Bryce Terry’s Ambient Downtempo Track “The Only Game In Town” is a Beat Driven Journey Into the Shadow Economy

Bryce Terry, photo courtesy the artist

Bryce Terry’s “The Only Game In Town” opens with ethereal drones like a walk through a hallway into an abandoned building. From there a steady, syncopated beat anchors screaming streams of tone, sustained, distorted synth and a ghost of a melody in the background. Rapid echos of harmonic sound give way to the latter early in the song as the beat establishes itself and the layers convey a sense of space like being given access to a secret area in which clandestine activities are undertaken and moves are made, think something like the vibe of an underground casino that is hidden away in the back rooms of a legitimate business that operates mostly on cash but in the after hours deals in the black market economy. Like the rest of Terry’s album Two-Thousand Yard Stare there is an undercurrent of menace in the song that suits the album’s themes of addiction and succumbing to the inner demons that drive one in that direction but despite the song’s title the song doesn’t sound like video game music like this song and a few others on the album reflect the moments when one is able to break free of the spell of addiction for some moments to see one’s life for what it is and the context in which one has placed oneself in service to addiction. In this way it’s reminiscent of Oneohtrix Point Never’s soundtrack work for the film Good Time and that film’s tone of unreality and gritty reality side by side to give resonant tonal contrasts. Listen to “The Only Game In Town” on Spotify and follow Bryce Terry at the links below.

Bryce Terry on Apple Music

Bryce Terry on Instagram

The ALLAY Remix of Erik Bashore’s “Contortion” is an Ambient Prelude to the Onset of Full Winter

The ALLAY Remix of Erik Bashore’s “Contortion” is so transformative that the spare, acoustic ambient track that is the original is rendered into pure atmosphere, its distinct sounds processed and blurred into a continuous flow. It’s like the warm and detailed instrumentation of the original is a campfire obscured by a sudden snowstorm. Post-rock becomes something darker and moodier when the original song wasn’t exactly short on a hushed vibe. If the track were used in a soundtrack perhaps this remix would be in the introduction and the original for the credit sequence. It’s reminiscent of Onehotrix Point Never’s score to the 2017 crime thriller Good Time and suggests hidden depths within a blizzard on the edge of civilization and setting the expectation of an emotionally harrowing drama ahead. Listen to the ALLAY remix of “Contortion” by Erik Bashore on Soundcloud.