The first album from Philly/Baltimore’s most ungoogleable band, @, was what duo Victoria Rose and Stone Filipczak termed “hyperfolk,” earthy Americana in the vein of The Cradle, Adrienne Lenker, and early Woods, but a little weirder. With their new, forthcoming EP, Are You There God? It’s Me, @, out on Carpark next week, @’s done a turn to computer music. “Webcrawler,” premiering here today, is the eeriest of the project’s five tracks. Named after one of the OG search engines, it’s pixely and coiling. It creeps along like I imagine the 1994 application would, stretching and treading its spidery legs, spinning a snarl of data as it inches forward. The song’s ideas exist somewhere in the cache between then and now: there’s so much to ask, and so many answers; does such profusion provide us with understanding? “When I search for what to say / The search results are too demanding / I’ll be on your domain one day,” @ sing-chant, and near the end there’s a software riff—just the one—that sounds like dial-up, but make it metal.