does a vision
lend its wisdom
in the light held
by the prism
Bunadox returns from a quiet stretch with The Prism, a track that treats ambition as a condition of doubt and private desire. The Seattle project, led by sound designer and multi-instrumentalist Hans Twite, has always seemed drawn to the place where programmed precision meets the loose intelligence of players. Here, that tension feels newly sharpened. Baritone guitar moves through the arrangement with a low, searching authority; Will Andrews’s drums supply a restless architecture, syncopated enough to unsettle the floor under the song without turning the piece into an exercise. The vocals begin close to the chest, understated and watchful, then lift into a controlled glide, gathering power without breaking the song’s inward spell.
The track’s stated terrain is interior conflict, though the music keeps the drama physical. Its new-wave synth beat has mass and contour rather than a simple atmosphere, carrying traces of Ultravox’s sleek elegance and the haunted machiney of early Gary Numan, while the Dolby Atmos presentation gives the production a sense of depth. Bunadox draws from postpunk, dark wave, and industrial music, but The Prism gains its charge from restraint here: every part seems placed in relation to an unseen stress, a force bending light before it reaches the eye.
“There are many versions of ourselves, all living inside of us,” he says. “Each version has a conflicting level of certainty in who it is, and who it is supposed to be. A vision can be a force that drives us forward, but the light that pushes us, is also bent in our will. The choice of what we see, and who we listen to, is ours alone. Our intentions operate on many wavelengths, some in high frequencies, and others operate very low. But what can we see if we open up to it all?”
That explanation could read as metaphysics, but Twite’s background keeps the idea grounded. He has spent years in experimental groups, including The Ether Room and Jungle Maps, and has since built a career in audio design for games, film, science channels, and NPR production. His method for Bunadox is collaborative: he begins with unusual timbres, then invites local musicians, engineers, and producers to follow their instincts as much as their plans. On The Prism, that process yields a track concerned with selfhood without becoming airless. The song circles the inner vision of a possible self: the version we chase, obey, resist, or finally learn to question.
“There has been many times that I have felt pulled by a vision of what I was supposed to be doing, or who I was supposed to be in certain situations,’ he admits. “I’ve realized many times that idea can be a trap, and that there are more possibilities for yourself if you open up your mind and unravel your idea of how things should be.”
Listen to The Prism below and order the single here.
As a reintroduction after 2023’s Fell Into Night, The Prism is purposeful without grandstanding. It points toward a new series of releases and future multimedia performances with improvisation at the center. It gives Bunadox a persuasive form for its central preoccupation: the self as prism, bending intention into revelation, error, and motion.
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