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noise.knru.polin.ski.ap.brid.gy
The Komoy Noise Research Unit
@noise.knru.polin.ski.ap.brid.gy
Welcome to The Komoy Noise Research Unit. A place for notes, plans, patches, polemic and confusion.

🌉 bridged from https://knru.polin.ski/ on the fediverse by https://fed.brid.gy/
Spotify Haters Club
You know something that is absolutely worth considering? Planning an exit from the culture-destroying, weapons-investing, ICE-advertisement platform known as Spotify, a place where music is seen only as a tool to destroy people's imaginations and flatten art into a homogenised, AI-friendly, beige churn of endless content to immiserate us all. It's not that any of the other streaming services are good, but Spotify is almost certainly the worst. Do not trust it. Do not let it turn your enjoyment of music into stats and algorithmic playlists. Do not let it quietly funnel AI-slop into your daily mixes. Do not let it sort you into woefully inaccurate micro-demographics to better sell your data to advertisers (what’s the chances it shares this arbitrary-human-classify tech to its weapons company interests to decide who’s allowed to not get bombed?). Do not willingly give it free advertising by sharing league tables of bands on your socials. Don't do it. It is appropriating all that is great about loving music, all that is great about being part of the communities that surround music, and weaponising it against us all! If you don't believe me, read this book and see if it changes your mind. Also, Brian Merchant recently wrote a fairly comprehensive how-to guide for leaving Spotify which is more practically useful than my contempt for them is. (Apologies for the Substack link... there's just no escaping these abhorrent tech companies is there). A year or so ago I took the relatively nerdy option of building my own Plex server. I filled it with mp3s of my old cd collection I’ve carried around forever on hard drives, bandcamp purchases, and songs foraged from various corners of the internet. It was the best music-related decision I have made in years. Plex offers only the vaguest of stats really. Just 'top ten most listened to artists'. Last year that chart was topped by Lana Del Rey followed by Ryuchi Sakamoto. This year it turned out to be... exactly the same. Which at first felt strange because I felt like I had listened to a lot more new music than last year. But then, like a not-particularly-profound-thing hitting me at a sensible speed, I realised both of these things could be true. My Lana playlist remains a go-to for many moments, and I still think she has written some all time bangers, but that playlist serves a particular function for me. It is not quite background listening (or 'lean back' listening as they'd call it internally at Spotify), but it also isn't exactly active listening. I guess it is wandering around or commuting music for when my brain is elsewhere. I still love listening to music I know inside out, that has travelled with me through large parts of my life. But it doesn't follow that music I only listen to a few times or even just once cannot also be impactful. I only read most books once, only see most films once. And — always wary of nostalgia — no matter how hard I might try, I will not be able to hear music for the first time and have the same reaction to it I did hearing new music in my teens or twenties. I bring too much to the text. I have seeped myself in noise for decades. This relationship has become different. I am still learning how to lean into that. But clearly, for me at least, not trusting any new music discovery to corporate algorithms is a step in the right direction. So abandoning that one stat Plex offered, I made a filter to show a playlist of tracks that I had not heard _before_ 2025 and that I had listened to at least once during this year and it became a _much_ more interesting selection. And so, with some light editorialising and removing things that I immediately decided were rubbish (I am looking directly at you, latest Taylor Swift record), here are some cool albums I actively listened to this year, as opposed to musical anaesthetic that I lazily wrapped around myself to block out the rising existential horror of existing in 2025. Bandcamp links where possible. Happy Spotify Wrapped Season! ### SOME GOOD MUSIC Ben Lukas Boysen - Alta Ripa // Just gorgeous synth work. Ben's stuff always sounds like being wrapped in analog silk. C Reider - The Mending Battle // What 'computer music' ought to sound like in a world where computers haven't become mostly awful and terrible. Calum Gunn - Eroder // Really, really good. Wrote about it HERE. Carly Rae Jepsen - E•MO•TION // Somehow I had never heard the whole album before. It's great. Clark - Steep Stims // Clark absolutely back on top form with microtonal weirdness and clanging bangers. Deftones - Private Music // It's another Deftones album. You already know exactly what it sounds like and what it does. Emptyset - Dissever // Another band who always sound reassuringly like themselves. Rarely do I listen to this kind of thing these days but nice to know it's still there. Grails - Miracle Music // Wrote about this HERE. Didn't stick with me as much as I thought it might, but that's my fault rather than the record's. Greet Death - Die in Love // Fantastic, heart-on-sleeve stuff inspired by all your 90's alt-rock favourites. JISOO - AMORTAGE // I just love this. Wrote about it HERE. Jungle Fatigue Vol. 1 // Will give you jungle fatigue. Two thumbs up. Jungle Fatigue Vol. 3 // As above. Kendu Bari - Drink For Your Machine // Some solid drum'n'bass production. Ledley - Ledley // Curious contemporary jazz. Sort of a bit like if Squarepusher were a brass-centric jazz band? Native Soul - Teenage Dreams // Can't remember how I stumbed across this. Electronic deep house from South Africa. Very good. It makes writing beats that people will want to dance to seem effortless. Noneless - A Vow of Silence // Some really great glitch production but it is sometimes overshadowed by occasional dubstep tangents that veer a little too close to Skrillex for me to be able to gel with. Papé Nziengui - Kadi Yombo // Lively folk (harp-based?) energy from Gabon. I bet this is great to see live. Paul Jebanasam - mātr // A gorgeous bruise of a record. Full of noise fluttering on the edge of distortion. Polygonia - Da Nao Tian Gong // Some pretty techno. Easier said than done. Tentacles of Destruction - Tentacles of Destruction // An old punk cassette I found on archive.org. It is VERY GOOD if you like mysterious old punk cassettes. The internet suggests they are from early 2000s New Zealand. Also the chorus of the first track sounds a lot like 'Perfect Teenhood' by ...And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead. TROVARSI x ALX-106 - Frequencies EP // Some tough, utilitarian techno. Easier said than done. Underworld - Strawberry Hotel // They've still got it, huh? Ψ - Again There is Nothing Here // End of the world synth growls. That kind of analog broadcast that is cold, clinical yet simultaneously bursting with a warm of kind of hope(lessness). Takashi Yoshimatsu - Symphony no. 2 // I know nothing about this and can't remember how or where I found it, but it is an absolutely sublime, really spectacular piece of work.
knru.polin.ski
December 4, 2025 at 10:11 AM
New Polinski Song on a Compilation for Palestine
I wrote a new song. It's called _garden_heart_ for some reason. Listening to it now I suppose it does kind of remind me of the hidden mess of unruly life and death you might find lurking just underneath the surface of a garden. Rhizomatic mycorrhizal networks passing messages through the soil. The autumnal mulching of fallen leaves into future food for whatever manages to come next. The tireless march of tiny creatures doing their best. That's just a wild guess though. I have no idea why I called it that. I don't even have a garden. You can find _garden_heart_ on _Compassion through algorithms volume III_ which is a fund-raiser that has been hastily pulled together by the Algorave community, building upon the 24hr Live Code Stream for Palestine the other week. It is out this Friday, 5th December, which is a Bandcamp Friday so if you wanna buy it, ideally do it on Friday instead of Pre-ordering it now so none of your money gets diverted into the pockets of the Bandcamp CEOs. It feels a bit odd to announce a song before anybody can hear it, but as anybody who has ever bought something on a Bandcamp Friday will now know, these days many musicians time their releases around them, meaning when the next one rolls around you receive a deluge of new release emails in your inbox and it is easy for music to get lost in the crowd. So this is a just a heads up. In a couple of days you can throw whatever you can afford at a good cause and get a treasure trove of electric weirdness in return. Compassion through algorithms volume III, by algorave45 track albumalgoraveswiggins ### LAST WEEK'S LIVE STREAM If you missed it you can find a lot (all?) of it archived here. I cannot pretend to have watched all of it, but I did have a great time just randomly clicking on sets and being rewarded with very cool music each and every time. My set is HERE, although the compression that happened somewhere along the way has obliterated my visuals. The set opens with a rough sketch of _garden_heart,_ the capture of which formed the basis for the finished track. TOPLAP Stream for Palestine November 2025 - polinski - 2025-11-22 11:45 : polinski : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet ArchiveTOPLAP Stream for Palestine November 2025 live performance by polinski from manchesternorthern sysex---> SHIPPING-CONTAINER ZEITGEIST // HYPERSONIC…Internet Archive I performed the whole set from a Dirtywave M8, which is a little handheld tracker thing that looks a bit like a futuristic gameboy. Mainly just to see if I could pull it off. The set was what a more optimistic person might call a 'romp', but which I will call a 'stumble' through lots of different sketches I've written on the M8 over the last couple of years. I was doing some light on-the-fly editing of the various patterns that were playing too. The visuals were a hastily re-jigged version of my current Polinski live show visuals. They seemed to have been well-received in the live chat during the set and I've started doing a write up of how they are made, just in case anybody's interested. It'll give me an excuse to record some more and upload a more high-resolution version somewhere too. If I ever finish writing it. ### MORE COMPASSION THROUGH ALGORITHMS Compassion Through Algorithms Vol. II, by Light Entries10 track albumLight EntriesDeepDarkDweller Speaking of the _Compassion Through Algorithms_ series, in case you missed it there's an exclusive 65daysofstatic track on the previous volume. Here: https://lightentries.bandcamp.com/album/compassion-through-algorithms-vol-ii Compassion Through Algorithms Vol. II by 65daysofstatic It's called _Renoiser_ and it went on to become the source material for a couple of the systems in _Wreckage Systems_ , but this is the only place to hear the canonical version. And also connected I'll give a quick bump to _Asymmetry_, another 65daysofstatic song that was put out to raise some cash for Medical Aid for Palestine a few years ago. Asymmetry, by 65daysofstatictrack by 65daysofstatic65daysofstaticSepix
knru.polin.ski
December 3, 2025 at 11:40 AM
The Meanness of Production
I just finished a book by Kohei Saito called _Slow Down_. It originally came out in Japan in 2020 and sold a quarter of a million copies, which seems like quite a lot for a book about Marxism and what Saito calls 'degrowth communism'. I can imagine how being released that first year of the pandemic helped it resonate with a wider audience. As terrible as those times obviously were, for me those earliest days of lockdown are also associated with a fleeting feeling of... I don't want to call it hope but perhaps... solace? Definitely not optimism, but at least a glimmer of _something._ Because the pandemic was real, it was serious and horrifying, and it forced the state powers of the world to show their hand and reveal that actually, they _could_ slow down capital if they really wanted to. Things _could_ be different, the world _could_ pivot at extraordinary speed when the stakes were high enough. None of that lasted. Those same powers spent the following years pushing that idea back out of the public's consciousness, forcing the world back into an endless reenactment of the 'this is fine' meme. But perhaps that sliver of time where we caught a glimpse of how the world could be made differently contributed to this book grabbing the imaginations of so many people. ### WE CAN REBUILD HIM, WE HAVE THE TECHNOLOGY The book's main argument: allowing capitalism to continue is fundamentally incompatible with civilisation surviving climate change. We must therefore transition to 'degrowth communism'. Slow down, work less, consume less, shrink economies, and so on. This view does not quite fit within a classic interpretation of Marxism that still requires all the productive forces of the world to remain chugging away in order for the workers to eventually seize them. So after setting out his broad idea, Saito spends a good chunk of the book reconstructing Marx, citing various pieces of evidence to show that Marx's thinking later in life, after writing _Capital_ , had evolved in significant, more environmentally-aware ways. Saito suggests that although _Capital_ -era Marx had a kind of proto-accelerationist opinion insomuch as he claimed that the path to communism lies beyond or _through_ capitalism, by the end of his life Marx came to realise that actually, if capitalism was left to run its course unaltered it would create a disastrous 'metabolic rift'. This is a very _Pacific Rim_ way of him saying that the churn of endless productive industry would become so untethered from any kind of sustainability that capitalism would destroy the environment long before it destroyed itself. There'd