Brian Eno Has Some Actual Good News


Rain noises for sleeping, chill beats for studying, spacey melodies for getting stoned: The ecosystem of sounds known as ambient music excels at blocking out the world. But Brian Eno, the man who named the genre, has spent a life recording songs that reflect the reality around him. In the 1970s, the drab bustle of an airport terminal and the ruckus of New York City helped inspire him to use then-novel synthesizer technology to paint pastoral soundscapes: the yin to the yang of modern life.

On the new album FOREVERANDEVERNOMORE, the 74-year-old Eno now reacts to the global climate crisis—and uses his own voice for urgent purposes. Blending ambient music and operatic pop for his first vocals-driven solo album in 17 years, he croons about ominous visions in a tone that’s notably lower than he sounded in his early days as a rock-and-roll frontman. “I found a new voice, and with it a new way to sing,” Eno wrote in an email after we chatted on Zoom last month. “And with that, a new set of feelings that suddenly became singable … regret mixed with joy, or melancholy with resignation.”

On a 2021 podcast episode, Eno—whose résumé also includes playing keyboards in Roxy Music and producing for Coldplay and U2—said that he often dislikes when lyricists strain to fit important messages into their music. But when I spoke with him, he wasn’t shy about conveying a political agenda. At one point, he got up to show me a T-shirt he’d had printed with an environmentalist slogan: WE’RE ON THE SAME SIDE. (Last year, he founded EarthPercent, a nonprofit to make the music industry greener.) Bespectacled and sporting a neat, white beard, he also fulfilled his reputation as an artist-intellectual, pausing after each question before giving a considered, forceful answer.

This conversation has been edited and condensed.


Spencer Kornhaber: In the past, you’ve expressed some ambivalence about how lyrics work on the listener. What is the role of lyrics?

Brian Eno: So many of the songs that I’ve loved all my life, I still don’t know what the fuck they’re about. For me, lyrics are as impressionistic as any other aspect of the sound. I resist saying “This is what this song is about,” because if that was really all that it was about, I would’ve just written the lyrics down and put them in an envelope and sent it to somebody.

Kornhaber: This is your environmentally themed album, so you do have a message here. What’s the likelihood of that message making change?

Eno: One of the things that art does is it suggests things that you might pay attention to. It’s a way of saying, “Why don’t you look at this?”

I’ve been thinking about the word propaganda. I came up with another word a few years ago, which is prop-agenda. Propaganda is easy to detect and defend against because we recognize it. Prop-agenda is what our governments do now. They put something else on the agenda, misdirecting you away from what people would prefer you didn’t think about. It’s the essential ambiance of commercial life, really: that we keep your mind preoccupied with shit.

What are the chances of changing anything? Well, things do change, and they always are changing. I’d like to give people the feeling that they could be included in this process. All the decisions you make as a consumer and as a parent and as a worker are part of the machinery of how the world changes. So saying to people, “You’re already an agent of change. Are you conscious of that? And would you like to take more control of that?” That’s the first message for me.

For big social movements like the climate-change movement, the critical moment is when people [within it] start to realize how big it is. At the moment, we’re still acting like we’re the embattled resistance fighting against huge forces like the market and corporations. But in fact, everything’s on our side, except a few intransigent systems that certain people—by and large, rich people—have a huge interest in maintaining.

Kornhaber: Do you want to be making prop-agenda? Is it okay for your music to be thought of that way?

Eno: The agenda is currently dominated by the usual preoccupations of the media, which is bad news. What I would like to say is that there’s actually a lot of good news, but it is not dramatic. Mostly it’s to do with things like technical changes in solar panels. Within every field that I know anything about—arts, sciences, economics, government, politics, and so on—I can see movements that are all preparing for a different future. We’re making progress. There’s this huge root system growing underneath our feet. I would really love to make people more aware of that.

Kornhaber: That’s an interesting way of framing the new album, which, to me, is a little devastating. There’s an apocalyptic mood. How does that fit with this desire to kind of wake people up to the positive?

Eno: I think there’s only a couple of places where it’s quite gloomy.

Kornhaber: Maybe those hit me more. Like “Garden of Stars.” That’s a very powerful song; it’s scary.

Eno: Oh, yes, yes. Well, that’s the gloomiest one. But do you know what I was thinking about when I wrote it? These people who believe the universe is a game that’s been constructed by some other being. Like, if you were now playing World of Minecraft, in that little world you are a god because you can change the rules. So the supposition, which apparently Elon Musk believes in, is that the universe is a generative world and we happen to be living in it.

I was just writing that song as though that were true. The I in the song is the person building the world. And that person can switch the world off if they want to. They can gleefully watch it collapse under its own internal forces and contradictions. If you’re a simulationist, you can find that acceptable and quite amusing. We’re just an accident of the design.

Kornhaber: In the music of the album, there are a lot of low, groaning, distorted sounds that are really remarkable. What am I hearing?

Eno: Partly because I don’t have bass and drums on there, there’s a lot of space for those kinds of sounds. Often when I’m making a piece, I’m thinking like a painter: I need more shadow here in order for this brightness to shine.

One of the catastrophes of recording lately—not so much now; people got wise to it—but there was a period when people wanted every instrument to be at the front of the mix. I call those “cocaine mixes,” because they often seem to accompany the ingestion of lots of cocaine. Everything is brightened up and sharpened up and pushed to the front of the mix. Of course, that means that everything is in the same place, essentially. You start to realize after a while that in order for something to appear bright, there has to be something dark beside it. And vice versa.

