Tag Archives: #gothiclifestyle

Synapsyche Unleashed: Italian Dark Electro Duo Dives Deep with EVOL RADIO

Prepare your neural pathways for full overload — Italian industrial duo Synapsyche brings their unfiltered energy, brutal honesty, and electronic chaos to EVOL Radio in a brand-new exclusive interview premiering April 20, 2025 on EvolRadio.com.

From the project’s raw beginnings to its genre-fusing evolution under the Alfa Matrix label, the interview explores Synapsyche’s unique soundscape—where aggrotech aggression collides with synthpop hooks and dystopian visions.

Marco Mantovani and Luca Sassi take us on a mind-bending journey across the past, present, and future of their musical and personal lives—diving into songwriting mechanics, lyrical psychology, cyberpunk philosophy, and what’s next for the duo as they push boundaries in both studio and stage realms.

This feature delivers:

  • Exclusive insights into their newest work
  • A breakdown of their creative rituals
  • Thoughts on the ever-mutating dark music scene
  • Techno-dystopian dreams and legacy talk

💀 “This is more than an interview — it’s a direct neural download from one of the most dangerous minds in modern industrial.” — DJ Darkside, EVOL Radio

The full feature will be available in text format only, with embedded tracks and direct links to Synapsyche’s digital domains.

🔥 Faderhead Unleashes New Single “This Is Not The End” + Mindset Hacks for High-Functioning Controlled Chaos 🧠💥

🎤 New Track Previewed Live in Germany

Kicking off March with explosive energy, Faderhead delivered a sold-out show in Oberhausen, Germany—where fans got a surprise taste of a brand-new track: “This Is Not The End.” Despite never having heard it before, the crowd went off.

📹 Watch the crowd reaction here

The official music video will be filmed this Saturday in Hamburg, where the team hopes for an equally electric audience. The single is scheduled to drop mid-May, just in time to crank momentum before Wave-Gotik-Treffen.

💿 FH20 Album in the Works

In last month’s Patreon studio stream, Faderhead teased plans for a brand-new full-length album in early March 2026.

Why now?
2026 marks 20 years since the release of Faderhead’s debut album “FH1”, and what better way to celebrate than with an “FH20” release.

After a string of singles in 2024, it’s time for something more immersive. Faderhead is back in album mode.

🎛️ 1-Hour Rave Mix: Not Your Typical FH Vibe

March’s 1-hour Patreon-exclusive mix takes a rave-forward detour. Less darkwave, more full-on energy.

It’s rhythmic, pulsing, and designed to attract new listeners—so if you’re into high-octane beats, give it a spin.

🎟️ Upcoming Faderhead Live Dates

Apr 5, 2025 – Bahnhof Pauli, Hamburg (SOLD OUT!)
✨ with special guest: Mechanical Vein

Aug 9-10, 2025 – M’era Luna Festival, Hildesheim
🎟️ Get Tickets

💪 Mindset Hacks: Fuck Your Excuses, Use Microbursts Instead

Q1 is over. Are your New Year’s resolutions collecting dust? Let’s fix that.

We all make excuses—life’s busy, motivation’s low, the timing’s never right. But if you wait for perfect conditions, you’ll stay stuck forever.

⏱️ Microbursts: The 10-Minute Fix

Instead of aiming for a perfect hour-long work sprint, start with 5–15 minutes of focused action.
Set a timer. Do one task. When it dings, you’re done. Or keep going.

That’s the magic of microbursts—small momentum snowballs fast.

🗓️ Temporal Landmarks: Hit Reset on Command

Want a clean slate? Use temporal landmarks like Mondays, birthdays, or the 1st of the month to mentally reset.
Pick a hard start date and commit. No waiting for motivation. Just move.

🧠 Perfection Is a Lie. Progress Is Power

You don’t need the perfect hour or the perfect energy. You need movement.
Start with one push-up.
One sentence.
One small win.

Because motion beats perfection every time.

🚀 Take the Shot

Next time you’re tempted to delay:
Say “fuck that.”
Set a timer.
Start something.

Small wins build big momentum.

Unter Null Reawakens: From Ashes and Isolation to Sonic Resurrection with Hollow 💀

Back in the early 2000s, the industrial scene was on fire—chaotic, raw, and unapologetically loud. It was in that searing crucible that Unter Null was forged, the brainchild of an artist straddling classical music training and a deep fascination with sonic destruction. Raised on piano, cello, and choir, she’d been composing her own pieces since childhood. But it was the visceral aggression of powernoise and industrial that gripped her soul. The controlled chaos was intoxicating, a vehicle to exorcise emotions that polite concert halls could never contain.