be no world left for the workers to win. Another way of putting this is that Marx disentangled himself from the idea of 'productivity' as a driver of change. I think what Saito means by this is that _Capital_ -era Marx (and therefore most Marxist theory since) describes historical progress as being driven by 'productive forces'. More things, better things, more effective things, increased technological complexity, better efficiency, etc. BUT, says Saito, the later Marx, more grizzled, more bearded, realised that this productive imperative would not and could not be sustained on our fragile and finite planet. There were other ways to model 'progress', other ways to think about routes out of capitalism, and probably not destroying the planet along the way was actually quite important. ### DECELERATE YRSELF With Marx duly reconstructed into a prophetic eco-warrior, Saito dangles Aaron Bastani of Novara Media's concept of _Fully Automated Luxury Communism_ like a kind of radical left piñata, then mercilessly smashes it to pieces with a big 'You're-Doing-Marx-Wrong' stick. Which, to be honest, I did find quite funny. I don't mind admitting that I did enjoy the idea of _Fully Automated Luxury Communism_ when it first start getting bandied about. I thought (and still think, to a somewhat lesser degree), that it was a useful way to think about utopias, to imagine better futures, and try to reclaim technology and various science fiction ideas from the tech bros and apply them to more egalitarian imaginaries. Did I at any point genuinely think that this was a viable future? That asteroid mining and synthetic lab-grown meat and so on would fix the world? I am pretty sure I did not. And so this is the one area that I'm not sure I follow Saito's thinking on. Not his stance on _FALC_ specifically — I think he is correct in his degrowth analysis — but his determination to take _FALC_ quite so _literally_ as an idea. I always thought it was more of a provocation, a critical thinking tool, a way to peek beyond the horizon of capitalist realism; not actually a genuine accelerationist manifesto. But perhaps that was an error on my part. Regardless! That was a long time ago. Things change. These days I prefer to take my utopias with a side of abyssal despair rather than space-based solar farms, and I prefer my communism to be more about making sure people can have nice parks and food, less about everyone-gets-a-flying-car/let's explore space forever. And so Saito's clear-eyed analysis is as convincing to me as it is bleak. We have to slow down. There can be no endless growth. Even 'Green Growth', can only be a transitional period, it cannot be the end goal. There is no 'good' capitalism, no 'good' economic growth. Finite planet, finite limits. Definitionally, capitalism is not equipped to deal with this. It has to be cast aside. As Adorno said: "progress occurs only where it ends". ### WHAT DOES THIS HAVE TO DO WITH MUSIC THOUGH? A great question. It's the one I always end up asking myself because ultimately, I don't know how not to ask it. 65days have been round the houses thinking about 'the end of progress' since we made _Wild Light_ , which was constructed from the ruins of an existential crisis informed by atemporality, hauntology, the slow cancellation of the future, all that postmodernity stuff that seemed so pervasive back then. We followed that up with _Decomposition Theory_; not explicitly decelerationist, but could be read as an act of hitting the wall of 'progress' (i.e. where do you go after building infinite plains of endless generative music?) and instead of pushing forward regardless choosing instead to pull back, to sculpt or 'de-compose' finite chunks of discrete music from the algorithms making blurs of infinite noise. And then most recently there was _replicr, 2019_ and _Wreckage Systems_, both of which found us stumbling around in Walter Benjamin's ideas roughly cribbed from the pages of _The Arcades Project_ and his _On the Concept of History_ essay which features the memorable take on the Angel of History. Perhaps a more widely-read philosopher than me could take Saito to task for his dismissal of this Benjaminian 'historical materialism' as merely a flawed view of history being driven by progress? Because I thought that Benjamin too was critical of such a thing, that the entire point of his _Angel of History_ parable was that there are many possible histories, all necessarily always written through the perspectives and biases of the present, containing the present in them even as they cast themselves backwards? And therefore 'history as progress' was just one inaccuracy amongst many? Also, despite the impossibility of a history built on