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Band/artist - Mourning Beloveth
Genre(s) - Doom metal
Origin - Ireland
Album - Dust
Year of release - 2000
Mourning Beloveth are a bit more orthodox than the previous few death-doom bands I uploaded. Especially Dust, their debut, is very much in line with the British tradition, most of all My Dying Bride in their classic period. That's not to say these Irishmen's music is uninteresting - would this album be here if it was? It's full of good melodies and the progressions in the songs come quite naturally. They manage to create a credible atmosphere without the help of keyboards. I remember the tracks Dust and Autumnal Fires especally fondly. The former has a crushing "chorus" twice somewhere in the middle of the tracks and from the first one on continues in variations on that same theme. The latter song starts out with a wonderful, emotionally strained melody and there are more exquisite moments that cost too much space to mention. Doom by the book, but what's wrong with that?
- The mountains are mine
- In mourning my days
- Dust
- Autumnal fires
- All hope is pleading
- It almost looked human
- Sinistra
- Forever lost emeralds
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Band/artist - Agalloch
Genre(s) - Neofolk metal
Origin - United States of America (Portland, OR)
So! Agalloch don't have two EPs out, they've got four, and I decided to be a perfectionist and upload 'em all. With all the genre confusion I've decided to call them neofolk-metal, which may be a bit "too short through the corner" but it's simply the most fitting term I can imagine. Their very latest EP, the White one, once again underscores the band's dedication to neofolk - it's entirely written in this tradition - and also their metal material usually shows influences from the genre. The Grey EP starts off with a (very) different version of The Lodge, off The Mantle album, transforming it from a short semi-acoustic track into a long, very beautiful piece of largely black metal-styled melancholy. Odal on the other hand has gotten an industrial-ambient treatment that can't catch my attention at all. The White EP consists of only new tracks, barren and bleached compositions with only sporadic use of electric instruments or vocals. It suits you or it doesn't, but I think it's wonderful.
Album - The Grey EP
Year of release - 2004
- The lodge (dismantled)
- Odal (nothing remix)
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Album - The White EP
Year of release - 2008
- The isle of summer
- Birch black
- Hollow stone
- Pantheist
- Birch white
- Sowilo rune
- Summerisle reprise
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Band/artist - Agalloch
Genre(s) - Neofolk-metal
Origin - United States of America (Portland, OR)
Up to a couple of months ago I ignored Agalloch completely due to soaring popularity. At the time it felt too much like jumping on the bandwagon and I'm no athlete. Quite glad I tried it out in the end. Haughm and company sound much like a neofolk-ensemble switched to metal yet keeping a lot of old influences. This results in some bleak and atmospheric music, thematically centered around negative feelings and love for nature, but too restrained to be conveniently labeled black, doom or folk metal. I figure that if you're looking for their albums you can probably find them all over the instawebs so when it comes to uploading, I'm going for the EPs. Of Stone, Wind and Pillor shows off the trademarks of their style, like their remarkable twin-guitar approach - one electric and one acoustic - and their penchant towards acoustic and ambient passages. Tomorrow Will Never Come is a two-track release consisting of an alternative version of A Celebration for the Death of Man, and a new, very desolate-sounding neofolk track with spoken-word samples.
Album - Of Stone, Wind and Pillor
Year of release - 2001 - Of stone, wind and pillor
- Folorium viridium
- Haunting birds
- Kneel to the cross
- A poem by Yeats
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Album - Tomorrow Will Never Come
Year of release - 2003 - Death of man (version III)
- Tomorrow will never come
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Band/artist - Various
Genre(s) - Pop, dance, metal, misc
Origin - Everywhere
Album - My horrid Christmas special
Year of release - Never, duh
I'm glad I never posted any actual Christmas music on here, but I do want to give you something for season greetings. So I gathered all the most embarrassing songs that were on my computer and randomly distributed them over four "disks" or volumes. The idea behind it is that you download all four volumes and try out all the songs, then decide which ones you want to keep, but you know, whatever. The files are around 40MB each and I believe Mediafire will allow you to download the four files simultaneously. The amount of total crap on my computer is absolutely ridiculous so be welcome to share in all its reeking, festering purity. 100% Guaranteed to make you feel dirty all over.
