Hello friends!

The third Mashinetron album, dedicated to the intertwining of machine intelligence and the human soul, has found its perfect conclusion. The final eleventh track, “New Time New Era”, is a large-scale philosophical statement embodied in sound and the culmination of the album’s entire narrative arc.

From the very first chords, you are drawn into an atmosphere of solemn anticipation. The confident, relentless pulse of the orchestra seems to symbolize the passage of time—powerful and unstoppable. But the track’s main highlight and uniqueness lie in its use of timbres. Here, a dialogue between past and future unfolds: the velvety organ, full of sacred grandeur; the ancient, ornate harpsichord; and the crystalline, airy celesta. The harpsichord, echoing the Baroque era, and the organ, a symbol of spiritual tradition, do not oppose the modern orchestral sound but are woven organically into it. The celesta, with its unearthly, “stellar” timbre, becomes a bridge to the future. Their interplay is the very idea of time’s flow: the past does not die but becomes the foundation for the new.

“New Time New Era” is a metaphor for technological progress. The track doesn’t just state the fact that a “new era” is arriving; it makes you feel it on a physical level. It’s impossible to stop the movement, impossible to turn away from change. The composition builds and layers, much like technological discoveries accumulate, leading to a powerful, enlightened apotheosis.

The central message of the track rings out with utmost clarity: to resist the future is to get stuck in the past. The music leaves no choice: it picks you up and carries you forward, toward that future which is getting closer with every moment. This is its main strength.

“New Time New Era” is a vivid finale for Mashinetron—a track that is both a conclusion and a revelation. It ends the album on a high note, leaving the listener not with a sense of an ending, but with a feeling of the beginning of a new, vast, and opportunity-filled path.

New Time new Era

You can listen to my soundtracks on the ORCHESTRAL MUSIC page.