The Ring Cycle
Sciencenv
Performed By
Sciencenv
Album UPC
039517199549
CD Baby Track ID
12146400
Label
Fine Vermin
Released
2013-04-30
BPM
121
Rated
0
ISRC
ushm21387322
Year
2013
Spotify Plays
42
Writers
Writer
Larry Jay Davis
Songwriter ID
686014
Pub Co
Fine Vermin
Composer
Larry Jay Davis
ClearanceFacebook Sync License,Traditional Sync,YouTube Sync ServiceOne Stop
Rights Controlled
Master and Publishing Grant
Rights
One-Stop: Master + 100% Pub Grant
Original/Cover/Public Domain
original
Country
United States - California - SF
Description
A mix of progressive and symphonic rock, jazz fusion, and ambient music.
Notes
The Last Album Before the End of Time is ScienceNV's third - and clearly our most ambitious - album.
Even before we had finished mastering our second album, we had begun working on material for our third. It's true: we're essentially impatient and anxious to perform new music. We always resurrect our version of a classical piece of music, and we already had our hearts set on recording a remarkable ScienceNV-oid version of Holst's Mars. In addition, The Ring Cycle was mostly written. We tentatively agreed that we were likely to finish writing and recording all of our new music by December 21, 2012; the new album's title emerged almost immediately. (We're pathologic optimists. Of course that's not how it worked out.) In 2011, David was beginning to frequent the Prelinger Library in San Francisco, where artwork of the "Space Age" was archived. Many of our new pieces had astronomical or other scientific themes, so we decided to go with the - um - scientific fiction - theme to tie together everything.
Even before we had finished mastering our second album, we had begun working on material for our third. It's true: we're essentially impatient and anxious to perform new music. We always resurrect our version of a classical piece of music, and we already had our hearts set on recording a remarkable ScienceNV-oid version of Holst's Mars. In addition, The Ring Cycle was mostly written. We tentatively agreed that we were likely to finish writing and recording all of our new music by December 21, 2012; the new album's title emerged almost immediately. (We're pathologic optimists. Of course that's not how it worked out.) In 2011, David was beginning to frequent the Prelinger Library in San Francisco, where artwork of the "Space Age" was archived. Many of our new pieces had astronomical or other scientific themes, so we decided to go with the - um - scientific fiction - theme to tie together everything.
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