Tranquility Bass - Mya Yadana (Petko Turner Edit) Free DL
Tranquility Bass was the stage name of Michael Ad…
8 Minuten
Podcast
Podcaster
Beschreibung
vor 8 Jahren
Tranquility Bass was the stage name of Michael Adam
Kandel,(1967/1968 – May 17, 2015) an American musician whose music
has been variously categorized as ambient house, trip hop, and funk
rock. He released various singles during the 1990s, followed by his
first full-length album, Let The Freak Flag Fly, in 1997 on
Astralwerks. Kandel was born and raised in Chicago. He learned to
play guitar and keyboards at age 12. By the age of 15 he had begun
to record experimental electronic music in his bedroom. Kandel
attended the Chicago Academy for the Arts, after which he moved to
Los Angeles in the early 1990s to attend CalArts. It was there that
he met Tom Chasteen, with whom he started the Exist Dance label in
1991 The two released several singles, including some as
Tranquility Bass, later that year. In 1993, Kandel released the
single "They Came in Peace", which has been described as an
ambient-house classic and appeared on the Mo' Wax compilation album
Headz the following year.[4] After the duo released this and a few
other singles, including two songs that appeared on the FFRR
compilation album, California Dreaming in 1994, Chasteen left
Tranquility Bass and relocated to Tucson.[6] Tranquility Bass's
touring bassist, Matt Lux, is also the bassist for Chicago-based
band Isotope 217. In 1994, after Chasteen's departure, Kandel
joined Tyler Vlaovich to record an album on Lopez Island in
Washington.[8] More than two years later, the album was released as
Let the Freak Flag Fly on Astralwerks Records. Kandel sometimes
ceased talking to people, or from using his voice, for two or three
days on end during the recording process.[8] According to
Billboard, the album led to Kandel developing "a cult following
that spans several genres beyond the dance realm." The Los Angeles
Times gave the album a rating of three stars (out of four) and
described it as "the electronic progeny of acid rock." IIt was also
reviewed favorably by Greg Kot, who described it as "a grand
journey through nearly a century of recorded music, a densely
layered montage of electronic manipulations and live instruments
made under conditions that were certainly unusual."[11] The album
contained the song "We All Want To Be Free", made more popular by
its airplay on MTV's Amp. Heartbreaks & Hallelujahs[edit] After
a long hiatus from studio recording and rumors of drug abuse,
Kandel returned in 2012 with a sophomore effort entitled
Heartbreaks & Hallelujahs. The album was completed on March 21,
2002. Kandel reportedly tried to have the album released on
multiple labels, only to have each of them fold after he sent it to
them. The album ended up being released on Exist Dance, although it
is readily available in digital format on Amazon MP3 and iTunes.
The album is mostly new material with the exception of yet another
remix of an early days single, "Mike's House". Kandel seemed to try
to get away from the idea of being an electronic musician (although
some of the album still has electronics), with a dose of various
types of rock such as funk rock and surf rock.
Kandel,(1967/1968 – May 17, 2015) an American musician whose music
has been variously categorized as ambient house, trip hop, and funk
rock. He released various singles during the 1990s, followed by his
first full-length album, Let The Freak Flag Fly, in 1997 on
Astralwerks. Kandel was born and raised in Chicago. He learned to
play guitar and keyboards at age 12. By the age of 15 he had begun
to record experimental electronic music in his bedroom. Kandel
attended the Chicago Academy for the Arts, after which he moved to
Los Angeles in the early 1990s to attend CalArts. It was there that
he met Tom Chasteen, with whom he started the Exist Dance label in
1991 The two released several singles, including some as
Tranquility Bass, later that year. In 1993, Kandel released the
single "They Came in Peace", which has been described as an
ambient-house classic and appeared on the Mo' Wax compilation album
Headz the following year.[4] After the duo released this and a few
other singles, including two songs that appeared on the FFRR
compilation album, California Dreaming in 1994, Chasteen left
Tranquility Bass and relocated to Tucson.[6] Tranquility Bass's
touring bassist, Matt Lux, is also the bassist for Chicago-based
band Isotope 217. In 1994, after Chasteen's departure, Kandel
joined Tyler Vlaovich to record an album on Lopez Island in
Washington.[8] More than two years later, the album was released as
Let the Freak Flag Fly on Astralwerks Records. Kandel sometimes
ceased talking to people, or from using his voice, for two or three
days on end during the recording process.[8] According to
Billboard, the album led to Kandel developing "a cult following
that spans several genres beyond the dance realm." The Los Angeles
Times gave the album a rating of three stars (out of four) and
described it as "the electronic progeny of acid rock." IIt was also
reviewed favorably by Greg Kot, who described it as "a grand
journey through nearly a century of recorded music, a densely
layered montage of electronic manipulations and live instruments
made under conditions that were certainly unusual."[11] The album
contained the song "We All Want To Be Free", made more popular by
its airplay on MTV's Amp. Heartbreaks & Hallelujahs[edit] After
a long hiatus from studio recording and rumors of drug abuse,
Kandel returned in 2012 with a sophomore effort entitled
Heartbreaks & Hallelujahs. The album was completed on March 21,
2002. Kandel reportedly tried to have the album released on
multiple labels, only to have each of them fold after he sent it to
them. The album ended up being released on Exist Dance, although it
is readily available in digital format on Amazon MP3 and iTunes.
The album is mostly new material with the exception of yet another
remix of an early days single, "Mike's House". Kandel seemed to try
to get away from the idea of being an electronic musician (although
some of the album still has electronics), with a dose of various
types of rock such as funk rock and surf rock.
Weitere Episoden
22 Sekunden
vor 8 Monaten
7 Minuten
vor 8 Monaten
6 Minuten
vor 8 Monaten
38 Sekunden
vor 9 Monaten
5 Minuten
vor 9 Monaten
In Podcasts werben
Kommentare (0)