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Fearless in Love
Popular albums
Most popular albums from Voyager
Colours in the Sun
Ghost Mile (Deluxe)
The Meaning of I
A Voyage Through Time (Live)
I Am the Revolution
Break A Broken Heart (Cover)
Ultraviolet
Prince of Fire
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2025 (feat. Voyager)
by Orcus , Voyager
Mockingbird (feat. Voyager)
K Nai Cha ra Jindagi (feat. VOYAGER)
Panzer (feat. VOYAGER)
Deathbed (feat. VOYAGER)
Drop It Like A Bomb
by Chemical Imbalance , Voyager , Toni
ELEMENTAL (Remixes)
by Cadmium , CVDMIUM
Bass Dreams, Vol. 5
by Various Artists
Panal Records - V.A. (8 Anniversary)
MIDSOMMAR COMPILATION
Eurovision Song Contest Liverpool 2023 (Karaoke Version)
Beyond the Dream Compiled by Dynamic Range
Top 100 Edm Rave Best Selling Chart Hits 2014 + Two Hour DJ Mix
Hospital Mixtape: Etherwood
by Hospital Records
Layered Sounds 2
Powerhouse progressive metal band Voyager has been pushing boundaries since its inception. Formed in Perth, Australia in 1999, the band came together around the visionary talents of lead vocalist and keyboardist Daniel Estrin and quickly established themselves as a force to be reckoned with in the progressive metal scene. The band's debut album, Element V, released in 2003, garnered an international following, with the album distributed in Europe and Japan as well as Australia. Throughout their journey, Voyager has experienced a dynamic line-up, with the talents of notable musicians like Emanuel Rudnicki (guitar, 2001-2005), Jennah Graieg (bass, 2002-2004), Geoff Callaghan (drums, 2003-2005), and Melissa Fiocco (bass, 2004-2007) sharing the stage. Their second album, Univers in 2007, saw the addition of Simone Dow on guitar and Mark Boeijen on drums, with the band continuing to captivate audiences with their third album, I Am the Revolution in 2009, which introduced bassist Alex Canion to the Voyager family. The band's artistic evolution reached new heights with The Meaning of I in 2011, as guitarist Scott Kay joined the fold, injecting fresh energy and creativity into the group. With each album, Voyager has deftly blended their progressive metal roots with elements of alternative rock, electronic and pop, with 2013 and 2017 releases V and Ghost Mile showcasing their maturity as songwriters and the ability to craft diverse and powerful anthems. Voyager's talent and dedication to their craft caught the attention of Season of Mist, a label known for supporting boundary-pushing artists, further solidifying Voyager's position as a formidable force in the progressive metal landscape. Invited to perform at popular club indigo at the O2 in London during their European tour in 2018, Voyager left audiences in awe with their electrifying performances, unveiling their seventh studio album, Colours in the Sun in the following year, which received both commercial and critical acclaim. With the Eurovision Song Contest in their sights, the band participated in the Australian pre-selection twice with "Runaway" in 2020, as well as " Dreamer" in 2022, finishing second to Sheldon Riley. In 2023, Voyager's unwavering dedication paid off as they were internally selected to represent Australia at the 67th Eurovision Song Contest in Liverpool. With their powerful and energetic entry, "Promise," the band won the second semi-final, securing 9th place at the grand final. The song debuted at number 3 on the Australian Independent charts, and continued to chart across Europe and the United Kingdom, landing in 7th place in both Sweden and UK, ahead of their highly anticipated 2023 release Fearless in Love .
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“We were just a progressive metal band going about our business… the next minute we’re on the world’s stage!” But playing to 160 million people hasn’t changed Voyager
Eurovision Song Contest was deep in the Australian heavy synth-prog quintet’s DNA from the start
Many artists would follow a mainstream moment with the most accessible music of their career. However, weeks after finishing in the Top 10 at the Eurovision Song Contest, Voyager have doubled down on their heavy synth-prog with new album Fearless In Love . Ahead of the last-minute cancellation of their 2023 European tour , Singer Danny Estrin, guitarist Simone Dow and bassist Alex Canion tell Prog about life after playing to more than 160 million people.
It’s early June when Prog video-calls Voyager frontman Danny Estrin, guitarist Simone Dow and bassist/singer Alex Canion, and the trio are midway through being smashed back into reality. This time last month, the Perth-based band (rounded out by drummer Ashley Doodkorte and Dow’s co-guitarist Scott Kay) were jet-setting in luxury. They were traipsing across Europe and getting interviewed by countless glossy magazines, all part of the run-up to them representing Australia to more than 160 million TV viewers live at the Eurovision Song Contest. Now they’re back home – and getting hammered by a storm so violent that it routinely wipes out their internet connection and freaks out Canion’s dog, Seamus.
“We played the WA Day festival [in Perth] yesterday,” Dow tells us, camera off to put less stress on the struggling WiFi, “and our booking agent sent us a video of the backstage area after we left. You should have seen the flooding! It was insane!”
Although Mother Nature is trying to quite literally rain on their parade, there’s no denying that Voyager became progressive music’s newest superstars this spring. Eurovision is touted worldwide as an international celebration of top-shelf songwriting (despite it frequently showcasing the most OTT pop possible) – and the synth-prog quintet had been chasing that rainbow from the moment Australia joined, in 2015.
They came tantalisingly close with their pop-prog anthem Dreamer in 2022, finishing second in Eurovision: Australia Decides , the nationally televised competition to select the country’s representative. This year, they finally got sent to the semi-finals when they were held in Liverpool, thanks to the electro- rock singalong of Promise .
Voyager advanced to the grand final and – after an 80s-throwback performance, replete with sequinned jackets, keytar solos and larking about on a Toyota MR2 sports car – finished a massively respectable ninth out of the 20 finalists.
The band couldn’t overcome the litany of public votes for Finnish rapper Käärijä, nor the jury’s collective passion for Sweden’s now-two-time winner Loreen. However, for five people playing prog in the isolation of Western Australia, it marked an underdog triumph.
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“It’s pretty incredible!” Estrin exclaims. “We were just a progressive metal band from Perth going about our business and, the next minute, we’re on the world’s stage! The comedown’s been real, but it’s been dampened by the insane amount of publicity we’ve done. It’s kept that spark of Eurovision alive: we’re selling out shows, particularly in the UK. Eurovision has given us the platform to continue doing what we were doing on a much bigger level.”
The numbers certainly agree. At time of writing, Promise is Voyager’s biggest song, with more than eight million Spotify streams. The music video’s been watched two million times on YouTube, with the footage of that grand final performance firmly in the seven-digit mark.
Estrin’s vow of his band sticking with what they’ve always done going forward isn’t hollow, either. A week before Voyager played Eurovision, they released another single called Prince Of Fire . It was every bit as proggy and high-energy as longtime fans would expect. Plus, with its leaps from synthy verses to sturdy rock choruses, it was powerfully dynamic. No kowtowing to the masses with simpler songwriting or a saccharine ballad here, thank you very much!
“It showed that we hadn’t vastly changed,” Canion says. “I did see some comments when we released Dreamer: people were worried that we were gonna change our sound. But Prince Of Fire is an indication that we’re still the same band. We still have the same melancholy and dark heaviness about us.”
The single, alongside Eurovision entries Dreamer and Promise , appears on Voyager’s eighth album, Fearless In Love . And said album doesn’t just mark Voyager continuing to be Voyager despite the newfound mainstream intrigue: it contains the most out-there and genre-agnostic music of the band’s career.
