Ambient music fans » Diskussionen

What got you into ambient?

 
    • dotzolder schrieb...
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    • 3. Mai. 2004, 9:41

    What got you into ambient?

    The toilet-dive scene in my favourite movie Trainspotting, featured a great soundtrack by Eno (Deep Blue Day). I downloaded that track and kept playing it over and over.
    Moments later I bought Roaches Structures from Silence (2001). I shill think it's a gem! Since that moment, my exploration started and i've gotten to know the greatest artists! (Vir Unis, Matthew Florianz, Oöphoi, Mathias Grassow, Vromb to name a few)

    Tell us your story!

    • saul schrieb...
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    • 3. Mai. 2004, 21:30
    Hmm. I don't remember it that well. At that time I was always trying to find new kinds of music, and I remember that the eerie soundtrack Fallout 2 made an impression on me. Eventually I found the great great site sleepbot.com and started trying to get my hands on some of the artists' albums. Steve Roach was the one I listened to first, too. :)

    • Flakk schrieb...
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    • 4. Mai. 2004, 9:27
    a friend said she thought I'd like Aphex Twin ... and I did...and I asked what kind of music that was called...she said Ambient...and then it's gone from there.

    • nlo schrieb...
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    • 4. Mai. 2004, 16:11
    I think I developed my like for ambient by playing games from the Final Fantasy series. I developed my musical taste fairly late, a year or two into high school, and didn't really listen to much music before that (first whole album I listened to was Green Day's "Insomniac", still a favorite). The music from Final Fantasy was generally very unobtrusive, and wholly instrumental (being on 8- and 16-bit systems originally, it didn't have much choice!) I also like to have music that I can listen to without being distracted by vocals (as I easily am). I discovered Aphex Twin about two years ago (Selected Ambient Works 85-92 is excellent) and most recently I've began listening to Air.

    • saul schrieb...
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    • 5. Mai. 2004, 18:52
    What? 28 views and only 3 replies? Come on, tell us something! :)

    • tima schrieb...
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    • 5. Mai. 2004, 22:33
    in 1996 (i was 12/13 years old) i had a magazine from philips that had an article that described all of the electronic music types. don't know why but i was very interested in ambient. i think it seemed the coolest to me. i went to a cd store and listened to a cd from the orb and thought that was a bunch of crap. so i can't exactly recall when i really got into it. i think orbital made a bridge from techno to ambient to me. i was (and still am) a huge fan of orbital and became more and more fan of that sort of elektronic bands. i went back to the cd store, bought that cd from the orb (live 93) and now i love that one. although selected ambient works 1 from aphex twin was my first ambient cd (because that Philips Magazine recommended that one)

    maybe also that trainspotting scene, don't know that. i do know that that song (deep blue day from brian eno) is my favorite ambient song together with the orb - blue room (ambient mix)

    • nady schrieb...
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    • 6. Mai. 2004, 1:35
    An Orb remix of Pink Floyd :)

    Wish you Were Here

  • I used to work in a hiphop bar (Old school hiphop stuff mostly, none of this commercial/media-influenced eminem/50 Cent/'bitch yo nigga' crap) - but thursday nights was 'chill out' nights. It played mostly stuff like Massive Attack, Morcheeba, that kind of triphop thing. That's how I got into triphop, (DJ Shadow now being my favourite artist)...

    Then one night I opened up the bar on the thursday, and I got to decide what kinda music to put on. I started off by finding out a CD of /reeally/ ambient stuff. One of these less-commercial CD's that didn't have Moby and that on... Which although are good, unfortunately means that every chillout CD is the same ;)

    But yeah, it had stuff like "Herbalism - Run Away" and "The Pathfinder - Choices" Which are 2 of my most favourite ambient musics...
    Since /then/ I've really been into it.
    Most recently I've been checking out a couple of stuffage by 'Paul Mounsey' - He's got a track called 'North' on the 'Come To Scotland' adverts, if anyone in the UK has seen them. Tis some good shit

    But I'm going to stop typing, because I'm babbling.

    rm
    • Kim schrieb...
    • Abonnent
    • 5. Aug. 2004, 9:43

    OK, a bit embarrasing...

