Robert RichSomnium

Label:

Soundscape – hyp2131

Format:

DVD , DVD-Video, Album, Stereo

Country:

US

Released:

Genre:

Electronic

Style:

Ambient

Tracklist

Somnium
1 Part 1 2:35:00
2 Part 2 1:59:57
3 Part 3 2:24:54

Companies, etc.

  • Copyright ©Robert Rich
  • Published ByAmoeba Music
  • Manufactured ByAmeric Disc
  • Made ByNorthwestern Inc

Credits

  • Artwork [Cover And Disk Image]Brad Cole (4)
  • Artwork [Robert Rich Portrait]David Agasi
  • Written-By, Producer, Mastered By, Liner NotesRobert Rich

Notes

DVD-video disc with music only, no picture (other than the menus). The DVD-video format was used because the storage of 7 hours of continuous audio on one side of one disc. It is a stereo (two channel) audio program.

"Somnium" is a single continuous track separated into three parts, a 7-hour sleep concert recording.

Assembled and edited from August 1999 to July 2000, using sound elements recorded between 1994 and 2000 by Robert Rich.

Instrumental sounds include analog and digital electronics, processed flutes and acoustic piano, lap steel guitar with Sustainiac Model B, chimes and bowed metal. Environmental sounds recorded by Robert Rich in California, Iowa, Minnesota, Washington and Mexico. Additional sounds include electric fish (Apteronotus leptorhyncus) recorded at Scripps Institute with the assistance of Calvin Wong, and processed environments from the library of Andy Wiskes. Authored at EP Visual in Philadelphia by Pete Meyers and Adam Peterson.

Released in conjunction with Relapse Records.

© 2000 Robert Rich

Listening Tips from Robert Rich:
"You can listen to Somnium at any hour, at any volume, but it works best quietly at night. You can set the best listening levels by adjusting the first 10 minutes so that it plays at a soft, comfortable volume for falling asleep. The environmental sounds during these opening minutes should be nearly inaudible. The music will gradually slow down and become quieter during the first hour, so that when you are sleeping, it should be soft enough that it hovers just at the edge of awareness.

You can create the optimum listening environment with mutiple speakers arranged in a circle around the listening space. Although Somnium is a stereo recording, you can use the effects settings in a 5.1-channel home theatre amplifier to create the illusion of a complete environment. A four speaker stereo arrangement can also succeed in evoking this environmental effect. You can listen to Somnium in your sleep with a small pair of headphones, although these can become uncomfortable if you try to sleep on your side. If you choose to use headphones, be sure to keep the volume extremely low."

"Somnium and the Sleep Concert
by Robert Rich

The term “Sleep Concert” can be a bit misleading, as it implies that this music is intended to help you sleep deeply. On the contrary, when you play Somnium at night, you may find that you sleep less deeply, and wake up more often. The idea is to let the music incorporate itself into your perceptual framework during the night, to create a sonic surround, an environment for unique states of consciousness. The music is aimed at the nebulous territory that exists in your mind when you are hovering between awake and asleep, when you are still aware of your environment, yet detached, when your half-sleeping mind wanders into the realm of hypnogogic images and dreamlike non-linearity. You might find that this music can act as a trigger for these flowing thoughts, and the activation of the environment around you can help you to skate around the edges of sleep, with one foot in the dream world and one foot in the room where you are sleeping.

The experience of listening to Somnium in your home will differ from the experience of audience during the Sleep Concerts that inspired this music. In the concert environment, an additional state of heightened arousal can occur from social factors, whereas the environment of the home is more relaxed. At home you will have more choices about the way you listen to this music, so the music must also conform to these different possibilities.

Certain things happen when many people sleep in a room together. In general, people sleep less deeply. One of the more mundane reasons for this is snoring. An estimated 10% of the population snores, which means that in a room with 50-100 people, some will snore. Since the music is generally very quiet, snoring can become invasive (and sometimes it’s quite funny.) Besides snoring, other interruptions will doubtless invade the Sleep Concert ambience. Among these may be traffic sounds, car alarms, sirens, or people walking around in the room when they get up to use the bathroom. Audience may also notice my presence in the room as I work behind the mixer. The simple noises of other people can keep listeners in a lighter sleep.

Interestingly, people become more physiologically activated merely by being in the proximity of other people. Perhaps this arousal is a purely chemical phenomenon. This is one of the interesting features that distinguish a live Sleep Concert from listening to Somnium at home. In the act of bringing a group of people together in the same room, we create an energized environment, which can contribute to the intensity of personal experiences. But for these factors to contribute to an interesting aesthetic experience, listeners must combine this activation with an increase in attention to internal states of mind. The music helps to intensify this internal focus. You can use Somnium at home in the same way.

The musical environment of Somnium can act like a lens to sharpen mental images, a stimulus to help you generate internal realities. Some of the sounds are abstract, blurry, hard to separate from the background. Other sounds evoke natural environments, open spaces, insects and animal calls, wind or rain. The music can replace the acoustics of a room with a shifting virtual soundscape.

To get the most out of Somnium, I recommend that you focus on several aspects of the sleeping experience. The most interesting experiences will occur in the transitions between sleeping and waking, and later when you are dreaming. Stage 1, non-REM sleep is the transitional stage of sleep, when you are still partly conscious of your environment. This distinguishes it from Rapid Eye Movement sleep (REM), when you have the most coherent dreams.

