Tag: ambient

  • Glint Interview: Glint on Hope, Quiet Strength, and the Art of Reduced Sound

    Glint Interview: Glint on Hope, Quiet Strength, and the Art of Reduced Sound

    Glint is the atmospheric electronic project of Martin Stehl, blending ambient air, chillout pulse, and cinematic detail into warm, emotionally direct sound. With roots in decades of production across pop, house, and electronic music, he now focuses on music that turns landscape, memory, and motion into immersive listening experiences.

    Glint

    Introduction

    Q: For those who don’t know you yet: how would you describe Glint in a few sentences—and what kind of emotional space do you want your music to open for listeners?

    Glint: Glint brings together different musical influences and forms something of its own. Sometimes the music is very reduced and clear; at other times, it is multilayered and full of fine details. I’m fascinated by this interplay between simplicity and depth, and by the blending of different genres. What moves me most is when listeners tell me that my music affects them deeply.

    Q: Your career began in the 1990s with pop and house production, long before Glint became your cinematic instrumental outlet. What were the key turning points that led you from the club-oriented world into these quieter, more atmospheric soundscapes?

    Glint: Good question. I’m also drawn to storytelling—music that not only works in the moment or in a club context, but also carries a narrative. Glint ultimately emerged from that process—not as a conscious break, but more as a natural evolution of what has always interested me musically, yet had not fully come to the surface before.

    Latest Work

    Q: Hope is your fourth studio album—and it’s the first time piano-based compositions step into the spotlight. How would you describe this album in your own words, and where does it sit in your evolution as Glint?

    Glint: Through the piano compositions, a new stylistic and sonic layer emerges—distinct melodic themes, reduced to a few instruments and clear structures. For me, this is an important step in my development with Glint—a kind of condensation in which I try even more to create depth and atmosphere with minimal means.

    Q: The press text says, “Sometimes hope is not born out loud, but in silence.” While making Hope, what emotional or conceptual thread did you keep returning to—and what does “hope” mean to you in sound?

    Glint: For me, with “Hope,” there was always this feeling that hope is not something loud or imposing. It is something fragile that emerges between the notes. The thread running through it was not a straight path, but more of a circling motion. In sound, hope does not mean a radiant resolution. It is more like a floating chord that never fully resolves—an open space in which something can emerge.

    Creative Approach

    Q: Hope feels deliberately reduced: warm, organic, and spacious, with subtle electronics supporting the core ideas. How did you approach writing, sound design, and arrangement for this album—and what did you do differently compared to Estival Arvo, Human, or The Beginning?

    Glint: This time, I wrote everything on the piano and then created the sounds I imagined for it. When arranging, I rely on intuition. I often have a sense of the spaces where things will happen. In contrast to my previous albums, I only used the DAW when there was no other option.

    Personal & Creativity-Related

    Glint

    Q: Do you have a routine or ritual that helps you stay inspired—especially when you’re working with subtle emotions and minimal elements? Or do your best ideas come from spontaneity?

    Glint: Often, an idea doesn’t arise at the instrument or in the studio, but from an impulse in daily life that triggers a melody, a chord progression, or a rhythmic pattern. Ideas emerge in quiet environments—when I isolate myself. I experiment mentally with melodies and basslines, and I can already hear certain aspects of an arrangement. I don’t write things down—good ideas are not forgotten. When the time comes, I develop them concretely on my instruments and move into the production phase, where I start working quite early with synthetic sounds and sound design.

    Q: How do you deal with creative blocks, self-doubt, or periods of silence—when the studio suddenly feels empty instead of inspiring?

    Glint: Well, as often happens, there are tunes that don’t fit the format or ideas that lead nowhere. Then I usually take a few days off and return to the studio with fresh ears. Most of the time, I know how to continue quickly.

    Inspiration & Listening

    Q: Which artists or albums have inspired you most recently—and what exactly about them sparked you?

    Glint: Recently, I listened to Joni Mitchell’s jazz album “Both Sides Now.” It features beautiful orchestral arrangements of well-known jazz pieces, reworked by Vince Mendoza.

    Q: If you could recommend one piece of music—any genre—that everyone should listen to at least once, what would it be, and why?

    Glint: Bach—“Air” (Orchestral Suite No. 3 in D major, 2nd movement). It is incredibly beautiful and, to me, it has a spiritual energy.

    Creative Philosophy & Vision

    Q: What role do experimentation and risk-taking play in your music today? For example: shifting from “more elements” to “less,” introducing piano as a lead voice, or letting a track stay fragile instead of ‘fixing’ it.

    Glint: Experimentation is very valuable to me—this is often where interesting ideas emerge. It means taking unconventional paths in music—melodies that unfold slowly, harmonies that don’t follow the expected course. It’s about breaking down familiar patterns and exploring what lies beneath them.

    From Silence to Sound – Creative Identity

    Glint
    Glint

    Q: I often explore how personal decisions shape a musician’s signature sound. Which choices most strongly define yours—your harmonic language, your relationship to groove, your instrument palette (piano/textures), your mix aesthetics, your sense of space?

    Glint: I try to see and hear everything. It’s the whole picture—the interplay of melody, bass, harmony, and rhythmic intricacies—that fascinates me, especially in more complex music that requires more elements. In those moments, I feel more like an arranger filling in the gaps than an instrumentalist.

    Closing

    Q: What do you hope listeners feel or take away when they experience Hope—especially on days when they need calm, reflection, or a reset?

    Glint: The album invites reflection and, hopefully, conveys to listeners the feeling that hope is still possible.

    Q: If you could give one piece of advice to someone at the beginning of their creative journey, what would it be?

    Glint: I think you should be open to all styles and try out what you enjoy most. Personally, I approach music with joy. You should love engaging with music—and I simply cannot get enough of it.

    Q: Finally, what’s next for Glint—after Hope? What should we be looking forward to?

