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Special Edition of These Hopeful Machines Planned

Posted by Brett

Forgive the simple cut-and-paste job, but this is all the information available at this time. Given BT’s plans to originally release These Hopeful Machines as a box-set with stems and software from Sonik Architects, it’ll be very interesting to see how this pans out.

BT’s fans will be especially interested to know that when the producer launches his full-scale live assault in the US, he’s also got a special edition of These Hopeful Machines planned to coincide with the tour.

“We’re doing a repackage of These Hopeful Machines and it’s literally going to be four CDs and come in a coffee table box as a piece of art,” he revealed. “It’s coming out when the tour happens and there will be seventy remixes and re-interpretations of the songs and I literally hand-picked every one. From artists like Armin Van Buuren to Hamock and then some of these guys that are A-list remixers and bands.”

“There are a lot of tracks that I wrote for this album that I never completely finished and there will be some demos and some works in progress too.

New BTMusic.com Now Online

Posted by Brett

After sitting defunct for more than a year, BTMusic.com is now back online, with a totally new design, and what looks to be loads of new content to come in the near future. Go check it out.

Bits & Pieces

Posted by Brett

With BT’s official website defunct for close to a year now, there’s been little in the way of official news over the past few months. Still, here’s a quick round-up of what’s been going on since These Hopeful Machines was released 3 months ago:

These Hopeful Machines has been receiving mostly positive reviews from critics since its release. In particular, USA Today commented that:

BT’s lush, electro-organic soundscapes are so textured, nuanced and melodically inviting that even techno-phobes will be seduced by his forward-thinking musicality.

Wired also gave the album a highly positive review, stating that:

These Hopeful Machines is the culmination of years of that type of meticulous and mathematical creation… These Hopeful Machines incorporates many elements of past albums, with near-perfect transition… it’s an album of ultimate depth and movement.

… If you’ve never liked electronica before, this is the release that could change your mind.

For a full list of reviews and interviews, please check out this thread on the board, which sharpmath is kindly keeping updated.

Meanwhile, sharpmath also stumbled upon a Tumblr page which simply has 15 photos of the video shoots for Every Other Way and The Ghost In You. The video for Every Other Way was supposedly being wrapped up in early April. Nothing further is known about the video for The Ghost In You however, or even if this track will be released as a single.

While we’re on the topic of These Hopeful Machines, it’s worth noting that Feed The Monster, a collaboration with Charlotte Martin, and an as-of-yet-name-unknown track with Bassnectar have both vanished following their mentions on Amazon and Black Home Recordings’ respective websites. As always, time will tell if these tracks will ever see the light of day.

Judging from Twitter updates, it looks as though BT may be colaborating with Armin van Buuren on a track for Armin’s upcoming album, due for release in September. And possibly working on another track with JES as well.

Over on Facebook, BT recently held a vote for a merchandise design competition, with entries submitted by fans. You can view the entries and the results here. He also put up a poll asking if people would prefer a new 4-track EP every year, or a new 12-track album every three years. Votes were 55% in favour of the EP. Whether this will come to anything is pure speculation, but it’s interesting that BT is wanting feedback on something like this.

Lastly, as mentioned at the start, BT’s official website has been defunct for close to a year now - it’s still listing The Rose Of Jericho as the current single, and stating that a “new album” is coming soon, and the message board has been in the process of an overhaul for more than a year (wink wink indeed). Well, it looks like that is all set to change in a month or so. A few days ago, a new BTMusic.com Twitter account popped up out of nowhere - even the man himself sounded elatedly surprised - declaring:

New website, new tour, new single, it’s all going off for BT! Stay up to date with news & development of the new BTMUSIC.COM for 2010

Apparently the new BTMusic.com will be launched within a couple of months, and will feature “AMAZING social web integration”, new merchandise (a given), official videos through YouTube, and will also have a “microsite” version for the iPhone. I know for a fact that many months’ work has been put into this site, so it’ll be very interesting to see the final product.

