In contrast to Hayden's debut Diviner, a critically acclaimed album steeped in solitude and fragility, Moondust For My Diamond moves into a more natural visual and sonic palette. He's interested in, he says, "the meeting point between science and religion, the grand struggle for reality that shapes so much of our time." Thorpe has made an album that is galvanizing, reassuring, elegant, seductive: it oozes Big Cosmic Energy. "What about nature? What about the cosmos? What about all these things that break through the tyranny of the self? Our sense organs bring the world inside of us after all, I just had to sing it back out. I was enchanted again with the mystery of science and how I might speak from the heart in an age where metric is gospel." Moondust… comes as the by-product of a coping mechanism: exploring the worlds of digital mysticism, and the need to melt down reality and recast it when so much feels so unreal.