Dagmar Zuniga remixes and rewires the carousel of time
Paste Pick: Re-released this month by AD 93, in filth your mystery is kingdom / far smile peasant in yellow music is a project with both clear roots in a loner folk lineage of decades past and a deadset mission to sidestep any sense of tradition in form or function.
In our jagged history of popular song, this is one of those things that avid online crate diggers like me weave our waking dreams from: a project with both clear roots in a loner folk lineage of decades past and a deadset mission to sidestep any sense of tradition in form or function, released into relative obscurity (in this case, to Bandcamp and YouTube) and snagged by the algorithm to attract the attention of indie-folk heavyweights and earn the record a full-on official release with label-of-the-moment AD 93. It sounds like something I’d invent to bolster my own faith, and yet, these are the details that those in the DIY know have regurgitated and marveled over since the March 2026 re-release of Brooklyn musician Dagmar Zuniga’s in filth your mystery is kingdom / far smile peasant in yellow music. Recorded over the course of five years in three different locations on her Tascam 424 machine and originally shared online in January 2025, it’s garnered fewer comparisons to the indie singer-songwriter stalwarts you might have in mind with that initial pitch, and instead more to experimental one-offs remixing and rewiring the carousel of time: Grouper, Cindy Lee, fellow New Yorker Anastasia Coope, The Microphones—artists who float above our understanding of time and location, suspended permanently in air.
The first point of comparison that hit me upon hearing in filth your mystery’s opening track, “Even God Gets Stuck in Devotion” (the first of two main versions that crop up throughout the tracklist, delivered here as a folk ballad helmed by an acoustic guitar and flute), was roving British folk singer Vashti Bunyan’s now-venerated 1970 cult record Just Another Diamond Day. Other elusive folk nuggets made by women 50 years ago—gossamer voices whispering fairy stories ‘till they’re real, often sweet and homespun—by the likes of Linda Perhacs and Bridget St. John have also been batted around by those in search of something to peg the indescribable to. Yet, I’ve settled on the record’s closest spiritual cousin being another record from that same year, which Zuniga herself has cited as an influence: ex-Pink Floyd ringleader Syd Barrett’s debut record, The Madcap Laughs.
Though not quite analogous with the sound of Zuniga’s unorthodox recording methods, so key to what sets her record apart, Barrett’s often sweet and ever-unraveling debut is similarly dependent on the peculiarities of its form, rather than its content. For his former bandmates recording him in Abbey Road Studios, what should have been an album of straightforward psychedelic pop ditties quickly became a portrait of an artist’s mental condition worsening. Songs like “Terrapin” or “Dark Globe” are submerged into a dark haze, fractured into pieces, shattered solely by the delivery of their songwriter. It excavates both the beauty and the terrors of its creator, and what initially spelled disaster for the production is now considered a defining feature.
Zuniga, too, courts the strange in a formal sense, both in the way the songs have been recorded and in the interest of picking apart and repurposing each track over the course of the record’s runtime. The result arrives more as a piece of outsider art than it does a contemporary folk album—lyrically inscrutable, putting what feel like centuries-old devotional songs to tape, reworking and re-ordering the lines scribed into scripture as if documenting the sound of something’s mythology being born. At times, the variations of different musical ideas repeated will tremble under their own hymnal weight, letting hummed vocals by Zuniga’s daughter clash against a spectral organ run, only for the whole thing to collapse beneath the static fuzz clouding the mix. This disruption, of course, is a central feature.