Implosion – The Bug / Ghost Dubs
GENRE; Electronic
LABEL; Pressure
RATING; 3/5
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The Bug vs Ghost Dubs – Implosion is one of the most compelling explorations of bass-heavy dub-influenced electronic music released in 2025. A collaborative effort between Kevin Richard Martin (aka The Bug) and Michael Fiedler (aka Ghost Dubs), the album pushes the boundaries of dub, ambient and techno into a tense, immersive sound world that feels both futuristic and ritualistic.
From the outset, Implosion establishes its purpose: to envelop the listener in subsonic frequencies and unease. Each artist takes alternating tracks, offering contrasting but complementary interpretations of spectral dub. The Bug’s contributions are dense, brooding constructions with oppressive bass and industrial textures that evoke desolate club spaces and urban decay. Tracks like “Believers (Imperial Gardens, Camberwell)” and “Burial Skank (Mass, Brixton)” feel like soundtracks to abandoned nightclubs, where basslines are so powerful they physically resonate.
Ghost Dubs’s pieces, meanwhile, weave dub techno and ambient dub with kinetic energy. His productions are slightly lighter in rhythmic motion but no less intense, often conjuring minimalist soundscapes rich in melodic ambiguity and hazy reverb. Tracks such as “Hope” and “Into the Mystic” shimmer with texture and reveal a deep understanding of space and repetition.
Critically, Implosion has been praised for its immersive sound design and atmospheric depth, though its slow pacing and deliberate heaviness place it outside mainstream accessibility. Its hypnotic, introspective nature makes it an album best heard in one sitting, ideally on a system capable of revealing its full low-end force.
Overall, Implosion is not just an album but an experience: a dark, meditative exploration of bass and texture that challenges as much as it mesmerizes.