The Best Intentions opens Fearless In Love with a pulsing dance beat, joined by Estrin’s graceful vocals before the band dive into some heavy, off-kilter rocking. Submarine smacks you into a wall of guitar hefty enough to belong in a TesseracT or Devin Townsend tune, before Twisted ’s synths and irresistible hook feel comparable to Signals -era Rush . That’s all before semi-title track Gren (Fearless In Love) wraps these 45 minutes up with an atmospheric and guitar-powered symphony. It’s arguably the most nuanced, evocative song Voyager have ever put their name to.
“ Fearless In Love is one of our synthiest and most melodic albums, but it’s also the heaviest,” Estrin summarises. “It was during the Eurovision process that we wrote it, so I guess we had a bit more focus on song structures and making sure there’s no extra fluff. We’ve got playful guitar solos and more prog than was on the last album [2019’s Colours In The Sun ].”
Dow adds: “We started writing around the time of Australia Decides and [the release of] Dreamer , and the writing process was very different. We did it all at Scott’s little studio in his house. That way we could edit and change things as we went along, rather than doing it all in the rehearsal studio. Then, when we recorded the album, everything was all done. It’s been a huge process, but it was one of the most rewarding and creative processes we’ve gone through with an album.”
It comes as no surprise that Eurovision hasn’t changed Voyager since Estrin, who formed the band in 1999, says that the contest was one of his very first musical inspirations. He was born in the North German town of Buchholz In Der Nordheide before his family relocated to Perth, and while growing up in Germany, Eurovision and classical music were his two greatest musical loves. “That knack for melody and a really catchy chorus came very early on and stayed with me from the very beginning,” he says. “It’s why I’m the catchy chorus guy in Voyager!”
Estrin started the band at just 18 years old – by which point, he says, “I was living and breathing metal.” As a result, their 2003 debut, Element V , packed more high-speed power metal drumming than later albums. However, it also flaunted a love of operatic melody, prog and keytar playing that still defines their sound to this day.
“The goal was to make music sustainable: to write and record music and tour around the world,” Estrin remembers of the early days. “Living in one of the most isolated cities in the world has made that very, very difficult because, wherever you go, it’s very, very expensive. It’s even more difficult when you play a niche form of music.”
Making things even harder was an Australian underground that seemed more smitten with extreme metal than anything else, as well as Voyager’s revolving-door line-up. Dow (friends with then-guitarist Mark De Vattimo) joined in 2005, six years after the band formed, and is today the second-longest serving member. Canion, who played with Dow in a thrash act called Psychonaut, joined in 2007.
“I immediately recognised that Voyager were one of the top bands in the scene,” the bassist says. “Danny had this X-factor that no other band had. He was driving forward a sound that was almost too daring for the metal scene to adopt.”
By 2012, Kay and Doodkorte had completed the line-up, which hasn’t shifted since. Three years later, with the announcement that Australia would become an honorary competitor in Eurovision, the band began campaigning to represent their country. They started the Twitter hashtag #VoyagerForEurovision and submitted songs every year, to no avail. Even after being the runner-up to singer-songwriter Sheldon Riley on Australia Decides in 2022, though, they were never disheartened. “It was never like, ‘We have to do Eurovision or we’re a failure!’” Estrin says. “It was more like, ‘However far we can get, that’s awesome!’”
Australia Decides was canned in 2023. Instead, Voyager were simply told over the phone by broadcaster SBS that they’d be going to Liverpool. When there, they had the same outlook: a win would be nice, but simply representing prog and band-made music to millions of people is already brilliant enough. “If you’re a Eurovision fan, you know the juries don’t like heavy music, or bands in general,” says Estrin. “So the fact that we came sixth in the jury vote is incredible.”
That casual attitude made its way on screen. When Voyager won the second round of Eurovision’s semi-finals, they sprayed people around them with water that they’d put in a champagne bottle. During the final, almost as talked-about as Promise was the fact that, when the band were given top marks by the Portuguese jury, a camera caught them snacking on some ham sandwiches. Cue memes aplenty across social media.
“It was Marks & Spencer’s, so it was a quality sandwich,” Estrin chuckles. “We were told off after the semi-final for the splash incident, so we thought, ‘If we can’t drink, we’re going to eat something.’ These are gruelling nights and days, so there’s nothing like having a little sandwich in your pocket.”
Voyager were far from the first heavy rock band to play Eurovision. Rock’n’roller Freddy Quinn represented the genre (and Germany) at the inaugural Contest in 1956. Then Finnish masked monster mash Lordi and Italian glam bunch Måneskin won the whole thing in 2006 and 2021, respectively. Even this year, Voyager were contending with German gothic metal quintet Lord Of The Lost, who sadly finished in last place.
However, competing in a mainstream programme mostly reserved for pop singers/songwriters has led to purists sometimes denouncing bands as ‘Eurovision groups’, like it’s a derogatory term. Dow claims Voyager haven’t weathered any such pushback, though.
“The feedback we had during the whole process was super-supportive,” the guitarist says. “People were stoked that we were putting progressive metal on the map. Now, we’ve got sold-out shows across Europe and Australia. You could not ask for anything more than that.”
Currently, Voyager are only weeks removed from Eurovision, but they already have a full touring cycle directly ahead of them. Eager to see their litany of new fans in the flesh, Estrin, Dow and Canion are all impatient to get onto the road. “I hope Eurovision will allow us to keep upgrading with each subsequent tour,” the bassist says. “I hope it’ll let us craft the kind of show that I’ve wanted to put on with Voyager since I joined.”
Looking beyond this year, they want to have a legacy as the band that brought both fearlessness and consistent quality to not just Eurovision, but the broader rock and prog scenes. “I want us to go down as a band that doesn’t sound like anyone else, regardless of at what point you pick up a Voyager album and listen to it,” Estrin states.
“We’ve always done things differently, but we’ve always sounded quintessentially Voyager,” Canion adds. “I think that, now we’re eight albums in, that’s never going to change.”
Louder’s resident Gojira obsessive was still at uni when he joined the team in 2017. Since then, Matt’s become a regular in Prog and Metal Hammer, at his happiest when interviewing the most forward-thinking artists heavy music can muster. He’s got bylines in The Guardian, The Telegraph, NME, Guitar and many others, too. When he’s not writing, you’ll probably find him skydiving, scuba diving or coasteering.
