The Bunker Nonstop: Rrose, Timnah, Carrier, Carlos Souffront, Patrick Russell, Scotia + more
About This Event
The Bunker Nonstop at Nowadays brings a cross-section of New York’s electronic scene — Rrose, Timnah, Carrier, Carlos Souffront, Patrick Russell and Scotia among others — for an extended night of DJ and live sets. The bill emphasizes long-form, texture-driven programming: Rrose and Carrier lean on dub/minimal structures and patient sound design; Souffront and Russell foreground tactile rhythms and controlled pacing; Scotia supplies steady, rhythm-focused blends.
About the Artists
Rrose
Rrose is an electronic artist and DJ associated with dub techno, minimal techno, and drone-leaning techno. In New York City, they appear at BASEMENT, where their sets sit comfortably alongside peers like Dustin Zahn, quest?onmarq, Henry Chow, JADALAREIGN, and Justin Cudmore.
Timnah
Timnath or Timnah was a Philistine city in Canaan that is mentioned in the Hebrew Bible in Judges 14 and in connection with Samson. Modern archaeologists identify the ancient site with a tell lying on a flat, alluvial plain, located in the Sorek Valley ca.
Carrier
Carrier is an electronic group associated with New York City’s club and art-music circuit, appearing at venues like Public Records. Their work sits in the orbit of dub techno, IDM, and experimental electronics, leaning on texture, space, and patient rhythmic development.
Carlos Souffront
Carlos Souffront is a New York City–based electronic artist and DJ who has appeared regularly in club contexts such as Nowadays. His sets move between tactile rhythm work and open-ended sound design, shaped by the demands of long-form dance floors.
Patrick Russell
Patrick Russell is a New York City–based DJ and electronic artist, heard in club contexts like Nowadays. His sets sit alongside peers such as Introspekt, Joe Nice, ARCHANGEL, Cisne, Jasmine Infiniti, CMD+JAZMINE, Petal, and S’aint Panic, linking him to a scene where bass pressure and experimental rhythm share the same room.
Scotia
Scotia is a DJ heard in New York City rooms like Brooklyn’s Good Room, where she has appeared on the I Love Acid bill alongside DJ Hyperactive, DJ ESP, Posthuman, and DJ Warp. Her sets sit comfortably in that lineage, with attention to rhythmic structure and a steady arc over long blends.