machine-soul electronics.
Asheville, North Carolina based Spooqs — “Hygge (Demo)”. Cozy but slightly unhinged.
And Djrum — “Three Foxes Chasing Each Other”. Breakbeat mysticism in full flight. Via Houndstooth.
Side B is now live.
FIFTH CLUSTER
Fifth cluster. We’re deep in it now.
CIALYN — “Sun Childs”. Bright, glowing electronic lullaby from Lille, France
Aucuba Replica — “Noni”. Strange fruit, stranger frequencies. Via Secuencias Temporales.
Ori Kaplan & Lihu Melamed — “Shangri La”. Mystical, searching jazz-tinged wander. Via Batov Records.
And Psyché — “Sabir”. Hypnotic, ancient-future pulse. Via Four Flies Records.
Still with me?
FINAL CLUSTER
Last cluster. Final transmission before the static wins. A long and a short piece.
Frankfurt Am Main, Germany based Jogging House — “Parker”. Slow-burn ambient reflection. Via artist curated Seil Records.
And finally Los Angeles, California based Elijah Fox — “Glass House / Clear Pool”. Crystalline, watery piano and electronics.
That’s the whole set.
Thanks for floating here with me.
I hope the journey sends you in the direction of these artists. All the links and purchase paths are illuminated at trevor.se, on Trevor Lewis on Substack, and marked in the timeline.
If you’re still listening… you’re in the club.
No meetings. No rules. Just dust and frequencies.
Send files, confessions, whatever, to trevlad@gmail.com.
Send stories for Chord Confessions. I’ll read them in my sleep-voice.
See you in the next crack in the wall.
Cheerio…
Intro – 00:00
Apta – Falter – 01:35
Passepartout Duo – From Belgrade – 09:05
Pulselovers – Timbral Awake – 11:35
Maggie Nicols, Robert Mitchell, Alya Al Sultani – Inner Sanctum – 16:40
Fallen – This World is quickly Fading – 20:05
Trevlad – Retrial Twinge Memo – 25:45
Lorna Dune – Void Coefficient – 27:00
Anita Tatlow & Runaway Horses – lunar phase – 29:50
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard – Doom City – 33:30
Mark Ellery Griffiths – Synthi Sequence A – 37:17
B Side – 40:10
Adrian Lane – Reach For The Horizon – 40:45
Benge – Four Forty Two – 45:25
Spooqs – Hygge (Demo) – 49:15
Djrum – Three Foxes Chasing Each Other – 51:55
CIALYN – Sun Childs – 59:35
Aucuba Replica – Noni – 1:03:15
Ori Kaplan & Lihu Melamed – Shangri La – 1:09:05
Psyché – Sabir – 1:11:47
Jogging House – Parker – 1:15:30
Elijah Fox – Glass House/ Clear Pool – 1:21:12
Outro – 1:21:39
🔗 Stream free for 7 days: https://www.mixcloud.com/djsofabed/subscribe/
🎧 Episode background track: https://trevlad.bandcamp.com/album/tvcl-11
Trev’s Virtual Cassette Library 189
Virtual mixtape radio for the sonically adventurous. 20 artists. Drops about three times a week. No schedule, just a passion for independent music.
03 April 2026

votes.riddle.tuck.
Brams burgers – great burger joint. Now it’s just a coordinate for whatever this episode is.
Hey.
Welcome back… or maybe you just crawled in through a crack in the drywall.
This is Trev’s Virtual Cassette Library. Episode one-eight-nine.
We’re still pretending it’s a radio show for the sonically adventurous, but really it’s just me and the frequencies arguing in an empty apartment while the world outside forgets I exist.
Headphones on.
Let time dissolve.
And let the frequencies claim you.
We’re bunching it tonight – four transmissions at a time, like weird little dreams stitched into the set. No schedule. Just the mood and the margins.
FIRST CLUSTER
Four signals crawling out of the high passes and the liberation fronts.
Sonic-Soma – Kinnaur Calling – Cities and Memory, Nepal field recordings turned into sonic soma.
The Music Liberation Front Sweden – Astra Shambotica – Submarine Broadcasting, astral jazz revolution.
Grosso Gadgetto – Quadrata Dodus Act 2 – Bulgarian label Mahorka, who might be the reason for me not doing these episodes for a few days. Keep an eye and ear out for future Planck Tone episodes I may be guesting.
Willebrant – Dell – atmospheric drone from down under. Birds in the rain. A must.
You just survived the first transmission: Sonic-Soma, The Music Liberation Front Sweden, Grosso Gadgetto, and Willebrant.
The space between us is definitely thinner now.
SECOND CLUSTER Brain shells cracking open, hits amended, voids flattered, dust explained. Zerfranzt – Hirnschale – which means skull or, the nicer translation of, Brain case from Kaiseki Digital, who I’ve been playing lately as Free Album Codes has provided me with codes for some early releases from 2018. German synaptic spill. Trevlad – Hits Enjoyable Amended – self-released soundscape from the episode of the same name. A repeat name from the spot where I try and sleep most nights. This one’s from the album TVCL 10 and has nothing to do with the track of the same name from TVCL 09. Puscha – Sycophanatic – NEN, Melbourne cinematic hypnosis. Provided by Fonodroom. Everyday Dust – Without Explanation – Dustopian Frequencies, Scottish drone stories that evaporate.
You just floated through Zerfranzt, Trevlad, Puscha, and Everyday Dust. Halfway mark is creeping up. I’m starting to feel that metaphysical flip? The universe just winked at you and kept walking.
THIRD CLUSTER (pre-B Side)
Edges blurring, bodies floating.
phorme – blur – Kaiseki Digital, Australian meditative haze from NSW. Also from 2018.
Takashi Kusano – Floating – Sounds for the Soul, Japanese levitation.
And then comes the B Side…
phorme and Takashi Kusano just lifted you clean out of gravity.
Now the bench is empty and the cats are from hell.
FOURTH CLUSTER (B Side)
Empty benches, hellcat beats, half-human wires, clinical worms.
Substak – Empty Bench – Daydreamers, Greek meditative park-bench snippet.
Le Morte d’Abby – Nyanko No Jigoku Beat – dark electro from the neon underworld.
Jilk – Half-Human – Bricolage, Glasgow idm hybrid soul.
The Foot & Leg Clinic – Worms 2 – alternative rock diagnosis under fluorescent lights.
You just sat on Substak’s Empty Bench, got bitten by Le Morte d’Abby’s hellcats, glitched with Jilk, and received a full worm examination from The Foot & Leg Clinic.
Your body is now 40% frequency.
FIFTH CLUSTER
Appetizers of life, grace with nothing, tidal animation tags, Nordic sea breath.
The Appetizers – The Life – Italian roots reggae funk from Rome.
Rejoicer – Grace Was Happy (I Found Nothing) – LA epiphany of joyful emptiness. Sounds as if Weather Report did music for film.
Record Of Tides – Yoshimoto Animation Tag – Mahorka hauntological Japanese cels on the tide. Glitchy 8-bit crackles.
Albin – Havet – Paltunes, Swedish sea inhaling your thoughts. Everything Albin Johansson touches glows with a nostalgic warmth I can never get enough of.
You just tasted The Appetizers, let Rejoicer’s Grace smile at nothing, rode Record Of Tides’ animation waves, and sank into Albin’s Havet.
The apartment is underwater now.
FINAL CLUSTER
Rain shelter geometry and half-a-day London melt.
Kikagaku Moyo – Amayadori – Guruguru Brain, psychedelic Tokyo forest clearing.
ff8282 – london / half the day – 4000 Records, fractured electronic daydreams.
You just sheltered with Kikagaku Moyo and melted through half a London day with ff8282.
That’s the whole set.
Thanks for floating here with me.
I hope the journey sends you in the direction of these artists. All the links, and purchase paths are illuminated at trevor.se and marked in the timeline.
If you’re still listening… you’re in the club.
No meetings. No rules. Just dust and frequencies.
Send files, confessions, whatever, to trevlad@gmail.com.
Send stories for Chord Confessions. I’ll read them in my sleep-voice.
See you in the next crack in the drywall.
Cheerio…
END OF BROADCAST Stream free for 7 days on Mixcloud. Background track: Trevlad’s TVCL 11. A sonic journey with a metaphysical flip at the halfway mark – perfect for a long walk, a mental wander, or a quiet moment alone with the universe
Intro – 00:00
Sonic-Soma – Kinnaur calling (Nepal) – 02:09
The Music Liberation Front Sweden – Astra Shambotica – 10:15
Grosso Gadgetto – Quadrata Dodus Act 2 – 14:00
Willebrant – Dell – 22:00
Zerfranzt – Hirnschale – 25:30
Trevlad – Hits Enjoyable Amended – 28:20
Puscha – Sycophanatic – 30:29
Everyday Dust – Without Explanation – 36:15
phorme – blur – 41:00
Takashi Kusano – Floating – 44:54
B Side – 50:45
Substak – Empty Bench – 51:30
Le Morte d’Abby – Nyanko No Jigoku Beat – 53:19
Jilk – Half-Human – 58:10
The Foot & Leg Clinic – Worms 2 – 1:03:29
The Appetizers – The Life – 1:05:55
Rejoicer – Grace Was Happy (I Found Nothing) – 1:09:50
Record Of Tides – Yoshimoto Animation Tag – 1:12:43
Albin – Havet – 1:15:03
Kikagaku Moyo/幾何学模様 – Amayadori – 1:19:45
ff8282 – london / half the day – 1:21:40
Outro – 1:27:39
🔗 Stream free for 7 days: https://www.mixcloud.com/djsofabed/subscribe/
🎧 Episode background track: https://trevlad.bandcamp.com/album/tvcl-11
Trev’s Virtual Cassette Library 188
28 March 2026

hey.
welcome back… or maybe you just crawled in through a crack in the drywall.
this is Trev’s Virtual Cassette Library. episode one-eight-eight.
we’re still pretending it’s a radio show for the sonically adventurous, but really it’s just me and the frequencies arguing in an empty apartment while the city outside forgets we exist.
bags.colder.inched.
a great Thai restaurant, apparently. now it’s a coordinate for whatever this episode is.
twenty artists. no schedule. drops when the mood hits.
labels haunting the margins: Passed Recordings, whitelabrecs, Ingrown, Audiobulb… you know the ones.
braindance, idm, alternative, whatever slips between the cracks like water through broken concrete.
Honolulu to Amsterdam to Prague to Saint Petersburg. the world’s shrinking but the weird pockets are still warm.
send files, confessions, whatever, to trevlad@gmail.com.
send stories for Chord Confessions. that track that ruined you or saved you. i’ll read it in my sleep-voice or you record it yourself. win-win-win.
I’m also doing Trev Tales now—little dreams stitched into the sets. long lucid naps you’re not sure you want to wake up from.
headphones on.
let time dissolve.
and let the frequencies claim you.
First out from the amazing Passed Recordings label stable Cavern Cult – Of Hope (from the album Approach)
This is followed by Russian idm champ NDORFIK – Joensuu from the album NORTHERN CACHE out on Clean Error Records after that some Loneward. but first Of Hope by Offenbach based Cavern Cult.
That was Mike Carss aka Loneward – The Unknowable Realm of Wisdom from the album Paradox of Silken Stars out on Altus Music.
Next up we head back to 2018 The Microgram – No Service from the album Savage Architecture which I received courtesy of Free Album Codes, cheers mate. Out on the Lansing, Michigan based Kaiseki Digital label.
This is followed by another great Passed Recordings release by David Aimone – Curiosità Ajmone and the track TimeDown
After that The Bird’s Companion and Neil McRoberts but first No Service by The Microgram.
You’ve just been listening to The Bird’s Companion and Neil McRoberts – Another Day from a few places, one of them being the compilation This Burnished Land a wonderful NYP release on whitelabrecs.
Coming up some quality indie pop in the form of Saya Gray – LIE DOWN.. from the album SAYA out on Dirty Hit records.
Followed by California beach vibes with Poolside – Looking Backwards out on Counter Records. and then some Black Country, New Road but first LIE DOWN.. by Saya Gray
That was the post-rock stylings of Black Country, New Road – Intro from the album Ants From Up There out on Ninja Tune.
Next up the episodes newest release by Jics. Out on whitelabrecs today March 28th.
Followed by Man as Island – Automaton from the album AN that’s out on Russian label Local Gods and was sent in by NDORFIK who I played earlier. After that the virtual B side flip but first Jics – What Brings You Here from the album New South Wales.
B SIDE
That was Prague based artist Kh3rtis – Still, for a Time from the album In the Wake of Light out on Audionautic Records.
Next up Leslie Lowder aka idiiom – Solitude from the album Neural Network out on the Audiobulb label.
after that Blank Embrace – The Caves from the 2018 release Ascension out on the Kaiseki Digital label.
Then some odd person
You’ve just witnessed odd person – earthquake anxiety – my dismal arcadia available on the outstanding Ingrown Records label. Who is homeless at the moment so any purchases from them could be life saving.
Coming up me, Trevlad – Pipe Fluid Fame which is a location from a Hotel in Dublin where I recorded the visual for the video that goes with this piece. All my track names are geolocations of places that mean something to me personally. I use them for the backgrounds in the intros and outros of the episodes Pipe Fluid Fame is from episode 165 back in January. After that Simon Holmes – Broken (South Sudan) from the compilation A Century of Sounds out on the legendary Cities and Memory label. This is followed by Tomo Katsurada & Misha Panfilov but first myself as Trevlad with Pipe Fluid Fame.
That was Tomo Katsurada & Misha Panfilov – Mostra – Eternal Almost out on the label Future Days Radio run by Tomo himself.
Now the penultimate piece of episode 188 of Trev’s Virtual cassette library is by Wunderfish – Through Painted Figures (Prologue) – the third piece in the show from the Kaiseki Digital label courtesy of the amazing Free album Codes. This one’s from the compilation Bento Box, Vol. 1
We end this adventure with a stunning 8 minute outing by Ben McElroy – Surely There Are Worse Things – from the album Bird-Stone which you could purchase via whitelabrecs.
that’s it for episode 188.
thanks for floating here with me.
if you’re still listening… you’re in the club.
no meetings. no rules. just dust and frequencies.
See you in the next crack in the drywall.
