Exposed to electronic music in 1993 with a demo disk of Tetra compositor from Bram Graveland of UltraForce which came with creative's SoundBlaster 8bit mono card. Playing for years with the demo with no possibility to save, dubbing most to tapes which are now long gone. (thankfully). Eventually moving onto Fast Tracker versions 1 and 2, Impulse Tracker . Releasing old 4,6 and 8 channel .mods to local BBS's.
Joined the ranks of the Kosmic Free Music Foundation in 1994 releasing all material for free public consumption until its demise around 2000-2001.
A Few full length albums where made available through Area51 Records (KFMF's indie label), Anonymous.Hate and Negative Youth where the title's, but are no longer available.
Related Linkage:
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molotovbliss.com
Kosmic.org
IndiSoundz
WikiPedia on K.F.M.F.
Deviant Art Portfolio
Amiga Music Preservation
Pics From my T-mobile Wing
More tracks on Dimension Music
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What happens when we listen to music? I guess any given person could conceivably provide a multitude of reasons as to why, or why they don't like a particular song, artist or album. Some people may find appeal in a certain rhythm track or perhaps a memorable vocal melody, or both. I guess it depends on why you listen to music. While some listeners like to dance, others prefer pure listening - almost a study of the music, its elements and how it all fits together.One of the characteristics of Boomer's music, that I exceedingly appreciate, is how in many cases, he attempts to provide a mood - an audio backdrop that may precede the musical body of the track, or may pop up somewhere along the way to provide an insight to the disposition of the subject matter. Self-interpretation, I feel, is the key to understanding some of the material. In "Divided Dream", for example, Boomer uses an audio track to lay down a strong feeling of tension. Buried deep in the background is the quiet drone of a television set. In the immediate background, the voices of an angry man and an indifferent woman dominate over melancholy electro-string swells.
To me, it seems that what we're hearing is through the ears of an observer, a child, perhaps, listening to his parents in the midst of yet another meaningless argument. Censorship is abandoned here, and rightfully so. How does one communicate a raw feeling by watching their words? A great deal of Boomer's music is dark - but by no means is it depressing. Emotional? Yes, and to convey a feeling to your audience and have them react to your message is paramount to the composer - and a very good sign that you're doing something right.
In contrast, Boomer also writes some great, laid-back trip hop that demonstrates excellent use of rhythm and audio tweaks. Boomer says: "I can't really pinpoint my style, its just something that has evolved over the years. I use anything I hear that I can sample and play with (television, AM-FM radio, people, things, etc.)."
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- IndiSoundz