Prism of Eternal Now

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (43 ratings)
Prism of Eternal Now album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 71:09

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wow

irq506

I really really like this, i dig it. i got it a few days ago, and ive listened to it a few times every day since, and I was looking at the files tonight and realized that the name of track 5 is two minutes later then when I downloaded it, and i didnt know about that until ten minutes ago, in fact I thought id accidentally renamed it myself. this reminds me of *zoviet'france*, rappoon, terminal cheesecake and a few others..

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Rocks!

FatOnnie

Okay, not "rocks" in a traditional kind of way, but Pulses is one of the coolest songs out there. Other tracks go from ambient to minimalist to spirtiualistic and back. Sky Drips Drifts is a stronger album from start to finish, but this has plenty to make one happy.

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rotation, is heavy

eeyote

this one really gets inside your brain cells. shades of the 60's but influenced by electronic / ambient beats like classic aphex twin. groovy!

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sounds of communication that are almost spiritual

SCHEMA

Like a tribal tribute message being sent to the Gods who later respond with astral projections of blissful drone and space dust.

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eMusic Guide to Kranky Records

By Joe Muggs, eMusic Contributor

Kranky's great skill is escapology; it's practically defined by its ability to evade definition. If there is received wisdom about the Chicago label, it's as a home for abstracted guitars, moody soundscapes and occasionally spiky electronic beats: all very serious, very studious, very intense. Maybe when Bruce Adams and Joel Leoschke founded it in 1993, it could have been pegged as an indie label that tended toward the experimental — but with each release it… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Adam Forkner’s White Rainbow project began with CD-Rs and soon evolved into multimedia installation pieces. White Rainbow’s Kranky debut, Prism of Eternal Now, shows off the spectrum of Forkner’s music, which occupies a blissful space somewhere between dream pop, drum circles, psychedelic rock, and avant-garde electronics. The album warms up with some relatively brief tracks: “Middle” sets Forkner’s distorted vocals adrift on a shimmering sea of electronics, while the aptly named opener, “Pulses,” layers yipping, tablas, a heavy synth bass straight out of ’70s prog, and a lysergic guitar solo, proving that as transcendent as White Rainbow’s music may be, it isn’t always gentle. Likewise, the Terry Riley-inspired “For Terry” boasts some strangely feral electronic squeals, and “Mystic Prism”‘s relentless bassline adds an ever-so-slightly ominous edge to its beauty. As Prism of Eternal Now unfolds, it gets more elongated and abstract, displaying Forkner’s skill with setting moods and shaping atmospheres. “April 25 11:14 PM” and “Awakening”‘s viscous electronic textures underscore Forkner’s ties to Portland’s other sonic wanderers, including Valet and Jackie-O Motherfucker. “Warm Clicked Fruit” may be Prism of Eternal Now’s definitive track, its melody and whispery percussion ebbing and flowing like heartbeats and breathing, or breezes and rippling water, in a perfectly balanced blend of acoustics and electronics. Tribal yet modern, intricate yet spacious, this is White Rainbow’s most accessible work. – Heather Phares

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