Cheerio…
Virtual mixtape radio for the sonically adventurous. 20 artists. Drops about three times a week. No schedule, just a passion for independent music.
Intro – 00:00
Cavern Cult – Of Hope – 02:15
NDORFIK – Joensuu – 03:40
Loneward – The Unknowable Realm of Wisdom – 07:35
The Microgram – No Service – 14:10
David Aimone – TimeDown – 17:30
The Bird’s Companion and Neil McRoberts – Another Day – 22:45
Saya Gray – LIE DOWN.. – 26:40
Poolside – Looking Backwards – 32:10
Black Country, New Road – Intro – 36:02
Jics – What Brings You Here – 37:00
Man as island – Automaton – 39:15
B Side – 42:10
Kh3rtis – Still, for a Time – 42:40
idiiom – Solitude – 45:50
Blank Embrace – The Caves – 49:40
odd person – earthquake anxiety – 53:47
Trevlad – Pipe Fluid Fame – 56:10
Simon Holmes – Broken (South Sudan) – 59:30
Tomo Katsurada & Misha Panfilov – Mostra – 1:03:47
Wunderfish – Through Painted Figures (Prologue) – 1:07:30
Ben McElroy – Surely There Are Worse Things – 1:12:45
Outro – 1:20:30
🔗 Stream free for 7 days: https://www.mixcloud.com/djsofabed/subscribe/
🎧 Episode background track: https://trevlad.bandcamp.com/album/tvcl-11
EXPANSIVE WAVES 25
26 March 2026

Good evening… or morning… or whatever fragment of time you’ve found yourself floating in. This is Expansive Waves, episode twenty-five. I’m Trevor—your host, your guide, your occasional sonic conspirator.
This programme is not for the hurried. Eight pieces. Each longer than twelve minutes. Most stretching far beyond that. Each more patient than the last. If you’re expecting choruses, drops, or anything resembling urgency… you may want to try another channel. Or just turn the volume down and stare at the ceiling. That works too.
Massive shout out to Iso Brown on Mixcloud, who spotlighted the show and sent a fresh wave of new followers crashing in. Welcome, newcomers. I usually mention new followers but out of the 200 new followers I’m guessing that maybe one or two will like or comment, but if you do I will mention you and your channel in the next episode. I hope you enjoy the many strange faces of these outings—independent artists, leftfield corners, music that refuses to be in a rush.
We begin with what has been described as the album of the year so far.
Deep Earth Network – Land 2
https://richardnorris.bandcamp.com/track/land-2
Ancient soil breathing through cracked speakers while forgotten BBC voices whisper about ley lines and the first gods who were mostly moss.
So settle in. Let the kettle boil. Let the cat sleep on your chest like a small, warm dictator. Let the world spin without you for a while.
That was Land 2 by Deep Earth Network from the EP Land out on the Republic of Music label.
JSF – Time And Space, Compressed
https://theastralrealms.bandcamp.com/track/time-and-space-compressed
Your childhood bedroom at 3 a.m. stretched until the walls become nebulae and the glow-in-the-dark stars remember they were once real suns.
That was Time And Space, Compressed by JSF from the album Astral Airways out on The Dream Journal Institute
Gareth Evans aka HDRF – Flowergate Coda – a glimpse into HDRFs live set at Switched On 2025 in Whitby last November.
https://hdrf.bandcamp.com/track/flowergate-coda
A single flower made of stained glass slowly melting back into rain on the roof of an abandoned Victorian greenhouse.
That was Flowergate Coda by HDRF from the self released album H25L. Do grab this release yours truly feature on the first couple of tracks.
*Zyggurat is Pete Grimshaw’s experimental jazz project – Out of Darkness into Light
https://old-technology.bandcamp.com/
Release date 10th of April
Climbing the last step of a black marble staircase that ends in blinding white dawn, barefoot, with no memory of how many centuries you just walked.
That was Out of Darkness into Light by Zyggurat from the album Sphere to Sphere dropping April 10th on the Old Technology label.
Correlations – 3300 WELLSPRING TAPE PHASER REF
https://correlations1.bandcamp.com/track/3300-wellspring-tape-phaser-ref
Every cassette you ever owned playing at once inside a warm metal well, tape hiss turning into soft spring water that tastes faintly of solder and nostalgia.
That was 3300 WELLSPRING TAPE PHASER REF by Correlations a self released track.
Michael Brückner – A Sequence of Colours – Parts 8
https://cyclicaldreams.bandcamp.com/track/a-sequence-of-colours-parts-8-10
Walking through a cathedral built entirely from slowly shifting stained-glass emotions—indigo guilt becoming emerald forgiveness becoming gold that has no name.
That was A Sequence of Colours – Parts 8 by Michael Brückner from the album A Sequence of Colours out on Cyclical Dreams
Projet -> Renard) Ost) – Avulsing Prometheus
https://maxencedubroca.bandcamp.com/track/avulsing-prometheus
The titan chained to the mountain suddenly realizing the eagle is just a very committed performance artist and the liver is optional.
That was Avulsing Prometheus by Projet -> Renard) Ost) who are Maxence Dubroca, Anita Franz & Simon Gris. This was from the album Jump Badger Jump.
And so the waves recede for another evening. Eight long forms. Eight patient unfoldings. If any of these pieces resonated in the quiet corners, you’ll find links to the artists and albums on the episode page at trevor.se and in the Mixcloud comments.
Feel free to leave a thought on the Mixcloud timeline. A sentence. A sigh. A single emoji that somehow says everything.
Until the next fragment of time pulls us back together… this is Trevor, signing off from Expansive Waves, episode twenty-five.
We end with 46 minutes from
DaFou – Time passing by, from the album Berlin Transit also out on Cyclical Dreams
https://cyclicaldreams.bandcamp.com/track/time-passing-by
Standing on a moving Berlin sidewalk at 4 a.m. while every second of your life files past like friendly ghosts waving from trams that never quite stop.
Cheerio…
Deep Earth Network – Land 2 – 01:40
JSF – Time And Space, Compressed – 23:30
HDRF – Flowergate Coda – 39:50
*Zyggurat – Out of Darkness into Light – 50:50
Correlations – 3300 WELLSPRING TAPE PHASER REF – 1:06:25
Michael Brückner – A Sequence of Colours – Parts 8 – 1:17:50
Projet -> Renard) Ost) – Avulsing Prometheus – 1:32:05
DaFou – Time passing by – 1:46:15
***track is unreleased at the the time of the episode’s publication.
🔗 Episode page: https://trevor.se/
🔗 Trevlad on Bandcamp: https://trevlad.bandcamp.com/
🎛️ Drop a comment on the Mixcloud timeline. The void is listening.
Trev’s Virtual Cassette Library 186
21 March 2026
(Fasching Stockholm)

Virtual mixtape radio for the sonically adventurous. 20 artists. Drops about three times a week. No schedule, just a passion for independent music.
Welcome to Trev’s Virtual Cassette Library, Episode 186, your virtual mixtape radio for the sonically adventurous. As per usual we’ll dive into 20 artists. All the shows have three word subtitles for places that have some meaning for me personally. These are also used as names for the background music in show intros and outros. This episodes’ subtitle is Worker Buffoon Exact which is the entrance to Stockholms legendary jazz club Fasching.
If you’d like to be featured on the slowest growing show on the internet then send files or codes to trevlad@gmail.com
This episode has a couple of exclusive tracks at the time of recording from Salamanda and Haiku Salut together with Meg Morley.
Some of the labels that need an honourable mention are whitelabrecs, Mystery Circles, Mahorka, Cyclical Dreams and Lo Recordings to name a few.
Styles featured include electronica, ambient, minimal, space music and more.
Places worth mentioning are Bütgenbach, Belgium, Saint Petersburg, Russia, Seoul, South Korea, and Ostrava, Czech Republic.
Please do send in your stories for the Chord Confessions series about a piece of music that has been pivotal in your life. You can record it yourself or I can tell it for you while promoting you and playing the most important music on the planet. A win, win, win concept. I’ve also started Trev Tales a new idea of mixing story telling with DJ sets where I do a story based on the tracks in the set.
A shout out to my one new follower this week ‘TXH’. Great stuff…
We start with a preview track from an upcoming album by Tacoma Park – Untied Motorik kraut vibes with steel guitar. A pretty great opener I think…
So headphones on, let time dissolve and let the frequencies claim you.
Tacoma Park – ‘Untied’ from the album Baltimore which will be released on April 24th via the Centripetal Force label.
Next up a NYP release (for now) via Triplicate Records by Bütgenbach, Belgium based duo RIKAAR – Chill Serum X
Wonky synths in space.
RIKAAR – ‘Chill Serum X’ from the album Malin 1.
Now the shortest piece of the episode ‘London Nights’ by Luder. Retro synth beat manifesto.
Luder – London Nights from the compilation album This is not the end: Music For Iklectik. where all proceeds went to helping Isa and Eduard who ran the sadly lost venue in London.
Next going long for almost 7 minutes but keeping it retro is Wizardmaster – Those With Legs.
Wizardmaster – Those With Legs from the album ‘A Dwelling of the Mind Protruding Through the Head’
The tracks of which are described as being solid without a void.
Now with some deep kalimba and chimes the legendary Richard Norris – The Corn Is Coming.
Richard Norris – The Corn Is Coming. A NYP single on the Republic of Music label and one of the few tracks by Richard that isn’t 20 minutes long.
Next drones and looping arppegio time with me as Trevlad – Applied Crawled Wires.
Trevlad – ‘Applied Crawled Wires’, which, if you pop the name into What3words will give you the geolocation of a spot in a forest where I made the visuals for the piece. It’s from the album TVCL 9.
Now Dmitry Kiselev with some chilled Idm as DEE-KEY – Intermission.
DEE-KEY – ‘Intermission’ from the album Wild Flowers out on Saint Petersburg label Local Gods who are pumping out some fantastic electronic releases.
Next it’s jazz time with Raquel Bell aka Galecstasy & Mike Watt Trio – Neon Mermaid.
Galecstasy & Mike Watt Trio – Neon Mermaid from the album Wattzotica. Available from one of my all time favourite labels the fearless, Mystery Circles.
Now a recent piece by MiDi BiTCH – Premabhai Hall [Ahmedabad].
MiDi BiTCH – Premabhai Hall [Ahmedabad] from the conceptual album Habitat inspired by iconic Brutalist architecture around the world. Available on the incredible Cyclical Dreams label.
Next some deep space ambient S.V.R.A – Melt Things Into a Blur.
S.V.R.A – Melt Things Into a Blur from the massive 50 track NYP compilation ‘Commemorative Compilation’ which is the 100th release of Mexico City based label, Secuencias Temporales
Now the first, or second exclusive of the episode, depending on how you look at it. And the final track of this virtual A side. sliding guitar notes and drones with Seoul-based left of centre ambient duo Salamanda – Basil’s dream.
Salamanda – Basil’s dream from the album ‘Music To Watch Seeds Grow By 008: Salamanda (Basil)’ Check out the whole series of Music To Watch Seeds Grow By on Bandcamp. A great cassette label concept.
Kicking off Side B. The longest track of this episode @ 7:42. Ambient flute with Andrew Heath – Building Mountains.
Andrew Heath – Building Mountains from the self released album ‘Quiet Noise’ and also available on the whitelabrecs stunning compilation ‘An Ambient Decade’.
Next up Staying in whitelsbrecs country. Guitar noodling with Blochemy – Calythe.
Blochemy – Calythe from the must have compilation album Shades out on whitelabrecs.
Now some heart wrenching americana vocals with Humbird – Blood Moon
Humbird with the single ‘Blood Moon’ available through the Nettwerk label.
Next we head back to ambient land with the French duo Sobria Ebrietas and Iliaque collectivly known as Dormance – Dormance 10
Dormance – Dormance 10 from the album ’II’ out on Bulgarian label Mahorka.
Now some spiritual jazz tones featuring Joseph Shabason. Toronto-based, Japanese-born Masahiro Takahashi – Dreamies.
Masahiro Takahashi – Dreamies from the album ‘In Another’ out on telephone explosion records.
Next instrumental trio Haiku Salut together with pianist Meg Morley give us the exclusive track Meine Beste Freundin.
*Haiku Salut & Meg Morley – Meine Beste Freundin from the album ‘The Lost Score’ dropping on Lo Recordings on March 27th.
Now a musical journey inspired by Jacobo Grinberg’s Sintergic Theory, where sound becomes a tool for the exploration of consciousness. Herne von Bòrmanvs – Etruscan Wave Odyssey.
Herne von Bòrmanvs – Etruscan Wave Odyssey from the album ‘Synthergic’ out on LA based label Pénte.
Next the penultimate piece and another longer track at 7:15 from ambient greats Chilian artistbahía mansa & Spanish artist David Cordero – Espacios Imperfectos.
bahía mansa & David Cordero and the single Espacios Imperfectos (Imperfect Spaces) available on David Cordero curated label Noray Records.
We’ve reached yet another virtual tape ending. Thank you all for listening, don’t forget to support all these wonderful artists and labels, as well as each other. Subscribe to the channel to listen to the 956 releases whenever you like. Do send in your favourite music stories for Chord Confessions and your own music for future Virtual Cassette Library shows.
We finish off with the unmistakable sound of KILN – Crayola Skybox & Sandwasp.
KILN with the NYP single Crayola Skybox & Sandwasp which is a two tracks in one file. which is cheating but I like it.
cheerio…
Intro – 00:00
Tacoma Park – Untied – 02:10
RIKAAR – Chill Serum X – 07:00
Luder – London Nights – 11:20
Wizardmaster – Those With Legs – 12:30
Richard Norris – The Corn Is Coming – 18:55
Trevlad – Applied Crawled Wires – 22:45
DEE-KEY – Intermission – 26:05
Galecstasy & Mike Watt Trio – Neon Mermaid – 29:10
MiDi BiTCH – Premabhai Hall [Ahmedabad] – 35:20
S.V.R.A – Melt Things Into a Blur – 41:03
Salamanda – Basil’s dream – 46:30
B Side – 49:17
Andrew Heath – Building Mountains – 49:35
Blochemy – Calythe – 56:55
Humbird – Blood Moon – 1:02:25
Dormance – Dormance 10 – 1:05:54
Masahiro Takahashi – Dreamies – 1:11:15
Haiku Salut & Meg Morley – Meine Beste Freundin – 1:15:39
Herne von Bòrmanvs – Etruscan Wave Odyssey – 1:19:25
bahía mansa & David Cordero – Espacios Imperfectos – 1:23:20
KILN – Crayola Skybox & Sandwasp – 1:30:03
Outro – 1:35:46
*track is yet to be released at the date of episode recording.
