June 25th, 2026 2:57pm
Deep In The Scatter
Squarepusher “K10 Terminus”
I’ve been thinking about how so many of the people we’ve been calling “electronic” producers and artists since the 90s really should’ve been classified as composers from the start. I understand why they weren’t: it’s kind of a lofty term, it’s not very commercial, and early on the most novel selling point was that acts like Aphex Twin, Boards of Canada, μ-Ziq, and Autechre were largely working in an electronic mode and making futuristic music. But from this point in history, it’s pretty clear that electronic production was only a means to an end for most acts in this lane, and the game has always been about ambitious composition, not computers and synthesizers.
This is particularly true of Squarepusher, who was asserting himself as a jazz artist working in an “electronic” milieu by the late 90s. Jump ahead nearly 30 years to his new record Kammerkonzert and he’s fully in composer mode – the electronic elements are still there, but the emphasis is on jazz and orchestration. It mostly sounds like film music, but the compositions are so busy and detailed that it’s unlikely any of it could sit easily in the background of a movie. The songs are full of action and implied plot, a drama you can fill out with your own mental footage. The balance of genre is well-calibrated – the potential stuffiness of the chamber music aspect is loosened up by the madcap energy of the jazz elements, and the IDM of it all scrambles expectations and keeps anything from sounding too traditional.
Buy it from Bandcamp.
Goose “Good2B”
The jam band format is malleable enough to contain any genre elements a group of players cares to integrate, but the classics in the field have particular inclinations that shape their work – The Grateful Dead favored country and folk, Phish like to get funky. Goose, who have emerged as the top Millennial jam band, generally aim for “alternative” aesthetics. This can make them sound like Radiohead stripped of their bad vibes and uptight discipline, or like if Coldplay got a lot more interesting and experimental. More recently they’ve pushed in a more unexpected direction, drawing on the crisp and bombastic aesthetics of a very Patrick Bateman realm of 80s pop music. It’s a peculiar sound to mix into the jam band stew, in that they need to break the tight structures of that style to open space for jammy excursions. But the cocaine-jolt energy and bright sound suits the band well, and a little bit of intentional cheesiness makes Rick Mitarotonda’s earnest but hackneyed “we’re overwhelmed by too much information!” lyrics go down a lot smoother than if the tone was more serious.
Buy it from Bandcamp.









