No dammit Ziggy just no. Your taste in music is usually spot on. I always look forward to your posts but this is something Hellboy might try to sneak in. Dammit man you must redeem yourself posthaste!
No dammit Ziggy just no. Your taste in music is usually spot on. I always look forward to your posts but this is something Hellboy might try to sneak in. Dammit man you must redeem yourself posthaste!
WHO R U TO WAVE YA FINGA
You must have been out your head
No dammit Ziggy just no. Your taste in music is usually spot on. I always look forward to your posts but this is something Hellboy might try to sneak in. Dammit man you must redeem yourself posthaste!
WHO R U TO WAVE YA FINGA
You must have been out your head
I said Posthaste!!! No dilly dallying or Tom foolery from you Sir!!
Re: New Music Thread
Posted: Tue Dec 04, 2018 4:39 am
by earthrocker
[bc][/bc]
Re: New Music Thread
Posted: Tue Dec 11, 2018 11:39 pm
by ziggy23
Re: New Music Thread
Posted: Wed Dec 12, 2018 3:06 am
by M0G
Re: New Music Thread
Posted: Thu Jan 10, 2019 2:12 pm
by ziggy23
From the album 'An Attempt to Draw Aside the Veil,' out Feb. 8.
Experimental lute player Jozef Van Wissem and acclaimed film director and musician Jim Jarmusch have a working relationship that dates back to 2006, when they ran into each other on the street in New York City and quickly struck up a friendship. Van Wissem contributed to the soundtrack for Jarmusch’s 2013 movie Only Lovers Left Alive, and the two have collaborated on three previous studio albums.
An Attempt to Draw Aside the Veil delves into the theology of William Blake and Emanuel Swedenborg, this time also exploring the work of Russian occultist and philosopher Helena Blavatsky. The album is mostly instrumental, so the dialogue between the esoteric thinkers who inspired it and Van Wissem and Jarmusch is expressed in the song titles — fittingly arcane phrases like “Concerning the White Horse,” “The Two Paths,” “When the Sun Rises Do You Not See A Round Disc of Fire.”