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🎧 Episode background track: https://trevlad.bandcamp.com/album/tvcl-11
Trev’s Virtual Cassette Library 185
16 March 2026

(Omnipollos Hatt)
Virtual mixtape radio for the sonically adventurous. 20 artists. Drops about three times a week. No schedule, just a passion for independent music.
Welcome to Trev’s Virtual Cassette Library, Episode 185, your virtual mixtape radio for the sonically adventurous. As per usual we’ll dive into 20 artists. All the shows have three word subtitles for places that have some meaning for me personally. These are also used as names for the background music in show intros and outros. This episodes’ subtitle is
If you’d like to be featured on the slowest growing show on the internet then send files or codes to trevlad@gmail.com
This episode has a bunch of artists from releases on the driftworks and whitelabrecs compilations ‘This Burnished Land’ and ‘An Ambient Decade’. Also a couple of tracks from the wonderful Passed Recordings label who were nice enough to write a Substack post about me.
There has been a break in the Virtual Cassette Library series. The last one was a whole week ago since then I’ve been busy working on the Chord Confessions series. And please do send in your stories about a piece of music that has been pivotal in your life. You can record it yourself or I can tell it for you while promoting you and playing the most important music on the planet. A win, win, win concept. I’ve also done a couple of Krautrock inspired sets and a couple of Female artist sets celebrating International women’s day. AND, I’ve started a new idea of mixing story telling with DJ sets where I do a story based on the tracks in the set. All these while doing 5 part time jobs.
A shout out to my one new follower this week ‘Citizens of Sound’ who are a dynamic podcast production agency that brings shows to life with gravity, handling everything from conception and branding to editing, mastering, management, and distribution for creators seeking impactful audio storytelling. They also seem to be involved with live events too. Great stuff…
We start with a couple of friends of the show who I believe made contact after appearing on the same compilation I released last December ‘Resonances from the Depths’ This is the New South Wales / Vancouver collaboration CommsBreakdown + Socool – My Brain Feels So Good (CommsBreakdown Mix)
filtered guitar flickers like neon through rain-smeared windows, bass hugs the ribs, oh the snare snaps dopamine straight into the bloodstream, feet move before the mind catches up, so good so good so good…
That was My Brain Feels So Good by CommsBreakdown together with Socool
And now whitelabrecs label curator Harry Towell – The Arrival from the album Infinite Light.
horizon line shimmer gold, birdcalls echo on porch wall, lungs fill with warm arrival, everything settling into place like dust finally deciding to land
That was Harry Towell with The Arrival. Now from a label who’s been growing to new heights daily Passed Recordings. Here is one of their more beat oriented artists.
Unruly Disturbance – Winter Chorus (from The Ghost of Christmas Passed)
icicle voices overlap in the chimney throat, old tinsel ghosts harmonize with wind through cracked panes, memory frost blooming on the inside of eyelids, shivering carols no one saw.
That was Manchester based artist Unruly Disturbance with Winter Chorus.
Now from winter vibes direct to California beaches and funky indie pop joviality with Ginger Root – Neighbor from the album City Slicker
elevator soul hums through thin walls, city lights smear like lipstick on glass, who’s next door living my alternate Tuesdays, smooth keys slide under skin, pretending not to notice the shared vibes.
That was Ginger Root with Neighbor. Next a good mate of the channel
Asha Patera – The Light From Within from the album Ocean Compilation 2 out on the extremely prolific label Sounds for the Soul Records. A great label to get a track on if you want to get noticed.
golden thread unspools behind the sternum, breath catches on warm filament, everything inside glowing quiet, no edges, just soft radiance pooling where shadows used to sit
That was Asha Patera with The Light From Within. Asha will also appear on my upcoming compilation Puzzles of the Psyche. There are still a few day left to send in a piece.
Now Lingua Lustra – Cloudsong from the album Essence from 2017 and recently released on a compilation featuring Lingua Lustras most notable tracks.
drifting white shapes swallow the sky, tones float weightless like exhaled thoughts, higher, softer, dissolving into pale blue nothing, I am only vapor now
That was Lingua Lustra with Cloudsong
Next up a couple of artists I’ve played a few times on the channel get together here. Dogs Versus Shadows & Nicholas Langley – ‘Slapdash And Bouldered’ from the album 16mm out on Spanish label Strategic Tape Reserve. The shortest track of the show.
wonky tape warble stumbles over mossy rocks, slap echo bounces erratic, head full of loose marbles rolling downhill, laughter distorted through pine needles, gloriously off-kilter
That was Dogs Versus Shadows & Nicholas Langley with ‘Slapdash And Bouldered’.
Now a balearic vibe and some more birds Sweatson Klank – Ultra Marine from the album Aureolin Winter compilation out on Los Angeles, California’s Friends Of Friends label.
deep cyan pulse underwater cathedral, synth tendrils curl like bioluminescent kelp, body suspended, heart knocking slow against infinite blue pressure, beautiful drowning.
That was Sweatson Klank with Ultra Marine.
Next staying with the birds. I do miss my old mix show For The Birds where all the tracks featured birds. One beautiful day when some more of you subscribe I’ll bring it back. Anyway here’s another collaboration. This time Graham Seaman, Mosaicist and Noctilusense – Pastures Green from the album This Burnished Land available through the Driftworks label.
emerald blades bend under invisible feet, distant bell tone ripples through dew, mind wanders fence lines that aren’t there anymore, green green greener until the color swallows itself.
That was Graham Seaman, Mosaicist and Noctilusense with Pastures Green
Now Michael Grigoni – Nod from that fantastic whitelabrecs compilation ‘An Ambient Decade’
slow eyelid curtain falls, world softens to charcoal smudge, breath syncs with low tide hum, nodding deeper into velvet dark, yes, yes, keep going.
Next, to end the A side, we stay with whitelabrecs and An Ambient Decade. This is Mosaicist, Simon Hall, Neil McRoberts, Percolator and Marjorie Dawson with Jack from (au·tay·uh·row·uh) Aotearoa – Waiting For Rain.
dry earth cracks whisper upward, sky heavy with unshed silver, fingers trace dust on windowsill, clouds gather like forgotten promises, any second now the first drop.
B Side –
We open Side B with yet another collaboration. This time Israeli artists Nitai Hershkovits & Daniel Dor – Elsewhere – Found & Found. This is one of only two tracks available to listen to on the pre-order of the album which will be released on April 24. ‘Found & Found’ is their second outing together. Back in 2024 they released one of my favourite albums of that year ‘The Garden Suite’. What we hear here is promising.
piano keys wander off the map, somewhere between memory and tomorrow, notes drift like lantern paper across black water, we aren’t here anymore, are we.
That was Nitai Hershkovits & Daniel Dor with Elsewhere.
Next a piece of my own as Trevlad – Hill Roving Slicer from the album TVCL 10 which is the 10th album of collected backgrounds from the Virtual Cassette Library series. If leaving tips or subscribing to the Mixcloud is not your thing then maybe you could consider grabbing a copy of one the back catalogue albums. Anyway…
wind slices grass blades sideways, modular blades carve hill contours, body tumbling through frequency grass, roving, slicing, alive in the shear
That was me, Trevlad with Hill Roving Slicer.
Now from the East coast of Sweden to the West this is Datasal – Besök from the double A side single Observatoriet / Besök out on Gothenburgs finest Höga Nord Rekords. A wonderful mix of synth and guitar here.
Swedish twilight creaks open, footsteps on wooden dock over dark lake, visitor arrives without knocking, air thick with pine and unsaid words, welcome, stay
That was Datasal with Besök.
Next Mr Harry Towell is back with his alias Glåsbird – Days of Iron and Steam, another featured track from the compilation An Ambient Decade. Wonderful ambient tones and sparce piano.
rusted pistons sigh in fogged morning, iron veins pulse slow heat, steam ghosts rise from cracked boiler hearts, industrial lullaby grinding toward dusk.
That was Glåsbird with Days of Iron and Steam. Now another couple of friends of the channel here in the form of Exit Chamber & Ed Herbers – Loathing (from SELF-) out on that fantastic label Passed Recordings that keep insisting on being included in the shows by being the best.
nails on chalkboard nerves, mirror cracks inward, loathing coils like smoke in the throat, self staring back with borrowed eyes, heavier every loop
That was Exit Chamber & Ed Herbers with Loathing
Next the longest piece og the episode, clocking in at 10:17 by the artist JSF – The Opening Gate (Splendid Seas of Canopus) from the album ‘Astral Airways’ out on a label that’s been catching my attention lately ‘The Dream Journal Institute’.
cosmic gate creaks on star hinges, Canopus light floods the corridor, splendid seas roll in vacuum waves, sailing weightless toward unknown shore
That was JSF with The Opening Gate (Splendid Seas of Canopus)
Now yet another collaboration. Julia Gjertsen and Gustav Davidsson – ‘Afterglow’ from the album ‘Wandering Mind, Drifting Weather’. Norwegian piano meet Swedish trombone.
last ember glows behind closed lids, piano traces fading sunset lines, bodies still humming from earlier touch, quiet warmth lingers, refuses to leave
That was Julia Gjertsen and Gustav Davidsson with Afterglow.
simon mccorry – in the feint of moonlight – ‘all the important things are now connected’. On whitelabrecs. A listening party on the 16 of March with the official release set for 21 March.
moonlight feints through bare branches, cello bow breathes almost inaudible, silver outline of everything almost disappearing, almost here, almost gone
That was simon mccorry with the penultimate track of episode 185, ‘in the feint of moonlight’.
To end the show I give you Visible Cloaks – Disque (ft. Motion Graphics) from the album Paradessence. Available through RVNG Intl.
prism refractions dance on wet pavement, synths bloom fractal petals, motion graphics flicker inside the mind’s eye, disque spinning endless iridescent now.
Thanks for listening…
echoes fold into themselves, last tone hangs like breath in winter air, silence returns, softer than before, carrying everything we heard… cheerio…
Intro – 00:00
CommsBreakdown + Socool – My Brain Feels So Good (CommsBreakdown Mix) – 02:52
Harry Towell – The Arrival – 06:25
Unruly Disturbance – Winter Chorus (from The Ghost of Christmas Passed) – 09:51
Ginger Root – Neighbor – 14:03
Asha Patera – The Light From Within – 17:06
Lingua Lustra – Cloudsong – 25:41
Dogs Versus Shadows & Nicholas Langley – Slapdash And Bouldered – 31:41
Sweatson Klank – Ultra Marine – 33:27
Graham Seaman, Mosaicist and Noctilusense – Pastures Green – 36:45
Michael Grigoni – Nod – 39:54
Mosaicist, Simon Hall, Neil McRoberts, Percolator and Marjorie Dawson with Jack from Aotearoa – Waiting For Rain – 43:03
B Side – 47:17
Nitai Hershkovits & Daniel Dor – Elsewhere – 47:33
Trevlad – Hill Roving Slicer – 52:35
Datasal – Besök – 56:19
Glåsbird – Days of Iron and Steam – 1:02:29
Exit Chamber & Ed Herbers – Loathing (from SELF-) – 1:07:33
JSF – The Opening Gate (Splendid Seas of Canopus) – 1:12:53
Julia Gjertsen and Gustav Davidsson – Afterglow – 1:18:56
simon mccorry – in the feint of moonlight – 1:21:27
Visible Cloaks – Disque (ft. Motion Graphics) – 1:24:31
Outro – 1:27:49
*track is yet to be released at the date of episode recording.
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🎧 Episode background track: https://trevlad.bandcamp.com/album/tvcl-11
Trev Tales – Neon Cassette
Welcome to NEON CASSETTE, the transmission where analog dreams collide with digital ghosts, and every beat feels like a memory you never quite lived.
I’m your host, Trevor, speaking straight from the glow of a flickering CRT, cassette deck spinning, reverb tail trailing into the void.
This new series (I know I do too much already) is an idea I have for doing live DJ sets combined with me reading fictional tales where each transition is a new chapter. I hope you like it. Channel subscribers get the music only mixes of course.
We’re diving deep into the grid—stolen frequencies, midnight motorways, poolside echoes that never quite close up, and utopian mirages that glitch when you get too close. We’ve got a handpicked journey through the underground wires: from the raw pulse of trial and resistance, through lunar skin and stargazing rooftops, all the way to that final white-noise cliff where we realize we can’t wait for death… because the night’s already ours.
So dim the lights, hit play, let the tape hiss fill the room. We’re not just listening—we’re escaping.

Apta – Trial – 01:28
Gavel pixels stutter across the cathode screen, my wrists cuffed in magnetic tape loops. The judge’s face is pure waveform, spiking guilt, spiking innocence, I can’t tell which. Fingers itch for the keys anyway—steal the sound, steal the future, they said. The courtroom hums like a detuned oscillator. One wrong note and the grid swallows me whole. But the tape is already rolling. Escape in 4… 3… 2…
Cautionary Guides – Merseytravel – 05:29
Train doors hiss open onto wet Liverpool concrete, South Parkway signs bleeding orange into the night. Cautionary yellow lines streak past the window like corrupted data. My reflection stares back—hollow, cassette-case thin—while the Mersey rolls black and silver below. Suitcase full of stolen patches rattles on the rack. Every mile erases the courtroom glow. North, south, doesn’t matter. The rhythm says keep moving.
Jetfire Prime – Closing Up (Unreleased Poolside Track) – 08:00
Club lights die one by one, turquoise rectangles folding into black water. Last swimmer’s laughter echoes off tiled walls that smell of chlorine and ozone. I stand at the edge, towel around my neck like a noose, watching the pool reflect a sky that no longer exists. Unreleased. That’s what they’ll call this night too. The gate clangs shut behind me. Echoes only.
Conny Frischauf – Wunder – 09:17
A single chord blooms—pure Wunder—lifting the hairs on my arms like static electricity. For one frozen second the motorway becomes a cathedral of light. Then the chord bends, warps, reveals itself as just another illusion. Still, the heart remembers the lift. Still, the lungs remember how to breathe again.
