In Love With Magnatune’s Ambient Music

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Wil Wheaton talks about his love for reading whilst using ambient music as background ambience in this article. And why not I say!
Read the article here.

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In Between Words: Christopher Bissonnette

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Ambient Music Blog announced yesterday the new album: In Between Words by Christopher Bissonnette. Check out the article here.

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New Free Mp3 Download Music At Ambient Music Garden

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New mp3 music for download has become available at Ambient Music Garden.com

Today Kesseny has released some of his current music on Ambient Music Garden as 128kb/s versions for free.

Check the free samples below or click here to go directly to the free mp3 download category at Ambient Music Garden straight away!

SimogenJo (Calm) Free Mp3 Download. Here’s a Sample of the full piece.


The higher quality mp3 versions remain at a low affordable download price also.

September Morning


Here’s one more for you all!

September Brown



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New Ambient Relaxation Mediation Music For Spring / Summer 2008

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Go straight to Ambient Music Garden’s music here.

Hi! Here’s some new music from Ambient Music Garden for Spring / Summer 2008.

We have a new category as well: Dark Ambient has been added to our collection and begins with two albums listed below.

 

New Ambient Relaxation Music

Asoma: Many of you have already listened and downloaded Asoma’s new offering: Spa Music which is two long pieces offered as an album for relaxation, mediation and therapy.
Lazy Hammock: Island Lover. Lazy’s latest warmed up offering is popular with chillout lovers. Island Lover brings some diversity and some gorgeous tracks together in a single chillout album.
Dave Ross: Half of Skywirters brings us a haunting relaxing dark ambient album named Midwinter. Cool for meditation and moody atmospheric ambiences.
The Colour Of Time: offer up their first full album to Ambient Music Garden in the shape of Neon Waves, A dark ambient collection that is the second of our dark ambient category albums.
Graphite: Graphite has three great new tracks / mixes: Mysterious Girl, I’m Me Again and Beautiful Nights to compliment his down-tempo collection here..and moving a little into ambient too!
Nick & Gerald: The transatlantic duo have created a new ambient piece called ‘In Absentia‘.
A quick reminder: last season we offered up Paul Adams and Dave Hoffman for the first time but weren’t able to bring you more details at that time.

For starters check out the New Age / Nature Inspired Ambient Album ‘The Property Of Water ‘by Paul Adams …

…and also Dave Hoffman’s downtempo ‘Prairie Skies’.

Click here and check out Ambient Music Garden’s music here.


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Attune your Spirit & Putting Affirmative Words to Music

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This is an article kindly given to me by Errol Francis of Asoma Music who sells his music for download at Ambient Music Garden.

Thank you Errol.

Attune your Spirit & Putting Affirmative Words to Music

A Message from Errol and Lisa Francis

The Attune Your Spirit CD series is shared with you in the Spirit of Love.

We have been studying and experiencing how the universal laws, when applied (and also when they are not applied) affect the conditions of our lives. Throughout all this study and practice we looked for a way to really serve the higher Good.

Our personal family relationship is one of togetherness; we really enjoy being together. Our prayer has been to serve, together, while continuing to study and practice the Truth Principles. Our prayers were answered and we were inspired to share the power of praise, in word and in song. 

The materials are designed to make the listener/participant experience increased Joy, Health, Wealth and Happiness. A lifting up of the heart and mind occurs when both speaking and singing the same words of Truth, using both left and right brains. Daily practice is encouraged, in order to stay in tune with all the good that is everywhere equally present.

Our prayer now is that those who use this method, experience daily upliftment. That, with practice, becomes the new consciousness: a consciousness of joy, a grateful state of mind, and a song of praise in the heart.

Read on to learn more:

Let’s first take a look at the transformative qualities of music; then we’ll explore the innate power of the spoken word. We’ll learn why the combination of these is key to accelerating our ability to access the powers of the Universe.

