Seefeel Release Sol.Hz, Their Most Minimal Record Yet

The longtime Warp act pares everything back on a new full-length that follows two 2024 mini-albums.

Thirty years after becoming the first guitar band signed to Warp Records, Seefeel are still challenging the idea of what their music can be. The London group, known for drifting between IDM, ambient, and post-rock, has just released Sol.Hz, a record that dials back the density of their past work to something startlingly spare.

The album follows two mini-albums from 2024 and lands as their most minimal project to date. Across its tracks, Seefeel trade layered washes for open, pastoral spaces that summon images of countryside drives. “Everydays” is built from a single shimmering loop, a fragment of sound that repeats and slowly shifts. The whole album feels unhurried, as if it is moving through a landscape rather than a club.

Seefeel’s early connection to Warp came with a remix from Aphex Twin, a sign of how fluidly they moved between scenes. Sol.Hz continues that openness but does so with a new economy. There is nothing extra here. Every sound has a reason, and the silence between them is just as deliberate. After decades of shape-shifting, Seefeel have found a directness that feels hard-won.

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ROMBO Editorial Staff

ROMBO Editorial Staff

The collective voice behind ROMBO Magazine’s news, reviews, features, and cultural coverage.