There is something beautifully perverse about titling your first properly titled album "Grapes Of Nothingness". It promises abundance and delivers… absence. Or rather, a very curated, hand-numbered, coloured-vinyl kind of absence, courtesy of Karlrecords.
Periode, the duo of Andreas Reihse and Thomas Winkler, have been quietly refining their dialogue since 2016. Reihse, known as a founding member of Kreidler and a composer for theatre and film, brings a structural instinct that never quite turns authoritarian. Winkler, who moves between music, painting, publishing and performance, supplies the grain, the friction, the slightly crooked line that keeps things human.
The setup is almost ascetic: a 70-plus Telecaster with eccentric pedals, a drum machine, an overworked laptop, and two minds that understand restraint. Winkler’s guitar patterns feel fragmented, as if they were discovered rather than written. They shimmer in reverb, hesitant and searching, until Reihse’s beats enter not to dominate but to frame. His programmed rhythms flirt with groove, then pull back at the last second, holding tension like someone who knows that gratification is overrated.
The backstory of Winkler learning his distinctive picking technique from a homeless man under the Brighton piers in 1986 sounds suspiciously cinematic. But the playing carries that ghostly residue. There is a sense of inherited gesture, now sharpened by decades of practice. The guitar lines are not flashy. They circle, they hover, they insist without raising their voice.
Across nine tracks, "Grapes Of Nothingness" unfolds less like a collection of songs and more like a series of mood studies. Melancholy is present, but it is not dramatic. It is the kind that watches the horizon rather than collapsing on the floor. The album often feels nocturnal, yet it can just as easily conjure brutal midday light, asphalt shimmering, a train platform somewhere in Berlin. Titles like “New Trains” and “Hohenschönhausen” hint at movement, but the motion is ambiguous. Are we travelling, or is the world sliding past while we remain still? The record never clarifies, and that is part of its quiet intelligence.
There are coordinates you might recognise: a trace of the atmosphere once cultivated by Les Disques du Crépuscule, a certain kraut-informed motorik discipline, a faint echo of Spaghetti Western spaciousness. But these are signposts, not destinations. Periode are not quoting; they are navigating. What emerges is something like a subdued Musique Noir, where the drama has already happened and we are left with its afterglow.
The production, tweaked and spatially polished, keeps the guitar’s contemplative drift in tension with the drum machine’s crisp, slightly scratchy surface. The beats never fully surrender to dancefloor logic, yet they are too physical to be dismissed as mere ambience. Is it trance or dance? The record shrugs and keeps moving.
What makes this album compelling is its refusal of spectacle. In a time when electronic music often competes for attention with brute force, Periode work with suggestion. They stretch a mood across a limited palette and prove that limitation can be fertile. Nothingness, here, is not emptiness. It is space. Space to drift, to project, to listen to the faint mechanics of repetition and variation.
Hand-numbered vinyl aside, this is not about collectability. It is about duration. About letting a guitar figure repeat just long enough to alter your perception of time. About discovering that a delayed groove can be more affecting than a drop. The grapes, it turns out, are not nothing at all. They are small, dark, and quietly intoxicating.