Re-experience a trio of agile dancers swirling neon litestix under a
canopy of stars, underscored by driving electronic industrial music.
What’s not to like...
Ahead of its time in more ways than one, Flashes premiered to the delight of
children, their parents, and the “tres cool” of Austin’s nascent avant garde
dance scene in the summer of 1982. Choreographed and performed by Jeff
Burke and dancers, Flashes was set to an extended analog Ubiquitous Music
score titled Pluribus Mundi (Many Worlds).
Experience the musical evolution of the Pluribus Mundi themes on the 30th
Anniversary Recording.
Richard Budet - Shorts
A small collection of short melodies for the
attention deficient of the 21st century.
Laugh, cry, love, hate, but not for long...
Need to free your mind? Want to get
away, but don’t have much time? You
need music for the “Ringtone Generation”.
These short musical interludes were
conceived and created in airports, coffee
bars, and office buildings whilst in transit,
between meetings, actively multi-tasking,
and completing “value added” deliverables.
You know what I mean. Take a quick
moment to listen to “Shorts”. It won’t take
long.
Headline: 30th Anniversary Recording of Flashes released...
Made with Xara
Flashes - 21st Century
The wait is over. Hidden in the shadows for decades,
the seminal analog electronic score from 1982 is
reborn in 21st century digital splendor.
flashes, ubiquitous music, Eno, Brian Eno, synthesizer, Berlin, Ian Anderson, Jon Anderson, Greg Lake, Kraftwerk, Tangerine Dream, King Crimson, Yes, ELP,
electronic music, Jeff Burke, SXSW, analog, modern dance, Korg, Roland, Sequential Circuits, Moog, Austin