dw080 - Somnarium - The Fourth Presence

Cultural Flow - kultur (c) 2011
In the modern society with its restlessness, it is difficulty to take a break to fully clear the mind of task based review and thought. The Fourth Presence is intended as an aid for full immersion and submission into the originating darkness – an area we infrequently visit throughout our lives although it is our ultimate collective destination. Michael Meara aka Somnarium, an Australian ambient musician created this album primarily utilizing processed guitar drones and various field recordings as source material for an intense and fascinating sonic collage to hold communion with oneself. It is highly recommended that playback occur late at night while prone and devoid of everyday occupations.


Disquiet - Marc Weidenbaum (c) 2011
In Space No One Can Hear You Drone

There are many types of drones. When we speak of drones, even just the drones that fall under the broad rubric of electronica or electronic music, we can be speaking of many things, all of them quite different from one another. There are high-pitched squeals that seem to have dogs as their intended audience and that often speak to anxiety about technological creep. There are ambiguous swaths of field recordings that seek the underlying sonic narratives in everyday life. There are thin wisps closer to ether, soft sounds that speak of the alignment of spirits and electricity. These are among the many things that purveyors of drones and connoisseurs of drones call drones. And then there are the drones that the general public would recognize as drones: the thick, dirge-like, extended instances of ear-rumbling tone. Such is "Wretched Seed," the penultimate track off Somnarium's recent release, The Fourth Presence, on the Dark Winter netlabel (darkwinter.com).

It's a slow-moving mass of deathly solemnity -- and, for those not privy to the tastes of drone-listeners, that's a high compliment. It sounds as if video artist Douglas Gordon had taken the opening moments of the original Star Wars film, when the cruiser moves past overhead, and slowed them to the precise length necessary for the newly attenuated audio -- stretched like taffy, but all the darker for the effort -- to serve as a backing score for a dramatic reading of Stanislaw Lem's novel Solaris. Such is the intensity of Somnarium (aka Australian Michael Meara).










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