Showing posts with label Bruised Skies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bruised Skies. Show all posts

1.11.12

(BHR04) Bruised Skies - 'These Four Walls' EP

Purveyors of deep and emotional ambient music, Black Hymn Records have pulled it out of the bag with this latest release from Coventry's Bruised Skies.


Opener Drifting is a nostalgia-laced piece, that starts off hopeful, before tailing into the darkness that will set the tone for the other two tracks, Haze, a dark, sparse track and the haunting drone of Return replete with a melancholic sample buried deep in the mist.

Check it out...


You can grab the whole release as a name-your-price download over on the Black Hymn Records Bandcamp page now. 
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29.8.12

Sangambient

Maybe I'm just making assumptions, but I'm guessing it was the likes of Burial's Night Bus, Forgive and In McDonalds that kicked off an interest in ambient music for a lot of the producers I follow and write about here, and of course, that is no bad thing, when it allows the likes of Sangam to flourish.

 

Check this new piece with fellow ambient lord, Bruised Skies, entitled Street Lamp Mist. You may remember their previous pieces, Subcontinent and the, frankly, stunning Signs, and this piece follows the bleak, cinematic vibe.


It's up for free download. Grab it if you have any common sense.

To some, ambient is a pointless, impenetrable genre that will hold no interest. To me, it's music that's unencumbered by any pre-conceptions of what's expected, away from the world of rigid drum structures that basically define the track and can remove a lot of the organic feel, and I think that allows a hell of a lot of ideas to flourish that might fade away anywhere else.

Something Sangam can probably be considered somewhat of a pioneer of is applying ambient soundscapes to grime vocals. Check out his latest piece, Agrow (Sangam's Highest Heights Bootleg), probably the most out and out ambient edit he's made so far...



Is anybody else doing this with grime at the moment? Yeah, me, sort of, and you can expect something along these lines from Sangam and myself pretty soon. Taking away some of the attitude and well, agro, from the track can completely change the mood and tone of the vocals.

Burial might've given ambient music to a larger, more dance focused audience, but the likes of Sangam and Bruised Skies have taken it and are running as fast as they can with it.

2.6.12

Bruised Skies & Sangam - Signs

Check out this amazing ambient piece formed in a collaboration between Bruised Skies and Sangam. Very sorrowful stuff from the both of them.

It's a free download too.

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12.2.12

Interview with Bruised Skies & Night Tracks 032: Guest Mix

After a short absence, the interviews are back, and this time it's the turn of Bruised Skies, who's also gave us a guest mix which you can check out at the end of the interview. Read on...


NT: Hey man, can you give us an introduction?
BS: I’m Bruised Skies, I write ambient, downtempo and hopefully emotive music.

NT: It seems a lot of your own tracks are ambient in nature. Have you produced in any other styles?
BS: Before I went under the name Bruised Skies I did really bad acoustic covers of songs that I’d record with a bad camera and post on youtube thinking it was a good idea… it was not. Other than that I’ve always stuck to an ambient style if not pure ambience the use of dense textures and layers of sound.

Bruised Skies - Goodbye