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Voyager – Fearless in Love (Album Review)
Posted on July 5, 2023 by kjdraven
Voyager – Fearless In Love Released: July 14, 2023
Danny Estrin // vocals Simone Dow // guitar Scott Kay //guitar Alex Canion // bass Ashley Doodkorte // drums
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Itâs an exciting time for Perth band Voyager . Fresh off their ninth-place finish in the 2023 Eurovision Song Contest ( recap here ) , the band embarked on a sold out Australian tour ( gig review here ) ahead of the release of eighth album Fearless in Love . Theyâve timed the release beautifully to take advantage of the mainstream press that Eurovision brought them, but thereâs a question of whether the new fans that âPromiseâ has attracted will be into a full LP of synth-prog-metal. After all, âPromiseâ noticeably turns down the heavy riffs compared to their back catalogue, so Fearless in Love has the delicate job of acknowledging long-time punters and satisfying those looking for a post-Eurovision fix. Thankfully the band is up to the task.Â
Even though it doesnât pop up until the albumâs second half it is worth reviewing âPromiseâ first. Itâs easily my most streamed song of 2023 and elicits the same sing-a-long in my car that it did when it was released. The energy that Voyager put into on stage in Liverpool rubs off and the guitar solo into the keytar lick still rules. It is quite simply a banger and builds to the final minute where we can get a juicy breakdown and growl from Alex. Itâs worth noting it is the same version that has been a single without any additional embellishments. As far as album centrepieces go, it is hard to beat.Â
Those new to the Voyager world will be asking if there is anything to back up  âPromiseâ and um, deliver on the, uh, promise of that tune. Their Australia Decides 2022 contender âDreamerâ is here as the next track for Eurovision fans. Itâs heavier than âPromiseâ but has another great emotional hook. It builds through the synth but is much quicker to showcase the bandâs metal riffs, making it a great bridge between their core sound and synth-pop leanings. The breakdown is more badass than I remember and Dannyâs vocals are arguably even bigger. It certainly grabs your attention and holds it for the three minutes.Â
Thereâs plenty of album tracks that scratch the 80s synth itch. âUltravioletâ sounds like a song from a Tom Cruise movie that time forgot with a quick tempo and a drum sound that owes more than a debt to Dire Straits . Itâs got some gnarly modern guitar and a screamy cameo from fellow Perth native, Sean Harmanis of Make Them Suffer , who joins the party with an ominous growl. Â It captures the glorious collision of influences in a way only Voyager can. âThe Lamentingâ mines similar 80s vibes in a ballad form that serves as a nice change of pace, even if the hook isnât as memorable as some of the other songs. Likewise âDaydreamâ is more pop-rock than metal and would be a great single that will appeal to fans of âPromiseâ .Â
As an album Fearless in Love isnât so much of a shift from their previous work, but a continued evolution from Colours in the Sun (2019). The fans who have been on the journey with them for twenty years will get a kick out of first track âThe Best Intentionsâ as it drips with spaced-out prog synths and keys. It jumps straight into the most recent single, âPrince of Fireâ , which is unmistakably a metal song with chunky djent riffs. Their great strength as a band is their ability to create a sonic scene that suits the lyrics, painting a musical picture that implants an image in your head. âPrince of Fireâ is a bleak dystopia, particularly when compared to the previously mentioned singles, capturing the solitude of the songâs protagonist. There is a cool interlude though so Danny can get his croon on before the big note.Â
As far as prog-metal albums go, Voyager have loaded this with anthems. âSubmarineâ has all the markings of an odd novelty song with a cute riff and big hook. The solo echoes Queenâs Brian May with Simone Dow dropping all sorts of tricky taps and whammy bends. But itâs a little darker than that when it gets to the final stanza and Alex screams that he is âcoming up for airâ . If thereâs another Guardians of the Galaxy movie, this should be the end credits tune.
âTwistedâ is a more electro take on prog-metal but also has a massive inspirational chorus that will play well live. âListenâ also gets the Queen vibe right with plenty of guitar hero action. (Or as my wife just observed, it sounds a bit like Ghost , which is not a bad thing in my house.) Longtime fans will also get a kick out of the final track âGren (Fearless in Love)â . Itâs much more of a traditional prog song with ethereal keys that sound transcendent in that space rock way.Â
Voyager have successfully walked the tightrope between drawing in new fans from their Eurovision run, while rewarding longtime followers for their devotion. Fearless in Love has enough riffs, synths and hooks to catch the ear of anyone with a passing interest in 80s style rock and metal without ever sounding like a complete vintage act. It is certainly epic and accessible and demands a bigger audience than their recent club tour. I dare say Iâll be singing its praises among the best albums of the year.Â
Voyager – Fearless In Love Tracklisting :
1. The Best Intentions 2. Prince of Fire 3. Ultraviolet feat. Sean Harmanis of Make Them Suffer 4. Dreamer 5. The Lamenting 6. Submarine 7. Promise 8. Twisted 9. Daydream 10. Listen 11. Gren (Fearless in Love)
Rating: 9 / 10 Fearless in Love is out July 14 via Seasons of Mist . Pre-Order here . Review by KJ Draven ( Twitter and Instagram ).Â
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ABOUT VOYAGER
Get ready to witness a genre-transfiguring quintet take the stage like never before! Hailing from Australia, Voyager has shattered expectations with their resilient and determined attitude. This progressive pop metal force has toured the world, winning over fans with their contagious music and electric live performances. Voyager's signature blend of new-romantic and 80s infused vocals, keytar solos, technical yet melodic fretwork, groovy bass, and bombastic drumming efforts is unlike anything you've heard before. And now, after eight years of perseverance, patience, and fan support, Voyager have secured a top 10 position representing Australia at the Eurovision Song Contest 2023 with their song 'PROMISE', an epic progressive pop metal masterpiece that takes listeners on an emotive journey of adventure and redemption. Dropping their brand-new album on July 14th, 'Fearless in Love' is next-level prog metal mastery that shatters all archetypes and expectations. Available for pre-order!
- The Contents
- The Making of
- Where Are They Now
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Q & A with Ed Stone
golden record
Where are they now.
- frequently asked questions
- Q&A with Ed Stone
golden record / whats on the record
Music from earth.
The following music was included on the Voyager record.
- Bach, Brandenburg Concerto No. 2 in F. First Movement, Munich Bach Orchestra, Karl Richter, conductor. 4:40
- Java, court gamelan, "Kinds of Flowers," recorded by Robert Brown. 4:43
- Senegal, percussion, recorded by Charles Duvelle. 2:08
- Zaire, Pygmy girls' initiation song, recorded by Colin Turnbull. 0:56
- Australia, Aborigine songs, "Morning Star" and "Devil Bird," recorded by Sandra LeBrun Holmes. 1:26
- Mexico, "El Cascabel," performed by Lorenzo Barcelata and the Mariachi MĂ©xico. 3:14
- "Johnny B. Goode," written and performed by Chuck Berry. 2:38
- New Guinea, men's house song, recorded by Robert MacLennan. 1:20
- Japan, shakuhachi, "Tsuru No Sugomori" ("Crane's Nest,") performed by Goro Yamaguchi. 4:51
- Bach, "Gavotte en rondeaux" from the Partita No. 3 in E major for Violin, performed by Arthur Grumiaux. 2:55
- Mozart, The Magic Flute, Queen of the Night aria, no. 14. Edda Moser, soprano. Bavarian State Opera, Munich, Wolfgang Sawallisch, conductor. 2:55
- Georgian S.S.R., chorus, "Tchakrulo," collected by Radio Moscow. 2:18
- Peru, panpipes and drum, collected by Casa de la Cultura, Lima. 0:52
- "Melancholy Blues," performed by Louis Armstrong and his Hot Seven. 3:05
- Azerbaijan S.S.R., bagpipes, recorded by Radio Moscow. 2:30
- Stravinsky, Rite of Spring, Sacrificial Dance, Columbia Symphony Orchestra, Igor Stravinsky, conductor. 4:35
- Bach, The Well-Tempered Clavier, Book 2, Prelude and Fugue in C, No.1. Glenn Gould, piano. 4:48
- Beethoven, Fifth Symphony, First Movement, the Philharmonia Orchestra, Otto Klemperer, conductor. 7:20
- Bulgaria, "Izlel je Delyo Hagdutin," sung by Valya Balkanska. 4:59
- Navajo Indians, Night Chant, recorded by Willard Rhodes. 0:57
- Holborne, Paueans, Galliards, Almains and Other Short Aeirs, "The Fairie Round," performed by David Munrow and the Early Music Consort of London. 1:17
- Solomon Islands, panpipes, collected by the Solomon Islands Broadcasting Service. 1:12
- Peru, wedding song, recorded by John Cohen. 0:38
- China, ch'in, "Flowing Streams," performed by Kuan P'ing-hu. 7:37
- India, raga, "Jaat Kahan Ho," sung by Surshri Kesar Bai Kerkar. 3:30
- "Dark Was the Night," written and performed by Blind Willie Johnson. 3:15
- Beethoven, String Quartet No. 13 in B flat, Opus 130, Cavatina, performed by Budapest String Quartet. 6:37
Voyager's lead singer Danny Estrin reveals cancer diagnosis and cancels European tour
Australian progressive metal band Voyager's frontman, Danny Estrin, has revealed a "life-altering" cancer diagnosis, as the band cancels its upcoming European tour.Â
Key points:
- Estrin, who is the Perth band's lead singer, shared his "life-altering" cancer diagnosisÂ
- The band has cancelled an upcoming European tour with hopes to reschedule in October 2024
- Its last performance will be at the America's Cup Event in Fremantle on Sunday
Estrin, who is the Perth band's lead singer, shared the announcement on the band's official Instagram account on Friday.Â
"Last week I was dealt some life-altering news: I've been diagnosed with cancer that requires immediate treatment," he wrote.