    Glint: Well, if I knew that… it will continue, so let’s be surprised.

  • Christoph Sebastian Pabst Interview: Christoph on Place‑Inspired Electronica, Creative Freedom, and Capturing the Now

    Christoph Sebastian Pabst Interview: Christoph on Place‑Inspired Electronica, Creative Freedom, and Capturing the Now

    Christoph Sebastian Pabst creates melodic, place-inspired electronica where deep-house pulse meets ambient air—music that turns landscape, memory, and motion into warm, emotionally direct sound.

    The Interview

    Introduction

    Q: For those who don’t know you yet: how would you describe yourself as an artist in a few sentences—and what kind of emotional space do you want your music to open for listeners?

    Christoph: I see myself as a producer and artist who is fundamentally free and independent. While I try to maintain a certain artistic line, my influences are quite diverse. If you stream my music, you might not always find a single “red thread” because I move between Ambient, Neoclassical, Chillout, Downbeat, and Deep House. But for me, it is always about a feeling, a specific emotion that is present the moment I create. It can range from deep melancholy to pure happiness. Honestly, I don’t even feel like a musician in the traditional sense, as I haven’t mastered any instrument. I wouldn’t belong on a stage, unless it was just to turn a cutoff knob or slide an envelope. I’m a creator of moods.

    Q: Your journey includes phases of growth, a longer pause, and a strong return with a clear identity. What was your path into music like—was there a defining moment when you knew you wanted to create your own worlds through sound?

    Christoph: I fell in love with pianos and keyboards very early on. My sister took lessons on an upright piano at home, and whenever it was free, I would sit down and improvise. I never had formal lessons; to me, sheet music looks like hieroglyphics.

    In the early 90s, the Amiga 500 opened the door to electronic music for me. I was the first in my circle with an 8-bit sampler, playing sounds via the computer keyboard using a 4-track tracker. Eventually, I built a full studio in my basement with legendary gear like the MS-20, Juno 60, and TB-303. But back then, I didn’t truly understand the technical side of production, the sound was often muddy. After a brief stint releasing Disco House on vinyl and later moving away for my medical studies and starting a family, music faded into the background for years.

    The turning point came years later while I was traveling as a locum doctor. I rediscovered my old ideas and felt it was a tragedy to let them be forgotten. I sent them to you, Thomas — we had met years earlier through a classified ad — and that spark led to our first song, Pastellstrand, and to our albums Meerblick and Bergblick. That return to music felt like coming home.

    Latest Work

    Q: How did the Chiemgau region shape “Chiemgaumorgen” and “Traunnebel,” and what do you hope listeners feel when they hear them?

    Christoph: Right now, I’m working on a beautiful new project with…you! That will eventually become an album. It’s inspired by the Chiemgau region where I live. The first songs, Chiemgaumorgen and Traunnebel, are quiet Ambient pieces with a Neoclassical touch. It’s music for wandering through nature, for standing by the lake or in the mountains, and simply marveling at the world. It’s best heard when you want to relax and breathe.

    Q: How would you describe this release in your own words—and where does it sit in your evolution as an artist right now?

    Christoph: I tend to find ideas and inspiring sounds very spontaneously. Because of my medical profession and my family, I often don’t have the time to get lost in the tiny technical details of mixing and mastering. I am incredibly grateful to you Thomas for that. You are a master of clarity and depth. You handle the final polish, the Dolby Atmos versions, and the visual side. This allows me to stay in the pure creative flow of finding that initial spark.

    Q: Your work often feels connected to specific places and moods—Bavarian landscapes, lakes, mornings, islands, wide horizons. What emotional or conceptual thread did you keep returning to while making this new piece?

    Christoph: The Chiemgau is a landscape of contrasts. You have wide plains and gentle hills meeting the jagged edges of the Alps and the vastness of the Lake Chiemsee. I am captivated by the reflections in the still water at sunrise, the mystery of morning fog, and that tension between vastness and limitation. It’s where reality and fantasy meet.

    Creative Approach

    Q: How did you approach the creative process for this project—writing, sound design, arrangement, mixing? Was it different from your earlier releases?

    Christoph: My process is very intimate. I sit at my desk at night with my MacBook, my Genelec speakers, and my master keyboard. I’ll pull up a beautiful felt piano or a synth pad, add some reverb and delay, and then I just close my eyes and play. I visualize the mountains and the water, and usually, a perfect basis for a song emerges surprisingly quickly.

    Q: Can you describe a moment during the creation where everything clicked—or almost fell apart? What changed the outcome in the end?

    Christoph: There are dry spells, of course. Sometimes the sound is right but the melody is wrong. I’ll sleep on it, throw out everything that doesn’t resonate, and start fresh with whatever fragment felt “real.” For this Chiemgau project, focusing on Ambient has been a relief. I’ve always struggled with beats and rhythms — I often have something in my head that I can’t translate to my satisfaction. By letting the beats go, the melodies just flow out of me.

    Personal & Creativity-Related

    Q: Your music often feels like it’s born from place: you translate landscapes into harmony, texture, and rhythm. What does a “real location” become in your studio—chords, tempo, sound palette, silence?

    Christoph: The Chiemgau is soft and warm. The sound of this place, to me, is analog and living, but never harsh. In the studio, this means the filters on my synths are never fully open; the frequencies aren’t too high. The bass has a solid foundation. It’s a slow, evolving sound — not “pure” ambient that just drifts, but something that carries a melody, blurring the lines with Neoclassical and Chillout.

    Q: Your sound balances an emotional warmth with clean electronic production. Do you have a routine, ritual, or habit that helps you stay inspired (certain hours, a walking route, a first sound you always start with)—or do you thrive more on spontaneity?

    Christoph: It’s almost entirely spontaneous. I need a sound that fits the exact moment. When I find a preset that moves me, I start shaping it — swapping a square wave for a sawtooth, playing with the envelope and the stereo image until it feels alive.

