Artist Interviews on Nagamag
Interviews
Welcome to Nagamag’s Interviews, where music comes alive in the words of its creators.
Behind the sounds, the emotions you feel with every good music you listen to, there is a mind or more. A mind which releases these emotions through its fingers that controls the instruments that translate thoughts into a sound art. The sound art which makes our lives more interesting and coloured.
Nagamag, carefully handpicks and invites part of the most interesting artists around the scene and share a few words with them. Through Nagamag you get a small insight of their own music world, offering in few lines the most interesting parts about their art and helping listeners to discover easier new music and few more details about their favorite artists. All that through a great format. A format that is to the point, without been “heavy” for the reader, with focus to quality over quantity. This is a Nagamag interview.
Good music has no borders and here you can find interesting interviews from various genres as Nagamag covers a wide range of music styles as Neoclassical, Indie Electronic, Songwritter, Synthwave, Electro Pop, Trip Hop, Psychill and more…
Total Music Artists Interviewed
140
Anhedral Interview on Nagamag.com
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
Soto Interview on Nagamag.com
Soto Interview Nagamag: What are the genres that describe better your music style? Soto: Jazz, R&B, Funk, Soul, Neo-Soul, Hip-hop. New to the UK Jazz scene, Soto is a trio born out of Brighton with a foot in the doors of Jazz, R&B, Funk & Soul. Blending intricate rhythms and unique melodies, their feel is both a tribute to the scene, and something new altogether. Nagamag: Few words about your musical background and career?
Hypnotic Peafowl Interview on Nagamag.com
Hypnotic Peafowl Interview Photo by Timothée Prézélus Nagamag: What are the genres that describe better your music style? Hypnotic Peafowl: Giving a very specific genre to my music is not easy. especially when it comes to my "alternative" productions. I think that my music is situated between Basse music with a jazzy side and synthetic textures like halfred or mindex ... and the ethnic and psychedelic side that we can find with merkaba music. The
Daytuner (Moai System) Interview on Nagamag.com
Daytuner (Moai System) Interview Nagamag: What are the genres that describe better your music style? Daytuner (Moai System): Ambient, Downtempo, Psydub, Chillout, Cinematics Nagamag: Few words about your musical background and career? Daytuner (Moai System): As a music producer, from classical background (15 years of violin and music school) to electronic music for more than 30 years, I feel so grateful because that gave me great opportunities to meet, learn and work with amazing
Project Divinity Interview on Nagamag.com
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.
Christoph Sebastian Pabst Interview on Nagamag.com
Christoph Sebastian Pabst Interview Nagamag: What are the genres that describe better your music style? Christoph Sebastian Pabst: Chillout, Ambient, Electronic, Deephouse Nagamag: Few words about your musical background and career? Christoph Sebastian Pabst: I started in 1992 with an Amiga 500, the 4-track music program Octamed and an 8-bit sequencer! Bit by bit new elements were added, a Korg 01w / FD, an Atari computer was needed for the first Cubase, later a





