TJ Dumser TJ Dumser

The History of Ambient Music: From Eno's Airport to the World You Hear Today

I discovered ambient music on a subway platform in Manhattan, running a fever, trying not to fall over.

This was pre-pandemic, back when working through a cold was just what you did — you showed up, you pushed through, you apologized to your coworkers with your eyes. I was working at a studio in SoHo at the time, and I had finally hit the wall where pushing through was no longer physically possible. So I packed up, headed for the subway, and in that particular fog of fever and fluorescent light and the general chaos of a New York City platform at rush hour, I did something I don't entirely remember deciding to do.

I put on Tangerine Dream's Phaedra.

I'd never really heard them before — or more accurately, I'd heard them without knowing it. Phaedra was the soundtrack of Risky Business, the one playing when Tom Cruise slides across the floor in his socks. That was my entire reference point. I figured it would be a good soundtrack for the commute. I had no idea what was about to happen.

The train came. I got on. And somewhere between Canal Street and wherever I was going, I stopped being on the subway. The fever helped, probably — everything was already slightly unreal, slightly detached from its usual weight. But the music did something to that state. It didn't fill the space so much as expand it. The rhythmic sequencers cycling slowly beneath those long, hovering synth pads, the whole thing moving like a tide rather than a song. I arrived somewhere I couldn't name. I didn't want to come back.

That was the beginning. That was the moment I understood, in my body before I could articulate it, what this music was actually for.

But the Story Starts Much Earlier

Ambient music as a named genre has a specific origin, and it belongs to Brian Eno — though he'd be the first to tell you he didn't invent the underlying idea, just gave it a useful label.

The real conceptual seed was planted by a French composer named Erik Satie in 1917. Satie wrote what he called musique d'ameublement — furniture music — pieces designed to be played during social gatherings not to be listened to, but simply to exist in the room. To color the atmosphere the way wallpaper colors a wall. He reportedly got irritated when audiences sat down and paid close attention. That wasn't the point. The point was presence without demand — sound that occupied space without asking to occupy attention.

That idea sat mostly dormant for sixty years. Then Brian Eno had a car accident.

The year was 1975. Eno was recovering in bed when a friend visited, put on a record of 18th century harp music, and left without turning the volume up properly. The music was barely audible — more suggestion than sound, blending with the rain outside the window. Eno was too weak to get up and fix it. So he lay there, listening to something hovering at the edge of perception, and had what he later described as a revelation: this was a completely different relationship to music. Not active listening. Something more like breathing. The music was simply there, changing the quality of the air without demanding anything in return.

That experience became Music for Airports in 1978 — four pieces of slow, looping, largely textureless music designed for public spaces. Not elevator music. Not background noise. Something genuinely new. Eno coined the term ambient, and a genre was born.

What Was Happening in Japan

While Eno was working in England, something parallel and in many ways more philosophically sophisticated was developing in Japan.

Japanese composers in the late 1970s and early 1980s were developing what they called Kankyo Ongaku — environmental music — rooted in a distinctly Japanese aesthetic concept called ma. Ma is the idea that negative space is not absence but presence — that the gap between things carries as much meaning as the things themselves. Silence not as emptiness but as a compositional element with its own weight and intention.

Hiroshi Yoshimura's Music for Nine Postcards, released in 1982, is one of the defining works of this tradition — synth melodies so sparse and carefully placed they feel like light through blinds rather than a conventional piece of music. Midori Takada's Through the Looking Glass is stranger and more hypnotic, percussion cycling slowly like something geological. These records were not widely known outside Japan for decades. When they were finally reissued and discovered by a new generation of listeners, the response was immediate and overwhelming. People recognized something in them that felt ancient and necessary.

That philosophy of negative space — the idea that silence is part of the composition, not a gap in it — lives in my own music now, even when I'm not consciously reaching for it.

Tangerine Dream and the Electronic Wilderness

Back on that subway platform: what Tangerine Dream were doing on Phaedra in 1974 was something that didn't have a name yet.

The Berlin School — Tangerine Dream, Klaus Schulze, Cluster, early Kraftwerk — were using synthesizers not as tools for mimicking acoustic instruments but as tools for generating entirely new sonic environments. Long, evolving sequences. Textures that shifted so slowly the movement only became apparent in retrospect. Music that felt less like a song and more like a place you could enter and inhabit.

Phaedra specifically — that opening sequence of arpeggiated synth rising out of a low drone, unhurried, going somewhere and nowhere simultaneously — is still one of the most transporting pieces of recorded music I know. I understand now why it caught me off guard on that platform. It wasn't asking me to listen. It was asking me to go somewhere. And in my fever-softened state, I went.

These were the records that proved the synthesizer wasn't just a novelty or an orchestral shortcut. It was its own instrument with its own emotional vocabulary. That lineage runs directly through everything I make.

A Record That Found Me Later

There's another piece of music I need to mention here, because it was formative in a quieter way.

Ami Shavit's In Alpha Mood was one of the early records that helped me understand what ambient music could do on a more intimate, almost psychological level. Where Tangerine Dream transported you outward — into vast electronic space — In Alpha Mood worked inward. Softer, more patient, designed to slow the brain into that particular state between full wakefulness and something deeper.