After listening to a piece of music, just notice your feeling, and how does it make you feel? Usually music will make you feel more uplifted, more energetic, more alive and vibrant – and why is that? Let’s take a look at it.

What is music?
Music is sound vibration, wave, and frequency when played in concession or unison or harmony. These resonating frequencies impact the emotional centers into action or inaction.

As some of you already know, having learned from gurus and teachers, everything in our Universe is vibrational. We live in an ocean of motion. And we can also tell you that music transcends space and time, and is multidimensional. Not just sound, but the actual  movement of sound vibration in its  varying frequency, creating music, melody and harmony. That does something to people.

As music moves through our physical form, it is key to unlocking the emotional centers and also stimulating memory and nerve centers. One reason we know that music stimulates these emotional centers, especially for memory, is the effect of advertising jingles and sound bytes such as the Intel signature sound. Or what about when your favorite song pops into your head -  you are quite often  instantly transported back to a specific event. It’s not just an emotional attachment, it’s an actual memory attachment to that sound, to that piece of music.

Music strikes a chord within us. This is called resonance, when you’re vibrating at the same frequency or level as the music, it goes directly into our cellular memory structure, and then it’s easier to retrieve. Like tht song you just can’t get rid of.

An example of resonance: you could sing or hum a tone to a guitar or piano. You will find that when you sound that certain note, the corresponding piano or guitar string will start to vibrate to that frequency and will then re-sound it back to you.

We’re all like this. We find levels of frequency with each other, with things that we like and things we do not like. And this is how things are attracted or repelled according to the level of vibration. So music is very key in transforming  a lot of things within us. It can actually wash through us, and wash out our undesirable memory traits, and instill pleasurable and desirable memory traits.

Now that’s a very very encapsulated view of music as sound vibration.


Now when we attach the affirmative word, we add another component to this. We use words every day, some good, some not so good. When we use affirmative words in this process, we’re using a number of important laws. One is the Law of Mind Action, which is “Thought held in mind produce their kind.”  So what we want to do is keep a desirable thought in our mind action so that it produces the most desirable fruit.

The 2nd law is the power of the spoken word, which is “Ask and ye shall receive.” “In the beginning there was the word, and without the word, nothing was made.” So words are dynamic because they create. And speech is the very breath of God. So let’s see what actually happens when we speak. You take a breath and fill your lungs with air: which is light, the energy of life. The air goes through your larynx, which is the music box of the mind; it is a power centre or chakra: a very very powerful place. This is like a vibrational amplifier of thought. You are bringing that thought out of the unseen into the seen.

The other thing that happens when we say a word,  is our lips shape the words. Our lips shape this light vibration into word. We shape and mold the Universal Substance, which is the life force of our lungs through the larynx, or music box of the mind, and we shape it into words, and shape it into our world. So this is how we become co-creators, by shaping our own world, by speaking it into existence. So keep in mind, that even the not so good stuff that is sent out, must be transformed by denials or cancelled out because this also is going into our universal substance and is presented to us on a daily basis as our moment-by-moment experience. By combining your affirmations with the sound vibration of music, and by singing those affirmations, you add this powerful powerful tool to manifest your own desires, your own world, your own universe.

 

Since emotion is one of the keys to demonstrating our desire, we need to activate those feelings. This is where and why you can use singing.

I believe somewhere in the Bible, or somewhere in the mystic teachings, there’s a phrase that says, “Blessed are those that make a joyous sound.” Another phrase I seem to remember is “Those who sing pray twice.” So singing adds emotion to your thought.

If ever you find yourself in distress, simply hum. Simply find a melodic something to take up that space, and you’ll find yourself lifting out of that lower vibration instantly, just by singing, or humming. So singing adds emotions to your thoughts and words. And music opens up the emotional centers, and activates them into creating a link to memory. So we set up a triune vibrational energy field, which the Universal Substance responds to with yes, yes YES! So we have 3 elements coming together as one. We have thought, which is wave, we have emotion, which is pulse, and we have word, which is form. And when this all happens we call this coherency. Coherency is the action of stitching together, the harmonious connections of several parts, so the whole thing works together.

