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Startseite  Back Catalogue  Post Rock / Experimental

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Back catalogue: Post Rock/Experimental

Juno's full catalogue of Post Rock/Experimental
Artikel 1 bis 14 von 14 auf Seite 1 von 1 anzeigen
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z ALLE
Singles
Nanocluster Vol 3
Nanocluster Vol 3 (gatefold bio vinyl double 10")
Cat: VWM 59LP. Rel: 06 Mar 25
The Nameless (3:42)
Cross Pollination (7:04)
In Between Us (5:37)
Attitude (4:22)
In The Far Away (5:15)
Luminous (4:51)
Khamsin (4:30)
State Of Motion (4:53)
Review: So what happens when a European post-punk outfit meets an American 'ambient country ensemble'? The answer: A Nanocluster. In fact, three. This being the third. Immersion first met SUSS in September 2021, and the results were mesmerising. Three years on and the impact was no less staggering. Originally landing in September 2024, part tres takes us into the kind of musical places we're used to finding Spiritualized or Mogwai, and even then the references are misleading. For as many times as Nanocluster Vol. 3 sucks us into a thick soup of ambient and atmosphere, inviting us to get lost in opiate cloud formations, it also asks us to jump on board a stream train of rolling and driving rhythms, juggernauts gathering depth and complexity as they forge ahead. A stunning collection of highly evocative and incredible musical instrumentals.
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 in stock $25.23
Alben
Taba
Taba (LP)
Cat: RVNGNL 119. Rel: 24 Apr 25
Ishi (2:19)
Many (2:15)
Tonbo (2:12)
Horo Horo (1:12)
Mushi Dance (2:08)
Spells (3:12)
Nami (1:51)
Wakaranai (2:15)
Dottsu (3:09)
Kodama (3:32)
Tent (2:51)
Metallic Gold (2:36)
Omajinai (1:53)
Ghost (4:01)
Review: On her sixth full-length album, Tokyo's Satomimagae continues to refine her idiosyncratic fusion of folk, ambient and sound collage into something singular and quietly expansive. Hailing from Japan's acid-folk scene, Satomi's music often blurs the edges between the intimate and the cosmic, the rooted and the abstract. Taba floats beautifully in that liminal space. Rather than traditional song structures, she presents Taba as a series of open-ended vignettes, each radiating with a soft-focus clarity. The arrangements are centered around fingerpicked guitar, hushed vocals and ambient textures that are deceptively gentle. Closer listening reveals a rich interplay of glitchy electronics, subtle field recordings and haunted atmospheres. Tracks like 'Many' drift on echoing voices and vaporous folk melodies, while 'Tonbo' finds a summery sweetness in its fusion of pop and pastoral folk, complete with the sound of nature rustling at its back. 'Omajinai', perhaps the emotional core of the album, embraces traditional pop structure only to dissolve it into a haze of nostalgia and spectral warmth. Taba is not background music, it asks for deep listening, but rewards you with quiet truths and melancholic beauty.
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 in stock $26.35
Quique (reissue)
Cat: PURE 374LP. Rel: 27 Mar 25
Climactic Phase (#3)
Polyfusion
Industrious
Imperial
Plainsong
Charlotte's Mouth
Through You
Filter Dub
Signals
Review: Bridging the gap between guitar-driven rock and ambient techno - they would later become the first artist to bring guitars to Warp Records - Seefeel skillfully blended electronic loops with post-psychedelic basslines, mermaid-like vocals from Sarah Peacock and intelligent percussion. Their debut album for Too Pure in 1993 was both ahead of its time and timeless, offering a quiet revolution of repetition and downtempo somnolent soundscape, a record that remains beautifully undated. Tracks like 'Imperial'. 'Industrious' and 'Charlotte's Mouth' demonstrate Seefeel's knack for using guitars as electronic complements, layering hypnotic smears of feedback with Peacock's intimate whispers. The eight-minute opener, 'Climatic Phase No. 3', floats with barely-there percussion and a lazy, dreamy melody, while 'Filter Dub' delivers a sublime, drowsy bass line perfect for slipping into sleep. The album's structure leans into drone and quirky ambience, creating an experience more akin to a dream state than a traditional rock record. Quique feels proto-IDM, a precursor to the ambient-motorik noise-pop aesthetic that artists like Tim Hecker and Mouse on Mars would explore. Seefeel's early work remains a blueprint for electronic experimentation, demonstrating that the band's forward-thinking approach helped define a genre that continues to defy easy categorisation. Quique is not just a product of the 90s - it's a sonic vision that still feels fresh and boundary-pushing today.
