- A1: A Way Out
- A2: Me
- A3: Det Var Da
- A4: 1621
- B1: Hang Em High
- B2: Believe
- B3: Göteborg
- B4: Working Class
- B5: Moments
- B6: Smash It
- C1: My Home
- C2: When You're Dead
- C3: No Shame
- C4: Cowards
- C5: Stories From The Past
- D1: Längtan
- D2: Yellow & Blue
- D3: En Underbar Dag
- D4: Forever
- D5: Heart Full Of Pride
Cerca:sha
- A1: Outside In
- A2: Tunnel Maze
- A3: If I Can
- A4: February
- B1: Trigger
- B2: Change Your Narrative
- B3: Big Dreams In Kadikoy
- B4: From The Ov
Sie spielt in Melodic MetalɞBandsɎ tourt mit populären israelischen Indieɞ und CrossoverɞActsɎ tritt mit elektronischer Musik in Clubs und auf Festivals auf und gibt akustische SoloɞPianoɞKonzerteɍ Mit ihrem Trio vereint sie all diese Einflüsse und schafft ein farbenfrohes und erstaunlich stimmiges Ganzesɍ Kraftvolle Rhythmen und Melodiɞ enɎ die an Mansurs Metalɞ und KlassikɞHintergrund erinnernɎ stehen neben cineastischenɎ ätherischen Stückenɍ
Golden hour couldn't come soon enough for HATT.D, presenting his new EP on Belgian label Flipsight.
Our sun-soaked journey along the lakeside begins with the title track, 'Hold Me' . An unexpected vocal flip that transforms a forgotten sample into a soulful plea. Next up, 'DANCE' delivers a mellow yet club-ready groove, driven by sharp vocal chops and Dave's signature bass-forward rhythm.
On the B-side, 'Check This Shhh Out' fires things up with no-nonsense energy: snappy hi-hats, heavy kicks and pure peak-time attitude.
Closing the ensemble is 'Connection', an ode to the deep, often elusive feeling of true human connectivity.
- 01: Let There Rise The Hymns Of Exaltation
- 02: Unmake Me
- 03: Ppm (Revisited)
- 04: Threads 2024
- 05: The Next Last Day
- 06: My Exit, Unfair, Pt. 2
With the world burning around oneself, the importance of the current moment is core, not to get lost. Focus on the important, i.e. the non-urgent, the ectoplasmatic material in the cracks between the whirlwinds of hurry, angst and greed around. Scarred ourselves, yet with unrelenting blissful resistance to the unforgiving circumstances, an apocalypse is not about giving up. Circling around the chaos to find one's own unique place(s), hailing and embracing the rare people that share those whereabouts. Connection, mutuality and community as the means to walk through the harsh cliffs of the world.
Gabba Gabba We Accept You is a children's picture book that tells the story of how a kid who was bullied and felt like a misfit grew up to become a hero to so many as lead singer of The Ramones. This story speaks to one of the greatest silent majorities in the world - all the kids who feel a little off. It contains an essential message that the world of punk rock has always meant to communicate.
All of us, regardless of our diverse and non-exclusive design, have something that we are meant to have and share, in a place that we can call our own. As children, these things may appear to many of us as problems and shortcomings. The challenging passages of life that brought Jeffrey Ross Hyman to the place where he became Joey Ramone provide a natural lesson to young folks navigating their way through the complexities of growing up. Working in collaboration with visual artist Lucinda Schreiber, Jay Ruttenberg guides the story of Gabba Gabba We Accept You in unexpected directions, with Lucinda's lyrical illustrations and colorful design opening the sense of possibility in what feels like the path less traveled on every page.
"Lionel Bart’s musical masterpiece, freely adapted from Charles Dickens’ novel, Oliver! tells the story of the orphaned Oliver Twist, who escapes the harsh Victorian workhouse and takes refuge in London’s murky underworld with the wily gang leader Fagin and his team of resourceful pickpockets led by the Artful Dodger. He finds a friend in the kind- hearted Nancy and when he’s wrongly arrested for stealing, Oliver meets an unexpected saviour; but is happiness truly within his grasp?
With a sensational score, including Food Glorious Food, Consider Yourself, You’ve Got to Pick-a-Pocket or Two, I’d Do Anything, Oom Pah Pah, As Long As He Needs Me, and many more, the Olivier, Tony and Oscar-winning masterpiece vividly brings to life Dickens’ ever-popular story of the boy who asked for more.