    Q: How do you deal with creative blocks, self-doubt, or periods of silence—especially when you’re working with subtle emotions and minimal elements?

    Christoph: If it’s not working, I walk away. I’ll bounce a rough idea and listen to it in the car or at breakfast. Often, the solution comes to me while I’m not at the desk, and I can’t wait to get back to it.

    I’ve also consciously stepped back from social media. I found myself “killing time” by scrolling, and it didn’t feel good. I prefer the “real” silence now. True silence can be haunting at first because it forces you to face yourself, but it’s where the best ideas live.

    Inspiration & Listening

    Q: Which artists or albums have inspired you most recently, and why? (Harmony, groove, sound design, storytelling, restraint—anything that sparked a new idea.)

    Christoph: I don’t actually listen to music around the clock — I need space for conversations and family life. But I am moved by artists like Ólafur Arnalds or Two Lanes. I admire their sense of restraint. For a while, I was fascinated by Dreamscapes — how a simple, expressive melody can feel so complete.

    Q: If you could recommend one piece of music—any genre—that everyone should listen to at least once, what would it be?

    Christoph: That’s hard! I grew up inspired by Vangelis and Jean-Michel Jarre, but I’d probably point toward the classics like Phil Collins, Depeche Mode or Sting. They laid the foundations for everything we do today.

    Creative Philosophy & Vision

    Q: Your music walks a fine line: it can be functional (focus/relax) and still emotionally meaningful. What role do experimentation and risk-taking play in your music—and where do you allow yourself to break your own “rules”?

    Christoph: I don’t really have “rules” to break because I don’t think in terms of theory. I often realize after a song is finished that it isn’t in a 4/4 time signature. My project Toteles was my space for going “all over the place” experimentally, even if it wasn’t a commercial success. It was pure joy.

    Q: If there were no limits—no budget, no deadlines, no technical restrictions—what would your dream creative project look like? (A concept EP tied to places, a long-form album journey, film/series scoring, immersive audio, a live setup, etc.)

    Christoph: I’ve always wanted to score a film. I’ve entered competitions before, and while I didn’t always hit the “jury’s taste,” I know I could create something deeply emotional for a quiet, contemplative movie — drama, science fiction, fantasy, romance or documentary film.

    From Silence to Sound – Creative Identity

    Q: I often explore how personal decisions shape a musician’s signature sound. Which choices do you feel most strongly define your sound—your chord language, your relationship to groove, your instrument palette (felt piano / organic textures), your mix aesthetics, your sense of space?

    Christoph: My sounds have very few overtones; I avoid harsh highs. I prefer felt piano over a grand piano, and I like my chords to have a bit of a “wrong” note in them, something that creates a subtle contrast. I couldn’t tell you the names of the chords, but I know how they feel.

    Q: You also release music under the name TEPON. What made you create a second identity—and what is different there (emotion, tempo, storytelling, sound palette)? How do you decide which idea belongs to Christoph Sebastian Pabst vs. TEPON?

    Christoph: TEPON was an attempt to create a “pure” Ambient identity, partly to escape my struggle with beats. But truthfully, the lines are blurring. The Chiemgau project with you occupies that same soul-space.

    Closing

    Q: What do you hope listeners feel or take away when they experience your music—especially on days when they need calm, clarity, or a reset?

    Christoph: I want them to feel themselves, to notice the nuances of being alive. I want the music to help them connect with the world and feel a deep gratitude for what we have. It’s about making the things that fade in the busyness of everyday life shine again.

    Q: If you could give one piece of advice to someone at the beginning of their creative journey, what would it be?

    Christoph: Just start. You don’t need a Moog or a professional studio. Sit down, experiment, and learn from how you feel while playing. Ask for help, watch tutorials, but most importantly: don’t try to be someone else. You are interesting and valuable exactly as you are. The world is waiting for your unique story, not for more of the same.

    Q: You’ve collaborated in different constellations (duo projects, remixes, joint singles). What do collaborations teach you about your own sound—and how do you keep your personal artistic identity strong inside a shared process?

    Christoph: I learn so much through collaborations. I draw a lot of inspiration from the exchange with another artist, it always brings forth something entirely different than if I had created the music alone in isolation. It develops this genuine sense of “we,” a true togetherness. Of course, it’s all part of the journey: sharing the joy of a breakthrough, and sometimes perhaps being briefly irritated by an influence that doesn’t quite seem to fit at first. But it is exactly this exchange that fulfills me. You share the music with someone long before the world outside hears it. I enjoy that very much, and I’m always thrilled whenever I find new input from you or suddenly discover an idea or a finished song in my inbox to check out. It makes the entire process come alive.

    Q: Finally, what’s next for you—what should we be looking forward to?

    Christoph: More singles with you Thomas, leading up to an album! But to be honest, we don’t have a name for it yet. I think we should keep it simple and pure. How about just Chiemgau, or perhaps Chiemo, the namesake of the region? Whatever we decide, it’s going to be something very special. I’m just so happy to be on this journey with you again!

  • MALIWA Interview: MALIWA on Guitar-Driven Lo-Fi, Jazzy Chillhop, and Creative Consistency

    MALIWA Interview: MALIWA on Guitar-Driven Lo-Fi, Jazzy Chillhop, and Creative Consistency

    MALIWA crafts chilled, jazz-infused lo-fi that feels like a small daily reset—warm chords, soft groove, and a guitar-minded sense of touch that turns simple moments into atmosphere.

    MALIWA

    The Interview

    Introduction

    Q: For those who don’t know you yet: how would you describe yourself as an artist in a few sentences—and what does the name MALIWA stand for in your musical world?

    MALIWA: MALIWA is one of my music projects, which I started in 2022. I have a lot of different musical tastes, but everything I make in the lo-fi, jazzy beats, and chillhop world flows into this project.

    Q: You’re extremely consistent and prolific—your discography is huge. Looking back: what was your journey into lo-fi, and was there a defining moment when you knew this “chilled + jazzy” direction was your lane?