"I am absolutely devastated that we cannot perform on our forthcoming European tour, especially after this incredible Eurovision year we've had.
"I am on strict doctors' orders to not take this lightly, put my health first and get this sorted so we can be on stage again as soon as possible."Â
Estrin said it had been an "extremely hard decision to make" and the band's upcoming European tour would be rescheduled to October 2024.Â
"Voyager will perform our last show for a while at the America's Cup Event in Fremantle, Western Australia this Sunday 24 September 2023, so come and party with us before I start treatment," he added.
"I'm surrounded by my incredible bandmates and team who are navigating all things Voyager whilst I am out of action."
The band was Australia's lead contender at the 2023 Eurovision , making the grand final and eventually finishing ninth.Â
The band has had its fair amount of changes throughout its lifetime.Â
Voyager parted ways with bass player Jennah Greaig in 2004 and his replacement, Melissa Fiocco, was later replaced with Alex Canion after the release of the album uniVers.
In June 2008, guitarist Mark De Vattimo quit Voyager due to personal and professional differences.
Guitarists Chris Hanssen and Scott Kay and drummer Mark Boeijen soon followed.
A June Australian tour saw sold-out shows nationwide, with the Perth performance needing to move to a larger venue to accommodate demand.
- X (formerly Twitter)
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Get ready to witness a genre-transfiguring quintet take the stage like never before! Hailing from Australia, Voyager has shattered expectations with their resilient and determined attitude. The new album 'Fearless in Love' is next-level prog metal mastery that shatters all archetypes and expectations. Available NOW! ... more
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Voyager, NASAâs Longest-Lived Mission, Logs 45 Years in Space
This archival image taken at NASAâs Jet Propulsion Laboratory on March 23, 1977, shows engineers preparing the Voyager 2 spacecraft ahead of its launch later that year.
Launched in 1977, the twin Voyager probes are NASAâs longest-operating mission and the only spacecraft ever to explore interstellar space.
NASAâs twin Voyager probes have become, in some ways, time capsules of their era: They each carry an eight-track tape player for recording data, they have about 3 million times less memory than modern cellphones, and they transmit data about 38,000 times slower than a 5G internet connection.
Yet the Voyagers remain on the cutting edge of space exploration. Managed and operated by NASAâs Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, they are the only probes to ever explore interstellar space â the galactic ocean that our Sun and its planets travel through.
The Sun and the planets reside in the heliosphere, a protective bubble created by the Sunâs magnetic field and the outward flow of solar wind (charged particles from the Sun). Researchers â some of them younger than the two distant spacecraft â are combining Voyagerâs observations with data from newer missions to get a more complete picture of our Sun and how the heliosphere interacts with interstellar space.
NASAâs Solar System Interactive lets users see where the Voyagers are right now relative to the planets, the Sun, and other spacecraft. View it yourself here . Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
âThe heliophysics mission fleet provides invaluable insights into our Sun, from understanding the corona or the outermost part of the Sunâs atmosphere, to examining the Sunâs impacts throughout the solar system, including here on Earth, in our atmosphere, and on into interstellar space,â said Nicola Fox, director of the Heliophysics Division at NASA Headquarters in Washington. âOver the last 45 years, the Voyager missions have been integral in providing this knowledge and have helped change our understanding of the Sun and its influence in ways no other spacecraft can.â
The Voyagers are also ambassadors, each carrying a golden record containing images of life on Earth, diagrams of basic scientific principles, and audio that includes sounds from nature, greetings in multiple languages, and music. The gold-coated records serve as a cosmic âmessage in a bottleâ for anyone who might encounter the space probes. At the rate gold decays in space and is eroded by cosmic radiation, the records will last more than a billion years.
45 Years of Voyager I and II
Launched in 1977, NASAâs twin Voyager spacecraft inspired the world with pioneering visits to Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. Their journey continues 45 years later as both probes explore interstellar space, the region outside the protective heliosphere created by our Sun. Researchers â some younger than the spacecraft â are now using Voyager data to solve mysteries of our solar system and beyond.
This archival photo shows engineers working on vibration acoustics and pyro shock testing of NASAâs Voyager on Nov. 18, 1976. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
NASAâs Voyager 1 acquired this image of a volcanic explosion on Io on March 4, 1979, about 11 hours before the spacecraftâs closest approach to the moon of Jupiter.
Neptuneâs green-blue atmosphere was shown in greater detail than ever before in this image from NASAâs Voyager 2 as the spacecraft rapidly approached its encounter with the giant planet in August 1989.
This updated version of the iconic "Pale Blue Dot" image taken by the Voyager 1 spacecraft uses modern image-processing software and techniques to revisit the well-known Voyager view while attempting to respect the original data and intent of those who planned the images.
This illustrated graphic was made to mark Voyager 1âs entry into interstellar space in 2012. It puts solar system distances in perspective, with the scale bar in astronomical units and each set distance beyond 1 AU (the average distance between the Sun and Earth) representing 10 times the previous distance.
This graphic highlights some of the Voyager missionâs key accomplishments. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech Full image details
This graphic provides some of the missionâs key statistics from 2018, when NASAâs Voyager 2 probe exited the heliosphere. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech Full image details
Beyond Expectations
Voyager 2 launched on Aug. 20, 1977, quickly followed by Voyager 1 on Sept. 5. Both probes traveled to Jupiter and Saturn, with Voyager 1 moving faster and reaching them first. Together, the probes unveiled much about the solar systemâs two largest planets and their moons. Voyager 2 also became the first and only spacecraft to fly close to Uranus (in 1986) and Neptune (in 1989), offering humanity remarkable views of â and insights into â these distant worlds.
While Voyager 2 was conducting these flybys, Voyager 1 headed toward the boundary of the heliosphere. Upon exiting it in 2012 , Voyager 1 discovered that the heliosphere blocks 70% of cosmic rays, or energetic particles created by exploding stars. Voyager 2, after completing its planetary explorations, continued to the heliosphere boundary, exiting in 2018 . The twin spacecraftâs combined data from this region has challenged previous theories about the exact shape of the heliosphere.
Voyager 1 and 2 have accomplished a lot since they launched in 1977. This infographic highlights the missionâs major milestones, including visiting the four outer planets and exiting the heliosphere, or the protective bubble of magnetic fields and particles created by the Sun.
âToday, as both Voyagers explore interstellar space, they are providing humanity with observations of uncharted territory,â said Linda Spilker, Voyagerâs deputy project scientist at JPL. âThis is the first time weâve been able to directly study how a star, our Sun, interacts with the particles and magnetic fields outside our heliosphere, helping scientists understand the local neighborhood between the stars, upending some of the theories about this region, and providing key information for future missions.â
The Long Journey
Over the years, the Voyager team has grown accustomed to surmounting challenges that come with operating such mature spacecraft, sometimes calling upon retired colleagues for their expertise or digging through documents written decades ago.
