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NAM-KHAR "Antimon" CD / DL (274th Cycle)
Returning after the introspective descent of The Sarajevo Spiral, Cyclic Law presents Antimon, the latest ritual transmission from the long-standing collective Nam-Khar. Founded in 2009, the project has continuously navigated the liminal intersections between ritual ambient, psychoacoustic exploration and esoteric introspection, employing an arsenal of ethnic instrumentation, analog synthesis and immersive visual elements to construct deeply transformative sonic environments.
Over the years, Nam-Khar has shared creative paths with acts such as Sielwolf, Vortex and Alone in the Hollow Garden, while bringing its ceremonial performances to festivals across Europe and Australia. Following the completion of the acclaimed “Tibetan Trilogy” (Secret Essence, Sur Chöd, Dok-Pa), Antimon signals a significant evolution in the project’s sonic language while retaining the spiritual and ritualistic essence that has defined its previous works.
Within Antimon, contemplative analog drones and ritual sound structures merge with clicks, glitches, sequenced pulses and vast floating textures, forming a sonic coniunctio where organic and synthetic elements dissolve into one another. The result is an album that feels equally meditative and psychologically charged, unfolding like an interior rite suspended between dream states and subconscious revelation.
Conceptually, the album continues Nam-Khar’s engagement with psychoanalysis and the analytical psychology of Carl Gustav Jung. While The Sarajevo Spiral examined socio-political fragmentation and collective trauma, Antimon turns inward, exploring the emergence of unconscious psychological material into conscious awareness through both Freudian and Jungian perspectives.
Drawing from Jung’s fascination with alchemical symbolism as manifestations of archetypal structures within the collective unconscious, Antimon approaches alchemy not as historical curiosity, but as a metaphorical framework for psychic transformation. The ancient transmutation of lead into gold becomes a symbol for the purification and integration of the fragmented self, mirroring the process Jung identified as individuation. Echoing Sigmund Freud’s famous statement, “Where id was, there ego shall be,” the album navigates the unstable threshold between shadow and consciousness, dissolution and reconstruction.
This philosophical foundation resonates deeply with the observations of psychotherapist Andrew Samuels, whose writings on alchemical imagery and the plural psyche describe the symbolic language of alchemy as uniquely capable of expressing the paradoxical interplay between interpersonal experience and intrapsychic transformation. In this sense, Antimon operates as an act of “sound alchemy”, a catalyst intended to accompany processes of introspection, confrontation and inner metamorphosis.
Dense yet permeable, abstract yet profoundly human, Antimon stands as one of Nam-Khar’s most immersive and conceptually ambitious works to date, a ceremonial descent into the hidden architecture of the psyche where ritual sound becomes a vehicle for transformation.
CD Co-Released with Zazen Sounds
CD Edition of 300 copies in 4 panel Digipak. 7 Tracks. Running Time 48:00
Release Date June 12 2026
Digital Available Via Bandcamp
Returning after the introspective descent of The Sarajevo Spiral, Cyclic Law presents Antimon, the latest ritual transmission from the long-standing collective Nam-Khar. Founded in 2009, the project has continuously navigated the liminal intersections between ritual ambient, psychoacoustic exploration and esoteric introspection, employing an arsenal of ethnic instrumentation, analog synthesis and immersive visual elements to construct deeply transformative sonic environments.
Over the years, Nam-Khar has shared creative paths with acts such as Sielwolf, Vortex and Alone in the Hollow Garden, while bringing its ceremonial performances to festivals across Europe and Australia. Following the completion of the acclaimed “Tibetan Trilogy” (Secret Essence, Sur Chöd, Dok-Pa), Antimon signals a significant evolution in the project’s sonic language while retaining the spiritual and ritualistic essence that has defined its previous works.
Within Antimon, contemplative analog drones and ritual sound structures merge with clicks, glitches, sequenced pulses and vast floating textures, forming a sonic coniunctio where organic and synthetic elements dissolve into one another. The result is an album that feels equally meditative and psychologically charged, unfolding like an interior rite suspended between dream states and subconscious revelation.
Conceptually, the album continues Nam-Khar’s engagement with psychoanalysis and the analytical psychology of Carl Gustav Jung. While The Sarajevo Spiral examined socio-political fragmentation and collective trauma, Antimon turns inward, exploring the emergence of unconscious psychological material into conscious awareness through both Freudian and Jungian perspectives.
Drawing from Jung’s fascination with alchemical symbolism as manifestations of archetypal structures within the collective unconscious, Antimon approaches alchemy not as historical curiosity, but as a metaphorical framework for psychic transformation. The ancient transmutation of lead into gold becomes a symbol for the purification and integration of the fragmented self, mirroring the process Jung identified as individuation. Echoing Sigmund Freud’s famous statement, “Where id was, there ego shall be,” the album navigates the unstable threshold between shadow and consciousness, dissolution and reconstruction.
This philosophical foundation resonates deeply with the observations of psychotherapist Andrew Samuels, whose writings on alchemical imagery and the plural psyche describe the symbolic language of alchemy as uniquely capable of expressing the paradoxical interplay between interpersonal experience and intrapsychic transformation. In this sense, Antimon operates as an act of “sound alchemy”, a catalyst intended to accompany processes of introspection, confrontation and inner metamorphosis.
Dense yet permeable, abstract yet profoundly human, Antimon stands as one of Nam-Khar’s most immersive and conceptually ambitious works to date, a ceremonial descent into the hidden architecture of the psyche where ritual sound becomes a vehicle for transformation.
CD Co-Released with Zazen Sounds
CD Edition of 300 copies in 4 panel Digipak. 7 Tracks. Running Time 48:00
Release Date June 12 2026
Digital Available Via Bandcamp