Destination Beyond

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (34 ratings)
Destination Beyond album cover
Album Information

Total Track: 1   Total Length: 71:39

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Waste of Credits

Objectman

I love ambient but this guy is just plain boring and old fashioned.

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Always great in some way!

Luminal

Yes, as Crist said, "Subtle variations" mark the best Roach work. I suspect the music makes the brain work better but that is totally subjective, I do need the help. =) I agree that a longer sample listen is in order when you consider the cost. I liked the old prices but I do want more Roach.Hey- how about more resolution of the rip also?

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Good Stuff

richard.crist

I am drawn more toward dark ambient, but I must admit this album is a strong offering of the lighter side. At first I was not taken by it, but the more I listen the more I hear the subtle variations of the overall theme. It makes me feel as if I am in the landscape on the picture, sometimes galloping on a horse, other times sitting on a hill in contemplation. It is easy to put this album on and let it play while I work, or maybe lay in bed at night and immerse myself in it. It is worth the download.

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a ver si se entiende en spanish

Merluza

son unos tontos. en lugar de seguir estimulando a la gente la castigan. no tiene sentido, mal pensado, mal marketing. en un mundo de crisis, hay que dar mas.

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I Agree

lil_krez

Beautiful music, but I am also disappointed in the new credit system, and would continue service if previews were a bit longer.

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Beatier than it sounds

Masanga

The padscape you hear in the preview extends through the whole piece, but half of the total running time comprises a couple of extended hailstorms of joyous bouncing layers of beat loops laid attractively on top and ping-ponging off the ends of the stereo pan, before subsiding back again into the dreamy wash. It's pretty top-notch stuff; if you're a fan of long-form Roach, this latest is well up to scratch. I'd happily have coughed up twelve credits, and for those still lucky enough to be in single-credit land it's a no-brainer.

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need longer preview

bub2000

emusic needs to provide a longer preview if they are going to charge these kind of credits.

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Really DJShaggy?

fnordian

Someone needs to explain to YOU that 71 minutes of music that you enjoy should be more valuable than 42 cents. The pricing is finally closer to fair. Stop your whining.

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12 Credits???

DjShaggy

You want me to spend 12 credits, where I used to spend 1. Did you explain to Steve Roach that his albums are now 12X more expensive?

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They Say All Music Guide

Destination Beyond features another of electro-acoustic musician Steve Roach’s long-form works. At over 71 minutes, it is filled with multi-layered, drifting soundscapes, ghostly keyboards, and shimmering ambience. There isn’t anything wrong with that; Roach has always made his records stand out from those who attempt to imitate him, and from his peers who he’s left in the primordial dust of his lonesome path forward. There is a repetitive multi-structured keyboard pattern at work in various phases of “Destination Beyond” that functions almost as a mantra — a pulsing line somewhat reminiscent of Tangerine Dream’s prime work in the 1970s, but it doesn’t sound like a sequencer, or even a machine for that matter. It functions instead like a beckoning mantra, a vocal encounter with what Roach calls “the magnetic pull and drive towards the point on the horizon.” Early on in the work it becomes more pronounced, making itself not only present but seemingly fully formed. It proves elusive, however. Even though he employs it, he does so suggestively, trying to make the listener “see” that same place he does, and how alluring it is. It is not a mirage or an illusion, but something with form and substance that calls incessantly to the heart of the artist. It all but drops out in places and Roach follows on, trying to get a glimpse of it again, knowing somehow that it is right there, obscured by the sonic clouds he invokes. The listener roots for him to take hold of this sound and embed it firmly into his traveler’s pouch, but that would be to defeat the purpose of Roach’s intention. He is trying to show process and what drives him, and he does so very successfully here. When the voice of the pattern disappears into a formless void in the middle and then into a blissful kind of acceptance of its elusiveness at the end of the piece, the listener glimpses the inner journey and can do what Roach does: look in and keep on following whatever trace remains. There are many electronic artists out there, all trying to achieve effect. Roach doesn’t attempt to achieve anything; he simply goes about his way and follows his muse without distraction, creating work after work of engaging, creative excellence. – Thom Jurek

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