FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
House of Buneau Releases Cadence, an Album That Understands How Systems Listen
There are albums that ask for attention, and there are albums that earn it quietly.
Cadence, the new release from House of Buneau, belongs to the second category.
Built with restraint rather than spectacle, Cadence is an electronic album concerned less with impact than with continuity—how rhythm moves through a listener, how energy is held rather than spent, how songs behave when placed inside modern listening systems that reward patience over noise.
The record arrives at a moment when electronic music is often defined by maximalism and engineered peaks. Cadence moves in the opposite direction. Its tracks advance deliberately, guided by tempo discipline, spatial clarity, and vocals that feel spoken to the listener rather than performed at them. Nothing rushes. Nothing begs. Everything knows its place.
This is not dance music designed to dominate a room. It is music designed to stay—to survive radio sequencing, autoplay logic, late-night listening, and repetition. The album functions as a unified body, each track reinforcing the next, building a sense of forward motion that never breaks its own spell.
House of Buneau’s work has increasingly appeared across electronic and party radio formats not through marketing campaigns, but through structural compatibility: songs that don’t fracture sessions, don’t force skips, and don’t announce themselves as disposable. Cadence formalizes that instinct into a full-length statement.
If there is a thesis here, it is simple and unfashionable:
that music does not need to shout to be heard, and that longevity is still a craft.
Cadence does not chase virality. It assumes time.
The album is available now on all major streaming platforms.