PYRAME — BACK FROM THE FLASH: PARALLEL RHYTHMS
- 29 may
- 2 min de lectura

Pyrame’s “Back From The Flash” feels less like a traditional remix package and more like a fragmented reconstruction of memory. Released through THISBE Recordings, the EP takes the DNA of “Flashback” and stretches it across four radically different emotional states, each remix uncovering a different hidden layer inside the original composition.
Rambal Cochet delivers the standout reinterpretation, transforming the track into a sprawling electro ritual steeped in 90s futurism. His remix pulses with tribal momentum and widescreen tension, balancing mechanical grooves with something strangely spiritual. It’s cinematic without losing dancefloor focus — a track designed equally for dark rooms and inner journeys.
Balam shifts the atmosphere toward euphoric indie disco territory, injecting warmth and motion into the release. Where the original carried a sense of introspection, Balam opens the curtains wide, allowing light to flood in through shimmering synths and buoyant rhythms. There’s nostalgia here, but not the hollow kind. Instead, the remix captures the emotional openness that made early crossover disco so compelling.
Delhi Mendoza pushes things deeper into late-night territory. His version is uptempo yet melancholic, threading melodic detail through driving percussion with impressive restraint. It’s the kind of track that thrives at transitional hours — when the energy of the club starts dissolving into reflection.

Closing the release, Rambal Cochet’s Tabla Effect Mix strips the track down into hypnotic rhythmic repetition, leaving behind an almost meditative afterglow.
Alongside the music, Christian Krüger’s accompanying visual piece expands the project’s dreamlike atmosphere into a parallel cinematic narrative. Altogether, “Back From The Flash” succeeds because it never settles for simple nostalgia. Instead, it treats the past as raw material for something immersive, emotional and strangely timeless.
.png)




Comentarios