Perhaps the most beautiful track on the album, it features a chime-like melody played on the Synclavier II. In MP3, those chimes sound like tiny bells. In FLAC, they sound like points of light exploding in a dark room. The stereo image is holographic, with Dolby’s vocal sitting dead center, slightly dry and intimate, while the "crash" of the drums is pushed far back in the mix. The difference is the difference between looking at a painting behind glass and standing in the room with the canvas.
A wordless synth overture. In FLAC, you hear the breath of the analog oscillators—the slight pitch drift as the Juno-60 warms up. It sets a cinematic, airborne mood before Dolby whispers the first lyric. Thomas Dolby - The Golden Age of Wireless -flac-
Thomas Dolby (born Thomas Morgan Robertson) was a studio prodigy before he became a frontman. Having played keyboards on albums by Foreigner and Def Leppard, Dolby’s solo vision was radically different: cinematic, cerebral, and deeply strange. Perhaps the most beautiful track on the album,
Enjoy your high-quality listening experience! The stereo image is holographic, with Dolby’s vocal
In the early '80s, Thomas Dolby burst onto the pop music ... - Facebook
The album features several notable tracks, including: