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39 Mysterions Audela Catalog#: Plague 003 Format: CDr (Deleted), Mp3/Flac/Ogg Vorbis/Etc. Status: Available from bandcamp Audela's 2nd album featuring one long ultra-ambient track. 39 Mysterions was sent to Plague as part of a massive demo set of which 5 tracks were compiled on the self-titled Audela CD. Since 39 Mysterions lasts 52 minutes it didn't fit on the debut album so it was released as a full-fledged album short after. Both CD's finish a first cycle of music inspired by Jupiter's Great Red Spot. The first album evokes turmoil, the second brings back equanimity. Tracklisting 1. 39 Mysterions (51:36) Reviews "A superb slice of deep-freeze electronics from Plague Redcordings' Audela, 39 Mysterions is said to take its inspiration from Jupiter's Giant Red Spot, and first came to the label's attention as part of a multi-album demo set. This single, continuous piece of music takes place over fifty minutes or so, conjuring an ominous sense of scale and a slow-moving, hollowed-out sounding resonance. Effortlessly grand and surprisingly riddled with details, this record requires a certain amount of patience from the listener, but if dark-ambience is your tipple, expect 39 Mysterions to suck you in straight away." (Boomkat, UK) "From without, Audela gives no indication these caverns of the 39 Mysterions are so deep. The tinkers who creep beneath are stoking the flames of their forges, yet their fires burn cold and phosphorescent green, a light which cannot be seen without entrance into the depths. Every sound is amplified and stretched to the far edges of sight by the vault looming from sight far overhead. Boomings of the planet's rotation are muffled scuttling and subsonic rumbles reminding us that the air is so thick it has nearly congealed. Below the cavern floor a river is silent and still, save for the bubbling gill gurgles of creatures whose eyes have long ago become hallucinatory longings in their small and savage minds. The blood rushing within their skulls is an audible pressure to those in the open air, stealing the silence away." (Sid Redlin, USA) |