Bruits et Temps Analogues is an album by French musician Patrick Vian, his only solo album.
Bruits was released on the Egg label in 1976, which was owned by Barclay Records and designed to present young and innovative musicians (it had Vangelis and Tim Blake under contract).[1] It was re-released in 1978, on the Movieplay label,[2] and it was re-released on CD by the German Staubgold label.[3]
Track list
edit- Side A:
- Sphère (6:10) (B. Lavialle)
- Grosse Nacht Musik (5:05)
- Oreknock (6:45)
- Old Vienna (2:10)
- Side B:
- R & B Degenerit! (6:10)
- Barong Rouge (4:10)
- Tunnel 4, Red Noise (4:30)
- Bad Blue (1:56)
- Tricentennial Drag (2:20)
Musicians
edit- Patrick Vian – Moog IIc and ARP 2600 synthesizers, sequencer, piano
- Mino Cinelu – drums, percussion
- George Granier – Fender Rhodes, marimba
- Bernard Lavialle – guitar
Production
edit- Produced by Jerome Laperrousaz
- Recorded at Studio I.P., Paris, by George Granier, assisted by Alain Marcel
Artwork
edit- G. Lacroix – front cover (illustration)
- Millie – back cover (photograph)
References
edit- ^ "International". Billboard. 1978-01-21. p. 122. Retrieved 2009-08-28.
- ^ "Patrick Vian". Discogs.com. Retrieved 2009-08-28.
- ^ Segal, Dave (15 April 2013). "Patrick Vian's Amazing 1976 Synth LP Bruits et Temps Analogues Finally Reissued". The Stranger. Archived from the original on 30 June 2013. Retrieved 13 May 2013.