John Cravache and I:Cube team up for the first time on this odd blend of retro electronics, machine funk, kosmische synth experiments and spooky horror soundtrack grooves.
According to the brief press release, Chimère FM is an imaginary radio station "broadcasting its stellar weirdness live from Paris". Cravache and I:Cube developed the material from a series of studio improvisation, and the music's haphazard, but always intentional vibe references this process. From track to track there's a mood that links the duo's narrative, but the sound is liable to shift without warning at any mimute. So the title track's occult cinema drones and well-worn analog synth blurts don't match completely with following vignette 'Tableau d'Yvette', a beatbox-led library music organ groover, but the radio concept makes it coalesce somehow - it's the quirky mixtape you never knew you needed.
At their best, the duo evoke another age of electronic music, like on 'Le Mans 2' where they excavate the sweet spot between Tangerine Dream's early experiments and Popol Vuh's "Affenstunde", using pitch-bent oscillators and dank, grimy drones. Even more upbeat moments, like the Ceephax or Kerrier District-referencing acid disco cut 'Vol du héron cendré' gives the feeling that if nothing else, Chimère FM was a project dreamt up with fun at forefront.
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John Cravache and I:Cube team up for the first time on this odd blend of retro electronics, machine funk, kosmische synth experiments and spooky horror soundtrack grooves.
According to the brief press release, Chimère FM is an imaginary radio station "broadcasting its stellar weirdness live from Paris". Cravache and I:Cube developed the material from a series of studio improvisation, and the music's haphazard, but always intentional vibe references this process. From track to track there's a mood that links the duo's narrative, but the sound is liable to shift without warning at any mimute. So the title track's occult cinema drones and well-worn analog synth blurts don't match completely with following vignette 'Tableau d'Yvette', a beatbox-led library music organ groover, but the radio concept makes it coalesce somehow - it's the quirky mixtape you never knew you needed.
At their best, the duo evoke another age of electronic music, like on 'Le Mans 2' where they excavate the sweet spot between Tangerine Dream's early experiments and Popol Vuh's "Affenstunde", using pitch-bent oscillators and dank, grimy drones. Even more upbeat moments, like the Ceephax or Kerrier District-referencing acid disco cut 'Vol du héron cendré' gives the feeling that if nothing else, Chimère FM was a project dreamt up with fun at forefront.
John Cravache and I:Cube team up for the first time on this odd blend of retro electronics, machine funk, kosmische synth experiments and spooky horror soundtrack grooves.
According to the brief press release, Chimère FM is an imaginary radio station "broadcasting its stellar weirdness live from Paris". Cravache and I:Cube developed the material from a series of studio improvisation, and the music's haphazard, but always intentional vibe references this process. From track to track there's a mood that links the duo's narrative, but the sound is liable to shift without warning at any mimute. So the title track's occult cinema drones and well-worn analog synth blurts don't match completely with following vignette 'Tableau d'Yvette', a beatbox-led library music organ groover, but the radio concept makes it coalesce somehow - it's the quirky mixtape you never knew you needed.
At their best, the duo evoke another age of electronic music, like on 'Le Mans 2' where they excavate the sweet spot between Tangerine Dream's early experiments and Popol Vuh's "Affenstunde", using pitch-bent oscillators and dank, grimy drones. Even more upbeat moments, like the Ceephax or Kerrier District-referencing acid disco cut 'Vol du héron cendré' gives the feeling that if nothing else, Chimère FM was a project dreamt up with fun at forefront.
John Cravache and I:Cube team up for the first time on this odd blend of retro electronics, machine funk, kosmische synth experiments and spooky horror soundtrack grooves.
According to the brief press release, Chimère FM is an imaginary radio station "broadcasting its stellar weirdness live from Paris". Cravache and I:Cube developed the material from a series of studio improvisation, and the music's haphazard, but always intentional vibe references this process. From track to track there's a mood that links the duo's narrative, but the sound is liable to shift without warning at any mimute. So the title track's occult cinema drones and well-worn analog synth blurts don't match completely with following vignette 'Tableau d'Yvette', a beatbox-led library music organ groover, but the radio concept makes it coalesce somehow - it's the quirky mixtape you never knew you needed.
At their best, the duo evoke another age of electronic music, like on 'Le Mans 2' where they excavate the sweet spot between Tangerine Dream's early experiments and Popol Vuh's "Affenstunde", using pitch-bent oscillators and dank, grimy drones. Even more upbeat moments, like the Ceephax or Kerrier District-referencing acid disco cut 'Vol du héron cendré' gives the feeling that if nothing else, Chimère FM was a project dreamt up with fun at forefront.
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John Cravache and I:Cube team up for the first time on this odd blend of retro electronics, machine funk, kosmische synth experiments and spooky horror soundtrack grooves.
According to the brief press release, Chimère FM is an imaginary radio station "broadcasting its stellar weirdness live from Paris". Cravache and I:Cube developed the material from a series of studio improvisation, and the music's haphazard, but always intentional vibe references this process. From track to track there's a mood that links the duo's narrative, but the sound is liable to shift without warning at any mimute. So the title track's occult cinema drones and well-worn analog synth blurts don't match completely with following vignette 'Tableau d'Yvette', a beatbox-led library music organ groover, but the radio concept makes it coalesce somehow - it's the quirky mixtape you never knew you needed.
At their best, the duo evoke another age of electronic music, like on 'Le Mans 2' where they excavate the sweet spot between Tangerine Dream's early experiments and Popol Vuh's "Affenstunde", using pitch-bent oscillators and dank, grimy drones. Even more upbeat moments, like the Ceephax or Kerrier District-referencing acid disco cut 'Vol du héron cendré' gives the feeling that if nothing else, Chimère FM was a project dreamt up with fun at forefront.