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 in stock $33.63
Drifting
Cat: HD 24. Rel: 27 Mar 25
Computer Spiritus (1:03)
Hidden (4:07)
La Cascade (1:09)
Arps & Loops (3:14)
Chasing (1:49)
5th Floor (3:24)
Bad (4:18)
Mantrak (4:39)
Drifting (4:59)
Review: SFJ, formerly Sunglasses For Jaws, introduces 'Drifting', a nine-tracker tracing one duo's evolution from humble beginnings in a friend's shed to a fully realised studio in East London. The London duo blend lounge, experimental and groovy 70s influences with a modern edge. The offbeat 'Computer Spiritus' brings a quaint curiosity about it, while 'Chasing' prefers a fader-happy vignette in funky, action-sequent frequencies. Only the latter half of the record provides any longer extension, 'Bad' being the baddest of them all.
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 in stock $28.88
Agaetis Byrjun (reissue)
Agaetis Byrjun (reissue) (gatefold 180 gram 'meet me in the bathroom tile' deep blue vinyl 2xLP + booklet + insert with obi-strip)
Cat: VMP 2358LP. Rel: 27 Mar 25
Svefn-g-englar (10:27)
Staralfur (7:30)
Flugufrelsarinn (7:32)
Ny Batteri (7:57)
Hjartao Hamast (Bamm Bamm Bamm) (7:06)
Viorar Vel Til Loftarasa (10:04)
Olsen Olsen (6:41)
Agaetis Byrjun (7:36)
Avalon (4:07)
Review: Considered groundbreaking at the moment of its release, Sigur Ros' Agaetis byrjun, originally released in 1999, is a subtle and speechless blend of post-rock, ambient, and ether-electronica. The album propelled the Icelandic band to fame for its lush falsettos from Jonsi - which indulged a Cocteau Twins-esque conlang mixed with Icelandic, known among the band members as "Hopelandic." Tracks like 'Svefn-g-englar' and 'Staralfur' became instant classics, with a wide-berthed, cinematic feel, regaling the sense of standing at the edge of an ultimatum. The 2024 Vinyl Me, Please reissue now comes repackaged, offering it in a deluxe vinyl edition with remastered sound.
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 in stock $47.66
The Smegma Christmas Album
Cat: TES 178LP. Rel: 14 Jan 25
Santa Bring My Baby Back (1:52)
Auto Suk (8:11)
Whatever (For Now) (5:02)
Christmas Trees Are Free (4:16)
Beans In My Eyes (edit) (3:15)
The Cheez Stands Alone (Improvisation) (14:16)
Happy Holidays (TK version) (3:16)
Review: This reissue unearths a hidden gem from the Smegma archives, a Christmas album recorded in 1973 and finally seeing the light of day 50 years later. Originally captured in a San Diego garage, the album showcases the band's early sound, a wild and experimental blend of original songs and - it is Christmas, after all - an Elvis Presley cover. 'Santa Bring My Baby Back (To Me)' and 'Auto Suk' feature the captivating vocals of Ju Suk Reet Meate, while Amy's flute solos on 'Whatever (for now)' and 'Beans In My Eye' add a touch of psychedelic flair. The album also includes the quirky 'Christmas Trees Are Free' and the improvisational 'The Cheez Stands Alone', showcasing the band's eclectic and unpredictable nature.
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 in stock $36.44
Maps
Maps (LP)
Cat: MG 143. Rel: 13 Feb 25
Alpha & Omega
All Show & No Go
Ask For The Moon
All Eyes & Ears
All Rolled Into One
Alpha & Omega (reprise)
Review: Switzerland and Britain collide on the latest Mental Groove-facilitated collaboration between Sonic Boom and Sinner DC. An ambient record first laid to tape in 2013 to accompany live performances at the Festival La Batie in Switzerland, this six-track LP edition is but one half of a wider audiovisual experience, inspired by the idea of the limits of representation. Already building on both artists' trilling cross-sectional work in ambient ethertronica and shoegaze, this album pairs with visuals generated by Dutch artist Space Is Green using a modified ZDoom game engine.
