Some musicians write albums. Others map territories. Craven Faults has been doing the latter for years, patiently sketching a peculiar cartography where analogue synthesizers behave like geological tools and melodies emerge the way old rail lines surface from peat and fog.
With "Sidings", the project’s third full-length double LP following "Erratics & Unconformities" and "Standers", the anonymous architect behind the name returns to the same terrain: northern England seen not through postcards but through strata. Landscapes here are layered with industry, abandoned engineering projects, folklore, and a quietly obsessive relationship with sound technology. It’s pastoral music, if your idea of pasture includes rusted rail yards, forgotten viaducts, and the faint electrical hum of machines that refuse to die.
Craven Faults has always worked within a language of slowly evolving analogue sequences. Repetition is the skeleton, but patience is the real instrument. "Sidings" stretches this approach across eight pieces that unfold like journeys rather than compositions. The opener “A. Ganger” immediately sets the tone: arpeggios rotate with deliberate inevitability, like wheels finding their rhythm after a long push uphill. There’s propulsion, but it’s not the impatient kind. It feels engineered rather than performed.
The album’s conceptual framework wanders through railway construction, remote communities, and a labyrinth of historical references that jump between continents and decades. Recording studios appear in the liner notes like distant signal posts: Olympic, Gold Star, Black Ark, Wally Heider. The implication is quietly mischievous. The building of railroads, the building of studios, the building of electronic music cultures. All forms of infrastructure, all shaping how energy travels.
“Stoneyman” is perhaps the clearest demonstration of Craven Faults’ craft. The sequence is simple, almost stubborn, but the surrounding textures shift like weather over open moorland. Synth tones accumulate warmth until they glow rather than pulse. You start noticing microscopic variations, tiny rhythmic hesitations. It’s hypnotic in the literal sense, not the fashionable one.
Shorter tracks like “Yard Loup” and “Drover Hole Sike” function almost like signposts along the route. Brief, skeletal, they let the larger pieces breathe. “Three Loaning End” and “Incline Huttes” introduce subtle harmonic turns that feel like a road suddenly bending around a hill you didn’t see coming.
Then there’s “Far Closes”, the fifteen-minute closing track that quietly confirms the whole project’s logic. By this point the album has trained your ears to accept slow development as narrative. The piece unfolds with a kind of stoic beauty: two chords, a patient sequence, and a gradually thickening atmosphere that seems to condense out of cold air. Minimal ingredients, maximum horizon.
The persistent mystery around the project’s identity has always been part of the appeal. Rumours circulate, theories multiply, but none of it matters much. Craven Faults works precisely because the music feels detached from personality. It behaves more like landscape than confession.
What "Sidings" does particularly well is reinforce the idea that electronic music can carry a sense of place without relying on obvious sonic clichés. There are no field recordings of wind or sheep. Instead, the geography emerges through structure: repetition as terrain, modulation as weather, analogue warmth as soil.
It also quietly continues a tradition running from early minimalist electronics to kosmische music and the experimental underground that treats synthesizers less like futuristic gadgets and more like patient mechanical companions. The sound is neither nostalgic nor aggressively modern. It simply persists.
By the end of "Sidings", the metaphor of railways feels unavoidable. Tracks branching, converging, disappearing into tunnels. Some lines abandoned, others still carrying cargo through the night. Craven Faults doesn’t hurry the journey. It lets the listener walk beside the rails, counting sleepers, watching distant red kites circle overhead.
In an age addicted to immediacy, this sort of music feels almost subversive. Nothing explodes, nothing begs for attention. The album just continues forward, mile after mile, quietly proving that sometimes two chords really are enough. Three, as the album itself suggests, would probably be extravagant.