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Cat-No:LOS002
Release-Date:05.04.2024
Configuration:LP
Barcode:8720648038273
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Last in:-
Cat-No:LOS002
Release-Date:05.04.2024
Configuration:LP
Barcode:8720648038273
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Leonardo Heiblum - The Monk And The Elephant
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Leonardo Heiblum - Chis Chis
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Leonardo Heiblum - Las Pelotas De Riesman
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Leonardo Heiblum - Kasol
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Leonardo Heiblum - Tanganazo
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Leonardo Heiblum - Shamani En El Metro De Mazunte
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Leonardo Heiblum - 1
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Leonardo Heiblum - Velorio
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Leonardo Heiblum - Bebe Y Monos
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Leonardo Heiblum - Oakland C
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Leonardo Heiblum - Church And Branch
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Leonardo Heiblum - Chacarera
Recorded in the past 25 years in different parts of the world, Encyclopedia Sónica Vol. 1 compiles the music and sounds of Leo Heiblum. Comes with insert.

Since Leo Heiblum was a little boy, he always found music everywhere. Listening to the engine of his mother's car and hearing incredible rhythms. He always thought every sound we hear can be made into music, every sound that we hear can be heard as music and it can be felt and understood as music. Every sound has an attack, a decay; some have a pitch. What is more beautiful, the sound of a flute, a bird, a trumpet, a car horn, a violin or a mosquito buzzing? They can all be used to make music.

Leo Heiblum believes that If we learn to hear all sounds as “musical” or at least to have the potential to be used to make music, we might look at the world and listen to the world more lovingly. That car passing by had a beautiful crescendo. That dog barking in the distance created a fantastic melody with an impossible-to- transcribe rhythm. Is there no creative intention behind those sounds? Can the listener give them an intention, can the listener transform them into art? Leo Heiblum is trying to organise them and use them in a way that will be musical for us. He hopes that the next time we hear an ocean wave breaking a bond, fire crackling, or a fly flying, we can enjoy the notes and the rhythms they are making. They are being created by something; who knows what the intention is, but some of the most unique beats he's heard come from rocks falling in cenotes or ice breaking down in a glacier. And the melodies he's heard from bats, dogs fighting, or a newborn dog are both haunting and beautiful. The timber from sounds such as the thorn of a cactus, the voice of a homeless person in the street or a mosquito buzzing can be used to create instruments as beautiful as any instrument. And they have a new sound or a familiar old sound used differently. A way that invites us to hear the music created by this planet. More