Search - Dean De Benedictis :: Salvaging the Past

Salvaging the Past
Dean De Benedictis
Salvaging the Past
Genres: Dance & Electronic, New Age, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (10) - Disc #1

Dean De Benedictus is known for passionately exploiting his interests in a variety of musical styles and concepts. His music is a celebration of age-old artistic attempts to tie the essential common thread between opposing...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Dean De Benedictis
Title: Salvaging the Past
Members Wishing: 2
Total Copies: 0
Label: Spotted Peccary
Original Release Date: 1/1/2005
Re-Release Date: 9/13/2005
Genres: Dance & Electronic, New Age, Pop
Styles: Electronica, Meditation, Adult Alternative
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 600028170121

Synopsis

Album Description
Dean De Benedictus is known for passionately exploiting his interests in a variety of musical styles and concepts. His music is a celebration of age-old artistic attempts to tie the essential common thread between opposing genres and mentalities, as well as draw a natural sense of mystery out of his own work. Venturing into gritty, experimental, and edgy elements of electronic music, Salvaging the Past explores the art of instrumental music with an honesty and integrity that reflects the artist. This is an album that is raw and direct, capturing a vital heart of true electronic music while suggesting more thought-provoking themes. This album contains a powerful mix of chillout/space/ambient electronic textures with outstanding audio quality and packaging
 

CD Reviews

Electronic, not new age. Ambient, not chillout.
Manny Hernandez | Bay Area, CA | 11/16/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I ran into "Salvaging the Past" thanks to the program Echoes, in NPR, that mentioned his name and compared his work to Brian Eno's. While I feel the comparison may be a bit of a stretch, I am happy to have gotten this album, since it makes me feel like I am listening to what Vangelis would have evolved into, had he not gotten stuck doing epic scores.



There's some ethnic bits in this album and there's a certain Jean-Michel Jarre-like feel that always keeps it at a safe distance from turning into a formula-based New Age product, with a foot well into David Darling territory. Recommendable, by all means to all fans of the electronic genre (think Tangerine Dream, Jarre, Vangelis)."
Salvaging the Past
John C. Dumitru | San Francisco, CA USA | 02/28/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Dean's music comes at your brain like a sneak attack, with intelligence, feints, layers of shapeshifter sounds and coyote attitude that keeps you listening, wondering, "What is next?" Because you do not know, will not know, until after many listenings, the sinuous tracks may get gently worn into your gray matter. This music is a different kind of soundtrack, to Dean's inner movie, and perhaps you can try and make it fit yours too, but it never will completely, as this music is intensely personal, intensely Dean's own. I'm just glad that he makes the great effort to get it just right, and, when he is ready, shares it with the rest of us."
Dean De Benedictis "Salvaging the Past"
Stephen A. Ruby | Oshkosh, WI | 01/14/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"There is a lot of electronic music these days and it is apparent that either some of it fits (musically), or it doesn't. Dean's latest excursion into the realm of "ambient/sequencer" music takes this listener to the edge of infinity via "Salvaging the Past".

I have a host of releases by Surface 10 (Dean DeBenedictis) but this latest offering by one of L.A.'s most potent producers of modern electronica has a new edge to it not found in most of this type of instrumental meandering, rather, it breathes a new life and takes you on a journey to an expansive openess of vast landscapes, with gentle washes full of electronic color.. The listener will be exposed to Dean's studio prowess, recording technique, and synthetic textures by hearing this latest release, and by no means, skip through this, listen to it in it's entirety to get the full impact of creativity that went into it's development.

I highly recommend this recording for your library, but by no mean's compare this to such legendary composers Tangerine Dream or Klaus Schulze, it is of itself a fresh set of compositions that go beyond that retro "berlin-school" style of sequencing that everyone seems to base their final result as the only style of E-music ever conceived, it is fresh and it is revealing, like the composer intended."