Each Voyager is powered by a radioisotope thermoelectric generator containing plutonium, which gives off heat that is converted to electricity. As the plutonium decays, the heat output decreases and the Voyagers lose electricity. To compensate , the team turned off all nonessential systems and some once considered essential, including heaters that protect the still-operating instruments from the frigid temperatures of space. All five of the instruments that have had their heaters turned off since 2019 are still working, despite being well below the lowest temperatures they were ever tested at.
Get the Latest JPL News
Recently, Voyager 1 began experiencing an issue that caused status information about one of its onboard systems to become garbled. Despite this, the system and spacecraft otherwise continue to operate normally, suggesting the problem is with the production of the status data, not the system itself. The probe is still sending back science observations while the engineering team tries to fix the problem or find a way to work around it.
âThe Voyagers have continued to make amazing discoveries, inspiring a new generation of scientists and engineers,â said Suzanne Dodd, project manager for Voyager at JPL. âWe donât know how long the mission will continue, but we can be sure that the spacecraft will provide even more scientific surprises as they travel farther away from the Earth.â
More About the Mission
A division of Caltech in Pasadena, JPL built and operates the Voyager spacecraft. The Voyager missions are a part of the NASA Heliophysics System Observatory, sponsored by the Heliophysics Division of the Science Mission Directorate in Washington.
For more information about the Voyager spacecraft, visit:
https://www.nasa.gov/voyager
News Media Contact
Calla Cofield
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
626-808-2469
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Luke Combsâ new album and nine more things you need to listen to this week
- Updated: Jun. 11, 2024, 10:31 a.m. |
- Published: Jun. 11, 2024, 10:30 a.m.
Country star Luke Combs' fifth studio album, "Fathers & Sons," comes out Friday, June 14 (Courtesy Columbia Records Nashville) Columbia Records Nashville
- Gary Graff, special to cleveland.com
Country hitmaker Luke Combs begins life after âFast Carâ to top this weekâs batch of new music releases, joined by titles from the Decemberists, Moby, Normani, Don Toliver, rock veterans John Cale and Mike Campbell, and an archival set from Paul McCartney & Wings (all subject to change)...
Luke Combs, âFathers & Sonsâ (Columbia Nashville): After riding Tracy Chapmanâs âFast Carâ to double-platinum, award-wining success, the country singer and songwriter is back with his fifth full-length album, adding another dozen songs to a catalog thatâs logged 17 No. 1 genre hits in just seven years. Timed for, of course, Fatherâs Day, the album features songs inspired by his own experience raising two sons and was recorded live by combs and a corps of Nashville A-list players in the studio.
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Hubble will change how it points, but NASA says 'great science' will continue
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The Hubble Space Telescope in orbit in 1999, just after a servicing mission by astronauts. NASA hide caption
The Hubble Space Telescope is suffering the kinds of aches and pains that can come with being old, and NASA officials say theyâre shifting into a new way of pointing the telescope in order to work around a piece of hardware thatâs become intolerably glitchy.
Officials also announced that, for now, theyâve decided not to pursue a plan put forward by a wealthy private astronaut who wanted to go to Hubble in a SpaceX capsule, in a mission aimed at extending the telescopeâs lifespan by boosting it up into a higher orbit and perhaps even adding new technology to enhance its operations.
âEven without that reboost, we still expect to continue producing science through the rest of this decade and into the next,â Mark Clampin , director of the astrophysics division in NASAâs science mission directorate, told reporters in a teleconference on Tuesday.
Because of atmospheric drag, the bus-sized telescope is slowly drifting down towards Earth. If nothing is eventually done to raise it up, it will likely plunge down into the atmosphere and mostly burn up in the mid-2030âs.
Private mission to save the Hubble Space Telescope raises concerns, NASA emails show
Thatâs one reason why NASA was so interested when Jared Isaacman, who has previously gone to orbit in a SpaceX capsule, suggested mounting a mission to Hubble as part of a series of technology demonstration spaceflights he has planned.
NASA and SpaceX jointly worked on a feasibility study to see what might be possible for Hubble. The telescope has been in orbit since 1990 and was last repaired 15 years ago, by astronauts who went up in NASAâs space shuttles, which are now museum exhibits.
NASAâs Clampin told reporters that âafter exploring the current commercial capabilities, we are not going to pursue a reboost right now.â
He said the assessment of Isaacmanâs proposal raised a number of considerations, including potential risks such as âpremature loss of scienceâ if Hubble accidentally got damaged.
NASA officials stressed that Hubbleâs instruments are healthy and the telescope remains incredibly productive.
âWe do not see Hubble as being on its last legs,â said Patrick Crouse , project manager for the Hubble Space Telescope at NASAâs Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. âWe do think it's a very capable observatory and poised to do exciting things.â
But it will have to do those exciting things with a new way of operating the system it uses for pointing at celestial objects.
Thatâs because officials have abandoned their efforts to use a glitchy gyroscope that has repeatedly forced the telescope to suspend science and go into âsafeâ mode in recent months.
Hubbleâs pointing system is so precise, NASA says it is the equivalent of being able to keep a laser shining on a dime over 200 miles away for however long Hubble takes a picture â up to 24 hours. This system has long relied on using three gyroscopes at a time.
Now, though, to avoid having to use the sketchy gyro, NASA says Hubble will shift into a one-gyroscope mode of operation, a contingency plan thatâs been around for years.
âAfter completing a series of tests and carefully considering our options, we have made the decision that we will transition Hubble to operate using only one of its three remaining gyros,â Clampin said. âOperationally, we believe this is our best approach to support Hubble science through this decade and into the next.â
The scattered stars of the globular cluster NGC 6355, that resides in our Milky Way, seen in this image from the Hubble Space Telescope ESA/Hubble & NASA, E.Noyola, R. Cohen hide caption
Using only one healthy gyroscope, and keeping one in reserve as a backup, will let the telescope continue to return gorgeous images of the universe, with some limitations. Hubble will be less efficient, for example, and it wonât be able to track moving objects that are close to Earth, within the orbit of Mars.
But Clampin said that âmost of the observations it takes will be completely unaffected by this change.â
Astronomers still clamor to use Hubble, with proposals for what to observe far exceeding the available telescope time.
The launch of the James Webb Space Telescope in 2021 did not render Hubble obsolete, as the two telescopes capture different kinds of light.
NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft is talking nonsense. Its friends on Earth are worried
Eventually, NASA will have to decide what to do about Hubble, given that some of its large components would survive re-entering the Earthâs atmosphere. The space agency has long considered sending up some kind of mission that would control its descent and ensure that any Hubble rubble would safely fall into an ocean.
Adding such a propulsion unit would mean that NASA could also boost Hubbleâs orbit, enabling it to live longer and take advantage of whatever instruments continued to work. But NASAâs Clampin suggested that there is time to consider options.
