Unur became a working project of Patrick Scott from Chicago in the summer of 2010, releasing cassettes on his own Modern Tapes label. Two of them (Anywhere and Anyone) are featured on this 12: percolations of simple electronics, steady blips, crashs and thumps of otherwise antiquated analog and early digital rhythm machines coupled with the alternating smeared fuzz and coldwave bite of minimalist guitar clanging. All nestled between layers of analog synthesizers guiding the melody and blurred vocals adding texture as they guide us through these collected city streets. Unur is a reflection in two senses of the word. It is a bouncing back of images of the environment in which Patrick lives, it is also a look inward to the ideas and perversions one finds in themselves going through life always asking questions and trying to understand why we do what we do to ourselves and each other as a species. It isn't always pretty in there and that's o.k. There are songs about lives led beautifully sung elsewhere, good for them. “Anywhere\u002FAnyone” is a celebration of the universality of fallibility and what we do with it. Or, you could also say that it is about three things. Sex, Death, and Synthesizers.