    MALIWA: A few years ago, one of my guitar students wanted to learn a song by L’indécis. I loved it and fell down the rabbit hole—after the lesson, I listened through his entire discography. I was so hooked that I tried composing something in that direction myself, and the ideas kept coming. I stuck with it and went deeper and deeper into the genre.

    Latest Work

    Q: Your releases often feel like snapshots—compact, direct, and mood-first. Where do you feel your sound is right now compared to earlier MALIWA tracks, and what are you consciously refining?

    MALIWA: I hope my sound has improved over the years. I’m trying to get faster and more confident with recording and producing—and especially with capturing the mood I hear in my head. Starting MALIWA was when I really began to dive deep into production.

    Q: There’s a clear atmosphere running through your catalog—cozy, relaxed, jazzy, and emotionally “light on its feet.” What emotional or conceptual thread do you keep returning to when you write?

    MALIWA: I don’t chase a specific concept—I let inspiration lead the way. Luckily, I almost always have ideas when I sit down at my instruments. Fingers crossed it stays that way.

    Creative Approach

    Q: When a new track starts, what usually comes first for you: a chord progression, a drum pocket, a sample/texture, a guitar phrase, or a specific emotion?

    MALIWA: I don’t have a fixed process—every track starts differently. I can be inspired by almost anything: a chord, a little lick, a drum groove, a new sound, or a mood. Whatever shows up first becomes the starting point, and from there, I build the track.

    Personal & Creativity-Related

    MALIWA

    Q: You share a lot of your world through Instagram. How do visuals and short-form content shape your creative process—does social media inspire you, pressure you, or help you stay connected?

    MALIWA: For me, social media is at its best when it does what it was meant to do: connect you with inspiring people around the world. It’s how I’ve found almost all of my collaborators, and I love discovering new ideas through other artists’ channels. But if I’m being honest, it can get overwhelming fast—and I still catch myself spending way more time on it than I should.

    Q: Do you have a routine or ritual that helps you stay productive—or do you thrive more on spontaneity?

    MALIWA: I don’t really have a routine. But I usually have works-in-progress with other people, so I’m always motivated to move things forward. I want each track to be as good as I can make it—that’s what drives me.

    Q: How do you deal with creative blocks, self-doubt, or periods of silence—especially when you’ve built a project that’s known for regular releases?

    MALIWA: I allow it. It’s rare for me to have no ideas—usually, as soon as I focus, I start creating. But I don’t panic anymore if nothing shows up for a while. I keep learning, let myself be inspired, and it comes back. Luckily, that’s always been the case for me.

    Inspiration & Listening

    Q: Which artists or albums have inspired you most recently—and what did they unlock in you creatively (jazz harmony, drum swing, sound design, texture, arrangement, mix choices)?

    MALIWA: I’ve been listening to a lot of Kenny Burrell lately—an American jazz guitarist with incredible flow and versatility. I’d love to absorb even a small piece of that and bring it into my own playing. And I’ve been a big fan of Tom Misch for years—a superb songwriter, producer, and all-round talent.

    Q: If you could recommend one piece of music—any genre—that everyone should listen to at least once, what would it be (and why that one)?

    MALIWA: Then maybe a L’indécis track. I’m not sure everyone needs to hear it, but it started this whole journey for me—and it’s still super groovy and tasteful: “L’indécis – Soulful.”

    Creative Philosophy & Vision

    Q: In lo-fi, the line between “beautiful” and “generic” can be thin. What role do experimentation and risk-taking play in your music—and what do you do to keep your sound fresh while staying MALIWA recognizably?

    MALIWA: Experimentation is very important to me—I could do it all day. I’m open to all kinds of music and influences, and I’m always trying new things and creating unpredictable moments. I make music with whatever I can get my hands on. I’m not sure I have a clearly recognizable style yet, but exploring is the best way I know to develop one.

    Q: If there were no limits—no budget, no deadlines, no technical restrictions—what would your dream creative project look like?

    MALIWA: I’d love to write an album with Tom Misch and L’indécis—and then tour it with them.

    From Silence to Sound – Creative Identity

    MALIWA
    MALIWA

    Q: I often explore how personal decisions shape a musician’s signature sound. Which choices most strongly define your sound—chord language, groove, drum texture, instrument palette, the way you treat “imperfection,” your mix aesthetics?

    MALIWA: I don’t have a specific strategy for that, but you’ll probably always hear my guitars in my songs.

    Q: Looking back, what have been the most important turning points in your creative journey—moments that changed how you make music or how you think about release strategy, collaboration, and consistency?

    MALIWA: Learning to record myself, learning to produce, and staying open to collaborations.

    Closing

    Q: What do you hope listeners feel or take away when they experience your music—especially on days when they need calm, focus, or a reset?

    MALIWA: I hope listeners can unwind and nod their heads to my music.

    Q: If you could give one piece of advice to someone at the beginning of their creative journey (especially someone navigating doubt or a “silent phase”), what would it be?

    MALIWA: Be open-minded. Try out everything you can musically. It doesn’t matter if anyone else likes it, as long as you like it. Start songs and finish them. Keep going. Keep learning. Immerse yourself in the craft and dive in headfirst. Love what you do.

    Q: Finally, what’s next for you—what should we be looking forward to?

    MALIWA: I’m constantly working on new songs with people scattered all over the globe. I really enjoy this varied and creative process. I hope I can meet more of my collaborators in real life, not just online.

  • C37 Interview: C37 on Into Thin Air, Diary-Like Storytelling, and Emotional Honesty

    C37 Interview: C37 on Into Thin Air, Diary-Like Storytelling, and Emotional Honesty

    C37 (Paul Cudby) turns diary-like memories into emotional downbeat—felt piano, guitar, and delicate electronics shaped by the Lake District—and Into Thin Air captures the beauty and ache of people who touch our lives and then disappear.

