How to See Know and Fall drop third single off upcoming debut album Ecologies

Photo: Angela Washko

How to See Know and Fall is the new project of Jesse Stiles and Brian Shankar Adler, and it feels like a perfect musical pairing. Adler’s background in percussion and composition and Stiles’ work in electronic music and sound design complete each other, each bringing out something stronger in the other. They have a debut album on the way, Ecologies, releasing on April 3rd through Adhyâropa Records. Originally created as a remote collaboration during lockdown and later expanded through live performances, Ecologies moves freely between rhythm-driven sections, melodic fragments, and more abstract passages, with a strong focus on texture and the interaction between acoustic and electronic sound. Across nine instrumental tracks, the interplay between acoustic percussion and electronics stays at the centre throughout, shifting in intensity and shape from track to track.

Preceding the album’s release next week, How to See Know and Fall have recently shared the bewitching third single, ‘Rynchops albicollis’. Novelist, poet, and friend of the band Jesse Ball titled all the tracks on Ecologies and wrote an accompanying manifesto, featuring a section dedicated to each song. About ‘Rynchops albicollis’, he wrote:

“Refuse the hegemony of pitch. When that goes, all manner of sound can be heard.”

‘Rynchops albicollis’ comes paired with a video and you can watch it below.

Anenon shares new single,‘When The Light Appears, Boy’, from forthcoming new album Dream Temperature

Photo: Valeria Chaika

A longtime favourite of ours here at CTD, Anenon, the moniker of Los Angeles-based saxophonist, producer and composer Brian Allen Simon, has announced details of a new album. Entitled Dream Temperature, the record is set to arrive on April 24th through Tonal Union. Written and recorded over the past year in his home studio, it sees Anenon moving back towards a more electronic-leaning sound, this time built around a wind synthesiser, alongside piano and tenor sax, with breath and body at the centre of the process. As the press release describes, “the entirety of the album’s electronics are triggered by Brian’s lungs, generating otherworldly synths modulated by expressive breath control”. As with previous efforts, he continues to blur the lines between jazz, ambient and electronic forms, here with a slightly heavier and more textured feel that still retains a sense of intimacy.

The ethereal and moving ‘When The Light Appears, Boy’ is the latest track to be lifted from the album and you can stream it below.

Maryam Saleh’s first new album in eight years, Syrr سِرّ, arrives this Friday

We’re finally approaching the release of Syrr سِرّ, the long-awaited new album from Maryam Saleh, landing this Friday through Simsara Records. Her first album in nearly a decade, the record brings Saleh back at the centre of Egypt’s alternative scene with a record shaped over three years of songwriting, composition, and collaboration. Co-produced with Maurice Louca and Kamilya Jubran, who also served as mentor throughout the process, Syrr سِرّ draws on a range of Egyptian and Arabic song forms, from mawwal and lullaby to muwashshah and taqtuqa, reimagining these traditions through a contemporary lens.

In the lead-up to its release, and following the introspective, powerful and poignant ‘El Fetra الفطرة’, Saleh has shared two other tantalizing singles, ‘Wanas’ and ‘Nedaa’. Take a listen to both below and grab Syrr when it drops on Friday.

Juli Deák announces debut album, Brisk

Polish-Hungarian flutist and saxophonist Juli Deák has announced the release of her debut album, Brisk, arriving on April 24th through Thanatosis Produktion. Moving fluidly between classical, contemporary, and jazz tradition, she also embraces experimentation, improvisation and folk influences. Drawing on years of experience across ensembles, festivals, and collaborative projects, her work has long circled around breath and its limits, textures, and the physicality of sound itself. Recorded in a church in Budapest, Brisk grew out of unfinished ideas that only revealed themselves fully in performance. Over time, those ideas settled into a cohesive body of work, influenced as much by listener response as by Deák’s own evolving instincts. The album also leans into the physical limits of the instrument and the body, with breathing at the core of it, both as technique and as sound.

Deák had already unveiled two magnificent singles from the record, the title track and ‘Tamed’. Both offer a glimpse into Brisk from different angles, tracing the contours of an album that invites close listening. Here they are.


Angine de Poitrine set to release new album, Vol. II, in April

Photo: Constantin Monfilliette

Mysterious microtonal cardboard duo Angine de Poitrine have been turning heads with their wildly inventive and off-kilter sound and electrifying live shows. Made up of Khn de Poitrine (microtonal guitars, vocals) and Klek de Poitrine (percussion, vocals), they have swiftly built a reputation as one of the most unpredictable and exhilarating acts around. Channeling a strange and hypnotic energy, their music thrives on shifting patterns, hypnotic grooves, and looping microtonal guitars with propulsive percussion. Comes April 3rd, they will release their much anticipated new album, Vol. II. Built around their signature technique of layering and reshaping repeating motifs, the record sees them leaning into sharper contrasts, more dynamic structures, and an overall sense of urgency that makes it feel fast, daring, and ecstatic. As the press release describes, “the noble brothers summon swirling vortices of hypnotic sound and vision”.

Angine de Poitrine have already let loose two blistering and trance-inducing singles from the album, ‘Fabienk’ and ‘Mata Zyklek’. Play them loud!


Dumama unveils video for new single ‘Eating The Other’

Photo: Jessica Garfield

Last month, Dumama announced the release of her new album Towards an Expanse, sharing then the stunning and haunting first single ‘What Did The Rain Say’. Now, the Berlin-based South African composer and sonic artist is offering another gripping glimpse into the record in the form of her new single, ‘Eating The Other’. Built around a dense and slow-moving rhythm, ‘Eating The Other’ is imbued with a sense of tension and urgency. Sung in isiXhosa, the track engages with themes of drought, hunger, illness, and wider social and environmental struggles. Speaking about the single, Dumama says:

“Inspired by “Eating The Other: Desire and Resistance” by bell hooks, this track reflects on a society that remains ill despite having the resources to heal. The heart of the song is a chant my grandmother sang to me over the phone before she transitioned, a private moment that became an intergenerational meditation on being consumed. Sonically, I wanted to create a warped and punked-out space for the uhadi. By pairing the lineage of Princess Magogo with the left-field influence of Picchio dal Pozzo, I am pushing the bow into post-punk and experimental electronics. I refuse to let this instrument be reduced to an ethnographic subject or “world music” trope. This is a study of spiritual harm and the sonic will to resist being devoured.”

‘Eating The Other’ comes with an accompanying video by Jessica Garfield. Watch it below.

Towards an Expanse is out on May 8th through Soundway Records.