Joep Beving’s Solipsism Redux (2025): A Timeless Rebirth

Joep Beving’s Solipsism Redux is out today — a complete re-recording of his 2015 debut album Solipsism. I’ve been listening through it this morning, and from the very first notes, it’s clear this isn’t just a technical refresh. It’s a reinterpretation. One that feels deeply considered, patient, and alive.

If you know the original, you’ll notice the difference immediately: the pacing here is slower, more unhurried. Beving lets the music breathe. He sinks into each note, allowing silence to stretch just long enough to create space. Space for resonance, space for reflection, and space for us, the listeners, to really hear. His touch feels softer, yet somehow more deliberate, drawing out the subtlety that was always there but now fully illuminated.

These pieces have always stirred something deep in me. They did when I first heard them years ago, and they still do now. But this time they feel different. Matured, like a conversation revisited with the benefit of time and distance. Music grows as people grow, and Redux captures that growth beautifully. It’s not nostalgia, it’s evolution.

What strikes me most is how alive this recording feels. Every time music is performed, it’s made new again, and Beving leans into that truth. Where some artists tire of revisiting old work, he seems to have found fresh meaning in these compositions. If anything, Redux proves that he’s not simply retracing old steps — he’s rediscovering them.

The result is an album that feels timeless, yet renewed. A testament not just to Beving’s skill as a composer, but to his curiosity as a performer. His willingness to return, listen closely, and let the music breathe in a new way.

“In Circles” / Out Now

Hello! Over the last few months I’ve been working on some new music I wanted to make sure you knew about. The first is called “In Circles”, which was released today (11.01.24). Here is some context around the piece:

Have you ever tried to step outside your life, to observe it from a storyteller’s perspective? Or like a movie-goer? We watch the protagonist on the screen go through a horrific, life-altering event. They lose a loved one. They lose money, status, or the things they find their identity in. Or they lose everything. It’s often in those moments, that as the observer we think, “There’s still an hour left in this movie. I wonder what happens next? I wonder how they’ll get through this one!” By the end, it all becomes clear. Our lives are like a story. We often find ourselves in situations that seem beyond our control. Situations that lead us into despair. What would it be like to step outside our story in that moment? To shift our thinking from: “This is it. I’ll never get out of this.” To: “I wonder how my story will unfold from here. I wonder what unexpected good things will come my way.” To view ourselves as the protagonist.

“In Circles” is about the hope that comes to us in our darkest moments.

The other is called “When Morning Comes”.

Both can be found on any streaming service as well. I hope you enjoy listening to them as much as I enjoy playing them.

—Vontmer