With Optic Sink, Natalie Hoffmann (NOTS) creates a musical paradox: an endeavor that doesn't really seem to belong to any particular time or place, constructed with sounds that are synthesized and stripped down, yet bristling with urgency and brutalist emotion. The project took shape in 2018, when NOTS were on a break to write and woodshed music for 3, and Hoffmann began experimenting on her four-track recorder. Optic Sink surfaced as a performance soon after, appearing at bars, venues and festivals, including Memphis Concrète and SXSW.Hoffmann drives Optic Sink in live performances and on the self-titled debut album, with percussionist Ben Bauermeister (Magic Kids, Toxie, A55 Conducta) collaborating from the co-pilot's seat. Setting up camp on the post-punk side of the minimal electronic scene, Optic Sink eschew computers for a warmer, decidedly human soundscape. Hoffmann's power, and the tension she generates between human and machine, evokes Maria, the rebellious teacher-turned-Maschinenmensch in Fritz Lang's Metropolis, and Ripley, the swaggering, sacrificing heroine of Ridley Scott's Alien franchise. Dadaism and the Bauhaus movement could both be cited as influences; so might the existentialist philosophy of Simone de Beauvoir and the jump-cuts of Maya Deren.Written over a two-year period, the eight songs that comprise Optic Sink sound like they should've been recorded in a bathysphere or on a space station-instead, they were captured via analog tape at Andrew McCalla's Bunker Audio studio in summer 2019. Bauermeister's inventive aux percussion and drum machine work provides the backdrop, while Hoffmann stokes a proverbial furnace in the foreground, dryly revisiting and repeating words and phrases until they're imbued with portent. Hoffmann's synthesizers add texture with growls and shrieks, often mutating danceable rhythms into shimmering walls of sound. Optic Sink defy categories, shape-shifting from cold wave to psychedelia to distorted noise rock. In the process-which frequently occurs in a single song-Optic Sink claim unchartered territory as they cathartically fragment and reassemble sounds, concepts, and verbal constructs. The conflict they define is life in America in 2020, finding beauty in the journey despite what the final resolution might be.
Release date:
October 23, 2020
Label:
Install our app to receive notifications when new upcoming releases are added.
Recommended equipment and accessories
-
Vinyl Care - Top Picks
A selection of accesories to keep your turntable equipment & vinyl records in the best shape
-
Nobsound Little Bear T7 Tube Preamp
Delivers rich, warm audio through its high-quality vacuum tubes, featuring multiple inputs and adjustable gain
-
Turntables - Top Picks
A selection of reliable record players you can buy today, for every budget
-
Vevor Ultrasonic Cleaner
Thoroughly clean and restore your vinyl records, removing dust, dirt, and grime from every groove without damaging the surface
-
Pro-Ject Phono Box DC Pre-Amp
Compact, high-performance phono preamplifier for both MM and MC cartridges, delivering a clean, detailed signal with minimal noise.
Featured Upcoming Vinyl
-
Sugar House of Dead Memories / Long Live Love Single
Bmg
May 1, 2026 -
Marmozets Co.War.Dice.
Nettwerk Records
May 22, 2026 -
Aldous Harding Train On The Island
4Ad
May 8, 2026 -
Croz Boyce Croz Boyce (Clear)
Domino
May 8, 2026 -
Zara Larsson Midnight Sun
Epic Records
June 5, 2026 -
Kraftwerk RAdio-Activity
Warner Records/Parlophone
May 15, 2026 -
Hether Holy Water [2xLP]
R&R
May 29, 2026 -
Chuck Prophet Wake The Dead
Yep Roc Records
June 5, 2026 -
Jejune Wait A Lifetime
Numero
June 19, 2026 -
The Home Team It Lives, It Changes (Opaque White)
Invogue Records
June 26, 2026 -
Lusaint Apothecary
Heavenly Fire
May 8, 2026 -
Les Claypool’s Fearless Flying Frog Brigade Return of the Live Frogs: Volume 1
Ato Records
May 22, 2026 -
Armored Saint Emotion Factory Reset
Brutal Planet
June 12, 2026 -
Lucia & The Best Boys Picking Petals
Communion Group Limited
July 31, 2026