progressive/productivity, that is nevertheless the unreality we've all been living, no? That is kind of the whole problem? I've tangled myself up here. The point is, in terms of thinking about all this in relation to music, I have been here before. And 'degrowth' as a concept is not new either. Environmentalists have been talking about this for decades; I am old enough to remember when 'contraction and convergence' was the framing of choice. Nevertheless, something about Saito's book _does_ feel new to me and I'd like to figure out what it is and how it could be used to think about music. (And also to, y'know, save the world and bring about an actually-good communism.) ### BECOME UNSTUCK IN TIME (BUT NOSTALGIA IS STILL THE ENEMY, RIGHT??) Trying to imagine what _degrowth_ could mean in terms of writing music brings to mind _Sinners_ , specifically (very mild spoilers) that great sequence where a musical performance manifests both the past and future (relative to the time period of the film) of Black music, a collaboration of musical ancestors, taking part in a conversation across time and yet all under the same roof. And perhaps there is something useful here? Because yes, new music is always _informed_ by music that came before, but that doesn't necessarily mean 'progress', certainly not if we look at music from phenomenological or political rather than technological viewpoints. There is no serious way to argue that new music is somehow objectively 'better' than old music. It can be more familiar, perhaps more clearly tied to all the other strands of popular culture woven into our little window of existence and therefore more relatable or exciting. But just because a piece of music might have been written a hundred or a thousand years ago it doesn't mean it cannot still be affective, or danceable, or be unable to achieve whatever its original intentions were. So perhaps music is a good lens through which to build history out of non-productive materials. All music is recycled, all music is a kind of time travel, always conversing with itself in every direction. I vaguely gestured at this idea with the entirely made up term 'neostalgia' in THE MUSIC ABOLITIONIST PROVOCATION. A way to look back into history without lapsing into the 'nostalgia mode' Fredric Jameson warned us about. But I think I spent so much of my life being suspicious of nostalgia that, when it came to music at least, I started to become suspicious of any kind of backward momentum. I guess re-examining why I remain convinced that nostalgia is the enemy (it _surely_ is!) might be a good place to point these thoughts next. ### VAGUE CONCLUSION? Yeah, I don't know how to wrap any of that up. I've got another draft on the go which is about the importance of being inefficient when composing. And blatantly stealing from Hegel's idea of 'good infinity' and 'bad infinity' I think there is 'good inefficiency' and 'bad inefficiency' and that this is something I find useful to think about in terms of making stuff. Now I've written whatever this is instead, I think that maybe applying the good kind of inefficiency to creative work could be a little like employing a degrowth approach? Let's see if I ever finish writing that up. * * * ### OTHER BITS & PIECES I'll be jumping on the _Live Code Stream for Palestine_ organised and hosted by Euler Room for a quick 15 minute set this Saturday 22nd November. My slot is at 11.45am, hopefully timed perfectly to ride my second coffee of the day caffeine wave. Dunno what I'll do yet but I imagine it will be based around my current live system. If it's any good maybe I can stick it on Bandcamp with proceeds going to Medical Aid for Palestinians or something. And if it's bad, maybe we can all just pretend it never existed and throw a bit of cash at MAP anyway. * * * ### Interview with The Verge 65daysofstatic’s new No Man’s Sky album searches for humanity in an AI-filled worldA return to the sci-fi universe.The VergeTom Regan There's a 50% chance that this article will be paywalled for you if you click through. It is an interview with me and Paul Weir (audio guy at Hello Games and recent collaborator on the new 65daysofstatic record), ostensibly about our new album but also about generative systems and generative music. Mainly notable because I didn't really expect the part of the conversation where I was blaming capitalism for ruining everything and going on about how much I hate generative AI to make it past _The Verge_ 's editors, but for some reason they decided that was kind of gonna be the hook of the whole article? It is almost as if the tech press is scrambling to pretend that they were never in thrall to the AI tech bro's bluster in the first place...