This performance is a co-production with Chichester Festival Theatre, where Oliver!’s run as part of their 2024 Summer Season was the biggest success in the theatre’s history. The production was said to have “genuinely breathed new life into this staple of British musical theatre.” (What's On Stage). It will be running at the Gielgud Theatre, Shaftesbury Avenue, throughout 2025.
"
- The Devil Is Here
- Save My Life
- Still We Fight
- Wait On The Wind
- See My Demons
- Barrow Hill
- Chorale/Slaves To Righteousness
- Victory
- Angel Take Me
Wytch Hazel's stellar 2016 debut Prelude confirmed these Lancastrian apprentice wizards to be Britain's most promising new hard rock band. Two years on, that promise comes to abundant fruition on II: Sojourn, an album that moves Wytch Hazel on from the innocence and exuberance of the debut to a darker, more profound and complex place, carefully wrought into optimum shape by the band's singer, guitarist, songwriter and mastermind Colin Hendra. "I'm really into the idea of an album," notes Colin. "I don't do mix-tapes, I don't listen to singles, I'm interested in albums. I want to make a good, listenable, cohesive work, that is the whole thing." Asked what inspirations were brought to bear this time, Colin has good news, and even better taste: "I was listening to plenty of Judas Priest, Thin Lizzy and Wishbone Ash last year," remarks the frontman. "This seems to be more of a hard rock album, where the last one was more rock-folk. It's definitely more rock than folk!" The most crucial influence fully expresses itself via Les Paul guitars in sweet twin harmony through cranked Super Lead Marshalls - "Exactly the same type of amp that Thin Lizzy would have used," beams Colin - a benefit of working in James Atkinson's Hand Of Law Studio, a converted gaolhouse in Leeds. "We knew there would be a lot more great gear, more amps, more options," enthuses Colin of this productive new work environment. "We were more prepared, we planned better. I had a lot more vocals to record on this album, pretty much every song has at least three harmonies, but James is a really chilled out guy, he made it easy for us. I had a very clear idea of how I wanted each song to sound, I thought about every single aspect. I probably over-prepared for this album, and it paid off!" Wytch Hazel's proud, avowed Protestant Christianity continues to set them apart from the occult hocus-pocus of their peers, and the very title Sojourn has a Biblical inspiration: "It's used a lot in the Old Testament, people would travel somewhere to stay for a short period of time," explains Colin, comparing the idea to Wytch Hazel's development since Prelude. "We're going to reside here with this sound for a while, and the next album might not sound the same. Come and have a listen to this aspect of Wytch Hazel - it's a temporary stay. We'll be here for a while, then there will be something else. I'm always writing, it's a constant stream, but I'm always trying to raise the bar, because I don't want the next album to be not as good as the other ones!"
Over the past near-decade, Lancashire's medieval metal phenomenon WYTCH HAZEL have been honing an uncommonly wholesome, rustic and devotional brand of timewarped hard rock that's all their own, with 2016's Prelude and 2018's II: Sojourn summoning to mind fevered images of Robin Hood and his Merry Men grooving to Jethro Tull and Thin Lizzy. Yet within moments of pressing play on their third LP, III: Pentecost, the musty mystical minstrelsy takes a back seat in favour of a rich, sumptuous, anthemic late-night drivetime vibe, passionately embracing the most high-end smash-hit classic rock and metal circa its late 1970s heyday. "I thought I put a lot into the second album, but this album has been an absolute obsession," stresses the band leader, Colin Hendra. "Every aspect had to be as good as possible. We've gone back and forth, Ed was tinkering with it for months on end. There's quadruple tracking going on with the rhythm parts, then we've doubled, tripled and quadrupled all our lead parts to get that richness and fullness of sound, all meticulously planned with pages and pages of organisational notes. It wasn't just `get in the studio and see how it goes!'" he laughs. "One day I did 14 hours of vocal recording. All vocals are double-tracked, I can't express how much hard work that is. The last album feels like a breeze compared to what we've done with this - and I don't plan on ramping it down!" Musically there are gorgeous self-professed touches of Black Sabbath, Blue Öyster Cult, AC/DC and early Scorpions_"With the soloing I was trying to go for Michael Schenker" beams Colin_while the scampering headbanger I Will Not initially took a nod from Angel Witch, who Hendra was helping out on second guitar back in 2015 when the track was composed, before studio treatment made it sound "a lot more Wytch Hazelly". But perhaps the most lateral comparison is to a band from the opposite spiritual realm, with Archangel an explicit homage to Swedish faux-Satanic devil cult Ghost. "I find them fascinating, Ghost; musically great, the songwriting is spot-on," enthuses the frontman. "We share an intrinsic connection, with Bad Omen honcho Will Palmer being the person who discovered us both. "Music is created for all, it's a common grace for everyone," he affirms, "which is why the music that shows the glory of God the most, in my opinion, is not music created by Christians. It's Black Sabbath!"
