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Tycho’s style is more concerned with creating interesting soundscapes than blasting out pulsing club hits. It is a blended, sometimes soporific narcosis of wide-ranging sound clips that ranges from spacey, to aquatic, to harmonious, to dissonant. Tycho encapsulates the analogue sounds, instrumentation and samples of early electronica – Kraftwerk and Neu!, to wit – while staying strong to a futurist ethos.
He’s signed to Ghostly International, a Detroit-based electronic label that focuses on alternative electronic music and has released a range of underground artists including Com Truise, Tropic of Cancer, Gold Panda HTRK and ADULT. across genres ranging from break-beat, synthwave, shoegaze and indietronica.
He’s released two full-lengths with Ghostly International 2011’s “Dive”, including the singles “Hours” and the title track, “Dive”, and 2014’s “Awake”, with the singles “Montana”, “Spectre” and “See” as well as the title track.
“Awake” charted Number 2 on the US Dance/Electronic Albums Chart and Number 3 on the US Independent Albums Chart.
His sound has drawn varied comparisons from critics to the down-tempo lo fi of Toro Y Moi and Washed Out, to the glittering drone of Boards of Canada, to the intercut trip-hop of DJ Shadow.
He’s done official remixes of Little Dragon’s “Little Man”, Ulrich Schnauss’s “I Take Comfort In Your Ignorance” and Thievery Corporations “Fragments”.
Alongside his musical prowess, Hansen is also an established visual artist, working under the alias ISO50 for his design and photographic projects.
I saw Tycho live with a group of my best friends on a really chill night before we went bar hopping. We were all childhood best friends, who hadn't seen each other in a few years. We just by chance had the opportunity to see Tycho.
I was so very impressed by Tycho's performance. Scott Hansen is a really chill laid back guy, who has a humble band backing him. You get the sense that they're just a group of guys who like creating innovative melodies. Hansen barely looked at the audience, which doesn't mean he wasn't responsive.
In fact, I really appreciated it because it felt to me that he was so involved in the music and so involved with creating beauty that he couldn't concentrate on anything else. Because there are no lyrics, Tycho reaches the audience in a much more subtle yet poignant way. The music and lighting worked together to create a harmonious experience and emotionally powerful performance.
The lights dimmed and changed colors at just the right moments during the songs, and I felt like I had the power to create my own lyrics to the music, that I was in some ways apart of creating the music just by reverently witnessing it. I felt incredibly inspired and contemplative the entire performance, and so did my friends! We all found ourselves holding hands and swaying to the music. Instead of going out later that night, we downloaded Tycho's album and went to a park and listened to the music.