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Since 2010, many netlabels and artists publish their new free music releases on the clongclongmoo website. Free means that you don't have to pay anything or register to download music. However, you can usually pay something to support the artists. Please note the licenses under which the music is published. This is important to know what you are allowed to do with the music. Please visit the labels' homepages to get the free music. Most files are published under a creative commons licence. At netlabellist you will find an extensive list of websites that also offer (or have offered) free music. If you run a netlabel yourself or offer your music for free and want to draw attention to it, you are welcome to use the submission form. And remember that clongclongmoo is not there to do business, because “Business Is Not My Music.”

Farrux Vekhalayev – Image of Image

Farrux Vekhalayev – Image of Image

Farrux Vekhalayev

“Image of Image”

The cage was perfect. Its six rectangular faces were framed by beams of the finest rays of light–countless lines of all kinds: straight, zigzagging, curved. Each line intersected others at impossible angles and had its own way of being: moments of stillness followed by bursts of vigorous throbbing.
In the center of the room, before a large transparent screen stood two. He was human, or rather whatever was left of him. She was a simulation, immaculate but fragmentary.
“Do you see this?” he asked, pointing to the screen. Only a moment ago, lines like the ones that created the impenetrable boundaries of their space were crawling across it. Now their chaotic pattern transformed into an orderly dance of geometric shapes. Circles, squares, triangles fluttered like dust in the artificial sunlight, subject to an unknown logic.
“This is what music looks like,” her voice shimmered, constantly reassembling itself from the fragments of thousands of other once-heard voices. “A human tool to replay memories—mostly, the ones that never truly existed.”
“I wish I could remember,” he whispered, leaning forward slightly.
Her silhouette trembled, as if shedding a fleeting outline, and then disappeared. A new beam streaked across the screen, rushing into the center of the shifting mass of colors. Сhains of figures collapsed on contact with the foreign element, only to reassemble the moment it moved away.
“It’s an illusion,” she said in her usual expressionless voice, as she regained her form. The lines on the screen were dissolving into a new figure.
“So are we,” he replied, his voice weary, though absent of disappointment.
They stood silently in the room bounded by the geometry of light and emptiness. The music remained a silent vision on the screen.
He, who had forgotten what it meant to remember, and she, who had never known what it meant to be, watched the quiet play of colors and shapes on the virtual canvas without looking away. Somewhere on the other side of the screen, music was playing—a reflection of memories that never existed.
— M. Savintsev, 2025
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posted 31 January 2025