A perpetually unfinished list of things that one may enjoy,
if we have the same taste.
Suggested entry points: "Johannesburg" (Night Melody), "Recovery" (Sonne), very few bad choices, avoid Overflow.
Minimalist, intricate instrumental analog synth. Limited instrumentation, complexity that waxes and wanes. Feels careful, polished, but never clinical.
Features some of the most carefully filthy analog synths I've heard, particularly on Howl. Try "Looming", "Walls".
Extremely consistent - He's done some soundtracks (Mindseye [2025], wow, imagine working on that trainwreck) which are... soundtracks.
Overflow is the only standout disappointment, by the incredibly high bar of there are songs on this album that I didn't immediately adore. It has themes of stuttering, glitchy sounds, and occasional samples, which work on tracks like "I Like", but sit oddly separate in the mix of the titular "Overflow". "Pulses of Information" sounds like it would be right at home on Articulation.
Suggested entry points: Try "Black Dunes" (Tunnel Blanket) and if that connects just listen to all of Another Language.
Instrumental post rock. "Doom". Cascading waves of glorious noise.
The first of several "doom" adjacent post-rock bands on this list, TWDY actually started out on the other side of the post-rock dichotomy, finding fame with the principal track on the soundtrack to Moneyball (a film I have never seen) and two initial albums of bittersweet-coming-of-age-movie-closing-scene Explosions in the Sky adjacency. Which are... which are fine.
But Tunnel Blanket was a smash cut to a substantially darker, sludgier, mournful, wailing tone. And it's fucking brilliant.
Tunnel Blanket justifies use of a name as melodramatic as "This Will Destroy You".