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 in stock $24.40
Gimme Fever
Gimme Fever (LP + MP3 download code)
Cat: INVINC 39LP. Rel: 18 Mar 25
Wired Wyrd (5:33)
Tah-Tah-Kle'-Ah (5:27)
RF Conga (4:45)
Inanna (5:46)
UFO (5:03)
Gimme Fever (7:10)
Riding With Deat (3:38)
The Ocean (5:27)
Review: Outer-psychic dance orienteers Invisible Inc. return to the fore with a bright, effulgent, new wave and disco infused EP, Sordid Sound System's 'Gimme Fever'. A pungent, eight-track mini-record best played at a motorik tempo, this one wafts full Oort clouds of psychosomatic orga-noise in a refractive stylistic rain-ring, coming full circle on torrential synth cascades like 'Gimme Fever' and 'Inanna'. Opener 'Wired Wyrd' is circuitous and boxy enough, and keeps truer to a surfy song format, recalling early filter-glam James Ferraro. We reach a full, pavilioned exotic head within the plodding pergola that is 'The Ocean', up which rare vines climb a trellis made of tuned steel pans and reso-sploited marimba.
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 in stock $21.87
With Trampled By Turtles (Loser Edition)
With Trampled By Turtles (Loser Edition) (limited gatefold white vinyl LP)
Cat: SP 1680X. Rel: 29 May 25
Stranger (3:33)
Too High (4:05)
Heaven (1:58)
Not Broken (3:21)
Screaming Song (3:40)
Get Still (3:39)
Princess Road Surgery (3:04)
Don't Take Your Light (5:15)
Torn & In Ashes (3:09)
Review: Alan Sparhawk isn't one for large crowds or the showy side of fame, yet over the course of his career, his influence has expanded far beyond his low-key persona. As the frontman of Low, the band he founded in the early 90s in Duluth, Minnesota, Sparhawk's distinct style has permeated not just indie rock but also the broader sphere of music that prizes depth over spectacle. The hallmark of Sparhawk's songwriting is the austere, almost minimalist beauty he coaxes from the sparsest of arrangements. His approach to music is inextricable from his sense of placeiDuluth's biting winters, its isolationieverything about the environment feeds into the slow-moving intensity of Low's sound. Musically, the album moves through a variety of textures, from the folk-tinged melodies of 'Heaven' and 'Get Still' to the raw emotional power of 'Screaming Song' and 'Don't Take Your Light.' The latter is particularly stirring, with its swelling fiddles and cello lines, embodying the depth of feeling that pours out during the recording. There's a certain urgency to the musician immediacy that comes from being in a room full of people who understand what it means to create together. The track 'Stranger' is imbued with an intimate, communal spirit, while 'Torn & in Ashes' builds on layers of banjo and mandolin, giving it a rich, earthy feel. Even as the sounds shift, there's an underlying consistency in the raw honesty of Sparhawk's voice and the way the band responds to it. Overall, the record a sense of continuity, reminding us that music, when made with those closest to you, becomes a vessel for lasting memories and support.
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 in stock $24.95
Set
Set (clear vinyl LP)
Cat: BT 127. Rel: 13 Jan 25
I (18:01)
II (15:19)
Review: Konrad Sprenger, as any real heads will know, is a moniker of Jorg Hiller, who works in many fields including composing, producing and instrument building. His work seamlessly blends scientific exploration of sound with pop sensibility and humour. From the diverse instrumentation of albums like Miniaturen and Versprochen to the electric guitar explorations of Stack Music in 2017, Hiller's evolution is ever-captivating. Here he unites these elements into a playful, infectious epic performed by Hiller and the enigmatic Ensemble Risonanze Moderne with guest Oren Ambarchi weaving swirling harmonics into its vibrant soundscapes. These two side-long pieces feature polyrhythmic frameworks blending shimmering guitar harmonics, horns and synthetic bursts into a mix of avant-garde and techno wonderment. Hiller doesn't release very often but when he does, it's worth taking note.
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Gespielt von: Kaoru Inoue
 in stock $31.39
Cowards (B-STOCK)
Cowards (B-STOCK) (clear vinyl LP (indie exclusive))
Cat: WARPLP 368I (B-STOCK). Rel: 01 Jan 90
 
B-STOCK: Sleeve damaged but otherwise in excellent condition
Crispy Skin (6:20)
Building 650 (3:44)
Blood On The Boulders (4:16)
Fieldworks (I) (3:56)
Fieldworks (II) (3:23)
Cro-Magnon Man (3:59)
Cowards (5:48)
Showtime! (5:08)
Well Met (Fingers Through The Fence) (8:15)
Review: ***B-STOCK: Sleeve damaged but otherwise in excellent condition***


It's been a boom period for British post-punk, but with more than five years passing since the craze hit its peak, it's become easier to separate the wheat from the chaff and recognise those who are here to stay and those who had very little to sustain any interest. Squid are here to stay, having blossomed from their shouty beginning into one of the most compelling British bands of the past ten years, with genre-defying qualities and boundless creative spirit. This new album is about evil, nine stories whose protagonists reckon with cults, charisma and apathy. Real and imagined characters wading into the dark ocean between right and wrong. Recorded at Church Studios in Crouch End with Marta Salogni and Grace Banks and Dan Carey on additional production, it's a real gem with a real chance of being up for nomination at the next Mercury Prize ceremony.