Example: We have a 100 watt light bulb. Now the light in the room if you have a 100 watt light bulb, will radiate that light all around the room. It’ll take that light and disperse it. But when you condense the light, say in a 100 watt laser, that laser can then cut steel. The difference between this is  in the light bulb, the light is diffused all over the place, it’s sporadic, whereas the laser gets all the light to work together in one stream.

So this is why series like Attune Your Spirit works so well, because it’s putting all that energy, all that light, into one area, so that the focus can be clearly defined. We can use the series for manifesting more Joy, more Health, more Wealth, more Happiness, for ourselves and for humanity.

In concluding, we have put together a series of affirmative phrases, and sung those affirmative phrases in a very joy-filled and uplifting musical sound scape. It is provided it for 4 main areas of life, which are Joy, Health, Wealth and Happiness.
I invite you to come to Attune Your Spirit and enjoy a sample of an Attune Your Spirit session.

Sign up for our newsletter, which features additional free MP3’s, articles and tips on living well.

Many Blessings to you now and always.

The Asoma Music Team

Check out Asoma Music here.


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Creating Successful Relaxation & Meditation Music; Sound And Composition

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Creating Successful Relaxation & Meditation Music; Sound And Composition

Recently I gave a positive critique to a talented musician who had submitted a piece for my comment with regards its suitability for therapeutic environments. The piece was lovely, however had a number of points about the piece that inspired me to consider what elelements in my opinion make a successfull relaxation and meditation music piece. Here’s my opinion.

I must say I am not trying to be an expert here. After all, the therapists themselves know what works for them specifically within their own therapeutic environment and discipline, and with each specific client of there’s. Not everyone is relaxed by the same type of music. However, generally, and in my experience the following does provide a good list of considerations. Please let me know if you have any additional thoughts on this list.

Key Point: Consider You Are Making Music To Communicate With The Unconscious.

Unlike popular music (and others) that aims to engage your mind, relaxation and meditation music aims to connect with your unconscious, so less is more. Less Instruments, less notes and less melody as well.

Beat & percussion

Percussion has to be subtle if it even exists within the composition at all. A beat provides a link to your heart beat so if you introduce a beat; you need to be careful what heart rate you may be inspiring. A beat is also engaging. A beat can wake up and stimulate rather than relax. Percussion can provide ambience but once it forms a beat it may raise the consciousness of a listener at the time when the therapist is trying to relax a client and move closer towards unconsciousness.

Its great for sitting at home chilling out but my opinion is that percussion can be just a little engaging of the mind, its like it puts you on a treadmill in some sort of way rather than keeps you in a timeless space that other sounds can create. When I think of soundtrack music, the percussion comes up when its time to move on within the storyline, get on your bike and peddle. So, without percussion, I think you are left in a timeless space where the sounds bounce around a room that reflects nature and so relaxes.

A subtle introduction of a percussive beat can help to wake a client up at the end of their session. So if timed for the ending of a piece of music, this could be useful to suggest subconsciously to a client that its wakeup time and their heart begins to pump slightly faster.

To engage a listener in therapy music is something I am quite passionate about. Read on to hear more.


Sudden noises or instrumental chords

Anything sudden is definitely not right for relaxation. Don’t even think about it. It’s not even useful for waking people up since it is too much of a sharp wakeup call.

Choose your tones well to blend

Much like any composition arrangement you need to think about the collection of sounds that your instruments will be making. Make sure you take some time to spread out your sounds in the audio spectrum and so avoid making everything muddy and unclear. Conversely, don’t try to cram so much into the dynamic range that it complicates what is going on and is too busy and not relaxing at all.

Consider the sound of each instrument and the contribution it makes to your piece. Avoid high sounds particularly as they are not felt by most tastes as relaxing but are more stimulating (hence the use of violins in horror movies!!)