Vol. I - Load it down
- 2 Unlimited - No limits
- B*witched - C'est la vie
- DJ Norman vs. Darkraver - Komt ie dan he
- Eiffel 65 - Blue (da ba dee)
- Hakkuhbar - Supergabber
- Jerry Lee Lewis - Great balls of fire
- Johnny Cash - Ring of fire
- Kylie Minogue - More, more, more
- Nomads - Yakalelo
- Ray Peterson - Tell Laura I love her
- Schnappi das Kleine Krokodil - Schnappi (original version)
- t.A.T.u. - All the things she said
- Village People - YMCA
Vol. II - Load it down
- ABBA - Gimme! Gimme! Gimme!
- Avril Lavigne - Sk8er boi
- David Hasselhoff - Do the limbo dance
- Dschinghis Khan - Moskau
- Gloria Gaynor - I will survive
- Kylie Minogue - Can't get you out of my head
- Nargaroth - Black metal ist Krieg
- Pink Stëël - We fight 4 cock
- Snow - Informer
- The Bee Gees - Staying alive
- Toy-box - Tarzan and Jane
Vol. III - Load it down
- ABBA - Voulez-vous?
- Aqua - Barbie girl
- Conny Froboess - Zwei kleine Italiener
- Dream Evil - Kingdom at war
- Frankie goes to Hollywood - Relax
- Kelly Family - Fell in love with an alien
- Lulu - I'm a tiger
- Paradiso - Bailando
- Rick James - Party all the time
- Sister Act - I will follow Him
- The Spice Girls - Wannabe
Vol. IV - Load it down
- Art Garfunkel - Bright eyes
- Celine Dion - My heart will go on
- Donna Summer - Hot stuff
- Falco - Amadeus
- Hanson - Mmmbop
- Kelis - Milkshake
- Los del Rio - Macarena
- Nordglanz - Wotan strafe England
- Rednex - The way I mate
- Satyricon - I got erection
- Scooter - How much is the fish
"Fuck you Santa, this is MY goddamn holiday!"
Band/artist - Bob Dylan and the Grateful Dead
Genre(s) - Folk rock
Origin - United States of America
Album - Dylan & the Dead
Year of release - 1989
Christmas stress? Not sure if you're gonna get your cooking done on time? Still not sent those Christmas cards?Are the kids gonna like their presents? Chillax! Escape the agitation the holiday season brings with ye masters of psych and ye master of folk, combined. Usually I probably wouldn't have found this so interesting cause I'm not the greatest fan of Bobby's voice or most of his songs, but Dylan and the Dead? Oh hell yeah. Such easy-going music has never been heard before. Despite (sadly) featuring Dylan songs only, the Grateful Dead do certainly leave their stamp on them. This is some laid-back folk rock, and especially wonderful on the way to work - especially by train - and not even because the first track's title. I think there's something magical about trains, and this music recognizes that. Incidentally, Slow Train is probably the most wonderful song on here together with Knockin' on Heaven's Door.
- Slow train
- I want you
- Gotta serve somebody
- Queen Jane approximately
- Joey
- All along the watchtower
- Knockin' on heaven's door
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Band/artist - Nagelfar
Genre(s) - Black metal
Origin - Germany
Album - Virus West
Year of release - 2001
Another one of my very favourite German bands is Nagelfar. They are one of the first groups that incorporated the amount of atmosphere, intelligence, and intensity that I crave in black metal. If there is one band that may reach equal status to Lunar Aurora, it's this one. Virus West is their latest and last full-length, and while it sounds more dry, more direct and more guitar-based than their earlier material it's in no way a step down. Furious music with a vision far beyond the usual riffs and compositions, that is nonetheless black metal through and through. The twists and turns that this release displays are entirely intoxicating and there is one moment in particular I want to draw your attention to. Whatever you do, make sure you listen to Hetzjagd in Palästina (seemingly dealing with Christian Antisemitism) from, say, 5:00 to 6:12. Tell me that isn't the most triumphant and addictive riff that you've ever heard. Many more awesome moments are scattered across the album but the quality and atmosphere is consistently satisfying throughout its duration. The final two tracks are very raw demo versions. Any black metal fan owes it to themselves to check this one out, now.
