Open-hearted, wistful, and emotionally rich with a strong cinematic feel.
Good day listeners, wherever you are. Trevor here. Welcome to episode 205 of the Virtual Cassette Library – music from all over the world, sparked by a single track that sets the tone for the set. This is a 60 minute virtual tape with a metaphysical flip at the half way mark. If and when I get a couple more subscribers then I’ll go back to doing 90 minute versions, complete with commentary. This episode is based on the track “mabel” by Linear North from the album “We Thought It Was Normal”. Shout out to Linear North for sending me the album. Also shoutouts to Mystery Circles, Mahorka, Cyclical Dreams, Imaginary North and Rupert Lally for sponsoring the channel with material. Also thanks to CommsBreakdown for being the latest artists to appear on the upcoming compilation The Mystery of the Night. There’s still time to get yours in. June 24th is the deadline. This is a flowing mix of expansive ambient, emotional introspection, and gentle cinematic storytelling. Side A opens with wide-open airy landscapes and healing warmth before moving through melancholic waltzes, intricate rhythms, and reflective urban tones. Side B brings playful quirkiness, hazy nostalgia, romantic filmic moments, and closes with darker, ritualistic depth. Overall mood: Open-hearted, wistful, and emotionally rich with a strong cinematic feel. It shifts from bright, spacious hopefulness into warmer nostalgia and subtle darkness — ideal for thoughtful listening, road trips, or evening reflection. Intimate yet expansive with lovely emotional range. If you make music, or are a label, and would like to be featured, send your file links or Bandcamp codes to trevlad@gmail.com. I’d love to hear what you’re working on. So settle in, turn it up a bit, and let’s see where it takes us. I hope you enjoy it. No breaks, just the music.
Side A 00:00:00 Ryan J Raffa & Sam Prekop / Wavefiler – Ryan J Raffa & Sam Prekop – Wide Open Spaces Expansive, breezy ambient with wide cinematic pads and airy openness. Light, hopeful, and spacious. 00:05:16 Tom Bragl – Exposed to be healed Gentle, healing ambient with warm evolving textures and soft emotional release. Tender and restorative. 00:10:41 Fallen – Our Neverending Waltz Melancholic, looping ambient waltz with graceful sadness and infinite repetition. Poignant and hypnotic. 00:15:03 Time Rival – Four in Hand Intricate, rhythmic electronic minimalism with subtle drive and clean layering. Precise and engaging. 00:18:14 Linear North – mabel Warm, melodic ambient with gentle northern light and nostalgic softness. Intimate and comforting. 00:18:59 MiDi BiTCH – Barbican Centre [London] Atmospheric, urban-inspired ambient with concrete resonance and subtle architectural depth. Cool and reflective. Side B 00:24:31 SUUB – Straight In No Kissin’ Playful, quirky electronic groove with cheeky energy and offbeat charm. Fun and characterful. 00:28:16 CRSY – Reminiscence Nostalgic, hazy ambient with warm reminiscing tones and soft emotional glow. Dreamy and heartfelt. 00:33:07 Zerfranzt – Edward Darkly elegant electronic with mysterious undertones and subtle cinematic tension. Atmospheric and refined. 00:38:21 Kilometre Club – Open Roads (with Raphah) [Splinter Forceps Remix] Road-trip ambient with expansive horizons, warm textures, and gentle forward motion. Open and liberating. 00:46:05 Rupert Lally – If This Was A Movie (We’d Be Together) Romantic, filmic ambient with wistful beauty and emotional storytelling quality. Tender and cinematic. 00:49:28 Stewart Keller – Blood Stained Cauldron Dark, ritualistic ambient with occult warmth and simmering intensity. Mysterious and immersive closer.
Virtual 90 minute mixtapes for the sonically adventurous. 30 artists, two 45 minute sets. A spoken intro followed by music only show. Drops about three times a week. No schedule, just a passion for independent music.
“Hello, I’m Trevor, and this is episode one‑five‑nine of the Virtual Cassette Library. Today’s theme is Twist Fondest Waffle—which, as usual, is both the track you’re hearing underneath and a location you can find on a map, if you’re the sort who enjoys chasing coordinates on What3Words. We’ve got ninety minutes ahead—two sides, fifteen tracks each. Some names you’ll know, some you won’t, and that’s half the fun. We begin with Arbee & Norvik drifting through a Montréal alleyway, Bary Center disappearing into the trees, and Pocket Lint reminding us that we grow through our friends. There’s a rise‑in‑love from micca, diamond‑cracking teeth from pjpriiincess, and a new sun courtesy of GODTET. Now then, starting back on episode 156, there’s a little cipher game running through the series. Each episode, during the intermission, you’ll hear a number. Scribble it down. After ten episodes, you’ll have the full sequence. Put the pieces together, crack the cipher, and you’ll unlock a code that knocks ninety‑five percent off anything on my Bandcamp page. Which means you can scoop up the whole discography for about two quid. It’s not meant to be difficult—just enough to keep you awake at night wondering if you’ll get it right. Later on, we’ll hear winter choruses from Unruly Disturbance, a 2025 remaster from Ian Boddy & Chris Carter, and a snowy Christmas‑Eve vignette from On Idyl. Leisure Prison gives us another living space, Tim Story offers a dust bale hole, and Clearways pings us exactly once before Michael D. Tidwell closes the A side. On the flip side, Tapemoth brings entropy, Marie dissolves into a Bahrambient remix, and IKSRE gives us granite from Imaginary North. There’s cartography from Droning Cats with NRV, Italian library breaks from Modern Sound Quartet, and a fading coordinate from Grant Beasley. Roedelius appears, as he often does, like a quiet blessing. I’ve slipped in one of my own—Another Oddly Screamed—before Floating Points and Raphah carry us gently to the end. It’s ambient, kosmische, wintery, slightly haunted, and occasionally festive in a sideways sort of way. The sort of thing you might stumble across late at night on a shortwave dial, wondering if you imagined it. So—headphones on, let time dissolve, and let the music claim you. First track up: Arbee & Norvik, Dans une ruelle, suite…”