| 
| 
 ![Tom Eaton - How It Happened (2019) [Hi-Res] Tom Eaton - How It Happened (2019) [Hi-Res]](https://www.dibpic.com/uploads/posts/2019-04/1555909019_cover.jpg) 
 
 
 
      艺术家: Tom EatonHow it Happened is not happy or cheerful music, it is 
consistently calm, sometimes dark and somber. The instruments are all 
held deep in the glowing sound of the ambient reverberation haze. There 
are keyboards ranging from what sounds to me like a huge stadium-size in
 magnitude piano, to a whimsical harmonium, plus an actual accordion, 
and of course synthesizers, lush and rich in timbre and tone. Each song 
has lots of extra silence in the distance between one ending and one 
beginning. There might be just four notes played on the entire album, 
over and over again like waves on the shore, and they are ample. It 
works perfectly, just what the medicine man ordered. Relax. It is also 
good for your blood pressure too. Listen for yourself! Breathe out and 
soar into beauty. Utterly superb, highly recommended.专辑名称: How It Happened
 发行时间: 2019
 厂牌: Spotted Peccary
 音乐流派: New Age
 音频编解码 24-bit/44.1kHz FLAC
 
 试听地址: Album Preview
 
   
 TOM EATON AND HIS MUSIC
 The
 music floats up into the air and shimmers, hanging there like an Aurora
 Borealis, just above your speakers. A sound that is timeless, easy, 
gentle, refreshing, and certainly restful. There is no hurry anywhere on
 this album, no driving rhythm or beat, no pulse pumping percussion, 
nothing like that. The compositions have very few notes, very simple, 
sustained open melodies, always slowly repeating and easy, like 
daydreaming clouds. Like a distant mountain mirage, huge and steady. 
Relaxing and complex, music for those moments when you want to breathe 
out and reflect.
 
 Tom Eaton plays piano, synths, acoustic and 
electric guitars, fretted and fretless basses, accordion, and percussion
 on this album, which has the title How it Happened and is his first 
release on the Spotted Peccary Music label. Some of his influences 
include Tangerine Dream, Vangelis, Jean-Michel Jarre and Tim Story.
 
 How
 it Happened is what he considers to be his third major solo album. The 
first two are not his first ever, but he likes to draw the line there. 
The two previous albums are Abendromen (2016), the first part of the 
title is “Abend” which means evening, and “Dromen” is dreams; followed 
very shortly afterwards by Indesterren (2016), which means “into the 
stars.” Plus, there is a single, “Matjora is Still Alive” (2018), which 
is a cover of a Johannes Schmoelling delight. All three of these 
recordings are on his own label, Riverwide and can be found on Bandcamp.
 These recordings are all piano based, with lots of fancy production 
work for an amazing and distinguished polished sound. Did I mention that
 Eaton has worked as a producer and engineer with Will Ackerman at 
Windham Hill since about 2010?
 
 THE ALBUM HOW IT HAPPENED
 Tom Eaton - How It Happened - Electronic Music of Brainvoyager
 
 Let’s
 get back to How it Happened, which as a title makes me think it’s going
 to be someone explaining something that possibly went a little wrong. 
Or perhaps it is the title for a comedy sketch, or how about a murder 
mystery? This music is very far from any of that. The sound is very 
polished and elegant, breathless even. Delicate. Delicious! He does not 
do the driving beat thing. I hear a piano, but the sound on this album 
is more complex, textured, more ambient and richer than the previous 
works. Often there are only a few notes, played very slowly, repeating 
as your thoughts are allowed to soar and sparkle.
 
 The pictures in
 the little booklet that comes with the album show the surface of a 
river in the wintertime with some floating sheets of ice, no snow, but 
the vegetation looks cold and brown, far from spring or summer in 
appearance. The music is cold and pure, but not dramatically so. Some of
 the details are tiny and delicate and the sound is very simple, all of 
the feeling is calm and refreshing. Restful and engaging. It is a 
fantastic album for dreaming!
 
 A CRACKING SOUND LIKE ICE BREAKING…
 …is
 heard from under the water. The music drifts in from the void, 
synthesizer and piano with rare odd celestial crackles and an ethereal 
distant angelic choir. The first song is “Ice” (5:37) and it establishes
 the mood, lush and full, without clutter or jumble. There is a deep 
glacial feeling to the sound, with dark pauses and those occasional 
celestial crackles that could be coming from colliding sheets of ice up 
in a cold windy world above.
 
 Synthesizer keyboards with piano, 
steadily developing in complexity, but overall very hazy and cloudy, and
 shimmering, “An Unexpected Opening” (7:58) continues after the 
introduction of this album with a distant easy pace. It glides into 
ringing tones with partial melodies that glow, reverberation lingering, 
chords break and then fade. Tones play in a slow dance, a few notes and 
then they hang there reverberating, then a few more notes. This takes 
away the hurry and allows you to relax and let go of your tension.
 
 The
 title piece, “MK, And How It Happened” (7:19) presents a further 
evolution of the album’s developing subdued melody concept, piano tones 
with a synthesizer glow gently lingering overhead. Eventually, a 
drifting accordion joins an electric guitar with celestial processing. 
Also, I hear haunting memories and sad recollections under tons of 
reverberation and echoes. This is also very slow in the pace and 
progression as the song unfolds.
 
 THEN THE TRACK…
 …”The Slow 
River” (9:21) with sustained tones layers of synth frost, with a piano 
in there too. The sound is all deep and undemanding.
 
 “Later, At 
Night, By the Lake” (6:58) begins with sort of high pitched bell 
reverberations, also there are quantities of synthesizer glow; the music
 of a night sky with all the stars very bright, floating in the deep 
dark beyond the silver moon, the sound of magic.
 
 An ethereal 
choir in the distance just singing one note, with a hint of synthesizer 
to frame it. This extends the magical spell created so far, continuing 
the established mood. Slowly some kind of strings, or keyboard, forms a 
repeating pattern, infinitive past participle. The title of this song, 
“Genezen” (13:01) is an old word that means “to return home to recover, 
to heal” and this song finishes with an extended section featuring a few
 notes over and over again repeating a melody, slow of course. Piano and
 synthesizer and ambient electric guitar.
 
 A GENTLE SOFT GLOW…
 …of
 a shimmering synthesizer fades back into deep silence. The title of 
this track is “The Fog and the Lifting” (6:25). The piano emerges after 
that, encased in the slow soft synth glow. Now the synth slides forward,
 and now the piano is up front in the sound mix, back and forth, gentle 
is the right word. An electric guitar with lots of processing slides in 
and about then ponderously it fades back into deep silence, sustained 
slowly drifting. It never goes completely silent, but it does slow down 
and darkens.
 
 There is no time, you just float, synthesizer with 
piano and accordion. “Until Her Eyelids Flutter Open” (13:47). This is 
my personal favorite of the collection, it has the timeless theme of the
 album and it also adds a lighter mood, like dawn approaching. She is 
going to wake up any second now, and then things will begin. For now, we
 wait and reflect on all the best events of her past.
 
 01. Tom Eaton - Ice
 02. Tom Eaton - An Unexpected Opening
 03. Tom Eaton - Mk, and How It Happened
 04. Tom Eaton - The Slow River
 05. Tom Eaton - Later, At Night, By the Lake
 06. Tom Eaton - Genezen
 07. Tom Eaton - The Fog and the Lifting
 08. Tom Eaton - Until Her Eyelids Flutter Open
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 提取码
 4olb
 
 淡月疏影收藏
 |  |