With North Star, Matthew Robert Hunt constructed an interstellar corridor between existential rawness and avant-garde elevation. While the distortion-laced vocal refrains drag flickers of pain from the peripheries into focus, the effervescent textures send them back into orbit. It is alt-electronica with a soul too spectral to be anchored. A contradiction in theory, resolute in execution.
As the debut release from Hunt’s third studio album, North Star signposts more than creative direction. It gives form to the immaterial. This isn’t a drift into the conceptual. It’s a controlled propulsion into the emotional architecture of love as a guiding force. The instrumental minimalism is illusory. Beneath the smooth surface lies a pressure system engineered by bass pulses and synths that never settle into passivity. The entire production oscillates between gravitational pull and ambient escape, lending a physicality to the metaphysical.
There’s a paradoxical weight to the air within the track. The atmospheres are lifted, the intent is grounded. Even with the experimentalism dialled all the way up, there’s no alienation. The invitation is clear: surrender to the resonance.
Hunt’s catalogue may resist easy categorisation, but it never fails to offer immersion. From bass-driven high-energy escapism to the grounding warmth of acoustic folk sincerity, he builds sonic worlds that serve as full-body sensory transport. North Star adds a new axis to his sound, one that refracts the light of his most emotionally luminous work.
North Star is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.
Review by Amelia Vandergast
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