So just from a purely painterly point of view, those [low] sounds are counterpoint to the higher, brighter sounds that I’m using. I want to make universes that seem credible, which means that they have threat as well as joy in them. Even the one song you’re talking about, “Garden of Stars,” has joy to it. It’s slightly manic, because the guy [who runs the simulation] is rubbing his hands and therefore sounds quite dangerous.

Kornhaber: Making art that considers the end of the world is an ancient preoccupation. What is your relationship with that history?

Eno: I have a resistance to it because of its religious connotations—and the notion that within religion, apocalypse is sort of welcomed. I would do everything in my power to prevent [apocalypse] if I could. I don’t see any redemption in it. I just see a nasty, messy end with no winners, except the animal kingdom. They might be very happy to see us enraptured.

Kornhaber: Ambient music in the early days was meant to push back against oversaturated capitalism. How do you think that has panned out as the influence of ambient music has moved through the culture?

Eno: Well, I think it does make a difference. Somebody I think is very disruptive, in a good way, is Marie Kondo, and her message is similar. She’s saying, “Do you really want that much? Wouldn’t you actually enjoy it more if there were less of it?” Ambient music is music that leaves a lot of things out. It’s doing the opposite of what a lot of entertainment music is doing, which is trying to keep your attention, catch it and tweak it at every bar. This is saying, and she’s saying, “What about a world in which the most active thing is your own thought?”

Those things have made a huge difference to what people think their lives are for and what they should find enjoyable. Of course, the rest of the culture still goes on. It’s not all going to suddenly disappear because Marie Kondo and a few ambient records come out. But I think it does give people an alternative way of thinking about who they are.

Kornhaber: It’s interesting that minimalism has become a rich person’s aesthetic in some ways. What do you make of that?

Eno: It is partly because they have the luxury of asking themselves the question “What do I really like? And can I have it?” If you find out that what you really like is peacefulness, not a continuous, hectic barrage of exhortations to buy things, then if you’re rich enough, you can insulate yourself from all of those things. Wealth is insulation really. You can’t blame people who can afford it for following [minimalism]. But, of course, music is quite cheap.

Kornhaber: On Spotify, utilitarian mood music, such as rain noises for sleep, is so popular. What do you make of its ubiquity now?

Eno: It tells you what people want in their lives, doesn’t it? It tells you that people think they’re not getting enough of that, whatever that is.

I was wondering the other day why, in a lot of music, the reverbs keep getting longer and longer. And I thought, well, it’s because big reverbs give you a sense of a big space. That’s not something that most of us have. Fifty percent of all humans now live in cities, and the numbers are going up all the time. A lot of our evolutionary history was spent in big, open spaces, and so we obviously still have a hankering for those. So we choose them in virtual ways. That music you’re describing to me sounds like a virtual countryside.

Kornhaber: There’s birdsong on this album. What’s interesting about birdsong to you?

Eno: Its suggestion of the outside. Music is nearly always an inside activity, and one of the main things I wanted to do with ambient music is to say “I’m not telling you where the edges of this music are.” In quite a lot of my ambient records I’ve included deliberately nonmusical sounds at the edges of the mix to blur the boundary between the music and the rest of the world. It’s embracing everything and saying “Think of all of that as music.”

That’s one of the reasons that people like ambient music when they’re working. The rest of the world no longer seems like harsh pokes and jabs into your concentration. Now it all seems to belong under one umbrella. Birdsong is another of those edge-blurring sounds because it says to you, you’re outside, or at least your window is open. It says you’re not stuck in a small room, though in fact you may well be.

Kornhaber: That idea of everything being music—there’s also an environmental subtext to it. Is that part of the goal?

Eno: Yes. Ecosystems aren’t bounded. A lot of the mess that we’re in comes from the idea that systems are separate from each other—that we can suck up resources of the Earth and chuck the trash back, and that’s outside. There is no outside. That’s what we have to remember.



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Michael Gielen conducts Messiaen, Szymanowski & Penderecki


Twentieth century music is at an interesting point in its history from the perspective of recordings. Contemporary music, for obvious reasons, is always the most under-represented, whereas works from the last hundred years are beginning to reach the stage where’s there’s a more meaningful range of recordings available. In the case of some repertoire, though, there’s a question to be asked with regard to interpretation, and to what degree different recordings not merely do but can bring something genuinely new to the listening experience. Perhaps that sounds naïve or ridiculous: after all, isn’t each individual performance, live or recorded, entirely unique? Maybe so, but when i consider concerts and recordings i’ve heard of music by, for example, Messiaen (especially his later work) and Penderecki (especially his earlier work), the differences between them have, for the most part, felt more than usually slight. i attribute this in part to the very particular, unique musical languages of these two composers. Aside from accuracy of performance, what scope is there for wide varieties of interpretation in, say, Messiaen’s Chronochromie or Penderecki’s Threnody?

i pose the question not because i believe the answer is “none”, but because it’s something i’ve genuinely wondered about in recent times. Late last year, listening to Kent Nagano and the Bavarian Radio Orchestra’s 3-disc box set featuring Messiaen’s Poèmes pour Mi, Chronochromie and La Transfiguration, i was struck by how anonymous it sounded. All of it was 100% recognisably Messiaen, yet i’d be hard pushed to say how much of it was 100% recognisably Nagano or Bavaria. Does that make them bad performances? or does it, perhaps, make them all the better because the conductor and orchestra haven’t got in the way of the composer’s voice? Is it enough for a performance to be merely faithful? As contemporary and avant-garde music becomes ever more part of history and more widely recorded, these are vital questions. After all, we live at a time when if we want to hear, for example, a symphony by Beethoven, we have literally hundreds to choose from; will the time come when there could be over a hundred versions of Chronochromie or Threnody? Would that be desirable? Would it be meaningful? Again, i don’t necessarily believe the answer is “no”, though the actual answers to all these questions no doubt lie in the hands of each individual orchestra and conductor who decide to explore these works and present them, hopefully, afresh.