That’s all for now. Peace out all!

Forget Me - New Single Due June 14

Posted by Brett

BT has just confirmed on his Twitter that the next single off These Hopeful Machines is Forget Me:

Single news!!! Blackhole Records releasing new single Forget Me w/Mixes by Mr Sam & Michael Cassette June 14th! Contest details soon!

For anyone who’s picked up a physical copy of the album, it shouldn’t be much work to guess what the single cover would be - see this post. Although, the space remaining suggests there’s a good chance that one more single could be released after this. A sticker on the album lists The Emergency as a single, so it’s long been suspected that this is the case. That being said, Breakfast’s Remix of The Unbreakable was featured on Ferry Corsten’s Countdown #142, and Dresden and Johnston are also working on a remix. Time will tell.

Press Release - BT Brings the Album Experience Back to Digital Music Consumers

Nettwerk

BT Releases His Double-Disc Sixth Studio Album, These Hopeful Machines, as Two Individual Tracks on iTunes and Amazon

January 27, 2010, NEW YORK, NY - Internationally renowned artist, visionary producer, film composer and technologist BT has always been known for being unpredictably groundbreaking. From his artist albums to his film compositions to his production for superstars such as Sting, Madonna, and Britney Spears, platinum-selling artist BT is consistently looked to in the music community as an innovator and pioneer, constantly pushing the envelope of what is possible in both music production and innovation around the modality of his music.  In an unprecedented move, BT has chosen to release his new album, THESE HOPEFUL MACHINES (February 2, Nettwerk), as two individual tracks on iTunes: Disc 1 and Disc 2.

False Start: Offense. 8-Day Penalty, Repeat First Listen. And second. And third…

Posted by Rageous

With all the swiftness of inevitability, BT’s soon-to-be-released album These Hopeful Machines leaked digitally in advance of its February 2nd street date. That everything remained locked down for this long is actually a considerable success, given that U2’s latest was pilfered six weeks in advance. A few notes:

  1. This is not the first time his music has released early. Such is the nature of both digital distribution and high demand/anticipation, and there’s really no point in ignoring the white elephant in the room. To the fans who have it: If you haven’t pre-ordered the album already or made plans to pick it up as soon as the release hits, you really should. To BT: Please exercise patience and restraint, and do not judge your fans who jumped the gun. They’ve waited a long time, supported you the entire way, bought your previous albums and gone to your shows.
  2. BT Network does not encourage the distribution of the leak. We do know, however, that it has scene origins through Usenet and made it’s way across the more popular avenues throughout the afternoon. Hot tip, kids: It’s V2 VBR, a space-efficient equivalent of 192 kbps. That’s what we call ‘utter shit quality’ in layman’s terms, scarcely better than FM radio. You get what you pay for. People who actually buy the album will notice a significantly higher ceiling.
  3. It’s been so long since BT officially spoke his peace on the controversial subject of filesharing, it’s impossible to know where he actually stands. He’s expressed devout openness in the distant past and serious reservations in more recent interviews. However, it’s fair to assume that no artist wants their music released before they’re ready for it to be.

Bottom line: You are openly allowed and encouraged to discuss the album if you happen to have it, just respect those who choose to wait and do not make this any easier than it already is to obtain. And know your source is an unintended, inferior product… no matter how good the material itself may be.

These Hopeful Machines - Album Cover?

Posted by Brett

If Amazon.com is to be believed, this is the album cover for These Hopeful Machines:

Rageous Edit >> Peeled out the hi-res 1500x1500 source from Amazon. Click here for it. Enjoy, folks!

