Album release announcement: Transformation of Matter
Next album release will be “Transformation of Matter”. Release date Thursday 14th September.

Next album release will be “Transformation of Matter”. Release date Thursday 14th September.
Uwe Saße at sequenzerwelten.de says new music discovered “The music of the -Azaran Forecast- touched me immediately because I really like hearing the fusion of ambient and the melodies of the Berlin School”
….. and discovered new music again 🙂
This time I had a look around what other Bandcamp users are listening to….. just click and discover. By chance I came across the site of “The Polymusicon”. Behind this project is Graeme Nattress from Ontario, Canada.
Graeme’s music moves between Berlin School and Ambient and has a nice, spacey touch.
The music of -Azaran Forecast- immediately touched me, as I love the fusion of ambient and Berlin School melodies. This is a real hit and once again confirms to me that Bandcamp is a veritable land of milk and honey of good music!So far Graeme Nettress has released 2 albums and a single track on his site and I’m already looking forward to the next album. The -Azaran Forecast- is a great start and therefore highly recommended :-
Translated from German with DeepL.com
Azaran Forecast takes inspiration from the clearly differentiated seasons we enjoy in Southern Ontario, with long-form instrumental tracks that use sequences to flow between melody and ambient texture.
4 tracks for 71 minutes of melodic ambient goodness!
Mission To The Unknown takes The Polymusicon in a fun rhythmic direction, with classic sequences and a wild video featuring dancing ferro-fluid.
I set up a small Petri dish with ferro-fluid, put it on a small clear table, and by hand moved magnets beneath. Off to the side, I had a multi-colour LED light and I cycled between red, blue and magenta.
Synth&Sequences is wonderful website which reviews and helps us listeners find more amazing synth music. I’ve found many artists and albums from Sylvain’s reviews, and he has a way of describing music which almost lets you hear the music through those words. Anyway, read the review of Evalake here.
While work on a new album progresses, I’ll sometimes make tracks that I really enjoy, but don’t fit in context. Rather than keep these tracks hidden away in the archives, I’ll put them out as singles. The first of which is in the works now…