Defrag System is the new work by Railster (the musical alias of Andrea Uliana), a Friulian producer and multimedia artist active between Udine and London. The album collects the most significant tracks composed between 2020 and 2024—a selection shaped over time, between personal experiences, deep listening, and musical intuition. The title is both a poetic provocation and a clear statement of intent. Inspired by the concept of digital defragmentation, it turns the idea into an artistic gesture: using one’s free time—that seemingly empty space between life’s obligations—to gather and reorganise fragments of emotion, sound, and thought. The result is a personal sonic diary, a semi-ironic act of creative optimisation, pushing back against the noise and productivity obsession of modern life. As an act of quiet resistance, Defrag System invites slow listening, immersive attention, and the rediscovery of what's left behind. The album moves fluidly through abstract hip hop, minimal electronics, ambient passages, and cinematic atmospheres—retaining a layered but accessible identity. Railster’s production approach is both artisanal and forward-thinking: vintage tools like the Akai S950, MPC 2000XL, and SP-404 coexist with digital and real synths, and field recordings captured between Italy and the UK. Each track often begins with raw sonic material—carefully sampled, manipulated, and rebuilt. For instance, in Ermes Ghost and Scan Cjosul, the mechanical sound of a scanner recorded with a contact mic becomes a compositional element. In contrast, Feel It draws from italo disco fragments, enriched by the warm guitar playing of Jacob Paul Elliott, blending nostalgia with exploration. The result is a soundscape that alternates urban tension with ambient introspection—deeply rooted in a sense of nature, often overlooked in our hyper-connected and disjointed reality. This tension between the organic and the digital is also reflected in the visual identity of the album. The artwork features a photograph of tree bark, overlaid by a geometric grid derived from the artist’s own graphic motifs—symbolising rationalisation and the attempt to bring order to chaos.