Cover of the Computer Trilogy vinyl collection by Infinity Frequencies

seen from Argentina
seen from China

seen from France
seen from Canada

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Kazakhstan

seen from Malaysia

seen from Bangladesh

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Canada
Cover of the Computer Trilogy vinyl collection by Infinity Frequencies
Humanized version (although I guess it’s more like just anthropomorphized at this point) of the final album in the Computer Trilogy, Computer Afterlife. I leaned really into the afterlife part of the title if that wasn’t already obvious lol
Also fun fact: while I was figuring out what this design would look like, I image searched for examples of cyberpunk-esque wings for inspiration’s sake and was extremely disappointed when all that showed up were shitty AI generated ones that all looked exactly the same. We live in a society, folks!
Download: https://computer-gaze.bandcamp.com/album/computer-afterlife
---released in May 2014---------
Vapor Memory: 108
Infinity Frequencies - Empty
Definitely one of my top 5 favorite albums of the year. Had to share these nice words from Aïsha Devi on this album from Juno's best of 2014 list:
"It’s a sublime whole unity, a big wrap of mixed emotions that almost lead me to altered states of consciousness, a deviant comfort music. It’s very much playing with our collective memory as it’s a collection of 22 loops taken from TV commercials, reworked and reduced to the very elixir. It’s like he’s pushing the concept of TV hypnosis to its extreme, and transcends it. Brainwashing becomes brain healing, in a sorta modern mantra.
I’ve always been into ad jingles and anonymous commissioned music. Its functional constraints, format and stereotypical language of advertisement is a genre by itself. Infinite Frequencies is compressing the expressionism of it to the core into synthetic, liquid wobbly sensual sequences. The music is cathode ray tube music in a flash. We are all ad era kids and it has a deep imprint on our consciousness. Ineluctably, 'Just Do It' is the new Om. Computer Afterlife is a romantic dissection move, a cruel testimony. What would be left after our whole civilization has burned down? Recording of computer whispers, functional love, TV desires, mechanic complaints. Spectacular and cheesy, glorious and doomed at the same time. I only recognized the track 'Remember' that was initially written by Ennio Morricone for the movie 'Le Professionnel' and was also featured in a French dog food ad."