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AeTopus

AeTopus
Bryan Tewell Hughes of AeTopus.jpg
Bryan Tewell Hughes of AeTopus
Background information
Born (1966-05-19) May 19, 1966 (age 51)
Origin Bellingham, Washington
Genres Electronic, New-age, Dark Ambient
Years active 2002–present (2002–present)
Labels 12Ton Productions
Associated acts AnthroPile
Website www.aetopus.com

AeTopus is a progressive Electronic music project performed and produced by composer Bryan Tewell Hughes. The music has received critical acclaim within the new-age and electronic music genres, and the album Between Empires won the award of Best Electronic album in the 2012 Zone Music Reporter Awards. The album Tempula was nominated in the Best Electronic category in the 2006 NAR Lifestyle Music Awards.

Bryan Tewell Hughes (May 19, 1966) was born in Quantico, Virginia. He began taking piano lessons at age 6, and took up playing bass guitar at age 17. He claims to have been introduced to Electronic and New Age music by his grandparents in the early 1980s, and cites Ray Lynch and Kitaro (notable pioneers in the genre) as two of his early influences.

Between 1987 and 1997, he played bass guitar in local Blues, Reggae, Funk, and Punk bands in Moscow, Idaho (where he earned a B.F.A. in Fine Arts/Painting at University of Idaho in 1989), Portland, Oregon, and his current home of Bellingham, Washington. After releasing a solo industrial CD, AnthroPile: Take (1999), he began an audio engineering internship at Binary Recording Studio in Bellingham.

Hughes has dedicated his musical energy to AeTopus since the release of the full-length CD Memories of the Elder in 2002. He is also a visual artist, and is credited with the art and graphic design of his CD liner notes.

AeTopus' sound combines both synthesized and recorded elements, and often features sound bites and spoken human vocalizations that are used to solidify each album's theme. The music is reminiscent of early Electronic New Age in that it contains many common synthesizer sounds (such as arpeggio beeps and bass pads), yet has an exotic presence due to the use of orchestral and ethnic instruments (such as violins, pipe organs, and African percussion).


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