When two visionary voices reinvent intimacyWith Paper Masks, Phew and Danielle de Picciotto deliver a striking collaboration where minimalist electronics meet spoken poetry. Developed between Tokyo and Berlin over nearly five years, the album transforms a simple experimental exchange into a fascinating sensory dialogue. Phew shapes radical, shifting sound textures, reinventing de Picciotto's voice to build a space where language, breath, and machines blend and distort. Between avant-garde, raw emotion, and exploration of the boundaries of sound, Paper Masks stands as a hypnotic work — the rare meeting of two major figures in experimental music.