Calling Down the Sky - Robert Rich

Calling Down the Sky

Robert Rich

  • Genre: Electronic
  • Release Date: 2004-05-21
  • Explicitness: notExplicit
  • Country: USA
  • Track Count: 8

  • ℗ 2004 Soundscape Productions

Tracks

Title Artist Time
1
Erasing Traces Robert Rich 13:17
2
Overhead Robert Rich 5:34
3
Vertigo Robert Rich 21:34
4
Supplication Robert Rich 7:23
5
Borealis Robert Rich 6:01
6
Lost Landmarks Robert Rich 6:25
7
Adrift Robert Rich 4:56
8
Recognition Robert Rich 8:50

Reviews

  • Where is Track 2?

    1
    By Aehiilrs
    Track 2 "Overhead" is missing. That is why I give this a 1 - in hope of this error begin corrected. Robert Rich is one of my favorite ambient composers so I just wish this was the complete album.
  • Eerie

    4
    By Essentialism
    Some of Rich's more eerie music...This would be effective as a soundtrack to a video game or film, but I find I would not generally wish to listen to such ominous music for its own sake. Reminiscent of the soundtrack to Myst's "Riven" (which itself was probably influenced by Rich's earlier music).
  • Overhead

    5
    By ZenElectro
    I think I'll be buying the rest of this album. Great to create a certain reflective atmosphere.
  • various scenarios

    5
    By texas_marky
    due to the various scenarios predicated on any given value there may or may not be a solution within the range of parameters sufficient to balance a function and its arrays.
  • 13 Billion Years

    5
    By joseph falco
    If someone made a film showing the birth of the Universe from just before the Big Bang, through all the stages of galactic evolution, to our little blue planet circling our little yellow sun, to the death of the Universe in a whirlpool of converging black holes 13 billion years hence, this would be the soundtrack. Robert Rich has made one of the greatest albums of all time in any genre. Just take it slow, turn out the lights, put on the lava lamp, and really....really....listen.
  • Immense

    5
    By indeepwinter
    This "music," if it should be called "music" instead of some theologically deep term for "aesthetically pleasing, ethereal-saturated music of the gods" is the ultimate in soundscapes. Rich takes all of time, space, and understanding and warps it into strange worlds and ancient dreams. A "peaceful nightmare" if possible. Pure, real, and visceral. Nothing better than this!

Videos from this artist