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 in stock $24.66
All At Once
All At Once (LP + insert)
Cat: DE 332. Rel: 17 Jan 25
Littleness (3:13)
Daycare (8:21)
Steps (3:16)
Above (5:09)
People Like Us (5:31)
A Dedication (2:49)
Bright & Wild (4:18)
Form Changed (5:28)
Review: Sunfear is a project from Turkish multidisciplinary artist Eylul Deniz who now returns to Dark Entries with her sophomore album. Deniz has been making waves in sound since 2017 when she debuted her blend of ambient and experimental music using piano, guitar, voice and synths as tools for storytelling and self-expression. Inspired by Dante's Love That Moves the Sun and Other Stars, Pessoa's poems and Turkish poet Lale Muldur, this darker follow-up to Octopus channels some of her own personal loss and grief. Tracks like 'Above' pair sparse guitar riffs with swirling electronics, 'Bright and Wild' contrasts lush drones with jagged feedback and there are also hints of hope in the likes of 'Form Changed.' A great return.
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Gespielt von: Josh Cheon
 in stock $26.08
Died In The Wool: Manafon Variations (reissue)
Cat: 655759 1. Rel: 30 Jan 25
Small Metal Gods (5:04)
Died In The Wool (5:59)
I Should Not Dare (For NO) (3:12)
Random Acts Of Senseless Violence (6:22)
A Certain Slant Of Light (For MK) (4:24)
Anomaly At Taw Head (4:07)
Snow White In Appalachia (5:59)
Emily Dickinson (3:27)
The Greatest Living Englishman (Coda) (3:05)
Anomaly At Taw Head (A Haunting) (3:07)
Manafon (4:03)
The Last Days Of December (6:21)
When We Return You Won't Recognise Us (18:04)
Review: Manafon by David Sylvain of Japan fame is an underrated gem. The electroacoustic improvisation, complete lack of drums, coupled with Sylvain's voice right at the front of the mix, makes for an ambient, freeform and highly experimental sound. The art-pop sonics that saw him gain success in the 70s and 80s is left firmly in the past and he's doing exactly the music he wants hear - not what's expected of him commercially. Now, on vinyl for the first time, comes remixes by classical contemporary genius Dai Fujikura - he wrote the string parts - of six songs from said album. There's also new songs, heavily influenced by Fujikura and an 18-minute piece ('When We Return You Won't Recognise Us') culled from a much longer sound installation that Fukikura and Sylvain created together for the 2008-09 Biennial of Canaries in Gran Canaria. How music this sublime hasn't been on vinyl from the start is beyond us. Thankfully, that's now rectified.
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 in stock $40.09
The Good Son vs The Only Daughter: The Blemish Remixes
David SYLVIAN / VARIOUS
Cat: 655758 6. Rel: 30 Jan 25
The Only Daughter (Ryoji Ikeda remix) (6:11)
Blemish (Burnt Friedman remix) (4:28)
The Heart Knows Better (Sweet Billy Pilgrim remix) (4:18)
A Fire In The Forest (Readymade FC remix) (6:07)
The Good Son (Yoshihiro Hanno remix) (4:33)
Late Night Shopping (Burnt Friedman remix) (2:52)
How Little We Need To Be Happy (Tatsuhiko Asano remix) (4:35)
The Only Daughter (Jan Bang & Erik Honore remix) (8:05)
Blemish (Akira Rabelais remix) (7:31)
Review: You can go one of two ways as an artist when you've had pop success early in life: you keep the wheel because the wheel isn't broken. Or you change the wheel and reinvent yourself and make music that's true to yourself and not guided by commercial expectation. David Sylvain has done the latter with aplomb. At the time of making this album, which is the companion album to Blemish (2003) and now on vinyl for the first time, he was free from the shackles of a major label and diving headfirst into improvisation. You can't even faintly hear echoes of the band that made his name - new wave icons Japan. For these remixes Sylvian worked with the likes of Ryoji Ikeda, Burnt Friedman, and Readymade FC, although some songs were re-recorded rather than remixed. 'Late Night Shopping', remixed by Friedman, is a great entry point to this work, with dark beats and eerie noises, making for an atmospheric triumph. This is an album that pushes music as an artform forward. Long may Sylvain continue.
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 in stock $32.24
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