Palmer: In the Temple John Palmer

Album info

Album-Release:
2013

HRA-Release:
22.08.2013

Label: Animato

Genre: Ambiente

Subgenre: Meditation Music

Artist: John Palmer

Composer: John Palmer

Album including Album cover

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  • 1 Beginning 06:31
  • 2 Lower Hall of Earth 02:29
  • 3 Higher Hall of Earth 05:56
  • 4 Hall of Metals 03:54
  • 5 Labyrinth 07:55
  • 6 Blue Temple 03:40
  • 7 Hall of Water 05:56
  • 8 Hall of Spheres 03:56
  • 9 Hall of Mirrors 05:26
  • Total Runtime 45:43

Info for Palmer: In the Temple

Midway life’s journey I was made aware, that I had strayed into a dark forest, and the right path appeared not anywhere. Dante’s opening of “The Divine Comedy” resembles an extraordinary event that occurred to me in the Spring of 2003: entering an underground temple at the feet of the Italian Alps.

A 1992 BBC TV programme on this subject had already struck my imagination, but I had to wait 11 years before I would face the evidence of the existence of such a place. As I plunged into the cave I descended a secret underworld of thousand colours, a labyrinth of halls and corridors rich in sound and architecture. Luminous spheres and reflections of light-beams on strange paintings and sculptures carved into the rock, while intense perfumes of every kind would emphasize a truly multi-sensorial experience of astonishing beauty. Without being aware of it, I found myself initiating a journey into mystical knowledge, a pathway to a lost sacred heritage. The concept and form of “In the Temple” is connected to the architectural and conceptual structure of the temple itself: seven halls, one labyrinth and interlinking corridors. Each space being built according to precise mathematical, acoustic and spiritual laws where architecture becomes a medium between the spiritual and the material. A cathedral containing esoteric knowledge, architectural mathematics, as well as the discovery of sensorial relationships between colours, light and sound.

“In the Temple” is a 52’ long acousmatic work consisting of nine movements. The movements are linked by a Leitmotif consisting of both footsteps and a gentle surge-like sound associated with the corridors and the entering of the temple’s halls: symbolical bridges linking diverse sensorial realities as experienced in each hall. Note on the 5th movement (Labyrinth)

In this hall the origin of mankind, being enrooted in the Atlantis period, is initially depicted in its matriarchal and patriarchal traditions. Twenty-nine divinities taken from different religions of the world are represented each by a painting. Such divinities are proposed as containers of specific energies, each one being a mirror reflecting the divine in us. Each of the 29 divinities has been interpreted with a specific sound interlinked to another by a drone. Below the complete list and succession of sound-events in chronological order:

1. Aphrodite / 2. Ra / 3. Osiris / 4. Brahma / 5. Persephone / 6. Buddha / 7. Ades / 8. Enlil / 9. Poseidon / 10. Anubi / 11. Brigit / 12. Christ / 13. Balder / 14. Mitra / 15. Sin / 16. Gea / 17. Marduk / 18. Ganesh / 19. Jahve / 20. Horus / 21. Pan / 22. Thot / 23. Bran / 24. Cybel / 25. Bastet / 26. Astarte / 27. Athena / 28. Allah / 29. Amaterasu

John Palmer, piano


John Palmer
started playing the piano at the age of 6 and composing at the age of 15. He graduated in Piano Studies from the Conservatory of Music in Lucerne, Switzerland, having undertaken courses in composition and experimental improvisation with Edison Denisov and Vinko Globokar. In London he studied Composition at Trinity College of Music and completed a PhD in Composition at City University. Further studies include composition with Jonathan Harvey and conducting with Alan Hazeldine at the Guildhall School of Music. Since 1977 he has equally been active in different musical genres: from experimental and popular music to free-jazz. Since 1987 he has focused on instrumental, orchestral, vocal and chamber music, and in the early nineties he extended his compositional interests with electroacoustic resources.

Much of John Palmer’s music is characterized by a distinct awareness of sound, time and space. Sound unfolding in time and experienced as a syntactic priority of the musical discourse: a sensitivity for subtle transformations of timbre combined with a highly individual perception of space and silence. The latter proposing psychological and spiritual dimensions taking shape beyond any stylistic clichè. His compositional techniques vary from work to work, from the application of vigorous methodologies to the most spontaneous unfolding of musical ideas based on pure intuition. (Stephen Hawkes, New York, 2004)

This album contains no booklet.

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