Armed with Cubase and a Yamaha CS2X, she began sculpting the project that would become Unter Null—a collision of elegance and entropy, beauty and brutality.

The name itself—Unter Null, German for “below zero”—emerged as a tongue-in-cheek jab at her own self-esteem. A way to wear vulnerability like armor. “I struggled a lot growing up,” she admits. “It wasn’t some profound branding decision. It was just honest.” But over time, that phrase became more than a label; it became a mantra for transmutation—of pain into power, of failure into fuel.

Albums like The Failure Epiphany and Moving On are brutal emotional snapshots, soaked in the toxic residue of broken relationships and internalized shame. “I didn’t have a grasp on boundaries back then,” she reflects. The Failure Epiphany captured that spiral of self-doubt. But Moving On marked a shift—an album born of personal reckoning and emotional liberation. That record was nearly lost in a studio fire, and only the salvaged hard drives kept it from being incinerated. “That near-loss felt symbolic,” she says. “It mirrored the themes of survival woven through the music.”

While Unter Null remained her aggressive outlet, a new project emerged when a quieter pain needed expression. That project—Stray—was born during a particularly dark period. “The first song I wrote, ‘Does It Really Matter?,’ just didn’t fit with Unter Null,” she says. “It came from a place of vulnerability and empathy rather than rage.” Stray became the space for her softer introspections, standing in contrast to Unter Null’s sonic fury.

Through it all, music remained her emotional life raft. “I’ve never been great at expressing myself any other way,” she says. “Writing has always been instinctive—like a direct channel.” But she’s quick to acknowledge that even music can’t do all the heavy lifting. “It’s not a substitute for taking care of your mental health. You have to consciously work on that too.”

🎶 Listen Now:

After a period of creative dormancy, the embers were reignited through a long-overdue collaboration. Enter Hollow—a joint effort with Frontal Boundary that resurrected something vital in her. “It felt like we had just hit ‘pause’ and pressed ‘play’ again,” she says of reuniting with Brendin Ross, Krz Souls, and Jaysen Craves. Their synergy was electric, natural, and deeply satisfying. “It reminded me how essential it is to have inspiring, creative people in your circle.”

The track Hollow is a lyrical deep-dive into the psyche of damaged individuals unaware of their own brokenness. “Krz and I wrote it together. It’s about how unhealed trauma can ripple out and wound others,” she explains. Sonically, it blends weight and melody, aggression and emotion—a hallmark of both projects. “That contrast is what makes it work.”

Though she’s returned to the scene, she admits the landscape has changed dramatically. “When I first started, everything was different—especially the connection with fans,” she says. “Social media has reshaped everything.” But through that evolution, she’s found a deeper appreciation for her long-time supporters. “Seeing their excitement about my return has been so moving. I do this for them.”

The experience of releasing music in 2025 is far removed from the gritty underground scene she came up in. “There’s more competition now, but that’s not a bad thing,” she insists. “More people creating music means more voices being heard.” Even the sense of community has shifted. “It doesn’t feel so cutthroat anymore. Artists are lifting each other up, and it’s refreshing.”

With Hollow generating buzz, fans are already eager for more. A special SoCal show on May 26th with SITD will feature both Unter Null and Frontal Boundary, including a live performance of Hollow and a preview of new Unter Null material.

She’s also gearing up to release a brand-new single, Coming Up To Breathe, via Alfa Matrix Records on April 4th. “Unter Null is back in full swing,” she confirms. “Stray will follow, but I try to keep the two separate so they each get the space they deserve.”

Creatively, she’s steering Unter Null in a new direction—one marked by self-empowerment rather than self-destruction. “There’s still darkness, but now it’s about resilience and growth,” she says. Collaborations are fueling that shift, with upcoming projects involving Dawn of Ashes and remix work with Funker Vogt. “It’s exciting to see how each artist brings something unique to the table.”

And what does she want fans to take from all of it?

“I’m back. The sound might be different, more refined—but the core is still there,” she says. “Don’t ever let anyone take away your autonomy or make you feel like you’re not good enough. Stay true to yourself. Always.”

Deep Dive into the Universe of Unter Null: