Hi, fellow new age music fan!

Thank you for visiting our site.

NewAgeMusic.nu is a product of my deep and enduring love for new age music. I can still remember the first new ageish song I heard: Dance with the Lion by Andreas Vollenweider. I was seven years old, in 1988, and Vollenweider’s beautiful harp was the background music on a local TV station.

In the late 1980s and early 1990s I mostly heard new age music through the influence artists like Tangerine Dream and Jean Michel Jarre had on computer game music. And then, with the release of Enigma’s MCMXC a.D. (which first caught my ears in 1993, only moths before The Cross of Changes was released) and then World Mix by Deep Forest, I was hooked for life.

With the introduction to the Internet my music consumption grew rapidly. I discovered Mike Oldfield and Tubular Bells, and after that numerous of other artist presented on this page.

If you would like to contact me, my email address is bt[at]newagemusic.nu

My 5 all time favorite albums:

1. Enigma Le Roi Est Mort, Vive Le Roi! (1996) Enigma - Le Roi Est Mort, Vive Le Roi! 3

Comment: This is an album I always return to, and never get tired of. Enigmatic and powerful.

2. Mike Oldfield Amarok (1990) Mike Oldfield - Amarok

Comment: One of the most exiting albums ever. 60 minutes of pure creativity. Burlesque, ever-changing and highly positive. “Beginnings, beginnings. We never want to hear this word; endings!”

3. Deep Forest Deep Forest (1993) Deep Forest - Deep Forest

Comment: I went into the deep forest back in ‘93, and have in many ways never returned to the open plains. In my opinion this is the best ethnic fusion album out there. Sweet Lullaby sounds even sweeter to me today, after 15 years on replay. Incredible.

4. Medwyn Goodall Earth Goddess (2007) Medwyn Goodall - Earth Goddess

Comment: My one way tropical island escape ticket. I own 85 Medwyn Goodall albums, and I love every one them – but this is his best so far.

5. Era Era (1997)

Many would say that Eric Levi was highly inspired by Enigma’s MCMXC A.D. when he created the first Era album – but I think the two albums are very different. I love the great vocals on Era, and the strong medieval feeling. Bring me my lance and horse!

// BT Fasmer