Category Archives: Benjamin Lew

Benjamin Lew & Steven Brown – A Propos D’Un Paysage

This was requested a while a go, and now here it is. The poetry and ambient melodies of Benjamin Lew have produced some of the eighties truly innovative music. Lew’s collaborations with saxophone player Steven Brown of Tuxedomoon have yielded two memorable albums -A Propos Dún Paysage and Douzieme Journee: La Verbe, La Parure, L’amour. Excellent ambient music with an ethnic touch. Special appearence by: Vini Reilly (The Durutti Colomn). A Propos D’Un Paysage was released on vinyl by Crammed Discs (CRAM 038) in 1985, released on cd by Made To Measure (MTM 16 CD) also in 1985.

Tracks:

  1. Moments
  2. Les Enormes Et Pourtant Invisibles
  3. Profondeurs Des Eaux Des Laques
  4. Une Telle Richesse
  5. S’Ignorer
  6. Paresseuse Aussi
  7. Au Sujet D’Un Paysage
  8. Face A Ce Qui Se Derobe
  9. Nouvelles Observations
  10. La Vie Aussi
  11. Etendue

“Download”

enjoy

Posted in Benjamin Lew, Steven Brown, Vini Reilly | 1 Comment

Benjamin Lew And Steven Brown – Douzième Journée: Le Verbe, La Parure, L’Amour.

Originally released in Japan on the Belgian Crammed Discs label (CRAM 020 LP, 1988) and subsequently re-issued on Made to Measure (MTM 15, 1988), Douzieme Journee treads that odd ground combining ambient music with roots in Eno and various so-called world musics, here concentrating on those found in Northern Africa and the Mid-East. This confluence seems to have been in the air at the time as witness similar efforts from Hector Zazou and the Penguin Café Orchestra. Lew and Brown first met while Lew was working as a bartender in a Brussels bar frequented by Brown and other members of Tuxedomoon. When their conversations steered towards their musical vision, they discovered a kinship that continues to produce results. Lew and ex- Tuxedomoon member Brown, ably assisted by label mainstay Marc Hollander, fashion cinematic sound-pictures heavy on rich drones and invigorated by generally Arabic rhythms. Worlds collide, but do so in a gentle, dreamy manner such that the abuttal of ringing synthesizer and handheld drum sounds illogically natural. Lew would go on to refine this approach leading up to his superb Nebka, but all the groundwork has been laid herein, making this a worthwhile pick-up for listeners of ethno-ambient music that still retains some bite and otherworldliness.

Tracks:

  1. Bamako Ou Ailleurs
  2. Passage
  3. De l’Autre Côté Du Fleuve
  4. L’Ile, L’Hôtel
  5. Aveugle, Depuis
  6. Elle S’Avanca
  7. Dans Les Jardins
  8. Les Autres, Tous
  9. II, Les Quitta A L’Aube

“Download”

enjoy

Posted in Benjamin Lew, Steven Brown | Leave a comment