Though
Microstoria did not change their sound significantly for their third studio album,
Model 3, Step 2 is perhaps the project's most interesting artifact. Once again, the duo of
Jan St. Werner (who works with
Andi Toma as
Mouse on Mars and also makes solo material as
Lithops) and
Markus Popp (whose main focus is
Oval) combine their individual sets of influences into a complex and organic whole. The sound palette here bears some resemblance to
Oval's
Ovalprocess, with sampled guitar fret buzz, distorted organ drones, and assorted clicks and glitches comprising the raw material. But the arrangement of these sounds is more subtle and conventionally musical than
Popp on his own. At low levels, these atmospheres form an interesting blend with ambient room noise, akin to hearing an ancient apartment building settling into its girders. With sufficient volume, the wealth of sonic detail hidden in the spaces begins to reveal itself. "Glocky Bit" has warm,
Eno-esque drones that are constantly being pushed aside by arrhythmic static and a faint industrial hiss. "Mem Brand" makes use of what could be samples of an African thumb piano, but contrasts this acoustic sounds with deeply abstract digital processing.
Model 3, Step 2 is more varied in texture than either of
Microstoria's previous two efforts, and holds up better to repeated listening. This may be a bit more challenging than standard ambient fair, but
Model 3, Step 2 is definitely worth the effort.