Focus on warm flowing low sounds before you layer on more specific higher sounds such as bells and flutes.

Instruments

Look for a set of complimenting instruments that are played calmly and not with passion. For instance, a violin tends to focus on high frequency notes and is often used to represent high emotions. Conversely a tenor saxophone can be relaxing but also arousing, both best avoided in our therapeutic environment. A bass, particularly a double bass can have a woolly ‘rounded’ deep note that doesn’t ask for a lot of concentration nor forces its clarity onto your mind to interpret. Distant flowing strings (as long as they aren’t too high frequency) can lay a background for other more gentle sounds to sit on. Bells and flutes can risk creating a stereotype but if used sparingly and not flooding a piece of music can offer up some melting relaxing feelings for listeners.


 

 

 

Sounds

Generally, people find the sound of trickling water a calming sound. Too fast a trickle and you might be inspiring someone to go to the bathroom instead! Likewise the sound of waves against a sea shore can take someone away from there current environment to relax but more stormy waves will raise their consciousness that they might be listening to an oncoming storm

Birds twittering, trees rustling both connect us back to nature and anything that does that calmly, like the trickling water above, will provide as good a relaxing feeling as a shot in the arm with something less natural.

The sounds of voices can tend to relax, however the spoken word engages the mind with its lyric which isnt good for keeping someone in the unconscious, unless you are delivering a guided meditation piece in which the objective of the piece is to take someone on a guided imaginary journey and facilitating this journey from beginning to end.

Melody

As hard as I try, I continually fail on this one myself. I am always looking for an engaging melody in my compositions. Therein lies the fault; therapeutic music in my opinion should not be too engaging. Avoid strong melodic pieces that connect with the mood of the listener too much. Consider ballads for example. They aim to express love and passion; too strong an emotional connection for relaxation and therapy music.

One needs to look at a composition in a totally different way from the aim of most music, which is to engage the listener and draw them in more and more into the flow and storyline of a musical piece.

Almost (but not quite) the opposite is required for therapy and relaxation music. You need subtlety in everything. You are creating an ambience, and environment for therapy and relaxation, not a soundtrack to the latest blockbuster.

Arrangement

A relaxation and therapy piece of music needs to not differ too much as it flows from beginning, to middle and then to end. It shouldn’t have changes in tempo, nor changes in the subtle melody.

What is important, and very useful for therapists is to have a piece of music that begins slowly and forms a relax-down for 10 minutes. This helps the therapist relax the client for the therapy. So a slow build of instruments towards a plateau where the therapy takes place, and then at the ending, a slow removal of instruments leaving the lower noted instruments ending last.

Duration

A 40-minute piece with 10 minutes relax-down and 10-minute wake up gives a client a full 20 minutes of focused therapy. Add more to the middle to give therapists options of longer therapy sessions but no more than 50 minutes in total is the norm, unless a therapist specifically requests it. For example, A therapist might be interested in commissioning a piece that flows throughout a longer introduction session with a client where he gets to understand them before then moving into a therapeutic session. In this way, a piece could be continually playing from when a client enters the room to when they leave. This could enhance the therapeutic experience considerably.

Lastly, all I can say is, give it a go. Don’t be shy. If you are a musician looking for ways to sell your music then music within therapy is a real opportunity. Contact me and tell me all about your piece and send me a sample. I promise to respond as soon as I can.

Guy


Click Here AmbientMusicGarden.com. The ambient relaxation & meditation mp3 download music site.

Here’s some more thoughts on the subject of composing music for therapeutic practice. Located at Dr Harry Henshaw’s Blog titled “The Therapeutic Nature of Therapeutic Relaxation Music.” Thank you Dr Harry Henshaw for this article.

Copyright Kesseny ltd 2008. All Rights Reserved.


