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The Wine Music

by Tony King

/
  • Streaming + Download

    Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
    Purchasable with gift card

      $16 AUD  or more

     

  • Compact Disc (CD) + Digital Album

    released January 26, 2006

    Tony King wrote and produced The Wine Music.
    An album made entirely from an orchestra comprised of Wine related objects. It was the first time an album of this nature has been made anywhere in the world.
    It was the most popularly requested album on ABC Classic FM.
    Tony is now using 100 % of proceeds from sales to build wells in Ethiopia in a project called “Wine into Water”
    More info at www.winemusic.biz

    AUSSIE MAKES BEAUTIFUL SOUNDS USING THE TOOLS OF THE TRADE

    By JACK HEEGER ,Napa Register California Staff Writer

    Thursday, May 11, 2006 1:13 AM PDT
    
When consuming wine, you use all five senses -- you smell it, you see the color, you feel the texture with your mouth, you taste it and you hear the pop of the cork or the clink of a glass during a toast.
 You can change and even enhance the first four senses by sipping a different wine -- one with a fuller aroma, a little more color, a heavier texture or a more fruity taste. But nothing will change the sense of hearing -- the cork pop and the clink stay pretty much the same regardless of the wine.
    
Until now, that is.
    
Tony King, an Australian musician, composer and wine aficionado, has expanded on what one gets from that fifth sense -- he created music made exclusively from wine-related objects.
 He uses crystal glasses, corks, barrels and even his own breath as he blows into wine bottles to create incredible music that can sound like a pipe organ, Celtic whistles, or a Pan flute. It's even been described as sounding like birds and whales, and in some cases, seems like a full orchestra.
 However one wishes to depict it, the music is a sound unlike anything else. It's dreamy, it's toe-tapping, it's catchy. Although it's not classical music per se, it has been the most popular music on Australia's leading classical music station.
    
Touching the glass rim
    
Probably everyone who has consumed wine at a dinner party has run a finger around the rim of a glass and listened to the vibrations. As the glass empties or fills, the sound changes.
 That's exactly what King did. He borrowed about 40 glasses of all sizes and shapes, some from friends and some from Riedel, the famed Austrian wine glass company. Each created a specific sound -- a shiraz glass sounds like a cello, a chardonnay glass is like a viola, and a Champagne flute is more like a violin or piccolo, or something with high notes. The sounds of a particular glass even appeared to match the wine -- "The richer, deeper sound (of a Bordeaux glass) seemed to correlate to the taste of a Bordeaux," he said. "A sauvignon blanc glass has a more crisp sound."
 When he ran his finger around the Riedel Grand Cru Bordeaux glass, he said the table actually vibrated. (The glass is more than 10 inches high with a capacity of more than 30 ounces -- to put it in perspective, a 750 ml bottle contains a little more than 25 ounces.)
King used about 10 bottles of varying shapes and sizes, ranging from 375 ml to a Nebuchadnezzar (15 liters), then tuned them with varying amounts of wine by using an eye-dropper to achieve proper pitch. "One drop can make a note sharp or flat," he said. "The bottles were the biggest surprise to me. If you put (the sound) on an oscilloscope, it would show a perfectly smooth pattern."
    
One barrel, 20 sounds
    
He made considerable use of a single barrel, achieving about 20 different drum-like sounds, depending on where he hit it. "Even the metal band around the barrel made a different sound," he said. "I used the barrel a lot."
 Turning a cork in a bottle gives a squeaking sound, and, of course, pulling the cork provides the popping "thunk" we all know so well.
 Hitting a corkscrew against a Champagne flute sounds like an orchestra triangle, and tapping or flicking a finger against a glass will provide some unusual sounds, he said.
 How you move the finger on the glass changes the sound, he said. "Instead of going around (the rim), touch the glass quickly only about a half-inch, and it sounds like a violin," he said. "If you tilt the glass, it changes the sound."
King used only objects associated with wine. "We filled the glasses only with wine, and we used wines I like to drink," he said. "That was the reward after the recording session."
    
