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SPACECRAFT: Summer Town (sfm12001 on SpaceForMusic.com Records) Reviewed by Jim Brenholts, author of "Tracks Across the Universe: A Chronology of Ambient and Electronic Music" due for publication Summer, 2001 3/4/2001 "Summer Town" is the first Spacecraft CD on the SpaceForMusic
label. Tony Gerber, Diane Timmons, John Rose and frequent Spacecraft
guest Giles Reaves performed this fifty-five minute piece during
the Unity Fest 2000 Celebration. The performance began at 8:30
a.m. as "more than 150 people did their morning yoga and meditation
exercises." |
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LETTERS FROM FANS The Spacecraft Cybersphere concert was the best concert I have
ever been to in my life. I didnt want it to end and I still try
to explain it to people, but it was something that you had to
see for yourself. I know that this is going to sound weird but
I think that the music of Spacecraft is going to change the world,
because whenever I listen to your music I just get in a better
mood. I know if it works for me then I know it will work for anyone
else. As I always say, you keep making the music and I will keep
listening.
You guys ROCK !!!!!!!! I have been playing guitar and listening
to rock and alternative for fifteen years and recently I have
been so bored by it. Then I stumbled across Echoes on public radio
and heard you. What an epiphany! I cant get enough. I have all
three of your Cds and listen to them all the time. Thank you for
getting me excited about music again.
Tony, ...I have always loved this kind of music that you make and promote
even though I never new quite what it was called and had limited
exposure to it. So I am glad that the artform has such a strong
visionary as yourself to produce piece after piece of musical
genius and to promote it so wholeheartedly. Space music fans everywhere
certainly owe alot of the growing popularity to you. Dan Brandenburg |
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ECHOES SYNDICATED RADIO TOP 25 Artists for 10 years 1. Dead Can Dance |
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New Age Journal names Wind and Wire Magazine names |
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Alternative Music Press CD REVIEWS Wind and Wire CD REVIEWS Jan/Feb 1998
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Spacecraft: Exploring the Aural Void SPACECRAFT: Spacecraft - 4 star Amazon.com Spacecraft
By Matt Howarth
Special to SPACE.com
posted: 12:08 pm ET
12 July 2000
As a musical entity, Spacecraft came into being in 1996, when
the members witnessed a session of NASA image and sound mappings
from the Voyager space probe. Inspired by the majesty of space,
band members Tony Gerber and John Rose immediately programmed
a new palette of sounds for their synthesizers. With the additional
electronics of Diane Timmons and Giles Reaves, Spacecraft was
primed for launch.
Since then Spacecraft has released four CDs and thrilled numerous
planetarium audiences with their improvised electronic soundscapes
accompanied by space visuals. The band is currently working on
producing a sound and visual package for use in planetariums.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
INTERVIEW WITH TONY GERBER
SPACE.com: For those unfamiliar with Spacecraft's live performances,
can you (briefly) give us an idea what the audience experiences?
Tony Gerber: Ninety percent of our concerts have accompanying
visuals. Projected computer animations, NASA footage, lasers,
star machines and SFX lighting are all used. Many of our shows
are in planetariums around the country, so an "under the dome"
environment is generally the venue. The audiences, which we have
found to be a broad cross-section of ages, from 2 to 80, witness
creativity in action as the Spacecraft members each play their
instruments "live," projecting the "band" vibe, performing mostly
music of the moment. The audience and venue influence each of
our performances differently. Each show is unique. One of the
most remarkable things is the fact that the children under 10
years old are totally quiet. Even the babies! In all of our recordings
from these concerts, I don't think I have ever heard a child cry
out. It must be captivating.
SPACE.com: Do you find working with predetermined visuals restricts
the generation of improvised soundscapes?
TG: Absolutely not. First of all, we rarely perform with predetermined
visuals. The visual artists who work with us are generally creating
"visual music" of the moment also. Or if they have predetermined
visuals, we haven't seen them until we are performing. Many times
we are reacting to the visuals, or the visuals are reacting to
us. It all seems to magically work together. The element of chance
is also a remarkable synchronicity.
SPACE.com: The emotional connections between outer space and ambient
electronic music are pretty obvious, both evoking mysterious sensory
realms. Do you perceive an applicable union between these elements
once mankind begins sending manned missions to other worlds?
TG: Most definitely. I can imagine nothing more appropriate than
traveling to Alpha Centauri with Spacecraft music playing over
the starship's sound system! Ambient soundscapes as an audio environmental
background in the International Space Station will be perfecto.
In fact, traveling to the International Space Station and creating
a live recorded concert from space, in the upcoming media lab
module is something we would like to see happen. I think we are
in the infancy of this style of music and it will grow far more
appropriate as mankind aims for the stars.
SPACE.com: Besides the lure of space, what other factors inspire
Spacecraft's music?