    C37
    C37

    The Interview

    Introduction

    Q: For those who don’t know you yet: how would you describe yourself as an artist today—and what does the name C37 represent for you?

    C37: There’s an old stone bridge near my hometown called Cuckoo Arch. I once had a band named after it, before I moved further into the Lake District. The band included my childhood friend and my younger brother, and it was a deeply personal experience. I kept all the recordings but never released them. I still draw on those times and sounds when I make music as C37. The “C” comes from Cuckoo, and “37” was my parents’ house number—where all the recording took place. Maybe one day I’ll release those recordings.

    Q: Your journey includes heavy rock in the 1990s (including touring and a record deal), later shifting toward more textured influences—and eventually electronic music as your main storytelling medium. What were the key turning points that brought you from that world to the C37 sound?

    C37: We’d play thrash metal by day and Pink Floyd by night. We were exposed to all kinds of music. Being close to Manchester obviously meant The Smiths, The Stone Roses, Joy Division, and a thriving rave scene—then bands like Happy Mondays started blending the two worlds. But the real turning point was when I moved out of my marital home. A young person I worked with (in care) played me a track they loved: “Aurol Therapy” by fwrd/slash. That was the moment I realised electronic music could have a real emotional impact. I’m very thankful for that moment.

    Latest Work

    Q: Please introduce Into Thin Air in your own words. What kind of album is it for you—and how would you like listeners to approach it?

    C37: Into Thin Air reflects a twelve-month period of intensely mixed feelings. Each song is directly linked to a moment or feeling from that time. I was going to call it “Foxglove” after the beautiful flower here—which is poisonous. Beauty can hide a great deal of hurt. Listening to it now takes me back to each moment, but not as intensely as during the creation of the tracks. If anyone connects with any of those moments—the sadness or the more hopeful parts—then I’ve done what I set out to do.

    Q: This is your second album, following Beautiful Beginnings. In what ways does Into Thin Air deepen or expand what you started with your debut?

    C37: Into Thin Air was definitely a big step in evolving the sound and style I want C37 to be. Beautiful Beginnings was more raw—made during a time when my personal life felt overwhelming.

    Q: You said this album tries to capture how people enter our lives, impact us emotionally, and then vanish “into thin air.” What moments or emotions were you trying to hold onto most while writing these tracks—love, loss, hope, something else?

    C37: Mainly loss, dotted with moments of hope. C37 was born out of the ashes of a 20-year marriage and raising four children, ending in divorce. However, C37 doesn’t document that time directly; it captures the attempt to rebuild your life, navigate new relationships, and find a sense of peace.

    Creative Approach

    C37
    C37

    Q: The album opens with “Head Space,” weaving in sounds from real life and nature—almost like painting with sound—before the felt piano and guitar pull us into your inner world. Why did you choose that as the opening door into the album?

    C37: I still love the music and atmosphere of this track, and I’m proud I was able to capture that particular week in sound. The field recording underneath it was given to me by the person the track is for. It simply felt like the right way to set the tone for what follows across the album.

    Q: Your music blends emotive piano progressions, layered guitars, ethereal samples, and a hypnotic pulse. When you’re building a track, what usually comes first for you—the chords, a texture, a beat, a melody, or a feeling?

    C37: Nine times out of ten, it’s the feeling that pushes me to start exploring chord progressions. If the chords don’t match the feeling—or I can’t quite achieve it—or, more importantly, it starts to require too much thinking, I stop. When it’s spontaneous—driven by emotion, and it just happens—I know it’s right for C37.

    Personal & Creativity

    Q: You’ve described early C37 releases as almost like diary entries set to music. Does that still feel true on Into Thin Air—and how do you decide what stays private versus what becomes a song?

    C37: Yes—this is still the whole purpose of C37. It’s my diary. So when an album is compiled, you’re getting a dozen “pages” torn out and given away. Of course, some things stay private, but I remain grateful to the person who inspired most of it—even if that time brought huge spikes of sadness and joy for both of us. Without that period, I would never have come to rely on music again. Silver linings.

    Q: The Lake District seems deeply connected to your work—you even visit specific beauty spots to spark ideas. Can you describe how a place becomes a sound in your mind? (Is it harmony, rhythm, ambience, tempo, silence?)

    C37: I live a few minutes from a staggeringly beautiful estuary, with the South Lakeland fells as its backdrop. This place features in nearly all the social media clips I post. There are lots of memories attached to the area, so blending those thoughts with the ambience of the place at sunset is inspirational. Translating that into sound is generally achieved by softening high frequencies and using underlying white noise—or something similar.

    Q: When self-doubt or creative silence shows up, what helps you move through it—especially when you’re working with such emotional themes?

    C37: I create such a large amount of music that I usually have an idea to expand on. However, if a project doesn’t capture the moment I intended, I quickly let it go. If that situation goes on for days, I have a habit of putting myself—mentally—back into historical moments of sadness. I’m aware that isn’t great for overall well-being.

    Inspiration & Listening

    Q: Your influences range widely—from bands like Pink Floyd, The Smiths, and The Stone Roses to electronic impressions from rave culture, and even modern electronica. Which influences feel most present in your current writing—and how do they show up in the details?

    C37: I don’t tend to listen to a great deal of electronic music, but I do have a few favourites I return to. Recently, “After the Rain” by Klur has been my most-played track. I still enjoy earlier Motorpsycho albums and find a lot of inspiration in their work. I’ve always gravitated toward the moodier stuff—so when I listen to Pink Floyd, I’m drawn to the darker moments from The Wall, or anything Roger Waters led.

    Q: If you could recommend one piece of music—any genre—that everyone should listen to at least once, what would it be (and why that one)?

    C37: “Hope in Balance” (Jody Wisternoff and James Grant Remix). It’s an incredible example of electronic music that feels organic and genuinely from the heart.