âOur latest prediction is that the earliest Hubble would re-enter the Earth's atmosphere is the mid-2030s,â he said. âSo we are not going to be seeing it come down in the next couple of years.â
- Hubble Space Telescope
13 episodes
In the realm of sleep enhancement and relaxation, a diverse and enriching collection of auditory experiences awaits those in search of a peaceful transition into dreamland. This vast array of music and soundscapes is designed to cater to various needs and preferences, ensuring that every listener can find their path to tranquility and rest. The essence of these auditory journeys lies in their ability to harness the gentle power of sound, from the soothing harmonies of delta waves to the serene whispers of nature. Each piece of music is a key to unlocking a deeper sense of calm, guiding the mind away from the day's stresses and into a state of deep healing sleep. Delta wave music, in particular, offers a scientific approach to relaxation, leveraging the brain's natural frequencies to induce a state of deep restorative sleep. Whether you're seeking a short respite or an extended escape into slumber, these tracks are meticulously crafted to support healing and rejuvenation over two, three, or even eight hours of uninterrupted rest. For those who gravitate towards the celestial and the ethereal, selections infused with lunar melodies and tranquil tracks invite you to a nightly voyage across the astral plane. These soundscapes are imbued with a sense of wonder and serenity, making them perfect companions for meditation and deep relaxation. The calming influence of nature is another cornerstone of sleep music, with offerings that include the rhythmic patter of rain, the gentle rustle of leaves, and the distant echo of thunderstorms. These natural sounds provide a comforting backdrop for sleep, evoking a sense of being nestled safely within the earth's embrace. For listeners seeking guidance and affirmation, sleep hypnosis tracks offer a more directed experience, focusing on themes such as confidence, stress relief, and overcoming insomnia. These sessions combine music with gentle vocal guidance, encouraging positive thought patterns and self-reflection. The collection also acknowledges the diverse needs of its audience, offering specialized tracks for preschoolers that blend instrumental melodies with soothing sounds, ensuring that even the youngest listeners can find comfort and rest. Expanding the horizons of relaxation, the compilation includes music that spans from the ancient and mystical to the modern and ambient. These tracks serve not only as a lullaby for the weary but also as a bridge to cultures and traditions that have long understood the healing po Zen meditation yoga sleep music wind chimes white noise tranquil ocean waves thunderstorm subliminal stress relief free spa soothing lullabies bedtime routine therapy stories podcast healing with nature sounds piano for kids insomnia dogs babies anxiety depression adults delta waves deep calm 8 hours 3 hours inducing hypnosis apnea ambient aid serene ambiance restful REM relaxing rainstorm techniques rain quiet nightmares night time native American naptime mindfulness mental calmness melodic melatonin boosters live listen isochronic tones relief methods hz hypnotic guided good going to gentle whispers guidance easy listening dreamy landscapes dream-inducing dog delta sounds songs fall asleep fast 429 deep meditation relaxation comforting classical cat calming anxiety remedies binaural beats best bedtime ASMR baby lullaby ambient sounds noise tai chi dream music singing bowls pink noise sea sounds forest ambiance lightning storm whispered tension release wellness harmonious fairy tales evening ritual rejuvenation audio therapeutic recovery acoustic for teenagers sleeplessness cats infants worry sorrow elders theta rhythms restorative 6 hours 2 hours sedative trance snoring support refreshing deep REM unwinding drizzle hush beach bad dreams dusk siesta rhythmic frequency mesmerizing narrative soft mellow vistas fantasy alpha melodies tunes drift off 528Hz serenity orchestral kitten peace stress slumber whispers infant lull bedtime rhymes solace nature melodies quietu
Sleep Music Delta Waves | Ancient Anthems, Meadow Melodies, Hours of Sleep Music, Sleep Hypnosis Relaxing and Calming, Sleep Premium
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- JUN 8, 2024
8 Hour đ Relaxation Music for Sleep | Intimate Sleep Music for Deep Sleep
Subscribe for a next-level sleep experience. Sleep meditation Sleep sounds by nature Sleep stories Sleep hypnosis Deep sleep sounds Deep sleep meditation Sleep meditation podcast
- JUN 7, 2024
Enjoy sleep music: Sleep disorders, best sleep music,Meditation music - Subscribe for a next-level sleep experience
"In the depths of sleep, we find the peace that eludes us in the chaos of the world." - Michael Barbaro Subscribe for a next-level sleep experience Sleep meditation podcast, sleep with me, sleep stories, sleep sounds, sleep hypnosis, sleep magic, sleep tight stories and music, the sleepy bookshelf relaxation sounds
- JUN 6, 2024
Eight Hours Deep Rest Gazebo Tones
âLaugh and the world laughs with you, snore and you sleep alone.â - Anthony Burgess
- JUN 3, 2024
Sleep Music for Relaxation đ Delta Waves & Theta Binaural Beats
Unveiling the secrets of how delta waves and theta binaural beats enhance sleep and relaxation can transform your nightly routine. Have you ever pondered the science behind why certain sounds help you drift into a peaceful slumber while others don't? Picture ending your day with a harmonious blend of delta waves and theta binaural beats, meticulously crafted to guide you into a state of deep relaxation and restorative sleep. This unique auditory experience creates an ideal atmosphere for unwinding, allowing both your mind and body to fully rejuvenate. What are delta waves and theta binaural beats, and how do they function? Delta waves are low-frequency brainwaves, typically ranging from 0.5 to 4 Hz, and are associated with the deepest stages of sleep. They play a crucial role in restorative sleep, facilitating physical healing and regeneration. Theta waves, on the other hand, range from 4 to 8 Hz and are linked to light sleep, REM sleep, and deep meditation. These waves help you achieve a state of relaxation and emotional healing. Binaural beats occur when two slightly different frequencies are played into each ear, and the brain perceives a third tone that is the mathematical difference between the two frequencies. This auditory illusion synchronizes brainwave activity, promoting relaxation, focus, or sleep depending on the frequency range used. Why are these specific frequencies particularly effective for sleep and relaxation? Delta waves are essential for entering a deep, restorative sleep, where significant physical healing and regeneration occur. They help calm the mind and reduce physical tension, which is crucial for quality sleep. Theta waves, associated with deep meditation and light sleep, facilitate relaxation and emotional healing. Zen sounds, meditation, yoga sleep music, wind chimes, white noise, tranquil ocean waves, thunderstorm, subliminal, stress relief, free, spa, soothing, lullabies, bedtime routine, therapy, podcast, healing, nature, piano, for kids, insomnia, dogs, babies, anxiety and depression, adults, delta waves, deep sleeping, calm, app, 8 hours, 3 hours, inducing, hypnosis, apnea, ambient, aid, serene ambiance, restful, REM, relaxing rainstorm, techniques, rain, quiet, nightmares, night time, native American, naptime, mindfulness, mental calmness, melodic, melatonin boosters, better sleep, lullaby, live, listen to, Isochronic tones, relief methods, hz, hypnotic, guided, good, going to, gentle whispers, guidance, easy listening, dreamy landscapes, sleep meditation podcast, sleep with me, sleep stories, sleep sounds, sleep hypnosis, sleep magic, sleep tight stories, sleep wave, sleep well, blissful relaxation music, 8 hour sleep music, meandering piano, deep sleep sounds, sleep better, nature sounds oasis, sounds for deep sleep, white noise and sleep sounds, sleep cycle, sleep sound podcast, sleepy by nature sounds, ambient nature sounds, sleep with silk, dream-inducing, dog, disney, songs, 429, comforting stories, classical, cat, anxiety remedies, binaural beats, best, bedtime ASMR, baby, lullaby lyrics, sounds, noise, tai chi, dream music, singing bowls, pink, sea sounds, forest ambiance, lightning storm, whispered, tension release, wellness, harmonious, fairy tales, evening ritual, rejuvenation, audio, therapeutic, recovery, acoustic, for teenagers, sleeplessness, cats, relaxing music for sleep and stress relief, sleep music for sound sleeping, music for deep sleep, insomnia relief, music for ultimate relaxation, music for yoga and meditation and sleep tight, infants, worry, sorrow, elders, theta rhythms, restorative, 6 hours, 2 hours, sedative, trance, snoring support, refreshing, unwinding, drizzle, hush, beach, bad dreams, dusk, siesta, rhythmic frequency, mesmerizing, narrative, soft, mellow, vistas, fantasy, alpha, melodies, tunes, drift off, 528Hz, serenity, orchestral, kitten, peace, slumber, whispers, infant, rhymes, solace, quietude.