TG: The initial inspiration for the band was derived from NASA
resources. The synthesizer technology we are using stems from
NASA developments. We are of the "landing on the moon" generation
and space was a part of our childhood. These are obvious space
connections. However, we look at our music in a very spiritual
light too. The recognition of the blessing or gift that we collectively
have to create this music is also important. We are all very close,
like family, and the growing relationship we have with each other
is also very key. We travel with John and Diane's little girl,
Claire, who is 3 years old. Claire is a never-ending catalyst
to our work. We gain inspiration in the great times we have together
as humans. We also find it very important to intertwine earthly
energy into our music. Traveling in nature and reacting to the
beautiful environments we encounter on the road are also very
integral. We look at planet Earth as a living organism floating
in space. The balance between the spiritual, technological, stellar
and earthly planes are of utmost importance to us.
SPACE.com: What was the last scientific discovery that made you
go "Wow!"?
TG: I would most definitely have to say "Wow!" to the recent tree
ring studies and polar core samples that support the "Catastrophic
Volcano of 539 AD" discovery. This recent historic event drastically
changed our course of history. A volcanic eruption that mushroomed
ash over the entire globe. Darkness, drought, and cold for a decade.
Civilizations were toppled, and a new world scene was born. This
concept is changing the way I look at ancient world history and
culture.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SPACECRAFT: Spacecraft (CD on Lektronic Soundscapes)
Although possessing mildly melodic attributes, the music on this
64-minute CD is generally comprised of ambient tonalities, often
almost abstract in their sonic structure.
Electronic sounds are the instrument of choice, although there
is considerable use of electric sustaining koto. The synthesizers
are tuned to pierce the outermost regions between earth and sky,
where atmosphere gives way to cold vacuum. Leaving our planetary
mass behind, Spacecraft's music heads into the void with full
heart and astral sensibilities.
Often duplicating the peripheral, mechanical noises we all attribute
to space travel, the band amalgamates these sounds of sci-fi subconsciousness
with their own stylistic atmospheric sonics. Long synthi waves
overlap each other, expanding without ever reaching an endpoint.
Inspired by the excitement shared by space enthusiasts, this music
delves quite loyally into the cosmic moods and aural awe of everything
beyond the atmosphere of our Earth. Never becoming too minimal,
nor blustering into overt expression, the calm of the vastness
of space is captured with clinical perfection, creating soundscapes
of nebulous drifting which seethe with a controlled power, hinting
at greatness just out of reach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SPACECRAFT: Hummel (CD on Lektronic Soundscapes)
Recorded in the Hummel Planetarium at Eastern Kentucky University
in 1998, this 69-minute CD captures the wonderful airs of Spacecraft's
free-forming, flowing live performance. While the band played
their atmospheric electronics, their music directed the movements
of laser light refracting across the Planetarium's evocative dome.
These pleasantly languid auralscapes are tinged with delicate
keyboards, comfortably paced to inject melody to the slowbuilding
tonalities. Balanced between minimal and demonstrative, this music
oozes in the air, like a benevolent swarm of electric bees.
The synthesizers are focused on generating an aura of placid tension
with their purring growl. Ethereal textures are everywhere, like
intangible windstorms seen in the distance. Fragile keyboard riffs
manifest to stir the cosmic mists with their sonic guidance.
Guitar effects and heavenly choral vocals creep into the mix,
adding depth to the liquid electronics. In fact, their presence
in the music is often cleverly hidden by their otherworldly nature;
the guitar in particular employing a very vaporous sound. Although
the primary use of voice is restricted to choral pitches, one
track does feature lyrical vocals (in Latin).
This music's sense of awe swells with an invigorating harmonic
power. The mellow cosmic soundscape becomes enlivened with agreeable
currents of euphony.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SPACECRAFT: Earthtime Tapestry (CD on Lektronic Soundscapes)
This 57-minute CD from 1999 features a distinctly more melodic
side of Spacecraft's music, as the band explores the link generated
between earth and life by sonic resonance.
This time, the domain of synthesizers is visited by a guitar presence
and choral vocals. While the soft electronics pulse and flow like
energized mist, processed guitars flavor the blend with soaring
tones, enhancing the music's ascendant quality.
After lulling the listener with ambient soundscapes, the guitars
adopt a more traditional presence, and the synthesizers become
more keyboard-like with cyclic sequences of sparkling rhythms.
The long waves of sound build into dreamy passages, accompanied
by heavenly non-lyrical female vocal pitches. There's even a sedate
trace of synthetic percussion in a few pieces.
These compositions are touched with a glorious sunlight, charging
each holistic tone with a shimmering quality. Spacecraft's fusion
of melody with minimalism produces an ambience that is enthusiastic
and inspirational.
