Take Me There – Distance Is Our Enemy (Spotify)

Categories: Ambient Features, Audio, Electronica, Features, The Latest|Tags: , |

Take Me There – Distance Is Our Enemy
(Spotify)

A song from the 4th release from the swedish ambient artist Take Me There. In this release there is a heavier focus on minimalism and making the listener feel relaxed, lush atmospheric pads and slow ambient progressive which delivers the right pleasure to ears.

Take Me There is a experimental ambient artist from south Sweden, who makes instrumental music that is meant to be soothing, relaxing and to create other certain different moods and thoughts for the listeners. He is a new up and coming artist who is completely self-taught and has just started out making music after learning to play guitar and to produce through audio softwares like Ableton Live. With every song he tries to create a different ambient soundscape or feeling for the listener by mixing everyday ambient sounds with sustained sounds like ambient drones and instruments like guitar, piano and cello.
spotify https://open.spotify.com/artist/4U5SwY8EauxTV4YATwDP7O
soundcloud https://soundcloud.com/elias-j-nsson-3
youtube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCREeywOdCmRT_ykp0CTKCTg
bandcamp https://takemethere.bandcamp.com/
twitter https://twitter.com/TakeMeT88351084

minco eggersman, Svante Henryson, Oene van Geel, Efrén López Sanz – La misión (Spotify)

Categories: Ambient Features, Audio, Features, Neoclassical, The Latest|Tags: , , , , , |

minco eggersman, Svante Henryson, Oene van Geel, Efrén López Sanz – La misión
(Spotify)

La misión is one of the tracks of the soundtrack for the movie Behind the Blood.

The documentary Behind the Blood by Loretta van der Horst – which premiered at IDFA last year – won the HUMAN Rights Human Wrongs Award in Oslo, Norway a couple of months ago. Behind the Blood is the shocking true story of a man fighting against rampant gang violence in Honduras, and a portrait of three unlikely friends: a pastor, a killer, and a crime journalist. The intense soundtrack for this movie was made by VOLKOREN's Minco Eggersman.

Besides being the VOLKOREN A&R manager, over the past 12 years Minco has created many soundtracks to international films and documentaires. Many have played all over the world and some even won prices like an Emmy award (DE NIEUWE WERELD) or (3) Gouden Kalveren (IN BLUE), both by director Jaap van Heusden. Among others, In 2018 Minco created the soundtrack to the Bosnian film Regained Memory by director Stijn Bouma as well as the Belarus’ film Hidden Word by Daniel T. Halsall. Most of 2019 found Minco working on the Indian drama film Aquarium by Aditya Vikram Sengupta, the American A Mutual Understanding by Abigail Prada and I am Durin by Valeriu Andriuta from Romania. The fall of 2019 saw the premiere of the documentary (feat. Minco’s soundtrack) Behind the Blood (Honduras) by Loretta van der Horst at IDFA.

Connect with Minco Eggersman:
spotify https://open.spotify.com/artist/2iWoQ1sXZrTGHb4FcMxz93
soundcloud https://soundcloud.com/volkorenrec
youtube http://www.youtube.com/volkorenrec

Anhedral Interview on Nagamag.com

Categories: Ambient Features, Ambient Interviews, Features, Interviews, The Latest|Tags: , , , , , , , |

Anhedral
Interview


Nagamag:
What are the genres that describe better your music style?

Anhedral:
Ambient, Soundscape, Cinematic, Instrumental, Drone


Nagamag:
Few words about your musical background and career?

Anhedral:
Change, is constant. Driven by influences as diverse from his past bands' works, to melodic classic instrumentals, Anhedral (Singapore) combines sounds from people's daily, recognizable elements with a tint of unprecedented melodies. Listeners will be confronted with repetitive reconsiderations of their final conclusion about his learned pieces.


Nagamag:
Do you remember your first connection of love to music that was the right impact to be a music artist now?

Anhedral:
It was the day where my dad gave me an electric guitar on my 17th birthday, just watching him play in front of me and guiding me the basic chords to start off everything, till now.


Nagamag:
Why are there no recorded vocal tracks in your works?

Anhedral:
I believe plain sounds, can really bring out different interpretations of a single track.


