More than a decade after his last full album, Kim Hiorthøy returns with Ghost Note, out March 2025 via the Belgian label Blickwinkel—an exploration of sound at the edge of presence and absence, a fictional world that feels both constructed and organic.
Using mostly digital technology, Hiorthøy created a set of instruments that are real—you can hear them, they have tone, timbre, and resonance—but also not. The percussion, for instance, sounds like scrap metal drums. But are they real? Do they exist? Hiorthøy plays with perception, challenging what feels real and what feels like a memory. In doing so, Ghost Note becomes an invitation to embrace uncertainty and indefinability.
"It’s a kind of foggy area between theatre and daily life. Ghost notes. I wanted to try to make music that existed in this in-between space. Electronic music that is acoustic, a kind of emotional music that also hides in abstraction (or the other way around), and to try to make tracks that were sort of falling apart as I was making them," says Kim Hiorthøy.
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More than a decade after his last full album, Kim Hiorthøy returns with Ghost Note, out March 2025 via the Belgian label Blickwinkel—an exploration of sound at the edge of presence and absence, a fictional world that feels both constructed and organic.
Using mostly digital technology, Hiorthøy created a set of instruments that are real—you can hear them, they have tone, timbre, and resonance—but also not. The percussion, for instance, sounds like scrap metal drums. But are they real? Do they exist? Hiorthøy plays with perception, challenging what feels real and what feels like a memory. In doing so, Ghost Note becomes an invitation to embrace uncertainty and indefinability.
"It’s a kind of foggy area between theatre and daily life. Ghost notes. I wanted to try to make music that existed in this in-between space. Electronic music that is acoustic, a kind of emotional music that also hides in abstraction (or the other way around), and to try to make tracks that were sort of falling apart as I was making them," says Kim Hiorthøy.
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