Patrick R. Pärk – Synthetic Utopian Mirage – 11:37
Palm trees made of vector lines shimmer above cracked asphalt. Perfect neon condos float above the desert, windows full of laughing holograms. I reach out—fingers pass straight through pink stucco. The mirage laughs back in 16-bit. Utopia always looked better on the oscilloscope.
Franco Esse – Pelle Di Luna – 19:08
Her shoulder under moonlight—silver, cool, impossible. Skin like vinyl left in the sun too long, warm and warped and perfect. I trace the curve with a fingertip and the memory skips, repeats, skips again. Pelle di luna. The only sample I never stole.
Pabellón Sintético – La Resistencia – 21:20
Concrete walls pulse with red spray-paint glyphs. We are the resistance of the last frequency. Boots on wet pavement, synths hidden in rucksacks, hearts beating in 4/4 defiance. Sirens in the distance sound like detuned arpeggios. We don’t run. We modulate.
Acos CoolKAs – Stargazing – 29:09
Roof tiles cold against my back. Stars above look like dead LEDs someone forgot to turn off. I count them anyway—each one a lost patch, each one a night we almost made. The city hums below like a held note. I keep staring until the sky itself starts to breathe.
Dark Strands – We Own The Night – 34:08
We own the night. The slogan tastes like copper and cheap smoke. Streetlights flicker in time with the kick. Shadows lengthen, stretch into black ribbons we can hide inside. Tonight the city belongs to anyone with a sequencer and a grudge. Tonight we are the dark strands holding everything together.
Makeup and Vanity Set – Search The Night – 40:15
Flashlight beam sweeps empty arcades, hunting for one more glowing screen. Makeup smeared across cracked mirrors, vanity long gone. I search for the signal that will tell me it’s safe to stop running. Every corner throws back only my own face, distorted, beautiful, terrified.
Dogs Versus Shadows – MALCONTENT – 42:42
Malcontent. The word snarls in my chest like a broken sawtooth. Everything perfect is a lie. Every utopia glitches. Every lover fades to static. I bare my teeth at the moon and the moon bares its teeth right back. Good. At least we understand each other.
Pye Corner Audio – Program 70 – 44:15
Program 70 boots in the glovebox—green phosphor glow lighting the steering wheel. Old code I wrote when I still believed in happy endings. It hums, remembers me, offers one last subroutine: RUN AWAY. I laugh until the tears short-circuit the dashboard.
Salvatore Mercatante – Detector – 48:22
Beep. Beep. The scanner on the dash lights up red. They’re close. Detector never lies. I floor it. The engine screams in perfect fifths. Every beep is another bar of the final track I’ll never finish.
Albin – Hammenhög – 52:13
Hammenhög appears like a memory I never lived—red wooden houses, windmills frozen mid-turn, snow that shouldn’t be here in July. I pull over, engine ticking cool. For one moment the world is quiet. Then the detector beeps again. Even paradise has an exit ramp.
Larry Manteca – Tuareg Road – 55:32
Sand whips across the windshield in turquoise dunes. Tuareg Road stretches forever under a violet sky. No mirrors, no rear-view, just forward. The car becomes a camel made of chrome. I ride the arpeggio into infinity.
Erez Yaary – O7 – 57:05
O7. The secret orbit. The code inside the code. I punch it into the old radio and the stars realign. For seven seconds I am outside everything—outside the trial, outside the night, outside death itself. Then gravity remembers my name.
Yves Malone – We Can’t Wait For Death – 1:05:26
The road ends at a cliff of pure white noise. I kill the engine. The last chord hangs in the air like a question that already knows the answer. We can’t wait for death—death has been riding shotgun the whole time, tapping its foot to the beat. I smile, finally. The tape clicks off. Silence rushes in, warm and endless.
The stars above are still blinking in perfect 4/4.
I close my eyes.
The next track begins inside my chest.
Chord Confessions 2

Well here we are it’s only been a couple of weeks since the pilot episode of Chord Confessions. Yet it feels like an eternity. For me making shows is easy when it’s just me pulling all the shots. I do find it uncomfortable when asking others to help me make show like this.
The idea behind it is simple. Present life changing musical pieces, and why they are so. Songs that changed everything. That changed a life direction somehow. It could be from early childhood or maybe from last week. It might be the piece you want played at your funeral or the track that reminds you of a loved one, or the one that helped you through a dark patch.
The shows are real stories, the most important music on the planet and I get to mention some fantastic people out there. People like you!
So get involved DM me with your stories or send them to trevlad@gmail.com and let’s create something special together.
Welcome to Chord Confessions episode two.
Scholars of the Peak is the evocative ambient electronic project of Drew Huddart, a musician and sound artist based in the High Peak District of the UK. Drawing inspiration from the rugged landscapes, rolling hills, and resonant traditions of his home region—including his background as a campanologist (bell-ringer)—Huddart crafts immersive, atmospheric soundscapes that blend subtle field recordings, melodic synth layers, and haunting textures.
Under the Scholars of the Peak moniker, he has released a series of acclaimed albums and tapes, including Polymorphic (2024), Peak Quest: The Call of the Summit (2025), Transmissions from Mother Hill (2025), and the recent The Seawatch Observatory Tapes (2026 on Preston Capes Tapes), which captures coastal atmospheres with evocative, mist-laden electronics. His work often explores themes of place, memory, and the natural world, earning praise in underground electronic and hauntological circles for its contemplative beauty and innovative fusion of organic and synthetic elements.
Huddart handles all aspects of composition, performance, production, and design himself, releasing primarily through Bandcamp while building a dedicated following through live performances and collaborations. Scholars of the Peak offers a serene yet deeply resonant escape—an electronic rolling hill where blips, bleeps, and beeps feel right at home.
Here’s Drews confession:
I remember the first time I heard this song. I was around 15 years old & it was during the late 90s ITV television series The Grimley’s, a nostalgic comedy set in 1970s Dudley, West Midlands. In it we follow the daily life of Gordon Grimley, an outcast teenager who is deeply in love with his teacher, Miss Titley. It’s an alternate universe where Noddy Holder plays the school music teacher with Alvin Stardust the local pub landlord and Brian Conley as the brilliant but cruel PE teacher Doug ‘Dynamo’ Digby. Slade songs scatter the series with one episode closing out with Mr Holder singing Cum On Feel the Noize on an acoustic guitar in an empty classroom. A real treat that was. I feel Noddy and Slade are criminally underrated.
I had a conversation with the late great Virgin Radio DJ Pete Mitchell just a couple of weeks before he passed away, he was a friend of Noddy’s and I’d said how much I’d love to be in a room with just Noddy Holder and a guitar to hear his sing some Slade classics completely raw. Pete responded “I have, and you would love it”.
I always felt like the piano was an instrument out of my reach – I simply was not clever enough to know what to do so spent 20 years playing the guitar thinking learning a few tabs and progressing to chords was the limit of my ability after my uncle Graham gave me my first guitar aged 16. In more recent years I began familiarising myself with the Slade back catalogue and I discovered a real treasure trove of tracks. How Does It Feel stayed as a standout track for me. By a stroke of luck, my Uncle Graham messaged me to say he was upgrading his electric piano, would I like his old one. Yes! Absolutely! Now was my chance to just sit down, alone and try and learn the piano at my own pace. I didn’t want to sit and learn keys, notes, chords or scales – I wanted to learn how to play How Does It Feel then I felt everything else could start once I’d tried that.
Cue some disastrous piano sessions struggling to get my fingers working independently of one another and scouring YouTube for any cover videos of the track in a hope I can see where other people “put their fingers”. Eventually I managed to carve out a reasonable rendition of the intro & chorus and I felt incredibly proud of myself. I’d isolate Noddy’s vocals and try and play along.
Eventually I picked up a midi keyboard and began playing around with Ableton. A questionable decision was to produce a synthwave version of How Does It feel – you can hear that here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rBvdaQnAJjs&list=RDrBvdaQnAJjs&start_radio=1&pp=ygUcc2xhZGUgaG93IGRvZXMgaXQgZmVlbCBjb3ZlcqAHAQ%3D%3D
This was all before Scholars of the Peak became a thing but this journey, from this Salde song was the true catalyst in directing my down the musical road that eventually became Scholars of the Peak.
Yes what a stunning opener with Slade and How does it Feel? Thank you Drew Huddart aka Scholars of the Peak for that.
Also a massive thank you to my secretary Sharon whom you may know a Gareth Evans aka HDRF for their fantastic work to make this show possible. I love making the time to put these together but I do not love making the time to reposting requests, reminding people who have said they’ll send in something etc, etc.. I don’t know how Sharon does it, and I apologies for any threats made but without them I would have given up on this, and what a shame that would have been.
I have no budget to pay Sharon so I do urge you to grab something or everything from HDRFs Bandcamp catalogue. Also I have no budget because most of you are not subscribing which I understand as the shows are free to listen to for a while but wouldn’t it be nice to listen to them in a week from now. Wouldn’t it be nice to get the music only mixes of the shows? Well you can for about 3 quid a month.
Now back to business…
Warmfield is the evocative, place-bound electronic project of Paul Broome, a UK-based musician (also active in bands like Fauxchisels and Monica’s Last Prayer) who explores the hidden layers of the West Riding of Yorkshire and its surrounding fringes through a blend of ambient, downtempo, and electronic soundscapes interwoven with spoken or sung words.
Described as a “parageographical exploration” of people, places, folklore, history, and everyday memory, Broome’s work under Warmfield draws deeply from local Yorkshire landscapes, industrial heritage, sporting lore, and personal recollections—evoking a hauntological yet warmly nostalgic sense of northern English terrain. His productions feature subtle synth textures, field-inspired atmospheres, and narrative elements that map forgotten corners like parish villages, rugby grounds, roundabouts, and market halls.
Since emerging prominently in 2024, Broome has built a prolific catalog via his Bandcamp label and releases on DIE DAS DER, including the expansive 23-track album Warmfield-cum-Heath (March 2024); the rugby-themed EP The Dreadnoughts (November 2024); the evocative mini-album Barbara & Henry (2025); and the 1980s-set Saver Strip (April 2025), with tracks like “Tesco Roundabout (Underpass)” and “Britain’s First Food Court” capturing faded retail and urban memories.
A 2024 compilation gathered much of that year’s output, and Broome continues to record in The Back Room (Stone, Staffordshire), self-releasing tapes, vinyl, and digital editions that resonate in underground ambient and DIY electronic scenes for their intimate, geographically rooted storytelling and gentle electronic melancholy.
Warmfield invites listeners to wander the spectral edges of the Merrie City and the Rhubarb Triangle—one shimmering synth line and whispered memory at a time.
Here’s Pauls confession:
As a teenager in the late 80s I was navigating life on a strict diet of heavy metal, noise and proto-grunge. The guitar was king. I was a horror movie nut – and even published a short lived fanzine called The Small Hours. So, apart from the soundtracks of John Carpenter, electronic music was almost entirely absent from my sphere of influence.
The main bonus to publishing a fanzine back then was the glut of promotional items you would receive on a regular basis. One day what should arrive in the post but a 10″ and cassette copy of a new release from Solar Lodge records – The Unreleased Themes for Hellraiser by Coil.
Now, I had heard about these recordings due mostly to Clive Barker mentioning them in several interviews. I knew he had commissioned them for his directorial debut, but the studio had vetoed their use (too weird or something) and insisted on the Christopher Young score that was ultimately used (which is also great, but very different).
The first time I pressed play I was at my mate (and chief fanzine layout person) Andy’s house. For some reason we decided to turn out the lights and crank up the volume… It freaked us out.
This was the moment that I first realised the latent power of electronic music and the infinite emotive and metaphysical possibilities that lay within it. It was the moment that planted a seed. It was the moment that altered my DNA and lit a fire.
There have been many more such moments over the last 40 years. But that was the first.
Hope this is useable 🙂
All the best!
- Paul.
- Artist / Song Title: Coil / Main Title (Unreleased Theme for Hellraiser)
Magpie Vectors is the shadowy, ritualistic electronic alias of EQ-P (often stylized as eqp or Edwina Louise Quatermass-Palmer), a Leeds-based artist, writer, and self-described “aestheta-berserker” whose work channels occult-tinged ambient, modal techno, warped house, and experimental sound design into hypnotic, otherworldly sonic ceremonies.
EQ-P crafts mixes and releases that function as tonal séances—pulling listeners through fog-drenched club pulses, shimmering ambient interludes, and gravitational distortions that feel equal parts industrial hauntology and midnight invocation. Drawing from a magpie-like compulsion to collect and transmute obscure influences, the project blends rhythmic drive with eerie, oil-slick atmospheres, evoking strobe-lit hallucinations and concrete mysticism.
Active across platforms like X (@elqpalmer), Bluesky (@eqp.bsky.social), and Bandcamp collections, Magpie Vectors has built a cult following in the UK’s underground electronic and experimental scenes. Recent highlights include live performances at events like Switched On Whitby Electronic Music Weekend (November 2025) and contributions to compilations alongside kindred spirits in folktronica, dark ambient, and DIY electronics. A new album dropped in early March 2026, with limited CD runs for UK collectors highlighting the project’s tactile, ritual-object ethos amid broader digital drops.
EQ-P’s output resists easy categorization—it’s club music that whispers ancient curses, ambient that prowls like a spectral bird, and a personal sonic grimoire where no sex magick is permitted in the apartment, but the air thickens with implication nonetheless.
Magpie Vectors gathers the shiny fragments of the night and forges them into something beautifully unsettling—one vectorized shriek and modal drift at a time.
Here’s Edwina’s story:
I’m, EQ-P or Magpie Vectors. Terrific fan of the electronic music scene, new, slightly nervy performer, and proud to know many of the artists here, and very proud to call some of them my friends.
My chosen track that changed my life, and steered me in this direction, is from an artist who is probably tired of of me telling this story, as I’m always telling it, (sorry again, Kevin!) but here we are, such was the profound effect of hearing one of their tracks in the middle of the night on Radio 6.
I had separated from my partner temporarily (as it turned out), and lived by myself for a while. I developed odd sleeping habits, and kept the radio on all night for company.
