Steve Roach
A longstanding leader in contemporary electronic music, composer and multi-instrumentalist Steve Roach draws on the beauty and power of the Earth's landscapes to create lush, meditative soundscapes. Throughout his decades-long career, he's explored styles ranging from tribal rhythms to deep space music, and he's proven to be an enormous influence on several generations of ambient artists, trance producers, and new age/world music fusionists. First emerging with the Berlin School-styled Now in 1982, he came into his own with the 1984 minimalist epic Structures from Silence, often regarded as one of the best ambient albums of all time. Efforts such as 1988's equally heralded Dreamtime Return were directly inspired by desert life, incorporating field recordings and rhythms inspired by indigenous music traditions. Dark ambient works such as 1996's The Magnificent Void and 2000's Midnight Moon reflected the vast expanse of space. During the 2010s, he began building an extensive modular synthesizer/sequencer system, revisiting his Berlin School roots with albums such as 2015's Skeleton Keys. Roach has maintained an impossibly prolific work rate throughout his career without sacrificing quality or craftsmanship, resulting in countless hours of truly sublime, otherworldly music. Born in California in 1955, Roach -- inspired by the music of Tangerine Dream, Klaus Schulze, and Vangelis -- taught himself to play synthesizer at the age of 20. Debuting in 1982 with the album Now, his early work was quite reminiscent of his inspirations, but with 1984's Structures from Silence, his music began taking enormous strides. The album's expansive and mysterious atmosphere was partly inspired by the natural beauty of the southwestern U.S. Subsequent works, including 1986's three-volume Quiet Music series, honed Roach's approach, his dense, swirling textures and hypnotic rhythms akin to environmental sound sculptures. In 1988, inspired by the Peter Weir film The Last Wave, Roach journeyed to the Australian outback, with field recordings of aboriginal life inspiring his acknowledged masterpiece, the double-album Dreamtime Return. A year later, he teamed with percussionist Michael Shrieve and guitarist David Torn for The Leaving Time, an experiment in ambient jazz. After relocating to the desert outskirts of Tucson, Arizona, Roach established his own recording studio, Timeroom. In the years to follow, he grew increasingly prolific, creating both as a solo artist and in tandem with acts including Robert Rich, Michael Stearns, Jorge Reyes, and Kevin Braheny; in all, he recorded close to two-dozen major works in the '90s alone, all of them located at different points on the space-time continuum separating modern technology and primitive music. These range from the tribal ambient of Robert Rich collaborations Strata (1990) and Soma (1992) to darker albums like 1996's The Magnificent Void, plus many collaborations with dark ambient artist Vidna Obmana. Throughout the remainder of the 2000s, Roach remained extremely prolific. His release schedule included several Projekt titles, including 2002's Trance Spirits (with Jeffrey Fayman, Robert Fripp, and Momodou Kah) and the quadruple-disc Mystic Chords & Sacred Spaces (2003). He also collaborated extensively with fellow Projekt artists such as drummer Byron Metcalf and Erik Wøllo, and released several albums of minimalist drone as part of the Immersion series. He also self-released several titles on his own through Timeroom Editions. Over the next decade, Roach would show no signs of slowing down as he continued with a nonstop slew of new material under his own name, as well as collaborations and soundtrack work. Though new volumes of work appeared at a rate of more than three albums per year, standouts included more collaborations with Byron Metcalf, 2013's Future Flows, 2014's disparate releases of arid road trip music on The Desert Collection, and ambient explorations of mortality and humanity on The Delicate Forever. Roach began constructing an extensive analog modular synthesizer system in 2014, and in 2015 the album Skeleton Keys was composed entirely using this setup. In 2016, he released two full-lengths with Robert Logan (the more rhythmic Biosonic and the serene drone album Second Nature), as well as solo efforts This Place to Be and Shadow of Time. The ever-prolific composer remained busy throughout 2017 with releases like Painting in the Dark, Fade to Gray, Spiral Revelation, and The Passing. In August of that year, Roach returned to the Projekt label with the long-form ambient work Long Thoughts. The same label released 2018's Berlin School-styled Molecules of Motion, while Roach celebrated the 30th anniversary of Dreamtime Return with the self-released live recording Return to the Dreamtime. This was concurrently released with Electron Birth, containing one live performance and one studio creation. A gaseous ambient album titled Mercurius appeared in November of 2018. In 2019, Roach released collaborations with Radiant Mind (Heliosphere) and Sam Rosenthal with Nick Shadow (The Gesture of History), in addition to solo effort Bloom Ascension. The Sky Opens, recorded live at the First United Methodist Church in Pasadena, was released in 2020.© Jason Ankeny & Paul Simpson /TiVo Read more