Despite these earthier origins, this music still lives in outer
space. The expansive qualities cannot be restrained to any atmospheric
condition, needing the limitless void to unfurl and properly display
its inherent spaciness.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SPACECRAFT: Kaleida Dreams (CD on MP3.com)
Released in 1999, this CD sports 48 minutes of the band's delicate
electronic melodies, a soundtrack for the award-winning computer
animation of David Turner. Also included is a band history and
pictures.
Rich with keyboard melodics and spacey guitars, this music stands
nicely on its own, pulsating and cascading with ethereal qualities.
The pieces alternate between atmospheric passages and lightly
active tunes with synthetic rhythms ricocheting about in the electronic
surf.
These soundscapes are evolutionary, involving the blossoming of
cosmic textures that mature through each track's timespan. The
general tone is a sedate one, generating a calming sense of wonder
with their sparkling ambience.
Averaging four minutes in length, these songs display a more focused
brand of Spacecraft's ambient style, featuring a higher degree
of melodic content.
The Sound of Silence in Deep Space, May 2, 2000
Reviewer: Paul Allaer from Cincinnati
From the opening moments of the first track Planet Orbit, Spacecraft
takes you onto a flight in deep space, giving you a flavor of
the sounds of silence found there. Not much melody here, just
mood explorations with synthesizers of all kinds. Think Tangerine
Dream around Phaedra and Zeit. The key track is Zero, One: a 22
minute "quiet blowout" of their deep space sound. This album is
the perfect setup for what would come next for Spacecraft, namely
the Hummel CD (see review there).
SPACECRAFT: HUMMEL - 5 star Amazon.com
The Best Tangerine Dream Album Never Made By TD, April 30, 2000
Reviewer: Paul Allaer from Cincinnati
I first heard a track from the "Hummel" album on the "Echoes"
late night program on NPR and immediately knew I had fallen on
a gem. As a big fan of Tangerine Dream era '73-'77, I keep hoping
to come across more albums that display the same unique sound
of "deep space" made legendary by TD (think "Ricochet", "Rubycon",
"Encore"). Well, look no further. "Hummel" is as good as, if not
better, than anything TD ever put out. Clearly, the "Hummel" album
is a loving tribute by Spacecraft to TD. Spacecraft uses the same
deep pulses, synthesizers and screetching guitar solos to create
70 minutes of the best TD music you'll ever hear.
EARTHTIME TAPESTRY
Lektronic Soundscapes (1999)
Time: 56:49
When I interviewed Tony Gerber earlier this year, and he said
that Giles Reaves had joined Spacecraft for their next release,
I eagerly looked forward to it. Reaves is well-known for his space
classics Sea of Glass and the treasured, out-of-print Wunjo. He
also was featured on Gerbers solo CD Blue Western Sky, to which
I must confess a certain sentimental allegiance, being the first
CD I reviewed in print. I may not be fully objective, but I think
it is safe to say that Earthtime Tapestry continues in the direction
set by Hummel, painting beautiful sonic landscapes of extraterrestrial
places.
Like Hummel, Earthtime Tapestry is firmly rooted in improvised,
flowing space music, with much more melodic sense that the first,
self-titled release Spacecraft. Spacecraft have two things going
for them that keep their music very fresh and inventive. One is
the improvisational nature of their music, the other is the slight
changing of personnel from album to album. Though Gerber, John
Rose and Diane Timmons seem to have captured a signature sound,
they also seem to keep pushing the envelope just a bit, this time
with Reaves comfortably joining in. Spacecraft seems to straddle
the lines between ambient, experimental, and new age, in a way
that is so easily listenable. The end result seems effortless,
as in Dreams of One, which floats so smoothly and softly, drifting
with Timmons voice as it echoes across the expanse of space.
The eleven selections, which run together as one, strike a perfect
balance of musical energy, seeming to know just when to pull back
or really take off. The mood ranges from playful (Stepping Lightly)
to sad (Elders Mourning) to a little spooky (Beyond). Throughout,
the space theme resonates, as there is a fragility, a delicate
touch that binds it all together. Earthtime Tapestry is stellar
space music.
Tony Gerber: Blue Western Sky (CD, 62:25); Lektronic Soundscapes
LS-94006-CD, 1994
Lektronic Soundscapes
P. O. Box 15867
Durham, NC, 27704-0867 USA
Ph: 919-419-9900
Fax: 919-403-2451
Email: LEKSOUND@AOL.COM
Cyberhome: http://spaceformusic.com/leksound.html
This is one of those electronic, ambient, spaced synth, harps,
and guitar
releases that you can free fall in and find hidden places in your
soul and
psyche. This is bliss and the purest of light in sound that warms
like the
afternoon sun and the spectral zephyrs of daydream. Gerber has
crafted a gem
here. If you liked Ash Ra Tempel's guitarist/synthman's New Age
of Earth or
Reaves' Sea of Glass then you'll love this. The super-sustain
guitars and
dreamy keys send you off in relaxing, deep breathing exhalations,
of
absolute peace. Gerber's works are a reverie in sound. This is
splendid
thought-stream music done just right. If you collect well-done
ambient
works, want to deep dream, and enjoy creatively original music
-- FIND THIS!
