Furniture Music.
Click below to like this Track:
trees generate their own darkness
Lovely sounds and textures, very lush and evolving, it's good work! Andrew
I'l have to chase up some info on The Bell. This has a sinister feel to it...just like wandering around a dark wood by yourself (do it all the time...look out! :)...no birdsong...not much light...plenty of spooky shadows...unacountable noises...things to trip over...and...colourful toadstools :-) k
those reverse gate sounds sizzle nicely amid the bigger, wider, deeper, expansive tones. Sounds are suited for a meditation in Imber Abbey....or Buddhist temple given the Om? Not really dark under the canopies you have provided.. There seem to be rays of light filtering through, perhaps even in the clanking bell?. Whatever you derived, in terms of inspiration, from The Bell...this result is certainly contemplative and well-tempered. perfect for my fresh brewed coffee moment of self-indulgence :)
A nice soundtrack.Like a surreal walk in the woods. some good sounds in here.
Not familiar with Iris Murdoch but I like this track a lot. It's pensive and like a very long walk on a straight road where you can't see the end, you know there is one but how much further? It doesn't matter. Forward motion is all that matters.
Ambient music includes forms of music that put an emphasis on tone and atmosphere over traditional musical structure or rhythm. Ambient music is said to evoke an "atmospheric", "visual" or "unobtrusive" quality.To quote one pioneer, Brian Eno, "Ambient Music must be able to accommodate many levels of listening attention without enforcing one in particular; it must be as ignorable as it is interesting".
Furniture music, or in French musique d'ameublement (sometimes more literally translated as furnishing music), is background music originally played by live performers. The term was coined by Erik Satie in 1917.