- Hellebarn (Halberd)
- Sturm der Katharsis (Storm of catharsis)
- Hetzjagd in Palästina (Witchhunt in Palestine)
- Westwall
- Fäden des Schicksals (Threads of fate)
- Protokoll einer Folter (Torture protocol)
- Meuterei (Mutiny)
- Bieter des Kampfes (Provider of struggle)
- Transilvanischer Hunger (Darkthrone cover)
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Band/artist - Cat Stevens
Genre(s) - Folk-pop
Origin - London, United Kingdom
Album - Saturnight (Live in Tokyo)
Year of release - 1974
My love for Cat Stevens isn't what it used to be but I still enjoy his classic albums Tea for the Tillerman and Teaser and the Firecat once in a while. Most of my favourite songs made it onto this live release in a dignified quality, in contrast to the later Majikat live album which was overstuffed with ladies' choirs and other grotesqueries. In addition to being a not ungifted acoustic guitarist and pianist, Cat has got a warm, gentle voice that somehow reminds me of oak wood. His songs are elegant and uncomplicated, and most of you will probably have heard one of them somewhere. The best ones among them are usually a tad autumnal (Wild World, My Lady d'Arbanville) if not plain sad, like Father and Son and Oh Very Young, though sometimes also hopeful like Peace Train. Ah, the nostalgia.
- Wild world
- Oh very young
- Sitting
- Where do the children play?
- Lady d'Arbanville
- Another Saturday night
- Hard headed woman
- Peace train
- Father and son
- King of trees
- A bad penny
- Bitterblue
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Band/artist - Mar de Grises
Genre(s) - Doom metal
Origin - Chile
Album - The Tatterdemalion Express
Year of release - 2004
Of all doom-death albums I have posted or aim to post in the future, The Tatterdemalion Express by Mar de Grises is one of the most interesting ones. The band is Chilean, and while I'm usually hesistant with South-American extreme metal - it just doesn't seem to fit their climate, you know, nor their fiery, love-for-life temperament - this is an excellent find. It's very dark stuff, definitely in the vein of the "Big Three", UK doom-death originators, but somehow more menacing, more mysterious, more tormented. Mentioning the relative busy-ness of the music, the careful attention to detail, the beautiful piano accents or the song structures that literally collapse under their own weight (check out To See Saturn Fall to see what I mean), doesn't seem enough to fully explain the unique atmosphere presented here, but then I don't know what would. This is doom, squared.
- El otro
- To see Saturn fall
- Storm
- Recklessness
- Self portrait no. 1
- Be welcome oh hideous hell
- Onirica
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Band/artist - Forteresse
Genre(s) - Black metal
Origin - You can guess
Album - Métal Noir Québécois
Year of release - 2006
Oh, Canada. Our home and blah blah blah. Here's some Quebecois nationalist/separatist black metal for humanity's collective enjoyment. Dense yet ambient-ish stuff carried entirely on the strength of the slow but not unmelodic riffs that envelop you like a mist. The drums and vocals are there, but exceedingly simple and understated, respectively, and of really quite little importance. Burzumesque, certainly, but with big Canadian balls instead of Varg's little Norwegian peanuts. I had actually already posted Forteresse's latest when I decided I'd rather put up this one. It's a bit less raw and minimalistic than Les Hivers de Notre Époque, with a bit more ground given to the melodies. Epic, foresty melodies that is, immersive enough even for my demands and with more than a touch of proud nostalgia (La Flamme et le Lys!). Métal Noir Épique Québécois, mère-niqueur! Alors.