It was very early 2020, and I woke just after one cold midnight to hear the most beautiful music I had ever heard on the radio, and as I listened, I knew I was forever changed. Luckily, I caught the name of that track, and that of the artist. I went to find it online, and from there, an entire new world opened for me.
I found not only the entire Black Meadow lore, in music, book, and broadcast forms, but a community of artists making the most creative work, sending out sonic excellence to the universe.
As a child, and younger adult, my mother was my true musical influence – a classical pianist who had also played in jazz clubs in the north of England to put herself through her music degree – and was enchanted by electronic music. Nothing was off limits to her ear, and she bought stacks of albums into the home to excitedly share with me. I grew up with Delia Derbyshire, Wendy Carlos, Daphne Oram, and later, the more commercial artists such as Sky, The Electric Light Orchestra, as my life baseline.
To rediscover the genre as an adult was transformative.
After moving back home at the beginning of the declared COVID epidemic, work sent us home, which was rather what I needed, I had time to immerse myself in this new electronic scene. I spent that summer mostly outside, with my record deck set up in the garden, playing album after album, while getting acquainted with other fans online. And DJ Space Terrapin on Mad Wasp Radio opened the door even further for me. His shows are quite wonderful.
What strikes me most about this community is how supportive these artists are, as a rule. I’ve been given opportunities as an artist which I’m sure I don’t deserve, but for which I’m so very grateful. Mainly, I’ve made some lovely, lovely friends for life, even if some of them are no longer with us.
Thank you, HDRF, Subphotic, Band of Cloud, Guerilla Biscuits, Hymns for Robots, Polypores, DJ Space Terrapin…it’s a very long list, and apologies to anyone who deserves a special shout-out, but know that so many of you have supported me, even when it seemed I wasn’t creating anything.
Many thanks, EQP as Magpie Vectors.
and here it is Soulless Party with The Village Under the Lake
Artist: Greg Wye – Sunshine Playroom / Prozapine / Persephonic Sprawl
Greg Wye is the multifaceted UK-based musician, producer, mastering engineer, and creative polymath behind the aliases Sunshine Playroom, Prozapine, and Persephonic Sprawl—each channeling distinct facets of his eclectic sonic palette from his home-recording setup in East Devon (with earlier ties to Leeds, West Yorkshire).
Under Sunshine Playroom, Wye conjures “light and fluffy, melodic psychedelia” laced with nostalgic hauntology: sampling childhood TV snippets, archive sounds, and retro textures to craft affectionate, bittersweet trips down memory lane. Debut album The Old Railway Track (2023) delivered a sprawling 16-track evocation of lost summers and faded railways, while follow-up Melancholy Melodies & Stolen Memories (April 2024) trawled deeper into melancholic, stolen childhood melodies—earning praise in underground press for its uncanny 1970s/80s authenticity in a modern context.
As Prozapine, the focus shifts to layered guitar-scapes and introspective, textural compositions—evident in revamped EPs like Prescription for Acute Sleep Deprivation (updated 2025), featuring guest woodwinds and dreamlike, sleep-deprived drifts that blend organic instrumentation with electronic subtlety.
Persephonic Sprawl ventures into pure ambient, drone, and experimental territory: atmospheric sketches and moods, most recently realized in the March 2026 mini-album Kleeep—a 7-track homage to Paul Klee’s paintings, translating colorful, abstract canvases into shimmering sonic landscapes available in limited CD editions.
All projects release primarily through his Bandcamp hub (prozapine.bandcamp.com), where Wye also operates Persephonic Audio for high-quality mixing and mastering services. A one-man operation embracing neo-psychedelia, hauntology, and sonic archaeology, Greg Wye’s work invites listeners into personal, memory-haunted worlds—whether basking in sun-dappled psychedelia, wandering guitar-layered reveries, or drifting through abstracted drone paintings—one nostalgic fragment or painted-inspired pulse at a time.
Czukay, Wobble, Leibezeit – Mystery RPS (No.8)
So the fact that this track is titled ‘mystery’ is quite apt, as it was a complete mystery to me for quite a few years… 1993/4 was my first year as a student in Leeds. This was before the internet had invaded every home, and discovering new music was either through mate’s recommendations, hearing something on the radio (J. Peel) or taking a complete punt on something based on the cover & blurb. Sometimes just picking up something from a sale bargain bin. Which is how I came across this track – I picked up a single CD without a case or sleeve in HMV for 1.99. it had an orange and silver face, with the letters BE large at the top and 76:03 below ‘Ambient 3’ and it was Disc 2 (so must have been separated from Disc 1 somewhere along the way). It was a voyage of discovery in the dark, without the inlay and track listing, I had no idea what most of the tracks or artists were (and couldn’t just ‘Google’ it)
I only recognised The Future Sound of London somewhere towards the end. I loved most of the stuff on it, but what the heck was it all? The one that really fascinated me was Track 2. Starting with some ominous footsteps and an eerie humming machinery sound, an insistent deep bassline fades up. A half-whispered voice starts asking ‘Can you feel the wind?, the hypnotic drum groove develops and occasionally someone seem to be clanking a pipe with some metal. It was so different, so otherworldly, but it resonated with me very deeply and I became obsessed. I hadn’t yet discovered Can & Krautrock, even though I knew Copey was always singing the praises.
I kept telling all my mates that ‘I want to be in a band like THIS!’ (spoiler: unfortunately I never was as I couldn’t find anyone with similar musical ambitions).
It was a few years later when I finally stumbled across the intact ‘Ambient 3’ double-CD with the track listing, to put names to all the beguiling music I’d been listening to blind
So this was Jah Wobble with Holger Czukay and Jackie Leibezeit of Can – and that sent me on another voyage of discovery…
Rick Flynn
I have 3 tracks that all sparked different changes in my life and love of music. I’ll start at the beginning.
- Mogwai Fear Satan – Mogwai
So back in 1997, prior to joining a band as a bass player (never a guitarist who played bass….always a bassist) I was into the indie wave of bands, Oasis et al. I joined a band, a band that would open my eyes to a whole new genre of music and allow me to play with so many other cool bands. Not long after joining said band, we would happen to sat in the drummers bedroom chatting about music and stuff that was of interest. He pressed play on a record that would change the way (and what) i would listen to for the rest of my musical life. It was Mogwai’s debut album, Young Team. As the music played i was lost in melodic basslines, powering feedback and sparse bleak and fragile quiet breaks. The albums final track, the 16 minute, 19 second epic Mogwai Fear Satan. From its slow building delay ridden chord intro, to the defenining building feedback sections and the stripped back flute melody section. It had everything I never needed i knew and to this day is the song that will mark the end of my time on this earth. Mogwai from that point would be my favourite band and laid the foundations for all that came after.
- – Dohnavùr
During lockdown I started to use Twitter (back when it was good) to find new music and would ofter listen to Lippy Kids, music bazar (name check?) and his then Electronic Odyseey. In these shows he would play some of the more mainstream electronic artists i was aware of, but lots of new and exciting artists. At the time, I was also going through a very rough patch mentally and my home life was unpleasant to say the least. These shows were a break from that noise and somewhere I would get lost for an hour. He spoke about a label ‘Castles In Space’ and at first it was the name that intrigued me, already knowing The Orb track of the same name i investigated further. I saw, via Bandcamp that there was a Subscription Library and hastily joined. I was at the brink mentally and close to doing something horrendous that would damage the future of my family, but as I looked through the back catalogue of albums released I came across an album by a band (well duo) called Dohnavùr. I pressed play on my phone and the sound of the opening to Cloudback changed my whole outlook on life. I knew that I could get better, sort my life out, talk about my problems. This track saved my life! It will always mean so much to me.
Rick Flynn is the passionate UK-based music enthusiast and dedicated Bandcamp digger behind Rick’s Listening Page, a curated showcase of sonic discoveries shared via Instagram (@rickslisteningpage) and echoed across his online presence.
A self-described “music lover” and bass player (with nods to #MDANT in his bio), Flynn maintains an expansive Bandcamp collection under rickscottflynn—boasting thousands of items focused heavily on electronic music, alongside ambient, experimental, and underground gems from labels like Third Kind Records. His wishlist and “new” additions highlight atmospheric soundtracks, entropy-infused ambients (e.g., Nicholas Langley), quirky projects (Portland Vows’ Plastic Alice, dogs versus shadows’ Hollow Headaches), and esoteric releases that suggest a taste for textured, introspective electronics—perfect for rainy drives, contemplative listens, or unearthing hidden corners of the scene.
Through Rick’s Listening Page, he spotlights finds and favorites from Bandcamp and beyond, serving as an informal curator in the vein of underground music communities. His shares often surface in niche roundups (e.g., I Heart Noise’s Dispatches from the Underground), where his recommendations help amplify lesser-known artists in ambient, drone, and leftfield electronic spheres.
Based in Brighouse, UK, with ties to Last.fm for deeper tracking, Flynn embodies the ardent fan who treats music discovery as a daily ritual—quietly championing the overlooked, the shimmering, and the strange, one thoughtful share at a time. Whether highlighting sax-kissed highlights or entropy-laced ambients, Rick’s Listening Page is a gentle beacon for fellow explorers wandering the vast, rewarding fringes of modern independent music.
Greg again
OK, here goes… Swing Out Sister – Theme (from It’s Better to Travel) It’s the 1980s, I’d just turned teenager and my musical tastes was pretty much electro-pop. The first album I ever bought was Falco3 and my heroes were the Pet Shop Boys. As soon as I heard Swing Out Sister on the radio, I was absolutely buzzing from the saccharine sugar rush of Breakout, so many catchy hooks with lush synths, strings and major 7th splendour. So I went straight down to Our Price (or it might have been WHSmith?) and bought the album It’s Better to Travel. It generally unravelled per expectations, jazz-pop chords, all slick synth-based 80s production topped off with Corinne’s incredible Sade-esque voice.. But when it came to the closer ‘Theme’- at first I wondered whether there had been some mix-up at the record company or duplication plant? The rest of the album had lush orchestration on most of the tracks but… Opening the track with harp and timpani, strings, horns… bassoon and harpsichord?
And no singing? This wasn’t the saccharine pop I’d just feasted on. It sounded more like one of my dad’s Mike Oldfield records. Or the score to an intense finale scene from a fantasy adventure film? At first I wasn’t sure what to make of it. But there was something about it that just grabbed me. Confounding expectations this was a revelation- a pop band doing an atmospheric movie soundtrack. Anything was possible – ‘don’t judge a book by it’s cover’ and all that, it made me realise that you shouldn’t pigeonhole bands, and also as an artist you could do whatever you want – don’t pigeonhole yourself! It opened me up to other styles of music (and eclectic styles side by side on one record). It planted the seed for exploring ‘modern classical’ soundtrack stuff years later, getting into artists like Johann Johannsson, Nils Frahm, Sylvain Chauveau to name a few.
Whenever I play this track blind to someone who’s never heard it before and ask them to guess who it is, the look of disbelief on their face when I say Swing Out Sister is always priceless…
Next up an artist who is relatively new to me under his alias Swimming Lesson. Mr. Darryl Wakelin. Who sent in his own blurb which goes like this:
What is a Darryl Wakelin, and what music does he make?: I’ve been making music since I was about 9, but I was obsessed with sound, noises and music from as young as I can remember… I would be so excited by the sound collages on programmes like Vision On, any of the Radiophonic stuff that was all over the BBC in the 70s, TV themes like The Persuaders, twanging rulers on desks, putting a slinky to my ear for Star Wars laser sounds – all that stuff. Electronic music, though, really, really satisfied my brain…and I found out when I was 35 that it’s because I have synaesthesia (a condition where senses overlap). The form I have means I perceive music as an endless/limitless 3d image in my mind’s eye, with every instrument or sound having weight, shape, texture and movement. Electronic music makes the best pictures! I assumed up until that point that everyone had this and that was why music was so beloved! Back to the 1970s – I started tinkering with electronic music in around 1977 and have been obsessed ever since. I was in a few bands in the 1980s, with names like Integrated Circuit, Genetixx, and Oasis (!), and made a lot of soundtracks for student films when I was at film school. During the 90s I continued making soundtracks, did a lot of work with choreographers, and a lot of my own stuff – all under names like Storm Boy, Koenig, Pierre and Velo-music. These days I have 3 main projects – ‘swimming lesson’ is firmly focussed on a handmade/old-school home studio aesthetic, drawing inspiration from growing up in the 1970s and 80s; ‘Isograph’ is abstract ‘ambient’ experimental work that takes the microscopic world, folklore and mysticism as starting points for tracks, combined with very particular sound design that generates detailed, sharp-focus brain-images for me; and ‘Luder’ is all about Brutalism, Modernism, Europe, and that particular brand of the 1980s contradictory optimistic/dystopian eye on the future.
Track: ‘Rooms with Brittle Views’ by Bill Nelson, Disques du Crepuscule 1981.
Here’s Darryl’s two Chord Confessions which I’ll play back to back.
I first heard this track at my friend Willy Carter’s house – his older brother was one of those cool kids who managed to find this kind of stuff – a Belgian 7inch by an artist nobody really cared much about?! I was absolutely transfixed by this song and demanded to hear it over and over again. It sounded like everything I ever wanted to hear, all in one song – the sound of a robotic, automated dystopian future from the synths, cranky, spiky guitar, cool bassline…and lyrics like ‘your house is a machine for living in’?!?! Wow. Bill fast became my favourite artist of the 80s and I still love all his Cocteau Records output, and the home studio aesthetic really resonated with me, but this track is the one that sounded most like the cool/scary, Ballardian future I envisaged at that point….brilliant.
Track: ‘Upon This Earth’ by David Sylvian, from ‘Gone to Earth’ (double album), 1986.
From the first play of this album when I got it on release, to this day, I am wrapt from start to finish… The instrumental album as a whole though, is, to me, the most beautiful collection of music I’ve heard, and the final track ‘Upon This Earth’ moved me profoundly as an 18 year-old and still does. It’s not ‘just’ the overall tenor of the piece, or the gorgeous Robert Graves poem at the start about heartbreak and betrayal, or the plaintive piano chords, tumbling gently throughout, or the keening Frippertronics engraving and scratching heartache onto the delicate backdrop… it’s more than the sum of its parts, and I still don’t know why it affects me the way it does. It’s an amazing piece of work, and changed my emotional responses to music forever. Up until then, I wanted to hear fairly extreme dynamics, and synths, and bass, and drive and rhythm, or abstract noise and more synths…and then there was this. Sylvian is a bona-fide genius.
