Catalog

Dive into Sagedus releases, curated entry points into our shifting electronic spectrum.

An ultra-minimalist dark listening room featuring a single, low, onyx-black pedestal in the center, supporting a polished metallic orb engraved with concentric wave patterns. Around the orb, faint luminescent rings of soft teal and pale gold hover just above the floor, suggesting invisible sound fields. The walls are nearly black with subtle texture, interrupted only by slim horizontal light strips that glow dimly like distant spectrogram lines. Cinematic, carefully controlled lighting falls in a narrow beam from above, spotlighting the orb and leaving the rest of the room in gentle shadow. Shot from a low-angle wide lens, the orb dominates the frame while the room stretches into darkness. The atmosphere is contemplative, luxurious, and quietly intense, embodying the phrase “Find your frequency.”
An abstract, translucent crystalline prism suspended in mid-air above a mirror-black surface, its facets etched with faint waveform patterns and frequency graphs. Thin beams of cyan, magenta, and amber light slice through the prism from different angles, refracting into intricate spectral patterns that ripple across the floor like liquid light. The environment is a vast, dark cinematic void, with just enough atmospheric haze to catch the light rays. Shot from a slightly low angle, centered composition, with sharp focus on the prism and soft bokeh trails of color receding into the background. The mood is enigmatic and cerebral, evoking experimental electronic sound design as pure, sculpted frequency. Clean, ultra-modern, cinematic realism.

Start with these frequencies

New to Sagedus Find your frequency through these key experimental electronic releases, spanning glitched ambience, club mutations, and cinematic drones.

Releases & Merch

1

Choose your format

Stream or download lossless files, plus notes, artwork, and alternate mixes.

2

Name price

Limited cassette runs with hand printed art for true collectors and supporters.

3

Format options listed

Every purchase directly fuels new experiments, residencies, and collaborative projects.

4

Instant access

Fair revenue splits sustain underground artists beyond platform playlists and algorithms.

Arvustused

A close-up of a high-end, matte-black audio waveform analyzer screen embedded in a monolithic dark metal console. The display shows a single, elegant, slowly morphing waveform rendered in fine neon lines of turquoise and soft amber, drifting across a pitch-black background. Tiny, razor-sharp numerical readouts and frequency markers line the edges of the display. Ambient, low-intensity lighting from below casts a gentle glow on the console’s beveled edges, adding a cinematic depth. The environment behind the console is kept in deep shadow, hinting at a sophisticated studio. Captured straight-on with a shallow depth of field, the analyzer’s screen is pin-sharp while the console edges blur subtly. The mood is focused, technical, and refined, representing experimental sound as a living, evolving signal.

Aya Nakamura

“Sagedus keeps surprising me; every release bends electronic music into new shapes.”

A meticulously detailed modular synthesizer rack, all-black with brushed metal panels and tiny amber status LEDs, fills the foreground. Patch cables in muted grayscale tones weave an intricate, almost architectural pattern across the modules. The rack sits on a dark walnut desk with a satin finish, set against a charcoal wall lined with minimalist acoustic diffusers shaped like abstract frequency bars. A single overhead spotlight creates dramatic top-down cinematic lighting, casting long, elegant shadows and gentle reflections on the desk. Captured from a slightly elevated three-quarter angle using the rule of thirds, the focus is crisp on the center modules while the edges fall softly out of focus. The scene feels refined, analytical, and deeply musical, representing the craft of experimental electronic composition.

Mateo García

“The catalog flows like one long transmission; I always discover unexpected textures.”