- A1: Main Title
- A2: Peace Through Superior Firepower
- A3: The Final Countdown
- A4: World's Worst Landscaping
- A5: Mess It All Up
- A6: Hurley's Handouts
- A7: Just Another Day On The Beach
- B1: Ana Cries
- B2: The Tribes Merge
- B3: The Gathering
- B4: Shannon's Funeral
- B5: All's Forgiven... Except Charlie
- C1: Charlie's Dream
- C2: Charlie's Temptation
- C3: New Trade
- C4: Mapquest
- C5: Charlie's Escape
- C6: The Last To Know
- C7: Rose And Bernard
- D1: Toxic Avenger
- D2: I Crashed Your Plane, Brotha
- D3: Eko Blaster
- D4: The Hunt
- D5: Mcgale's Navy
- D6: Bon Voyage, Traitor
- D7: End Title
- A1: Entergalatic Theme
- A2: New Mode
- A3: Do What I Want
- A4: Angel
- A5: Ignite The Love
- A6: In Love
- A7: Willing To Trust
- B1: Can't Believe It
- B2: Livin' My Truth
- B3: Maybe So
- B4: Can't Shake Her
- B5: She's Lookin' For Me
- B6: My Drug
- B7: Somewhere To Fly
- B8: Burrow (Bonus Track)
Skinned' ( released digitally in 2020) - the debut album from Danish composer, producer and singer ML Buch.
Comes with lyrics printed the inner sleeve.
After releasing her debut EP Fleshy in 2017 - Skinned that takes her expansive guitar work and catchy melodies to another territory.
With her unique experimental pop and vocals that seem to slide into your ears as fluorescent liquid, ML Buch portrays the reality of intimacy in a digital era. Working primarily with synthetic midi sounds, the general love of songwriting and guitar music is ever present.
As if in search for something real, ML Buch takes the listener on the other side of the skin. Led by tender love songs like I’m A Girl You Can Hold IRL and Can’t Get Over You With You we journey through her throat and into her intestines, discovering a fascinating realm of shiny mucus and bile in flesh and yellowish colors. Panoramic images were captured by a small pill camera travelling through the body of ML Buch and act as extensions of the architecture of the music. This literal way of internalizing modern technology is symbolic of Skinned where eclectic instrumental compositions share the space with strong hooks and ML Buch’s spherical voice.