Wonderful stuff there ‘Upon This Earth’ by David Sylvian and before that ‘Rooms with Brittle Views’ by Bill Nelson. Thank you for the tales Darryl.
Next up is someone who’s been mentioned earlier in the episode. A figure who has been an important one in many of our lives. Not least my own. He has been one of the greatest sources of inspiration and discovery for this channel. Now years on it’s sometimes scary how many of the same artists feature on our episodes.
It is of course Marc Fabian Erdl Who we all know as DJ Space Terrapin or Gehege Drei is the enigmatic radio host, archivist, and selector behind It Came From Enclosure Three, the long-running experimental music broadcast on Mad Wasp Radio—a weekly deep-dive into the outer reaches of electronic, avant-garde, ambient, and genre-transcending sounds, often dubbed the “irrepressible voice of the Zoological Garden.”
Operating from an archival mindset, DJ Space Terrapin curates mind-bending “sound safaris” that blend obscure finds, hauntological echoes, library music curiosities, and contemporary underground electronics into hypnotic, exploratory sets. Episodes like Continental Drift, Gehege Drei Kaleidoskop, and listener-choice specials (e.g., on Charity Shop Classics) showcase his eclectic ear: from British hauntology twists to global oddities, jazz-rooted wanderings, and collaborations with labels and artists in the experimental sphere.
His mixes appear on Mixcloud (where he archives broadcasts), with features in compilations and remixes (e.g., contributing to projects on Unexplained Sounds Group and See Blue Audio anthologies. Praised by peers in the scene—including shoutouts from Magpie Vectors, Morgen Wurde, and others—for his adventurous programming and expert curation, he champions the weird, wonderful, and overlooked.
Whether guiding listeners through dystopian buttery textures, proto-human remixes, or shade-rather-than-light anthologies, DJ Space Terrapin remains a trusted guide in the worlds DIY radio underground—delivering weekly doses of sonic zoology that reward deep, headphone-immersed listening, one enclosure at a time. Tune in via Mad Wasp Radio or Mixcloud archives for the full, genre-defying expedition.
To experience the Terrapins confession in the best way is to let him tell it himself. Take it away miestro:
There are moments in your life, when everything comes together, all the pieces of the puzzle fall into place, at least for a while, and after that things have changed. So, about 50 years ago, in 1976, (half a century, imagine that…), my mother went to party, a rare occasion, as she worked hard and raised me alone. But this was a birthday of a close friend, and it was in our neighbourhood, so, with a few words of comfort and one or the other stern warning she went away. When I woke the next morning, she was there and had gift for me, from her friend…a Musiccassette, a blue one, from The Beatles. Aha
I might have heard the name before, but knew nothing and thought that I never had heard them. as my mom told me this morning, these Beatles had been great, but alas, had split, „long ago“. You know how kids feel about time. They had split 1970, and that made them for the 7 year old reptile I was but a part of the dim and distant past, like World War II, of which my mother talked quite a lot, or the dinosaurs, who had called it a day also roundabout that time, to the best of my knowledge. Ancient History, all of it.
I was instantly in love, dear listeners. The beginning alone, the combination of Strawberry Fields forever, segueuing into Penny Lane, two track that should not work together – but boy, how they did- Cranberry Sauce – Shivers ran down my spine…Then stuff like Lady Madonna, or I am the Walrus, or Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Heart’s Club Band…the urge to dance, to move, to jump or run around…the sheer kinetic energy that these songs induced…I remember being completely enthralled.
But the real postmodern cracker still waited for me. Well, back in 1973…we all had heard rumours abut a new show in German Television, from America, just for Kids…Sesamstraße, Sesame Street. There had been tests, they said, in 1971, and in 1973 the show was established all over Western Germany, except for Bavaria. Watching this still not adapted, ultra-American – in the best sense – show was incredibly cool and liberating for us Kids. The German writer and cartoonist F.W. Bernstein summed it up what it was like to watch Ernie and Bert, Grover, etc at that time: „Oh when the saints go marching in“. Although as usual in Germany it was translated into German and synchronized, even the songs, this still was a window into another world. Brownstone houses, groovy Monsters in the Neighbourhood, Talking Frogs, People of Color, and an easygoing lifestyle rarely to have in the smalltown where I grew up.
Well, in 1976 they were to germanify Sesame Street, giving it a German frame, and that was the end of it for me, mostly. I still loved the old routines, but the German framing was abominable, filled with „the heavy slime of pedagogical sorrows“ – again F.W. Bernstein…So i stopped tuning in. Anyway…golden times.
Well, and the Blue Album, from the Beatles? …When „Something“ faded out, a new song started, and although I was already high as a kite, musically, the real cracker was to come now…The Beatles, thos mystical icons wer singing…Krakengarten, bzw. Im Garten eines Kraken…Octopus’s Garden…But, hey, this could not be…that was Kermit’s song…wasn’t it.? But of course. I had sung along more than once, loved it to pieces, sure, although the underwater atmosphere was a biut uncanny …now, the Beatles, connected to Kermit…unbelievable. I had known the Beatles for ages, indeed. And everything was connected – wheels within wheels, so to say…. Thos Liverpudlian gods had humour, and Kermit was Ringo Starr’s avatar. Who would have thunk?
Rick Flynn
- Breadcrumb Trail – Slint
As mentioned above, Mogwai opened the doors to work much new (to me anyway) music and one of those acts and one that showed me that music can be fragile, brazen, uneasy, jaggered, broken, epic was Slint’s ‘Spiderland’ album. The almost silent and whispered eerie opening track ‘Breadcrumb Trail’. Spoken vocals, dark meaningful lyrics, storytelling at a different level. The melodic guitar that would also be a big influence to the whole band. It just hit differently than anything I’d heard before, but linked so well to my love of Mogwai, but this time with vocals that screamed for help. Amazing!
Rick
Rick Flynn
Larry Farber. stockholm coffee tea juice, the best damn selection of weird cool unusual and amazing films books music toys shirts and people. Larryscorner.nu
Larry Farber is the spirited Detroit-born proprietor, curator, and artistic director of Larry’s Corner, a beloved offbeat cultural hub tucked away on Grindsgatan in Stockholm’s Södermalm district.
Originally from Detroit, Farber relocated to Sweden over three decades ago, eventually transforming a small storefront into a multifaceted venue that defies easy categorization: part cozy café (serving coffee, tea, juice, and good vibes), part eclectic shop stocked with “the best damn selection of weird, cool, unusual, and amazing films” alongside books, records, and oddities, and part intimate performance space championing underground music, experimental sounds, poetry, and live art.
Since opening, Larry’s Corner has become a go-to spot for adventurous Stockholmers and international touring acts alike—hosting everything from solo snare drum improvisations and looping performances to folk/rock/noise bands, jazz-adjacent sets, and intense evenings of avant-garde collaboration (think live bootlegs captured on Bandcamp and YouTube from artists like Ryosuke Kiyasu, Stellan Wahlström Drift Band, MOODD+Speak, and more). The venue’s small, welcoming room fosters close-up encounters with niche and boundary-pushing creativity, earning it a reputation as a sanctuary for “long live offbeat culture” in the Nordic scene.
Farber himself is a raconteur and local legend—frequently featured in podcasts (e.g., Sips and Clips, Troubadours and Raconteurs) sharing stories of his transatlantic journey, dream journals, and unwavering commitment to the strange and wonderful. With thousands of Instagram posts (@larryscorner) chronicling daily life, gigs, and finds, he keeps the spirit alive: open afternoons for browsing, evenings for discovery, and always an unapologetic “we just don’t give a damn” attitude toward the mainstream.
Larry’s Corner remains a rare, enduring gem in Stockholm—one man’s defiant love letter to the quirky, the creative, and the community that gathers around a good cup of coffee and even better sounds. Drop by from 2-ish till 6-ish (or whenever the music calls) and see for yourself.
So it must’ve been 1969. I thought it was 68 but I just looked and the lp came out 1968 and I just cannot imagine a sears roebuck department store record department in a Livonia Michigan shopping mall would be so hip. It was time for me to buy my very first lp George zinger my next door neighbor and best friend came with me Up until we had only bought 45s so getting a whole lp was kinda like a rite of passage I really didn’t want something that was being played on the am radio stations so three fog night cream and ccr were nixed Now this is where it becomes fateful but in a super positive way George thought I should get an lp by a group Called Chicago transit authority and I was tempted Pretty cool name and pretty cool cover- Fate loved me.
Chicago transit authority later became the group Chicago One of THE most boring groups ever I shiver to think how different my life had been if I’d taken that route But Fortunately for me I was and always have been Horny. Thusly when I saw an lp with a pretty girls butt on it I knew I was going places. That lp was Soft machine One of the coolest most creative groups ever and one fucking mind blower and life changer of an lp Somehow that lp opened my eyes to captain beef heart mothers of invention and the list is long I think about this memory often when people tell me what they heard on Spotify I have a hard time believing that Spotify gonna be supplying memories like getting soft machine at the record department of a Sears, Roebuck in 1969
Trev’s Instrumental, Experimental, Kraut Time Pt. 2

00:00:00 Cavern of Anti-Matter – Blowing My Nose Under Close Observation
00:04:09 Keith Seatman – A Posh Hat and Timepiece
00:07:45 Sordid Sound System – Dia De Muertos
00:12:05 Gaudi Kosmisches Trio – Vom Mond Zum Roten Planeten
00:18:37 Misha Panfilov – Beep Beep
00:26:52 Kosmischer Läufer – Nordlicht
00:31:29 Hena – Nuan
00:39:03 Prairiewolf – Sage Thrasher
00:40:45 Heldon – Northernland Lady
00:47:17 Mark Ellery Griffiths – Near extinction event (Yamaha FM)
00:49:29 Kreidler – Beginn / Drücken
00:54:29 Einseinseins – Gasetagenheizung
00:59:04 L’Eclair – Sisi La Fami
01:02:25 GLOK – Kolokol
01:08:37 Faust – Es ist wieder da
Alone on the Dance Floor 05
For people that dance to a different tune.

00:00:00 Neo Dymium – Uncoiled
00:06:42 Fluffy Inside – pH5
00:12:03 Alpak’ – Enso
00:17:16 Made By John – Future Sound of Sligo
00:21:39 Patrick Cowley – Floating
00:27:42 Orbital – Deeper (12′ Version) – Remastered
00:42:23 Artileqt – Subductive Zone
00:47:44 Dib – Troiscenttrois 002
00:52:14 Brasa brasil – I Got to Bahia
00:55:20 Karl Marx – Maískorn
01:02:11 Alternative Civil Servant – Bowed Philosophy
01:07:37 Kavalcade – NULL 01
Trev’s Virtual Cassette Library 178
15 February 2026

Virtual mixtape radio for the sonically adventurous. 20 artists. Drops about three times a week. No schedule, just a passion for independent music.
Good evening, or morning, or whatever fragment of time you’ve found yourself in. This is Trev’s Virtual Cassette Library 178. I’m Trevor—your host, your guide, your occasional sonic conspirator.
A sonic journey with a metaphysical flip at the halfway mark—perfect for a long walk, a mental wander, or a quiet moment alone with the universe.
So, settle in. Let the kettle boil. Let the cat sleep. Let the world spin without you for a while.
We float tonight through drifts of ambient electronic, modular wanderings, dubwise echoes, some art rock angles, leftfield pop inflections, drone undertows, and the odd burst of experimental pop. Places flicker by: Wormhole World gatherings, Republic of Music corners, Castles in Space haunts, Invisible Inc. pathways, Four Flies shadows, and points scattered from Lancashire to Vilnius, Munich to Mexico City.
The longest stretch in the selection comes from Caught in Joy – Elsewhere, a patient unravelling that lingers in the mind. The shortest snaps past in a flash with Allmanna Town – Sample 24, not even reaching the minute mark.
We begin with Dubberrookie and Winter Weather, a seasonal drift from A Wormhole Xmas 2025 on Wormhole World. Chilled dub pulses meet wintry synth haze, gentle echoes folding into themselves like snow settling on rooftops.
Headphones on, let time dissolve, and let the frequencies claim you.
Dubberrookie – Winter Weather. Dubberrookie will appear on my upcoming compilation “Puzzles of the Psyche”. There’s still time. Send in your entries by March 25.
Now Floating Points with Precursor, the bonus unreleased cut from the Elaenia 10 Year Anniversary on the Republic of Music label. Sparse piano gestures meet subtle electronic undercurrents, a quiet prelude that breathes slow and deliberate.
Floating Points – Precursor.
Next up Bahia Brazil based artist – Navin Kala offers Vijf from Spinoza on a favourite label of the show Mystery Circles. Minimalist piano lines trace thoughtful paths, space around each note allowing contemplation to gather.
Navin Kala – Vijf. A reminder now if you have a piece of music that has meant a lot to you for some reason tell me about it. I’m putting together a new show called “Chord Confessions” and I need some tales behind the most important music ever released. PM me on the socials or email me trevlad@gmail.com Now back to the show.
Now amping up the drone. Stewart Keller brings Disheveled Zen from the whopping 100 track 2020-2025 Archives. Loosened field recordings and soft electronics tangle in a relaxed, almost accidental calm.
Stewart Keller – Disheveled Zen.
Here’s me Trevlad with Curving Archive Scales from the Trick or Treat 4 compilation on Sounds for the Soul. Archive dust and curving scales weave a long, meditative thread, time marked in subtle modular shifts.
Trevlad – Curving Archive Scales. Just a quick shout out to the latest followers Bernt Haas, who I believe is part of the Cries from the LTN outfit. Also Liquid Shape and The Tall Librarian. Thanks for the follow.
Now Mexico City based artists Eafhm and Mwamwa collaborate on Luzne (Mwamwa Part) from the split release on Secuencias Temporales. Dubby bass hums beneath fragmented vocal traces, a hazy half-step wander.
Eafhm, Mwamwa – Luzne (Mwamwa Part).
And now for something completely different. Deerhoof deliver L’Amour Stories from Apple O’ on Joyful Noise Recordings. Quick, angular art rock bursts with playful yelps and tight rhythmic jabs.
