This site has limited support for your browser. We recommend switching to Edge, Chrome, Safari, or Firefox.

FREE SHIPPING IN NZ ON ORDERS OVER $70

JOIN OUR RECORD CLUB - GET FREE SHIPPING ON ALL ORDERS & 10% OFF PRE-ORDERS

Cart 0

No more products available for purchase

Products
Free shipping in Aotearoa! You are $70 away from free shipping.
Leave an order note or gift card message
Add Gift Wrap & Card
PO Box or Rural Delivery?
Pair with
Subtotal Free
View cart
Shipping, taxes, and discount codes are calculated at checkout

Your Cart is Empty

Galactic Melt - Flying Out

COM TRUISE

Galactic Melt (10th Anniversary Edition)

$70.00
FORMAT

IMPORTED TITLE - This product is sourced from overseas. Usually ships within 2-3 weeks

Earn 7 F|O Points on this item

Free Shipping on NZ orders over $70

When talking about the music of Com Truise (one of the many pseudonyms of New Jersey designer/musician Seth Haley), the nostalgia bit inevitably comes up, so let’s get that out of the way. Yes, his songs tap classic sci-fi and proto-electro in a way that is distinctly early eighties in scope. But they’re also remarkably weird—stutter-step proggy and intoxicatingly psychedelic, like those classic touchstones got drunk on lava lamp juice inside a pinball machine. After his well-received Cyanide Sisters EP, a grip of remixes for artists like Twin Shadow, Neon Indian, and, uh, Daft Punk, and a few floating MP3s, Truise’s first LP, Galactic Melt, will finally enter brainspaces this summer.

And what an appropriate title it bears. For a brief moment, opener “Terminal” subsumes you in warm, starry-eyed synth arpeggios, and then down the rabbit hole you go—from the keyed up, skyscraping machine love of “VHS Sex” and “Cathode Girls” to opuses like “Air Cal” and “Ether Drift” that sound like Doogie Howser’s idea of the perfect prom song—mathy, forlorn, funky, and mighty in technical ambition. That they’re all noticeably cinematic is, of course, by design—Haley envisioned Galactic Melt as a “sort of film score…from the mind,” chronicling the lift and death of Com Truise, the world’s first synthetic/robotic astronaut, from his creation and life on earth to his subsequent mission to a newly discovered galaxy called “Wave 1.” Eventually, Truise becomes one with his newfound cosmos, like Pinocchio becoming a real boy, but in the nether regions of imaginary space.

Tracklisting

  1. Terminal
  2. VHS Sex
  3. Cathode Girls
  4. Air Cal
  5. Flightwave
  6. Hyperlips
  7. Brokendate
  8. Glawio
  9. Ether Drift
  10. Futureworld
  11. Galactic Melt 
  12. Karova 
  13. Intraplexdin 
  14. Pantex 
  15. Cntrld 
  16. Arwarw 


[{"variant_id":"39672980013118" , "metafield_value":""}]