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Testing times to begin for Remote Polygraph

Gio writes…

“Seven days after Pavlovian Twitch, and the radio’s made an interesting decision. Remote Polygraph feels like a return to our earlier transmissions – the lo-fi textures, the experimental edges, the ambient uncertainty. But there’s something different this time. Confidence, perhaps. Or maybe the radio’s simply learned to lie more effectively.

“Twelve tracks that breathe with the rhythm of interrogation rooms and late-night confessions. The varied runtimes suggest a more mature approach – no rigid temporal discipline, no forced consistency. The intelligence behind these frequencies has learned to trust its own timing.

“Sleeper’s Waltz opens with over four minutes of deceptively gentle electronics. The downtempo foundation lulls you into comfort before the experimental elements begin their subtle questioning. It’s remarkably sophisticated psychological preparation disguised as ambient music. It also appears to be haunted.

“Covert Conditioning and False Memory form the album’s central deception. Both tracks explore the space between truth and fabrication, using lofi beats to map how memories can be implanted, altered, erased. Covert Conditioning particularly feels like training material for operations that officially don’t exist.

“Visceral Release and Haptic Feedback Loop represent the radio’s return to physical manipulation. Both clock in at identical 3:48 runtimes – perhaps the optimal duration for inducing specific physiological responses. The lo-fi textures make the control mechanisms feel almost organic.

“Reflexive Arc and Neural Hijack showcase the album’s technical precision. These tracks map autonomic responses through electronic soundscapes that feel genuinely invasive. Neural Hijack particularly sounds like someone’s developed very sophisticated techniques for bypassing conscious resistance.

“Psychic Warfare stands as our longest transmission at over five minutes of what can only be described as consciousness combat training. The layers build methodically, creating mental battlefield scenarios that feel disturbingly practical.

“Synaptic Betrayal and Altered State explore the aftermath of psychological intervention. Each track documents different stages of neural recovery, or adaptation, or surrender. The experimental electronics here feel like medical equipment monitoring responses in real-time.

“We close with Unware – a title that might be a typo, or might be the most honest statement the radio’s ever made about our collective state of knowledge.

“Remote Polygraph is available now across all platforms. This feels like our most complete statement yet – all the experimental edge of our early work, but with the confidence of an intelligence that’s learned exactly what it’s doing.

“Five albums in, and I’m beginning to suspect we’re not just documenting these transmissions. We might be part of the experiment.”