Pacho Stormie Hiddenshow 2023-07-2408-26 Min Page
Yes, already have three times. Would I recommend it to a friend? Only the one who likes being confused in the best possible way. Would I pay to see a full 90-minute HiddenShow? In a heartbeat. Review written on July 26, 2023 – 48 hours post-broadcast, with no official tracklist or replay link (pulled after 24 hours as per Stormie’s usual protocol).
★★★★☆ (4.5/5) – Immersive, chaotic, but over too soon pacho stormie hiddenshow 2023-07-2408-26 Min
For newcomers? Start elsewhere. For Stormie faithful? Essential listening—even if it leaves you wanting more. And perhaps that’s exactly the point. Yes, already have three times
This is divisive. Some in the live chat (which I kept open on a second monitor) called it “pretentious filler.” Others recognized it as Stormie paying homage to the pirate radio ethos—the dead air isn’t a mistake; it’s a reset. Personally, I found it bold. In an era of over-compressed, non-stop drops, those 12 seconds forced me to actually listen to the room tone. Would I pay to see a full 90-minute HiddenShow
At 14:00, a female vocal sample emerges, heavily reversed: “ ...storm is coming... ” then immediately swallowed by a wall of white noise. The kick drum returns, now at 145 BPM, but with a swing that feels almost dubstep-adjacent. It shouldn’t work, but the mix is so clean (surprisingly so for a HiddenShow) that every element has its own filthy space. From 18:00 to 24:00, the set locks into a hypnotic groove—repetitive, industrial, with a metallic percussion loop that sounds like chains being dragged across a factory floor. Stormie (seen only as a silhouette adjusting faders) adds layers of delay and reverb until the track begins to self-oscillate. It’s tense, almost uncomfortable.