Knocking on a barrel
    
He conceived the idea while walking through a winery in Southwest Australia. "They had barrels along the wall, and as I passed by, I knocked on one and I heard a great sound."
 He hit it again, but in a different spot, and heard a different sound. "I started thinking of what all the sounds can be." 
Then, as he sat at a dinner table and ran his finger around the glass, he heard the familiar sound, but it was a monotone. "I kept trying to think of how to get other sounds out of the glass."
 The project took him two years to complete, working on and off. "I didn't have a deadline, but I worked on it on (vacations) and I worked on it when I was feeling in a good mood." 
King composed 11 songs, writing them to fit the sounds he could create, and the order in which they appear on the CD is almost like wine's journey from the vineyard to the glass.
 In fact, the opening song is "Journey to the Barrel," followed by "Sunrise on the Vine" and "Scarecrow Jig." Among the other titles are "Perfect Blend," "Soaked in Oak," and "Toast to Old Friends."
 Perhaps the most clever title is "Fugue Good Wines," and as one listens to the song, it's difficult to believe it's not a full orchestra playing it.

    Like recording a band
 he created each sound separately, then mixed them, "exactly the way you'd record a band," he said. "We did the drum track first, then the chords, the melody and filled in with the other sounds." 
He makes it sound simple, but it obviously took considerable time to achieve the result he wanted. He completed it a year ago and made the CD.
"I wanted it to be serious music, not thought of as a gimmick," he said. "It appeals to classical music fans." 
He enlisted the help of his wife, singer Kris Ralph, in putting the project together. But working in concert is not unusual for them -- they've been traveling the world, writing songs and performing for 22 years, "and we're still in love with each other," he said.
 Selling the CD
 With all the traveling, this is only their second trip to the United States, but the first to Northern California. He's here to acquaint local wineries and gift shops with his music and is hoping to find a distributor to carry the CD.

    King has an impressive resume of musical accomplishments and said he "was exposed to music early in life" -- his father was in the British Air Force and they moved "every six months or so." Among his credits are writing the musical scores for several Burbank Studios movie hits familiar to Americans, including "The Littlest Mermaid," "Mulan," "Moses, the Prince of Egypt" and "Anna and the King." But those never brought him to American shores because Burbank Studios had a facility in Australia. He has numerous credits for scoring motion pictures, but King said, "It was stressful.

    Includes unlimited streaming of The Wine Music via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
    ... more
    ships out within 1 day

      $27.50 AUD

     

1.
2.
3.
4.
Glass Lake 04:10
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
The Tasting 03:04
11.
The Downpour 03:14

credits

released January 26, 2006

Tony King wrote and produced The Wine Music.
An album made entirely from an orchestra comprised of Wine related objects. It was the first time an album of this nature has been made anywhere in the world.
It was the most popularly requested album on ABC Classic FM.
Tony is now using 100 % of proceeds from sales to build wells in Ethiopia in a project called “Wine into Water”
More info at www.winemusic.biz

AUSSIE MAKES BEAUTIFUL SOUNDS USING THE TOOLS OF THE TRADE

By JACK HEEGER ,Napa Register California Staff Writer

Thursday, May 11, 2006 1:13 AM PDT

When consuming wine, you use all five senses -- you smell it, you see the color, you feel the texture with your mouth, you taste it and you hear the pop of the cork or the clink of a glass during a toast.
 You can change and even enhance the first four senses by sipping a different wine -- one with a fuller aroma, a little more color, a heavier texture or a more fruity taste. But nothing will change the sense of hearing -- the cork pop and the clink stay pretty much the same regardless of the wine.

Until now, that is.

Tony King, an Australian musician, composer and wine aficionado, has expanded on what one gets from that fifth sense -- he created music made exclusively from wine-related objects.
 He uses crystal glasses, corks, barrels and even his own breath as he blows into wine bottles to create incredible music that can sound like a pipe organ, Celtic whistles, or a Pan flute. It's even been described as sounding like birds and whales, and in some cases, seems like a full orchestra.
 However one wishes to depict it, the music is a sound unlike anything else. It's dreamy, it's toe-tapping, it's catchy. Although it's not classical music per se, it has been the most popular music on Australia's leading classical music station.

