Artist
Label
emptyset
Dissever
Thrill Jockey
/
2025
Includes Instant Download
LP (blue marbled)
29.99
thrill631lpx / Includes Download Code
Edition of 500 copies
Pre-Order: Available on / around May 23rd 2025
CD
15.99
thrill631cd
Pre-Order: Available on / around May 23rd 2025
Incl. VAT plus shipping / Orders from outside the EU are exempt from VAT
Tracklist
1Gloam 6:48
2Aether
3Penumbra
4Dissever
5Lucent
6Antumbra
7Dawn

emptyset, James Ginzburg and Paul Purgas, explore both spatial and physical properties of sound; specifically the perceptible boundaries between it and noise. They have produced installations for Tate Britain and the Architecture Foundation in London. emptyset’s new album Dissever continues their exploration of the histories of 20th century electronic sound and media. Dissever delves into the intertwined evolution of cosmic rock, minimalism and electronic music, viewed through their prospective dreams and overlapping technological ambitions. Premiered at Tate Modern as a live performance, Dissever was part of the exhibition Electric Dreams, a large-scale survey of the global history of art and technology. The resulting album is astoundingly sublime, rich with sonics that are as thrilling and immediate as they are singular and dense with complexity.

The compositions across Dissever draw threads from pioneering production methods emerging in parallel across the late 1960’s, considering the cross talk between these fields and their radical intentions to carve out the future from differing paths, traversing the mystical and modern, while incorporating elements of the transformative, hypnotic, expansive and transcendent to define new principles within sound. The arrangements, performed live and captured in single takes, emerged across a series of sessions at long term collaborator Mat Sampson’s recording studio in Bristol. This process revisited early hardware, spatial and multitrack recording techniques to create a dynamic body of material that could look back to these foundational musical forms and converge them through the lens of a reimagined timeline, cultivating a transmission from 1969 to the present and a sensory bridge to the past.