During the transitions into Stage 1 sleep, you might have dreamlike thoughts and visions called hypnogogic images. Hypnogogic images are often less organized than true dreams, and often come blended with a semi-awareness of your environment. If you from this stage into a deeper sleep, you will not these images and thoughts. But if you can linger at the edge, slipping in and out of stage 1 sleep, you can ride along the edge of your own awareness. You can use the music as a focal point to hold yourself right at the brink of sleep, to help you maintain this hypnogogic state like a surfer uses gravity to stay on the leading edge of a wave. During these hypnogogic experiences, you might find that the sonic environment triggers dreamlike hallucinations, evoking fragile new mental landscapes.

You might also more dreams while sleeping with Somnium, and they might be more vivid and intense. The reasons for this again relate to the activated environment. In order to a dream, you must wake up from it. The more you pay attention upon awakening, the more you will and the more vivid the memories will be.

One of the more interesting dream experiences you might encounter is lucid dreaming – when you become aware that you are dreaming while still in the dream. Once you become aware that you are dreaming, you can affect the action within your dream, letting you explore the dream world actively rather than as a ive observer. Lucid dreaming becomes possible when you pay attention to the signs that you are dreaming, when you attend to your conscious processes. You may find that the activating nature of the Somnium environment can help you to pay closer attention to your mental states, and may even help you have a lucid dream.

For some people, more intense dreams can become unpleasant, due in part to negative expectations and mental habit. Self-awareness, and lucid dreaming in particular, can help overcome some of these habitual reactions. When you dream, your mind is trying to interpret current physiological and environmental conditions, and these interpretations can become incorporated into dream content. If your body starts to generate more energy or tension, the brain can interpret this arousal as fear, and the night’s dreams might develop some dark overtones. However, the brain can also interpret arousal as mystical ecstasy, joy or sexual energy. All of these feelings are closely related in the body, and they relate closely to past experiences, expectations and environmental cues. The music on Somnium does not intentionally evoke any specific images, light or dark, but rather hangs in an indistinct place which you can interpret in many ways, like the ink-blots of a Rorschach test.

The dream journey resembles a shaman’s journey, in that shamans know that they carry with them their own expectations when they enter their spirit world. Likewise, your past and your preconceptions will influence your dreams, along with your current environment. Throughout Somnium, the music gets quite deep, it explores the shadows. The music is also quite gentle. If you open yourself up to the possibility of intense experience, you can explore your mental states with an open mind. Even the shadows contain useful information. The more you pay attention, the more you might find."

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode (UPC): 75390-71260-20
  • Barcode (Scanned): 753907126020
  • Matrix / Runout: AD/CA DVD 51042 1 8 <8051> NW1432 NORTHWESTERN INC.
  • Mastering SID Code: IFPI L488
  • Mould SID Code: IFPI 81A4

Other Versions (4)

View All
Title (Format) Label Cat# Country Year
New Submission
Somnium (Full Version) (6×File, FLAC, Album, Reissue) Soundscape none US 2013
New Submission
Somnium (Full Version) (6×File, FLAC, Album, Reissue) Not On Label (Robert Rich Self-released) none US 2016
New Submission
Somnium (8×File, MP3, Album, Reissue, 320 kbps) Soundscape none US Unknown
New Submission
Somnium (DVD, DVD-Video, Album, Reissue, Stereo, LPCM 48kHz/16bit) Soundscape hyp2131 US Unknown

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Reviews

  • Chroniz's avatar
    Chroniz
    Edited 14 years ago
    Although one of Robert's best works, it's unfortunately also technically more flawed ones. According to Robert's comments on his blog, there were some issues with the production of this album. Due to DVD's limitations, the second part of Somnium had to be encoded in AC-3 and this somehow caused the track to have mono channels instead of stereo (can be easily heard when compared to track 1 or 3 with headphones) during the production. Because the DVD format didn't also gapless playback with separate tracks, fade outs had to be added between each of the parts.

    Luckily, Robert has also released a lossless version of this album to Musiczeit-store. On the web-release, the formerly mentioned issues have been corrected, making it technically the best version currently available.
    • Tennant
      Edited 15 years ago
      For the record: this is the longest piece of continuous music ever produced. Over 7 hours of Robert Rich's best, beautiful ambient works.

      Water effects drift in and out of heavenly chords. Birds sing and nature calls. This piece of music is wonderful, absorbing ambience. There is nothing decayed or dead here; everything is working in harmony. Changes in sound are so subtle that you find yourself in different landscapes without realising it.

      Part 1, a perfect countryside walk which lasts for days. You slowly venture into a mutating forest... Part 2: a visit to underground caverns filled with sparkling crystals and unknown wonders. Part 3, you are floating through space on an endless voyage to nowhere, occasionally being brought back down to Earth to enter calming forests with the alluring sound of birdcall brushing your conciousness. You are always detached but never lonely.

      Overall this is a wonderful album and one of the best ambient pieces I have ever heard, worth getting just because it's a record breaker alone. Other ambient record-smashers include the Orb's Blue Room, the longest single to be in the UK chart at 39:58 minutes long. And it reached #8!

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