- La moisson de la liberté (The harvest of liberty)
- Une nuit pour la patrie (One night for the fatherland)
- La flamme et le lys (The flame and the lily)
- De sang et de volonté (Blood and will)
- Métal Noir Québécois (Québécois black metal)
- Honneur et tradition (Honour and tradition)
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Band/artist - Twisted Sister
Genre(s) - Glam metal, hard rock
Origin - United States of America
Album - Stay Hungry
Year of release - 1984
Ah, the ugliest album cover in history and I have it on super-official vinyl. :) Twisted Sister are masters of bad taste and Stay Hungry is the band's most well-known album, as it has both I Wanna Rock and We're Not Gonna Take It. Personally I think the former track is way overrated but the latter belongs to the coolest tracks, together with the opening (title) song and Burn in Hell. But except for Horrorteria, there's nothing to complain about on this release. Great stuff to shout along and bang your fist to, with the ultimate rock'n'roll attitude and, intended or not, a huge dose of humour. As far as I'm concerned, Dee Snider deserves a medal. What a hero. Did you know that is his real hair? Fucking awesome. So anyway, not much in the way of emotion or atmosphere, but some very cool rock music.
- Stay hungry
- We're not gonna take it
- Burn in hell
- Horrorteria (Captain Howdy)
- I wanna rock
- The price
- Don't let me down
- The beast
- SMF (sick motherfucker)
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Band/artist - Xavier Rudd
Genre(s) - Folk, reggae, surf
Origin - Australia (Torquay, Victoria)
Album - Food in the Belly
Year of release - 2005
I saw this dude live in Amsterdam once and he absolutely blew my mind. Seriously, I had never danced like that, and without a drop of alcohol in my body. At some point the people were dancing on the freakin' stage! Crazy times. Of course you can't expect the same energy to be caught on a plastic disk let alone in mp3 file format, but Food in the Belly comes pretty close. Using didgeridoos, slide, bass and regular guitar, various sorts of percussion and more, Xavier Rudd is a one man band in the classic sense, in live situations often playing two or three instruments simultaneously. This way, he creates a really positive blend of sounds, incorporating folk, reggae, surf and world music influences. It's both warm and refreshing, foreign and familiar, energetic and relaxing, all these things and more, purely the expression of a beautiful, creative soul.
[The RAR file says 2006; my mistake.]
- The letter
- Messages
- Pockets of peace
- Energy song
- Fortune teller
- The mother
- Food in the belly
- My missing
- Mana
- Connie's song
- Famine
- Generation fade
- September 24, 1999
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Band/artist - The American Dollar
Genre(s) - Post-rock
Origin - United States of the American dollar
Album - The Technicolour Sleep
Year of release - 2007
Half a year ago I wouldn't have dreamed to upload a post-rock album even if my life depended on it. This was due to a silly and unfounded grudge against the entire genre. But then I discovered Les Discrets, and the use of The Long March in the video Tir Nan Og is what opened my eyes to The American Dollar. Now I've been discovering some awesome post-rock bands, but this one remains undefeated. In principle TAD is a very stereotypical example of its style's characteristics: instrumental, atmospheric music based on rock instruments, but with very resonant, sprawling tones and song structures that work up to a climax. But none of the other bands I've tried, including Mogwai and Caspian, have such emotionally charged songs. The track Signalling Through the Flames is simply the most beautiful instrumental track that I have ever heard and everybody should have heard it at least once before (s)he dies.
- Rudiments of a spiritual life
- The technicolour sleep
- Signalling through the flames
- Tonight, let's all make love in Vegas
- Daytrip
- The swamp
- Supernova landslide
- Time
- Summer of war
- DEA
- Raided by waves
- Palestine
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Band/artist - Elffor
Genre(s) - Black metal
Origin - Bizkaia, Basque Country
Album - Unblessed Woods
Year of release - 2006
Please do not mind the rather cartoonesque album art, true beauty is found on the inside! Elffor is a vehicle for Eöl, keyboardist of Basque-nationalist band Numen, and has always been very synth-minded. Summoning is clearly the greatest example to this project, and earlier albums sounded suspiciously like more tedious imitations of Minas Morgul. Unblessed Woods is the first album to partly let go of this formula, bringing a greater dose of aggression, more subtle atmospherics and an increased variety to the table. When the black metal is allowed free rein the music is at its best, and you can feel it taking over the space within your skull. This is beautifully demonstrated by the explosive tracks Through the Mist and ...From Ancient Scrypts. This is some epic symphonic black metal, and extra kudos for responsible use of a drum computer.
