“There must be a future that we can choose for ourselves …”
There are bands that follow the rules of genre, and others that move through them like mist—shifting, ungraspable. Code Indigo belongs to the latter. Born in 1994 from the collaboration between electronic and synthesizer artists David Wright and Robert Fox, the project began not as a band in the traditional sense, but as a conversation between two sonic minds—an attempt to sculpt atmosphere from silence, and narrative from tone.
With the arrival of guitarist and engineer Nik Smith, and later contributors like Dave Massey, Pat Pattison, Andy Lobban, DJ Bareford, Vaughn Evans, Stephan Whitlan, Ron Goodswen and vocalists Louise Eggerton and Carys, the sound grew darker, deeper—layered with emotion, tension, and space. There was always a sense of movement in their music, but not necessarily forward. Code Indigo moved inward—into memory, into dreams, into the quiet corridors of the mind.
Their performances, whether under cathedral arches or on festival stages, carried the weight of ritual: immersive, slow-burning, strangely sacred. Light and shadow played equal roles; their music invited not just listening, but surrender.
Across the years, each album became a new chapter in a long, nocturnal voyage. The solemn resonance of ‘For Whom the Bell…’ (1996), the restless pulse of ‘Uforia’ (1999), the introspective melancholy of ‘TimeCode’ (2003), and the glacial beauty of ‘Blue’ (Live at Derby Cathedral) (1998) — each a different shadow cast by the same fading light. Later works like ‘MELTdown’ (2013) and ‘Take the Money and Run’ (2014) continued to explore new textures and moods, adding fresh layers to their evolving sound. Together, these albums trace the arc of a band that never stood still, yet never rushed.
The band’s line-up shifted like weather, but the vision held. Code Indigo never aimed for the mainstream. Instead, they built their own quiet architecture—music of dusk and distance, where melody lingers like a distant memory, silence is never empty, and soundscapes unfold like echoes through dystopian and dream-stained worlds.
On June 17, 2025, Code Indigo unveiled ‘Endgame’, a monumental double CD and digital compilation that stands as both a reflection and a reckoning—a sonic chronicle of their 30-year journey through shadow and light. Spanning over 210 minutes and comprising 30 remastered tracks, this collection weaves together fragments from their expansive catalogue, conjuring a tapestry of moods and textures that evoke vast, sometimes haunting landscapes of sound.
More than a mere retrospective, ‘Endgame’ is an immersive voyage into the heart of Code Indigo’s artistry. It is a world where instrumental rock’s raw edges meld seamlessly with the ethereal pulses of electronica and the daring spirit of avant-garde experimentation. Each track carries the weight of memory and the thrill of discovery—moments frozen in time yet pulsing with life, inviting listeners to surrender to the shifting tides of emotion and atmosphere.
Yet the journey does not end with familiar paths. Hidden within this monumental release is a third, bonus CD and accompanying digital download, featuring previously unreleased compositions—secret echoes unearthed from the depths of the band’s creative vault. These rare gems reveal fresh contours of the band’s sound, like whispers from the shadows, beckoning the curious to venture beyond the known.
‘Endgame’ is both a culmination and a beginning—a place where past and present collide, and where the restless spirit of Code Indigo continues to wander. After three decades of exploring the edges of sound, their music remains a compelling enigma: dark yet luminous, haunting yet beautiful, ever elusive like a fading vision seen through the haze of twilight.
In a year rich with releases, this compilation stands among the finest—an echoing monument to a band that never settled for the ordinary. One of 2025’s most evocative and enduring best-of collections.
• Endgame - The Best Moves | Bandcamp
• Endgame - The Best Moves | AD Music