    When I was about 11, my school music teacher played us 'Switched On Bach' by Walter/Wendy Carlos.

    I was very into my BBC B micro at the time and was playing around with a primitive music setup called Music500 - a sort of proto-midi using a language called Ample.

    But that moog nonsense just rocked my world. So I was into beeps from an early age.

    Also, from listening to the original Hitchhikers Guide Radio series, with a fantastic soundtrack (Terry Riley etc...)

    And then a rather embarrasing sidetrack into Jean Michelle Jarre (hey, I was only 12). A couple of his bits still really stand up today - Zoolook, frinstance.

    So I've just stuck with mellow beeps for close to 20 years, really...

  • That's Enigma, you know

    In middle 90-s when I was 13-14 year old and barely had any idea about the genres and all that classification stuff, I was enjoying several Enigma tracks I occasionaly downloaded. Actually, I even didnt know the song titles :) Lately, as my mind grew up - it's nice to look back, heh - I quickly became acquanted with the music world structure, I got all Enigma albums, and I started to look for other new age music. I discovered Delerium, Era, Mike Oldfield...

    I couldn't find anything really good on new age stream, and I turned to neighbour genre - ambient. Actually, I didn't met anything in ambient too that would excite me the same way as Enigma did. I do occasionaly listen to Christofer Franke, he's damn good, also some other titles, for instance Ardor, Klaus Schulze, but not that often.

    I know, that's a bit off-topic, but I just wanted to describe the further evolution of my taste when it comes to electronic music :) At the age of 21 I really loved club music scene, Paul Oakenfold and similar stuff. Not silly boom-boom music, but club mixes with nice melody, rich electronic samples and dance rhythm. Tracks like Southern Sun, Hypnotized are very, very good. Club music is also perfect to listen when driving, doesn't let the mind relax.

    ...and if you believe in God, that's because of the Devil // MCMXC a.D.
  • It's only recently i realised the magic of ambient music, actually when i heard Treefingers on Radiohead's Kid A, and the track, Kid A, i suddenly became quite fond of the similar music. I downloaded bought Aphex Twin's Ageispolis track and it all went along from there, really. Now my music taste is maturing, and although my user page doesn't suggest it, i'm quite a fan of ambient music and the like (also a fan of Fatboy Slim's work).. However i just purchased Ágætis Byrjun by Sigur Rós and.. Wow.. I'll be checking out Squarepusher soon, too.

    Bearbeitet von spikeismoo am 9. Aug. 2004, 13:51
    • synkro schrieb...
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    • 14. Aug. 2004, 15:38
    i prefer the darker ambient stuff.

    raison d'être, lustmord, lull, melek-tha, etc...
    i suppose just from a bit of browsing around is how i found it.

  • Well, a dutch friend of mine got me into IDM....from that I heard Aphex Twin's "Selected Ambient Works Vol II", and I started getting into proper drift/drone ambient....Brian Eno, Tangerine Dream, Vir Unis, Steve Roach, and all.

    And now I absolutely love it :)

    • verseguru schrieb...
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    • 1. Sep. 2004, 17:24
    For me (and not unlike some others apparently!) I think there were two notable influences in my mid-late teens, a Jean Michel Jarre album my father palmed off on me, and an Enigma track I heard in HMV which prompted me to buy all their albums. But I should also blame my father himself (who as a 'part-time' musician released a number of ambient electronica albums with a collaborator, as 'Aqueous').

    As I hit my twenties I got distracted by slightly more dance-orientated groups like FSOL and Jam and Spoon (which also lead to my other main interest - House and Downtempo) but afterwards I caught the whole chillout thing (Café del Mar, Claude Challe, et al).

