Tim Doyle

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Nightlight 00:00 Tools
Incarnation 00:00 Tools
Exhibit A 00:00 Tools
Opium 00:00 Tools
Distraction 00:00 Tools
Fontina 00:00 Tools
Escape From Lhasa 00:00 Tools
Sunset Rider 00:00 Tools
Hotfoot 00:00 Tools
Bach on Tap 00:00 Tools
Zenith 00:00 Tools
Magellan 00:00 Tools
Pterodactyl 00:00 Tools
Bellbottom 00:00 Tools
MIng I (Darkening of the Light) 00:00 Tools
Great Smoky Mountains / Bill Frisell 00:00 Tools
Goya's Light 00:00 Tools
Monsoon 00:00 Tools
Fractal Breakdown 00:00 Tools
Roots 00:00 Tools
Redoubt 00:00 Tools
Condor 00:00 Tools
Get a Grip 00:00 Tools
Pixie Dust 00:00 Tools
Vigil 00:00 Tools
Flotsam 00:00 Tools
Magical Thinking 00:00 Tools
Shellshock 00:00 Tools
Agoraphobe 00:00 Tools
Bower 00:00 Tools
Dazzle 00:00 Tools
Heartthrob 00:00 Tools
Jerusalem Weeps 00:00 Tools
Sparkling Sands (Beach Dance) 00:00 Tools
Blue Hour 00:00 Tools
Fogblind 00:00 Tools
Water Strider 00:00 Tools
Extremadura 00:00 Tools
Stony Lonesome, Walking Home 00:00 Tools
Iron Horse 00:00 Tools
Pod People 00:00 Tools
Stout Hearts 00:00 Tools
Our Sleepwalking Hearts (feat. Pixieguts} fully loaded radio mix 00:00 Tools
Chernobyl Heart 00:00 Tools
Motivation 00:00 Tools
Milkweed 00:00 Tools
Creepers 00:00 Tools
Fractal Holler 00:00 Tools
Alexandria by Night 00:00 Tools
Ivy 00:00 Tools
Philosophy 101 00:00 Tools
Ana Gori - Aquela estrada, Aquela Canção (That Road, That Song) - Tim Doyle's Sun-Dazed mix 00:00 Tools
Glass House 00:00 Tools
Quintessence 00:00 Tools
Moonflakes 00:00 Tools
Wailing Wall 00:00 Tools
Cold Fusion 00:00 Tools
Shantytown Wake Up (Part One) 00:00 Tools
Andromeda Blues 00:00 Tools
Flying Fish 00:00 Tools
Aquela estrada, Aquela Canção (That Road, That Song) by Ana Gori - Tim Doyle's Sparkling Sands mix 00:00 Tools
Time Was 00:00 Tools
Changeling 00:00 Tools
Spring Thaw 00:00 Tools
Love Amid the Ruins 00:00 Tools
Magellan (remixed) 00:00 Tools
Fountain of Youth 00:00 Tools
Ghost Elephants 00:00 Tools
Coveside 00:00 Tools
Sourdough 00:00 Tools
Walking in Our Sleep 00:00 Tools
March of the Dreamers 00:00 Tools
Fey 00:00 Tools
Bermuda Triangle 00:00 Tools
Moroccan Shadows 00:00 Tools
Harpies 00:00 Tools
Orang Lullaby 00:00 Tools
Snowbound 00:00 Tools
Scorned 00:00 Tools
Redwood Empire 00:00 Tools
Rune Dance 00:00 Tools
Warp and Weft 00:00 Tools
Fever Dream 00:00 Tools
Freedom Strides the SunRoad 00:00 Tools
Idee Fixe 00:00 Tools
Emotional Weather 00:00 Tools
Fragtime 00:00 Tools
The Sixth Crossing 00:00 Tools
Hammer and Tongs 00:00 Tools
Still in Shock 00:00 Tools
Ennead 00:00 Tools
Grasshopper 00:00 Tools
Tablelands 00:00 Tools
Harpies (Gavotte) 00:00 Tools
Ebbtide 00:00 Tools
Inconsolable 00:00 Tools
Pandora's Remorse 00:00 Tools
Just Like That 00:00 Tools
Search and Rescue 00:00 Tools
Winter Haiku 00:00 Tools
Flight 815 00:00 Tools
Zephyr 00:00 Tools
VVVs 00:00 Tools
Sufi 00:00 Tools
In the Zone 00:00 Tools
Reign Forest 00:00 Tools
Peace Train 00:00 Tools
Lightning Bugs 00:00 Tools
Macabre 00:00 Tools
Craterscape 00:00 Tools
Juggernaut 00:00 Tools
Boneyard Boogie 00:00 Tools
Charybdis 00:00 Tools
Dolores Park 00:00 Tools
FryBrain 00:00 Tools
Hearth and Home 00:00 Tools
Ada Danced 00:00 Tools
Second Thoughts 00:00 Tools
Ground Zero Smoke (feat. Pixieguts) radio edit 00:00 Tools
Shy Beauty 00:00 Tools
Not Just Yet 00:00 Tools
Brisas 00:00 Tools
Our Sleepwalking Hearts (feat. Pixieguts) 00:00 Tools
Last of Her People (feat. Pixieguts) radio version 00:00 Tools
Excogitation IV: Porch 00:00 Tools
Retooling the Blues 00:00 Tools
Excogitation II: Cut 00:00 Tools
For James 00:00 Tools
Falling Home 00:00 Tools
Excogitation III: Covered With A Veil Of Oil And Left In A Box Set To Cool 00:00 Tools
Ttfobabibistras 00:00 Tools
Excogitation I: ACIG 00:00 Tools
Excogitation V: Cuaderno De Matematicas 00:00 Tools
Montana Summer 00:00 Tools
Obsession 00:00 Tools
Goblet 00:00 Tools
Philosophy 101 (Class of '68) Lao Tzu remix of King Wen mix 00:00 Tools
Last of Her People (feat. Pixieguts) 00:00 Tools
Endecha Asesino 00:00 Tools
Beach Dogs 00:00 Tools
Ground Zero Smoke (feat. Pixieguts) 00:00 Tools
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Tim Doyle's music could be described as "long-form fractal ambient." Any tags, however, are inadequate to the task of explaining the music. This brief introduction may help. He was born Feb. 12, 1949 in St. Cloud, Minnesota, the oldest of nine children, and spent his childhood in a rural setting on a heavily wooded lake. He has been making music in one form or another since childhood, when he soloed in a performance of his piano concerto "Rhapsody #1" at age 9 in a school production, and had a band piece called "Rough Draft" performed a few years later. He turned to jazz and blues piano in his teens, but although he studied music theory and composition, he majored in mathematics, his first love, receiving his B.A. in 1968. He was always intrigued by the connections between music and math, and made some early experiments at computer composition in the late sixties. His love for jazz deepened when he discovered the Blue Note catalog at age 20, starting with Jimmy Smith, Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers, Lee Morgan, John Coltrane, Miles Davis, and Bill Evans. He still plays keyboard in various styles, but has not recorded his improvised music. In 1999, he ran across a relatively simple fractal music generative