AUTORHYTHM’s Retrofuturist Krautrock Pop Single “Symmetry” is Imbued With an Intense Sense of Hope

AUTORHYTHM in bed making music. New album Self Help Manual out 2026.

Joakim Forsgren as AUTORHYTHM appears to have tapped simultaneously into the explorative end of 1970s electronic Krautrock and late 70s power-pop on “Symmetry.” Tones zip by, resonate, fade out, zip in and flare and trace a sonic landscape anchored by a minimal electronic percussion rhythm that resonates in the brain with both “Autobahn” and “My Sharona” and that’s a combination that shouldn’t work but it does. It feels playful and like the soundtrack to a Rudy Rucker novel in that it sounds both retro and futuristic like its channeling the energy of a utopian future as imagined in the 1970s that actually manifested in the present rather than the dystopian, oligarch dominated global order we’re experiencing now. In that fashion it’s an intensely hopeful work. Listen to “Symmetry” on Spotify and follow AUTORHYTHM at the links provided. The project’s sophomore album Self Help Manual released May 29, 2026.

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AUTORHYTHM’s Entrancing Layers of Synth on “Substantia Nigra” and the Songs for the Nervous System album are Like the Soundtrack to a Lost Utopian Science Fiction Epic

AUTORHYTHM/Joakim Forsgren, photo by Mohamed Mire

AUTORHYTHM’s “Substantia Nigra” from the project’s latest album Songs For the Nervous System (2023) is driven by a low cycling pulse as rhythm as it seems points in a network flash and flare in tones and percussive textures as the track builds to a distorted melody that bubbles with an urgency like an entire network of a factory coming online or a deep space colony in great sleeper ships activating a series of protocols to bring its cargo out of stasis in order to explore the possibilities of a new world and hopefully not exploit it and extract it to extinction with outmoded habits of human civilization. Halfway through the song’s near eleven minutes the tenor changes and low crackling white noise enters the field of hearing and a distant metallic beeping like a signal coming through the intergalactic haze. A sound like a dopplering alarm ascends and drops down back into the earlier theme of the distorted melody. It’s like the soundtrack to science fiction film or novel about a real sense of wonder at the unknown and not one that frames scientific discovery and exploration as an act of extending archaic notions of conquest but rather as mutually beneficial comprehension and an authentic attempt at expanding knowledge. Listen to “Substantia Nigra” on Spotify and follow AUTORHYTHM at the links below. Fans of Mort Garson’s Journey to the Moon and Beyond and other works of the great synthesizer pioneer will find a great deal to appreciate here.

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