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The result is something that takes you right into the heart of their creative processes, veering from completely abstract ambient explorations through buoyant repetitions that float into the territory of the most cosmic German and Italian synth explorers of the 1970s and 80s, then take flight into otherworldly techno grooves. It's not a sound that punches you in the face with its newness or weirdness the album draws you in gently with the truly beautiful airborne, beat-free opening passage of "Redshift" and "Dandelion Spheres, " and each track thereafter is subtle, rarefied and elegant. Says James, "Whorl can be taken as one long piece, because in the performance of it, we've gone where the processes we've set up have taken us. " And he's completely right it's as a whole that Whorl comes to life and really opens up its secrets and surprises. It's a truism that you should expect the unexpected from SMD, but this time round you can be damn sure of it, as they've created a system to ensure that it's precisely the only thing you can expect.