Syntax Error is an experimental music and
media project based in Toronto, Canada.


Click here to download music
Syntax Error:
2007 -> 2010

From 2007 until 2010, Syntax Error existed as the solo project of
Joshua Hemming. Producing dark industrial, and downtempo ambient
music and stunning psychedelic visuals, Syntax Error endeavored to
find new experimental ways to produce and perform music. A variety
of guest musicians have jammed, recorded, and performed with Syntax
Error over the years, each bringing their own unique spin to the Syntax
Error sound. As of Summer 2010, Syntax Error no longer exists as an
experimental music and media project, and has taken a whole new form.


The Syntax Error Project:
1999 -> 2007

In 1999, Joshua Hemming teamed up with Tony Ferreira, a bassist
with a penchant for unusual and experimental methods of sound
design and composition. Since then, Syntax Error has been exploring
different aspects of the ambient, downtempo and industrial genres in
an attempt at creating a new kind of dark groove. Between rare live
shows, Syntax Error produced a bi-monthly series of improvisational
thirty-minute releases called "Pretentious Ambient Noise". (download)
This series of releases has garnered the project a modest but faithful
following in countries around the world, particularly in China and Iran.


SYN~164:
1996 -> 1999

When ISG broke up in 1996, Joshua Hemming continued to produce
industrial-techno music as SYN164. With a variety of synthesizers
and drum machines in the studio, he spent three years exploring the
psychedelic side of industrial and trance. Producing three albums
over three years, Joshua fondly looks back at this time as his most
musically productive and educational.


Icky Sticky GOO (ISG):
1993 -> 1996

Joshua Hemming began composing electronic music in 1993 with
no more than an Ensoniq ESQ1, a Macintosh computer and the
software sequencer "Studio Vision Pro". Originally only intending
to produce basic drumbeats to aid in bass practice, he quickly
became interested in the possibilities of electronic composition.

After meeting guitarist & percussionist John Down in the spring of
1995, he purchased a Yamaha SY85 synth workstation and they
teamed up to create the industrial-techno act "Icky Sticky GOO".

After several unusual live performances, ISG broke up. John Down
went on to explore collaborative percussive performances, and Joshua
Hemming continued making industrial-techno as the solo act "SYN164".