частная фанатека, её осмысление, и прочая отсебятина 18+
ПРОЛИКСИР ♪ старт ♪ музобоз ♪ эссе ♪ кино ♪ неблог ♪ форум ♪ поиск: внутри / снаружи ♪ нашлось |
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Ambient music has been developed with the main idea of relaxation and curing, however during few years it became the new level in abstract feelings, bringing a listener the ability to construct his own mind and thinking through the listening process. Most of such art works are rare to get and even to buy, however there are many musicians that share their composing experience with no fee at all, and everybody could enjoy them just being connected to the Internet.
One of such musicians is Japanese sound construction specialist Ryu, which mostly surrounds himself with the hard-to-understand descriptions and bios, provides the only possibility to listen to his music through his own ears with no charge. "The Depressed" work, for example, is described as "a post sampling kinetic dissipative system of sound in nonequalibrium", however those who is familiar with the digital abstractionism, won't find it difficult to understand and get some fun.
Released at the famous darkenist Nathan Larson's net-label "Darkwinter", it consists of four tracks in total, each of them is more than 10 minutes long journey into gloomy world of something like city sewerage, which reminds me the dried brain of fanatics looking for S.E.T.I. signals while being underground. The emotional part of tracks follows the strange logic: it appears you are first following the submersion to nowhere constructed of microscopic humid and cut radio waves, then suddenly come to the hidden door which opens and scares you with the very bright, or maybe dark light — it depends on the mood you are currently in. Third track appears to be very calm and standing to the classic ambient works in "Biosphere" style, like giving the listener the fresh breath after a long sweaty running. Finally, the last 16-minutes long epoch discovers the true about this album's heroes, which seems to be some Japanese teens sitting on the closet and trying to imagine what is their life's problem: diffused Japanese woman's voice is combined with the ice and still water particles we heard at the beginning, with the standalone melancholics from the third track, and it ends up with the perverted harmonics inherited from the second part.
Can't say it will be a memorable record in my life, and as about the compositional part, it is created just from two or three changing notes; however it is an interesting work, full of unusual samples, textures and their combination, coming worldwide straight from the enigmatic continent.
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