Substak + LR Friberg
“The White Between Words”
Substak is the alias of Kostas Staikos, a sound artist based in Athens, Greece. His work moves through the deeper end of electronic music – drone ambient, space ambient, dub ambient, electronica and hypnotic minimalism – always shaped by a sense of inward movement. In Greek there is a verb, εμβαθύνω, meaning “to deepen”, and this perfectly captures the core of his practice: a continual descent into texture, resonance and the subterranean pulse of sound. For Kostas, Substak is less a name than a method – “sub” for low frequencies and introspective moods, “stak” from his own name. An abstract container for experiments, escapes and the slow building of a personal sonic language.
LR Friberg is a Swedish composer, mastering engineer and narrative artist whose work bridges sound and speculative fiction. Her music begins in mathematical processes – cellular automata generating evolving harmonic structures – and grows into immersive, emotionally driven ambient landscapes. Each piece functions as both music and world-building: sonic fragments of the ongoing fictional universe she writes, where light, place and connection shape atmosphere as much as melody. Her focus is precision, mood and storytelling through sound.
Though coming from different angles, Substak and LR share something essential: music as escape, experimentation and dialogue. Kostas describes collaboration as a natural way to trade ideas and deepen sound. LR finds that Kostas’ textures integrate flawlessly into her frameworks, opening spaces she wouldn’t reach alone. The admiration is mutual – LR is one of Kostas’ favorite artists to work with, and she sees every collaboration with him as an invitation into new terrain. Together, they create ambient that is both grounded and atmospheric, abstract and emotional – a meeting point where deep minimalism and narrative generativity merge into one evolving sound.
***
She’d been coming to the fjord every morning that week.
The city behind her stirred and hissed. Gulls shrieking over dumpsters, tram line clattering in rehearsal for rush hour. Bells rang out from the cathedral, mistimed and overlapping, like no one had agreed what hour it was anymore.
But out here, by the water, time did something else. It slowed. Not gently. More like a held breath. More like waiting.
Trine leaned against the railing, fingers curled around warm steel.
“I used to think peace would feel like sleep,” she said quietly, not looking up. “But it doesn’t. It feels like aftermath. Like the pressure that settles after the shattering stops.”
A silence answered. The kind that wasn’t empty, just unseen.
“I can track calm the way I used to track anomalies. There’s data in it. Repeating patterns. Subtle recursions. A kind of… harmonic delay. Not static. Not passive. Just a system cooling slowly, pretending it isn’t still under load.”
The wind shifted slightly, brushing the back of her neck. She didn’t shiver, but her breath caught, like someone had just stepped up behind her. Like something was about to speak.
“Stillness lies,” she said, lower now. “It tricks you into thinking nothing’s moving. But all the while, pressure builds. Currents gather.”
A ripple formed far down the fjord. Not wind. Not current. Too precise.
Trine watched it. Didn’t follow it with her eyes, just… marked it. Like you do with a noise in a dark house.
“Maybe that’s all there is now,” she said. “Residual motion. Echoes with memory. The shape left behind after a convergence.”
She closed her eyes. The world didn’t vanish.
But it did watch. Not hostile. Not kind. Just… observant.
“I don’t need the world to disappear anymore,” she whispered. “Just give me pause. Enough to decide if I still belong in it.”
She opened her eyes. Stayed still. Waited.
Then, finally, turned. Not with urgency. Not with fear. But like someone who knew she’d been seen, and didn’t need to run.
The city waited behind her.
And something else, just outside knowing, waited with it.






