Back To Mine with Slumber

No night time Slumber from this suo, late night grooves all the way








Delia Derbyshire – Love Without Sound
Delia has always been a big inspiration in our original music. Love without sound is warm yet silly, almost like being in a dream state experience.

Glass Candy – Digital Versicolor
Digital Versicolor has a deep driving bass with beautiful, warm, up lifting vocals on top. Has a very 80’s  classic sound.

Thomas Cade – 03 Apophenia
Apophenia is one of those tracks that hits you deep. Full of emotions.

Andy Stott – Violence
Violence is so beautiful and very well spaced. The track builds ever so softly into this mountain of dark emotion.

Pete Namlook & Mixmaster Morris – Fishology
Fishology is one of those tracks that will never get old. Spacey atmosphere under strange electric vocals. So dreamy’

Björk – Hyperballad
Equally one of our favorite Bjork songs and always a huge influence to our art.

This Mortal Coil – Acid Bitter And Sad, 16:9
This Mortal Coil brings so much feelings to all of their music but this song in particular brings a whole new wave of emotions.

Ishq – The Invisible landscape
The invisible landscape is one long journey into an alien world. Perfect right before bed or ambient living room sets.

Blue Hawaii – Sparkle Market
Blue Hawaii is so fresh right now and next level. Sparkle Market is just one example of the places they can take you.

Bored Nothing – I Wish You Were Dead
Memories of driving in the city listening to this song, filled with so many emotions.

Slumber – Body Clock (Rhythm Digital)
Paul Loraine is excited to announce a new sub label to his main charge, Rhythm Cult, entitled Rhythm Digital. This new label will showcase fresh sounds from artists like Dan Baartz, Brenn & Cesar and Alex Jann, but kicks off with a killer three track selection from Slumber. Originally hailing from Tampa, Florida, Slumber is the duo of Amber Cox and Oona Dahl. They came together over a shared love of music and have clocked up credits for their fine machine sounds on Viva, My Favorite Robot, Bad Animal and many other fine labels. Combining the organic with the synthetic, the dark with the light, they have very much cooked up their own singular sound. The alluring ‘Body Clock’ goes first, with its wavy grooves, deep synths and slightly paranoid ambiances of skittish voices and wet claps. A deep, burrowing track, some tender piano chords and intimate vocals add a sensuous, romantic feel. It’s a fine opening cut, to be sure. Then comes ‘Round Rose,’ quicker and slicker techno leaning cut with disorientating chords, layered poly-rhythms and lots of lush synthetic texture. It’s a dead of the night back room record that makes for a spooky vibe, and is masterfully carried out. Last but not least, the brilliant ‘Shooting Salad’ is a loose, shuffling shimmering minimal cut with feathery grooves and restless snare patterns. It is absorbing and heady, intricate and kinetic and is a third different side to Slumber’s great sound. This is an auspicious way to mint a brand new label – a label that is sure to go on to great things, much like its parent outlet, under the knowing stewardship of Paul Loraine.

Slumber – Body Clock (Rhythm Digital) Out 5th October 2015 Cat. No. RCD001