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Technostria & Telepherique - 1986 album

Technostria & Telepherique - 1986 album

  • Performer: Technostria
  • Genre: Electronic
  • Title: 1986
  • Released: 1991
  • Style: Experimental, Industrial
  • Country: Germany
  • MP3 version size: 1237 mb
  • FLAC version size: 1759 mb
  • Other: MP4 MOD XM WMA DMF MMF WAV
  • Rating: 4.7
  • Votes: 752

Description

Notes, Guests From Chaos. 221 beğenme · 2 kişi bunun hakkında konuşuyor.

Bonfire - Don& Touch The Light (1986).

A list of all music releases for 1986. Find the best music on Album of the Year.

Complete your Technostria & Telepherique collection. Whatever, it's an interesting album of well-recorded material. Side one opens with "Russische Erde", a moving mass of sound, much of which is vocal - and convincing it is too! It sustains it's huge wall of sound, all swept long with echo, as if frozen into place.

On this page you can not listen to mp3 music free or download album or mp3 track to your PC, phone or tablet. All materials are provided for educational purposes. Released at: This album was released on the label Zero Cabal (catalog number none).

On this page you can listen to mp3 music free or download album or mp3 track to your PC, phone or tablet. And you can download the album in one file to your computer or tablet or phone. Attention! All audio material is presented solely for information. All styles of audio music.

1986 is Taiwanese Mandopop artist Genie Chuo's (Chinese: 卓文萱) debut Mandarin studio album. It was released on 28 December 2001 by Rock Records. Z" (Crazy Party Zoo). Interlude 1. "我怎麼知道" (How Do You Know) – China Television (CTV) Ikkyū (一修和尚) ending theme.

The Chick Corea Elektric Band is an album by jazz and fusion keyboard player Chick Corea, released in 1986. It is the eponymous debut album of the Chick Corea Elektric Band, which at that time also featured drummer Dave Weckl, bass player John Patitucci and guitarists Scott Henderson and Carlos Rios. This album can be described as "jazz-rock", though it is much closer to traditional jazz than the jazz-rock albums of the 1970s. The keyboard sounds on the album are typical for the mid-1980s.

Listen to music from Telepherique like Untitled, Shape the Future & more. Find the latest tracks, albums, and images from Telepherique. The project Telepherique began in 1989 with the intention to explore processes and working with people of different cultures. They started with mail-art projects, co-operations, and communication with people all over the world.

Tracklist

Russische Erde 10:04
Alarm In Der Ukraine 6:13
Leben, Leiden, Lernen 6:45
Gute Alte Zeit 5:26
5 Jahre Jubiläum 9:20
Atom Mit Zukunft? 5:12
Tschernobyl II: Harrisburg 8:35

Versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
IT 056 Technostria & Telepherique Technostria & Telepherique - 1986 ‎(Cass, Ltd, C46) IRRE Tapes IT 056 Germany 1991
none Technostria & Telepherique Technostria & Telepherique - 1986 ‎(Cass, C46) Zero Cabal none Australia Unknown

Comments

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On the label this was entitled 'Real Industrial", but the inlay card says it's "1986". Whatever, it's an interesting album of well-recorded material. Side one opens with "Russische Erde", a moving mass of sound, much of which is vocal - and convincing it is too! It sustains it's huge wall of sound, all swept long with echo, as if frozen into place. It changes from time to time, high pitched synths fading altogether, others rising or falling in tone while something crackles dangerously up front. "Alarm In Der Ukraine" opens to a falling factory sound. A bassy rhythm comes in then and all manner of noise joins it, again sustaining the single atmosphere. It metamorphosizes inside its Electronic / Factory shell and indistinct 'moving' noises appear at the forefront. "Leben, Leiden, Lernen" begins with a sustained soup of noise, gravid with threat, on the verge of bursting with sound. Other sounds fade in around it, keeping the atmosphere of something impending - a beat appears, slow as a drummer at an execution, sounding like a moronic cutler sharpening a blunted kris. Side two opens with an evil-sounding treated voice on "Gute Alte Zeit", which grows into a switching, moving morass of pure noise, some of it warm, some of it grating, all of it working towards a central feeling - one of alienation. Actually, it becomes quite tuneful, in a dense, migraine inducing way. "5 Jahre Jubiläum" opens to a dense wall of ambient sound, though which can be heard a rippling rolling sequence and huge chords turning from dramatic to merely reflective. It finishes with a giant sound, as of a machine out of control. "Atom Mit Zukunft" begins with sustained hums, pulsing anti-beat and a high tom sound played slowly. The sound builds as ever, to become something much larger, although it does retain a tense minimal atmosphere. "Tschernobyl II: Harrisburg" opens with tapping of sticks while an ambient hum hangs. A clock chimes loud, breaking the peace and letting loose the Other-Dimensional cacophony which glides in like an elegant, snow-white carrion creature. It swirls, revealing the most brief glimpse of what lies beneath - and relief comes as the gaps between heal once more. Originally reviewed for Soft Watch.