A Technology of Feeling

Regan Bowering

Regan Bowering’s first LP, A Technology of Feeling (Infant Tree, 2025), builds on the ideas and techniques of her debut solo album, Solos for _ _ _ _ Spaces (Bezirk, 2023). Her practice centres on drums, amplifiers and microphones intertwined in a multi-layered feedback system. Where the debut exposed the tensions and rhythms of control within this system to shape a distinct vocabulary, the new record deepens that exploration, reaching toward fresh terrains of musical and sonic expression. 

A Technology of Feeling continues to navigate the contrasts between spaces, materials and the body; control and release; percussive rupture and feedback’s continuity. Where Solos for _ _ _ _ Spaces attended to the acoustic, technological and architectural conditions shaping the performance, “driven by the desire to craft electrifying drama,” (The Quietus), A Technology of Feeling turns inward. Through her percussive feedback language, Bowering maps the shifting borders between inner emotional states and the external environments that shape them. The result is a work that crafts moods and architectures of sound—delicate, resonant, and unresolved—without seeking to contain the contradictions of lived experience. Its title points to this focus, framing technology as a means of producing, mediating and reflecting the atmospheres and feelings that shape the environments we move through. 

Side A unfolds across five interconnected pieces, constructed from fragments of live and studio sessions recorded in London and New York. Each piece isolates and expands a different facet of Bowering’s practice—texture, feedback, rhythm, atmosphere, and emotion through layering and the recursive return of gesture and form. Side A charts several climactic arcs, moving through intensities that shift from overwhelm to fragility to euphoric collapse. Side B (Track 6) captures a live performance at Boston’s Waterworks Festival (April 2025), where Bowering’s feedback system reaches its most expansive form. The cavernous acoustics of the old water pump station reveal timbral nuances and tactile detail, infusing her
improvisational palette with vast natural reverb, resulting in a performance that is both chilling and echoes with melancholic yearning.