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Stephen Philips: Dreams 4
by AAJ Staff
Stephen Philips, the tireless and prolific performer behind Maryland-based Dark Duck Records, returns with two more albums of sonic atmospheres, one under his Deep Chill Network" alias and another under his own name plus a mysterious Isomorph." Philips has, in the last few years, established a niche for himself in the esoteric world of minimalist ambient. This genre is characterized by non-rhythmic, floating electronic sounds that are not meant as structured music" but as a sonic background establishing mood and ...
read moreStephen Philips: Yukon
by AAJ Staff
Washington DC-area electronic artist Stephen Philips returns under his Deep Chill Network" byline to bring us another album of dark, atonal electronica. There are four shorter pieces at the beginning, and then two extended pieces in the main body of the album. Track 1, Cold Breeze," sounds quite appropriate with a hissing deep drone; track 2, Ice Crystals," features water-like drips and glassy tinkling sounds. Track 3, Droplets," is the only piece that has any kind of recognizable harmony, synthesizer ...
read moreStephen Philips: Dreams 3
by AAJ Staff
Maryland-based ambient producer Stephen Philips is back under his Deep Chill Network" imprint, with another album of slow, somnolent sound. Unlike Deep Chill's" earlier album, Heart of the Tundra, this one has more recognizable notes, sometimes even in conventional harmonic sequences like the notes of a major triad or fifths. But there isn't any melody here, nor did Philips intend there to be. Almost all of this album is done in series of single synthesizer notes, soft and mostly low-pitched, ...
read moreStephen Philips: Desert Landscapes
by John W. Patterson
If Steve Roach’s Quiet Music or Structures From Silence era releases are exactly your ambient cup of tea, your preferred sonic sauna setting, or you just want ultra-restful, deeply, minimalistic synth structures and unimposing drones, (pause to breathe), then add this Stephen Philips creation to that certain area in your CD collection. Whew, long sentence, as if I were a word-drone-smith – now back to the review.“Dry River”: Philips departs somewhat from Roachisms in adding some synth embellishings ...
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