- MAY 31, 2024
8 HOURS of Deep Sleep Sounds | Music for Relaxation and Meditation
Have you ever wondered how incorporating soothing sounds and meditation music into your nightly routine can profoundly impact your sleep quality and overall well-being? This method combines deep sleep sounds, calming melodies, and relaxation techniques to create an environment that fosters deep relaxation and rejuvenating sleep. By integrating these elements into your bedtime routine, you can achieve a state of tranquility that helps you fall asleep faster and stay asleep longer. This approach is designed to calm both the mind and body, promoting a peaceful night's rest and supporting overall health. How do specific sounds and music contribute to better sleep? The sounds used in sleep music often include gentle, rhythmic elements like soft piano tunes, delicate string arrangements, and ambient nature noises such as flowing streams, rustling leaves, and birdsong. These sounds act to mask intrusive environmental noises, providing a steady auditory backdrop that encourages relaxation. The repetitive nature of these rhythms helps slow down breathing and heart rate, signaling to the body that it is time to relax and prepare for sleep. This reduction in physical and mental tension facilitates a smoother transition into deep, restorative sleep. Why is it important to include meditation music in your nightly routine? Meditation music is crafted to help achieve a state of mindfulness and profound relaxation. By listening to this type of music before bed, you can create a mental space that feels secure and serene, allowing you to shed the stresses of the day and focus on the present moment. The soothing, repetitive nature of the music quiets the mind and reduces mental chatter, fostering a deep sense of inner peace. Zen sounds, meditation, yoga sleep music, wind chimes, white noise, tranquil ocean waves, thunderstorm, subliminal, stress relief, free, spa, soothing, lullabies, bedtime routine, therapy, podcast, healing, nature, piano, for kids, insomnia, dogs, babies, anxiety and depression, adults, delta waves, deep sleeping, calm, app, 8 hours, 3 hours, inducing, hypnosis, apnea, ambient, aid, serene ambiance, restful, REM, relaxing rainstorm, techniques, rain, quiet, nightmares, night time, native American, naptime, mindfulness, mental calmness, melodic, melatonin boosters, better sleep, lullaby, live, listen to, Isochronic tones, relief methods, hz, hypnotic, guided, good, going to, gentle whispers, guidance, easy listening, dreamy landscapes, sleep meditation podcast, sleep with me, sleep stories, sleep sounds, sleep hypnosis, sleep magic, sleep tight stories, sleep wave, sleep well, blissful relaxation music, 8 hour sleep music, meandering piano, deep sleep sounds, sleep better, nature sounds oasis, sounds for deep sleep, white noise and sleep sounds, sleep cycle, sleep sound podcast, sleepy by nature sounds, ambient nature sounds, sleep with silk, dream-inducing, dog, disney, songs, 429, comforting stories, classical, cat, anxiety remedies, binaural beats, best, bedtime ASMR, baby, lullaby lyrics, sounds, noise, tai chi, dream music, singing bowls, pink, sea sounds, forest ambiance, lightning storm, whispered, tension release, wellness, harmonious, fairy tales, evening ritual, rejuvenation, audio, therapeutic, recovery, acoustic, for teenagers, sleeplessness, cats, relaxing music for sleep and stress relief, sleep music for sound sleeping, music for deep sleep, insomnia relief, music for ultimate relaxation, music for yoga and meditation and sleep tight, infants, worry, sorrow, elders, theta rhythms, restorative, 6 hours, 2 hours, sedative, trance, snoring support, refreshing, unwinding, drizzle, hush, beach, bad dreams, dusk, siesta, rhythmic frequency, mesmerizing, narrative, soft, mellow, vistas, fantasy, alpha, melodies, tunes, drift off, 528Hz, serenity, orchestral, kitten, peace, slumber, whispers, infant, rhymes, solace, quietude.
- MAY 25, 2024
Peaceful Sanctuary đž: Relaxing Nature Sounds and Tibetan Chakra Meditation Music for Relaxation Meditation - 1 Hour
Are you looking for a way to enhance your relaxation and meditation practices? Integrating the sounds of nature with Tibetan chakra meditation music can provide a profound sense of tranquility and well-being. These harmonious elements work together to create a soothing environment that helps calm the mind and body, making it easier to achieve a state of mindfulness and inner peace. How do nature sounds contribute to a relaxing meditation experience? Nature sounds, such as flowing water, rustling leaves, and chirping birds, have a natural calming effect on our psyche. These sounds help ground us, providing a sense of connection to the earth and its rhythms. This grounding effect is particularly beneficial during meditation, as it helps clear the mind of everyday worries and distractions. The consistent, gentle patterns of nature sounds create a soothing backdrop that encourages relaxation and mental clarity, making it easier to focus on the present moment and achieve a deeper state of meditation. Have you ever wondered how Tibetan chakra music can enhance your meditation practice? Tibetan chakra music is designed to align and balance the body's energy centers, known as chakras. Each track uses specific tones and frequencies to target different chakras, promoting harmony and balance within the body. This music can help release blocked energy, reduce stress, and improve overall well-being. When combined with nature sounds, the effects are amplified, creating a powerful tool for deep relaxation and meditation. The resonant tones of Tibetan chakra music complement the soothing sounds of nature, enhancing their calming effects and making it easier to achieve a meditative state. Zen sounds, meditation, yoga sleep music, wind chimes, white noise, tranquil ocean waves, thunderstorm, subliminal, stress relief, free, spa, soothing, lullabies, bedtime routine, therapy, podcast, healing, nature, piano, for kids, insomnia, dogs, babies, anxiety and depression, adults, delta waves, deep sleeping, calm, app, 8 hours, 3 hours, inducing, hypnosis, apnea, ambient, aid, serene ambiance, restful, REM, relaxing rainstorm, techniques, rain, quiet, nightmares, night time, native American, naptime, mindfulness, mental calmness, melodic, melatonin boosters, better sleep, lullaby, live, listen to, Isochronic tones, relief methods, hz, hypnotic, guided, good, going to, gentle whispers, guidance, easy listening, dreamy landscapes, sleep meditation podcast, sleep with me, sleep stories, sleep sounds, sleep hypnosis, sleep magic, sleep tight stories, sleep wave, sleep well, blissful relaxation music, 8 hour sleep music, meandering piano, deep sleep sounds, sleep better, nature sounds oasis, sounds for deep sleep, white noise and sleep sounds, sleep cycle, sleep sound podcast, sleepy by nature sounds, ambient nature sounds, sleep with silk, dream-inducing, dog, disney, songs, 429, comforting stories, classical, cat, anxiety remedies, binaural beats, best, bedtime ASMR, baby, lullaby lyrics, sounds, noise, tai chi, dream music, singing bowls, pink, sea sounds, forest ambiance, lightning storm, whispered, tension release, wellness, harmonious, fairy tales, evening ritual, rejuvenation, audio, therapeutic, recovery, acoustic, for teenagers, sleeplessness, cats, relaxing music for sleep and stress relief, sleep music for sound sleeping, music for deep sleep, insomnia relief, music for ultimate relaxation, music for yoga and meditation and sleep tight, infants, worry, sorrow, elders, theta rhythms, restorative, 6 hours, 2 hours, sedative, trance, snoring support, refreshing, unwinding, drizzle, hush, beach, bad dreams, dusk, siesta, rhythmic frequency, mesmerizing, narrative, soft, mellow, vistas, fantasy, alpha, melodies, tunes, drift off, 528Hz, serenity, orchestral, kitten, peace, slumber, whispers, infant, rhymes, solace, quietude.
