Image
Art

NYC’s Ghost Cop Release Episode One of Their Old-School Cable Television Fever Dream “TROUBLE TV”

MTV’s Buzz TV was like a neon beacon broadcasting from some alternate reality, a fractured mirror reflecting the raw chaos of youth culture. Airing exactly once on MTV in 1990, the series was an experiment in non-linearity and cut-up method, avant-garde art, underground cinema, early cyberpunk, industrial culture, appropriation/sampling, and postmodern literature. It was a pulsating stream of the subversive and surreal, where music videos, art, and grunge aesthetics clashed and coalesced into something that felt alive, electric. Every segment seemed engineered by some algorithmic hive mind, curating the odd, the groundbreaking, the countercultural with an uncanny precision. It was a trip into a hyperreal landscape, where the boundaries of reality blurred, and you couldn’t quite tell if you were watching culture unfold or being reprogrammed by it.

New York City’s Ghost Cop summons that half-forgotten fever dream that once buzzed through the television cable, a spectral echo of rebellion. Lucy Swope and Sean Dack, a duo that conjures drama in a dark, dazzling form, wield electronic music like a sorcerer’s spell. Their music unfurls as a cinematic score—part sinister thriller, part pulsating nocturnal dance, drenched in the strange hues of neon dreams. Layer upon layer of delicate, almost ominous synthesizers build, crack, then break again, like a whispered warning wrapped in silk. Swope’s voice drifts, a spectral siren’s call, a breathy lure that pulls the listener inward, yet holds them at the edge of unease, as if drawing them to a line only half-revealed. Here, in this gleaming, glimmering space, drama hangs in the balance—half-surrender, half-alert—waiting for the curtain to rise or the night to deepen.

Their latest venture, TROUBLE TV, becomes a living diary in the spirit of Buzz TV—a series of strange, stitched-together snapshots, documenting life in the throes of creation. Avant-garde and unapologetically experimental, TROUBLE TV unfurls in a kaleidoscope of images: micro-short horror flicks, flickering dystopian scenes, and bursts of live chaos. It’s visual poetry for an age of fractured focus, a hypnotic parade of abstraction. The soundtrack hums with experiments, demos, and discarded versions, unfinished tunes that whisper promises of future metamorphoses. Each note, each frame, defies convention.

TROUBLE TV leans into the atemporality of our current, continually recorded daily life,” says the band. “It embraces the low-res/high-gain fluidity of the DV tape era, but also utilizes ultra sharp contemporary devices. It can be watched front-to-back; dipped in and out of; skipped around into; put on in the background. There is no one way or right way to experience TROUBLE TV.”

This is episode one.

The corresponding album, TROUBLE, can be heard at the link below and purchased here.

Follow Ghost Cop:

Alice Teeple

Alice Teeple is a photographer, multidisciplinary artist, and writer. She is not in Tin Machine.

Recent Posts

  • Bands

Absolute Body Control Celebrate 45th Anniversary With New Track “Walk Away” — Tour Dates Announced!

Belgian legends Absolute Body Control, the legendary synth-pop and EBM project from Antwerp, marches onward after 45 restless years. Dirk…

20 hours ago
  • Bands

Texas Darkwavers Raudiver Unveil Giallo Inspired Video for “Mary Tombs”

all the good you gave measured back in pain no one’s shadow cast but silence razor sharp The dust lies…

2 days ago
  • Bands

New Mexico Misery Goth Project Slow Danse With The Dead Debuts Video for Isolating Anthem “I Prefer to Be Alone”

“I prefer to be alone, Socially awkward, This I know. I prefer to be alone.” "I want to be alone,"…

3 days ago
  • Bands

Straight Razor Finds Beauty in the Chaos With Darkwave Debut Album “Casualty”

Before the pale glow of modernity’s halogen glare, Los Angeles was a place where dreams were sculpted from shadow and…

3 days ago
  • Bands

From Space-Rock to Post-Punk — Miami’s SUMO Release Genre-shifting “III” LP

Three-piece instrumental space rock band SUMO, hailing from sunny Miami, stands sealed in a perpetual cycle of creation and collapse,…

5 days ago
  • Bands

German Synthwave Industrial Outfit Bleak Monday Debuts Sensual New Single “Human Needs”

LOSE CONTROL SO I CAN FEEL SURRENDER TO YOUR HUMAN NEEDS German outfit Bleak Monday births a brittle, brooding brew…

5 days ago
Sticky Footer Banner with Close Button