Future Worlds – track by track
Future Worlds is the name of my new instrumental album of science fiction-inspired music, and the first piece I have composed as Honorary Interstellar Musician for the recently-formed Institute for Interstellar Studies™ (http://www.i4is.org).
I like the idea of
instrumental music being open to listener’s own interpretation, but as an
artist, I always associate music with images, colours and concepts, so in turn,
I like my music to have an idea to drive it as part of the creative process,
which listeners can then either take or leave. Each track on Future Worlds has a specific theme or
vision in mind, reflected in the title.
Souvenir of Earth is a downbeat and reflective start, taking both its
inspiration and title from Karen Thompson Walker’s debut novel, The Age of Miracles, which my wife had
bought for me last year. The story depicts the impact on society and the
environment following the slowing of the Earth’s rotation. The destruction or
loss of our home world is a regular topic in SF literature, and I wanted to
create a piece to match that mood, leaving Earth as just a memory. This was the
first track I made and starting point for the whole album.
To the Stars was one of the first tracks I composed after being
invited to join the Institute for Interstellar Studies™, and I wanted to
reflect the forward thinking goals and ambitions of the Institute. I had
recently made a 25-minute evolving soundscape entitled Chrysalis, which was more of an experimental demo, but there was
one section I particularly liked, which I adapted as the main melody in “To the
Stars”.
Utopia – whether it’s the city of Diaspar in Arthur C. Clarke’s The City and the Stars, H.G. Wells’ When the Sleeper Awakes or almost any given Philip K. Dick
scenario, beneath the perfect, blissful society and lifestyle there is always a
dark undercurrent or conspiracy.
Colony – many space and science fiction artists have painted radical visions
of what man’s colonies on other planets could be like. “Colony” is one of the
more dynamic tracks on the album starts out as a heavily electronic piece and
gradually morphs into a thunderous orchestral score. I first started using
symphonic sounds when I created the soundtrack to artist David A. Hardy’s
English edit of 1957 Russian film, Road
to the Stars. I enjoyed working with these powerful sounds so much, I
decided to fuse orchestral and electronic styles together for Future Worlds.
The World Outside – is actually the title to my own digital painting
that I used as the album cover. I wanted a sparse sound and cold atmosphere,
which could depict either the first sight of a new world outside a freshly-landed
spacecraft, or a beautiful yet inhospitable alien terrain beyond the confines
of a colony.
Second Sun – I was reading 50
Years in Space by the late Sir Patrick Moore and David A. Hardy, which
contains one of my (many) favourite Hardy paintings, Antares. It’s one of those pieces that you feel you could step
right into, with beautiful cascading waterfalls set against a vibrant double
sunset. It’s also one of the brighter tracks on the album – thinking to the end
of the film, Sunshine, when the dying
sun is ‘rebooted” and warmth and sunlight returns to the Earth.
Icefall is one of the more orchestral tracks and combines the cold atmosphere
of a solar winter with the underlying message of climate change and the melting
of the polar ice caps.
Beneath the Surface continues the ecological theme, this time focusing on
the endangered life under the sea. This is perhaps the album’s most epic track,
with a gradual build and mid-point transition with echoes of Vangelis’ work and
Mike Oldfield’s Songs of Distant Earth
(which was inspired by the Arthur C. Clarke novel of the same name)
Cities in the Sky goes in a darker, industrial direction with
thunderous drums and metallic drones. The concept of the floating city is no
stranger to SF, and I wanted to produce a menacing piece that could capture the
vast spectacle of enormous, monstrous floating machine-like cities.
Flightpath is about the adventure of space flight, such as the
journey between warring worlds as depicted in Joe Haldeman’s Forever War or the plight of the Leonora
Christine starship in Poul Anderson’s Tau
Zero.
Earthlight – the partial illumination of a dark part of the surface
of the Moon via light reflected from the Earth, and also a term for the
appearance of the Earth as seen from the Moon during the lunar night – and an
early Arthur C. Clarke novel!
Sea of Flames is an apocalyptic vision of the sun closing in on the
Earth and setting alight to everything, including the oceans – a haunting close
to the album.
I usually like
albums to be around 40-45 minutes in duration – I think that’s just the right
length to digest. However, I had so many ideas on the go whilst making Future Worlds, even after completing my
planned twelve tracks, there were two pieces that I really liked and decided to
include them as bonus tracks. In the one sense, the album starts off with man
leaving the Earth and taking to the stars – almost like a first act. So for the second act, we’re setting foot on
a new world for the first time, and starting over there. This was the general
thinking behind the two additional tracks, which are only available with the
album download on my Bandcamp page.
First Steps started off as an energetic dance track entitled
“Contact”, but it wasn’t the right style for the rest of the album, so I slowed
it right down and changed it from an all-electronic piece to all-orchestral,
the final track sounding almost Terminator-like
in approach.
Origins is a slow building track, with layer upon layer of music gradually
emerging and evolving into a dramatic, but optimistic crescendo. It’s also the
only track on the album to feature vocal samples.
Sometimes when you
start work on an album, it often takes unexpected turns and ends up going in a
completely different direction to what you originally set out to. But with Future Worlds, I’d say it has turned out
exactly how I intended, as an emotive and thought-provoking soundscape with a mixture
of moods and atmospheres through a powerful blend of electronic and symphonic
music. I’m certainly proud to associate the album with the Institute for
Interstellar Studies.™
Future Worlds is available now as a digital album from http://thelightdreams.bandcamp.com/album/future-worlds (with 2 exclusive bonus tracks and PDF booklet) and will be available on Amazon and iTunes from 18th March.
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