Nagamag:
Friends or How I Met Your Mother?

Anhedral:
I'm a crazy HIMYM fan!


Nagamag:
Most artists have a favorite song from a different music genre than the one they are producing music for... Which is yours?

Anhedral:
Elephant Gym "Finger"


Nagamag:
Of Course Nagamag would love to listen also which track from a similar artist you admire?

Anhedral:
Rest You Sleeping Giant Three Sparrows

Discover & Listen to Anhedral

Anhedral on Spotify

Anhedral's Signature Track

Anhedral on Social Media

Anhedral's Website

Project Divinity Interview on Nagamag.com

Categories: Ambient Features, Ambient Interviews, Features, Interviews, The Latest|Tags: , , , , , |

Project Divinity
Interview

Nagamag:
What are the genres that describe better your music style?

Project Divinity:
Chillout, Ambient, Drone

Nagamag:
Few words about your musical background and career?

Project Divinity:
I have been producing music in my home studio since 2006 focusing on cinematic and ambient styles. I have a few different artist monikers that each focus on specific style and genre of which Project Divinity is the most ambient and laid back one. Others include Celestial Aeon Project (cinematic / soundtrack), Frozen Silence (piano) and Celestial Alignment (lofi beats) to name a few. I don't have a strong classical background nor have I studied composition nor arrangement, so you can say I'm mostly self learned and approach music from improvisation and "using my ear" kind of angle. Usually I just push record and start playing.

Nagamag:
Do you remember your first connection of love to music that was the right impact to be a music artist now?

Project Divinity:
I have always loved music and played piano and guitar since a small child, but I think the moment that really got me interested in production was back in the day when I first played a computer role playing game Baldur's Gate which had a gorgeous cinematic soundtrack by Michael Hoenig. It just got me thinking that if even games can have this kind of music I want to be a part of the realm in which these soundtracks are being created.

Nagamag:
What do you think of the streaming services and way the internet has changed the music business?

Project Divinity:
I think in many ways they have opened up new possibilities especially for indie producers like myself. Before this era there were no means for an unknown musician to get the music heard anywhere. Only way was through traditional labels and "gatekeepers". Process was heavy and hard to get started. But these days the freedom comes from the fact that after you have created your tune, after a few mouse clicks you will get it on the streaming services and potentially heard all over the world. There are no more gatekeepers to keep you from reaching that point. It's more about the music and the listener and how to create that connection instead of how the get the music heard in the first place. I personally find this new world a fascination realm full of possibilities. But I do understand that for many who were "happy in the old world" it's not that simple.

Nagamag:
What does music mean to you?

Project Divinity:
It is a complex thing. When I create music, I sometimes think practically like "what would people want to hear" and then approach that question from my side, finding a balance between what is my sound, but still something I think some other listener might enjoy as well. But then there also comes these moments of pure creation when I just get the urge to create exactly what I want no matter if anyone else enjoys it or not. So it's a scale between totally personal and "I do it for the others" kind of state of mind. But music itself is one of the most interesting forms of art and something bigger than life itself.

Nagamag:
Most artists have a favorite song from a different music genre than the one they are producing music for... Which is yours?

Project Divinity:
Pat Metheny "Tell Her You Saw Me"

Nagamag:
Of Course Nagamag would love to listen also which track from a similar artist you admire?

Project Divinity:
Biosphere "Poa Alpina"

Discover & Listen to Project Divinity

Project Divinity on Spotify

Project Divinity's Signature Track

Project Divinity on Social Media

Zenon Marko Interview on Nagamag.com

Categories: Ambient Features, Ambient Interviews, Features, Interviews, The Latest|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , |

Zenon Marko
Interview

Photo by Eva Mueller

Nagamag:
What are the genres that describe better your music style?

Zenon Marko:
Ambient, Neoclassical, Electronic, Downtempo, Electro-Acoustic, Traditional/”World”, Dub, Techno, House, Rock, Funk...

Nagamag:
Few words about your musical background and career?

