Song picture
The Next Age of Adventure
Comment Share
License   $0.00
Free download
Tenth song of FAWM 2010. Possibly the theme song to some future space adventure show :D
Commercial uses of this track are NOT allowed.
Adaptations of this track are NOT allowed to be shared.
You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the artist.
Artist picture
Jazz-influenced progressive rock.
artist is a middle and high school science teacher residing in Sterling, VA, USA. He switched to teaching after a career in medicinal chemistry. He is a member of the Mvskoke (Creek) Nation, a Native American tribe originally indigenous to the Southeastern United States. As a musician, he plays bass, guitar, Hammond organ, keys, and various drums. Many of these appear on his first album, , it focuses on a jazz-influenced rock sound; however, like , it is almost exclusively built using odd time signatures (such as 5/4 and 7/8). In this way, although it was born in a different world, it retains its connection to the past. One more move: this time to a new house. It was a difficult change, and out of the struggle was born a new sound. is just that: a collection of jazzy, funky, cool -- and most of all, original -- compositions. In addition to the works above, Bruce is also on , where he releases raw (unmixed) tracks from his albums and other works for use by remix artists.
Song Info
Charts
Peak #666
Peak in subgenre #67
Author
Bruce H. McCosar
Rights
2010
Uploaded
February 10, 2010
Track Files
MP3
MP3 3.3 MB 128 kbps 3:37
Story behind the song
Song #10 of FAWM 2010 -- "The Next Age of Adventure." To me, it sounds like the theme song to some future TV series about space. Of course that's all we have now ... TV series ... the last age of adventure ended when Apollo 17 splashed down in the Pacific. Now we're back to bickering and trying to solve the same old problems that haven't been solved in 5000 years of civilization. But just for once, we did something spectacular. Maybe one day the next age of adventure will come. The instruments: Two guitars -- the clean sound of a Fender Telecaster, the overdriven sound of an Ibanez S620. Fretless J-Bass. MIDI drums, played manually. And that awesome synth sound? Waldorf Blofeld. This patch was highly sensitive to key velocity. -- This song was composed and performed using natural rhythm only -- without a metronome, click track, or drum machine. "No Robots Allowed" is my theme, and here are the rules I'm following: http://bmccosar.wordpress.com/2010/01/24/the-robot-rules/
On Playlists
Comments
Please sign up or log in to post a comment.