On this Kucharz CD - Blue Motion - the mood of long, stratifying layers, found on DigiChoral Blue Portraits, have been exchanged for fast moving bits of audio information, rendering it a minimalistic, repetitive, illusionary feeling, not at all unpleasant. In fact, this is like having someone massage your temples or your neck, and the tingling sensation curves up right across your skull, descending in a hurried trail down your forehead, until it pops off of the tip of your nose like a discharge of static electricity!
What might come to mind is for instance Terry Rileys In C in the hammering version by Piano Circus on Argo (430 380-2), released in 1990. In fact, one of the sixteen pieces on this CD number 6 - is named for terry riley blue.
Later on, as the fairly short pieces (varying in duration from about one minute to almost seven minutes) change their nuances, the mood takes on shapes strikingly similar to what you find in Koyaanisqatsi, the movie for orchestra by Philip Glass, based on Hopi indian prophecies about the end of the world, triggered by Mans anti-spiritual and anti-caring rampage on this beautiful and wondrous sphere in the midst of this starsprangled void of space. In fact, this inspired me to check out Koyaanisqatsi once again, and it always is a thrill and a scare to watch that movie for orchestra, like having the whole evolution of Earth passing by in a flash in the mind of a dying and forsaken God.
However, Larry Kucharz's electrocomputer music stands its own ground here, and I recommend listening on a loud volume, to really get that brainmassage going! In its best moments this music reaches that minimalistic stage where the other voice rises, like in kargiraa or khoomei singing of Tuva or Mongolia, when the overtones rise out of the deep grunting voice (especially deep and hoarse in kargiraa singing), to live a separate life, like swallows flying high above the struggle of farmers, on the warm winds of July.
If you have a sub-woofer, turn that on too, to get the whole experience, from guts to brain!