Earlier this year, while making my way through SWR Classic’s epic 10-volume Michael Gielen Edition, i couldn’t help noticing that, despite its generous broad sweep of 20th century music (explored in volumes 7 and 10, the latter of which i reviewed in February), some significant composers were entirely absent. Messiaen and Penderecki were two such names, and i particularly wondered about them at the time, not simply because they weren’t included but more because i felt that if anyone could find something genuinely new in their interpretation of this music, then Michael Gielen – with his gift for teasing out amazing amounts of detail plus his penchant for unflinchingly exposing the raw emotional core of the music – surely could. This gap in the catalogue has now been filled thanks to two recent releases on the Orfeo label (who seem to be trying to prove they’ve got just as many previously unheard Gielen recordings in their archive as SWR Classic), both featuring the ORF Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra: one a portrait disc of Messiaen, the other focusing on music by Szymanowski and Penderecki.

Karol Szymanowski

Though stylistically extremely different, what unites the music on the latter disc, in addition to both composers being Polish, is its focus on lamentation. In the case of Szymanowski’s 1926 Stabat Mater, though, the music is often so opulent that the case for it being a lament can be hard to make. Gielen’s approach is therefore not to try, but instead to focus on the passion that drives the piece. That being said, the opening taps into a poignant sense of melancholy – albeit captured in lush language – with each phrase like a separate outburst of mourning, not increasing over time but simply continuing, in a sequence that therefore fascinatingly combines richness with a kind of dazed agony. For anyone who doesn’t share its religious sentiments it’s impossible to take the texts seriously (indeed, as they progress they become downright nauseating), yet Gielen, the quartet of soloists and the singers of Chorus sine nomine all treat them as if they believed each and every word. As such, the third and fourth movements are especially effective (almost affecting), turning inward and intimate, the orchestra suffusing the voices with tenderness and soft radiance. Likewise the anguished development of the penultimate movement is rendered a ferocious twist from intense depth to full-blown fire, closing the work in an atmosphere of unmistakable ecstasy.

The extent to which Gielen ensures a fully-committed authentic response to such manic sentiments indicates what’s going to happen when his attention is turned to Penderecki. In the Dies Irae, composed in 1967 as a memorial to the victims murdered at Auschwitz, both the solemnity and scale are immediately apparent. Furthermore, in a move that at first seems disorienting, the piece is presented as inhabiting a kind of schizoid state, veering irrationally between passages that seem ordered and ostensibly random blurts, howls and abstract noise. Over time, though, the performance indicates that the default position of the music is in fact cacophony and clamour, and that everything else – anything approaching clarity – is merely holding itself together just long enough to emote and draw breath before losing it all again. The whispered syllables at the start of the central ‘Apocalypsis’ thereby become deeply unsettling, both for the way they’re articulated by the Vienna Concert Chorus as well as for the implication of what’s inevitably to come, soon enough breaking apart completely in a dazzling but horrifying collapse. On the one hand, Penderecki’s wildly dramatic imbalance begs the question of whether it all sounds a bit over the top, less an authentic lament than the composer’s conception of what an authentic lament might sound like. Yet, how else could any response to the hell of Auschwitz sound? What capacity is there for clarity, or for anything approximating order or control? Again, Gielen’s full-throttle commitment makes the Dies Irae sound like the only true Day of Wrath ever adequately captured in sound.

Krzysztof Penderecki

As for the Threnody, much is often made of the fact that Penderecki’s naming it as a tribute to the victims of Hiroshima was an afterthought, but who cares – what difference does it make? Appropriately, it’s the composer at his most aloof and immediate, music that simultaneously means nothing and means everything, captured in not so much a narrative as a collage of disparate, desperate, archetypal sound masses. Bearing in mind what i said previously about interpretation, it’s a relief (though not a surprise) to hear Gielen delicately personalise Threnody in this performance. The sound shapes themselves are wonderfully vivid – the weaker string clusters sound like the abject wheezing of a knackered squeezebox – but beyond this it’s the way Gielen taps into that fundamental abstract / emotional, meaningless / meaningful dichotomy that makes this recording so compelling. There’s a recurring impression that the music is at once numb while also keening. Another way of putting it would be to say that Gielen simply makes the music “open”, enabling it to not so much convey anything itself as serve as a vehicle for whatever feelings we want to project onto it. All the same, he prevents the piece from ever becoming just a blank litany of abstruse textures, imbuing it with character and detail, where possible making some of Threnody’s transitions surprisingly telling moments of small-scale drama. One of the more notable occurs halfway through, when a wall of noise reduces to a single unison pitch, then reduces further to just a single instrument, its subsequent wavering suggesting the entire weight of all the players has been brought to bear on its shoulders. Perhaps there’s no such thing as a definitive performance of Threnody, but if i had to pick just one, this excellent recording would be tough to beat.

Volume 7 of the Michael Gielen Edition, exploring late 19th and early 20th century music, includes a disc questioning ‘Kitsch or Art?’ Featuring music by Wagner, Richard Strauss and Puccini, Messiaen’s early orchestral work Les Offrandes Oubliées (1930) would fit perfectly alongside them. Contrary to the general trend to have befallen his music over the years, Gielen and the ORF orchestra don’t in any way linger excessively over Messiaen’s emollient string writing (indeed, this performance is around a minute shorter than most), though even without milking it there’s no way to counter the work’s sheer oleaginous weight. Yet unlike many performances of Messiaen’s ‘ecstatic’ music, Gielen prevents it becoming a homogeneous mush; instead, we hear it as a texture comprising distinct timbres blending together. It’s an important distinction that makes a significant sonic difference. In such a context as this, it would be hard not to make the short, central sin-inspired section sound aggressive, yet Gielen obviates the usual mistake of simply turning it into a superficial diabolical dervish, instead presenting it as an engaging tilting between order and chaos, integrating its recurring high shrieks into the texture rather than exaggerating them.

Olivier Messiaen

The success of this performance of Poèmes pour Mi (1937) is as much thanks to soprano Sarah Leonard as to Gielen and the orchestra. Together they create an amazing sense of rapture, as if the piece were caught up in one place even as it continually drives along. This is matched by a balance, conveyed in the surreal texts, between ecstasy and a more relaxed form of happiness, illustrating the divine / mortal aspects of love at the heart of the work. While the latter are exquisite, the former are utterly heightened, to the extent that, at its most extreme, the music becomes truly terrifying, Leonard sounding wonderfully unhinged. One of the loveliest aspects of this performance is the way the sections are heard not as separate movements but like different exhalations of the same air into the same atmosphere, a single extended (melo)dramatic articulation of twin conceptions of love. Throughout, Gielen continually teases out textural details, such as the inner movement in ‘Ta voix’, made to sound here like concentric wheels moving at different rates while the soprano soars overhead. Without minimising the quasi-romantic and impressionistic qualities of the music, Gielen manages to make Poèmes pour Mi sound like it’s not made of musical ‘substance’ at all, but fashioned from light and air. Though it’s up against some competition, this is the best performance i’ve yet heard of this piece.

The disc ends with the work i cited at the start, Chronochromie (1960), which coming in the wake of such unchecked bliss could hardly be a more startling contrast. As with his approach to Penderecki, Gielen avoids letting the music sound like a conveyor belt of wildly dissonant blurts, clangs and flurries, bringing his laser focus to ensure the intricate details and structural shape of the score all emerge clearly. As a result, the ear continually leaps all over the place in response to these individual elements and layers that blend and intermingle. The highlight comes in the two ‘Antistrophe’ movements, each presented as a weighty back-and-forth between robust wind phrases and busy xylophones heard over shining tremolandos, the first culminating in a massive multiplicity of sound strata, the second in a dense discordant chorale that finally splinters apart. In a similar way to Threnody, i’m not sure if there could ever be a definitive performance of Chronochromie, but what sets this one apart is that it doesn’t merely ‘sound like Messiaen’, it goes deeper, revealing what it is that makes Messiaen sound like Messiaen.

Michael Gielen’s Messiaen disc was released in July, his Szymanowski and Penderecki disc in September; both are available on CD and download.




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Country Music Awards weekend started with all-star lineup for happy fans


Northern Ontario Coutry Music Association Awards Weekend 2022. Photo by C.Shoust

The Northern Ontario Country Music Awards weekend commenced last night to excited fans, with the Great Northern Opry All Stars Event.

White Stallion was the house band with guest appearances as the stage in the packed ballroom at Quattro Hotel was graced with country music greats from across Northern Ontario.

From the Sault, there was Rob Wagner, Larry Cote and Jimmy Bouchard. From Timmins there was Mike Geoffrey, Cleo and Chantal Bellemare, Dana Lee Herbert and Sasha Lee Cadieux. From North Bay there was Frank and Cheryl Robbins, Don Brose and Jason Lamoureax. From Manitoulin there was Ben Lentir and Doug Hope. From Sudbury there was Kevin Russell, Gilles Giroux and Guy Moncion.

Today will be the Northern Ontario Country Music Awards Show at 7 p.m.



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K-pop band NCT 127’s Indonesia concert halted after 30 faint in crush


SOUTH TANGERANG, Indonesia: K-pop band NCT 127 was forced to end their first concert in Indonesia early after 30 people fainted in a crush, police said.

Indonesia is still reeling after more than 130 people, including over 40 children, died in a stadium stampede last month – one of the deadliest disasters in football history.

Police spokesperson Endra Zulpan said late on Friday (Nov 4) that the concert near the capital Jakarta had been going for around two hours when fans started surging forward to get closer to the stage.

“Because of it, 30 people fainted. To prevent other incidents, we decided to stop the concert at 9.20pm (1420 GMT),” Zulpan said, adding that the collapsed fans had recovered.



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Musicians perform at Composition Concert


Conservatory of Music show features harps and saxophones.

North Steinbacher//CHIMES

Music composition major Alexander Reams, music major Jason Rhue and worship arts major Caleb Britt serenade the audience with saxophone melodies.

On Wednesday Nov. 3, family and friends gathered in the Lansing Recital Hall to support musicians in the Conservatory of Music. Students composed a wide array of pieces for a variety of instruments and themes. 

As the audience sat in anticipation for the concert, Dr. Robert Denham, associate professor and interim chair for the Conservatory of Music, introduced the schedule for the evening and explained the significance of the occasion. For this second composition concert of the year, each student composed a piece to be accompanied by a harp.

