Gestalt

Plaindrifter

Sale - Sale price $25.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $25.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Sale - Sale price $39.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $39.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Description

Gestalt is Plaindrifter’s sophomore album and their Ripple Music debut, released June 19, 2026, by the German progressive stoner/psychedelic trio from the Ruhr area. Spanning six tracks and just under 40 minutes—Moth Murmuration, Eternal Season, Hyborian Age, the short instrumental Respite, In Anima (featuring Ryan Garney of High Desert Queen), and the nine‑minute closer Debaser—the record pushes the heavy psych template toward something more cinematic and “desert‑prog,” adding keyboards by Philipp Seitzer and guest vocals from Garney and Lena Schneider to the band’s core of fuzzed-out guitars, bass, and drums. Produced, engineered, and mixed by Robin Stirnberg and mastered by Dennis Köhne, Gestalt builds on the trippy, expansive sound of their 2021 debut Echo Therapy but deliberately tries not to repeat it, leaning into more pronounced tempo and key changes and a stronger sense of long-form structure.

Critics describe the album as atmospheric, dynamic, and ambitious, rooted in wide‑open, desert-rock horizons but threaded with progressive rock and sludge-metal weight. Moth Murmuration and Eternal Season open with dreamy, supernova‑like sections that gradually erupt into crushing, mid‑tempo riffs, while Hyborian Age and In Anima combine hypnotic repetition with spacey ambient passages, often dropping back to “gliding through outer space” before detonating again into heavy climaxes. Respite serves as a soft, analog‑drummed instrumental breather, and Debaser closes the album with its longest journey, starting in burly, mid‑tempo heaviness and then veering into off‑the‑wall, spaced‑out playing and disjointed guitar lines before vocals re-enter and the band returns to their trademark “space floating” state. While some reviewers argue the record’s recurring motifs grow repetitive or that loud, glossy drum production occasionally flattens the dynamics—especially in Debaser—others praise Gestalt as an immersive, forward‑looking heavy psych trip; a “calming,” mind‑bending album of dinosaur‑step riffs and cosmic soundscapes that rewards headphones, patience, and getting lost in the whole rather than focusing on individual songs.

Gestalt is Plaindrifter’s sophomore album and their Ripple Music debut, released June 19, 2026, by the German progressive stoner/psychedelic trio from the Ruhr area. Spanning six tracks and just under 40 minutes—Moth Murmuration, Eternal Season, Hyborian Age, the short instrumental Respite, In Anima (featuring Ryan Garney of High Desert Queen), and the nine‑minute closer Debaser—the record pushes the heavy psych template toward something more cinematic and “desert‑prog,” adding keyboards by Philipp Seitzer and guest vocals from Garney and Lena Schneider to the band’s core of fuzzed-out guitars, bass, and drums. Produced, engineered, and mixed by Robin Stirnberg and mastered by Dennis Köhne, Gestalt builds on the trippy, expansive sound of their 2021 debut Echo Therapy but deliberately tries not to repeat it, leaning into more pronounced tempo and key changes and a stronger sense of long-form structure.

Critics describe the album as atmospheric, dynamic, and ambitious, rooted in wide‑open, desert-rock horizons but threaded with progressive rock and sludge-metal weight. Moth Murmuration and Eternal Season open with dreamy, supernova‑like sections that gradually erupt into crushing, mid‑tempo riffs, while Hyborian Age and In Anima combine hypnotic repetition with spacey ambient passages, often dropping back to “gliding through outer space” before detonating again into heavy climaxes. Respite serves as a soft, analog‑drummed instrumental breather, and Debaser closes the album with its longest journey, starting in burly, mid‑tempo heaviness and then veering into off‑the‑wall, spaced‑out playing and disjointed guitar lines before vocals re-enter and the band returns to their trademark “space floating” state. While some reviewers argue the record’s recurring motifs grow repetitive or that loud, glossy drum production occasionally flattens the dynamics—especially in Debaser—others praise Gestalt as an immersive, forward‑looking heavy psych trip; a “calming,” mind‑bending album of dinosaur‑step riffs and cosmic soundscapes that rewards headphones, patience, and getting lost in the whole rather than focusing on individual songs.

