MonolakeSilence

Label:

Monolake / Imbalance Computer Music – ML025

Format:

CD , Album

Country:

Released:

Genre:

Electronic

Style:

Ambient

Tracklist

1 Watching Clouds 5:10
2 Infinite Snow 6:01
3 Null Pointer 4:44
4 Far Red 5:55
5 Avalanche 6:29
6 Void 3:29
7 Internal Clock 8:17
8 Shutdown 6:33
9 Reconnect 5:53
10 Observatory 8:37

Companies, etc.

  • Copyright ©Imbalance Computer Music
  • Glass Mastered AtSony DADC – A0101441770-0101

Credits

  • Artwork [Uncredited]snc (3)
  • Composed By, Mixed By, ProducerRobert Henke
  • Mastered ByRashad Becker

Notes

Packaging: 4- Digipak.

© Imbalance Computer Music 2009

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode (From sticker on foil): 8 81390 53052 6
  • Other (From sticker on foil): 708253052
  • Matrix / Runout: Sony DADC A0101441770-0101 15 A00
  • Mastering SID Code: IFPI L555
  • Mould SID Code (Variant 1): IFPI 94K7
  • Mould SID Code (Variant 2): IFPI 94K5

Other Versions (3)

View All
Title (Format) Label Cat# Country Year
Silence (10×File, FLAC, Album) Monolake / Imbalance Computer Music ML - 025 2009
Recently Edited
Silence (2×LP, Album) Monolake / Imbalance Computer Music ML025V 2009
Recently Edited
Silence (10×File, MP3, Album, 320 kbps) Monolake / Imbalance Computer Music ML - 025 2009

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Reviews

  • rewind.musik's avatar
    rewind.musik
    Monolake's first album that we're going to talk about the site, and the sixth album from a fine list, we love this style of music, at once captivating and very involved.

    Music that want this very mental for many delirious at home. We will probably not please many a reader, we are far from a catchy rhythm as Vitalic, or a joyful melody Zoot Woman. But speaking style of Pan Sonic Plastikman Mimetic or we know we will still give pleasure to connoisseurs.

    "Silence", an album title really well chosen as the first track "Watching Clouds" is just a track or we hear the rain. Due to a little sweetness into the electronic rhythms begin to appear for a listen Minimal beautiful. These are some of what we feel after listening to this album.

    Nothing better to relax the front of this bed. Then in the same delusion, we recommend the same artist album "Cinemascope" which was released in 2001, if you must retain at least two. In short as good music as usual, which is released on the label Imbalance Computer Music.
    • Jazzual's avatar
      Jazzual
      A new Monolake release is always one of those must buy records. No need to listen to samples or read reviews because, technically at least, Robert Henke is one the the finest producers in electronic music. This one has been a long time coming as Henke has focussed on releasing records under his own name which although more experimental have at times suffered as a result.

      Silence represents a progression of the Monolake sound. The most innovative change lies in the percussion. With a varied use of metallic sounding pings and bounces, sometimes sounding like ballbearings bouncing on hard surfaces. This is balanced by a generally dark and at times ominous atmosphere that also brings a strange sense of warmth. In many ways this is an experiment in contrasting the synthetic with the organic and apparently features field recordings including wind blowing in the Grand Canyon for example.

      Where other Monolake records use more conventional techno based structures Silence seems to be reaching into unchartered waters. It's a journey that looks promising.
      • Headphone_Commute's avatar
        It goes like this. I wake up in my abandoned shelter made of found brick and metal scraps. It's been raining for over a month now. But the water collecting in the corners is undrinkable. It is full of ash and oily fluid. There is only one way out of here. I step outside into the eternal darkness, and climb the nearby unrecognizable object. Far ahead is a column of rising smoke. The electrical storm rolls in the distance. I start walking towards the echo of a machine made rhythm. I feel sad for our abandoned planet. And I don't have any hope for survival. The liner notes of Monolake's seventh album, Silence, tell a different story. But in my mind, there is my own. Either way - the story is futuristic, full of tension, survival, and hope. The words are reflected in music, composed by Robert Henke during the last year leading up to September 2009. Henke's staple sound has created a whole new branch of style springing off of minimal techno. This metallic, atonal, and rhythm driven mathematical progression captures your nerve endings, and sparks through your cells. The cavernous area of your head that was once possessed by thought is now a plausible site for transmission. On Silence, Henke moves further away from the four-to-the-floor pounding beat towards a dark, and groovy rolling pattern, that must be heavily influenced by dubstep. That's not a surprise, considering that Monolake's new partner in crime, Torsten Pröfrock, has recently bridged the gap between dubstep and techno by remixing Shackleton's Death Is Not Final as T++. The influence is contagious. And in this chain reaction Henke creates his own style. And the production? It's pristine! I fought the following thought for a while, and finally decided to break down and directly quote the first part of production notes: Sound sources include field recordings of airport announcements, hammering on metal plates at the former Kabelwerk Oberspree, Berlin, several sounds captured inside the large radio antenna dome at Teufelsberg, Berlin, dripping water at the Botanical Garden Florence, air condition systems and turbines in Las Vegas, Frankfurt and Tokyo, walking on rocks in Joshua Tree National Park, wind from the Grand Canyon, a friends answering machine, a printer, conversations via mobile phones, typing on an old Macintosh keyboard and recordings from tunnel works in Switzerland. Synthetic sounds created with the software instruments Operator, Tension, Analog and the build in effects inside Ableton Live. Additional sound design and sequencing using MAXMSP / MaxForLive. Additional reverb: various impulse repsonses via Altiverb. Composed, edited and mixed in Live with a pair of Genelec 8040s. Mastering by Rashad Becker at Audioanwendungen September 2009. Field recordings captured with a Sony PCM D-50. I'm not going to waste your time here, and tell you about Henke's contribution towards the evolution of sound on more than one physical plane - you can read all about contributions towards Ableton or his own designed midi-controller Monodeck on Wikipedia. What I want to capture here is how this album made me feel. And that indescribable feeling is pretty close to what I felt for the first time when I heard Plastikman's Sheet One back in 1993. Since then I've been jonesing for more. And Henke has finally hit that spot. His Silence is the answer. Silence is released on Monolake's own label - [ml/i] (Monolake / Imbalance Computer Music), and is available in CD, digital, and 2xLP formats. This release follows Monolake's recent two track EP, Atlas / Titan which was in turn remixed by T++. There is also a 60-minute single track, endlessly permutating atmospheric installation piece released by Robert Henke this summer, titled Indigo_Transform (Imbalance Computer Music, 2009).

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