- Unblessed woods
- Through the mist
- Of heretic pagan kingdom
- Winter, fullmoon, sorrow
- Dark orchestral hate
- ...From ancient scrypts
- Gorgorium goth
- The forgotten dying moon
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Band/artist - Trist
Genre(s) - Dark ambient, black metal
Origin - Rosenheim (Bavaria), Germany
Album - Hin
Year of release - 2007
[Semi-repost]
Hin-Fort has nothing to do with the more well-known Czech band named Trist. This is the German band/co-operation between one Timo Kölling (a poet and philosopher) and Benjamin König AKA Aran of Lunar Aurora. It's formally a dark ambient project, but this release is split in two very distinct disks. The second disk, Fort, is indeed comprised of very dark ambient of a cinematic kind that aims to frighten, using a lot of movie samples and the like. The first disk, Hin, is what this is really about. This single, hour-long behemoth of a track starts as an ambient piece too. But twice in its duration the music erupts into long stretches of the most intense, brainwarping and repetitive ambient black metal you might ever have heard. It does remind of Lunar Aurora - the atmosphere reminds of Hier und Jetzt and the Zyklus album to be precise, but the whole sound is more alike to Darkspace without the palm-muted guitars. You could see it as a blend of both, but more persistent in every way. I'd already posted the first disk but a set is a set. If you're not discouraged by lengthy songs and like a musical challenge you should let this unit turn your brain into goo - that's what it does, and it feels good.
Disk 1 - Hin - Load it down
- Hin (59:54)
Disk 2 - Fort - Load it down
- (Keine) Angst
- Unter dem Wolken
- Hilfe
- Schlaflos
- Licht aus!
- Nachtflug
- Fort
Band/artist - Grateful Dead
Genre(s) - Psychedelic rock, jam band
Origin - San Francisco, California, USA
Album - Live at Fillmore East 02-11 (or 11-02) 1969
Year of release - Never actually released
Another bootleg of the late trippiest band on Earth's 60s material, from when they were at their most psychedelic. With Workingman's Dead in 1970 on they would go into a more folky direction and later still, back to rock again, but it's just not the same. Oh, it's not like I only like their oldest stuff, the seventies albums have some nice tracks on them - I'm quite partial to American Beauty and Terrapin Station. But for me, and that's why I mainly like 60s live concerts, it's the psych-factor that makes the Grateful Dead. Here then a most excellent bootleg with a Beatles cover and plenty of spaced-out improvisation goin' on.
If you enjoyed this band you may want to check more material here.
Disk 1 - Load it down
- Good morning little schoolgirl
- Cryptical envelopment 1
- The other one
- Cryptical envelopment 2
- Doin' that rag
- I'm a king bee
- Turn on your lovelight
- Hey Jude
Disk 2 - Load it down- Introduction
- Dupree's diamond blues
- Mountains of the moon
- Dark Star
- St. Stephen
- The eleven
- Drums
- Caution (do not stop on tracks)
- Feedback
- We bid you goodnight
Band/artist - Celestial Bloodshed
Genre(s) - Black metal
Origin - Norway
Album - Cursed, Scarred and Forever Possessed
Year of release - 2008
I frequently speak out against Norwegian black metal, which may be a bit unfair. Just because I don't like Burzum, Gorgoroth and Satyricon anymore there's no reason why no good music can come from Norway, indeed! Celestial Bloodshed is one of the bands that prove this point. It's really quite classic mid-nineties black metal but with a certain flair I can't rightly explain. The very grim vocals, somewhere in the grey areea between grunts and screams, sure do impress, and you won't be disappointed riff-wise at all, either. The dragging slow passages have a rightly evil sound and rumbling floor-tom fills make the copious blastbeat sections nice and heavy. Even someone like myself needs some vitriolic straightforward black metal like this every once in a while.
- Intro
- Cursed, scarred and forever possessed
- Sign of the zodiac
- Truth is truth, beyond the God
- All praise to Thee
- Gospel of hate
- The demon of old
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