MoonSatellite

The electronic musician from Nancy France. He likes to play in the Jarre and Klaus Schulze Style, this depends just on which project he works on.
MoonSatellite
AlphaLyra + Moonsatellite - Live in Nancy 2013

Artist: AlphaLyra + Moonsatellite
P: 2014
Here are the two concerts from 2013 in Nancy in one set. Nice mix between Berlin School and Jarre.

20,90 EUR
 
incl. 19% tax excl. Shipping costs
MoonSatellite - Analog Way

Artist:  MoonSatellite
P:  2022
A CD in Digipack format. 8 tracks with a soaring atmosphere supported by beautiful synthetic melodies sailing on analog pads. An exclusive track is available as a ghost track on the CD version.

14,90 EUR
 
incl. 19% tax excl. Shipping costs
MoonSatellite - Dark Summer

Artist:  MoonSatellite
P:  2017
Berlin School Space Sequences with a touch of Jarres slow works. Brilliant, could have been a release from 1977.

15,90 EUR
 
incl. 19% tax excl. Shipping costs
MoonSatellite - Low Life

Artist:  MoonSatellite
P:  2013
A real sonic feast impregnated with an intense oniric, sometimes filmic and even symphonic, approach “Low Life” is a true monument of enchanting EM. MoonSatellite amazes by his boldness by going where his spiritual mentor always refused to go. Either into the progressive spheres where the rhythms and melodies get loose to embrace the limits of a heavy and somber psychedelicosmic journey in the lands of the unknown.

It's an intense, powerful album which is not afraid of its eddies nor of its boldness. Brilliant! A true masterpiece of ambient EM!


The infinity! The musical horizons of synths as well as their melodies and orchestrations converge on the infinity. One has to hear all the cosmic and symphonic wealth of “Low Life” to understand this. The electronic rhythms. The stormy and crisscrossed sequences which bombard and hammer the rhythms as much symmetric as asymmetric are the portal of the infinity. And “Low Life” shows it amply. What an album! “Low Life” it's 65 minutes of intense EM where Jean Michel Jarre's steams, in particular those of Chronology, float on rhythms and ambiences incredibly fed by a powerful electronic fauna as much multicolored as multi-sonic. Here is a surprising journey to the heart of the beats to hundred strings and knobs.

The staging is rather eclectic with tones which resound, collide and grumble on the remains of percussions from where rises a beautiful cathedral layer which brings the very emotional burden of "Low Life Ouverture" in cosmic spheres which remind me of the tones from the Serge Modular in Michael Stearns' Chronos. Foams of Jarre abound on this introduction wrapped of a poignant moving veil while bubbles of hydrogen water make the link with the spheroidal sequences and the echoing pulsations of "Low Life Part I". A muddle of lines of sequences follows. They skip and prang, a little as tens of submarine explosions, in a stationary rhythmic magma. Somber synth lines sweep this rhythm more implosive than frisky of melancholic breaths which little by little become pleasantly musical. Soiled by an apocalyptic and philharmonic approach, these lines of synths coo with intensity like shadows of musical energy in an environment became even more cosmic, bringing "Low Life Part I" in a very beautiful ambiospherical final. "Low Life Part II" is a small jewel of tenderness and nostalgia. The chords of sequences which coil up in their echoes to skip like muddy prisms are flooding an intro perfumed of a superb melancholic approach. We hear their organic breaths resound under a thick coat of ethereal voices which release seraphic singings of which the tones of meditative abandon are flowing on the back of the wide synth waves which wave idly. These sequences trample on the universe of cosmic noises towards half-time. Subdividing their keys, they forge a rhythm weaved by doubloons, loops and by echoes to deviate the oniric race of "Low Life Part II" towards an oscillatory harmonious rhythm which coos in loops and which binds itself to sustained percussions, plunging the track into a good rhythmic phase of which the oscillations adopt a diversity which rebel against a loud decor at both lunar and astral. And damn do these voices are penetrating!

