Exposé Online banner

Exposé Online

Not just outside the box, but denying the existence of boxes.
Covering music from the fringes since 1993.

Reviews

Steve Roach — Sentient Being
(Projekt no#, 2026, DL)

by Peter Thelen, Published 2026-02-06

Sentient Being Cover art

Sentient: Endowed with feeling and unstructured consciousness. That’s a good start for describing this latest release by Steve Roach — a little bit of a lot of things: sequenced electronics, sweeping melodic beauty, panoramic brilliance, dreamy ambience, and curious sonic scintillations and sparkle. Six long tracks of Roach’s trademark sound, buoyant and celestial, mystifying yet familiar, this is the one I’ve been waiting for, one that awakens a listener’s deepest inner spiritual circuits, with each of the album’s six tracks fading to black long before losing its welcome. Let’s start in the middle of this 70-minute sandwich with “Rapt in Solitude,” a piece that comes in slowly like the fog, each chord revealing an energized yet simple beauty, stark and riveting, shining a seemingly endless light into the great expanse of darkness, overlapping and crossing paths, with few moments of silence. Then comes the title track, swirling with introspective brilliance for close to twenty long minutes, with the power to cut through the mysterious haze that encircles the listener, flowing and ebbing with majestic beauty and warmth, constantly morphing and rolling as it recreates itself; few pieces of music hold this kind of mesmerizing shimmer fused with such organic depth. While those two probably have the deepest impact, there is plenty more here to match their glory, like the set opener “Angels in Flight,” where bristling sequences reach deep beyond the horizon, blended with scaling colors and shadows while deep pulses reflect the magical power of the universe, while its follow-on “I Feel You” is highlighted by repeating clusters of tones that morph slightly with each occurrence, perhaps bits of piano with heavy studio treatments, but I would prefer to not even try to analyze how they were made, instead accepting the sounds at face value. After the title track, “Angels at Rest” seems to recap some of the earlier sonic experiences, while “This Place of Splendor” wraps up the album nicely with a long series of warm overlapping chord changes and myriad sparkle and sonic curiosities.


Filed under: New releases, 2026 releases

Related artist(s): Steve Roach

More info
http://projektrecords.bandcamp.com/album/sentient-being

 

What's new

These are the most recent changes made to artists, releases, and articles.