program called Musinum, created by Dr. Lars Kindermann in Germany, who left it available as freeware and then moved on to other projects. Most of the sample music created by Musinum users was brief and (with a few notable exceptions) primitive, but the power inherent in the algorithms employed intrigued Doyle. He began to create a body of work of increasing intricacy and emotional content, now numbering over 200 works, most of them an hour in length. When his first Netlabel release "Escape from Lhasa" on Treetrunk Records garnered just under 1,000 downloads on its release date and over 3,000 the first week, he realized there was an audience for his music, despite its unfashionable length. (A number of pieces have since been used as radio background.) He has worked nearly thirty years as a computer programmer, and lives in Fairfield, California, not far from San Francisco, where he lived for over a quarter of a century. Most of his siblings and his younger son also make music in one form or another. (See also timpixi, this artist's music featuring vocals by Pixieguts.) More music (midi format), commentary, and ten thousand images at his website: www.musinumworld.com -- be sure to hover the images... half are hidden under the other half! From "How to Listen" webpage: "What a heading! This guy has to tell me HOW to listen to his music? Well, no, I'd like it to speak for itself, but as with any musical form, there are ways of listening that may help to get the most out of what's there. An example may help: Western classical music is traditionally complex harmonically (vertically), and relatively simpler melodically and rhythmically (horizontally). Much of the musical message is in the harmony, and the ear trained to listen to that music grows very sophisticated harmonically. The classical music of (let's say) Northern India tends to find its complexity, and hence to convey much of its message, in melody, rhythm, and indeed, delicate nuances of scale and pitch, as evidenced by (e.g.) the introductory statements of scale and meter that begin a raga. The ear trained to that music grows correspondingly sophisticated in detecting the message conveyed in the rhythms and pitches it hears. Two sets of ears, belonging to the same human species, and yet to the Western ear unfamiliar with Eastern music, the relative lack of harmonic complexity will perhaps make it sound like a pointless droning... The message in the intricate rhythms and precise shadings of pitch and ornament will elude it as much as any dog whistle or bat cry out of human range may do Conversely, to the Eastern musician, the classical music of the West may sound like the artless banging of a child on a toy drum... The shades of meaning and emotion which may induce in the Western listener every kind of emotion will be mostly lost on the ear not trained to decode the message. Even within a genre like jazz, the "moldy fig" traditionalists literally could not hear what was happening in bebop when it first emerged. There were masterful musicians, and there were those who just "ran the changes" on the chords, but to the moldy figs, they all sounded alike, the transcendental and the mediocre. What our ears may now easily hear was not accessible. Coming to the point, there are things to listen for in fractal music, in generative music in general, and in this music in particular. By and large, I like to let the music be what it is... I like to let the underlying structure show itself, and work itself out. (I'll explain more about that later.) One point in particular about fractals, including fractal art and fractal music, is that fractals are defined by being "self-similar." That means that at any scale they appear to have the same structure. Think of an ocean coastline viewed from space, then the detailed shoreline as we zoom down, and finally the little irregularities, the ins and outs, we see as we walk along the water's edge. Or again of a tree branching and re-branching, and the veins in the leaves doing the same down to the microscopic scale. As music is played out in the medium of time, what this means, at least in the case of music composed with the aid of the MusiNum program, is that the differences between, let's say, fifteen seconds and one minute from the point of origin of a fractal piece will be roughly the same as the differences between fifteen minutes and one hour. If the pitch of various voices is rising, for instance, it will tend to rise as much in the last three quarters of an hour as it did in the last three quarters of the first minute. In the intervening time, many structures will tend to be, not repeated, but restated, at many scales of time. Patience may be required to accustom oneself to this form, but patience will often be rewarded. The best way to listen to many of these pieces is not to bring prior expectations to them, but to simply let them be, as you might simply let the flora and fauna be on a nature walk, and observe them as they truly are. The gradual unfolding of qualities inherent in the structure is what is known as a "logarithmic spiral," and such a spiral can be observed in the growth of shelled animals such as the nautilus. I will talk about more things later, including the "hinged" pieces in which the peak of excitement and change is in the middle of the piece. Enough for now." Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.