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1.
Escape 1 29:13
2.
Escape 2 27:44

about

This is a studiorecording of the concert given in december 2013 at the B-Wave festival.
The album starts out in a moody ambient fashion, continuing the beautiful sonic narrative nicely as found on the previous recordings "The Crash" and "Hunted", but now further incorporating tasty vintage pads and textures to the duos highly cinematic, slowly unfolding soundscaping. It takes until the 15-minute mark on the first 29-minute track before a more pronounced sequence shows up in the mysterious realms, soon followed by warm choir and ethereal pads as the music starts growing bigger. The music gains speed as we pass the 20-minute mark and the (vintage Schulze-kindred) sequencers gently shift to a higher gear step by step and all the various sounds spread out are more upfront. It all ends up in a psychedelic spiral and a crash of the elements. "Part II" commenced without much notable interruption, venturing out in an improvised ambient style with some piano. Around the 10-minute mark, things shift into a sequencer pattern with a smooth soaring solo voice on top. Soon, the speed of the vintage sequencing goes up and soon fires off in classic TD’s mid ’70’s style, as a kind of pursuit takes place for nearly the next 10 minutes. From there, things wind down into atmospheric soundscapes and disappear in a flash as final crescendo.
The masterful mix of ambient and retro/sequencer driven music makes "Escape" a worthy and recommended piece of electronic music.
Chapeau, guys!
Bert Strolenberg


I adore this tone of flute enchantress which extricates itself from the claws of nothingness! It sings a seraphic ode and its solitary charms call other flutes, shier, to join in and give a small concert of soft oniric breezes. There is a delicate gradation in these ambient melodies, so that the intro slightly touches at times some ephemeral dramatic moods which remind me the birth of Ricochet 's muddled rhythms. This gives more relief to this ambiospherical painting which bickers constantly with ethereal elements. The astral singings dress of sibylline harmonies when the sparklings to the metallic reflections dilute the songs of the flutes in order to bring "Escape I" towards a more intense passage where the ambio-cosmic moods bring to life a structure of beat which staggers in an awkward way at the 5th minute spot. And this relatively ambient pace draws a kind of slow morphic cha-cha which dances beneath a thick cloud of synth layers painted of prismic breezes and of lascivious violin veils. The moods become then ambio-cosmic and decorate a slow sequenced walking where are whistling and blowing a thick cloud of astral colors synth lines. The beat of "Escape I" sways hips like a spirit in a soporific trance in a garden of honey where stars are within reach. The synth pads are as much in love as ethereal and their caresses are comforting a hearing which waits for the rhythm to become more accentuated. And the nothingness sucks up the sounds elements. Only the dark winds which make ring the carillons reign over this very meditative passage. This is the war of the airwaves. The war of synth lines of which the cracklings get lost in the dusts of stars where only weak ringings resist the winds. These ringings eventually form a skeleton of spheroidal rhythm. They turn into a ballet of sequences with the doubles of their shadows which dance in parallel in some sonic glares a bit dramatic. And if we listen carefully, we hear these gleaming sequences which made dance our dreams in Mirage. Except that the rhythm gets loose and makes other bass sequences which are trotting and banging vigorously. Chthonian singings invade this powerful and linear rhythm of which the gallop is flowing with a beautiful fluidity under solos of synth filled by the aromas of howling spectres. The roarings of what seems to be Martenot's waves are switching for wonderful violin flights with a Mellotron of which the burning sibylline airs pursue the curves of a rhythm which runs at a brisk pace. A structure of beat with a very beautiful meshing of sequences which criss-cross their chords and their overlapping, forming an electronic rhythm with such a fluidity which reminds enormously Klaus Schulze in the Body Love albums. We are riveted to our armchair, ears on the alert, to follow this deep tempo from where the only outcome seems to be inevitably a crash. A crash which will lead the last seconds of "Escape I" in a heap of metal and mirror which burst between the ears which have never expected this kind of finale. Nevertheless if we recall well the ambiences of Body Love...
With two long tracks and their deliciously ambient intros which unblock over rhythms fighting constantly with intensely cosmic atmospheres, this last The Roswell Incident's album is a strong one which will revive the flame of our souvenirs of Klaus Schulze and Tangerine Dream in their beautiful 70's. “Escape” is the outcome of a concert given by brothers Jan and Koen Buytaert within the framework of B-Wave Festival, held in Belgium, in December 2013. The Roswell Incident has reworked the music in studio with a result which reaches the parameters of very good The Crash. Yes it's still about EM. Again! Shall say some … Maybe but The Roswell Incident affixes a very personal seal with a cosmic approach which allows to merge marvellously the rhythms and the atmospheres of these 2 icons of the German EM. So goes "Escape II". The intro shows an ambient beat which leans on somber beatings. The moods are very dark with a kind of strange dialogue of metallic sounds which float as hoops without ends in the wandering sinister synth lines and their tortuous spectral harmonies. A note of piano falls at around the 5th minute. Hesitating, this piano reveals its naked notes and draws a somber passive and meditative melody, adding some more mysticism to "Escape II" which takes life with somber felted sequences. The movement becomes nervous. The keys skip and pound in a rather undisciplined rhythmic choreography. Superb solos with ghostly and sharpened harmonies overhang this anarchic rhythm while other sequences, clearly more incisive, redirect the structure of rhythm towards a more methodical phase. I hear Under The Dome's The Demon Haunted World here. And "Escape II" reveals its superb rhythmic schema with a mixture of sequences of which the criss-crossed lines let hear a figure of rhythm as lively than harmonious. The pace becomes more punchy with keys which pound of an arrhythmia to lose breath. Even the synth solos have difficulty to follow it. Mists to the metallic drizzle are hooting over this frenzy which eventually rides alone and throws itself in an oasis of serenity where ambiospherical elements will restrain its powerful swiftness.
One of the great qualities in the music of The Roswell Incident is this ease that the Buytaert duet has to mix ambiences, as Gothic and as cosmic, to rhythms which fast become objects of seduction. The movements of sequences on “Escape” are as much attractive than the ambiences which tame them. And this small wink of eye, quite discreet, to the masters of retro analog EM adds a very charming dimension to a music which doesn't really need it, to gain an enviable place among these big names. If you love great and strong cosmic rock with nice psychedelic aromas, you will spend some very good moments with this “Escape” from The Roswell Incident. Simply great EM and strongly recommendable!
Sylvain Lupari (September 7th, 2014)
gutsofdarkness.com & synthsequences.blogspot.ca


‘Escape’ by the fantastic The Roswell Incident has two long tracks. It is an album which mixes both Berlin School and ambient elements with lovely sequences and rhythms as well as some really excellent soundscapes. Again the sound samples are extremely long. Both ‘Escape 1’ and ‘Escape 2’ are great tracks but ‘Escape 2’ is probably the best track I have heard by them. The sequences are immense right from the off with some fantastic soaring leads. More and more sequences are added as things get faster and more intense as we go, reaching almost (but not quite) overload. It is a bit like AirSculpture’s take of the classic TD sound. Give this sample a listen first. The First track is also excellent with some great brooding moments as well as nice rhythms and sequences. This time the overall sound is more Klaus Schulze like.
This is a worthy successor to ‘The Crash’ and ‘Hunted’.
David Law
Music Zeit

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released May 10, 2014

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The Roswell Incident Ghent, Belgium

The Roswell Incident is a project by the brothers Koen en Jan Buytaert, from Belgium. Their music is inspired by the music from the ‘70s of Klaus Schulze and Tangerine Dream, the famous Berliner School Style, to which elements of their own have been added. The long pieces are mostly sequencer-based and improvised. ... more

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