Acousma

Track Listings
Disc: 1
1. Oneiromancy    
2. Elemental Folklore    
3. The Widening Gyre    
4. Light is a Liquid    
5. The Gramophone    
6. Aetherial    
Disc: 2
1. Fog Index    
2. The Ninth Wave    
3. Cathedral Sky    
4. Tagmeme    
5. Rebar    
6. Acouasm    

Editorial Reviews
Bill Binkelman, Wind and Wire Magazine, 2001
Acousma speaks to the open-minded listener in tones that are both alien and native. It's an amazing album!

Jim Brenholts, Eclectic Earwig Reviews, 2001
This is an absolutely essential CD!

Album Description
Robert Scott Thompson is a fashioner of surreal dreamscapes. Acoustic and electroacoustic sound sources interpenetrate and fuse, leaving one to question whether the timbres one hears are remembered and recognized accurately, or if they mimic sounds one thinks one may have heard in the past. The blending of familiar and unfamiliar elements is particularly rich in the opening track, Oneiromancy. This work, whose title — as the composer informs us — means divination by dreams, presents a bleak inner landscape reminiscent of the fascinating and yet unsettling fusion of organic and geometric forms in the paintings of Yves Tanguy. Clusters of discontinuous sounds give the impression of a flickering disembodied presence circling around more stable, continuous sounds. Many of the characteristic sounds found throughout the album are introduced here.

This album is a summation of Thompson's acousmatic explorations of the last five years. It represents a culminating point of a resonant inner soundscape whose territories he has been charting with determination and elegance for well over a decade. The works presented here clearly proceed from the foundation established in his earlier electroacoustic releases The Strong Eye (1992) and Shadow Gazing (1994), while at the same time pointing toward a deepening synthesis between his avant-garde and ambient personae, the latter richly represented by The Silent Shore (1996), Frontier (1998) and Blue Day (2000).

—Ronald Squibbs, Ph.D.

Acousma

Acousma, Music, Robert Scott Thompson
Acousma
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Acousma

    Manufacturer: EMF-Media
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    ElectronicaElectronica | Dance & DJ | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Classical | Styles | Music
    ClassicalClassical | Indie Music | Stores | Music
    ASIN: B0007VBO16
    Release Date: 2001-01-01

    Tracks:

    1. Oneiromancy
    2. Elemental Folklore
    3. The Widening Gyre
    4. Light is a Liquid
    5. The Gramophone
    6. Aetherial

    Tracks:

    1. Fog Index
    2. The Ninth Wave
    3. Cathedral Sky
    4. Tagmeme
    5. Rebar
    6. Acouasm

    Album Description

    Robert Scott Thompson is a fashioner of surreal dreamscapes. Acoustic and electroacoustic sound sources interpenetrate and fuse, leaving one to question whether the timbres one hears are remembered and recognized accurately, or if they mimic sounds one thinks one may have heard in the past. The blending of familiar and unfamiliar elements is particularly rich in the opening track, Oneiromancy. This work, whose title — as the composer informs us — means divination by dreams, presents a bleak inner landscape reminiscent of the fascinating and yet unsettling fusion of organic and geometric forms in the paintings of Yves Tanguy. Clusters of discontinuous sounds give the impression of a flickering disembodied presence circling around more stable, continuous sounds. Many of the characteristic sounds found throughout the album are introduced here.

    This album is a summation of Thompson's acousmatic explorations of the last five years. It represents a culminating point of a resonant inner soundscape whose territories he has been charting with determination and elegance for well over a decade. The works presented here clearly proceed from the foundation established in his earlier electroacoustic releases The Strong Eye (1992) and Shadow Gazing (1994), while at the same time pointing toward a deepening synthesis between his avant-garde and ambient personae, the latter richly represented by The Silent Shore (1996), Frontier (1998) and Blue Day (2000).

    —Ronald Squibbs, Ph.D.

    Music Review:

    1. Alfvén: Symphony No. 4
    2. Arthur Benjamin: Symphony No. 1 And Ballade For String Orchestra
    3. Bach: Magnificat, BWV 243; Cantata, BWV 82
    4. Beethoven: Sonatas for piano No8; Sonatas for piano No21
    5. Ben Heppner Sings Richard Strauss
    6. Benjamin Godard: Etudes, Op. 149
    7. Berlioz: Requiem [DualDisc] [DualDisc]
    8. Biped
    9. By Special Request
    10. Carnaval / Kinderszenen / Papillons

    Music Review

    music review

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