
Omniman
Atoms and Realities

Released in 2014, Atoms and Realities gathers the full scope of Omniman’s early work, presenting seventeen tracks divided between the original collaborative incarnation of the project (Omniman I) and its later solo evolution (Omniman II). Moving through industrial grit, noise‑leaning ambience, experimental electronics, and rock‑inflected textures, the album functions as both a document and a re‑imagining of the project’s formative years.
The Omniman I material — eight tracks — captures the raw, exploratory energy of the early duo. Pieces like “Neuron,” “Samadhi Orbwolves,” “2,000 Years,” and “The Thoughts of Maa” move between meditative drift and heavier, more abrasive structures. “R’lyeh” introduces a mythic undertone, while the ten‑second fragment “Astral Solar Systems”acts as a brief, disorienting prelude to the album’s closing work.
The final track, “Experimusica Decomposure,” runs over thirteen minutes and stands as the album’s most significant archival artifact — a surviving tape‑deck recording from a 1992 rehearsal session between the two original collaborators [Implanted; Infestation]. Its inclusion anchors the release in the physical, imperfect reality of its origins.
The remaining seven tracks, credited to Omniman II, reflect the project’s shift into a more solitary, sculpted mode of creation. These pieces extend the earlier themes while introducing a more controlled, introspective approach to sound.
Atoms and Realities ultimately serves as a bridge between eras — a release that documents the transition from collaborative experimentation to solo vision, preserving the rawness of the past while pointing toward the project’s evolving future.
1. Neuron
2. Samadhi Orbwolves
3. 2,000 Years
4. Not Liked
5. Before the Stars
6. Cultural Synthesis Spoken Word
7. The Thoughts of the Maa
8. The Karmic Brainseed Wheel
9. & I'm A Professor Too
10. Never Liked
11. R'lyeh (Deep Time)
12. Omniform
13. Theology Never Holds Itself Apart From Mysticism
14. Astral Solar Systems
15. Experimusica Decomposure (Profusion to Dematerialized Genitilia) '92
2014/12/27
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