Review of Azaran Forecast (German)

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

New album Azaran Forecast!

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!

  1. Diamond Dust 12:04
  2. Antheia 21:44
  3. Theros 19:09
  4. Recursive Island 18:03
Azaran Forecast by The Polymusicon

Music Video for Mission To The Unknown

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 Review Evalake

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.

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