The Music of Stars might sound like just a meaninglessly "poetic" title, but as a matter of fact, it's merely descriptive of this strange and oddly compelling album, originally released in 2001. British composer and percussionist
Morris Pert composed and recorded
The Music of Stars as the first part of a loosely defined trilogy of releases sharing themes of distance and topography.
The Music of Stars is quite literally a space rock album, except that instead of the sci-fi themes of
Hawkwind or
Pink Floyd,
Pert took the amplified sound of the universe's natural background radiation as his conceptual starting point. Basically, imagine if God had tinnitus. That ever-shifting tension between a maddening tuneless drone and otherworldly, celestial harmonies is at the root of
The Music of Stars. These nine lengthy pieces, each named after a different distant solar object, unfold slowly and serenely, lacking anything as conventional as melody or rhythm. What keeps
The Music of Stars from being mindless new age bliss-out music is the harshly-textured, dirty edge
Pert gives much of the electronics, as well as the atonality and seeming randomness of his percussion parts. (
Pert plays all the instruments, electronic and acoustic, himself.) Offsetting the quiet beauty of passages like the chiming, twinkling washes of notes that flutter across "Syrma" with sudden grinding buzzes and clatters reminds the listener that no matter how beautiful the starlit night is, that light is provided by far-off violent and destructive nuclear reactions. So yeah, it's more than a little pretentious if you think about it too hard, but
The Music of Stars remains an enjoyable listen. ~ Stewart Mason