    Creative Philosophy & Vision

    C37
    C37

    Q: You describe the C37 sound as “written from the heart and never forced.” In practice, how do you know when something is honest—and when you’re trying too hard?

    C37: I never push creativity. If I feel like I’m having to try, I tend to stop. Once an honest feeling is captured, I finish the project.

    Q: If there were no limits—no budget, deadlines, or technical restrictions—what would your dream project be right now?

    C37: It’s been a long time since I played on stages. It would be amazing to see C37 paired with misty Lake District images. Dream-wise, I’d have friends from my earlier bands play C37 live. It may just stay a dream, though.

    From Silence to Sound – Creative Identity

    Q: I often explore how personal decisions shape a musician’s signature sound. Which choices most define your sound—your piano tone, guitar layering, the way you treat ambience, your relationship to rhythm, or the emotional themes you write about?

    C37: It’s the emotional themes that drive the sounds. I can spend a long time searching for—or creating—the right sound to match the theme. The guitar usually comes at the very end of my process, where I’ll just jam over the track to see if anything happens.

    Q: The singles “Last Day of August,” “Are You Home,” and “Close To Losing Everything” previewed the album. What do these titles reveal about the emotional landscape you’re exploring—and why were these the right tracks to introduce the record?

    C37: I suppose they were the liveliest tracks on the album, so they don’t tell the full story. But they do give a good representation of the overall feel and sound.

    Closing

    Q: Finally: what’s next for you after Into Thin Air—do you feel pulled toward going even deeper into emotional downbeat, bringing in more acoustic elements, exploring vocals/lyrics more, or opening a completely new chapter?

    C37: My new album, “The Reality Is…”, continues the search for the definitive C37 sound. There’s less guitar and more soft piano tone on it. It follows a similar pattern, structure, and emotional theme as Into Thin Air.

  • SINE Interview: SINE on Impuls, Meditative Flow, and the Beauty of Rough Edges

    SINE Interview: SINE on Impuls, Meditative Flow, and the Beauty of Rough Edges

    SINE creates expansive, instrument-rich ambient that feels meditative yet alive—and Impuls captures a bold new way of working: fast, intuitive, and guided entirely by the moment.

    SINE
    SINE

    The Interview

    Introduction

    Q: For those who don’t know you yet: how would you describe yourself as an artist today—and what does the name SINE stand for in your musical world?

    SINE: I see myself as a traveler within the world of ambient and downtempo — always curious to explore new directions and gently step beyond familiar boundaries.
    My music is meant to touch listeners on an emotional level and invite them into a quiet inner journey.
    A few moments of stillness.
    Time to be fully present with themselves and the sound.
    A soft pause where the outside world fades, and drifting becomes possible.

    To me, SINE also represents everything beautiful and positive in this world.
    Inspired by the sine wave — the pure building block of all sound — it feels calm, warm, and soothing, yet always in motion and quietly evolving.

    Q: Your musical path started early (accordion lessons, later keyboard, then self-taught guitar), and you’ve played in bands across different genres before building your own soundscapes in the studio. Looking back, was there a defining moment where you felt, “This is the direction I want to go”?

    SINE: I would say this direction has always been within me, quietly present from the very beginning.
    Whether in the past, playing in grunge or metal bands, or later in the world of synth pop, there were always these calm passages — the silent, gentle moments inside the songs.
    Very often, those became my favorite parts.

    Maybe it was only a matter of time until I found a project where I could fully express myself in this kind of sound.

    Latest Work

    Q: Please introduce Impuls in your own words. What kind of album is it for you—and how would you like listeners to approach it (deep headphone listen, morning routine, background focus, late-night reflection, etc.)?

    SINE: As the album title already suggests, Impuls was born exactly from that feeling.
    I woke up in the morning with the idea of following my impulse each day — allowing a new piece of music to emerge before noon.
    Created purely from the moment.
    Without overthinking, without getting lost in details, simply moving straight to the essence until a track had taken shape by the end of the morning.
    In this way, seven songs were finished within a single week.

    I would describe the album as deeply cinematic.
    Many pieces begin in stillness and gradually unfold, gently rising toward a quiet finale.
    I consciously let go of genre expectations or the idea of doing things a certain way just to reach as many playlists as possible.
    It was simply me in that moment, perhaps also my most experimental album so far.

    Where or how people listen to it doesn’t really matter to me.
    What matters is that the music moves someone in some way.

    Q: Impuls includes eight new tracks plus the previously released “Signs of Light,” “Dreamland,” and “Mirror.” How do these pieces belong together—and what story (or arc) do they form as one album?

    SINE: Well, these three pieces were born from the very same feeling as the rest of the album — created deeply from impulse.

    Q: The title Impuls suggests movement and immediacy. What emotional or conceptual thread did you keep returning to while making this record?

    SINE: Trusting your own feeling, your inner flow, and the impulses within you.
    No rules, no pressure — just the freedom to create openly and honestly.

    Creative Approach

    SINE
    SINE

    Q: This album began as a creative challenge: developing a new song idea every day for a week—resulting in eight demos in ten days. What did this constraint unlock in you that a slower process might not?

    SINE: It opened up a deeply creative and impulsive way of writing and producing.
    I consciously allowed small imperfections to remain, without approaching things too perfectionistically.
    Letting go of genre boundaries.

    In this way, I believe a very honest album came into being.

    Q: You described the process as a “meditative flow”—diving in every morning and letting yourself drift. Was there a moment during the production where everything clicked—or a point where you thought the concept might not translate into a finished album?

    SINE: No, that moment didn’t really happen.
    I can imagine creating another album in a similar way at some point.
    Impuls is already a little while behind me, and since then I’ve released new songs, with more new music currently in the making.

    I feel the core idea behind it has only grown stronger over time.
    The newer pieces are also based on this same principle.

