| Nunatak | ||
| 1-1 | Untitled | 3:24 |
| 1-2 | Untitled | 6:05 |
| 1-3 | Untitled | 4:30 |
| 1-4 | Untitled | 5:24 |
| 1-5 | Untitled | 6:05 |
| 1-6 | Untitled | 3:31 |
| 1-7 | Untitled | 4:59 |
| 1-8 | Untitled | 3:30 |
| 1-9 | Untitled | 3:27 |
| 1-10 | Untitled | 3:14 |
| 1-11 | Untitled | 4:04 |
| Teimo | ||
| 2-1 | Ilira | 3:54 |
| 2-2 | Andenes | 10:08 |
| 2-3 | Teimo | 5:15 |
| 2-4 | Nieve Penitentes 1 | 3:13 |
| 2-5 | Nieve Penitentes 2 | 4:45 |
| 2-6 | Nieve Penitentes 3 | 4:28 |
| 2-7 | Teimo. Schluss. | 4:25 |
| 2-8 | Ruska | 3:46 |
| Permafrost | ||
| 3-1 | Nival | 5:58 |
| 3-2 | Serac | 5:41 |
| 3-3 | Firn | 5:36 |
| 3-4 | Permafrost | 10:11 |
| 3-5 | Meta Incognita | 7:05 |
| 3-6 | ... | 3:27 |
Thomas Köner – Nunatak • Teimo • Permafrost (Type, 2010 Compilation)
Experience the foundational documents of dark ambient music with this definitive three-CD collection from Type Recordings. Originally released between 1990 and 1993, this remastered compilation brings together German sound artist Thomas Köner’s influential trilogy—Nunatak, Teimo, and Permafrost—into one cohesive, monochromatic masterpiece.
Köner’s work is a masterclass in "isolationist ambience," eschewing traditional melodies and rhythms for deep, buried-under-ice field recordings and electronically manipulated acoustic sounds. Utilizing gongs and homemade instruments (often recorded underwater), Köner crafts a sonic landscape of glacial pacing, characterized by low-pitch gurgles, foghorn-like croons, and the haunting roar of arctic winds.
- Nunatak: Features ghostly, manipulated gong sequences that establish the series' cold, resonant palette.
- Teimo: A transition into smoother, yet equally desolate, aquatic territories.
- Permafrost: The darkest and most minimal of the three, stripping away harmony in favor of deep shadowy resonances and "white noise" tundras in tracks like "Meta Incognita."
This 2010 reissue is housed in a stunning tri-fold metal-colored digipak, featuring halftone grayscale imagery of arctic explorers, glaciers, and bleak oceanic vistas—the perfect visual companion to three hours of sublime, sub-zero drone.