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I forgot the main bit! [/Mr. Bean]
I am compiling a soundtrack to help me get into the right headspace for writing Indigo. Peter Himmelman's Synesthesia album came first to mind, as did various selections from Talk Talk and David Sylvian. Are there any other artists or songs my f-list can recommend that have the right feel to them? I'm looking for stuff that's atmospheric, complex and slightly dark; experimental yet still melodic; nothing too angry or dissonant, but nothing too fluffy and simplistic, either.
Suggestions, links etc. welcomed in comments.
I am compiling a soundtrack to help me get into the right headspace for writing Indigo. Peter Himmelman's Synesthesia album came first to mind, as did various selections from Talk Talk and David Sylvian. Are there any other artists or songs my f-list can recommend that have the right feel to them? I'm looking for stuff that's atmospheric, complex and slightly dark; experimental yet still melodic; nothing too angry or dissonant, but nothing too fluffy and simplistic, either.
Suggestions, links etc. welcomed in comments.
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Date: 2007-01-02 05:02 am (UTC)Their record company, Middle Pillar, has a free download of part of "Earthquake at Versailles" (http://www.middlepillar.com/mpp/mpp981/Earthquake_at_Versaille.mp3).
Also, two other favorites ("Season of Mist" and "Veils of Gold") are available through a fan-kept MySpace page (http://www.myspace.com/thechangelings2006) ("Veils" is from their last album, "Astronomica").
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Date: 2007-01-02 09:26 am (UTC)David Arkenstone does some very evocative thematic intrumental albums; I first found his stuff when I got his "Middle Earth" album, then "The Celtic Book of Days", though oddly enough, my favourite of his is "Atlantis - A Symphonic Journey".
Philip Glass: Koyaanisqatsi (again, not songs as such; the vocals are more for atmosphere)
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Date: 2007-01-02 11:55 pm (UTC)Oooh, tall order. The closest I can think of are 'Solitude Standing' by Suzanne Vega (for the lyrics: double-edged and eerie), Sting's 'A Thousand Years', and 'Navras' and 'Neodammerung' from the Matrix Revolutions soundtrack. (I like choral soundtracks because, as
Good luck!
IS THAT A RECORDER THE FIFTH DOCTOR'S GOT IN YOUR MOOD ICON??
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Date: 2007-01-03 05:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-01-03 03:12 am (UTC)First, "Cing Rechants", by Olivier Messaien. You can get this on iTunes! It's five retellings of Tristan and Isolde, for 12 voices a cappela, and it's amazing, but it might, perhaps, be too strident and weird? (BTW, not sure if you knew this already, but Messaien was a synaesthete.) Also by him, the "Quartet for the End of Time". The clarinet solo, which is called "The Abyss of Birds", is gorgeous.
I also actually like Stockhausen's song of the youths in the fiery furnace. But I can well understand someone being off Stockhausen after his extremely insensitive comments post 9/11. Still, it is an interesting piece of music.
So those are mine. I thought of the Smiths, too; Morrissey does drone on, but I think he's got a wicked sense of humor. He wouldn't be everyone's cup of tea, though; my sister finds him monotonous. And the music isn't as demanding as the others I've mentioned.