Many of the greatest electronic musicians also happen to be computer and technology geeks. Richard D. James, aka Aphex Twin, is no exception. The 46-year-old British musician has spent decades making music with an incredible range of analog and digital synthesizers (more details here), and one of his most impressive albums, Computer Controlled Acoustic Instruments, was made by programming robots to play live instruments to his exact specifications.

I could go on about James' nerd cred (including his decision to initially announce his 2014 "comeback" record Syro via deep-web links), but his lengthy, diverse, and weird collection of music does the talking—and now there's an easier way than ever to access it. A month-long countdown at the official Aphex Twin site concluded on Thursday, and with it came a near-complete collection of James' recording output since 1991. It includes a store where fans can buy lossless FLAC and LAME-encoded MP3 versions of albums, EPs, and even myriad side projects recorded under weird aliases (AFX, Polygon Window, The Tuss, etc).

Should you be short on cash, there's an embedded streaming audio player with unlimited access to the entire catalog. This is notable for a few reasons, but the biggest is that James' new shop includes hours of previously unreleased material from pretty much every phase of his career. His breakout 1995 album ...I Care Because You Do has been bolstered with a whopping seven new, lengthy tracks (and they're quite good), while most of his albums, EPs, and singles now include additional demo recordings and isolated-element remixes.

(The original template for his single "Windowlicker" is a fascinating newbie, for example, though certainly not as weird as its eventual version—which received a bizarre music video (probably NSFW) with James' face slapped onto bikini-clad, water-soaked models.)

Whether you're new to Aphex Twin's discordant, glitchy aesthetic, or you lost track of the musician during his 13-year "retirement" that ended in 2014, this free, streaming archive is as good a place as any to catch up and let the man's modulation ring in your eardrums. The site also promises more tunes to come, particularly from James' "Rephlex" period.