Deerhoof – L’Amour Stories.
Garda slips in Substratum from S-Lyga on the Neotantra label. Deep drone layers build slow atmospheric weight, substratum textures rumbling low.
Garda – Substratum.
Now time to punk it up. Tinned Meats present Caught in the Wild from Kilter on I Heart Noise. Raw edges meet noisy propulsion, caught somewhere between garage grit and wilder impulses. Mad stuff…
Tinned Meats – Caught in the Wild.
And now Keith Seatman with Tonight’s Guests Are? from the forthcoming Counting to Ten Then Back Again on Castles in Space. Radiophonic quirks and psych-folk fragments evoke childhood games and firework packaging memories, playful yet oddly disorienting.
Keith Seatman – Tonight’s Guests Are?
The Polish legend of Coconut Creek, Caught in Joy closes Side A with Elsewhere.
Karol is the most prolific Berlin school artist on the planet. He produces so much quality music on a weekly basis. Which he records live and can be witnessed on his Youtube channel. Analogue drooling adventures. The track Elsewhere is from the release Colorfield. Self released back in mid December. Karol has released 4 albums since then just for some perspective. This is Analogue coloured space drifts to close out the first side of the show.
Side B
We turn the cassette. If you have something you want featured on the shows lease don’t be shy. I’m not on a schedule which means I get to do shows several times a week, which means you won’t have to wait long to hear your music here. Here’s a label that does just that from the fantastic Italian label Four Flies Records. Chiaré opens with Ago e Filo from the album Sei. Italian library echoes meet modern restraint, strings and subtle grooves threading through.
Chiaré – Ago e Filo.
Now LOULA YORKE shares The Hidden Messages in Water (Live at the Mount Without) from Live Compendium 2 on Truxalis. Live-captured modular meditations unfold with quiet intensity, water-like ripples expanding.
LOULA YORKE – The Hidden Messages in Water (Live at the Mount Without).
Next another artist who has contributed in the past to my compilations the fantastic The Music Liberation Front Sweden who arrive with A Lot Of Things Ain’t Changing from their collection on Third Kind Records. Warped pop edges bend familiar shapes into something skewed and resilient.
The Music Liberation Front Sweden – A Lot Of Things Ain’t Changing.
And Now Higamos Hogamos rework Re-Exit (GK Machine Dub Voyager) from Voyager Dubs on Glasgows Invisible, Inc. Deep dub transformations stretch the original into cavernous space.
Higamos Hogamos – Re-Exit (GK Machine Dub Voyager).
Francesca Guccione offers Mechanical Promenade from Connected 3 on IUWE Records. Mechanical rhythms promenade alongside delicate electric piano, a poised mechanical dance. A wonderful must have compilation celebrating 9 of the best female experimental electronic out there. In fact the entire label focuses on the beauty of female diversity in electronic music. Enjoy.
Francesca Guccione – Mechanical Promenade.
Komodo Kolektif follow with Disciple Of The Drone (GK Machine Disciple Of The Dub) also from that Voyager Dubs compilation on Invisible, Inc. Drone devotion meets dub disciple rites, heavy and hypnotic. Invisible, Inc. is a label I wish I could play more of on the channel, and just can’t for financial reasons. They are great so if you can grab some of their beautiful physical releases.
Komodo Kolektif – Disciple Of The Drone (GK Machine Disciple Of The Dub).
Now friend of the show Russian artist Ndorfik contributes Tahvi from Solos on People Can Listen. 5/8 Idm explorations carve sparse, introspective paths. Ndorfik has enlightened me on the fact that Mixcloud is not available without streaming through VPNs in his neck of the woods. So I send him the files of past shows so he can spread the good word.
Ndorfik – Tahvi.
Now the penultimate track and two masters of the ambient scene. Rhucle & Arbee bring Mournful Sky from Plain on David Cordero curated label Noray Records. Mournful ambient skies drift with gentle melancholy, field-like textures breathing slow.
Rhucle & Arbee – Mournful Sky.
Material for future shows is always welcome. Send your vibrations to trevlad@gmail.com. Purchase paths glow at trevor.se and in each show’s timeline.
Until the next cassette turns.
Trevor, signing off from Trev’s Virtual Cassette Library 178.
I leave you with the very short track Sample 24 by Allmanna Town Allmanna Town is Phil Dodds who runs the amazing Waxing Crescent Records and my fellow Stockholm dweller Jonas Geiger Ohlin of The New Emphatic fame. this track is from Rodents out on their own Bandcamp imprint. Sampled fragments glitch and reform in rodent-quick bursts.
And that fades us out. Cheerio…
Intro – 00:00
Dubberrookie – Winter Weather – 01:35
Floating Points – Precursor – 08:18
Navin Kala – Vijf – 14:06
Stewart Keller – Disheveled Zen – 19:21
Trevlad – Curving Archive Scales – 20:45
Eafhm, Mwamwa – Luzne (Mwamwa Part) – 23:52
Deerhoof – L’Amour Stories – 29:14
Garda – Substratum – 31:21
Tinned Meats – Caught in the Wild – 34:30
*Keith Seatman – Tonight’s Guests Are? – 36:56
Caught In Joy – Elsewhere – 39:36
B Side – 47:04
Chiaré – Ago e Filo – 47:43
LOULA YORKE – The Hidden Messages in Water (Live at the Mount Without) – 51:08
The Music Liberation Front Sweden – A Lot Of Things Ain’t Changing – 56:50
Higamos Hogamos – Re-Exit (GK Machine Dub Voyager) – 1:02:56
Francesca Guccione – Mechanical Promenade – 1:08:49
Komodo Kolektif – Disciple Of The Drone (GK Machine Disciple Of The Dub) – 1:13:31
Ndorfik – Tahvi – 1:18:51
Rhucle & Arbee – Mournful Sky – 1:23:32
Allmanna Town – Sample 24 – 1:25:32
Outro – 1:27:09
*track is yet to be released at the date of episode recording.
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🎧 Episode background track: https://trevlad.bandcamp.com/album/tvcl-10
EXPANSIVE WAVES 23
11 February 2026

EXPANSIVE WAVES — EPISODE 23
11 February 2026
Good evening, or morning, or whatever fragment of time you’ve found yourself in. This is Expansive Waves, episode twenty-three. I’m Trevor—your host, your guide, your occasional sonic conspirator.
Tonight’s programme is not for the hurried. Eight pieces, each longer than 12 minutes—most stretching far beyond that—each more patient than the last. If you’re expecting choruses, drops, or anything resembling urgency, you may want to try another channel.
So, settle in. Let the kettle boil. Let the cat sleep. Let the world spin without you for a while.
We begin with a vast, unfolding live session that feels like drifting through forgotten orbital debris.
This is Secret Nuclear with Omega Redux. A NYP 45-minute live recording of six pieces from last summer, first heard on Kate Bosworth’s DARK TRAIN radio show. Broadcast on 21 July 2025. Layered with approach vectors, shadows, and extended consoles. Breathe it in.
That was Secret Nuclear, Omega Redux, straight from WHI Recordings. If you’re just joining us, this is Expansive Waves 23. No rush. We’re only getting started.
Next, another fresh live capture and another NYP release as that is what this channels budget allows, from the legends who practically invented this space. Recorded last August in Poland. Another long one at 32 and a half minutes.
Tangerine Dream — Katowice Session 2025. Over half an hour of pulsing sequences, violin drifts, and piano echoes. Let it carry you.
Tangerine Dream, live from Katowice. Timeless, isn’t it? We’re about a third through the evening now, but time doesn’t really apply here.
From Pennsylvania, a solitary reflection on endings and endurance.
Matthew Nowik — (we have) 5 years left. A slow-burning meditation on what might remain. Synth layers that feel like watching clouds dissolve. Another NYP release. I feel a pattern forming here.
Matthew Nowik. Quiet truth there in every sustain. Thanks for staying with me.
We move to Greece now. Piano meeting granular skies.
Giannis Gogos — Ambedo (part 2). Twenty-one minutes of attentive stillness from the recent Ambedo release on Whitelabrecs. The quiet attention that art still needs. This is not a NYP release as whitelabrec sponsors the channel with the best ambient releases out there.
Giannis Gogos. Ambedo—sinking into the moment until the edges blur.
Shifting tones now. A sense of deep belonging amid the haze.
Cries from the LTN — Belonging To. Title track from the EP. Extended, enveloping, like finding home in the drift. Shout out to Marcus from Cries from the LTN for sending this in. The EP is an innovative audio-visual collaboration between Birmingham based contemporary artist Tara Harris and experimental musical ensemble Cries From the LTN.
Cries from the LTN. Belonging isn’t always loud.
From Meanjin/Brisbane, Australia—a wavelength tamer reworking melancholy into vast space. Inspired by a single, heartbreaking scene from The Sopranos. This is the track doir from the new album No Statue, freshly re-recorded after life turned sideways. Raw, drenched in melancholy. Monumental. Released just yesterday on 4000 records.
ff8282 — doir.
ff8282 there with the sparkling new release No Statue that was the longest piece doir.
Six tracks gone. Only two remaining. The shortest track of the episode now and only just making the 12 minute cut at 12:12. Cassette territory next. Black Pylon’s world of field recordings and calls.
This is Corvid One Cassette — MOBBING CALLS. From the album Two. Corvids circling, warnings in the air, stretched into drone. This is the second release from the label Black Pylon. Definitely a label to follow and watch out for.
Corvids know something we don’t. Maybe that’s why it lingers.
And now, as we approach the final silence, a few words before we vanish again.
Thanks for sticking around. Really. These episodes aren’t designed for mass consumption, and neither are you.
I’ll be back when the wind changes or the tape runs out—whichever comes first. No schedule, no promises. Waves, that’s all we have.
If you liked what you heard, support the artists. Buy their music. Whisper their names into the void. It helps.
You can stream this episode on Mixcloud at djsofabed/expansive-waves-23, and find all the links and credits on the episode page at trevor.se.
Drop a comment if you feel moved. Or don’t. Silence is underrated.
Until next time—stay resonant, stay expansive, and let the soundtrack of the universe find you.
And finally, as we near the horizon—an unreleased study, fresh from Adventurous Music. Out in a few days, but you hear it here first. Unless you’re listening after February 16th.
Iván Muela — Drone Study X. From the forthcoming Ibidem II. Pure, patient exploration.
Secret Nuclear – Omega Redux – 00:00
Tangerine Dream – Katowice Session 2025 – 45:02
Matthew Nowik – (we have) 5 years left – 1:15:08
Giannis Gogos – Ambedo (part 2) – 1:31:45
Cries from the LTN – Belonging To – 1:51:53
ff8282 – doir – 2:05:09
Corvid One Cassette – MOBBING CALLS – 2:19:22
*Iván Muela – Drone Study X – 2:30:35
***track is unreleased at the the time of the episode’s publication.
🔗 Episode page: https://trevor.se/
🔗 Trevlad on Bandcamp: https://trevlad.bandcamp.com/
🎛️ Feel free to drop a comment on the Mixcloud timeline.
Trev’s Virtual Cassette Library 176
04 February 2026

Virtual mixtape radio for the sonically adventurous. 20 artists. Drops about three times a week. No schedule, just a passion for independent music.
Good evening, or morning, or whatever sliver of the clock you’ve managed to carve out for yourself. This is Trev’s Virtual Cassette Library, episode 176. I’m your guide, Trevor.
The cassette sits ready in the deck, labels hand-scribbled, oxide already flaking a bit at the edges. Side A and Side B, twenty artists strung across them like beads on a frayed string. We’ll flip the tape halfway through, that satisfying clunk and hiss, because some things refuse to be digital.
Tonight we drift through ambient drifts, kosmische pulses, drone meditations, a touch of library funk, some psychedelic sprawl, electroacoustic murmurs from places like Bulgaria, the UK, Munich, Buenos Aires, Athens, Rome, Sheffield, Colorado, and a few others that don’t fit neatly on any map. The longest track stretches out patiently, Asha Patera’s – Wandering in the Upside Down from Sounds for the Soul Records, clocking in at just over 11 minutes. Durations aside, none hurry. There’s an exclusive track which open the B side from Moscow artist DEE_KAY and his track Bellcut. But we’ll get to all that in a bit.
Headphones on if you’ve got them. Volume where it feels intimate. Let the kettle whistle if it wants to. The world can wait.
We begin with a January release from the Mahorka label in Bulgaria, a collected volume of drone and teknoiz spanning a decade. Autonomаton offers The UFO project remix—eerie, floating synth washes that suggest something observed from a great height, unhurried and slightly unsettling in the best way. From the album Collected Not Lost 2015-2025 Vol 1: Drone and Teknoiz.
Autonomаton – The UFO project remix.
Next, Mark Ellery Griffiths with Synthi Sequence B. Loops and sequences built on vintage synths, patient repetitions that build quiet architectures. Mark is a regular of my shows and doesn’t get the credit he should. Check out his Bandcamp releases. He’s nudging on 50 and they’re name your price. Synthi Loops Sequences 2025 – Self released back in December.
Mark Ellery Griffiths – Synthi Sequence B.
Danielle Nia now, Longing For Togetherness. Warm, enveloping tones from i u we records, a gentle pull toward connection without ever forcing the issue. Stunning patchwork from the great Connected 3 compilation. Released a couple of weeks back on i u we records.
Danielle Nia – Longing For Togetherness.
Greek artist Substak and his track Apartment Window from Belgian ambient label Daydreamers. A quick view onto quiet streets, field recordings woven into subtle rhythms, the sound of somewhere lived-in and watched over time. From the EP Empty Bench – released not two weeks ago.
Substak – Apartment Window.
A good friend of the channel Asha Patera, Wandering in the Upside Down. Dream-logic drifts and inverted atmospheres from Sounds for the Soul Records, like walking through familiar rooms that have rearranged themselves while you slept. The Vale of Shadows – Sounds for the Soul. Which is a Stranger Things inspired ambient compilation. Also released in January. This is the long haul.
Asha Patera – Wandering in the Upside Down.
Belgian artist Jeroen Lauwers is, Red Stars Over Tokyo with In Trance from self released The Burning Spiral. Pulsing, hypnotic acid tinged layers that suggest endless night drives through neon-lit cities that might not exist. The Burning Spiral. released back in December.
