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From the Laundry Line – Vol. 8

from: Portrait Image of Person Joon-beomJoon-beom    Marker Icon for the Link to the Citymap
A person is inside a soundproof booth, wearing large headphones and round glasses. They have a short, dark hairstyle and are wearing a thick, textured sweater. The person appears to be engaged in a recording session, with one hand raised in motion, possibly gesturing while speaking or singing into a microphone placed in front of them. The booth is filled with sound equipment, and the lighting has a warm, reddish hue, giving the image a vintage feel. The expression on their face suggests focus and engagement.




Dear Listeners of Block 17, 19, and that one tall building with the flickering hallway light,

If you’re reading this, you know where to tune in.
Same time. Same static. Same strange little frequency that somehow cuts through the fog.

This Friday at 23:00, don’t miss Volume 8 of your favorite anonymous transmission.

This week, we’re going deeper into the city’s hidden heartbeat.
Because tonight, DJ Joon-beom is not alone.

Special Guest: Ji-ho — the wizard of wires, the boy who builds drum machines out of rice cookers and birthday cards. The secret architect of Pyongyang’s underground dancefloor.

This week’s highlights:

🎚️ A track pulsing with Belgian EBM energy — heavy bass, late-80s concrete vibes, and echoes of strobe lights against cold walls.

🪩 A 90s minimal house groove with a New York swing — hi-hats shuffling like secrets, bass rolling under dim lights at 4am.

🎤 Ji-ho’s own creation: Korean House — a heavy kick, a flowing bassline, and vocals recorded by a friend in his bathroom while his parents were at work. Neon reflections on wet streets, bottled freedom in four-four time.

The signal might crackle. The bass might distort.
But that’s part of the magic — from the laundry lines to your living room.

Keep your ears open. Keep your curtains drawn. And as always: Don’t ask where the signal comes from. Just be glad it still reaches you.

Yours in rhythm and rebellion,
DJ Joon-beom

Related Postcards
A dimly lit radio station studio features a person sitting at a wooden desk, wearing headphones and facing away. They are operating a vintage audio mixing console with two large reel-to-reel tape machines. A large microphone is positioned on a stand to the right. On the wall in front, above the window showing a blurry cityscape, is a red sign with white Korean text. The setting conveys a retro, possibly mid-20th-century aesthetic.

From the Laundry Line – Vol. 7