Archive for February, 2010

Riva Starr – perfect winter chill out

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

Its this time of year where my home country is cold like the darkest corner in your freezer.

Everything is hard and cold and when the sun is out it looks as though it shouldn’t have left home today. In bed is the best place to be, chilling with some nice hot coco or something.

Some say there is a special nordic sound, a tone, melancholic in its ground substance.

Whether this is true or not I don’t know.

All I know is that melancholy is definitely a state of mind familiar to many Nordic people this time of year.

In Copenhagen we are lucky to have some daylight even when the days are their shortest, but all the way up in Norway where icebears and reindeers cruise the streets of every middle sized city, people litteraly go crazy this time of year when there is so little sunlight. Alaska should also be a tough place for humans in the winter.

Anyway the point is, its dark and cold and the best place to be is in bed.

I am not sure where, but somehow I stumbled over this track, that is almost perfect for this kind of weather.

Its called “Fanfar One” and is by Riva StarrRiva Starr who should be familiar to anyone into modern house music.

He is a talented producer of many music styles and has been around for a little over a decade

Producing and writing in many different genres under a lot of different names.

With a love of reinventing  music that inspires him, Stef created the term “Snatch!” as his way of describing his bootleg remix style of snatching/pick pocketing other music styles for his own. It’s also a play of words with the type of folk/Balkan/rock music he draws a lot of his  inspiration from, often carrying that gypsy spirit.

Having given away a number of widely praised and blogged “Snatch” mixes online (his recent remix of ‘The End’ by The Doors has well over 10,000 downloads on Discobelle alone), it wasn’t too long before some of these found their way into the DJ sets of some of the biggest names on the circuit.

I recommend “Fanfar One” to anyone blinded by winter or just life itself.

There is a Spanish Central Europevibe vibe to it, and its bound to get your spirits up a little.

So put your legs up, close your eyes and chill to this track.

Riva Starr – FanfarOne

http://www.ganga.dk

http://www.flincmusic.com

http://www.myspace.com/gangalounge

http://www.youtube.com/gangalounge

http://www.last.fm/music/Ganga

http://www.ilike.com/artist/Ganga

http://www.gangamusic.info

http://www.bandbase.dk/ganga

http://www.reverbnation.com/ganga

A history of ambient music – and chill out – related

Sunday, February 14th, 2010

If you are interested in reading about ambient music, then I suggest you check out what Mike Watsons writes over at his site www.ambientmusicguide.com
Very informative and comprehensive article about ambient music and all the genres that exists around it and a lot of other interesting stuff related more looseley to the subject.
Here is a little extract: “At the start of the third millennium music to chill-out to makes perfect sense. As the Western world becomes faster, more complex, more rife with nervous energy, the joy of listening to some instrumental music that expresses both our external environment (both man-made and natural) and our inner spaces (both emotional and mental) is now more popular than at any other time in the history of recorded sound.

Such music has many names: ambient, new age, contemporary instrumental, experimental, spacerock, chillout, ambient techno, ambient trance, mood music, world music, new acoustic music. The protests of some musicians and A&R people notwithstanding, I believe one of these names in particular – ambient – is a perfectly useful signpost for the phenomenon. It points to music across a hugely diverse spectrum: from the gorgeous solo guitar of John Fahey to the environmental techno of Biosphere; from the minimal avant-pop of The Penguin Cafe Orchestra to  lush ambient trance of Ultimae Records and its artists.”

Read more here

<a href=”http://www.ganga.dk”>Ganga – Downbeat / Chill Out Music</a>

http://www.ganga.dk/

http://www.flincmusic.com/

http://www.myspace.com/gangalounge

http://www.youtube.com/gangalounge

http://www.last.fm/music/Ganga

http://www.ilike.com/artist/Ganga

http://www.gangamusic.info/

http://www.bandbase.dk/ganga

http://www.reverbnation.com/ganga

check out this Gui Boratto remix of downtempo legends

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

Here is some good old piano chords – acoustic style – from triphop Bristol Legends

Massive Attack.

Its the track “Paradise Circus” that Gui Boratto is playing with in this remix.

Really slow piano playing with lots of deep single drones like Massive Attack have used it many times before. Piano bass tones that siiiiing out for a long time.

And the occasional nice acoustic bassline – sounds almost Pink Floydish with its very rhytmic fast figures – Morricone sound on that bass, but sometimes played a bit like “The Edge” would play his bigger than life guitar riffs.

You know, like from a huge irish cliff overlooking “The Atlantic Ocean” – all rocky with sunglasses and trench coat.

Its a great remix, and I almost forgot to mention the very sensitive vocal that comes along with the package.

Female singer creeps in under your skin and stays there and makes you wanna hide somewhere and just listen to that voice – I like it.

Here is the link

All the best here from the blistering cold frozen town of openhagen.

Some more chill out and downtempo sounds for you to enjoy under the sheets or whereever you hide. Maybe on the beach.

<a href=”http://www.ganga.dk”>Ganga – Downbeat / Chill Out Music</a>

http://www.ganga.dk
http://www.flincmusic.com
http://www.myspace.com/gangalounge
http://www.youtube.com/gangalounge
http://www.last.fm/music/Ganga
http://www.ilike.com/artist/Ganga
http://www.gangamusic.info
http://www.bandbase.dk/ganga
http://www.reverbnation.com/ganga