Interesting. The first track sounds like someone doing random rhythmic
modulations on a sawtooth drone set against Raymond Scott tick-tock
percussion.
On Wed, May 29, 2019 at 12:15 PM David Newman <dwnewman@clara.co.uk> wrote:
quoted 74 lines Ümlaut : In The First Wave
> Ümlaut : In The First Wave
>
> Imagine yourself in a satellite listening station, tuned into the
> gradually evolving structures of planetary waves. Regard the album as an
> electronic shuttle through planetary influences. Imagine. Receive. The mind
> expands.
>
> Release date: 29th May 2019
> Format: Digital download
>
> Release page: HERE
> <https://sable.madmimi.com/c/10705?id=228819.4348.1.5358348dc6c2eef033abd6e6f5104ce8>
>
> Bandcamp: HERE
> <https://sable.madmimi.com/c/10705?id=228819.4349.1.cd853edff976e9de27745ca12cb69f3d>
>
> Thank you for your support of Audiobulb & its worldwide roster of
> independent artists.
> [image: ***]
> [image: In the First Wave]
> [image: ***]
>
> *Tracklisting:*
> 1. In the First Wave
> 2. Without the Formula of Sound
> 3. Maybe Today is the Day
> 4. Pump
> 5. The Momentary Witness
> 6. Time is Not
> 7. May is Nigh
> 8. The Most Obtuse Objects
> 9. Between the Days
> 10. An Occasional View
> 11. Concluded & Begun
> 12. Sparkle
>
> *Ümlaut*
> Ümlaut is Jeff Düngfelder, a U.S. electronic music composer who is based
> in Queens, New York. The thematic concepts distinguishing his work are
> absence and silence; the ineffable exchange between viewer and image;
> random moments of stillness within a landscape in flux. The listener sets
> out on a richly layered journey into the unknown. As Rajneesh once said:
> “Sit very quietly, and when the scenery shifts, slip between it.”
>
> *The First Wave*
> With calming spirit, Ümlaut’s new album “In the First Wave” explores the
> reciprocity of silence and noise. As an atmospheric sound poem, the
> breathing spaces between sounds, textures and minimal beats are the blank
> lines. The in-betweens are important elements. As the album unfolds, the
> listener will begin to discern language in the spaces. The imagination is
> sparked. The title, “In the First Wave,” references a beginning - whether
> to time and space, or discovery of a new way of listening. Imagine yourself
> in a satellite listening station, tuned into the gradually evolving
> structures of planetary waves. Regard the album as an electronic shuttle
> through planetary influences. Imagine. Receive. The mind expands.
>
>
> Best wishes
>
> David Newman
> ___________________
>
> www.truthtable.co.uk | analogue electronic music
>
> www.audiobulb.com | exploratory music
>
> www.audiomoves.com | ambient music sync specialist
>
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