    My main exploration into ambient, unlike other genres, has been thanks to the internet, and led to Michael Brook, JFC, Nor Elle, Detroit Escalator Co, Craig Armstrong, Reinhard Voight... I do have some Tangerine Dream and Eno but these are filed under New Age rather than Ambient [Electronica/Techno] along with JMJ and Enigma, as with time I realised the distinctions! I'm also a big fan of those 'Euphoria' ambient remixes of dance tracks.

    My most recent Ambient purchase was Susumu Yokota's Sakura (although actually only half is Ambient fare).

  • MP3.com actually got me into ambient, initially. A friend of mine had downloaded a ton of Blue Tonic World and Bassic from there long, long ago, and I would up following suit soon after. I discovered a bit more here and there after that, but it wasn't until a random conversation with someone online that introduced me to Biosphere, and at about the same time, I pretty much decided to buy a cd by the name alone: SETI - Ciphers, and that only fueled my interest. Since then, I've loved ambient.

    • Dapto schrieb...
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    • 12. Sep. 2004, 17:25
    It was Brian Eno of course. I bought Before and After Science, and the B side of the LP (yes I bought it when it came out in 1978. I am THAT old) was the start of pop ambient (as oppossed to Satie, Stockhausen, Cage and the other more classically oriented ambient composers). From there it quickly went backward to Fripp & Eno (try Evening Star) and then Harold Budd, Klaus Schulze, Popol Vuh and the wonderful Australian band Not Drowning, Waving. Nowadays it's Sigur Ros, Moby, Banco de Gaia (which is more World), Aphex and the other more IDM related music. Fun journey and the end's not in sight.

  • drugs

    • pipsqueek schrieb...
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    • 16. Okt. 2004, 19:57
    believe it or not i actually grew up in the same town as richard james (aphex twin) so it was kind of inevitable i guess!

    Cornwall has had its fair share of pioneers: richard along with luke vibert, mike paradinas, tom middleton etc.

    • geewee schrieb...
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    • 23. Okt. 2004, 14:57
    I liked Coil's industrial albums a lot. But then I listened to "A Thousand Lights in a Darkened Room" and I remember thinking, hey this isn't music, this is just a drone! I got intrigued by it and it became a favourite album. From there I got to listen to other droney fellers.

    --
    • [Gelöschter Benutzer] schrieb...
    • Benutzer
    • 25. Okt. 2004, 7:02

    Re:

    safesurfer said it best :D
    various psychedelic artists acquainted me with the ambient genre through their slower/trippier tracks. even though i adore the music i mostly listen to compillations and don't pay much attention to artist names =)

    • Kim schrieb...
    • Abonnent
    • 2. Nov. 2004, 18:09
    safesurfer, you have a talent for cutting to the nub of the discussion at hand. Sir, I salute you.

    • frags schrieb...
    • Benutzer
    • 2. Nov. 2004, 22:13
    Jon hassell/brian enos fourth world was what got me into ambient.

    Bearbeitet von frags am 22. Feb. 2005, 8:15
    • Limpan schrieb...
    • Benutzer
    • 11. Nov. 2004, 6:24
    I guess fallout made a big impression on me as in many other cases as well as Raison d'être,Einheit,Svartsinn among names.

    • [Gelöschter Benutzer] schrieb...
    • Benutzer
    • 14. Nov. 2004, 6:25
    I downloaded every song ever by Boards of Canada and my love has only grown from there. Now I'm also really into orchestral stuff, especially movie scores and such >:D

  • Probably a computer game called Fallout. I got obsessed with playing it and the
    music just stuck in my head. Music is by a guy called Mark Morgan - damn good
    music for a computer game. But then again, I've always liked ambient-esque stuff.

    "Well, I've wrestled with reality for 35 years, doctor, and I'm happy to state I finally
    won out over it." - Elwood P. Dowd. Harvey, 1950.
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