
by Ben Hogwood
What’s the story?
The enterprising quiet details label welcomes Scanner – aka Robin Rimbaud – to deliver the latest in their increasingly impressive series of albums.
For this particular opus, Rimbaud gave himself a brief: “This album is forged entirely from the resonant clangs, echoes, and whispers of a stainless steel staircase at home, transforming everyday architecture into an unexpected orchestra.
By coaxing rhythm, tone, and atmosphere from the metallic body of a staircase, the work reimagines movement between floors as a passage through sound.
No synthesisers were used in the creation, only the natural sound of the staircase using a geophone seismic microphone and the gentle assistance of the occasional resonant filter and sample software.”
What’s the music like?
Darkly comforting. Scanner’s music can be experienced on two levels – one immersive and one with a broader perspective.
The immersive listener will appreciate how each track changes in harmonic content and texture over time, the incremental changes small and gradual but also meaningful.
Meanwhile the listener approaching this music from afar will get a firm appreciation of the space Scanner creates but will more than likely move into an immersive experience due to the intensity of the music. The textures, together with an almost complete lack of percussion, lead to the listener being suspended in thin air.
Start Moment bears out the move from passive to active listening, its thick low range drone punctuated with one of the resonant clangs Scanner talks about. Then the sound begins to fluctuate, the perspective changing to suggest the listener positioned inside an enormous tube.
Riser Beam Connection dresses its persistent central tone with slow moving tones of glassy purity, but Base Plate has more ominous designs and is creepy when powering down at the end. Grain Stress has atonal, avant-garde designs throughout its unpredictable movements, with plucked strings here and gathering clusters of notes there.
Finally the spacious End Moment, Wires is an immersive drone spread across nearly a quarter of an hour, the drone supporting sonorous, bell-like sounds and the scattering of electronic debris in the foreground.
Does it all work?
It does – who would have thought a staircase could provide these moments of drama?! Scanner brings from his source material a remarkably wide range of textural and emotional responses.
Is it recommended?
It is – an inventive five-movement suite that really pushes at the boundaries of its components, making a whole that traverses some weird corners, but which ultimately provides its listener with a reassuring ambience. A fine achievement.
Listen / Buy
Published post no.2,714 – Monday 7 November 2025
