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Showing posts with label roy batty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label roy batty. Show all posts

Tuesday 8 June 2021

Tears In June


Richard Norris continues to produce his Music For Healing series, monthly long form pieces of ambient/ deep listening. It started in March last year, and turned out to be an excellent way to deal with the pressures of lockdown. This year's releases have all been named after the months they appear in- June's is a particularly special piece of music. It's at Bandcamp. As it plays, the twinkling synth parts and washes of warm drone, there are moments where it really reminds me of Vangelis' Blade Runner soundtrack and especially Roy Batty's death scene with Rutger Hauer's partly improvised monologue. 

'I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Attack ships on fire off the Shoulder of Orion. I watched C- Beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser Gate. All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. Time to die.'

Tears In Rain

As June plays it attains a real sense of weightlessness, of being beyond gravity, the feeling of drifting through space. This feed from the International Space Station provides some very fitting footage to go with Richard's music. 


Monday 4 February 2019

Monday's Long Song


Eight minutes of blissed out synths and drum pads from Scottish DJ and producer Lord of The Isles with a track named after Rutger Hauer's famous line from Blade Runner. Tears In Rain was the closer on a 2011 release, an ep called We Were There (Freestyle Dancin').

Tears In Rain

If you want some freestyle dancing to brighten up your Monday this clip came my way over the weekend and it's ace, champion B-girls Wonda and Macca cutting some rug to Caterpillar by Royce da 5' 9".

Wednesday 2 January 2019

Do Androids Dream Of 2019?


We're now in the year Blade Runner was set. We have until November for all the aspects of the film to be realised- replicants, flying cars, off world colonies, Voight- Kampff empathy response machines (although it wouldn't surprise me if these do exist). Maybe Blade Runner isn't very far from our 2019 at all- in the film corporations are all powerful, product and advertising is everywhere, the climate is seemingly broken (perpetual rain and night), the wealthy isolate themselves living high up above the streets where everyone else exists. Deckard's Esper machine is voice controlled and has the functions of Google Earth, the ability to manipulate photographs.

In Blade Runner's 2019 people dress in a cross between 1940s film noir and early 80s synth pop.





In the meantime, Vangelis' soundtrack remains a repeated joy.