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On 04-02-04 22.13, "Bill Fox" <billyfox@soundscapes.us> wrote: > Hi Per, > > I have 56k dialup and no time for downloading so I can't comment on your >song. > But in your first sentence, you called it ambient so why are you looking >for a > style name? Marketing a CD is the hardest part of being a musician if >you're > marketing it yourself. Or you could shop it to record labels. Have you >tried > Groove, Hypnos, Space for Music, or any of the others? > > Cheers, > > Bill Fox Hi Bill, Thanks for the input! It's just that the style name "ambient" seems very broad today. As for myself "ambient" can go for as apart stuff as eighty year old piano pieces by Eric Satie, the Britches Brew album by Miles, most Orb stuff as well as simple field recordings, and at yet all these examples might go by different descriptions with other people - like "classic", "jazz", "techno" etc. "Ambient", as I understand it, stands for music that might serve as well for concentrated listening as for providing an ambience/background for other activities. A description based based on how the music is being used. Other descriptions might be based on a certain vibe, or emotion, communicated within the music. Like "Space Music" has adopted its definite criteria, even though I have never seen an explicit listing of them, after Stephen Hill's well known radio shows. I once read somewhere that "a good Science Fiction novel has to leave the reader in a certain Sense-Of-Wonder", and I think that's a good example of a "vibe based style description". So what's that applied on music? ;-) All the best Per Boysen