The Scottish sound sculptor crafted a bespoke transmission for Seattle’s KHUH, now released on Dustopian Frequencies.
A new work by Everyday Dust landed on January 17, 2026, but it didn’t arrive through the usual channels. Assemblance X Sessions was commissioned as a birthday broadcast for Hollow Earth Radio, the Seattle low-power FM station KHUH, and aired during DJ Bleek’s Urban Mutant show. The Scottish artist, known for his dust-laden musique concrète, built a suite of cavernous soundscapes that trace the movement of batwings from underworld to twilight forests. It is earthy music, rooted in physical texture, the kind that feels like it might leave a residue on your speakers.
Hollow Earth Radio operates with a clear mission. It programs found sound, field recordings, forgotten music, low-fi demos, and things that feel real. The station deliberately avoids the slickness of corporate streaming, championing the raw and the unpolished. This context matters when listening to Assemblance X Sessions. The piece doesn’t attempt to seduce an algorithm. It was made for a specific moment, a specific audience tuning into a frequency in Seattle, and now released on Dustopian Frequencies.
The work belongs to a lineage of transmission arts, keeping the airwaves unpredictable. With so much of the radio spectrum carved up by conglomerates, the fact that a station like KHUH can still commission original electronic music feels like a small, important victory. Everyday Dust delivers an earful of tangible dread, not through shock, but through a careful assembly of field recordings and synthesized atmosphere. It’s a reminder that good radio still exists, you just have to know where to dial.
Join the Club
Like this story? You’ll love our monthly newsletter.
Thank you for subscribing to the newsletter.
Oops. Something went wrong. Please try again later.