Details
detail icon barcode
Barcode :
0850074887423 0850074887416
detail icon publisher
Publisher :
Ripple Music Ripple Music
detail icon genre
Genre :
Metal
Product Dimensions
detail icon width
Length x Width x Height :
6 x 5.2 x 0.5 in 12.5 x 12.5 x 0.5 in
detail icon weight
Weight :
90 g 250 g

Gestalt

Plaindrifter

Sale - Sale price $25.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $25.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Sale - Sale price $39.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $39.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Description

Gestalt is Plaindrifter’s sophomore album and their Ripple Music debut, released June 19, 2026, by the German progressive stoner/psychedelic trio from the Ruhr area. Spanning six tracks and just under 40 minutes—Moth Murmuration, Eternal Season, Hyborian Age, the short instrumental Respite, In Anima (featuring Ryan Garney of High Desert Queen), and the nine‑minute closer Debaser—the record pushes the heavy psych template toward something more cinematic and “desert‑prog,” adding keyboards by Philipp Seitzer and guest vocals from Garney and Lena Schneider to the band’s core of fuzzed-out guitars, bass, and drums. Produced, engineered, and mixed by Robin Stirnberg and mastered by Dennis Köhne, Gestalt builds on the trippy, expansive sound of their 2021 debut Echo Therapy but deliberately tries not to repeat it, leaning into more pronounced tempo and key changes and a stronger sense of long-form structure.

Critics describe the album as atmospheric, dynamic, and ambitious, rooted in wide‑open, desert-rock horizons but threaded with progressive rock and sludge-metal weight. Moth Murmuration and Eternal Season open with dreamy, supernova‑like sections that gradually erupt into crushing, mid‑tempo riffs, while Hyborian Age and In Anima combine hypnotic repetition with spacey ambient passages, often dropping back to “gliding through outer space” before detonating again into heavy climaxes. Respite serves as a soft, analog‑drummed instrumental breather, and Debaser closes the album with its longest journey, starting in burly, mid‑tempo heaviness and then veering into off‑the‑wall, spaced‑out playing and disjointed guitar lines before vocals re-enter and the band returns to their trademark “space floating” state. While some reviewers argue the record’s recurring motifs grow repetitive or that loud, glossy drum production occasionally flattens the dynamics—especially in Debaser—others praise Gestalt as an immersive, forward‑looking heavy psych trip; a “calming,” mind‑bending album of dinosaur‑step riffs and cosmic soundscapes that rewards headphones, patience, and getting lost in the whole rather than focusing on individual songs.

Gestalt is Plaindrifter’s sophomore album and their Ripple Music debut, released June 19, 2026, by the German progressive stoner/psychedelic trio from the Ruhr area. Spanning six tracks and just under 40 minutes—Moth Murmuration, Eternal Season, Hyborian Age, the short instrumental Respite, In Anima (featuring Ryan Garney of High Desert Queen), and the nine‑minute closer Debaser—the record pushes the heavy psych template toward something more cinematic and “desert‑prog,” adding keyboards by Philipp Seitzer and guest vocals from Garney and Lena Schneider to the band’s core of fuzzed-out guitars, bass, and drums. Produced, engineered, and mixed by Robin Stirnberg and mastered by Dennis Köhne, Gestalt builds on the trippy, expansive sound of their 2021 debut Echo Therapy but deliberately tries not to repeat it, leaning into more pronounced tempo and key changes and a stronger sense of long-form structure.

Critics describe the album as atmospheric, dynamic, and ambitious, rooted in wide‑open, desert-rock horizons but threaded with progressive rock and sludge-metal weight. Moth Murmuration and Eternal Season open with dreamy, supernova‑like sections that gradually erupt into crushing, mid‑tempo riffs, while Hyborian Age and In Anima combine hypnotic repetition with spacey ambient passages, often dropping back to “gliding through outer space” before detonating again into heavy climaxes. Respite serves as a soft, analog‑drummed instrumental breather, and Debaser closes the album with its longest journey, starting in burly, mid‑tempo heaviness and then veering into off‑the‑wall, spaced‑out playing and disjointed guitar lines before vocals re-enter and the band returns to their trademark “space floating” state. While some reviewers argue the record’s recurring motifs grow repetitive or that loud, glossy drum production occasionally flattens the dynamics—especially in Debaser—others praise Gestalt as an immersive, forward‑looking heavy psych trip; a “calming,” mind‑bending album of dinosaur‑step riffs and cosmic soundscapes that rewards headphones, patience, and getting lost in the whole rather than focusing on individual songs.

  • CD
  • Vinyl