A self-proclaimed "57 minute long opus into ecocide and planetary divorce". In terms of it's themes, this album is very much James Ferraro's counterpart to last year's Oneohtrix Point Never record Age Of. Out of the two, this is definitely a more understated imagining of a post-human Earth. Although not explicitly what is trying to be portrayed here, I like the imagery of some other-worldly deity observing the aftermath of our errors and it's subsequent interpretation of those events. ...
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