Zenon Marko:
Music has always been a presence and love in my life. As a child, I studied piano and classical guitar, but drums soon became my primary instrument: acoustic drums, electronic drums, percussion. I became obsessed with the rhythms and sounds of drums. At the same time, I was also fascinated with the effects and possibilities of harmonies and timbre and texture and tonality, the “vertical” as well as “horizontal” axes of music. In my first university degree, I studied physics, but also studied music theory and composition; I continued on afterwards teaching myself more and more of these areas, along with production, engineering, sound design, synthesis, acoustics, psycho-acoustics, philosophy and aesthetics of music. I began a Ph.D. in physics, then switched tracks and instead completed a second undergraduate degree in philosophy. I am currently completing a Ph.D. in metaphilosophy, on the problem of beginning, or ultimate justification of knowledge. All along, I have been involved in music, as composer, producer, drummer, and DJ. As the list of genres suggests, my love of music embraces perhaps seemingly contradictory territories: from the most subtle ambient sound with no trace of rhythm, to extremely rhythmic music forms like dub, bossa, funk, techno, and rock. I have hundreds of musical works and ideas in various stages of completion, but perhaps it’s time to finally finish more of these and let them out into the wider world. There have been a number of releases with my on-going collaborative project Metasonica; I’ve just released my first solo album, the completely symmetrical instrumental ambient/neoclassical concept album “Symmetry”; there will be a rhythmic version of “Symmetry”, an entire video cycle related to the philosophy and concept, and live performances; there’s a completed ambient piano album to be released this year; I’m developing a dub techno project; also many tracks are already completed for a rhythmic downtempo project, featuring vocals in various different languages. Many more projects ongoing and in development, in and around my studio and production company, Disreality, here in downtown NYC.

Nagamag:
Do you remember your first connection of love to music that was the right impact to be a music artist now?

Zenon Marko:
Our family home was always full of music: piano, guitar, singing, records playing in every genre. However, my first distinct memory of experiencing music is that of hearing and seeing the Philadelphia Orchestra for the first time as a child. I was fortunate that my family introduced me to such experiences at an early age. I especially recall the overwhelming sense of awe and wonder at the beauty and power of this ensemble, in the grand space of the Academy of Music in Philadelphia, as the orchestra was tuning in preparation for the performance. Surely that sonic experience, of individual instruments beginning from a state of chaos and dissonance, gradually cohering into an immense and sublime coherence, has always remained with me as an ideal, not only of music, but of emotion, of something like (for lack of a better word) spirituality, and even of other-worldly perfection.

Nagamag:
Why do you create music?

Zenon Marko:
I often ask myself this question, actually. At times, from my more strictly rational, scientific, even somewhat brutally utilitarian, side, I question whether music, culture, art, and so on, are excessive luxuries and self-indulgences, in a world of so much suffering, of all creatures, human and non-human. This concern is magnified by my sense that the world is sliding towards some sort of apocalypse. Should I better apply my efforts elsewhere? Of course, I do work in philosophy as well, but one may raise similar doubts about the value of philosophy in the face of urgent practical crises. Should I only be working towards practical, measurable goals of world improvement, perhaps in a mode like effective altruism? Although these doubts never disappear, I do believe that our needs and aspirations go beyond the purely material, that one also needs what these cultural, aesthetic, intellectual, and spiritual activities provide. The material problems are urgent, of course, and demand our attention, as these address the functional basis for life; yet I believe these other regions of values, beliefs, and experiences are what render life beautiful and worthwhile. They offer a kind of transcendence. Certainly music has dramatically enriched my own life; it seems to offer a radically different kind of “answer”, compared to those offered by science and the more rational forms of philosophy; so how can I then deride it as a mere luxury or excess? After all, the music of others has given me so much. Therefore, my hope is that my music can give back in some way, and can bring to others, perhaps even to those in the depths of despair and suffering, some solace, beauty, and inspiration.

Nagamag:
Most artists have a favorite song from a different music genre than the one they are producing music for... Which is yours?

Zenon Marko:
Miles Davis “He Loved Him Madly”

Nagamag:
Of Course Nagamag would love to listen also which track from a similar artist you admire?

Zenon Marko:
Harold Budd & Brian Eno "First Light"

Discover & Listen to Zenon Marko

Zenon Marko on Spotify

Zenon Marko's Signature Track

Zenon Marko on Social Media

Zenon Marko's Website

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