These Hopeful Machines - Official Press Release

Posted by Brett

From Nettwerk’s Press Blog:

Internationally renowned artist, visionary producer, film composer and technologist BT is back with These Hopeful Machines, a double-disc opus that carries listeners through 2 hours of sweeping orchestral arrangements, pulsating electronic beats, heartfelt vocal melodies and even simple acoustic guitar. Out February 2 (Nettwerk), These Hopeful Machines embodies BT’s ability to weave both his technical prowess and compositional mastery that reminds listeners why he is the composer that all other composers and producers study.

These Hopeful Machines is the follow up to 2006’s This Binary Universe, an album that created an entirely new genre of evocative electro-acoustic music. Keyboard Magazine wrote in a review, “In a hundred years, it could well be studied as the first major work of the new millennium. It’s that good.” These Hopeful Machines continues to evolve BT’s distinct technical, lyrical and compositional vision and execution, but his usual melodic complexity and bleeding-edge electronic techniques permeate the album from start to finish.

Album opener and first official single “Suddenly” (out January 12) opens to a minute’s worth of glitchy breakbeats made using BT’s own software, Breaktweaker, before morphing into a powerful, guitar-driven anthem that is among the album’s most memorable songs. The track “The Emergency,” is instantly a classic BT dance hit designed to linger long after the song ends. The album even features BT’s first cover, a reinterpretation of “The Ghost in You” by The Psychedelic Furs. The song was recorded on tape, giving it a familiar and sentimental feeling while maintaining BT’s distinctive style. There are also multiple collaborators on This Binary Universe, like Rob Dickinson vocals on “Always” and “The Unbreakable,” Jes, (formerly of Motorcyle) on “Every Other Way” and “The Light In Things,” and The Police’s Stewart Copeland who lends a drum breakdown to “Every Other Way.”

From an early age, BT, born Brian Transeau, demonstrated a remarkable aptitude for playing and understanding classical music. He was heavily influenced by avant-garde and romantic composers such as Stravinsky, Bartok, Debussy and Rachmaninov. His biggest influences, however, were from everyday sounds that most would take for granted, from noticing the meter of the grandfather clock in the foyer to the micro-rhythms of crickets and cicadas to the ambience of passing trains at night.

“When examining my creation process, it makes perfect sense why I am a forced technologist,” he explains. ”I frequently face the fact that the tools I need to compose music simply don’t exist. It is like being an architect without bricks or mortar. I routinely create my own bricks and connective tissue as the diving off point to the compositional process.”

The drive to actualize the tools BT envisions has led to his evolution as one of the most cutting-edge programmers and technologists in music today. He has expanded this reach into a visionary software venture, Sonik Architects which launched its critically- and commercially-acclaimed iPhone application, Sonifi™, last fall.

Says BT, “My ultimate goal is to keep the emotional counterpoint and the integrity of the song intact, even when pushing the envelope with style and technique. The faster things get, the less people are willing to take in a body of creative work. There are so few things now that will engage us. The intent of consuming music is usually to have an awareness or a feeling, to have a truly, empathic connection to others. My hope is to create something that makes people feel that they have consumed something that completes a void. I want to create something lasting.”

These Hopeful Machines track listing:
Disc 1
1. Suddenly
2. The Emergency
3. Every Other Way
4. The Light Of Things
5. Rose Of Jericho
6. Forget Me

Disc 2
1. A Million Stars
2. Love Can Kill You
3. Always
4. Le Nocturne De Lumiere
5. The Unbreakable
6. The Ghost In You

#6 Is Officially…

Posted by Rageous

These Hopeful Machines

Not exactly the long-speculated “Feed The Monster,” although it’s probably a good thing the list of other embarrassingly speculated names is long gone. THM officially joins the parade of album acronyms IMA, ESCM, MISL, ET and TBU.

#6 - Official Press Release Coming Tomorrow

Posted by Brett

At a time which makes a lot of sense, given that rumours suggest its release date to be in February 2010, an official press release is due to be released tomorrow regarding BT’s upcoming studio album.

Tune back in tomorrow for what should be answers to what we’ve all been waiting far too long for.

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