new this week
enUSD
My Language
encndeesjp
My Currency
Your wishlist is empty
Items in wishlist:
Recently added:
Loading...
Cart
Your cart is empty
Items in cart:
Subtotal:
Recently added:
Loading...
View cart
Home  Back Catalogue  Coldwave / Synth

Filter

Release Date

Back catalogue: Coldwave/Synth

Juno's full catalogue of Coldwave/Synth
Options
Items 1 to 4 of 4 on page 1 of 1
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z ALL
Singles
Nabi
Nabi (7" + insert)
Cat: GUDU 006. Rel: 07 Sep 21
Nabi (3:52)
Review: Following up last year's production with Baltimore techno legend Maurice Fulton on 'Jigoo', the next release on Gudu is the first of two songs by label boss Peggy Gou that she will release over the coming months. Her first single in over two years, it translates to 'Butterfly' and is another collaboration. This time with fellow Korean sensation OHHYUK who is the lead singer and guitarist in the band Hyukoh. 'Nabi' is a downtempo, pop-inflected number said to be inspired by '80s synth classics and '90s Korean songs that Gou's mother used to play at home during her childhood.
Read more
 in stock $14.03
Albums
The Final Act
The Final Act (clear & yellow blob vinyl LP)
Cat: CITI 032. Rel: 01 Oct 24
The Final Act (5:28)
Sensitive Material (5:24)
11 Stars (feat Martin Dupont) (5:27)
The Magic Hour (4:37)
Dystopian Custodian (5:42)
Fifth Column (3:39)
Hardscape (4:24)
Polyurethane (4:19)
A Lemon In The Limelight (4:40)
Review: Citirax's next outing takes the form of a debut album from Los Angeles-based duo OP-ART. This pair, like so much great music of recent times, is born out of the creative isolation of lockdown and features Andrew Clinco, who you may know for his work with Drab Majesty. The alias they have adopted is an acronym of "Oblique Pleasures Amidst Rough Times" which they say reflected the challenges of their formation. Musically the duo is inspired by the 1960s visual art movement so embraces layered, psychedelic soundscapes with a minimalist approach and takes cues from New Wave artists like John Foxx and early OMD. OP-ART in particular focuses on analogue synthesis and gear like the Arp Odyssey and Moog Rogue while exploring time, romance, and existential themes with real emotional depth.
Read more
 in stock $28.89
Dazzle Ships (40th Anniversary Edition) (half speed remastered)
Dazzle Ships (40th Anniversary Edition) (half speed remastered) (limited gatefold 180 gram silver & blue vinyl 2xLP)
Cat: 488149 2. Rel: 30 Mar 23
Radio Prague (1:24)
Genetic Engineering (3:32)
ABC Auto-Industry (2:04)
Telegraph (2:56)
This Is Helena (1:59)
International (4:24)
Dazzle Ships (2:22)
The Romance Of The Telescope (3:25)
Silent Running (3:34)
Radio Waves (3:37)
Time Zones (1:56)
Of All The Things We've Made (3:29)
Telegraph 82 (Very Early demo) (2:52)
Silent Running (demo) (3:28)
Sold Our Souls (The Avenue demo) (3:10)
Shakespeare 82 (0:53)
Untitled Instrumental 82 (3:21)
In Heaven Above (4-NEU demo) (2:54)
Telegraph Live 1984 (3:51)
Review: Named after dazzle camouflage, an approach to painting naval vessels in ways that would make it difficult for them to be targeted with the naked eye (used extensively in World War I, less so in World War II), OMD's fourth studio album also arrived on Telegraph, an imprint that never existed and was instead a fictitious platform backed by Virgin Records. There's no mistaking the fact this is Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark, though, with the tracks here defining the band perfectly.
By that, we mean grand, epic overtures, a strange - at the time, groundbreaking - hybrid of electronic synth stuff with classical, Neo-operatics and rock & roll. It's evocative, immediately captivating and very difficult to make many assumptions about, with techniques such as sampling, looping and layering employed to incredible effect, without overshadowing the song craft itself. Which, it's safe to say, is approaching their artistic peak at this point.
Read more
 in stock $40.95
L'aventure Des Gens Modernes
Cat: LDM 006LP. Rel: 22 May 25
Cernes Et Maquillage (3:35)
L'Aventure Des Gens Modernes (2:57)
Voyage Ideal (4:16)
Visage (3:28)
Television Interdite (4:35)
Oberheim (3:36)
Crayon Noir (3:28)
Review: Nostalgia can be a dangerous thing. We don't need to cite examples why. In contrast, retrospect is important and retro sounds are, today, often capable of making us think about how we saw the future in the past. In some cases, that means staring down the barrel of the big question: did we heed any warnings, or has all the artwork and movies and music that sought to raise flags over the disappearance of humanity and individuality at the hands of 'progress' been for nought? Summoning the spirit of Depeche Mode, Eurythmics and more, Orphia present a stunning synth album which is at once catchy and poppy, even dance floor ready, but saturated in a kind of melancholy and juxtaposition of electronic and human. Robotic rhythms topped with organic emotions, there's a feeling of spiralling headfirst into lightning paced chaos and disorientation as the collection plays out. And that's about as apt as things get right now.
Read more
 in stock $21.87
Items 1 to 4 of 4 on page 1 of 1
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z ALL
Cart subtotal: