Death of a Dream
(Reimagined)
By
Matias Bacoñsky
Written by
Steve Sheppard
Matias Bacoñsky is an Argentine pianist and composer;
his genius lies in the realms of creating amazing electronic-orchestral music,
and as an artist known for blending emotive piano lines with cinematic
symphonic textures. He has been on my musical radar ever since 2016 and his
album Life and Death. Today Matias Bacoñsky reveals perhaps his
darkest work yet, as he brings us Death
of a Dream (Reimagined).
This is indeed one of his most powerful works to date, its atmospheric
and emotional layered synths, soft pads, gradual builds, and its eventually serene
coda gifts us the listener one of the most compelling recordings of his career.
This piece of music was originally released on the aforementioned 2016 release,
however this time around the quality is a more polished production with added
orchestration.
Contextually I found within the weave of the creation a
palpable spiral of emotions, emotional closure and a transformative energy,
perhaps a quiet aftermath of something that was once very meaningful. Something
that hardly gets mentioned these days is the art work, I’m still old school and
I adore the art that comes with the single, I am not going to tell you what it
is, but I hope when you purchase this track you will open up the art work, and
gaze at it whilst listening to the music, it works incredibly well.
The entire work is pretty well laid out and constructed
superbly by a musician who clearly knows how to compose music, arrange it, and
make it as dramatic as possible, a true artist of his trade indeed. The four
precepts of a truly great composition are all met here on Death of a Dream (Reimagined), the emergence of the offering, the
build and progression, the peak and the dissolution.
There can be no doubt that Death of a Dream (Reimagined) by Matias Bacoñsky has continued the onward path of success for the artist, and this new reimagined version is a credit to his dedication to his art and should be a huge success on its own right in the charts.
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