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Yuval Ron’s music
Selected music by guitarist, composer and Residents Of The Future band leader Yuval Ron.
- Yuval Ron – E. Guitar, Vocals
- Matt Paull – Keyboards
- Roberto Badoglio – Bass
- Marco Minnemann – Drums
Additional vocals on “The Discovery of Phoebe” by Dorin Mandelbaum
All music by Yuval Ron
Produced, recorded and mixed by Yuval Ron at The Bubble, Berlin 2016-2019
Drums recorded by Marco Minnemann
Mastered by Maor Appelbaum
Artwork design by Nicolas Uris
Cover astronaut image by Kharmazero
The Discovery of Phoebe is dedicated in memory of Allan Holdsworth.
- Yuval Ron – Electric Guitar
- Aviram Gottfried – Keyboards
- Yaniv Shalev – Bass
- Yatziv Caspi – Drums
Vocals on “Prelude”, “Postlude” and “Objects In The Mirror Are Larger Than They Appear” by Dorin Mandelbaum
Recorded 2009 at Bardo Studios | Mixed 2009 by Gal Navon and Yuval Ron at Digihipi Studios | Remastered 2012 by Yuval Ron
- Yuval Ron – Electric Guitar
- Ofir Shwartz – Keyboards
- Yaniv Shalev – Bass
- Yatziv Caspi – Drums
Recorded 2004 at The Box Studios | Mixed and Mastered by Nadav Katz
Flags
Single
released 23 September 2013
Music and lyrics by Yuval Ron
- Yuval Ron — Electric Guitar
- Falk Bonitz — Keyboards
- Roberto Badoglio — Bass
- Yatziv Caspi — Drums
- Vocals by Tammy Scheffer
Produced by Yuval Ron, 2013
Music production and mix by Fountainhead
Video production by Martin Bahre
Engineered by Christian Bader at Studio P4
Mastered by Steve Fallone
Walls of concrete and glass
The world below
Matters no more to them than us
Question the call
When there are rules to be made
Because it’s all about their debt when it must be paid
It’s a well-known game no one would like to defy
But I’ve got my edge to admit it:
When their interest is gone, you’re all on your own
Looking out for a way
It’s a matter of trust –
Are we here to abide
To the flags that are waving?
“Before you even listen to it, it’s clear that Yuval Ron’s Somewhere in This Universe, Somebody Hits a Drum is a very serious record. Stoic, in full astronaut gear, Ron floats in space on the album’s artwork, a definitive image for the odd mental cinema the record scaffolds—with the crucial role of drummer played by Marco Minnemann. It’s there on the final frontier, equipped with astral, analog synthesizers, arresting time signatures, and a generous helping of self-satire, that Ron presents his open jazz/metal echo of classic prog dipped in an absurd crystalline fondue.
It all begins with a march and a regal Gregorian yodel heralding the space voyage, and unfolds through Ron’s peaceful-stream-meets-metal-arpeggios guitar, and the occasional tubular bell and aural suggestion of space monsters (by growling, distorted effects). Matt Paull on keys and Roberto Badoglio on bass complete the quartet, together cultivating a fertile prog playground … in space.”