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Teimo Permafrost
 
 

Teimo Permafrost

Thomas KonerAudio CD
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Audio CD (April 15, 1997)
  • Number of Discs: 2
  • Label: Efa Imports
  • ASIN: B00000B49G
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #599,814 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Disc: 1
1. Ilira
2. Andenes
3. Teimo
4. Nieve Penitentes 1
5. Nieve Penitentes 2
6. Nieve Penitentes 3
7. Teimo. Schluss
8. Ruska
Disc: 2
1. Nival
2. Serac
3. Firn
4. Permafrost
5. Meta Incognita
6. [Untitled Track]

 

Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An experience..., October 19, 2003
By 
Craig (Sydney Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Teimo Permafrost (Audio CD)
Words will quite simply not do justice to this brilliant collection of ambient soundscapes. Thomas Koner has produced what can only be considered as THE quintessential dark ambient album. There are many fine dark ambient producers making fantastic soundscapes at the moment. Some do it just as well as Koner, but none better.

This album is dark. However, not in the sense of Lustmord darkness. Listening to lustmord you get the feeling that some immense beast is lurking around the corner and will soon be doing nasty things to you. It's more hellish than Koner. Teimo/Permafrost provides a kind of immensity, a kind of enourmous solitude and thoughtful atmosphere. Some of it I think would make a good ambient soundtrack for lord of the rings in both Mordor and the Mines of Moria - odd noises barely audible, carried on the wind float past you and lead you to the inevitable question - what the hell made that noise?

I really is hard to capture the feeling of this album in words. It reminds me of the slow grind of plate tectonics, of the stately orbit of neutron stars. Massive submarines moving through the depths of the ocean and fading into the darkness. Of desolate and misty plains in the middle of lands long forgotten by man. The immense beauty of nature.

It really has to be experienced with a big, high quality hi-fi system to get the full effect. My system is pretty good, but I had the pleasure to hear it on a $15,000 system not long ago, and, well, wow...

Please do yourself a favour and buy it.

Note: Many people these days are classing any music that is not suitable for insane all night raves as ambient. Any music you can sit and listen to in your house! This album is REAL ambient. You won't hear a single beat or piece of percussion that hasn't been processed beyond recognition here. This is just a warning, as many people i've talked to have bought this album only to be dissappointed at just how ambient it is. Perhaps you should download before you buy, just to check its what you think it will be. But then BUY IT!

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Feel the ambience, May 8, 2002
This review is from: Teimo Permafrost (Audio CD)
Let's get this straight first - this is not the sort of thing that will appeal to everyone. I've been told on numerous occasions : "What's that you're listening to. That's not music".
I guess it all comes down to what you define music as.
Koner obtains his effects from close-miked gongs, and adds some pretty heavy effects (relatively speaking) to them after that. The overall feel could best be described as being like a huge submarine scraping along the ocean floor. It is pure ambience, and it is minimal and bleak at times too.

I admit that this sort of music just does it for me. I have all his albums and can (possibly sadly) tell each album apart from a brief listen. There are differences there if you are prepared to *listen* to the music, and not just stick it on in the background.

It does take a little work to get something out of this, and the more you put in, the more you'll get out (cliche cliche - I know).
This is a superb double CD set, at a great price. Might just be worth the money to expand your horizons a little

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14 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Dark Ambient, December 6, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Teimo Permafrost (Audio CD)
As dark ambient musicians go, Köner is one of the best. The material here represents that genre in its purest form, with no concessions to such diluting influences as melody or rhythm. There's slowly drifting layers of dark synths, deep bass drones, all the usual stuff by the bucketload. Abyssal, sepulchral, subliminal, and so forth. Where Lustmord's older stuff had a dark, slightly demonic edge to it that suggested something nasty lurking just out of hearing, Köner's Teimo is cold, bleak, lifeless and inhospitable. Note that those aren't criticisms, that's just the way it sounds - Teimo calls up images of barren wildernesses scoured clean of life by howling winds. Not even lichen stands a chance in Köner's blasted wasteland. Well, almost - one track ("Nieve Penitentes 2") is rather more suggestive of bombers overhead than anything else. Permafrost, by contrast, takes the listener on a journey below the surface of this barren world. While it shares many of the same sonic ingredients, it's got more of an edge to it, and is a little noisier. We're not interested in lifeless wastelands and howling icy winds here, now we're floating through kilometres deep permafrost (well, I had to work the title in somehow), hearing the grinding of continental plates, listening to granite, the only sounds those of geology. Picture the lifeless landscape of Mars as seen by Pathfinder. Now imagine the same landscape - on a Bank Holiday. Sorry, I can't think of a particularly good US equivalent, since nothing ever seems to close down completely over here. Think of...umm, Nebraska, maybe? That's how utterly devoid of living things, how inhospitable Köner's soundscapes seem. All in all, good stuff, even if I can't adequately describe it. Fans of Lustmord-style dark ambient will lap it up. There's no direct comparisons to Lustmord's work - I can't say "this sounds a bit like Heresy" or anything like that. The only Lustmord that takes this bleak approach is The Place Where The Black Stars Hang, but there's not really a comparison there, Köner's work suggest a different kind of emptiness. It seems as good an introduction to dark ambient as any - Köner is, after all, one of the major names in the genre, and these two albums are almost definitively dark ambient.
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