My personal favourite release by Asian Glow so far. His experimentation with a heavy sound has really paid off and it makes for an intense and fun EP. Cans in Vain feels like an amazing closer with its softer styling and its anthemic ending. If I knew how to speak in Korean I would gladly scream sing along with the ending. Overall I hope to hear more like this from Asian Glow as it is some of my favourite writing of his.
Wow! This album is such a lovely journey. It feels like a greatest hits collection of a long lost artist from the 1960s. I wish I could write a 'good' review of this album, whatever that would mean. But I don't think I can. It is hard for me to quantify or grade this. It is just simply lovely. I feel pride listening to this as Canadian art is seldom thought about but this album feels so Canadian to me. It captures the emptiness of the prairies, the liveliness of the GTA and the ... read more
A far less interesting project then Ring of Tamyrlin's first release. Sometimes it felt like there were errors in the actual recording which took me out of the experience greatly. Dim's other works are very good so its a little shocking how hit or miss this release was.
Ring Of Tamyrlin's debut album, a strong and dense dungeon synth epic that flows along like a river.
It is music I enjoy studying too as it is creates a very thick ambience that the mind can get lost in.
A collection of lo-fi hiphop music. The beats are good and the various instrumental samples are also enjoyable. Sadly, I found every track to have the exact same flow --all starting with the instrumental sample before going into the main beat-- which really killed the vibes for me as it started feeling very samey.
| 100 | ||
| 90 - 99 | 1 | |
| 80 - 89 | ||
| 70 - 79 | ||
| 60 - 69 | ||
| 50 - 59 | ||
| 40 - 49 | ||
| 30 - 39 | ||
| 20 - 29 | ||
| 10 - 19 | ||
| 0 - 9 |