    Personal & Creativity

    SINE
    SINE

    Q: Impuls is also a conscious change in your setup: you switched off the familiar groovebox/sampler workflow and created the album with software instruments and DAW mixing—while bringing in many real instruments (guitars, bass, harmonica, accordion, felt piano, drums, and more). What made you choose that path—and what did it do to the sound and the decisions you made?

    SINE: I simply wanted to try something new.
    To step away from the MPC and return more toward classic audio recording — like in the old days with an eight-track tape machine.
    So at the beginning of each session, I used the DAW purely for recording audio, whether capturing a guitar riff or playing simple synth lines.
    These recordings always became the starting point of the tracks.

    I don’t think it really changed the sound itself.
    In today’s digital world, the sonic quality is already on a very high level — whether on the MPC or inside a DAW.
    It was more the way of working that shifted slightly.

    Q: Many of these instruments go back to your childhood. What’s the personal connection there—and did working this way change how “close” the music felt to you?

    SINE: Well, I naturally have a very special connection to the guitar.
    I would still call it my favorite instrument.
    My PRS electric guitar is more than twenty years old now, and it has been through a lot with me — which creates a quiet bond.

    Without a guitar, tracks almost feel a little unfamiliar to me.
    After all, it was where everything began.
    My very first guitar was a gift from my father.

    Q: You intentionally didn’t think about whether tracks would generate a lot of streams—you focused on authenticity. In today’s music landscape, that’s a strong stance. How do you protect that mindset when the outside world can be loud?

    SINE: I often feel that there is already more than enough inauthentic music in the world.
    If I manage to stay fully with myself, to let things flow calmly, and to gently switch off the outside noise, then I know I’m on the right path.
    It’s almost like turning my mind off — and in that space, SINE begins to emerge naturally from within me.

    And to remain open to the new.
    To try unfamiliar things and keep moving forward.
    Yet always staying close to myself.

    Inspiration & Listening

    SINE
    SINE

    Q: Which artists or albums have inspired you most recently—and what did they spark in you (composition, atmosphere, sound design, use of instruments, emotional pacing)?

    SINE: Oh, interesting question.
    These days I actually find myself listening to a lot of older music again.

    From Led Zeppelin and Pearl Jam to Sigur Rós, but also Massive Attack and Portishead…
    And of course,
    one of my all-time favorite albums: Spirit of Eden by Talk Talk.

    Q: If you could recommend one piece of music—any genre—that everyone should listen to at least once, what would it be (and why that one)?

    SINE: Maybe “After the Flood” by Talk Talk, from my second favorite album, Laughing Stock.
    A truly beautiful ten-minute dream journey.

    Creative Philosophy & Vision

    Q: Impuls sounds deeper, more expansive, a bit more unpolished—yet still meditative and varied. What role do imperfection and “rough edges” play in your music—especially in ambient, where things can easily become too smooth?

    SINE: A very important role.
    And with Impuls, I allowed myself to fully embrace it.
    Imperfection and rough edges make everything feel human — and also unique and authentic.

    Q: If there were no limits—no budget, deadlines, or technical restrictions—what would your dream project be right now? (For example: an instrument-heavy ambient record, a film/series score, a live concept with real instruments, an immersive format release, or something completely unexpected.)

    SINE: Simply retreating for a few months to a small house in Italy.
    Surrounded by my guitars and effect pedals, accordion, and other acoustic instruments, a few microphones, and an analog eight-track tape machine — letting purely acoustic pieces come to life.

    From Silence to Sound – Creative Identity

    Q: I often explore how personal decisions shape a musician’s signature sound. Which choices do you feel most strongly define your sound—your sense of space, your instrument palette, your relationship to rhythm, your production aesthetics?

    SINE: Are these truly conscious decisions, or rather unconscious inner impulses and preferences — perhaps also listening experiences from the past?
    I believe the most important thing is to begin the journey toward yourself, and to trust yourself along the way.
    From there, your own sound will naturally reveal itself.

    Q: With a long arc from Cross That Line to Ruhepol, Tiefblau, Einklang (including immersive releases), and the guitar-focused Tiefgang EP—what have been the most important turning points that changed how you make music?

    SINE: Hmm… in a way, every album or EP has been a turning point for me.
    I have always tried to be authentically SINE.

    But perhaps Tiefgang was truly something special.
    Purely acoustic, without any embellishment.
    It showed me that it doesn’t take much at all to express myself through music — even in the most acoustic, reduced form.

    Closing

    Q: What do you hope listeners feel or take away when they spend time with Impuls—especially on days when they need calm, focus, or a reset?

    SINE: I hope listeners simply have a beautiful moment with the music.
    That they can dive deeply within, that gentle memories may surface, or that they feel emotionally touched in some quiet way.

    Just listening.
    Just feeling.

    Q: If you could give one piece of advice to someone at the beginning of their creative journey—especially someone navigating doubt, comparison, or a “silent phase”—what would it be?

    SINE: Try to follow your own path, to find your sound and trust in it.
    Allow yourself to explore, to try new things, and to trust what truly resonates with you — then bring it into the world.

    The world needs every creative soul more than ever.

    Q: Finally: what’s next for you after Impuls—are you curious to go further down this software-based, instrument-rich path, return to a more haptic workflow, explore more guitar-led ambient, or open a completely new chapter?

    SINE: We’ll see.
    I think there will definitely be a lot of acoustic elements ahead — very organic and truly handmade.

    Thank you, Thomas.
    This was a real pleasure.

  • Andreas Bach Interview: Andreas Bach on Guitar as a Voice, Creative Contrast, and Keeping Music Human

    Andreas Bach Interview: Andreas Bach on Guitar as a Voice, Creative Contrast, and Keeping Music Human

    Andreas Bach is a versatile guitarist, producer, and guitar teacher from Osnabrück, Germany, known for warm tones and calming melodies shaped by years on stage and in the studio. Rooted in guitar-driven rock yet inspired by atmospheric worlds in the spirit of Sigur Rós, Esbjörn Svensson, and Pink Floyd, he blends crafted guitar sound with subtle electronics into intimate, cinematic ambient/downtempo pieces. He’s also the author of Beginner’s Guitar (SCHOTT Music), bringing the same clarity and musical sensitivity to his teaching and writing.

