Raz Ohara Looks Ahead by Looking Back on Ninth Album “Memories Of Tomorrow”

Raz Ohara, the Berlin-based boundary-shifting musician, is finally back with a new album.

“Memories Of Tomorrow”, his ninth studio album and arguably his most expansive statement yet, landed July 11 via House Of Frequency. Anchored by the spellbinding focus track “Vessel Of Love”, the record is a cinematic dive into intimacy, transcendence, and 30 years of fearless musical exploration.

Raz Ohara is a name widely revered across electronic, ambient, and leftfield circles alike. From his solo experiments to his collaborative efforts with The Odd Orchestra and Feathered Sun, Ohara has carved a genre-less path through modern music. Whether alongside Apparat, Acid Pauli, or Chilly Gonzales, or floating freely on his own, he moves fluidly: he’s impossible to pin down, and always in motion.

Following the critically embraced first single “Beyond and Deep Down”, which was premiered on Electronic Groove and heavily supported by Radio Eins, “Memories Of Tomorrow” arrives as both a culmination and a new beginning. There are no loops or sample: just raw, performed sound, weaving analog synths and acoustic instrumentation into something richly tactile and deeply emotional. It’s as suited to candlelit introspection as it is to open-air dancefloors.

The album’s centrepiece, “Vessel Of Love”, channels Ohara’s creative soul into a meditative trance, confronting the cultural suppression of love and sexuality with grace and gravity. He explains: “The album title refers to, in a spiritual sense, passing beyond the realm of space and time… From this perspective, we look upon the future and the past at the same time.”

With over 30 million streams to date, a summer residency at Ibiza’s Babel on the horizon, and a record that bends time itself, Raz Ohara is poised to soundtrack the future with one foot firmly in the timeless. “Memories Of Tomorrow” is a triumph, and something you need to experience to believe.

Stream “Memories Of Tomorrow” here!

The post Raz Ohara Looks Ahead by Looking Back on Ninth Album “Memories Of Tomorrow” appeared first on Magnetic Magazine.