Paul Schutze: Second Site Disc 1 CD Track Listing
Paul Schutze
Second Site Disc 1 (1997)
YEAR: 1997 ID3G: 26
This misc cd contains 51 tracks and runs 50min 3sec.
Freedb: 950bb933
Buy: from Amazon.com
Category
: Music
Tags
: music songs tracks misc Ambient- Paul Schutze - First Prologue (01:01)
- Paul Schutze - The dial is only visible by starlight (01:16)
- Paul Schutze - Every day at noon the sun shines through these apertures for the space of about a minute (00:38)
- Paul Schutze - The image of the sun indicates the sun's position as it passes through a hole in the concurve surface (01:15)
- Paul Schutze - There is a brass pointer fitted with sights and pivoted to the centre of the circle by which altitude observations are made (00:49)
- Paul Schutze - This chamber is no longer accessible to visitors (01:00)
- Paul Schutze - Access to any part of the engine is by steps which offer vantage points for various readings (00:49)
- Paul Schutze - Suspended in the hum of history (01:10)
- Paul Schutze - Originally cross wires stretched across each hemisphere, East to West and North to South (01:17)
- Paul Schutze - The ramped stair to the North of the two drums vanishes at thirty-two feet (01:03)
- Paul Schutze - These steps enable the observer to see all aspects of the brass calibration below (00:39)
- Paul Schutze - There is a huge calibrated sundial on each of its sides (00:59)
- Paul Schutze - This chamber is filled with garden tools and broken furniture (01:00)
- Paul Schutze - The mosaic of starlight slips back like the lid of an opening eye (00:59)
- Paul Schutze - This engine is primarily a calculator, though altitudes may be observed using the sighting bar fitted to the back (00:59)
- Paul Schutze - It is inscribed with concentric circles, at the centre of which lies a pointer (01:01)
- Paul Schutze - The calibrated parts are raised on three-foot pillars (01:00)
- Paul Schutze - The pink masonry charges the twilight with a faint sound (00:59)
- Paul Schutze - Another slope with stairs for the reading of figures (01:00)
- Paul Schutze - This engine is now only visible in twilight (01:00)
- Paul Schutze - Here is an immense brass circle suspended vertically from stone supports (00:48)
- Paul Schutze - Two hemispheres representing the sphere of heaven comprise the two halves of this engine (01:10)
- Paul Schutze - This wall describes accurately the North/South meridian (00:59)
- Paul Schutze - There are pillars at the centre of each circular wall each open to the sky (00:49)
- Paul Schutze - First Memory (01:09)
- Paul Schutze - The sky has shaped this place (01:00)
- Paul Schutze - Here I find a central iron pole with hooks facing to the North, South, East and West (00:59)
- Paul Schutze - A shadow is cast to the West before noon (00:58)
- Paul Schutze - The shadow can fall in the vacant sector of a drum (01:01)
- Paul Schutze - Days and nights are measured here and in the measuring seem longer, suspended somehow (01:00)
- Paul Schutze - The whole brass circle can be revolved around its vertical diameter so that altitude observations can be taken of any object at any time (00:59)
- Paul Schutze - A lofty but narrow chamber is contrived in the thickness of the walls and access is gained from a door opening from the masonry platform on which the engine stands (00:36)
- Paul Schutze - A further series of steps is only visible during the vernal equinox (00:23)
- Paul Schutze - Hold the machine in the vertical plane (01:00)
- Paul Schutze - Visible portions of the celestial sphere are represented by this map which has a movable elliptic which pivots at the point representing the pole (01:01)
- Paul Schutze - To move through these structures is to set them in motion (00:58)
- Paul Schutze - The altitude of the body observed is given while observing the vertically hanging bar through the two brass rings (00:59)
- Paul Schutze - A shadow is cast to the East after noon (00:59)
- Paul Schutze - These calibrations are no longer clearly visible (00:59)
- Paul Schutze - Another flight of observation steps and the sense of quiet rotation as I ascend (01:00)
- Paul Schutze - I study the vaults of a shell in which we float (00:59)
- Paul Schutze - Twenty-seven degrees thirty-seven seconds (01:00)
- Paul Schutze - The roofs of the enclosed drums are implied by shadows (00:59)
- Paul Schutze - The floor and walls are calibrated to read altitude and azimuth (00:59)
- Paul Schutze - These are the cool engines of celestial map-making (01:00)
- Paul Schutze - Here is the Supreme Engine (00:59)
- Paul Schutze - The sun seen through the pair of brass rings is used by the bar to indicate the time from sunrise until sunset (01:00)
- Paul Schutze - A pointer indicates on three arms; West, North and East (00:59)
- Paul Schutze - Here was the Supreme Engine (00:58)
- Paul Schutze - The engine of amplitude has a function which is no longer known (01:00)
- Paul Schutze - This engine is a rectangular brass plate (00:59)
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