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đŽStream/Download 'Colours' here: https://listen.voyagerau.com/coloursđ” On tour in Australia: https://ffm.live/voyagerau23đŽ On tour in UK/EU: https://ffm.l...
Listen everywhere here: https://listen.voyagerau.com/princeoffiređ” Our new album, "Fearless In Love" is OUT NOW! Buy/stream here:https://listen.voyagerau.co...
đ” Our new album, "Fearless In Love" is OUT NOW! Buy/stream here:https://listen.voyagerau.com/fearlessinlove // https://orcd.co/fearlessinloveđŽ On tour in U...
Fearless in Love by Voyager, released 14 July 2023 1. The Best Intentions 2. Prince of Fire 3. Ultraviolet (ft. Sean Harmanis of Make Them Suffer) 4. Dreamer 5. The Lamenting 6. Submarine 7. Promise 8. Twisted 9. Daydream 10. Listen 11. Gren (Fearless in Love) Electro Prog Metal outfit VOYAGER have announced their long-awaited eight studio album 'Fearless In Love', out July 14th via Season ...
Colours in the Sun by Voyager, released 01 November 2019 1. Colours 2. Severomance 3. Brightstar 4. Saccharine Dream 5. Entropy (feat. Einar Solberg) 6. Reconnected 7. Now or Never 8. Sign of the Times 9. Water Over the Bridge 10. Runaway VOYAGER explode like a supernova onto the worldwide stage with their new album 'Colours In the Sun'.
And, most tellingly, stuck with Voyager songs rattling around their head for days. "You want a hook," Dow says. "That's what grabs you when you listen to a band, either a catchy vocal hook or guitar lick. Then you've got bands like Meshuggah⊠they're fantastic, but there's not anything that's hooky that's going on.
Powerhouse progressive metal band Voyager has been pushing boundaries since its inception. Formed in Perth, Australia in 1999, the band came together around the visionary talents of lead vocalist .. ... Listen . Voyager. Fearless in Love. 04:13 Composers: Danny Estrin - Simone Dow - Scott Kay - Alex Canion - Ashley Doodkorte. 08. Twisted . Voyager.
Voyager is a progressive metal band from Perth, Australia. The band was formed in 1999, and the current lineup (since 2011) consists of Danny Estrin on vocals and keys, Simone Dow
Useful links. Listen to Voyager on Spotify. Artist · 110.5K monthly listeners.
Listen to music by Voyager on Apple Music. Find top songs and albums by Voyager including Promise, Prince of Fire and more.
Voyager are an Australian progressive metal band from Perth, Western Australia, who were formed in 1999.The band has released eight albums. Their eighth studio album, Fearless in Love, was released worldwide on 14 July 2023 through French American metal record label Season of Mist. They represented Australia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2023 with the song "Promise", finishing in ninth place.
Many artists would follow a mainstream moment with the most accessible music of their career. However, weeks after finishing in the Top 10 at the Eurovision Song Contest, Voyager have doubled down on their heavy synth-prog with new album Fearless In Love.Ahead of the last-minute cancellation of their 2023 European tour, Singer Danny Estrin, guitarist Simone Dow and bassist Alex Canion tell ...
It's an exciting time for Perth band Voyager. Fresh off their ninth-place finish in the 2023 Eurovision Song Contest , the band embarked on a sold out Australian tour (gig review ... Listen 11. Gren (Fearless in Love) Rating: 9 / 10 Fearless in Love is out July 14 via Seasons of Mist.
Hailing from Australia, Voyager has shattered expectations with their resilient and determined attitude. This progressive pop metal force has toured the world, winning over fans with their contagious music and electric live performances. Voyager's signature blend of new-romantic and 80s infused vocals, keytar solos, technical yet melodic ...
Perth progressive metal band Voyager are finally achieving their dream to make Eurovision history, as the first group to represent Australia â they talk to ABC about the long road to the Contest ...
The following music was included on the Voyager record. Bach, Brandenburg Concerto No. 2 in F. First Movement, Munich Bach Orchestra, Karl Richter, conductor. 4:40 ... "The Fairie Round," performed by David Munrow and the Early Music Consort of London. 1:17; Solomon Islands, panpipes, collected by the Solomon Islands Broadcasting Service. 1:12 ...
Sounds of Earth The following is a listing of sounds electronically placed onboard the Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft. Music from Earth The following music was included on the Voyager record. Country of origin Composition Artist(s) Length Germany Bach, Brandenburg Concerto No. 2 in F. First Movement Munich Bach Orchestra, Karl Richter, conductor 4:40 Java [âŠ]
Listen to Voyage by ABBA on Apple Music. 2021. 10 Songs. Duration: 37 minutes. Listen to Voyage by ABBA on Apple Music. 2021. 10 Songs. Duration: 37 minutes. Album · 2021 · 10 Songs. Home; ... The result is Voyageânine new songs and one resurrected from their original incarnation, fitting for a project that renders the very notion of the ...
The band has had its fair amount of changes throughout its lifetime. Voyager parted ways with bass player Jennah Greaig in 2004 and his replacement, Melissa Fiocco, was later replaced with Alex ...
VOYAGER is a spectacular tribute to the legendary rock band Journey. VOYAGER has continuously provided audiences with high energy performances of Journey's timeless hits. VOYAGER captures the intricate musical details along with the distinctive vocal styling of Steve Perry. Featuring extraordinary musicians and vocalists who have toured ...
Perth's premier electro power pop sensation VOYAGER are now sharing their brand new ear worm, "Submarine!" VOYAGER bassist/vocalist Alex Canion comments, "Danny told me that 'Submarine' is about someone coming out of isolation and finding their feet in society once again post-Covid lockdown, but after the band let me have my fun on the track AND be the main character in the video, to me it ...
NASA's twin Voyager probes have become, in some ways, time capsules of their era: They each carry an eight-track tape player for recording data, they have about 3 million times less memory than modern cellphones, and they transmit data about 38,000 times slower than a 5G internet connection.. Yet the Voyagers remain on the cutting edge of space exploration.
Listen to Never Let Go - Single by Jung Kook on Apple Music. 2024. 1 Song. Duration: 2 minutes. Album · 2024 · 1 Song. Home; Browse; Radio; Search; Open in Music. Never Let Go - Single. Jung Kook. K-POP · 2024 . Preview. June 7, 2024 1 Song, 2 minutes â 2024 BIGHIT MUSIC.
"Only The Young" performed by Voyage - The #1 Journey Tribute Band. https://www.voyageband.comFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/voyagehugo Instagram: https:...
After enormous success with Tracy Chapman's "Fast Car," country singer Luke Combs is back with his fifth studio album, joining a lineup of new music releases that includes titles from Moby ...
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Premium Duo. Music for two. Two Premium accounts for couples under one roof. $16.99/month. Cancel anytime. get started. Terms and conditions apply. For couples who reside at the same address. Spotify Premium is a digital music service that gives you access to listen to millions of songs without ads.
Music Expand/collapse submenu for Music. Tiny Desk Hip-Hop 50 ... Listen · 3:14 3:14. Toggle more options ... NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft is talking nonsense. Its friends on Earth are worried
Connecting to Apple Music. If you don't have iTunes, download it for free. If you have iTunes and it doesn't open automatically, try opening it from your dock or Windows task bar. After 25 years at the Late Night desk, Conan realized that the only people at his holiday party are the men and women who work for him. Over the years and despite ...
By listening to this type of music before bed, you can create a mental space that feels secure and serene, allowing you to shed the stresses of the day and focus on the present moment. The soothing, repetitive nature of the music quiets the mind and reduces mental chatter, fostering a deep sense of inner peace.