Search - Centrozoon :: Blast

Blast
Centrozoon
Blast
Genres: Dance & Electronic, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (4) - Disc #1

Electronica. Duo Consisting of the Touch Guitarist Markus Reuter and Synthesist Bernhard Wosteinrich. 'Blast' Contains Four Epic Soundscapes that Are Ambient in Intent but with Unusual Sequencer Under-Scores. Mixed by Ian ...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Centrozoon
Title: Blast
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Din Records UK
Original Release Date: 7/17/2000
Re-Release Date: 7/24/2000
Album Type: Import
Genres: Dance & Electronic, Pop
Style: Dance Pop
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 5028423000068, 703513840827

Synopsis

Album Details
Electronica. Duo Consisting of the Touch Guitarist Markus Reuter and Synthesist Bernhard Wosteinrich. 'Blast' Contains Four Epic Soundscapes that Are Ambient in Intent but with Unusual Sequencer Under-Scores. Mixed by Ian Boddy.
 

CD Reviews

Challenging and Yet Blissful Ambient Music
Nadim S. Haque | Dortmund, Germany | 02/01/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I made my first contact with Centrozoon's music when I met Markus Reuter and Bernhard Wöstheinrich, the band's founders, in January 2004. I had heard some of their music before through P2P sites but was rather confused by their complex rhythms and harmonies. Meeting them and talking to them about their music, though, provided me with some insight I needed to unlock the secrets to their instrumentals, which eventually led to Centrozoon becoming one of my all-time favorite bands. Perhaps I can give you some insight here and then take it from there to review Centrozoon's first album, "Blast".



Markus and Bernhard have surprisingly different backgrounds. Markus studied guitar under Robert Fripp, has been around in the music scene for longer than he cares to acknowledge and is very methodical about his playing. Bernhard, on the other hand, has little formal musical training; his music is based on his intuition and can move into any one of many possible directions at any time. What makes the two great together is the clash between and interplay of formal methods and informal experimentation. Markus uses Bernhard's rapidly changing modifications to sound and rhythm of their improvisations to lay his own textures down to weave a tapestry that is as intriguing as it is beautiful, and Bernhard uses his hardly predictable synthesizer techniques to surprise Markus and lay some roadblocks in his path every once in a while (with good intentions, of course). Their music--all improvised--explores the infinite possibilities of harmonies and Moiré effects.



"Blast", then, their first album, is a completely improvised collection of four pieces of ambient--some might call it outright spacey--electronica. Markus' soft and often fragile-sounding Warr guitar melodies weave their way through the epic pieces, as Bernhard's meditative synthesizer rhythms that never resemble dance beats but seem much more like mantras fade in and out of the audible space. The music never gets old or boring; each piece gradually changes as the loops play against and off each other in ever-changing combinations, and it is ultimately rewarding to trace the evolution of rhythms and harmonic textures through the hour-long album.



Because I have already spent much time reviewing the nature of the music here, I think a track-by-track review is obsolete and perhaps also inappropriate; the album was designed to be listened all the way through, but if I were to recommend any single track, it would be "Sign". If I may be so bold, I'd say that the music on "Blast" would fit very well as a soundtrack to the new "Battlestar Galactica" series or even Stanley Kubrick's "2001 - A Space Odyssey". But, even without pictures, this album paints pictures in your mind. Listen to "Blast" alone, in the dark and with headphones and you will see for yourself.



Recommended tracks: all, really; they're all integral to the album's theme.



Stay away from these tracks: none (see above for explanation). :)"
Awesome Spacemusic from Europe
lizbobo12 | mt. pleasant, south carolina United States | 05/08/2004
(4 out of 5 stars)

"I'm a fan of American composers like Robert Rich, Steve Roach, and Michael Stearns. All of their music is well made, but even though they were influenced and got their start from European synthesists, their music is distinctly American in style. The ambient music of the U.S. is great but after listening to Centrozoon, a duo presumably from Germany, I am reminded of why I enjoy this music in the first place. The music is fresh yet has an underscore of warped and mutating sounds made from vintage synthesizers. It's more than just a novelty sound. For it to be interesting, the sounds must go somewhere, and the here the music really conjures up a truly otherworldly feel. Having said this, the music is not of the exciting roller coaster variety. It lingers like some of the darker music by Harold Budd; in fact, one piece sounds like it could have been an outtake from Lovely Thunder. Take that lingering, icy drift and combine the slow alien machine bubblings of the modular synths and something quite fresh takes form."