1
Niko Tzoukmanis - Blue Valentine
2
Niko Tzoukmanis - Raindrops
3
Niko Tzoukmanis - Disorder
4
Niko Tzoukmanis - Green Belt
5
Niko Tzoukmanis - Floating Free
6
Niko Tzoukmanis - Free Hugs
7
Niko Tzoukmanis - Twinkle
8
Niko Tzoukmanis - Relief
9
Niko Tzoukmanis - Eastern Mantra
10
Niko Tzoukmanis - 24 Hours
11
Niko Tzoukmanis - The End
"Androids may not yet dream of electric sheep, but maybe computers do sing sad songs."
In 2013, Tzoukmanis released ‘Hope Is The Sister Of Despair’, issued here for the first time on vinyl with 4 previously unreleased tracks.
The album was made following the end of a relationship and the happy/sad feeling is everywhere in this music. Sequences twinkle and nag, soft pads pour balm on tired ears and when drums do appear they provide an intimate framework rather than a call to the dance floor. The album taps into a rich vein of sequencer romanticism, from Tangerine Dream-obsessed-‘Berlin School’ daydreamers to the whole nebula of music inspired by Warp’s Artificial Intelligence series. It also looks forward, prefiguring the return today, in troubled times, to the comforting inner space of ‘90s-worshipping ambient techno.
The German word ‘weltschmerz’, roughly translating as ‘world sadness’, fits this music well. The melancholy it inspires feels collective, almost heartening. Sorrow might be said to infuse the technology’s basic building blocks – Leibniz’s binary ‘one’ bereft of its ‘zero’, its presence twinned with absence. But there is hope, too, in the network of actions and decisions that have been fashioned here into melody and rhythm.
A1 - Blue Valentine
A2 - Raindrops
A3 - Disorder
B1 - Green Belt
B2 - Floating Free
B3 - Free Hugs
C1 - Twinkle
C2 - Relief
C3 - Eastern Mantra
D1 - 24 Hours
D2 - The End More
In 2013, Tzoukmanis released ‘Hope Is The Sister Of Despair’, issued here for the first time on vinyl with 4 previously unreleased tracks.
The album was made following the end of a relationship and the happy/sad feeling is everywhere in this music. Sequences twinkle and nag, soft pads pour balm on tired ears and when drums do appear they provide an intimate framework rather than a call to the dance floor. The album taps into a rich vein of sequencer romanticism, from Tangerine Dream-obsessed-‘Berlin School’ daydreamers to the whole nebula of music inspired by Warp’s Artificial Intelligence series. It also looks forward, prefiguring the return today, in troubled times, to the comforting inner space of ‘90s-worshipping ambient techno.
The German word ‘weltschmerz’, roughly translating as ‘world sadness’, fits this music well. The melancholy it inspires feels collective, almost heartening. Sorrow might be said to infuse the technology’s basic building blocks – Leibniz’s binary ‘one’ bereft of its ‘zero’, its presence twinned with absence. But there is hope, too, in the network of actions and decisions that have been fashioned here into melody and rhythm.
A1 - Blue Valentine
A2 - Raindrops
A3 - Disorder
B1 - Green Belt
B2 - Floating Free
B3 - Free Hugs
C1 - Twinkle
C2 - Relief
C3 - Eastern Mantra
D1 - 24 Hours
D2 - The End More