Voxfire takes Medieval chants and turns them into free-floating expanses with beautiful vocals. They infuse their chants with ambient moods and even blues harmonica.
Fink is the recording persona of Fin Greenall, who brings his ambient sensibilities to his deep and emotionally complex songs sung in his resonant tenor. Fink performs live on Echoes.
It’s Chamber Moods on Echoes. We’ll hear a live performance with pianist Fiona Joy Hawkins and violinist Rebecca Daniel. Then we talk with oboist Jill Haley about her National Park Soundscapes.
On a Slow Flow Echoes, two recent releases by veteran New Age artists. We’ll hear David Darling from Homage to Kindness and Nancy Rumbel, David Michael and Benjy Wertheimer from Confluence.
Take a trip. We have Maps. We talk to James Chapman. He’s half of the duo onDeadwaves but also records as Maps, merging electronics with Ennio Morricone grandeur and Beach Boys exultant harmonies.
New music from Berlin, the 1980s synth-pop band who have made a comeback with a new album called Transcendance. We’re also going to hear from the electronic group, Redshift off a new anthology.
Oboist and composer Jill Haley takes up residence and composes music inspired by the landscapes and her photographs. Join John Diliberto on a walk through the parks on Echoes.
A serene and free-flowing exploration of chamber music moods when we hear pianist Fiona Joy Hawkins and violinist Rebecca Daniel in a beautiful and intimate performance.
This weekend on Echoes Bat for Lashes’ Natasha Khan talks about the vampyric and film imagery behind her new album, Lost Girls and we hear pianist and composer Ludovico Einaudi playing live.
On a Slow Flow Echoes, it’s music by Djam Karet, the veteran American progressive rock group. Their album taps into their world music and folk influences. Come gaze at the heavens with us.