Meet Wild Thyme Music

Brother Ah – Song of the Unseen

In the media age, imagination has come under attack. However, the interface between the unknown and the self needs to be triggered as a source of inspiration for art and science. Listening can be a key to activating one's own imagination. Jazz musician Brother Ah discovered this technique at the age of five.

Charlemagne Palestine – Strumming Music

When Indian spiritual music became popular in New York City in the mid-1960s, one of the youngest artists was the least impressed. Charlemagne Palestine, known for his long ritualistic pieces without religious references, grew up in Brooklyn. The strong cultural environment of the Hasidic movement there shaped his early life, as he sang as a boy soprano in the synagogue choir.

Wild Thyme Music (5): A Sonic Fantasy

In the media age, imagination has come under attack. However, the interface between the unknown and the self needs to be triggered as a source of inspiration for art and research. 96 minutes with Brother Ah, Catherine Christer Hennix, Ursula K. Le Guin and Todd Barton.

Wild Thyme Music (4): A Sonic Universe

Through the purity of sound, both performers and listeners are meant to gain a deeper understanding of themselves and the nature of existence. 77 minutes with Amelia Cuni, Charlemagne Palestine, Eleh, Uli Hohmann, and Werner Durand.

Wild Thyme Music (2): A Sonic Exploration

In some works of minimal music, a particular type of tuning forms the foundation of the composition. It makes instruments produce acoustic phenomena such as overtones. 111 minutes with works by Arnold Dreyblatt, La Monte Young and Terry Jennings.

Wild Thyme Music (1): A Sonic Meditation

A constantly evolving, multi-layered soundscape, tones being sustained until the desire to change them disappears, and melodies that are created from what is heard. 76 minutes with pieces by Pauline Oliveros, Ramón Sender and Randall McClellan.