Sounds really great, univalve. I can't wait to hear a better quality recording of the material.
I've taken the liberty of running the band description you provided through Google Translate:
univalve's friend wrote:Analog Pattern Robots: Alf meets strung Space organ
Connoisseurs know: It takes only a disco beat a good riff and the conviction to play it. Connoisseurs know: Less is more, and a trio for the pure doctrine is already too much. As stated earlier? A good song is good even with just an acoustic guitar. Maybe, maybe not. Since analog pattern robots after all, is clear: A good song is good even with drums and guitars obscure. That which applies elsewhere as the essence - namely, the bass - is served here in passing. For bass you need a bass! This may sound bold, by chubby cheeks and sometimes cheesy. The cheese sticks, pulling the strings, but it is always delicious.
Effect guitarist and drummer Robin Jack, the two DAF, with melody and staccato vocals without affektiertes - and faster. An unbeatable duo Disco Knights Templar, the Plauzbär and the lean. Hannes drummer plays his kit with nimble thrust, as though he had never noticed what the sluggishness and inertia of old rockers.
And the guitar? The sounds sometimes harmonious, feist tugging, even more so after pulsing techno-ambient sounds. Warm sounds cold-pressed. Unknown synth echoes, countless fuzz pedals, and the most obscure Octave Guitar Rig, which may have played a guitarist in a duo ever. The soundscapes from looped guitar phrases and almost hypnotic melody pattern is like a musical mountain tunnels discovered by their rhythmic sound holes. No verkopften spiritual seat covers, the music undermines the confidence and goes directly into the blood. The Village People took four people to properly disengage what. Analog Pattern robots need only two.Well, and why Alf? Because this music is not of this world. And organ space? After guitar sound at least not analog pattern Robots. And who knows, sounds like a space organ.