Four of the musicians were selected to win the A Piacere award and record their piece after the concert.  Harpist Grethen Sheetz joined the performance to play “Fantasy for Harp” composed by senior music major Michael Fausett, “Piercing Shadows” by music composition major Heidi Voth, “Chased: Play it Cool” by music composition major Caleb Bilti and “Starlight” by music composition major Kayla Fermanian. 

PERFORMANCES

Each of the pieces displayed substantial talent and personality in both the stories and compositions. Music composition major Jaden Knighton’s “Tumultu” utilized both the piano keys and strings in his piece as he worked through feelings of being overwhelmed in a state of chaos. The event program states, “Tumultu resolves with a glissando in the lowest register of the piano. The notes ring out and blend together and leave the listener with a sense of motionless uncertainty.” 

Another notable song arranged by music composition majors Jason Rhue, Noah Peterson and Devan Watanabe, titled “Level 7,” incorporated video game elements with various selections from games such as Mario, Wii, Minecraft, Pokemon and more. This unique style demonstrated the seven musicians’ skill as they successfully passed each level to reach level seven within the different movements. 

“Bats at Midnight” by Anita Taylor, first-year media composition major, told the story of the bats that she saw in her neighborhood in Texas. The fluttering notes within the song represent the creatures in flight. Taylor explains that the key was specifically set in F Sharp Major since she has synesthesia — meaning, she sees various colors as she plays or listens to music. With this in mind, she specifically chose a key which represented the color purple before writing the composition. With this being her first concert at Biola, her family joined her for the evening to celebrate a piece she wrote three years ago as a high school student. 

“It’s cold outside, so you know, [I was] blowing on my fingers to get them warmed up … I [was] a little nervous, but I knew my family was here so that was good,” said Taylor. 

After each performance — including a bow and tribute to the composer —  the crowd applauded fervently for the impressive collection of pieces. The Conservatory of Music will host two additional performances in the spring 2023 semester to display their students’ accomplishments. 



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Down The Path: Lucas Burn drops terrifying new song Nightmare – Independent Music – New Music


Dropping his 3rd single from the much-anticipated upcoming album, Lucas Burn shows us that the pain remains and could tear the entire roof off with the heart-stopping new release Nightmare.

Lucas Burn is a Gdańsk, Poland-based indie hip hop artist who forms those meaningful songs that have a genuine message and helps others deal with their own issues.

My experience growing up in a home with an abusive father almost scarred me to life. However, I decided to channel the frustration to show my listeners, who might be sugaring from a similar situation, that they can overcome this and create a successful life for themselves and their loved ones. Many fans have already sent a message about how this song is helping them come out of their trauma and get their life back on track.” ~ Lucas Burn

Soaring into incredible heights that reveals what is really going on, Lucas Burn has released a brave single that is packed with intensity and shall get those speakers roaring with life.

Nightmare from Gdańsk, Poland-based indie hip hop artist Lucas Burn, is such an explosive effort that will shock the senses from our dripping souls. Steaming with intensity and featuring a powerful tone to truly get behind, we find ourselves in a harrowing story, which is cinematically on point for its creative intelligence.

We’re not alone.

Listen up to this unique single on Spotify and see more on the IG page.

Reviewed by Llewelyn Screen





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26 inspirational and practical ambient music production tips and tactics


Pioneered by the likes of Philip Glass and Brian Eno, ambient music is as much about creating mood as it is about creating melody. 

Fortunately, computer users can now call upon an arsenal of ambient-friendly production tools – MusicRadar is here to explain what they are and how to use them.

1. General inspiration and sources

1. If all the soft sounds and smooth vibes get a little too much, try some juxtaposition. Ambient heroes The Orb are fond of this technique, and whether it’s a squealing guitar, devastating synth hit or ridiculous vocal sample, they’re not afraid to toss something a little unusual into the mix.

2. Getting off-the-wall sounds doesn’t have to involve spending hundreds on sample downloads and libraries – there are plenty of interesting sounds happening all around us all the time. If you’ve got a mic and a laptop – or any portable recorder – take a field trip and record some of nature’s bounty. Running water’s always good for a laugh, but remember: your equipment should stay dry, even if you don’t…

3. Second-hand record shops are great places to find sounds. You may even find that your local charity shop has an untapped collection of oddities just waiting to be snapped up by the enterprising samplist. From records featuring nothing but steam engine noises to children’s story albums, there’s an abundance of weirdness out there for the taking.

4. Samples are a constant source of inspiration, but it’s easy to discount one because it doesn’t fit the feel of your track when you first try it. If you’re short on fresh ideas, try running short bursts of a sample through a delay effect. Using this method, it’s possible to come up with some great abstract noises that sound nothing like the original source material.

5. If your tracks are jam-packed full of synthetic-sounding virtual instrument patches and everything’s starting to sound too ‘computery’, consider bringing in some natural sounds or using a few real instrument parts. Even if they’re from ROMplers, it should help take some of the unnatural edge off.

6. Recordings of natural sounds such as rainfall, waves, wind and fire are great for filling out a mix because they’re basically noise, and as such, they have a wide range of frequencies. They shouldn’t be too loud or they’ll overpower the mix, but use them with care and they can be extremely useful.

7. Noise is a useful synthesis tool – if your synth features a noise oscillator, you can use it with a fast-attack amplitude envelope to create your own percussion sounds. This sounds artificial, but in a lo-fi way, and works especially well when teamed with a high-quality reverb.

8. If you’re using long, sustained sounds, such as pads, your mix can lack movement if these elements are too static. By subtly altering tuning, pulse width or filter cutoff over time, you can create more organic sounds that will enhance the mix rather than make it sound lifeless.

