chris conway scanning planet 3

A wondrous electronic voyage of exploration.
One long piece - over 58 minutes long - of atmospheric electronic music.
Spacey, often powerful, but dreamlike including sounds collected from the world around.

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instrumentation
Chris Conway -
synthesizer, electric 9 string guitar, theremin,
low whistle, voice, effects, samples, zither,
hammer dulcimer. percussion

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background
at the time

Some years ago the guys at Auricle Music suggested CC did an electronic album. Well nothing happened much til the Ayurveda album which gave him the idea about how to go about it. That and the arrival of the theremin.

Also he was listening to more electronic music (see influences). So from Jan to May 2003 he recorded as a kind of hobby, including the theremin and also including sounds taken from the world around him.

He got in touch with Auricle on completion and they agreed to release it.

What the Auricle label said about Scanning Planet 3
"Chris has been promising us a "cosmic" album for some 10+ years, and at long last, here it is in the form of SCANNING PLANET 3, a vast CD-long cosmic opus, with synths, theremin & guitar, lots of electroacoustic elements, melodic yet elusive & thoroughly creative, hints of Terry Riley, The Rain Garden, Terje Rypdal, etc. Chris has "scanned planet 3" i.e. Earth, and come up with a vast cosmic vision, a work that explores new and unexplored territory, and created an album that is unique."

influences

Vidna Obmana, Eduard Artemiev, Simon Stockhausen, Terry Riley, Terje Rypdal, Bernard Xolotl, Lydia Kavina, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Wendy Carlos, Robert Rich

technical

recorded at Oblong Studios, on to computer hard disk. Sound samples collected on minidisk.

retrospect

CC is very fond of this epic album. It was a voyage of discovery for him and was a very personal album in the selection of sounds.




reviews

Musicians don't come much more multi-talented than Chris Conway, he's released many different kinds of albums including Jazz, World Music/Fusion, New Age, Songs, and EM; not only that but he's also been a guest musician on many other albums. Scanning Planet 3 is the first of two EM albums, both of which feature the theremin amongst other instruments. The title is a reference to our planet Earth (the third from the sun) and the music seems to be from the perspective of aliens scanning our world.

An album utilising the sound of the theremin can take a bit of getting used to thanks to its weird and somewhat alien "wailing" quality, though this instrument is mainly used in the opening and closing minutes. It should thus come as no surprise that this is not a typical EM or spacemusic work, instead of going for rhythmic/melodic or floating/drifting motifs Chris has gone for a more experimental collage of impressions rendered in sound.

The music is delivered as a continuous whole over one, nearly hour length, track - of the same name as the album title. Over the course of the track the sounds change as the scanning of our planet shifts its focus, sometimes the soundscape is filled with effects - often of a distorted nature where the listener may recognise sounds from life and activity. There are some melodic parts too, notably a light and hypnotic melody (possibly played on the dulcimer) about thirteen minutes in that makes one think of good things as subdued wordless vocals provide a faint backdrop.

By the end of the album it feels like the sounds we've heard have run a fair way through the gamut of Earth bound emanations of nature, human voices and transmissions, industrial activity (there's a stretch starting about twenty four minutes in that has a driving industrial rhythm) and even strife.

Scanning Planet 3 is a good addition to any EM collection, it takes a bit of getting used to but is worth the effort when one looks past the weirder elements.

Dene Bebbington

Chris Conway works in many genres, going from being a singer-songwriter (with over 10 CDs released), over world music / fusion (playing in several bands such as the Jazz Orient/Re-Orient band, the world music group The Rain Garden and so on) to jazz, electronics and relaxation. On “Scanning Planet 3”, a journey in one single track of almost one hour, you get airy waves, relaxation, new age and electric guitar. The material is well produced and really does keep the road very well. My personal highlight is the guitar parts that made me remember the better tracks from ex-Police Andy Summers’ solo material. (BVI: 5)BVI


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