Red Stars Over Tokyo – In Trance.
Southend On Sea artist Adrian Lane, After The Deluge. Post-flood calm, piano and strings emerging from residue, reflective, haunted and sparse. Their Ghosts and Ours – out on Sheffields finest Audiobulb.
Adrian Lane – After The Deluge.
Argentinian artist Puppy Bordiga with mRn, Solarium. Collaborative warmth, sunlit electronics and gentle percussion from Walking the Way III. Self released back in November.
Puppy Bordiga with mRn – Solarium.
ATA Records is a label and I can’t get my head around if they are also a band. They really know their library stuff but on this release and others the artist is simply ATA Records, no credits to the artists which is a shame. Anyway This is Tatsuya, The Sword. Library archive material, cinematic and evocative, with a heartfelt flute. drawn from Vol 4. The Library Archive Vol 4 – ATA Records.
ATA Records – Tatsuya, The Sword.
Tape flip. The mechanism clicks, heads realign, oxide continues its slow decay. Side B.
Coming up the exclusive for episode 176 is by Moscow Marist DEE-KEY now, Bellcut. Sharp, precise cuts through ambient haze from Local Gods. Local Gods. Drops next week in the 12 of February. Remember where you heard it first.
DEE-KEY – Bellcut.
Now from one of the best Italian jazz-funk library albums of the ’70s. Oscar Rocchi’s Genziana. Herbal, pastoral electronics evoking wild flowers and Italian hillsides, from Erbe Selvatiche on Four Flies Vaults which is the digital imprint of Four Flies Records.
Oscar Rocchi – Genziana.
Now to a favourite label and a release from November. Grant Beasley, The Vanishing Point. This is the title track. Horizon-line drones and slow dissolves. Grant Beasley – The Vanishing Point – Cyclical Dreams.
Grant Beasley – The Vanishing Point.
Next filter sweep time. LA artist Good Sunset, Taormina. Which is a hilltop town on the island of Sicily and I bet they have good sunsets there. Sun-drenched, cinematic reveries from Cinema Everything on Mystery Circles.
Good Sunset – Taormina.
And here’s one from me, under Trevlad—EXPANSIVE WAVES 18 (Slipping Precautions Obvious). A previous transmission excerpt, layered and recursive. TVCL 07 – Trevlad.
Trevlad – EXPANSIVE WAVES 18 (Slipping Precautions Obvious).
Next the poppiest piece I’ve played in a good while. Nostalgia 77, You Where In My Dream Last Night. Dream-state jazz inflections, soft and lingering. Love the bass lines and sound. This is the first single from their upcoming EP titled: When The Lights Gone. Which drops on the 1 May on Nostalgia 77’s Bandcamp page.
Nostalgia 77 – You Where In My Dream Last Night.
Next up Guitars and synth with GROSSO GADGETTO, and “the track Once there was only dark”. Apocalyptic soundscapes for a world winding down, from “Soundtrack for a Dying World by Dark Supreme & Grosso Gadgetto”. Sampled voices of Matthew McConaughey & Woody Harrelson.
GROSSO GADGETTO – “Once there was only dark”.
Now get your world music psychedelic slippers on. We’re off to Melbourne Australia. King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Flying Microtonal Banana. Microtonal excursions, psychedelic without apology, the shortest in the episode at 2:34 yet packing strange tunings into tight space. From the album of the same fantastic name. Released on the Heavenly Recordings label about a year ago.
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard – Flying Microtonal Banana.
Now back to 2021 and some wonky synth chords. Near Stoic, Music For A Friend. Intimate, thoughtful pieces from Notebook Thoughts Short Stories on Third Kind Records. A definite Boards of Canada vibe to this one.
Near Stoic – Music For A Friend.
Now I wish my doorbell sounded more like this. The penultimate track and the ultimate wind down. Miguel Otero, Blooming in Sturton Street. Gentle blooms and street-level calm from Islas Calm Cloud. One of the recent compilations let loose on Whitelabrecs. Get it now…
Miguel Otero – Blooming in Sturton Street.
And before the tape ends. Thanks for staying with it. These transmissions aren’t built for haste, and neither, I suspect, are you. Support the artists if any of this lodged somewhere—buy the music, share the names. Stream this one on Mixcloud for a week if you need to revisit. All the paths and links live at trevor.se.
And if it was possible to close on a chiller note I think I have you covered. We close with Astropilot, The River Knows No Hurry. Flowing, unforced kosmische from Stockholm label Valley View Records, a reminder that some currents simply continue.
Until the next time the cassette calls. Stay resonant. Stay expansive. Let the sounds find their own way.
Trevor, signing off.
Astropilot – The River Knows No Hurry.
Intro – 00:00
Autonomаton – The UFO project remix – 01:45
Mark Ellery Griffiths – Synthi Sequence B – 06:21
Danielle Nia – Longing For Togetherness – 09:37
Substak – Apartment Window – 16:03
Asha Patera – Wandering in the Upside Down – 18:25
Red Stars Over Tokyo – In Trance – 28:44
Adrian Lane – After The Deluge – 35:44
Puppy Bordiga w. Various – Solarium (with mRn) – 38:46
ATA Records – Tatsuya, The Sword – 41:43
B Side – 45:35
*DEE-KEY – Bellcut – 45:52
Oscar Rocchi – Genziana – 50:50
Grant Beasley – The Vanishing Point – 53:21
Good Sunset – Taormina – 1:01:15
Trevlad– EXPANSIVE WAVES 18 (Slipping Precautions Obvious) – 1:04:46
Nostalgia 77 – You Where In My Dream Last Night – 1:07:54
GROSSO GADGETTO – “Once there was only dark” – 1:12:06
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard – Flying Microtonal Banana – 1:20:12
Near Stoic – Music For A Friend – 1:23:08
Miguel Otero – Blooming in Sturton Street – 1:27:32
Astropilot – The River Knows No Hurry – 1:32:45
Outro – 1:36:42
*track is yet to be released at the date of episode recording.
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📹 Episode background visual:
🎧 Episode background track: https://trevlad.bandcamp.com/album/tvcl-10
Alone on the Dance Floor 03
For people that dance to a different tune.

00:00:00 Dokun – Seedling
00:05:53 Dave Clarkson – Hive Mind
00:11:08 Spray – Hammered in an Airport
00:14:31 Lifting Gear Engineer – Scan
00:18:07 Floating Points – Birth4000
00:22:20 Hidden People – 303s & Hard Breaks
00:26:47 Fragile X – Kismet
00:33:11 Konerytmi – Rautatieasema
00:37:49 Odin Kaban – El baile de la pita
00:42:06 Julio Tornero – blazing starre
00:46:06 Minerva – Oligarch
00:49:28 Leise im Kran – Crackdown
00:53:51 Mordant Music – Ravesend
00:55:47 Nacht Plank & Futuregrapher – Sky High 8.43
Trev’s Virtual Cassette Library 173
27 January 2026

Virtual mixtape radio for the sonically adventurous. 20 artists. Drops about three times a week. No schedule, just a passion for independent music.
Good evening, or morning, or whatever sliver of the clock you’ve drifted into. This is Trev’s Virtual Cassette Library, episode one hundred and seventy-three. I’m Trevor, turning the reels in the quiet hours.
We approach this one as always—with the old cassette in mind. Side A first, then the satisfying clunk of the flip midway through. Twenty artists tonight, drawn from the shelves where the quieter signals live. Expect drifts of drone and deep ambient, patches of electroacoustic haze, touches of field-recorded exotica, slow-unfolding modular pulses, and the occasional submerged melody that surfaces like something half-remembered from another room. Places flicker through too: underwater trenches, Los Angeles highways at off-hours, Mediterranean dream coasts, vast starry processions, the interior of mechanical bird boxes, and the soft geometries of winter rooms.
No rush. No hooks to grab you. Only the slow uncoiling of sound.
Side A – 00:00
We begin with Nelson, British Columbia based Codedekay and out of place, from Vol. 9 – The Struggle on (We Are The New Underground) Weatnu Records. A patient unfolding of displaced tones, edges softened by time and repetition.
Then an old pseudonym of the artist Time Rival is Supply Fi who brings Unruly Cascade, taken from Unruly Predation on Triplicate Records who I believe Michael Southard, Time Rivals, Supply Fi’s real name, helped create. Cross-genre currents here—ambient electronics that fold and fracture without ever quite settling. Grab this, it’s a name your price release.
I know we’re all over the Christmas vibe already. But at least here in Sweden the snow lies thick. So here’s Omni Gardens with Winter Wonderland, from the Christmas release on Moon Glyph. Familiar seasonal shapes viewed through gauze, Moog warmth and mellotron drift turning the usual into something hushed and interior.
Now one of the channels favourites with some 90s vibe Lounge. I get a hint of Lemon Jelly wafting through this one. THE GAYE DEVICE offers Argent Echo from Routes. Silvered reflections in electronic form, routes that loop back on themselves with deliberate calm.
This next one is the opening track on my second compilation release. This is Ursula’s Cartridges who submerges us in Mighty Underwater Adventure (UC’s Challenger Deep Remix), from Resonances from the Depths. Dubbed echoes refracted through deep pressure, bubbles rising slow.
Things fall apart now with Dissolved who arrives with Alveolate Minds, Exposure Fields on Mahorka. Grainy, fragmented atmospheres—drone and broken beats meeting in alveolar spaces, porous and breathing.
Belgian artist MICADO gives us An Afternoon Reflection from Mindscapes on Argentinian label Cyclical Dreams. Gentle modular lines catching light, a pause where the day leans back.
Now to help us into the zone is Dormance who closes the first side with Dormance 14, from II on Mahorka. Pure dormancy—Squeaky toys, dub tones, and a spoon in a tumble dryer do half the work.
Flip the tape. Listen for the mechanism.
Opening the B side is channel champion brain, melting, Stephen James Buckley aka, Polypores opens the reverse with The Body Is The Spaceship, Hungry Vortex. The longest track of the episode clocking in at 11:30. Organic electronics as vessel, pulsing inward and outward in equal measure. Get everything Stephen releases and thank me later.
Now a haunting melody of the free by Kilmarth feat. Silly Shadow with A Paradox So Cruel from Cherophobia on Adventurous Music. Paradox held lightly—shadows and light in tender opposition.
Next the shortest track of the episode at 1:36 Elijah Fox drifts through Her Palace from Ambient Works for the Highways of Los Angeles. Highway-side reveries, palace built from exhaust and sunset haze.
Now into the darkness with Autonomаton who present Endless stars procession from Collected Not Lost 2015-2025 Vol. 1 on Mahorka. Dub Drones tracing constellations in slow parade.
Next up Michal Turtle & HOVE with Only Sawdust Remains from Sawdust Dreams. Sawdust as memory material, fragile and aromatic. A pumping beat over tribal vibes.
Friend of the show now and a short one. Not the artist but the track. I have no idea what Dave Clarkson’s height is. Here he conjures Mechanical Bird Box Exotica from The Ghosts of Christmas Past and the Effects on Mental Health on Mortality Tables. Clockwork birds singing through antique mechanisms, exotica tuned to melancholy.
Here’s an adventurous outing by Edward Givens with Rapid Eye Movement (a Dance) from the album, Terra. Dream-state pagan motion, eyes flicking beneath lids.
Here an offering of my own. This is Trevlad with EXPANSIVE WAVES 20 (Airtime Text Reacting) from TVCL-08. Airtime caught in reactive loops—waves folding back on their own transmission.
Now French synth miestro Alex Ringess with the final track And Now Let’s Play This New Game from Asynchronicity. Asynchronous invitation, rules written in delay and overlap.
Next an odd one by Catharæ with In my world from Dreams of the Mediterranéant on Adventurous Music. Mediterranean shores remade as interior landscape, trails tracing the mind.
And now the penultimate piece some deep bass tones from Christian Kleine who brings Slow from the 2025 Label Compilation mixed by Todos on A Strangely Isolated Place. Deliberate tempo, everything given room to breathe.
And now, as the tape nears the end, a few words before the leader. Thanks for staying with it. These programmes aren’t built for playlists or quick consumption, and neither are the ears that find them. Support the artists when you can—buy the music, name their work in quiet corners. It matters more than algorithms admit.
This episode streams free for a week on Mixcloud, links and credits at trevor.se and in the comments. Say something if the mood takes you. Or let the silence hold. Both are welcome.
I leave you with the wonderful Sussex Telecom who signs off with Kendophaz from the 2022 release Creator Warehouse on channel sponsoring Third Kind Records. Phased signals from some coastal telecom exchange, wires humming in the wind.
Until the next wind or the next run-out groove—stay resonant, stay expansive. Let the frequencies find their own way back to you. Cheerio…
Intro – 00:00
Codedekay – out of place – 01:54
Supply Fi – Unruly Cascade – 04:44
Omni Gardens – Winter Wonderland – 10:35
THE GAYE DEVICE – Argent Echo – 13:20
Ursula’s Cartridges – Mighty Underwater Adventure (UC’s Challenger Deep Remix) – 16:41
Dissolved – Alveolate Minds – 26:59
MICADO – An Afternoon Reflection – 30:16
Dormance – Dormance 14 – 38:50
B Side – 43:38
Polypores – The Body Is The Spaceship – 43:55
Kilmarth – A Paradox So Cruel (feat. Silly Shadow) – 55:11
Elijah Fox – Her Palace – 59:30
Autonomаton – Endless stars procession – 1:00:36
Michal Turtle & HOVE – Only Sawdust Remains – 1:06:02
Dave Clarkson – Mechanical Bird Box Exotica – 1:14:19
Edward Givens – Rapid Eye Movement (a Dance) – 1:16:32
Trevlad – EXPANSIVE WAVES 20 (Airtime Text Reacting) – 1:19:40
Alex Ringess – And Now Let’s Play This New Game – 1:22:16
Catharæ – In my world – 1:27:53
Christian Kleine – Slow – 1:31:16
Sussex Telecom – Kendophaz – 1:33:23
Outro – 1:38:47
*track is yet to be released at the date of episode recording.
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📹 Episode background video:
🎧 Episode background track: https://trevlad.bandcamp.com/album/tvcl-10