“Recordings of natural sounds such as rainfall, waves, wind and fire are great for filling out a mix because they’re basically noise”

9. If you’ve got a sample that you want to play for longer than its duration, you have two basic options: you could timestretch it, which will most likely introduce unwanted audio artifacts, or loop it. Crossfade looping is the best way to get seamless loops, but if this isn’t possible, you can recreate the effect yourself by fading between two audio tracks in your mixer.

10. To make a pad sound particularly evocative, try modulating the filter cutoff with a shallow LFO as well as a big, sweeping envelope. This will give the sound a great deal of movement and works superbly when combined with a delay effect.

11. When working with vocals, you can have a lot of fun with pitchshifting. When pitching vocals around, it helps to use a plug-in with a formant control – this helps vocals retain their characteristics or, conversely, can be used to alter them radically. 

12. With modern audio sequencers, it’s easier than ever to cut up vocals and other rhythmic sounds in order to fit them in with the groove of your track. When cutting sounds up in your sequencer, remember to zoom in to make sure you’re cutting the file at a point where the amplitude is zero – otherwise known as a ‘zero crossing’.

13. When deploying your newly-sliced rhythmic samples, it’s not always best to have your sequencer’s snap control active. You might find that pulling samples forwards along the track a little makes them fit in better with the rest of the groove, and having the snap control turned off also makes programming human-sounding rhythms easier.

14. Silky bass guitar tones are a common sound in ambient dub, but if you don’t have a real bass guitar to hand, you’ll have some trouble getting the same smooth sound. Try one of the virtual bassists or ROMplers now on offer – Toontrack’s EZbass (opens in new tab) is a great tool, for example, as is IK’s Modo Bass (opens in new tab).

15. Whether you’re composing in stereo or surround, it’s important to use the available panoramic space properly if you want to create a sense of size. If your track has drums, you’ll probably want to pan these around the centre, but with synths and effects you can afford to use the space more creatively, so try panning them around.

16. Most DAWs have simple pan controls that only enable you to pick one position in the stereo panorama. If you’re looking for slightly more control, a stereo imaging plug-in can be used to control the position and filter setting of each channel or tweak them as a mid/side pair, respectively.

2. Reverb

17. Reverb is one of the most important tools you have for creating a sense of space, so if you’re making ambient music, it pays to take the time to get it as sweet as you can. A good start is to use a high-quality reverb, and there are a few free ones well worth investigating – try Valhalla’s SuperMassive or Space Lite, for starters.

18. It can be tempting to just stick reverb on a few tracks and leave it at that, but that wouldn’t be using this powerful effect to its full potential. Using high damping values, large room sizes and long reverb times will create a big sound that, when combined with judicious EQ, can create a ‘far away’ kind of effect.

19. When using reverbs, if you want to create a softer, more ethereal effect, use less of the dry signal in the output. You can do this by turning the wet/dry ratio up, or, if you’re using a send effect, by setting it to pre-fader and turning the source channel’s main volume level down.

20. If you’d rather have a brighter, closer effect, then make the reverb’s damping less severe, reduce the room size and turn down the delay time. This works especially well in conjunction with stereo enhancer effects such as the Voxengo Stereo Touch plug-in.

21. Many interesting effects can be created by rendering out reverb and delay tails minus the original dry sound, then applying creative processing to the tail. Filters work particularly well for this kind of thing and, once processed, the new sound can be played back alongside the original version, or replace it altogether.

22. Finally, when programming synth patches, don’t discount the creative potential of your instrument’s reverb section. With a long, lush reverb, even the smallest synth squelches or blips can be turned into pleasingly tonal atmospheric effects. Of course, if your synth effects truly suck, you can always use a separate reverb or delay plug-in instead to create the same effects.

3. Delay

23. Delay is a pretty common effect in atmospheric music like ambient, but for ambient dub, a full-on feedback delay, such as Ohm Force’s excellent OhmBoyz effect, is just the thing.

24. Dynamic use of feedback delay is useful for creating long, evolving rhythmic effects. By automating the feedback control on a delay plug-in, you can build to a crescendo or create weird rhythmic effects.

25. Getting that distinctive morphing dub delay effect can be done by adding either a filter or distortion component to the feedback loop – easily done in OhmBoyz, as it has both. If you’re using a delay effect in Reaktor or another modular environment, you can add these elements yourself, though it’s advisable to put a level limiter after them to ensure the feedback doesn’t get out of control.

26. Delay effects work well before a reverb, though too much of either will swamp the mix. However, it’s possible to tame these effects with automation – set the reverb’s wet level to 0%, automating it so that it comes up as the end of the delay tail is playing. This way, you’ll be able to use both the delay and the reverb, without having too much of either going on at once. 

As an advanced alternative, you could use sidechain compression to duck the start of the reverb (using the source signal as the key input), and setting the release time appropriately, thus achieving the same effect automatically.



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Classical music concert will feature ‘eclectic’ selections on piano and double bass


Two classical musicians — double bassist Bill Koehler and pianist Amanda Huff-McClure — will give a concert Sunday afternoon at the Alhambra Theatre. 

Bill Koehler

It is titled “Medieval to Modern: An Eclectic Recital for Double Bass and Piano,” and plans for the concert grew out of a collaboration that began several months ago. 

Koehler and Huff-McClure were both searching for a collaborator when a mutual friend suggested they should met. 

