|
Kourosh Dini : Calm.
Minimalist piano with slashes of ambient electronics.
The mind's natural rhythms are reflected in its sounds, symbols, and words. Calm brings a soothing and relaxing state of mind by following the mind's ebbs and flows and invites the listener into a meditation of mind.
Songs:
1. A River Begins
2. Unfurl
3. Standing Waves
4. Speaking Sprites
5. Light Through Leaves
6. Dusk Falls
7. Reflections Of Sky
8. Waters At Midnight
9. Light's Return
10. River Widens And Calms
11. Life Within Water
12. A Branch Travels
13. Trees Offer Currents
14. Into Sea
Listen to: the entire album.
License Minimalist piano with slashes of ambient electronics by Kourosh Dini for your project.
Play the music of Kourosh Dini in your restaurant or store.
Release date: 2/26/2010
Kourosh Dini lives in Illinois USA
Tagged as: New Age, Ambient, Instrumental New Age, Instrumental Ambient, Contemporary Piano, Daydreaming, Massage, Meditation, Spa and relaxation, Space Music, Yoga
Recommended albums:- Within This Space by DAC Crowell: deeply ambient new music
- Future Forever by Ion: clean, crystalline ambient
- Passage by Mike Wall: healing music for planetary transformation
- Ambient and Cinematic Soundscapes by Piotr Janeczek: atmospheric, infinite spaces and ethereal worlds
- Acoustic Abstracts by Heavy Mellow: relaxing acoustic guitar duets
- Hidden Sky by Jami Sieber: enchanting cello compositions
- Angelorum - The Harps in the Trees by Cheryl Ann Fulton: World-class performer and teacher of Medieval, Baroque, Welsh triple, Celtic and Concert harps.
- Pictures of Silence by Tilopa: healing magic of the japanese zenflute
- Abstract Love by Dr Sounds: spacey ambient/dark new age
- Liquid Harmony by Giorgio Costantini: Intense and minimalist new-classic piano and cinematic orchestration
- The Ice Castle by Kirsty Hawkshaw: ambient electronica
- Timeless_ by Jami Sieber: enchanting cello compositions
- Ambiencellist by Claire Fitch: ambient cellist
- By The Way by Tilopa: healing magic of the japanese zenflute
- Atmosphere by Giorgio Costantini: Intense and minimalist new-classic piano and cinematic orchestration
- Ambiencellist Part II by Claire Fitch: ambient cellist
- Lush Mechanique by Jami Sieber: enchanting cello compositions
- The Once and Future Harp by Cheryl Ann Fulton: World-class performer and teacher of Medieval, Baroque, Welsh triple, Celtic and Concert harps.
- Mozart in the Age of Enlightenment by Seth Carlin: fortepiano music from the early 1800s
- Mozart Klavier Trios by Streicher Trio: classical chamber music on period instruments
Downloads:
- MP3: High quality MP3 variable-bit-rate files. Most people download these: they are audiophile files that play everywhere.
- ALAC: Perfect quality Apple Lossless format files. If you use iTunes or an iPod, get these. They're an exact audio copy of the original CD, and include the CD artwork and artist info. This is the same format as High Definition audio provided by the iTunes store.
- AAC: High quality Apple Audio Codec files. If you use iTunes or an iPod, these files sound great and include CD art and artist info. This is the standard format provided by the iTunes music store.
- WAV: Perfect quality WAV files. This format works everywhere, and is an exact audio copy of the original CD. It sounds fantastic. Album art and artist info is unfortunately not possible with this format.
- FLAC Perfect quality open source FLAC files. This is an open source audio format. It is an exact copy of the original CD, and includes CD artwork and artist info. Works great on Linux, VLC and many audio players based on open source.
- OGG: High quality open source OGG files. This is an open source audio format. It is a compressed (smaller file size) version of the original CD, and includes CD artwork and artist info. Works great on Linux, VLC and many audio players based on open source.
- 128k: Medium quality 128K MP3 files. These are medium audio quality MP3 files that will work on every device. The audio quality is good enough for most uses. These files are intended for cases where you want to conserve disk space.
|
|
|