Superb, supreme, schweet stuff! I listen often, to this, since
it arrived.
It has sensitivities that span the best of the '70s and the technological
expertise of the '90s. Highest of recommendations.
~ John W. Patterson
Tony Gerber, Chris Blazen, John Rose, Diane Timmons: Spacecraft
(CD, 63:52);
Take the data transmissions of Voyager to NASA from Jupiter, gravitational
wave audio studies, and NASA imagery -- mix it with the imaginative
minds of
four talented people and you get Spacecraft. Seven space music,
electro-ambient, journeys await you. This is not your typical
synth project
of quaint melodies and soothing textures. This is a '90s culmination
of
things early Tangerine Dream or Ash Ra Tempel projects were merely
reaching for.
Chris Blazen on Electric Sustaining Koto, Akai Sampler, Tony Gerber
on
Memorymoog, Minimoog, JD800 Synths, John Rose and his wife, Diane
Timmons,
on Roland synths pull the stars and solar storms down to your
living room.
This is less music than it is an experience in space-visions.
You have got
to love electronic music and all its unexplored nether regions
to fully
appreciate the worlds of Spacecraft. Think Eno's Apollo space
sounds,
Roach's miasmas of the universe's breathing in The Magnificent
Void, the
avant garde works of Subotonik, and Salvador Dali on lysergic
acid. You are
now approaching the strange dimensions of Spacecraft. Only on
the last
track, "Destination Infinity" do we gain a sense of resolution,
a signature
Gerberian area I'll call, "the final answer revealed."
This is trippy stuff, drenched in creative vision, pulsing with
the droning
hymns of cyborg priests evangelizing distant worlds. Take a chance
and
wander the unknown. This release is ripe pickings for any of you
budding
sci-fi movie makers for soundtrack material. Cool, very cool.
Recommended
for cosmic dreaming. ~ John W. Patterson
Tony Gerber, John Rose, Diane Timmons: Hummel (LIVE) (CD, 69:04);
This live recording at Eastern Kentucky University's Hummel Planetarium
captures the music reflecting and directing laser light refracting
within
the sky-vault dome. Those of us fortunate enough to have come
across Tony
Gerber's Blue Western Sky will hear a strong echo of that earlier
work here.
Joining Gerber is John Rose and Diane Timmons on synthesizers.
And going a
delightful step further we have Timmons' angelic, wordless choir
vocals
adding an ethereal human dimension
There is a definite Tangerine Dream sequenced Tangram structure
to "The
Summon" which comes off quite well. "Explorations In Space" is
more of a
Jonn Serrie/Steve Roach thing but evokes strongly the darker galactic
atmospherics of Spacecraft, another Gerber, Rose, Timmons, et
al project.
"Galileo" returns to a sequenced T. Dream/ Kitaro snippet. "Hummel",
the
title track opens with phased cosmic winds and a very Edgar Froese
solo
feel. I heard Aqua, Stuntman, and even that T. Dream classic,
Rubycon. This
is a great track, letting one hear what Tangerine Dream could
be doing if
they weren't noodling around doing dance mixes or worse. Gerber
adds guitar
in this track's outro.
"Dialogues of Energy" is a percussive, ethnic-tribal, chime-vibes,
Water
Music-ish piece with Nik Tyndall tendencies that is a nice rhythmic
change-of-pace. A bit of Peter Buffet piano is woven into the
crystalline
passages. "Astrollenium" crawls all over you in the thick heaviness
of a
droning, resonant mass. Gerber solos on an overdriven, infinite-sustain
guitar. The effects on your head with this one are near maddening
with
delight. When you think you can stand no more ecstasy, Timmons'
lilting and
haunting voice peels away another layer of your spinal column.
This is the
light-at-the-end-of-the-tunnel. Timmons' voice is like a riding
out a
positive NDE. "Oh man, this is good!" We are treated to more of
Timmons on
"De Profundis" as she chant-sings in Latin, a psalm to the reigning
King of
the Universe, Jehovah God, Yahweh of Israel. Beautiful synth keys
accompany
her in a David Lanz, Peter Buffet, T. Dream style with the slightest
touch
of reggae mixed with a sombre Middle Eastern flair. Very nice.
I'll save the
last track, "Domes of Light" for you to experience without any
of my
opinion. Enjoy!
This is a wonderful way to experience ambience and electronic
music. I
heartily recommend this offering. Folks, this is a must-have.
~ John W. Patterson
Eclectic Earwig Reviews: Progressive Rock and Beyond
©1996-2005 Space for Music