Create account Log in

Land of a Thousand Trances

[Edit]

Download links and information about Land of a Thousand Trances by A Produce. This album was released in 1994 and it belongs to Electronica, Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative genres. It contains 18 tracks with total duration of 02:09:01 minutes.

Artist: A Produce
Release date: 1994
Genre: Electronica, Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative
Tracks: 18
Duration: 02:09:01
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. The Far Shore 6:34
2. Land of a Thousand Trances 8:21
3. Heart of the Dunes 7:24
4. Insect Justice 4:29
5. The Dreaming Room 6:52
6. The Wall of Dali (#6) 6:01
7. It Comes In Waves 8:09
8. Meeting At Chiricahua 6:10
9. Heart of the Dunes (live) 8:19
10. The Dreaming Room (live) 13:16
11. Big Background 1:15
12. Lost River 2:50
13. Initiation 3:44
14. The Far Shore (solo Version) 5:54
15. The Wall of Dali (#5) 5:50
16. It Comes In Waves (extended Version) 11:31
17. Jimbe 6:17
18. Harold's House 16:05

Details

[Edit]

With Land of a Thousand Trances, A Produce has created a different work, different from a lot of his other works, but not different from his pursuit. Parts of this recording sound like A Produce's 2001 Hypnos Recordings record Smile on the Void, but then other parts of this recording sound unique. This recording has more musical substance, i.e., melodic and harmonic development, than other works from this artist, but his less minimal use of the timbre and melodic motif doesn't make this overly produced recording, rather this recording comes off sounding more substantial in a strange way. The ground that A Produce covers on Land of a Thousand Trances is certainly indicative of both spiritual and artistic growth, two things that this listeners really enjoy hearing and seeing when looking at an artist's body of work. Verily, this work illustrates growth, and demonstrates A Produce going into new territories. This recording isn't recommended as a starting point of the artist's expansive catalog. If you want to get a good taste of his work you might try Inscape & Landscape or the White Sands anthology, as these are more broad and put Land of a Thousand Trances into context better.