Ambient Techno
Ambient Techno is a slower, more relaxed form of Techno, incorporating the … Read Full Bio ↴Ambient Techno is a slower, more relaxed form of Techno, incorporating the minimal elements often found in Ambient music. Tracks may remain still essentially beat-driven, as in the early works of Aphex Twin. The other end of the spectrum is a more atmospheric, layered approach, such as that shown by Biosphere and Gas.
It is a 1990s offshoot of techno and ambient music that united the atmospheric textures of ambient music with the melodic and rhythmic elements of techno and electro. AllMusic states that ambient techno blended the "soaring, layered, aquatic atmospheres of beatless and experimental ambient" with techno's "well-produced, thin-sounding electronics; minor-key melodies and alien-sounding samples."[1] Artists returned to the instruments of the Detroit techno and Chicago house scenes, including analogue synthesizers, the Roland TB-303 bass machine, and the TR-909 drum machine, while also drawing on ambient and chillout elements.[2] The style would be associated with labels such as Warp, Apollo, GPR, and Beyond,[1] with releases focusing more on albums than 12-inch singles.[3]
Ambient techno departed from the communal, dance-oriented sound heard at raves and instead saw popularity as a form of "electronic listening music."[2] Critic Simon Reynolds characterized the style as a "post-rave genre" and "a digital update of nineteenth century programme music," comparing it to "the aqua-mysticism and forest idylls of Claude Debussy.
History
The 1984 album E2-E4 by German musician Manuel Göttsching was an early influence on ambient techno works by Carl Craig, the Black Dog, and The Orb.[4] The Orb's 1991 album Adventures Beyond the Ultraworld would influence subsequent dub-influenced ambient techno.[2] Aphex Twin's 1991 recording "Analogue Bubblebath" would also signal a shift toward meditative, ambient-leaning techno.[2] Producer Pete Namlook also released a prodigious amount of music in the genre, starting the label Fax and becoming a "spiritual leader" of the movement.[5] According to AllMusic, early classics of the style included albums such as the Orb's U.F.Orb (1992), Aphex Twin's Selected Ambient Works 85-92 (1992), Ultramarine's Every Man and Woman Is a Star (1991), and Biosphere's Microgravity (1991).[6]
The release of Warp's Artificial Intelligence compilation in 1992 helped to establish the genre and featured artists such Aphex Twin and B12 under aliases, Autechre, Richie Hawtin, and the Orb's Alex Paterson.[2] During the 1990s, compilation series such as Chill Out or Die explored ambient techno and house.[7] The genre would move toward a darker sound reminiscent of Brian Eno's notion of "environmental music" with releases such as Aphex Twin's Selected Ambient Works Volume II (1994).[8] In 1995, producer Wolfgang Voigt began releasing influential ambient techno projects as Gas, bringing together lush and expansive atmospheres with 4/4 minimal techno beats.[9]
It is a 1990s offshoot of techno and ambient music that united the atmospheric textures of ambient music with the melodic and rhythmic elements of techno and electro. AllMusic states that ambient techno blended the "soaring, layered, aquatic atmospheres of beatless and experimental ambient" with techno's "well-produced, thin-sounding electronics; minor-key melodies and alien-sounding samples."[1] Artists returned to the instruments of the Detroit techno and Chicago house scenes, including analogue synthesizers, the Roland TB-303 bass machine, and the TR-909 drum machine, while also drawing on ambient and chillout elements.[2] The style would be associated with labels such as Warp, Apollo, GPR, and Beyond,[1] with releases focusing more on albums than 12-inch singles.[3]
Ambient techno departed from the communal, dance-oriented sound heard at raves and instead saw popularity as a form of "electronic listening music."[2] Critic Simon Reynolds characterized the style as a "post-rave genre" and "a digital update of nineteenth century programme music," comparing it to "the aqua-mysticism and forest idylls of Claude Debussy.
History
The 1984 album E2-E4 by German musician Manuel Göttsching was an early influence on ambient techno works by Carl Craig, the Black Dog, and The Orb.[4] The Orb's 1991 album Adventures Beyond the Ultraworld would influence subsequent dub-influenced ambient techno.[2] Aphex Twin's 1991 recording "Analogue Bubblebath" would also signal a shift toward meditative, ambient-leaning techno.[2] Producer Pete Namlook also released a prodigious amount of music in the genre, starting the label Fax and becoming a "spiritual leader" of the movement.[5] According to AllMusic, early classics of the style included albums such as the Orb's U.F.Orb (1992), Aphex Twin's Selected Ambient Works 85-92 (1992), Ultramarine's Every Man and Woman Is a Star (1991), and Biosphere's Microgravity (1991).[6]
The release of Warp's Artificial Intelligence compilation in 1992 helped to establish the genre and featured artists such Aphex Twin and B12 under aliases, Autechre, Richie Hawtin, and the Orb's Alex Paterson.[2] During the 1990s, compilation series such as Chill Out or Die explored ambient techno and house.[7] The genre would move toward a darker sound reminiscent of Brian Eno's notion of "environmental music" with releases such as Aphex Twin's Selected Ambient Works Volume II (1994).[8] In 1995, producer Wolfgang Voigt began releasing influential ambient techno projects as Gas, bringing together lush and expansive atmospheres with 4/4 minimal techno beats.[9]
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@kraszerr
its 2019 and you took a trip with 3 friends to small seaside city in Poland called Łeba.
after arriving at 10pm you take lsd
night pass by
Sun starts to rise around 4am
you sit at the beach and sky is 100% pink
you put this track on
everything you see is pink sky, empty beach and local fishmens on their boats starting day on the ocean.
nobody speaks.
wonderful
@cualfuneri2510
the kind of music you want as background when you are having a nice moment and want to keep it as a memory.
@derekperez1418
Yup, I've got this associated with tropical rains in Guam. When I was there, California's drought was serious and I cried watching it to this song.
@rasvetx
dale el diego y afx
@cualfuneri2510
aguante el diego y la droga@@rasvetx
@Nonexistanthuman
This was the first song my daughter ever heard.
@DanielleOflynn
Always kept amazing memories for me so I couldn't agree more!
@memyself4852
this always feels like you've stepped out from a rave to grab a smoke and you're just processing the vibes while you can still hear the music from outside
@timothyjholloway
@@ravenitz Yes, well said!
@adammarquez5203
I guess so sure Marlboro
@theoriginaltommysteward
Perfect description.