My Favorie Art Pieces
- Length: 1:50
- Rating: ( ratings)
- Views: 45
- Author: vickylynne
Tags: angels art fairys fantasy galbreth gothic Jessica wings
A collection of my favorie pieces by Jessica Galbreth. Music: Passing of the ElvesFellowship of the Ring Extended soundtrack
Somebody is dying - House/Cameron/Foreman
- Length: 4:7
- Rating: 5.00 (5 ratings)
- Views: 609' favoriteCount='4
- Author: Zuczek16
Tags: Afternoon cameron fanvid Foreman hameron house House/Cameron Hugh Iron Jennifer Laurie Morrison Passing story Wine zuczek
House/Cameron/Foreman storySomebody is dying so that the other persons was able to liveCameron is with Foreman. They are living together, and they are concealing it in secret. Eventually the truth is leaving to reality. House is envious. He loves Cam but he didn't have so much courage to confess it to her.Foreman is beginning to be ill, Cam was very sad...Watch this video and get to know further their fate;)Music: Passing Afternoon - Iron & WineComments would be great, hope you enjoy.
Deaf - 1970 - Alpha - 4 - Alpha Part 2
- Length: 6:22
- Rating: ( ratings)
- Views: 129
- Author: proGfleA1234
The Swiss import LP reissue of Alpha brings one of the most interesting, obscure German progressive albums of the early '70s back into print, with all its excitement and intrigue intact. Side one, recorded live between 1970 and 1972, offers some of the wickedest, most chaotic Krautrock moments ever, aside from the one rather conventional (and, by comparison to the rest of the music, rather blasé) blues-based rock number. "No Time" is built out of hypnotic, tribal Can-like beats and free jazz freakouts, while the highly melodic prog keyboards keep the song moving forward. The vocals on "The Galactic Pack of Fönds Kari" are virtually indecipherable (not unlike Damo Suzuki's with Can), but the song speaks volumes on its own, with jump cuts between pop melodic moments and a section stripped to minimalistic Middle Eastern flair. The mammoth title track that takes up the whole second side of the LP (appropriately labeled "The Psychedelic Journey") is where the band turns especially ambitious. At an astounding 22 and a half minutes, the track does its inspiration -- Ravel's Bolero -- proud. It is psychedelic in the true sense of the word, conjuring up an imminently strange wind. The jam sets and maintains an acid-inoculated tone that meanders through demonic medieval chants, exotic Arabic rhythms, strains of organ exorcised from a dark Christian fugue, harnessed feedback, Renaissance orchestration, some progressive Brit-folk strumming, spacy sound effects, and accelerated circus music. Although it does occasionally drift out of focus and is virtually without melody or motif, the song is surprisingly deliberate. By creating a wealth of space, it even provides a sort of disorienting, long-form narrative that a lot of music passing for psychedelia never manages. Since Alpha was only pressed in a limited run the first time around, even most devotees of Krautrock have probably never heard this music. Needless to say, if you can find the 1994 Black Rills reprint, it's well worth it. ~ Stanton Swihart, All Music Guide
Deaf - 1970 - Alpha - 4 - Alpha Part 3
- Length: 8:29
- Rating: ( ratings)
- Views: 129
- Author: proGfleA1234
The Swiss import LP reissue of Alpha brings one of the most interesting, obscure German progressive albums of the early '70s back into print, with all its excitement and intrigue intact. Side one, recorded live between 1970 and 1972, offers some of the wickedest, most chaotic Krautrock moments ever, aside from the one rather conventional (and, by comparison to the rest of the music, rather blasé) blues-based rock number. "No Time" is built out of hypnotic, tribal Can-like beats and free jazz freakouts, while the highly melodic prog keyboards keep the song moving forward. The vocals on "The Galactic Pack of Fönds Kari" are virtually indecipherable (not unlike Damo Suzuki's with Can), but the song speaks volumes on its own, with jump cuts between pop melodic moments and a section stripped to minimalistic Middle Eastern flair. The mammoth title track that takes up the whole second side of the LP (appropriately labeled "The Psychedelic Journey") is where the band turns especially ambitious. At an astounding 22 and a half minutes, the track does its inspiration -- Ravel's Bolero -- proud. It is psychedelic in the true sense of the word, conjuring up an imminently strange wind. The jam sets and maintains an acid-inoculated tone that meanders through demonic medieval chants, exotic Arabic rhythms, strains of organ exorcised from a dark Christian fugue, harnessed feedback, Renaissance orchestration, some progressive Brit-folk strumming, spacy sound effects, and accelerated circus music. Although it does occasionally drift out of focus and is virtually without melody or motif, the song is surprisingly deliberate. By creating a wealth of space, it even provides a sort of disorienting, long-form narrative that a lot of music passing for psychedelia never manages. Since Alpha was only pressed in a limited run the first time around, even most devotees of Krautrock have probably never heard this music. Needless to say, if you can find the 1994 Black Rills reprint, it's well worth it. ~ Stanton Swihart, All Music Guide
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