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Mephistoo also known as Mephisto is a bulgarian darkwave project active from mid 80ies till early 90ies which current status is unknown (not dead! :))). The song is originally played by a band called "Ledove". However - this is a SUPERB video to a corresponding song ;)
Stalker, La Montaña Sagrada, Fando y Lis, El Topo, La double vie de Véronique, Dekalog, Trois couleurs, Los amantes del círculo polar, Waking Life, Dogville, Inland Empire, Mulholland Drive, Twin Peaks, Chronos, Ashes and Snow ...
Music:
Gothic, Darkwave, Industrial, Ethereal, Neo-classical, Neofolk, Medieval, Dark Ambient, Ethno Jazz Fusion, Trance, Black Metal, Black/Death Metal, Death Metal, Doom/Death Metal, Funeral Doom, Dark Metal
Books:
favourite author - Boris Vian, but also Umberto Eco, Friedrich Nietsche, Isaac Asimov, Stanisław Lem ...
This videos is about org-mode, an emacs mode that helps you get a bit more organized.
The voice is that of Carsten Dominik, its main developer and a...
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This videos is about org-mode, an emacs mode that helps you get a bit more organized.
The voice is that of Carsten Dominik, its main developer and architect, giving a Google Tech talk about Org last summer.
MCMXC a.D. (1990 in Roman numerals followed by a seemingly incorrect abbreviation of "Anno Domini") is a concept album created by the mus...
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MCMXC a.D. (1990 in Roman numerals followed by a seemingly incorrect abbreviation of "Anno Domini") is a concept album created by the musical project Enigma, spearheaded by Michael Cretu. It was Enigma's debut album and one of the most influential albums ever produced in the New Age genre. The project's popularity soon soared beyond Cretu's expectations after the album's launch, as it reached number 1 position in charts of 41 countries.[1] Four singles were excerpted from this album: "Sadeness (Part I)", "Principles of Lust", "Mea Culpa (Part II)" and "The Rivers of Belief". "Sadeness" and MCMXC a.D. itself hit No. 1 on the UK singles and albums charts respectively on its UK debut in January 1991. On the U.S. market "Sadeness (Part I)" reached fifth place on the Billboard Hot 100 and MCMXC a.D. made sixth place on the Billboard 200 and remained in the charts for a total of 282 weeks. MCMXC a.D. was one of the first albums to be recorded on a hard disk after Cretu's upgrade to the A.R.T. Studio.
The main theme in MCMXC a.D. could be interpreted as the struggle that one faces in life, between religion and sexuality. The main song of the album ("Sadeness (Part I)") questions the personal beliefs of the Marquis de Sade, who had an affection towards torture as pleasure. Other themes that appear on the album were based on Christian beliefs, and the end of the world from the Book of Revelation.
MCMXC a.D. starts with the mellow sounds of a foghorn, later on to be known as the "Enigma horn" and the voice of Louisa Stanley, who at the time was an executive at Virgin Records speaking in "The Voice of Enigma". The Gregorian chant "Procedamus in pace!" then segues into the first three-part movement of the album even before it starts, "Principles of Lust". The first part, "Sadeness", received the most attention through its unique and previously unheard mix of Gregorian chants and dance beat. Triangles and synthesized shakuhachi flutes add to the French vocals and breathy sounds of Michael's wife, Sandra. Cretu only describes the male voice speaking in French in "Sadeness (Part I)" as a good friend of his. The song fades into "Find Love", in which Sandra instructs the listeners to follow their lust. Reversed chants signal the start of "Sadeness (reprise)" and continues with a short piano piece, based on the same tunes as the shakuhachi flute earlier. The flute returns as chants of "Hosanna" gradually bring an end to the movement. The next song, "Callas Went Away" is a tribute to the opera singer, Maria Callas. Chirps from electronic birds at the beginning, mixed with a slow beat and sounds of a piano leads to Sandra's whispers and ends with some samples of Callas singing the aria Ces lettres, ces lettres from the opera Werther by Massenet. The rain at the beginning of Mea Culpa is a sample taken from the introduction of Black Sabbath's self titled album and song. The plainsong chant "Kyrie Eleison" (from Mass XI, Orbis Factor, in the Liber usualis) appears predominantly, alongside Sandra's vocals and the same flute. It fades into the experimental track, "The Voice and the Snake", which is based on "Seven Bowls", a song from Aphrodite's Child where a group of people describe the end of the world in an eerie and haunting manner, as mentioned in the Book of Revelation. A bowl falls to the ground and breaks, leading it to "Knocking on Forbidden Doors". The drums beats in the song made to resemble the sound of a door being knocked, before it progresses into a faster beat. A guitar enters and slips aside quietly for more Gregorian chants, this time a part of "Salve Regina", and fading into the following track. The second three-part movement in the album, "Back to the Rivers of Belief", begins slowly with John Williams' five-toned notes from Steven Spielberg's movie, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, which leads to mellow Gregorian chants in the first part of the movement, "Way to Eternity". The same beat from "Sadeness" enters for the start of "Hallelujah" as the strong sounds of violins accompany the beat. The triangle and voices from the first track reappears and repeats itself. A noticeable Arabian style is apparent in this part and segues into the next part, "The Rivers of Belief", the only track where Michael Cretu sings in the album. After Cretu sings the chorus, the music stops completely and an unfamiliar male voice intones Revelation 8:1: "When the Lamb opened the seventh seal, silence covered the sky". This is also sampled from Aphrodite's Child album 666 (the voice here is of John Forst). The sentence about the Seventh Seal enters at the 7th minute and 7th second of the 7th track, although in some pressings, it appears at the 7th minute and 17th second. The music resumes with the shakuhachi flute and Cretu's vocals. The album ends with the falling star effect and the "Enigma horn". [info courtesy: wikipedia.org]
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Enigma - Mea Culpa VIRGIN (P) 2008 The copyright in this audiovisual recording is owned by Virgin Music, a division of EMI Music Germany GmbH & C...
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Enigma - Mea Culpa VIRGIN (P) 2008 The copyright in this audiovisual recording is owned by Virgin Music, a division of EMI Music Germany GmbH & Co. KG
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whether i write a bad english, please forgive me^^ im from german and our schools are for the ass.
i like your video of hades almighty(and divercia, but i know it before. because the divercia vid, i find your account)
have you some more songs from hades almighty?
greetz
Blutengel - Bloody Pleasures (live)