"Low Life Part III" is the highlight of “Low Life”. The pulsations which describe the cardiac beatings of a breathless which gets his breath back brings us straight out to these lines of sequences and synth which tut in symbiosis, weaving the structures of a splendid mid-tempo which dances in a magical electronic universe. The breaths of synth are linen of silk which caress the booty of our hearing while that some secondary harmonies proliferate throughout this soft rhythm which crosses a more ambiospheric phase from the 4th minute. The movement of sequences shuck its rhythmic thoughts in beautiful wavelets which lull a void upholstered by interstellar voices and by tears of a sobbing synth. These sequences, became more and more weak, waddle with innocence under the fluty breaths which decorate the opening of "Low Life Part IV", a beautiful ambient track, always very poignant, with some brightness of dark chords and seraphic voices which get lost in some discreet orchestrations. And the more we move forward and the more we are stunned by the evolution of this small chef-d'oeuvre that is “Low Life”. "Low Life Part V" runs away from this ambiospherical hold with an intro seething of diversified tones. Bubbles of water, cosmic gurgling, studded trains, apocalyptic breaths, lamentations and melodious rustlings feed an intro which hears parade a train of rotary sequences. It's dense, intense and motionless, but that's going to move. Sequences are swirling in a controlled velocity a little after the 4th minute, drawing a rhythm which moves slowly in the vocal cords of the astral choirs and the noises of a still virgin cosmos. The broth is deep and waits for the attack of the volatile cymbals before with to implode with a meshing of the pulsations of a bass-drum, crystal clear sequences which bombard non-stop and percussions which decide for an allegorical space rock inundated by an electronic canvas which has difficulty to illustrate solos which make discreet in this opaque cosmic linen. "Low Life Part VI" ends this last album from MoonSatellite with a slow movement where the waves of synth are crying as much as they coo with their undulatory forms, reminding this finale that Thierry Fervant drew up on the path of our ears in Universe. The breaths are of agony, while the delicate pulsations of a bass line introduces tears of glasses which sparkle like the reflections of stars in a finale which stretches its immortality towards a cosmic electro storm where everything swirls in a hypnotic spiral which little by little is dying into the infinity.

A real sonic feast impregnated with an intense oniric, sometimes filmic and even symphonic, approach “Low Life” is a true monument of enchanting EM. MoonSatellite amazes by his boldness by going where his spiritual mentor always refused to go. Either into the progressive spheres where the rhythms and melodies get loose to embrace the limits of a heavy and somber psychedelicosmic journey in the lands of the unknown. It's an intense, powerful album which is not afraid of its eddies nor of its boldness. Brilliant!

2013. Sylvain Lupari /

Here the last copy!

19,90 EUR
 
incl. 19% tax excl. Shipping costs
MoonSatellite - Missing Time

Artist:  MoonSatellite
P:  2011
If you like CDs, that use the styles of the big names, and where these are combined in new ways, with well known sounds, this is the right one. Here the french synthesizer master MoonSatellite gets a few very nice styles into his melting pod. First we find the long tracks, that evolve with a lot happening within the music, where slowly sequencer appear and the environment reminds us to Klaus Schulzes late 80s, early 90s releases.
Then on other tracks, the new style made by MoonSatellite sounds like Equinoxe by Jarre. But he only uses these sounds and something really new comes out.
Highly recommanded. This is a factory pressed CD.

 

15,90 EUR
 
incl. 19% tax excl. Shipping costs
MoonSatellite - Strange Music

Artist:  MoonSatellite
P:  2018
One more time, Berlin sequencermusic at its best, with the touch of the Jarre style.

15,90 EUR
 
incl. 19% tax excl. Shipping costs
MoonSatellite - Whispers of the Moon

Artist:  MoonSatellite
P:  2015
Music with the influences of the old Schulze and of a cosmic Jarre.

14,90 EUR
 
incl. 19% tax excl. Shipping costs
Schwingungen Radio auf CD - Edition Nr.219 08/13
Schwingungen - Radio auf CD
Edition Nr.: 219
08/2013
5,00 EUR
 
incl. 19% tax excl. Shipping costs
Schwingungen Radio auf CD - Edition Nr.248  01/16
Schwingungen - Radio auf CD
Edition Nr.: 248
01/2016
5,00 EUR
 
incl. 19% tax excl. Shipping costs
Schwingungen Radio auf CD - Edition Nr.325 06/2022
Schwingungen - Radio auf CD
Edition Nr.: 325
06/2022
5,00 EUR
 
incl. 19% tax excl. Shipping costs
Show 1 to 10 (from a total of 11 products)