A longstanding leader in contemporary electronic music, composer and multi-instrumentalist Steve Roach draws on the beauty and power of the Earth's landscapes to create lush, meditative soundscapes. Throughout his decades-long career, he's explored styles ranging from tribal rhythms to deep space music, and he's proven to be an enormous influence on several generations of ambient artists, trance producers, and new age/world music fusionists. First emerging with the Berlin School-styled Now in 1982, he came into his own with the 1984 minimalist epic Structures from Silence, often regarded as one of the best ambient albums of all time. Efforts such as 1988's equally heralded Dreamtime Return were directly inspired by desert life, incorporating field recordings and rhythms inspired by indigenous music traditions. Dark ambient works such as 1996's The Magnificent Void and 2000's Midnight Moon reflected the vast expanse of space. During the 2010s, he began building an extensive modular synthesizer/sequencer system, revisiting his Berlin School roots with albums such as 2015's Skeleton Keys. Roach has maintained an impossibly prolific work rate throughout his career without sacrificing quality or craftsmanship, resulting in countless hours of truly sublime, otherworldly music.
Born in California in 1955, Roach -- inspired by the music of Tangerine Dream, Klaus Schulze, and Vangelis -- taught himself to play synthesizer at the age of 20. Debuting in 1982 with the album Now, his early work was quite reminiscent of his inspirations, but with 1984's Structures from Silence, his music began taking enormous strides. The album's expansive and mysterious atmosphere was partly inspired by the natural beauty of the southwestern U.S. Subsequent works, including 1986's three-volume Quiet Music series, honed Roach's approach, his dense, swirling textures and hypnotic rhythms akin to environmental sound sculptures.
In 1988, inspired by the Peter Weir film The Last Wave, Roach journeyed to the Australian outback, with field recordings of aboriginal life inspiring his acknowledged masterpiece, the double-album Dreamtime Return. A year later, he teamed with percussionist Michael Shrieve and guitarist David Torn for The Leaving Time, an experiment in ambient jazz. After relocating to the desert outskirts of Tucson, Arizona, Roach established his own recording studio, Timeroom. In the years to follow, he grew increasingly prolific, creating both as a solo artist and in tandem with acts including Robert Rich, Michael Stearns, Jorge Reyes, and Kevin Braheny; in all, he recorded close to two-dozen major works in the '90s alone, all of them located at different points on the space-time continuum separating modern technology and primitive music. These range from the tribal ambient of Robert Rich collaborations Strata (1990) and Soma (1992) to darker albums like 1996's The Magnificent Void, plus many collaborations with dark ambient artist Vidna Obmana.
Throughout the remainder of the 2000s, Roach remained extremely prolific. His release schedule included several Projekt titles, including 2002's Trance Spirits (with Jeffrey Fayman, Robert Fripp, and Momodou Kah) and the quadruple-disc Mystic Chords & Sacred Spaces (2003). He also collaborated extensively with fellow Projekt artists such as drummer Byron Metcalf and Erik Wøllo, and released several albums of minimalist drone as part of the Immersion series. He also self-released several titles on his own through Timeroom Editions. Over the next decade, Roach would show no signs of slowing down as he continued with a nonstop slew of new material under his own name, as well as collaborations and soundtrack work. Though new volumes of work appeared at a rate of more than three albums per year, standouts included more collaborations with Byron Metcalf, 2013's Future Flows, 2014's disparate releases of arid road trip music on The Desert Collection, and ambient explorations of mortality and humanity on The Delicate Forever.
Roach began constructing an extensive analog modular synthesizer system in 2014, and in 2015 the album Skeleton Keys was composed entirely using this setup. In 2016, he released two full-lengths with Robert Logan (the more rhythmic Biosonic and the serene drone album Second Nature), as well as solo efforts This Place to Be and Shadow of Time. The ever-prolific composer remained busy throughout 2017 with releases like Painting in the Dark, Fade to Gray, Spiral Revelation, and The Passing. In August of that year, Roach returned to the Projekt label with the long-form ambient work Long Thoughts. The same label released 2018's Berlin School-styled Molecules of Motion, while Roach celebrated the 30th anniversary of Dreamtime Return with the self-released live recording Return to the Dreamtime. This was concurrently released with Electron Birth, containing one live performance and one studio creation. A gaseous ambient album titled Mercurius appeared in November of 2018. In 2019, Roach released collaborations with Radiant Mind (Heliosphere) and Sam Rosenthal with Nick Shadow (The Gesture of History), in addition to solo effort Bloom Ascension. The Sky Opens, recorded live at the First United Methodist Church in Pasadena, was released in 2020.
© Jason Ankeny & Paul Simpson /TiVo
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Origins
Steve Roach
Electronic - Released by Fortuna Records on Jan 1, 1993
Steve Roach has an impressive body of recordings; however, Origins may be his most striking release to date. Continually intrigued by Aboriginal cultu ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Temple Of The Melting Dawn
Steve Roach
Electronic - Released by Timeroom Editions on Apr 2, 2021
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
Quiet Music (35th Anniversary Remastered 3-Hour Collection) (2021 Remastered)
Steve Roach
Electronic - Released by Projekt on Apr 16, 1986
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
Beyond Earth & Sky
Steve Roach
Electronic - Released by Projekt on Nov 5, 2021
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
Structures From Silence (30th anniversary Deluxe Remastered Edition)
Steve Roach
New Age - Released by Projekt on Jan 1, 1984
Originally released in 1984, Structures from Silence turned out to be one of Roach's most successful and acclaimed releases over time; widely consider ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
A Soul Ascends
Steve Roach
Electronic - Released by Projekt on Jul 10, 2020
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
Quiet Music (The Original 3-Hour Collection)
Steve Roach
New Age - Released by Projekt on May 25, 1986
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
The Sky Opens (Live 2019)
Steve Roach
Electronic - Released by Projekt on Feb 21, 2020
The Sky Opens is a two-hour recording of one of Steve Roach's famed Ambient Church concerts, specifically one that took place at the First United Meth ...
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
Kairos
Steve Roach
Electronic - Released by Timeroom Editions on Jul 1, 2006
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Second Nature
Steve Roach
Relaxation - Released by Projekt on Apr 29, 2016
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Texture Maps: The Lost Pieces Vol. 3
Steve Roach
Electronic - Released by Timeroom Editions on Nov 1, 2003
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Mystic Chords & Sacred Spaces (complete edition)
Steve Roach
New Age - Released by Projekt on Jun 3, 2003
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Immersion : Three
Steve Roach
New Age - Released by Projekt on Jun 5, 2007
The next release in this particular series of Steve Roach recordings counts as one of his most ambitious -- not only is it the third volume, but it's ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
The Desert Eternal (LiveStream 09-26-2020)
Steve Roach
Electronic - Released by Projekt on Dec 18, 2020
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
Into the Majestic
Steve Roach
Electronic - Released by Timeroom Editions on Jan 23, 2021
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
Live at SoundQuest Fest 2021 (Live)
Steve Roach
Electronic - Released by Timeroom Editions on Aug 6, 2021
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
Stillpoint
Steve Roach
Electronic - Released by Timeroom Editions on Feb 7, 2020
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
The Delicate Forever
Steve Roach
New Age - Released by Projekt on Jul 22, 2014
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
The Desert Collection (Volume One)
Steve Roach
New Age - Released by Projekt Archive on Jul 11, 2014
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Painting In The Dark
Steve Roach
Electronic - Released by Timeroom Editions on Jan 1, 2016
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Live Transmission (From The Drone Zone at SomaFM) (Live)
Steve Roach
New Age - Released by Projekt on Aug 13, 2013
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo