I’ll jam on it with no real plan, just exploring its chaotic, organic behavior, and then I record long takes of whatever comes out. After that, I run those recordings through Guitar Rig to see how far I can push them: saturating, reshaping, distorting, or softening them until they become completely new sounds.
Once I have these textured layers, I add them back into the groove, but always very low in the mix – almost hidden. The idea is that you don’t consciously hear the texture, but if you mute it, the whole track suddenly loses depth and feels empty. Those subtle, half-invisible layers create a kind of atmosphere around the groove that makes everything feel more alive, more human, and more three-dimensional.
I really believe that texture adds a huge amount of personality and depth to minimal music. It’s the secret layer that gives emotion to something that might otherwise feel too clean or too rigid. The groove gives the track its movement, but the texture gives it a soul.
Pro tip from Noha: Let the music breathe. Sometimes the best thing you can do is step away for a few days. Come back later, and you’ll hear it in a totally new way.



