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Musician

Suura

Active since:

Suura is an instrumental quartet formed by Nicolas Van Belle. The music consists out of original compositions which focus on free improvisation, sound and textures. 

​From 2021, the formation of the band changed to broaden the soundspectrum. This change led to new musical results which deepen the complexity and layering of their music.

​Suura's third full album to be released on May the 10th on bwaa.records.

Results for pages tagged "Drone"...

Musician

Alan Regardin

Alan Regardin develops a singular take on his instrument, both acoustic and electric.  He focuses his approach on the nature of sound and its vibrational spaces in the field of experimental,  from free jazz to minimalism by way of noise and traditional musics...

Results for pages tagged "Drone"...

Musician

Jakob Rehlinger

Born:

Jakob Rehlinger is a Canadian multi-instrumentalist, composer and improviser living in south Etobicoke, ON. His music is typically somber in tone and draws inspiration from early electronic musicians and ambient new age artists as well as Scandinavian jazz and 20th century minimalist composers. Previously he performed and released music as BABEL until 2018 when he chose to abandon the moniker and operate under his own name. From 1999 to 2019 he ran the boutique micro-label Arachnidiscs Recordings which featured an array of international artists working in similarly textural and adventurous instrumental music styles

Results for pages tagged "Drone"...

Musician

Collin Sherman

Born:

Collin was born in 1979 in Lexington, Kentucky. Growing up in Louisville, he began playing saxophone in 4th grade at age 9. He attended Oberlin College (in Oberlin, Ohio) and Tulane Law School (in New Orleans, Louisiana). Collin moved to New York City in 2004, and played with a traditional jazz group on and off while practicing law. He began releasing his own recording in 2012. His early recording were in the ambient electronic vein, partly because the project was entirely self- produced and Collin did not have access to standard recording equipment. As he grew more comfortable recording and producing on his own, he gradually began incorporating his wind instruments (alto and soprano saxophone, Bb soprano and bass clarinet) into his recordings


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