Touching the glass rim

Probably everyone who has consumed wine at a dinner party has run a finger around the rim of a glass and listened to the vibrations. As the glass empties or fills, the sound changes.
 That's exactly what King did. He borrowed about 40 glasses of all sizes and shapes, some from friends and some from Riedel, the famed Austrian wine glass company. Each created a specific sound -- a shiraz glass sounds like a cello, a chardonnay glass is like a viola, and a Champagne flute is more like a violin or piccolo, or something with high notes. The sounds of a particular glass even appeared to match the wine -- "The richer, deeper sound (of a Bordeaux glass) seemed to correlate to the taste of a Bordeaux," he said. "A sauvignon blanc glass has a more crisp sound."
 When he ran his finger around the Riedel Grand Cru Bordeaux glass, he said the table actually vibrated. (The glass is more than 10 inches high with a capacity of more than 30 ounces -- to put it in perspective, a 750 ml bottle contains a little more than 25 ounces.)
King used about 10 bottles of varying shapes and sizes, ranging from 375 ml to a Nebuchadnezzar (15 liters), then tuned them with varying amounts of wine by using an eye-dropper to achieve proper pitch. "One drop can make a note sharp or flat," he said. "The bottles were the biggest surprise to me. If you put (the sound) on an oscilloscope, it would show a perfectly smooth pattern."

One barrel, 20 sounds

He made considerable use of a single barrel, achieving about 20 different drum-like sounds, depending on where he hit it. "Even the metal band around the barrel made a different sound," he said. "I used the barrel a lot."
 Turning a cork in a bottle gives a squeaking sound, and, of course, pulling the cork provides the popping "thunk" we all know so well.
 Hitting a corkscrew against a Champagne flute sounds like an orchestra triangle, and tapping or flicking a finger against a glass will provide some unusual sounds, he said.
 How you move the finger on the glass changes the sound, he said. "Instead of going around (the rim), touch the glass quickly only about a half-inch, and it sounds like a violin," he said. "If you tilt the glass, it changes the sound."
King used only objects associated with wine. "We filled the glasses only with wine, and we used wines I like to drink," he said. "That was the reward after the recording session."

Knocking on a barrel

He conceived the idea while walking through a winery in Southwest Australia. "They had barrels along the wall, and as I passed by, I knocked on one and I heard a great sound."
 He hit it again, but in a different spot, and heard a different sound. "I started thinking of what all the sounds can be." 
Then, as he sat at a dinner table and ran his finger around the glass, he heard the familiar sound, but it was a monotone. "I kept trying to think of how to get other sounds out of the glass."
 The project took him two years to complete, working on and off. "I didn't have a deadline, but I worked on it on (vacations) and I worked on it when I was feeling in a good mood." 
King composed 11 songs, writing them to fit the sounds he could create, and the order in which they appear on the CD is almost like wine's journey from the vineyard to the glass.
 In fact, the opening song is "Journey to the Barrel," followed by "Sunrise on the Vine" and "Scarecrow Jig." Among the other titles are "Perfect Blend," "Soaked in Oak," and "Toast to Old Friends."
 Perhaps the most clever title is "Fugue Good Wines," and as one listens to the song, it's difficult to believe it's not a full orchestra playing it.

Like recording a band
 he created each sound separately, then mixed them, "exactly the way you'd record a band," he said. "We did the drum track first, then the chords, the melody and filled in with the other sounds." 
He makes it sound simple, but it obviously took considerable time to achieve the result he wanted. He completed it a year ago and made the CD.
"I wanted it to be serious music, not thought of as a gimmick," he said. "It appeals to classical music fans." 
He enlisted the help of his wife, singer Kris Ralph, in putting the project together. But working in concert is not unusual for them -- they've been traveling the world, writing songs and performing for 22 years, "and we're still in love with each other," he said.
 Selling the CD
 With all the traveling, this is only their second trip to the United States, but the first to Northern California. He's here to acquaint local wineries and gift shops with his music and is hoping to find a distributor to carry the CD.

King has an impressive resume of musical accomplishments and said he "was exposed to music early in life" -- his father was in the British Air Force and they moved "every six months or so." Among his credits are writing the musical scores for several Burbank Studios movie hits familiar to Americans, including "The Littlest Mermaid," "Mulan," "Moses, the Prince of Egypt" and "Anna and the King." But those never brought him to American shores because Burbank Studios had a facility in Australia. He has numerous credits for scoring motion pictures, but King said, "It was stressful.

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Beautifully Mad Sydney, Australia

Breathtaking original music reminiscent of the beauty of James Taylor, some honey from Melody Gardot, a lyrical spice of Cohen washed down with some Waits-like humour. A musical flame that licks at the heels of Folk and Jazz

More detail of their history at www.beautifullymad.com
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