    Andreas Bach
    Andreas Bach

    The Interview

    Introduction

    Q: For those who don’t know you yet: how would you describe yourself as an artist today—especially the role of the guitar as your “voice”?

    Andreas: It’s always difficult to talk about yourself. A brief summary would be: I’m a musician, and my main instrument is the guitar—I’ve been playing it for 30 years. It’s naturally my primary voice, but I also like to try anything I can get my hands on. I love many different genres and tend to take something I enjoy from each of them and weave it into my own music.

    Q: You’re active in very different worlds: ambient/downtempo production on one side, and high-energy live bands on the other. What does each world give you—and what do you take from one into the other?

    Andreas: I have a lot of different sides, and I enjoy contrasts. I love spending hours in the studio crafting calm, atmospheric music—but I also enjoy playing super-heavy rock. One side brings stillness and feels almost like meditation; the other is all about volume, power, and energy.

    Latest Work

    Q: You’ve released solo material and collaborations, and you’ve also worked closely with Thomas Lemmer. How does your mindset change when you create alone versus when you create as a duo?

    Andreas: When collaborating, I always try to get into a flow and bounce ideas back and forth. One person has a small idea, which sparks a new one in me. Each of us can bring something the other can’t—and it goes back and forth. I call it “ping-pong creativity.”

    When I work alone, I don’t need that in the same way. I usually have a very clear idea in my head, and I don’t want anyone to interrupt the process—because I already feel it’s right for me, and I know it will turn out well in the end.

    Creative Approach

    Q: When a new track starts: what usually comes first for you—tone and texture, a chord progression, a melodic hook, a groove, or a specific emotion?

    Andreas: Everything and nothing. I don’t have a fixed system. I can be inspired very quickly by the smallest things: a sound, a beat, a new chord, or even just a specific tempo. Once my brain is fired up, it doesn’t stop so quickly.

    Q: Your guitar sound feels carefully shaped. How do you approach tone-building: fingers vs. pick, dynamics, pedals/amps, layering, and the decision of when a part should stay raw versus processed?

    Andreas: I really like thick and warm guitar sounds—players like David Gilmour and Jimi Hendrix are my heroes. But of course, the tone has to fit the arrangement. So I always try to shape the sound to suit the song. That’s the main goal.

    Andreas Bach
    Andreas Bach

    Personal & Creativity

    Q: You studied guitar and also teach and write about the instrument. How has formal learning—and later teaching—changed your creativity?

    Andreas: I love diving deeply into these topics. I’m always discovering new things that interest me and that I want to learn. Even when I’m teaching a student something, I want to know exactly what I’m talking about so I can explain it well—so you’re constantly working on yourself. Many students also inspire me to explore new ideas. For me, being open-minded definitely fuels creativity.

    Q: On stage, you’re playing music that people instantly recognize; in ambient/downtempo, you’re shaping a mood that is more personal and abstract. What does “authenticity” mean to you across these two extremes?

    Andreas: Yes, true—I play in very different genres. For many people, those seem to contradict each other. Not for me. I just love the variety, and in the end it’s all music. There are only two cases: either I like it or I don’t. The main goal is always to move people with music.

    Andreas Bach
    Andreas Bach

    Q: When self-doubt or creative silence shows up: what helps you move through it? Do you reach for the guitar, the studio, a walk, a routine—what actually works?

    Andreas: Listening to new music. Picking up a new instrument. Collaborating with other people. Or doing something completely unrelated to music for a few days. It always comes back.

    Inspiration & Listening

    Q: What inspires you most right now—other musicians, films, games, places, books, daily life? And how does that inspiration translate into sound?

    Andreas: For me it’s almost always the same: listening to new music and really immersing myself in it—and making music with cool, creative people.

    Q: If you could recommend one piece of music—any genre—that everyone should listen to at least once, what would it be (and why that one)?

    Andreas: It changes all the time for me. But at the moment, I’m really into Ólafur Arnalds (an Icelandic composer somewhere between neoclassical and ambient). Give “Þú ert jörðin” a listen—what a beautiful little composition. Minimalistic, soulful, and deeply touching.

    Creative Philosophy & Vision

    Q: In ambient/downtempo, the line between “beautiful” and “boring” can be thin. How do you keep your music emotionally alive—without overfilling it?

    Andreas: Finding good melodies. Finding nice and interesting sounds. Not overproducing, but still paying attention to cool little details. Avoiding too much copy & paste. Finding an original style that hasn’t been heard a thousand times before. Keeping the music human and natural.

    Q: If there were no limits—no budget, deadlines, or technical restrictions—what would your dream project be right now?

    Andreas: For example: locking myself away with Ólafur Arnalds somewhere in Iceland and composing an album together. Experiencing magnificent nature and getting inspired.

    From Silence to Sound – Creative Identity

    Q: Looking back, what were the biggest turning points that changed how you make music?

    Andreas: Learning how to record myself—and learning how to produce.

    Closing

    Q: When someone listens to your ambient/downtempo music, what do you hope it gives them—calm, focus, comfort, energy, a sense of story, something else?

    Andreas: It should always touch the listener in some way—so they stay tuned in and want to hear more.

    Q: If you could give one piece of advice to someone at the beginning of their creative journey—especially someone navigating doubt or a “silent phase”—what would it be?

    Andreas: If you enjoy it, just do it—do it for yourself. Finish your songs. It gets a little better each time. Don’t compare yourself to others. Everything else will gradually fall into place on its own.

    Andreas Bach
    Andreas Bach

    Q: Finally: what’s next for you?

    Andreas: I’m already working on new songs of my own, and new collaborations are planned again.