INFRASONGE
ambient & asmrtist
Infrasonge is a drifting presence within the folds of ambient audio and tactile listening initiated by Jonathan Fitas.
Originally uploaded on YouTube channel in the early 2010s under the name ASMR & Soundscapes, these early videos drew a modest but devoted audience. There were no faces, no narratives, just sound as sensation—deeply spatial, almost physical.
If ASMR was the seed, Infrasonge quickly became something else. The compositions stretch beyond the genre's soothing clichés into vast, slow-moving tapestries. Infrasonge crafts immersive environments where silence is a collaborator and time seems to melt. Using exclusively recorded material—never pure synthesis—each piece is assembled through a meticulous layering process: textures close enough to breathe on your neck, others so distant they shimmer like heatwaves.
There is an architectural logic to it all. The artist often speaks of "distance as structure": elements are placed near and far in the stereo field like rooms in a house with no walls. Influences range from the textural poise of Brian Eno’s Ambient 1: Music for Airports to the micro-narratives of Luc Ferrari’s Presque Rien. But perhaps the deeper reference point is a kind of sonic empathy—a belief that every sound, if given the right frame, can carry sensation.
The visuals on YouTube reflect this ethos: minimal to the edge of invisibility. A slow bloom of smoke, a particle cloud, a monochrome ripple. Motion without movement. These images act less as accompaniment and more as a gesture—an invitation to stay, to listen, to dissolve and close your eyes.
Like a drifting vessel, Infrasonge's creation will echo through time and space, for anyone out there in need of an inner safe space. In an hibernation stage, who knows when the project might bloom again. Now released under the curatorial wing of Maison Mujō. Still, the project resists the mechanics of visibility. No promotional campaigns, no identity revealed. Just a steadily growing archive of audio rituals that whisper instead of shout.
The experience "PAUSE" on this website was made by Infrasonge for Maison Mujō.
Originally uploaded on YouTube channel in the early 2010s under the name ASMR & Soundscapes, these early videos drew a modest but devoted audience. There were no faces, no narratives, just sound as sensation—deeply spatial, almost physical.
If ASMR was the seed, Infrasonge quickly became something else. The compositions stretch beyond the genre's soothing clichés into vast, slow-moving tapestries. Infrasonge crafts immersive environments where silence is a collaborator and time seems to melt. Using exclusively recorded material—never pure synthesis—each piece is assembled through a meticulous layering process: textures close enough to breathe on your neck, others so distant they shimmer like heatwaves.
There is an architectural logic to it all. The artist often speaks of "distance as structure": elements are placed near and far in the stereo field like rooms in a house with no walls. Influences range from the textural poise of Brian Eno’s Ambient 1: Music for Airports to the micro-narratives of Luc Ferrari’s Presque Rien. But perhaps the deeper reference point is a kind of sonic empathy—a belief that every sound, if given the right frame, can carry sensation.
The visuals on YouTube reflect this ethos: minimal to the edge of invisibility. A slow bloom of smoke, a particle cloud, a monochrome ripple. Motion without movement. These images act less as accompaniment and more as a gesture—an invitation to stay, to listen, to dissolve and close your eyes.
Like a drifting vessel, Infrasonge's creation will echo through time and space, for anyone out there in need of an inner safe space. In an hibernation stage, who knows when the project might bloom again. Now released under the curatorial wing of Maison Mujō. Still, the project resists the mechanics of visibility. No promotional campaigns, no identity revealed. Just a steadily growing archive of audio rituals that whisper instead of shout.
The experience "PAUSE" on this website was made by Infrasonge for Maison Mujō.