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F4b Changes its Name to Ambient Music Garden

Posted: December 2007 in New Artists & Music - Tags: ,
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Hi! we have a new name! For a while now we’ve been pondering the need (or not) to change our name to something that better reflects us. Ambient Music Garden does just that. We will continue to focus on ambient music and its use in therapy and for ambient fans. The ‘garden’ bit? well, gardens are a place of tranquility and relaxation so we felt this created an atmosphere of peace that we aim to continue to portray within our music community here at Ambient Music Garden. Let us know what you think.
New Ambient & Chill-out Artists For Winter 2007. Mild as it is here in the South West of the UK its time to batten down the hatches for the winter and warm ourselves up by the fire. To help us is our community of artist plus some new guys I would like to welcome below:
Mel: Native to Britain but located in Austria Mel has created a collection of Chakra inspired ambient pieces which will be great for chakra lead therapies. This work has already been proven and worked well with therapists and it has been used within a film.
Red Robin: RR joins and offers up an atmospheric flute track that is perfect for escaping to a fantasy world for relaxation and would do wonders within a therapeutic environment .
Graphite: From Romania provides a mix of piano ambient with a hint of Ibiza.
Dreamscapes: From Canada offers up his first solo work. Read More about Dreamscapes in his artist page.
Asoma: Also from Canada and providing a wide range of albums for relaxation and therapy from a solar powered studio.
Paul Adams. Paul provides us with a range of new acoustic ambient albums sprinkled with emotive electronic pads. This month we launch his ambient flavoured Christmas album. More to come in 2008.
David Hoffman. Dave, who also creates with Paul offers up his Christmas album which is loosely describable as down-tempo but with influences of jazz too. Less ambient, more relaxing. give it a spin.
We also have new music from:
Heavencorn: New ambient music from the heart of Latvia. Sonic layers of synth pads and vocals.

lazy Hammock: Lazy has a new Yoga inspired album for us!! we are privilidged to have LH’s album here and all the tracks have a 30 second sample for you to listen to. LH’s new album, Lost In Dreams is classic Chill-Out Downtempo and provides the feel of warm summer eves that will warm your limbs up as you meditate and go through your yogic routines.
Sagar: We have a selection of new acoustic pieces from Sagar here too. Beautiful ambient pieces from Sagar’s new album Graveyard Shift sold individually.

Happy Christmas everyone! thank you for reading and we hope to see you back at Ambient Music Garden in the new year.
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New Artists Launched

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New Artist on F4b released today include Uncarved Block, Sagar, RedRobin & James Parrish. More to come.

If you have any interesting stories about how you use ambient relaxation music or any kind of music to relax with or use within therapy please let us know and we will profile it at f4b.com

F4b.com The Ambient Music Garden

— Guy

 

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The Love Of Collaborating With Ambient Artists

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The love of collaborating with artists · 113 days ago

One thing thats been great about running f4b is sharing in the excitement of many of the active artists here at f4b. Its like a view into the world of ambient music across the globe, as they travel and collaborate and produce new pieces inspired by their meetings with one another.

Its great to have pieces particularly put here for f4b too. I am honoured to have such interest here. But then, maybe its understandable when one thinks less of ones-self and more about what the music is here for and what it can achieve for anyone.

That’s why artists are motivated. Many talk of the rewarding feeling that some of their music is somewhere helping someone. even just relaxing in our complicated world is enough for us, to achieve that is not a simple task sometimes.

I am excited about the new work the guys are doing, and the new artists who are bringing new styles of music to us here, creating an increased diversity of what I am now struggling to just call ambient. For that reason alone I am forever re-thinking how to help the f4b visitor to browse through our music. Ambient.. Meditation audio, meditation soundscapes.. buddhist meditations.. I need to continually question these categories that they are helping musician and listener connect.

Look out for new artists with new interpretations of ambient and relaxation music, new interpretations of chillout music and soundscapes.

I am also hoping to up our catelogue to include guided imagery / guided meditations, nature inspired ambient music, organic ambient music, and hopefully eventually, ambient dub and even dark ambient maybe.

— Guy

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