knru.polin.ski
November 20, 2025 at 11:20 AM
The Cliffs of Autumn
I am clinging on to my modest goal of getting these little dispatches out at least monthly. Much like we're all clinging to the cliffs of autumn as winter's tendrils creep upwards towards our ankles, ready to drag us down into half a year of grey misery. Here's a things-from-September update. ### **ALPACA FESTIVAL** I played a show at Alpaca Festival a couple of weeks ago. It was a lot of fun and it seems like a really great festival, I wish I could have stayed for the whole weekend. Sheffield has a really lovely live coding scene and so much interesting work seems to be growing out of it and constellating around it. (Is constellating a word? I think so?) There's something about that city that feels really invigorating in this particular way - spaces for small, arty projects and their communities. It felt like that all the way back when 65days were starting out making our glitchy noises, and while most of those spaces seem to have been swallowed up by the buy-to-let flat plague, it's reassuring that new spots continue to find gaps to squeeze into. I played mostly new material. It all felt pretty good and I think it could feasibly become a short new EP. But who knows how fast that will get finished. Let's hope it doesn't turn out to be an album because with everything else going on I think that would take about a decade. ### **NEW 65DAYSOFSTATIC ALBUM IS OUT** A new 65daysofstatic record came out! Well, a 65daysofstatic & Paul Weir album. It's called _No Man's Sky: Journeys_. Find it on your terrible streaming service of choice or on Bandcamp. Or Soulseek. I wrote about this already both _here_ and over on 65daysofstatic.com so won't go much into it again. Whereas the first NMS album was the soundtrack to _No Man's Sky_ but _also_ a new 65daysofstatic album, this new one is more comprehensively 'a _No Man's Sky_ ' album. Maybe this distinction doesn't matter to anybody else, and it certainly shouldn't be read as me wanting to create distance from this record—I'm really happy with it!—just that it is trying to do a different thing. It is a score to a massive, beautiful, sci-fi universe. Whilst that kind of sound overlaps 'the 65 sound' in a lot of ways, I think left to our own devices we've been moving into somewhat different territory since that first NMS album back in 2016. ### **MISC. GOOD THINGS FROM SEPTEMBER** I _stilllllll_ can't talk about the massive project that takes up most of my time and has slowed this blog down to a crawl. I am not complaining though, it's a thing I get to sink my best creative efforts into and I am having a great time. But I'll make sure _The K.N.R.U._ keeps ticking over, so when the next window for obscure noise experiments too-weird-for-65 eventually arrives, I'll still have somewhere to put them. Other than that... I finally got to the _heartwrenching_ ending of _Clair Obscura: Expedition 33_. What a triumph! Not since _Baldur's Gate 3_ has a video game pulled me in so deep. Great music too. If you play video games and like your melodrama _off the chain_ (and if you're reading this then I assume you do), it is well worth seeking out. If Jim Steinman had been French and made a video game, I think it'd probably have been this one. I hit a pretty unlucky streak of bad books throughout all September, so I will have to go back to August for a couple of standouts. _It Lasts Forever and Then it's Over_ by Anne de Marcken was one. A lot of the pull quotes talk about it being funny, and it is funny, but it is also heartbreakingly sad and somehow gets to the core of some really raw stuff about being human and being alive, despite it being about zombies. A unique piece of work. _Stag Dance_ by Torrey Peters I also mostly enjoyed. Not normally a fan of short stories but Peters' last book _Detransition, Baby_ was good enough that I didn't want to skip this. I wasn't that taken with the other stories in this collection, but the centrepiece (also called _Stag Dance_), is novella-sized, excellent, and goes hard enough to shake off what I felt were its less assured companion pieces. I also read Sally Rooney's _Intermezzo_ (absolutely fantastic, obvs) and Rachel Kushner's _Creation Lake_ (absolutely fantastic, obvs). Big, big fan of both these authors (I wrote about Kushner before) but I don't really know how to start writing about how these two novels in particular affected me. And also how by reading them back to back I accidentally gave myself this powerful one-two punch of... some kind of existential glimpse into _something (??)