Tape Loops And Video




“The Ashtray” feels like one of the purest distillations of This Window’s long‑running fascination with analogue decay and the musicality of malfunction. 

Built from a 1/4" tape loop and shaped within the project’s cassette‑culture ethos, it sits somewhere between art‑project minimalism and a sci‑fi horror vignette. It plays like a fragment of a lost soundtrack cue — the kind you’d stumble across on a degraded VHS of an experimental film, its edges softened and half‑erased by time.

The loop’s mechanical churn becomes a kind of heartbeat, steady and indifferent, while the added layers smear into a synthetic fog that feels both intimate and alien. There’s tension in its restraint, a quiet pressure in the repetition, and an unsettling stillness that suggests the machinery itself might be breathing. Within the wider context of Extractivism — an album built from newly uncovered pieces, rediscovered fragments and reworked material — “The Ashtray” stands as a reminder of the project’s core: shadows, static, memory, and the strange emotional charge of sound captured in the moment.



Stylistically, The Ashtray sits within the Synthwave family—but not the polished, neon‑drenched variety that looks like it moisturises twice a day. This is the scruffier, more minimal cousin: the one who turns up with a pocketful of tape loops, a faint smell of vodka and absolutely no intention of behaving like a proper retro‑futurist anthem. It hums, it loops, it mutters to itself, and somehow that’s exactly its charm.

It’s a piece that honours the cassette‑culture ethos—lo‑fi, handmade, concept‑driven—while also feeling like a small slice of speculative cinema. A loop rescued from 1981, haunted by 2026.




Free downloads here: https://thiswindow.bandcamp.com/

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