Giorgio Fazio plunges fearlessly into the unknown with his new EP, "Nothing But Simulation," offering tracks that blur the line between digital facade and human sentiment.
Although clocking in at just over seven minutes, the project feels brief yet dense, pulling listeners into an abstracted universe where glitchy textures and cinematic unease coexist. Drawing on the simulation hypothesis (the idea that reality may be code), Fazio turns philosophical tension into sound, creating an atmosphere that is both alien and shockingly familiar.
Opening with fractured beats that challenge, "Nothing But Simulation" very quickly takes you out of your comfort zone and into the territory of living in a world of programming. Pulsing bass beats glitch and break, but with an unsettling allure. If you let yourself, you might let go into the unknown.
The journey inward goes even further in its companion piece, "But Something Feels Real." Here were brittle tunes slicing through the static dissonance, fleeting squibs of warmth amid a digital bonfire. Its subject seems to be that of real feeling, even in built spaces. The give-and-take of distortion and definition serves as a metaphor for our contemporary era, where reality is frequently obscured by artifice.
Together, these two pieces presented are as provocative as they are disturbing. It’s an EP for listeners with a hunger for music that is not just to be enjoyed but confrontational to the perception. On the challenging, lumpy mess that is "With Nothing but Simulation" but "Something Feels Real," Fazio proves that experimental music can have as much emotional resonance as more traditional forms. It’s a project to be felt almost as much as heard, that, no matter the digital haze, something undeniably real still remains.
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