._ I dunno. But smashing through two masterful novels like this, both of them moving at very different velocities with different intentions, but with similar prowess and insight... it was great tbh. (Also, unending respect to Rooney for her ongoing support for Palestine.) Now I've written all that, I realise that it didn't occur to me to mention any music that I've been listening to, but I haven't really been listening to much recently. And in terms of _making_ music, it is things like novels, video games, communities surrounding festivals like Alpaca, and, you know, _the world_ that tend to inform what I make. Not so much other music. I'm not sure if that's always true, but that's how it seems at the moment. I did finally get around to checking out Lady Gaga's _Mayhem_ because those first two singles (_Disease_ and _Abracadabra)_ are TOP CLASS BANGERS and her whole thing in general I am a big fan of, so I thought I'd be into it. But I ended up being disappointed by how much of the rest of the album was disco-tinged filler. Oh well. I still need to check out the new Deftones. I bet it sounds like Deftones. That's it for now. Keep your eyes on the heroic act of humanity that is The Global Sumud Flotilla the next few days because as terrifying as the world currently is, I imagine being on those boats is even scarier. Byyyyye.
knru.polin.ski
September 26, 2025 at 11:56 AM
No Man's Sky Redux
This is explained more fully in [this 65daysofstatic post](https://www.65daysofstatic.com/no-mans-sky-journeys-new-album/ ) so I'll keep this short, but we have just announced a new _No Man's Sky_ album! It is called _No Man's Sky: Journeys_ and is by 65daysofstatic and Paul Weir (audio director at Hello Games). Nine years ago, shortly after the initial release of the _No Man's Sky_ and our soundtrack album, 65days wrote another batch of soundscapes for one of the early big game updates that _No Man's Sky_ has become known for. Unlike our initial _No Man's Sky: Music For an Infinite Universe_ soundtrack, these new soundscapes were written directly as generative music systems, intended to exist only in the game itself. They were never designed to be songs. Nevertheless, over the last year-ish, we revisited the original recordings, and slowly sculpted brand new song arrangements from all the raw material. This was quite a novel challenge. Nobody involved was interested in churning out another _No Man's Sky_ album for the sake of it. But approaching it this way - constructing intentional, fixed pieces from endless soundscapes, was a much more compelling prospect. Our music makes up 50% of this double album. The other 50% is music that Paul Weir has been adding to _No Man's Sky_ throughout the intervening years. It is lush, grand, hopeful, cinematic sci-fi, and it sits nicely alongside 65's growly, always-a-little-bit-sad flavour of sci-fi. We deliberately mixed all the songs through the same studio pipeline and weaved them together on the record to make it a cohesive _No Man's Sky_ album. More info at that link above. It is coming out 18th September. Here is a link to the two lead tracks that are already streaming: No Man’s Sky - Vostock / The Journey (Original Soundtrack)Go to No Man’s Sky - Vostock / The Journey (Original Soundtrack).Vostock / The Journey (Original Soundtrack) ### ALPACA FESTIVAL Got a bunch of new tunes to try out during my set at Alpaca Festival in Sheffield in a few weeks. I am playing Saturday night (13th September). Looks like a great line-up—James Holden has just been added to the bill of a load of other cool names—so if you're in the area you should come along. My set will look something like this: Tickets for both the Saturday night concert I'm playing at and the whole weekend festival are available HERE. And if you missed it, the other week I wrote a bit more about Alpaca and what I'm planning to try out.
knru.polin.ski
August 27, 2025 at 2:10 PM