DRONAEMENT — Dead Organ Music - The Cosmic Tapes
Out of Stock
This release is no longer available in our current inventory. If you are interested in this title and would like to enquire about a possible repress or reorder, we would be very glad to hear from you.
Get in TouchMore Info
"Eyes on the Sky, Feet on the Ground: Since Kosmische Musik happend in the seventies, artists always try to build spaceships from rusty old electronic music instruments fueled with dreams and psychoactive substances.
dronæment’s "Dead Organ Music" is in the same vein of building spaceships to explore the own inner universe. We could tell you this is a lost and forgotten recording from 1973, but it’s not!" [label info]
http://dyingforbadmusic.com
"What precisely was the reason to call some music 'cosmic music'? I no longer remember, even while I am using the same reference too. Its to point that kind of music that is entirely made using a string of analogue synthesizers and some sound effects. Dating back to the golden years, the early seventies, Tangerine Dream, Klaus Schulze, Ash Ra Temple or Vangelis, there is currently a revival of that kind of music - with Emeralds being on top of the scene. Dronaement, also known as Marcus Obst, has of course the best artist name to present such music and delved up some shelved music from 2007. Four parts of 'Organ' music and two parts of 'Cosmic Tape'. This is textbook stuff of what this cosmic music is. Slowly changing, with slow arpeggio's on a bunch of synths, with minimal moves, of which the intentions are to bring the listener into some altered state. Its not easy to say wether this works really well. As a reviewer I can't take drugs whenever the music demands so (although donations in hard cash to do that are of course most welcome), but the darker cosmos explored by Dronaement is certainly a great place. The four 'organ' pieces as the more minimalist outings here, whereas the 'Cosmic Tape' pieces are even more classic in approach and which can easily be ranked as the best Dronaement stuff I heard so far. Maybe because of the positive buzz around the somehow old fashioned cosmic music clouds my judgement a bit, but this is surely great stuff." [FdW/Vital Weekly]
dronæment’s "Dead Organ Music" is in the same vein of building spaceships to explore the own inner universe. We could tell you this is a lost and forgotten recording from 1973, but it’s not!" [label info]
http://dyingforbadmusic.com
"What precisely was the reason to call some music 'cosmic music'? I no longer remember, even while I am using the same reference too. Its to point that kind of music that is entirely made using a string of analogue synthesizers and some sound effects. Dating back to the golden years, the early seventies, Tangerine Dream, Klaus Schulze, Ash Ra Temple or Vangelis, there is currently a revival of that kind of music - with Emeralds being on top of the scene. Dronaement, also known as Marcus Obst, has of course the best artist name to present such music and delved up some shelved music from 2007. Four parts of 'Organ' music and two parts of 'Cosmic Tape'. This is textbook stuff of what this cosmic music is. Slowly changing, with slow arpeggio's on a bunch of synths, with minimal moves, of which the intentions are to bring the listener into some altered state. Its not easy to say wether this works really well. As a reviewer I can't take drugs whenever the music demands so (although donations in hard cash to do that are of course most welcome), but the darker cosmos explored by Dronaement is certainly a great place. The four 'organ' pieces as the more minimalist outings here, whereas the 'Cosmic Tape' pieces are even more classic in approach and which can easily be ranked as the best Dronaement stuff I heard so far. Maybe because of the positive buzz around the somehow old fashioned cosmic music clouds my judgement a bit, but this is surely great stuff." [FdW/Vital Weekly]