His name is Turk Dietrich, he collaborated with Telefon Tel Aviv and with Nine Inch Nail (he remixed "the frail"), therefore I think that's enough to have your attention, isn't it?!. Can you imagine a post-Kranky sound mixed with a big imprint of My Bloody Valentine? C'mon it's not so hard and I think they go pretty well together. Warm pastiches imbued in distortion, but here comes the main shoegaze factor: the music sounds like it's coming from far away. Fading images of fields in a sun bath?! But for it may be contradictory these fields look in the middle of a winter dawn. If you're into quiet droning and soft psychedelia probably Belong "has it!" (whatever it is). Melancholic music for a daydream, can you picture the traffic of a big town moving in slow motion?. Dietrich is without any doubt refined and even while molding the structure of these apparently shapeless tracks, he never stretches everything too much. The shoegaze comparison describes vividly the lowest common denominator of the majority of the tracks. Sometimes I've had the impression I was listening to the droned/electronic reincarnation of Swervedriver (that to me it's enough to justify the order of this cd). Sweet like a sugar cane and diluted like plankton into the depth of the sea: indie-rockers and electronic-elitists it's time to sacrifice your money pigs.