I haven't been able to find it on streaming services in years, which is one of those small music world mysteries that genuinely bothers me. It seems to have quietly disappeared from the platforms.

Note to self: go find it on Discogs.

If you know it, you know why I'm bothered. If you don't, I'd encourage you to look — Discogs is where I do most of my hunting for records that have quietly slipped through the cracks of the streaming world, and it is remarkable what turns up there if you're patient enough to go looking. I could talk about Discogs and vinyl collecting for an embarrassingly long time. More on that another time — because it deserves its own post entirely. For now: go find In Alpha Mood. Good luck to us both.

The Neoclassical Wave and Where We Are Now

The genre that Satie pre-figured, Eno named, the Berlin School electrified, and the Japanese environmental composers deepened went through a long period of existing mostly at the margins — appreciated by musicians and sound designers and a dedicated community of listeners, but largely invisible to mainstream culture.

That changed, gradually, with a generation of artists who collapsed the boundary between classical and electronic music in ways nobody had quite managed before.

Olafur Arnalds, working out of Iceland, brought chamber strings and ambient electronics into a conversation so fluent it became impossible to say where one ended and the other began. Nils Frahm treats the piano as a synthesizer and synthesizers as pianos, his recordings alive with the sound of hammers and pedals and breath — the physical presence of a human being in a room. Max Richter's Sleep, an eight-hour piece designed to be listened to overnight, was one of the most quietly audacious artistic statements of the last twenty years. I covered one of its movements as a tribute. It deserved one.

And then there's the generation working now, in every corner of the world, making music that resists easy categorization and finds its audience through streaming algorithms and word of mouth and the particular loyalty of listeners who find something that actually does something for them and can't stop telling people about it.

Which is, I suppose, how most of us found this music in the first place.

A subway platform. A sick day. A record chosen almost at random.

And then: another dimension, entirely.

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TJ Dumser TJ Dumser

Discovering Japanese Ambient Music: A Journey into Sound and Space

I’ve always been drawn to ambient music, but my recent exploration into Japanese ambient music (Kankyō Ongaku) has been something entirely different—both deeply inspiring and incredibly meditative. As someone new to this world, I’m finding myself captivated by the way these artists utilize field recordings, minimalist compositions, and environmental soundscapes to create something that feels like breathing room for the mind.

A Brief History of Japanese Ambient Music

During the late 1970s and 1980s, Japan saw a flourishing of ambient and minimalist music, much of it falling under the term Kankyō Ongaku, meaning "environmental music." Unlike traditional ambient music in the West, which often focused on pure electronic textures, Japanese ambient artists integrated elements of nature, traditional instrumentation, and everyday soundscapes to craft immersive sonic environments.

This movement was influenced by Western ambient pioneers like Brian Eno, yet it took on a distinctly Japanese approach—one deeply rooted in the country’s cultural appreciation for space, impermanence, and the beauty of simplicity.

Artists That Defined the Genre

Exploring this world has led me to some incredible artists, many of whom have redefined my understanding of how music interacts with time, space, and emotion. Here are a few that have stood out:

  • Hiroshi Yoshimura – Perhaps one of the most well-known names in Japanese ambient music, his 1982 album Music for Nine Postcards is a masterpiece in minimalist soundscapes, blending delicate synth melodies with an almost weightless atmosphere.

  • Midori Takada – A composer and percussionist, her 1983 album Through the Looking Glass remains a landmark in experimental ambient music, combining gamelan-inspired rhythms and organic textures to create something otherworldly.

  • Satoshi Ashikawa – His album Still Way (Wave Notation 2) is a defining work of environmental music, where each note is intentional, and silence plays just as much a role as sound itself.

  • Yasuaki Shimizu – While known for blending avant-garde jazz and classical elements, his work also drifts into ambient territory, creating cinematic and expansive compositions.

The Art of Space and Silence

One of the most fascinating aspects of Japanese ambient music is its ability to create an experience beyond just sound. Field recordings of water, birds, wind, and urban life are often woven seamlessly into the compositions, making the listener feel like they are inside a living, breathing soundscape.

Unlike much Western ambient music, which often builds upon dense layers of sound, Japanese ambient music embraces negative space, allowing room for silence and subtlety. This intentional use of space makes the music feel almost meditative, providing a sense of stillness even as it moves forward.

How This Music is Inspiring My Own Work

The more I listen, the more I find myself influenced by these ideas. The way these artists use repetition, natural sound, and slow movement resonates deeply with how I approach my own ambient compositions. There’s something profound in letting the music breathe, in letting it simply exist rather than trying to force it somewhere.

As I continue learning about this genre, I find myself paying more attention to the role of silence in music, the textures that field recordings add, and the emotional impact of restraint. There’s a quiet beauty in allowing sound to unfold naturally, and that’s something I hope to carry into my own work.

A Playlist for Exploration

If you’re curious about Japanese ambient music, I’ve put together a playlist featuring some of these artists. Whether you’re looking for something to accompany meditation, deep focus, or just a moment of stillness, I highly recommend diving in.

🎧 Japanese Ambient Playlist

This is just the beginning of my journey into this world, but already, it’s reshaping the way I think about sound. If you have recommendations or thoughts on this genre, I’d love to hear them.

Until next time, Your fellow human just being.

  • Six Missing

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