Regular Price: $15.98 Online Sale Price! $5.00
Roach, Steve The Lost Pieces
Various Artists Amplexus (Roach/Obmana/Brennan) ~ SALE $5
vidnaObmana Crossing The Trail ~ SALE $5
Roach, Steve & vidnaObmana: Somewhere Else ~ SALE $7.98
Various Artists PROJEKT200 [3 CD] ~ SALE $17.98
"From the very start, listening to Midnight Moon is like being born into a dark dream, a floating void of pre-existence . . . This chilling terrain is not without a haunting essence of something human lurking in its folds and shadows. Rife with mood and substance, Midnight Moon is the ultimate in melancholy space music, representing some of Roach's most enigmatic and intuitive music to date." - Mark Burbey , writer for ALTERNATIVE PRESS
More about the album
A stunning recording of quietly moving soundworlds, Midnight Moon is a 70 minute-plus collection of haunting, minimal, deep-of-the-night, mood-drenched pieces. The recording was conceived in 1998 when Steve began to explore his own style of atmospheric, processed guitar-based zones, approaching the instrument "with a beginner's mind, the Tabula Rasa, or clean slate." Steve comments, "I set off with no technical understanding or desire to develop in any sense of a conventional guitar player.
"With this recording, I feel I am entering into a psychological landscape that is difficult to describe without characterizing it as ‘dark’ or ‘mysterious.’ I feel the metaphor of entering a vast cave is fitting, the sensation of going into new areas that pull you deeper and then deeper again. In that sense, it's really about exploring your unconscious creative landscape through the music, as if the sound becomes the illumination of this process, like the subdued glow of a single torch flickering against cavern walls that have never been lit before.
"During and after the recording of Dust To Dust, Roger King would leave his guitars in the studio. At a certain point, the impulse to pick up the instrument simply occurred. Up to that point, it was a foreign object. I started to explore and feel my way in the dark with the instrument, actually playing with very little light in the studio to enhance the exploratory state of mind. All the pieces were created in the late-night, early-morning hours at a time when I was clearly hovering in a hypnogogic state. Over time, I continued to discover and revisit the place that became Midnight Moon. I used the guitar as I do with all the instruments that I am drawn to, creating my own language and approach that serves the music in a directly intuitive way.
"After two decades of using synths as the main foundation for my soundworlds, the guitar proved to be a stimulating way to approach these soundworlds I live within. Midnight Moon captures an atmosphere I know I will never access again, since the magic was in the discovery. I simply managed to record the process as it was unfolding. Working with some great textural guitar players over the years, such as Suso Saiz, David Torn and Jorge Reyes, also fed the fire that was burning quietly to do this type of project; the difference being I was thinking of a collaboration with a guitarist rather than playing the instrument myself."
In the end, it is the music that always matters. After extensive looping and processing, the sound has an indigo hue, often beyond recognition of what the original source could have been. The result is one of pure introspection, offering a perfect flow of mood-altering soundworlds for infinite repeat-mode playback. In a world obsessed with categorizing all aspects of artistic expression, Midnight Moon is a another offering to the unnamed, ineffable realm of pure ambient - atmospheric music, one that Steve Roach expresses with quiet nobility.
Previous Steve Roach releases have embraced spiritual ambience, tribal rituals and deep space explorations. Midnight Moon, however, comes wafting from behind the final curtain like a ghostly mist. Whereas The Magnificent Void placed the listener on an asteroid making its way around the solar system, Midnight Moon offers no such ground upon which to plant one's feet. The effect is closer to a vertical drift, floating down the mythical tunnel towards the white light of forever. Tales of the tunnel have yet to speak of the darkness beyond the beckoning luminescence, but the soundworld that is Midnight Moon makes the prospect of heaven seem woefully unlikely. This is a place of mournful melancholy and loss, of separation and longing.
Roach's first-time use of processed guitar integrates well with his usual blend of electronic and acoustic instruments. The guitar gives the album a singular voice while the overall tone and mood remains faithful to his larger body of work. By album's end, a degree of hope and acceptance emerges, but return passage is not an option. Seldom has a work of art come so close to capturing the essence of something so enigmatic, or does it with such intuitive form. - Mark Burbey