Extraction 1989 - Download

Extraction — originally released by EE Tapes (ET06) in 1989 — returns here as a digital transfer from the original master tape. The material itself has a strangely archaeological quality: fragments literally gathered from the studio floor, lengths of ¼” tape spliced together, threaded through whatever machines were at hand, and mixed in a semi‑random, instinctive manner. Some of these sounds reach even further back, with source elements dating to 1978.

This download is sourced from the original master. Extraction pt.1 has been edited for language compliance, making this version suitable for all ages.

Extraction 1989 - audio download


Review of original cassette release:

THIS WINDOW – “EXTRACTION” (EE Tapes, Belgium, 1989)

C60 / experimental electronics, tape‑manipulation, post‑industrial ambience

There’s a peculiar tension running through Extraction, the sort of uneasy stillness you only get when someone has spent far too long alone with a reel‑to‑reel machine. This Window (UK) works in that grey zone between sound‑art and song‑form, but never commits fully to either. Instead, the tape becomes the instrument: loops grind against each other, fragments of voice drift in like intercepted transmissions, and the whole thing feels as if it’s been assembled in a room where the lights keep flickering.

The production is raw in the best possible way—close‑mic’d hiss, mechanical hum, and the sense of physical tape being pushed to its limits. EE Tapes have been curating some of the more interesting European underground electronics lately, and this fits their aesthetic perfectly: minimal, slightly claustrophobic, and quietly obsessive.

Side A leans toward rhythmic decay—patterns that almost become beats before collapsing back into texture. Side B is more atmospheric, with long stretches of treated guitar and environmental noise that suggest abandoned industrial spaces or late‑night shortwave drift. Nothing here is flashy; everything is deliberate.

What makes Extraction stand out is its restraint. Where many home‑tapers throw everything into the mix, This Window pares things back to the essentials: tone, texture, repetition, and the slow erosion of sound. It’s music that doesn’t try to impress you; it just sits in the room and alters the temperature.

A strange, absorbing little document from someone clearly committed to the craft of tape.

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