muzician norvegian From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Biosphere (n. , Comuna Tromsø, Troms, Norvegia) este cel mai cunoscut nume al muzicianului norvegianGeir Jenssen (n. 30 mai1962),[1] ce a lansat un catalog remarcabil de muzică electronicăambient. El este foarte bine cunoscut pentru stilurile sale de "ambient techno" și "arctic ambient", folosirea loop-urilor muzicale și sample-uri specifice din surse sci-fi. Albumul său Substrata, lansat în 1997, a fost votat de către utilizatorii paginii web Hyperreal în anul 2001 drept cel mai bun album clasic ambient al tuturor timpurilor.[2]
Mai multe informații Date personale, Nume la naștere ...
Man with a Movie Camera (1996 coloana sonora a festivalului, 2001 lansat in Substrata²)
Insomnia (1997 coloana sonora a versiunii Norvegiene originale a filmului Insomnia)
Cho Oyu 8201m – Field Recordings from Tibet (ca Geir Jenssen, 2006)
Nokas (2010 film soundtrack, ca Geir Jenssen)
Stromboli - inregistrari de teren de pe marginea craterului Stromboli - 2013 12" single lansat la Touch Music
Discografia colaborărilor
de obicei "Geir Jenssen" in loc de "Biosphere":
White-Out Conditions (1987, in Bel Canto)
Birds of Passage (1989, in Bel Canto)
Fires of Ork (1993, with Pete Namlook)
Polar Sequences (1996, live, cu Higher Intelligence Agency)
Nordheim Transformed (1998, cu Deathprod, remixing Arne Nordheim)
Biosystems: The Biosphere Remixes (1999, colectie a altor 8 trupe)
Birmingham Frequencies (2000, live, cu Higher Intelligence Agency)
Fires of Ork II (2000, cu Pete Namlook)
Toate titlurile albumelor lui Biosphere fac referire la mediile de aer reci sau gheață, și explorările acestora:
The Biosphere 2 project intended to explore the possible use of an artificial biosphere (a closed ecosystem) for space colonization. The Russian Biosphere 3 too. Both were detached, self-sufficient environments, like a space ship or a submarine.
The North Pole explored by a submarine, which may be lost like a ship in space.
Microgravity is the imperfect state of weightlessness in a space ship.
The word "patashnik" is allegedly Russian cosmonaut slang for "a traveler" or "a goner", a cosmonaut who didn't return from a space mission because his security cable disengaged and he was lost in space.[3]
Substrata is, among others, a glaciology term (always plural) for the nature of a glacier's bed. .
A cirque is an amphitheatre-like valley formed by glacial erosion. It also refers to the death of Chris McCandless, a sort of "patashnik" who explored self-sufficient survival in a cirque in Alaska and lost himself.
Shenzhou refers to the Chinese Shenzhou spacecraft.
Autour de la Lune (1870, French for Around the Moon) was Jules Verne's followup to From the Earth to the Moon and dealt with the launching and actual space travel to and around the moon.[4]
A dropsonde is a device designed to be dropped at altitude to collect data as the device falls to the ground – in this context, it's a sonde sent through space to another planet, it's another "patashnik" explorator intended to be lost.
N-Plants is probably a shortcut of "Nuclear Plants", also, the CD booklet of the album includes writing in Japanese that has this meaning.