“In a small community where there are not a lot of classical performance opportunities it felt really fortuitous,” said Huff-McClure, a Caldwell County resident who owns and runs The Corner Coffeehouse in Hopkinsville with her wife, April Huff-McClure. 

Koehler, who resides at Eddyville, is a professor emeritus at Illinois State University, where he taught bass and other music courses for 35 years. A composer, he has performed with major orchestra throughout Europe. 

Huff-McClure has taught piano for more than 20 years. For the past nine years, she has been teaching students at University Heights Academy and in her private studio in Hopkinsville. Most her opportunities to play classical music have been in churches. 

Amanda Huff-McClure

For the past six months, Koehler and Huff-McClure have meet every Thursday at First Christian Church in Princeton to practice the selections they will play for the Alhambra concert. 

“It’s such a very personal thing,” Huff-McClure said, describing how musicians are able to form a partnership. 

“When you are playing together … you have to click on a fundamental musical level or it doesn’t work,” she said.

The fact that Koehler and Huff-McClure did not know each other but were both looking for a collaborator at the same time in rural Kentucky felt serendipitous, she said. 

The concert will begin at 2 p.m. The theater doors will open at 1 p.m. Tickets are $10 for adults, or $5 for students and military, and can be purchased online.

“This is an opportunity to see if there is a market for classical performances in Hopkinsville,” Huff-McClure said. 

Sunday’s program will last about two hours, including a brief intermission. Koehler will have CDs of his music available for purchase at the Alhambra.





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Music world set to celebrate Dolly Parton, Eminem at Rock Hall of Fame


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Los Angeles (AFP) – The music world is gathering in Los Angeles to honor some of its finest acts on Saturday, inducting the latest class of luminaries including Dolly Parton and Eminem into the prestigious Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

The country queen and rap agitator are joined by pop futurists Eurythmics, smooth rocker Lionel Richie, new wave Brits Duran Duran, confessional lyricist Carly Simon and enduring rock duo Pat Benatar and Neil Giraldo in entering the music pantheon.

The Cleveland-based Hall of Fame — which surveyed more than 1,000 musicians, historians and industry members to choose the entrants — will honor the seven acts in a star-studded gala at Los Angeles’s Microsoft Theater.

More supergroup concert than ceremony, the evening will see music legends honor their peers with performances of their time-tested hits — the lineup is usually kept under wraps until showtime.

Dolly Parton initially tried to decline induction into the prestigious Rock and Roll Hall of Fame but in the end accepted admittance into the music pantheon SUZANNE CORDEIRO AFP/File

But Rock Hall Chairman John Sykes spilled some of the guest appearances in an interview this week with Forbes, telling the outlet that attendees will including Olivia Rodrigo and Alanis Morissette while Bruce Springsteen and Sheryl Crow are set to figure among those introducing the honorees.

‘Sound of young America’

Sykes emphasized the institution’s fluid definition of “rock” that is more about spirit than genre.

Eminem will join fellow rappers including Jay-Z and Dr Dre in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Leon Bennett GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File

Over the years a number of rappers, pop, R&B and country stars have been brought into the hall’s fold.

“Rock and roll, like music culture itself, never stays in one place. It’s an ever-evolving sound to reflect culture,” Sykes said.

“So you look at these different artists that you’re going to see inducted this year — they’re different genders, they’re different colors, they’re different sounds but they have one thing in common, they created the sound of young America.”

This year’s inclusion of Parton, 76, prompted a characteristically humble response from the beloved icon, who initially requested her name be taken out of the running, saying that she was far from a rock star.

But voting had already begun, and the organization explained to Parton, whose prolific body of work includes the classics “Jolene” and “I Will Always Love You,” that her body of work was worthy.

Lionel Richie will enter the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame after winning most other top music awards Stefani Reynolds AFP/File

“When she understood what the true meaning of rock and roll is, then she embraced it and is going to not only attend the ceremony but she’s making a rock and roll album and is going to debut a song, specifically from that record, at the ceremony,” Sykes revealed.

Eclectic group

The 2022 group of hall of famers is among the organization’s most eclectic in years.

Scottish singer-songwriter Annie Lennox (L) and English musician Dave Stewart of the Eurythmics are heading into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Angela Weiss AFP/File

Detroit rapper Eminem burst onto the world stage in the late 1990s with darkly comical hits off his major label debut “The Slim Shady LP” including “My Name Is.”

“The Marshall Mathers LP” cemented his superstar status, becoming one of the best-selling albums of all time and setting up the rapper as one of pop’s master provocateurs with a blistering flow.

He joins fellow rappers including Jay-Z, Tupac Shakur, Ice Cube and Grandmaster Flash along with his loyal producer and mentor Dr Dre in the hall.

Eminem gained the recognition in his first year of eligibility: acts can be inducted 25 years after their first commercial music release.

Lionel Richie, the crooner behind enduring love songs “All Night Long” and “Hello,” earned the distinction after already scoring the majority of music’s top honors.

Simon Le Bon (R) and John Taylor are among the 2022 inductees into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as members of the new wave band Duran Duran Angela Weiss AFP/File

The 73-year-old artist has been inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame as well as designated a Kennedy Center Honoree and a winner of the Gershwin Prize for Popular Song.

Eurythmics — the duo comprised of Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart — earlier this year also entered the Songwriters Hall of Fame.

The synthpop innovators behind “Sweet Dreams (Are Made Of This)” will now take their place among rock’s greatest.

Duran Duran is set to reunite with their former guitarists Andy Taylor and Warren Cuccurullo.

