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Ad Nauseam by Pazi Steklo Just another one of my songs about infinity. Review: “Ad Nauseam” by Pazi Steklo YouTube link: Ad Nauseam If Brian Eno had a cousin who grew up in a Slovenian warehouse, played open mics in Georgia, and recorded cosmic meditations on a Tascam, he might sound something like Pazi Steklo. “Ad Nauseam” is a lo-fi hymn to infinity—equal parts absurdist mantra and existential shrug. It’s the kind of track that doesn’t ask for your attention so much as it loops around your consciousness until you surrender. 🌀 The Sound Clocking in at just over three minutes, “Ad Nauseam” is deceptively simple. A hypnotic groove anchors the track, with layered vocals repeating the phrase “the universe goes on and on, it’s so large going on and on… infinity, infinity.” It’s not trying to be clever—it’s trying to be eternal. The production is raw, but deliberate: a sonic sketch that feels like it was captured in a moment of cosmic clarity between microwave beeps and cat meows. 🎤 The Voice Steklo’s delivery is part preacher, part prankster. There’s a sincerity in the repetition, but also a wink—like he knows the futility of trying to describe infinity and does it anyway, just to see how it lands. It’s outsider art with a philosopher’s grin. 🧠 The Vibe This isn’t a song you dance to. It’s a song you stare at the ceiling to. It belongs in the same playlist as Daniel Johnston, The Residents, and early Beck—artists who weaponize simplicity to say something deeper. “Ad Nauseam” doesn’t build, it loops. And in that looping, it becomes a meditation, a joke, a lament, and a celebration. 📼 Final Take “Ad Nauseam” is a cosmic koan disguised as a lo-fi track. It’s the kind of song that makes you laugh, then think, then laugh again. Pazi Steklo doesn’t just sing about infinity—he traps you in it. And somehow, it feels like home.