From basement cuts to winter rooms
The project began as a bedroom experiment blending downtempo beats, hushed rap, and ambient noise, then grew into a flexible live unit. After a quiet spell between releases, they leaned into live bass and hand percussion, giving the catalog a warmer pulse in rooms like this winter garden. Expect an arc that opens patiently, with possible highlights like 
Night Signal, the drifting 
Garden Static, and a late-set sway on 
Low End Letters. The crowd skews mixed in age and scene, from local beat-makers and poetry folks to neighbors curious about slow-bloom grooves, and the energy stays focused rather than loud. One neat detail: the name was inspired by a scribble on an old campus mixer, and early demos reportedly used greenhouse fan hum as a soft drone. They also like to thread tiny interludes built from field recordings between longer pieces, so transitions feel like short films. For clarity, note that any talk of songs or stage design here is an informed guess, not confirmed info.
What might be on deck
											The Winter Garden Scene with Not for Radio
						Quiet hands, loud hearts
Expect knit beanies, long coats, and layered scarves, more about comfort and texture than flash. People nod in time, trade knowing smiles on a clever sample flip, and let the room breathe during quiet outros. You may hear soft claps on two and four, gentle count-ins, or finger snaps when the band strips to drums and voice. Merch tends to be small-batch and thoughtful, like risograph posters, cassettes, and totes with garden motifs. The talk between sets leans toward pedals, field recordings, and which old trip-hop reissues folks are digging. It feels like a gathering of listeners who enjoy detail and space as much as the drop.
											
Knobs, Notes, and Nods with Not for Radio
						The slow-burn architecture
Vocals tend to be close to the mic, half-sung and half-spoken, then lightly thickened with harmonies so they float over the drums. Arrangements start sparse, add small details like shaker or guitar harmonics, and then land on a fuller groove that never rushes. The core tools are a sampler or laptop, a compact kit, warm electric bass, and a couple of synths with gentle filter movement. Tempos mostly ride in the mid-slow range, which lets the kick breathe and the bass carry emotion rather than sheer volume. The drummer often sits a hair behind the beat, giving the music a pocket that feels relaxed but sturdy. A neat live habit is swapping a straight beat on the record for a swung feel onstage, which makes familiar tracks feel newly alive. Visuals usually stay soft and warm, with color washes and simple projections that serve the sound instead of stealing focus.
											
Kindred Echoes for Not for Radio
						If you like these, you will feel at home
Fans of 
Bonobo will recognize the patient builds, earthy percussion, and bass that moves without shouting. If 
James Blake speaks to you for space, falsetto shadows, and heavy low end, this show sits in that orbit. The warm synth colors and playful rhythm choices that draw people to 
Little Dragon also live here. Those who like the elastic groove and head-nod bounce of 
Kaytranada should find similar satisfaction when the drums lean into swing. Together, these touchpoints frame a set that favors mood, texture, and human feel over flash.