![]() ![]() To return your product, you should mail your product to: 215 Spadina Ave., 100, Toronto ON M5T 2C7, Canada If the item wasn’t marked as a gift when purchased, or the gift giver had the order shipped to themselves to give to you later, we will send a refund to the gift giver and he will find out about your return. Once the returned item is received, a gift certificate will be mailed to you. If the item was marked as a gift when purchased and shipped directly to you, you’ll receive a gift credit for the value of your return. ![]() Return shipping Costs will be covered in full by the customer. If you need to exchange it for the same item, send us an email and send your item to: 215 Spadina Ave., 100, Toronto ON M5T 2C7, Canada. We only replace items if they are defective or damaged. Only regular priced items may be refunded, unfortunately sale items cannot be refunded. If you’ve done all of this and you still have not received your refund yet, please contact us items (if applicable) There is often some processing time before a refund is posted. Then contact your credit card company, it may take some time before your refund is officially posted. If you haven’t received a refund yet, first check your bank account again. If you are approved, then your refund will be processed, and a credit will automatically be applied to your credit card or original method of payment, within a certain amount of days. We will also notify you of the approval or rejection of your refund. Once your return is received and inspected, we will send you an email to notify you that we have received your returned item. To complete your return, we require a receipt or proof of purchase. Any returns or exchanges are also offered in-store at 215 Spadina Ave., Toronto. In any case of a non-defective return, shipping costs will be covered in full by the customer. If you wish to return an item that is not defective, it must still be factory sealed and in its original condition. ![]() Secondary copies sent out will be opened and inspected before being re-shipped to guarantee a non defective replacement. It must also be in the original packaging. To be eligible for a return, your item must be unused and in the same condition that you received it. If 30 days have gone by since your purchase, unfortunately we can’t offer you a refund or exchange. Clockwatching is around-the-clock listening, unassuming and beautiful start to end.Our policy lasts 30 days. ![]() I’ve listened to this album in the early morning, in the liminal pass between the high and low deserts, and it fits there-I’ve listened to it at night with the doors open and a breeze passing through, augmented by the nightbird and cricketsong of my own. Guitar loops and call-and-response lap steel fill the space just so, and as the project title invokes, there’s a touch of an aquatic vibe here a la fellow New Yorkers Gunn-Truscinski Duo’s Soundkeeper, with its shimmering, endless drone behind intricate strums and haunting licks. Like his New York neighbors SUSS, this album by Mike Horn transports you to a wider sky with its patient, meandering flow. “Light on the Horizon” is indeed a beacon, less of an endcap than a promise of what’s to come.Ītmospheric and expansive, at first listen you would never know that Clockwatching was city-made music. “Summer Hymn” is a bright interlude between the droning of the latter and the proximal “Levels,” a sequence of singing-bowl-reminiscent loops accented by delicate guitar lines that spread across the album, perhaps coming to an apex here before the denouement of the title track. In “Sidestepping,” guitar chimes counting past the usual amount of hours, rendering time both meaningless and infinite, culminating in a time-warp fuzz of noise and sound. “Some Kind of Symmetry” melts, mirage-like as a distant ship passing through a channel at night. Mastered by Sean Conrad of Inner Islands & Channelers, with design by Steve Rosborough of Moon Glyph, this is the first release under the brand-new Island House Recordings.īirdsong calls in the ambulant “Above the Waves,” drifting and soaring along, catching the wind just so to coast. He leans deeper into the cosmic realm with Seawind of Battery, an ambient, experimental exercise that acts as a sonic balm for those in a state of existential anxiety. It is an anchor in the sea of time, never rushed, nor does it overstay its welcome.Ĭlockwatching is the debut instrumental solo endeavor of Mike Horn, who’s released more cosmic American music as Goldkey and Sunblinders. Although perhaps made in a time in which we are all on edge, more aware than ever to the passage of time, Clockwatching is anything but restless. ![]()
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