In 2007, Modell teamed with Stephen Hitchell, aka Soultek, for what would go on to be one of his most commercially successful projects, Echospace (also the name of a new label he started at the same time). Its debut album, The Coldest Season, was released on cult British label Modern Love and featured one of the most deconstructed interpretations of the Basic Channel sound ever released, its dubby, decayed textures swathed in shrouds of tape hiss. The 2010 follow-up Liumin (a Chinese personal name) was a greater success still, even as it played up this "destroyed" sound yet more, turning hundreds of hours of field recordings made in China into an unrecognizable murk.
In 2011, Modell, now piloting Deepchord solo, signed to legendary Glasgow label Soma, which issued what was actually the first ever "proper" Deepchord album, Hash-Bar Loops. A period of intense creativity followed and 2012 saw the release both of another Echospace album, Silent World -- the soundtrack to an experimental film produced by Modell himself -- and the Deepchord follow-up Sommer. In 2013, Soma released Deepchord's full-length 20 Electrostatic Soundfields, and Modell's Echospace [Detroit] label launched a series of archival compilations collecting tracks from Deepchord's early-2000s 12" releases. The following year, Subwax released an album of Deepchord's "redesigns" of Yagya's 2006 full-length Will I Dream During the Process?, and British label Astral Industries released Deepchord's limited double-LP Lanterns. Deepchord continued releasing 12" EPs on Soma, however, and the label issued one of Modell's grandest statements yet, the lengthy double CD Ultraviolet Music, in 2015. Following 2017's Live in Detroit [Ghost in the Sound], a recording of a Deepchord set at an official afterparty for Detroit's annual Movement festival, the project returned to Soma with the full-length Auratones. ~ Rob Theakston & John D. Buchanan, Rovi