Carly Simon will be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame after first becoming eligible in 1996 KEVORK DJANSEZIAN GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File

Simon, the singer-songwriter behind the 1970s classic “You’re So Vain,” will finally be inducted following almost two decades of eligibility.

And power couple Benatar and Giraldo, who dominated the 1980s with hits like “Hit Me With Your Best Shot,” will also finally get rock hall recognition for their vast output.

Pat Benatar (L) and Neil Geraldo are among the 2022 class of Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees Ronda Churchill AFP/File

Judas Priest along with Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis will also receive awards for musical excellence, while Harry Belafonte and Elizabeth Cotten will be recognized for early influence prizes.

The gala will begin at 7:00 pm (0200 GMT Sunday), and will be broadcast on November 19 on HBO.



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Conrad Tao — the classical pianist making it up as he goes along


Classical music concerts are laid out on paper or in programme booklets. The music is usually familiar, if not famous, the order is pre-determined — it’s right there in print — and there’s very little room for surprises. That predictability often seems to be the point. It’s safe and satisfying.

But when Conrad Tao is on the bill, as pianist or even composer, something surprising is in store. The American’s playing has an exciting sense of spontaneity, but that’s the least of it. For an encore, maybe he’ll play something everyone knows, like a Rachmaninoff Prelude or a jazz standard, or even an indie pop song. Lately, he’s likely to do something that once seemed inappropriate: improvise his way through a Mozart piano concerto.

“It’s an invitation to illustrate what I think is eternal about the music,” says Tao, 28, over Zoom of taking up the historic practice of improvising. “I think I’m a little bit old-fashioned, a little bit formalist in the sense that there are certain principles [in the way music functions].” He talks about ways to tap into “why the piece feels the way it does . . . to show that while leaving my trace on it.”

Performing at the Lincoln Centre in New York in July this year, Tao improvised while playing Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 17 and Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue © Caitlin Ochs/Eyevine

Tao, the child of Chinese-born parents, grew up in Urbana, Illinois, and was a traditional prodigy: at the age of eight he made his concerto debut with the Utah Chamber Music Festival Orchestra, performing Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 12 in A major. He also performed professionally on violin through his teens, and has received awards as a pianist, recorded for major labels, and been commissioned as a composer — including by the New York Philharmonic — since he was 15. Composing, he says, “always seemed like a completely organic aspect of being a musician”.

That is the old tradition of the great composer-pianists who were also supreme improvisers, like Mozart and Beethoven, now slowly returning. This practice was vital and widespread throughout the 19th century but was sub rosa for a stretch of the 20th, still simmering but enveloped by the prominence of recordings and a new emphasis on strict adherence to the written score.

For Tao, the “trace” he leaves on music through improvisation combines intellect, fiery passion and disarming personal feelings. “I really love improvisation, period,” Tao says. “I have improvised in some capacity all my life, and it’s been a part of my composition process.”

At his Carnegie Hall debut recital in 2019, Tao’s main programme was Bach’s Toccata in F-sharp and Schumann’s Kriesleriana, with several modern works. He was expressive, intense, impetuous, exciting, and even a touch exhausting: things familiar from his recordings and concerts. Once again, though, the surprise was in the encore: “True Love Will Find You In The End” by outsider pop musician Daniel Johnston. Tao played the simple theme and chords, improvised with them, and then sang the lyrics along with his playing. “I’d never done it before, and I haven’t really done it a lot since, although I think it does fit into my larger approach with encores in general.”

“Johnston had recently passed away,” he explains, “it was simply in my ears. And I think it just mapped on to how I was feeling. I feel encores are best when they’re kind of a reflection of how I’m feeling in the moment. Maybe it’s just I hear something, and it moves me so deeply that I’m like, we’ve got to do this. I think I have that muscle.”

This past July in Lincoln Center, that muscle brought out Billy Strayhorn’s “Lush Life” as an encore following Tao’s performance of Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 17 and Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue with the Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra and conductor Louis Langrée. He improvised on that song as well, and in the main part of the concert improvised the cadenzas in the Mozart Piano Concerto. In the final cadenza-like passage in Rhapsody, the music carried him along until he broke free of it and bashed out clusters on the keyboard with his forearms.

Some of this development was “pandemic specific”. In those first lockdown months, he says, “I wasn’t all that motivated to compose, improvising kept me present in a way that was valuable, and I ended up spending a lot of time developing my toolkit at the piano.” He describes how doing live streaming performances from his home “was this nice middle ground where I could get used to the kind of immediacy and pressure of improvising for people without the actual pressure of an in-person audience”.

Tao (left), tap dancer Caleb Teicher (centre) and vocalist Charmaine Lee improvising onstage in New York, in 2018 © Hiroyuki Ito/Getty

Beyond improvisation, another old tradition that can surprise in the classical world is using dance as part of a performance. Tao has been performing with dancer Caleb Teicher since 2013, and in 2018 the pair began developing new performances. “It turns out to be one the most joyous, lightest, most fun things that either of us do,” Tao says. “We show up and play together. Caleb is a percussive dancer, there’s a shared musical background, we are both making music.”

Tao clearly values this as something beyond the classical world, another reflection of the prism. “So many of my peers are out there doing serious and exciting work in all sorts of fields . . . there’s great value working with people who have a different vocabulary, it’s enormously powerful. It forces me to think about what a performance, or an idea, really is.” And brings some surprising answers.

Conrad Tao performs with the Paul Taylor Dance Company at the David H Koch Theater, New York, on November 6 and 8 and tours with Junction Trio from November 28-December 11, conradtao.com

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