(logo)
(navigation image)
Home Audio Books & Poetry | Computers & Technology | Grateful Dead | Live Music Archive | Music & Arts | Netlabels | News & Public Affairs | Non-English Audio | Open Source Audio | Podcasts | Radio Programs | Spirituality & Religion

Search: Advanced Search

UploadAnonymous User (login or join us) 

East IslandEast Island - Twilight zone (EarXP10)


try new player!embedding and help

After a sabatical East Island re-enters the system with a remarkable release.

Till now all tracks of East Island were based on a combination of synthsounds and samples. The creating of new own sounds in their music always was the point of entry.

As fans of SF-movies and SF TV-series these gents watch to The Twilight Zone on a regulary base. Specific those parts of the fifties and sixties. Rare sounds and soundscapes of those old parts are remarkable. Their idea was to use that old sounds for making new tracks. In this release all that sounds are used, even the percussion. Theyâve maked new tracks of it.

The result is very refreshing. The tracks all have some kind of dark underscore as result of the use of that rare sounds.

Every track tells us a story of an episode of this TV serie. On this release the first 3 episodes: 1. Where is everybody, 2. One for the angels, 3. MR Denton on Doomsday

This item is part of the collection: Eastern Recordings

Author: East Island
Keywords: Experimental electronica

Creative Commons license: Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 Netherlands


Individual Files

Whole ItemFormatSize
earxp10_64kb.m3u64Kbps M3UStream
earxp10_64kb_mp3.zip64Kbps MP3 ZIP6.9M
earxp10_vbr.m3uVBR M3UStream
earxp10_vbr_mp3.zipVBR ZIP24.4M
Audio FilesVBR MP3Ogg Vorbis64Kbps MP3
01_Where_Is_Everybody2.8M2.4M1.4M
02_One_For_the_Angels3.8M3.3M1.9M
03_Mr_Denton_on_Doomsday17.7M6.6M3.5M
Image FilesJPEG
CoverBigEarxp10423.2K
earxp1017.8K
InformationFormatSize
earxp10_files.xmlMetadata4.8K
earxp10_meta.xmlMetadata1.6K

Be the first to write a review Reviews

Downloaded 2,235 times


Terms of Use (10 Mar 2001)