Cover of The Radiophonic Workshop Burial In Several Earths
ALFAMA

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For fans of the radiophonic workshop,lovers of ambient and experimental electronic music,listeners interested in synth-based soundscapes,enthusiasts of abstract and conceptual albums,explorers of sonic textures and auditory art
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THE REVIEW

Vortices of Analog Synths chase each other in a Place beyond time and space.

They bounce, overlap, free among a few piano chords and rare guitars. A sound that darts before your eyes, it brushes against you, you feel it, you could catch it.

An ocean of pure sound, only infinite horizons, with no land in sight.

Hypotheses, just an idea of music.

Fast mirages, fleeting black and white memories of possible pasts, possible futures constantly transforming in a cube thrown in a space-time vortex.

Sound And Vision

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Summary by Bot

The Radiophonic Workshop's album 'Burial In Several Earths' crafts a mesmerizing world of analog synth vortices, blended with occasional piano and guitar. The music evokes fleeting images and abstract time concepts through deep, transforming soundscapes. While immersive and richly textured, the album may feel elusive and abstract to listeners. Its strength lies in creating an infinite, boundaryless sonic ocean that invites contemplation.

The Radiophonic Workshop

A pioneering BBC electronic-music department founded in 1958, known for producing electronic music and sound effects for radio and television.
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