- Digital
Love Is Yes
Ghost and More Ghosts
Kit Records
- Cat No: KR99
- Release: 2026-06-19
- updated:
Track List
-
1. Love Is Yes - Ghost Twelve
00:51 -
2. Love Is Yes - Ghost Thirteen
03:13 -
3. Love Is Yes - Ghost Two
02:36 -
4. Love Is Yes - Ghost Nine
01:19 -
5. Love Is Yes - Ghost Four
02:54 -
6. Love Is Yes - Ghost Six
02:33 -
7. Love Is Yes - Ghost Eleven
03:02 -
8. Love Is Yes - Motionless
02:43 -
9. Love Is Yes - Ghost Three
03:15 -
10. Love Is Yes - Ghost Ten
03:56 -
11. Love Is Yes - Ghost One
02:53 -
12. Love Is Yes - Ghost Fifteen
00:36 -
13. Love Is Yes - bye-bye
04:56
24bit/44.1khz [wav/flac/aiff/alac/mp3]
Kit darlings Love Is Yes (Dax Niesten and Sander van der Toorn) return with a particle scattering follow-up to their celebrated, self-titled debut.
While the Dutch duo's serenely motorik guitar, levitational synths and airy vocals are still present, "????? ??? ???? ??????" sees the pair take a sideways step into the nether realm - tugging gamelan metallophones, organs and vocoders with them through the fermented portal as they disintegrate completely.
A melancholy magic trick occurs when these atoms regroup to poke fun at melodic techno ("Ghost Four"), disembodied R'n'B ("Ghost Six") and distilled pop ("Ghost Three"). These are marvellously disorienting sonic paintings - dappled, stringy, globs of sound that tilt the aspect from familiar forms to flaring, untold landscapes.
Recommended if you like Don Hertzfeldt, sodium-vapour lamps, typos.
While the Dutch duo's serenely motorik guitar, levitational synths and airy vocals are still present, "????? ??? ???? ??????" sees the pair take a sideways step into the nether realm - tugging gamelan metallophones, organs and vocoders with them through the fermented portal as they disintegrate completely.
A melancholy magic trick occurs when these atoms regroup to poke fun at melodic techno ("Ghost Four"), disembodied R'n'B ("Ghost Six") and distilled pop ("Ghost Three"). These are marvellously disorienting sonic paintings - dappled, stringy, globs of sound that tilt the aspect from familiar forms to flaring, untold landscapes.
Recommended if you like Don Hertzfeldt, sodium-vapour lamps, typos.
