Corrina Repp
ACTIVITY DREAM: Instrumentals on the guitar Vol. 1 (Pre-order)
Cat. No. JB264
$ 10.00
DETAILS
TRACKS
Side A
- Bumble Bee Crown King (9:08)
- JJ Faxon (6:23)
- Vollintine (7:43)
Side B
- Bon Air (8:36)
- Activity Dream (6:38)
- Rulers of the Sky (6:51)
RELEASE DATE
11/14/2025
• Limited Edition 1st Pressing Color Vinyl
• 36 page photo book containing photographs taken by Corrina, limited to 200 copies, includes a download.
• Bundle vinyl with photo book and save!
ACTIVITY DREAM is a slow-motion daydream—music that invites stillness, presence, and reflection. With each delicately plucked guitar string or quietly shifting chord, Corrina Repp creates emotional landscapes that speak volumes without the utterance of a single word. It’s an album where the space between notes feels intentional, like a breath held in reverence.
Each piece invites deep listening. On “Bumble Bee Crown King,” flight is suggested but never forced—think Rimsky-Korsakov’s Flight of the Bumblebee, only reimagined as a more softened and relaxed journey. The track hums gently, like a tuning fork tracing the edge of a brainwave, projected endlessly.
“JJ Faxon” brings subtle tension: plucked strings carry weight but never anchor you, evoking a perfectly restrained indie film score. Repp’s signature atmospheric minimalism is on full display, handled with grace and masterful control.
“Vollintine” lifts us into the celestial, seraphic realm — while introducing the first trace of Repp's voice on the record. By contrast, “Bon Air” rushes with joy: feverish fingerpicking, executed with crystalline precision, rains down like glittering light. High notes sparkle across the fretboard while deep E-string tones ground the moment.
On the title track, “Activity Dream,” each guitar pluck ripples outward like a drop in still water—resolving, and joining a larger current of our collective unconscious. And with “Rulers of the Sky,” she stretches sparse elements across six cinematic minutes, holding a whole world in restraint.
This is music as disciplined art: soothing, slow-drip, deeply intentional. In an age of instant everything, Repp offers a bold refusal—an invitation to listen deeply, to rest, to drift.




