
Meisha
The First Lessons in New Era Time...
© 2001 482 Music & Meisha (650594100527)
CD IN STOCK. ORDER NOW. Will ship immediately.
sublimely beautiful...gently melodic, cascading patterns and drones...Meisha is eminently accessible...could appeal equally to fans of Steve Reich and Philip Glass, Cluster and Brian Eno, Durutti Column and Cocteau Twins.
tracks
- 1 The news descending a stair case
- 2 Inducing the patio flamboyancy exam
- 3 Prescription sunglasses for the third eye
- 4 My what a marvelous floorboard it goes quite well with that dres
- 5 Everytime you see me you look through my records
- 6 It's pretty spacey, it's death ambient
- 7 We will not name this song soul shocking beef crunch
- 8 A celebration of life
- 9 The symbol song
- 10 Tranferring mass through the portals of time
- 11 Guitar parts the water
try this
albums you will love
- MIKE REED'S LOOSE ASSEMBLY: The Speed of Change
- MIKE REED'S PEOPLE PLACES & THINGS: Proliferation
- JASON ADASIEWICZ: Rolldown
- GREG BURK: Ivy Trio
- MEMORIZE THE SKY: Memorize the Sky
- MIKE REED'S LOOSE ASSEMBLY: Last Year's Ghost
- THE REMPIS PERCUSSION QUARTET: Hunter-Gatherers
- TAYLOR HO BYNUM & TOMAS FUJIWARA: True Events
- GREG BURK: The Way In
- CONFERENCE CALL: Live at the Outpost
- FIRE OF SPACE: Handbasket
- HERCULANEUM: Orange Blossom
- KYLE BRUCKMANN'S WRACK: Intents & Purposes
- MIKE REED: In the Context Of
- MODO TRIO WITH JAMIE SAFT: The Uninvited
- THE REMPIS PERCUSSSION QUARTET: Rip Tear Crunch
- TOM ABBS & FREQUENCY RESPONSE: The Animated Adventures of Knox
- ARAM SHELTON: Arrive
- ANTHONY BRAXTON / MATT BAUDER: 2 + 2 Compositions
- HARRIS EISENSTADT: The Soul and Gone
- FONDA / STEVENS GROUP: Forever Real
- GREG BURK TRIO: Nothing, Knowing
- KYLE BRUCKMANN: gasps & fissures
genres you will love
galleries you will love
By Location
Recommended if you like ...
notes
Meisha formed in 1996 after the prophet Sayas Ser spoke of a new era in time. He told Ken Camden, Pete Spynda and Mike Tamburo that they would have to take a great journey into the sound that has all meaning. He told them the secrets that are held between sound and the universe. They could not understand what he was saying then, but were inspired to work towards an understanding of this knowledge. That is the purpose of Meisha: to follow the path towards the greater sound. The Meisha records are a documentation of the ever continuing voyage down the path of discovery.
Previous Meisha recordings have been released by Gingkoba, Priapus Records and the Music Fellowship. Beyond the avant-rock proceedings of Meisha, the band members are active in film, photography, painting, multi-media live performance, electronica and yet another band, the Arco Flute Foundation.
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"Meisha's music shifts and sways. It moves between the extremes of thick tone drones to intricate shimmering guitar lines and explores the area between the two in great depth.
This is their third album, and it follows logically behind the last two. The dueling arpeggiated guitars that so easily invite comparisons to Steve Reich seem to have become a method of writing they have become more comfortable with, as they have less immediacy and a good deal of patience. The result is expansive songs, which can slowly move from a pop structured mish mash of picked guitar to a heavily layered collage of tones.
The intricate side is developed further in a similar way. The bass carries a good portion of the harmonic and melodic weight, allowing the guitars more room to step forward and back in their repetition, rhythm, and melodies. The drones also have a well defined sense of space, which pursue ideas and explore loops at length without losing sight of the overall aesthetic in the process. Meisha certainly haven't reinvented themselves (or even really changed how they approach things much), but they have developed their sense of self to a very pleasing end...11" (out of 12) -- fakejazz.com
*
"The music begins so softly, so subtly that it sneaks up on you like a hesitant lover; filled with passion and ready to burst, hands shaking with barely suppressed energy, the anticipation so sweet it's almost deadly. Softly strummed guitar reverberations thread through gently soaring notes that seem to sustain their wavering, haunting beauty to near eternity. Dreamy soundscapes of floating ambient feedback hover in the air, just a magic breath away, always an inch beyond your fingertips. There are lovely strains of near-trance-like folk wanderings, which sometimes recall early Durutti Column in their aspirations of transcendence through tranquil simplicity. There are bizarre moments of cave-like ambient/electronic/guitar exploration-exploring side tunnels like electric current flashing off octopus tentacles, soft voltage flows careening off the walls in blue-light arcs, seeking the soul of early Pink Floyd acid jams. While most of the music here leans toward the understated, there is a consistently delicate hint of ever-present tension and mystery, yielding a sound not unlike some bands on Chicago's highly regarded Kranky label...7" (out of 10) --Charlie Quaker
"...this release will conclude Meisha phase 1 of recorded material. recorded at the same time as returns/forever... triumph has never felt like this before..." --Mass Transfer
reviews
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very good
author: Paul GroperThough the transitions from song to song are much different then the preceeding albums, I believe there are stronger moments and more of them... God.