Sabrinde
Ysplo

490
Ysplo Cover

released April 24, 2026

There are albums that announce themselves with genre, and others that quietly dismantle the idea of genre altogether. Ysplo belongs to the latter. Conceived in 2002 and never formally released in the past, this body of work stands as a singular artefact: an electronic album that drifts through soundscape, industriall, experimental, IDM, drone and ambient—yet somehow remains internally coherent, as if all these divergent languages were dialects of one private tongue.

Behind the name Sabrinde is Dirk Pauwels, a Master in Audio-Visual Arts, whose practice has always leaned toward the liminal zones between disciplines, technologies, and emotions. Ysplo does not attempt to “fit” anywhere. It resists shelving, refusing the neat taxonomy of electronic subgenres. Instead, it behaves like a weather system: mutable, layered, and often unpredictable, yet guided by an underlying climate that feels intentional and strangely intimate.

The album’s tone is marked by continual transformation. Moments of near-silence and suspended ambience give way to sudden pulses, fractured rhythms, or industrial surges. Beats appear, vanish, and reappear in altered forms: textures swell and recede like tides. Sentiment oscillates between austerity and warmth, tension and release, abstraction and a faint, human fragility. The listener is never allowed to settle into a single emotional posture. Each track seems to question the one before it, proposing a new atmosphere, a new logic of movement, a new way of inhabiting sound.

What makes Ysplo especially remarkable, however, is not only its aesthetic ambition but its technical austerity. The entire album was constructed from a single stereo track in Sound Forge. There were no loop or glitch tools, no automation curves, no undo lists—only manual editing, performed with patience and risk. Every cut, every transition, every layering of sound was a deliberate commitment, irreversible in its moment. This working method gives the album a tactile quality, as if each sonic gesture bears the imprint of the hand that shaped it.

In a medium often defined by infinite reproducibility and non-destructive editing, Ysplo insists on finitude and consequence. The soundscapes breathe with the tension of decisions that could not be undone. The ambient passages are not decorative but meditative, holding space for the listener to linger inside the architecture of sound itself.

To listen to Ysplo is to step into a shifting interior landscape. It is not an album that offers hooks or easy narratives. Instead, it invites slow attention, curiosity, and a willingness to drift without a map. Its coherence does not come from stylistic unity but from a deeper consistency of intent: a devotion to exploration, to texture, to the emotional resonance of abstract form.

Though unreleased, Ysplo remains a quietly radical work—an early-2000s artifact that feels curiously untethered from its time. It stands as a testament to what can emerge when technical limitation meets artistic stubbornness, and when genre boundaries are treated not as rules but as raw material.

In the end, Ysplo is less an album than a sonic terrain: difficult to define, impossible to reduce, and deeply rewarding for those willing to wander its contours.

Immerse yourself – headphones recommended!

All tracks composed, produced and mixed by Dirk Pauwels
Graphic Design: Johan Van Oeckel
Photography: Dirk Pauwels

Thanks to: Ivo Plamenov Petrov and Jan Indip Vossen

[mhrk490]

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