Reprobus: Sonoluminescence reprobus sonoluminescence. reprobus sonoluminescence (SelfReleased - 1999) The (beautifully rendered) skeletal cover art may be http://www.spiderbytes.com/ambientrance/rep-s.htm
Extractions: Self-Released The (beautifully rendered) skeletal cover art may be more appropriate for the Hallowe'en season than it is for the bright and sprightly electrobeat sounds found in sonoluminescence . Self-confessed "electronic adrenaline junkie" reprobus has obviously poured his heart into these straightforward dance structures which are both retro and active. When you're finished at the AmbiEntrance, click on over to the Reprobus website to learn more. The bouncy beats and ratatat cymbals of love, to be the slave meet with assorted entities, from shimmering synth curtains, to e-piano notes, to tribal percussion to a load of house-y dance effects. Documenting the sounds that influenced Reprobus, very definite old school influences abound in electronic adrenaline junkie which also incorporates a certain amount of sweeping majesty into the track. mantra grooves more slowly, awash in light burbles, bassy rhythmic patterns and spaciously thudding beats. The dreamy oscillations and skyward synth veils of awakening are firmly pinned down by "classic" beat elements (the old robotic handclaps even). The cymbal-heavy, rapid-fire percussion of
Extractions: Science Technology Acoustics, Ultrasound and Vibration Ultrasound ... Go to Directory Home Web Pages - ranked by popularity The Physics of "Chain Reaction" http://www.aip.org/physnews/preview/1996/chain/ Physics News Preview, American Institute of Physics Public Information Division Sonoluminescence and Medical Ultrasound http://www.aip.org/physnews/graphics/html/sonomed.htm Physics News Graphics (American Institute of Physics) Physics News Graphics: The Sonoluminescence Process http://www.aip.org/physnews/graphics/html/sono1.htm American Institute of Physics Sonoluminescence: an Introduction http://www-phys.llnl.gov/N_Div/sonolum/ Answers to questions "What is sonoluminescence?", "Why is it so interesting?" and "What do we know about it?" The Casimir Effect: Physical Manifestations of Zero Point Energy http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/9901011