Francesco Fabris - DISPLACES (2026)

Artist: Francesco Fabris
Title: DISPLACES
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: Bedroom Community – HVALUR 46
Genre: Electronic
Quality: 16bit-44,1kHz FLAC / 24bit-44,1kHz FLAC
Total Time: 41:14
Total Size: 235 mb / 446 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: DISPLACES
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: Bedroom Community – HVALUR 46
Genre: Electronic
Quality: 16bit-44,1kHz FLAC / 24bit-44,1kHz FLAC
Total Time: 41:14
Total Size: 235 mb / 446 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Extraction Of The I (04:58)
2. Xanadu Phasing (04:30)
3. Barricading The Ice Sheets (04:41)
4. Monolith I (04:18)
5. A Quake In Being (05:10)
6. The Map Is The Territory (05:26)
7. Wolf-Rayet (04:30)
8. Monolith II (01:32)
9. Topography Of Extinction (06:09)
DISPLACES represents Fabris' most personal musical journey to date, inspired by the concept of hyperobjects and cartographic practices. The album sculpts a high-dimensional phased time-space composed of concrete materials and digital archetypes in a state of constant displacement. It delves into the symbolic and philosophical realms of mapping as one of the greatest sense-making mechanisms for life, in dialogue with object-oriented environments, superimposition and non-locality applied to cosmic, temporal, and emotional memory.
The sonic ecosystem expands on the image of navigating a path through a set of places, from the microcosm of quanta to the macro force of dark matter, from underwater depths to overland terrains, encapsulating the cyclical flow between birth and death, both in ecological and anthropological sense. The intersection of these shifting states is explored through the extensive processing of the langspil, Iceland's only traditional instrument, intertwined with manipulated field recordings of biophonies and geophonies captured across Icelandic and Venetian territories. These recordings form the backdrop for a meditative process that relocate familiar objects into unfamiliar realms, reflecting on the transformative power of self-reflection while encapsulating the fragmentation and entanglement found in nature and the human state. The record plunges the listener into a disconcerting and physical soundscape, as a “ghostly spectrality that comes in and out of phase with normalized human spacetime,” evoking sensations of suffocation and release as each layer continuously unfolds the palimpsest of the enclosed labyrinth.