The Slovenian imaginary folk instrumental trio returns with a kaleidoscopic third album. Complex instrumentation meets fearless sonic exploration. The Slovenian trio Sirom is hard to pin down – multi-instrumentalism, acoustics, folk, trance, avant-garde, and experimentation are fused into a dense sound that is often and most accurately described as imaginary folk music. Sirom has nothing to do with traditional Slovenian music, but has created a sound that showcases their native landscape and their own roots. Among the more than a dozen instruments in the band's repertoire are traditional and self-made, and time and again, the artisanal and handmade meet the spiritual. In Sirom's multifaceted soundscapes, the three band members merge improvisation, folk, classical, psychedelic, and polyphony. When working on "A Universe that Roasts Blossoms for a Horse," it was important to them not to sound like something that already existed. The potential for innovation lies essentially in the dismantling and breaking apart of musical structures and melodies, which are then reassembled into unexpected, colorful kaleidoscope images. Slovenian folk music from a parallel universe.