credits
All songs composed, arranged and produced by ML Buch
All lyrics by ML Buch
‘Touching Screens’, ‘O’ and ‘I Feel Like Giving You Things’ co-written by Oliver Nehammer
Bass on Can You Hear My Heart Leave, Touching Screens and Mw by Johan Polder
Drums on Touching Screens and Mw by Kristof Gasior
Viola on Stone Bridge by Astrid Sonne
Midi drums and keys on Touching Screens by Oliver Nehammer
Mix by ML Buch, Oliver Nehammer & Jacob Brøndlund
Mastered by ET Mastering
Cover photo by David Stjernholm
Artwork by Aske Zidore and ML Buch
Any15 - Anyines 2020
- A1: Blue
- A2: Trouble Man – Kyle Eastwood Feat. Joni Mitchell
- A3: Moon At The Window - Demo
- A4: Be Cool – Demo
- A5: Harlem In Havana
- B1: Cherokee Louise
- B2: Come In From The Cold
- B3: In France They Kiss On Main Street
- B4: Nothing Can Be Done
- C1: Sex Kills
- C2: Edith And The Kingpin
- C3: Cold Blue Steel And Sweet Fire
- C4: The Jungle Line
- D1: Shades Of Scarlett Conquering
- D2: Yvette In English
- D3: Marcie
- D4: A Bird That Whistles
- E1: Love
- E2: Comes Love
- E3: The Man I Love – Herbie Hancock Feat. Joni Mitchell
- F1: At Last
- F2: You’re My Thrill
- F3: Sometimes I’m Happy
- F4: Stay In Touch
- G3: Sweet Sucker Dance – Early Alternate Version
- H1: You Dream Flat Tires
- H2: Answer Me, My Love
- H3: Love Puts On A New Face
- H4: Both Sides Now
- I1: Harry’s House/Centerpiece
- I2: Sunny Sunday
- I3: Hana
- I4: Last Chance Lost
- I5: Smokin’ (Empty, Try Another)
- J1: Paprika Plains
- K1: Hejira - Live At The Santa Barbara County Bowl, September 9, 1979
- K2: Refuge Of The Roads
- K3: Blue Motel Room
- L1: Black Crow
- L2: Off Night Backstreet
- L3: Just Like This Train
- L4: No Apologies
- L5: Not To Blame
- L6: The Magdalene Laundries
- M1: The Sire Of Sorrow (Job’s Sad Song)
- M2: God Must Be A Boogie Man
- M3: A Chair In The Sky
- N1: Goodbye Pork Pie Hat – Live At The Santa Barbara County Bowl, September 9, 1979
- N2: The Tea Leaf Prophecy (Lay Down Your Arms) – Herbie Hancock Feat. Joni Mitchell
- N3: Shine
- G1: The Crazy Cries Of Love
- O1: If I Had A Heart
- O2: Impossible Dreamer
- O3: One Week Last Summer
- O4: Summertime – Live At Newport Folk Festival, July 22, 2023
- P1: Stormy Weather
- P2: Two Grey Rooms – Demo
- P3: The Dry Cleaner From Des Moines
- P4: Twisted
- P5: If
- G2: Face Lift
“Ti Ho Sposato Per Allegria” (1967) is a comedy directed by Luciano Salce, taken from the theatrical play of the same name (1965) by Natalia Ginzburg. The main characters are Pietro and Giuliana, respectively interpreted by Giorgio Albertazzi and Monica Vitti. A lawyer from a good family, serious, accustomed to a calm and regular life who got married to a indolent and dazed girl with a difficult past a month after meeting her at a party. Despite Giuliana's inability to transform herself into a good housewife, his relationship with Pietro continues to flourish, because he seems to find enjoyment in each of his wife's many mistakes. The reason for their union lies not in love but, perhaps, in a genuine sympathy, as strong as it is mutual. The story has become a minor classic with each new representation. On both stage and screen the themes of everyday life, and the more complex and existential ones, are addressed. The subtle irony of the work relies on recounting problematic events in a carefree tone: realities such as abortion, death, separation and the couple's incommunicability are underplayed with naturalness. The funny events of the film are commented on by Piero Piccioni's music, published for the first time on vinyl by Musica Per Immagini, with an harmonious tracklist. For this first orchestra rehearsal with the director, which will be followed by other important soundtracks, the composer makes an effective and elegant synthesis: on the one hand he reworks moods and aesthetic intuitions of some previous and happy experiences, while on the other he identifies and anticipates the first bars of that unmistakable sound between bossa nova, funk and lounge nuances that will characterize almost all the production of the Seventies. In fact, the Turin-native artist simplifies in a positive sense the articulated harmonic structures that have always distinguished his authorial figure – where the so called jazz features are to be considered more than central in the musical texture, as prominent elements of the harmonic syntax – and he tries a melodic reduction that will make the compositions more catchy or memorized, but not easier for this. Lightness of spirit and rarefied elegance are the keys of this new Dionysian world.
- B2: Orestes, Keyboards
- C1: Sleeping Beauty (Extended Intro), Bass – Paz*, Guitar
- C3: Renholdër, Engineer
- D1: Thinking Of You, Guitar
- D3: Over (Alt.), Kalimba
- A1: The Hollow, Drums – Tim Alexander*
- A2: Magdalena 4:04
- A3: Rose, Arranged By
- B1: Judith 4:05
- B3 3: Libras, Viola – Luciano Lenchantin
- C2: Thomas, Percussion – Draven Godwin
- D2: Breña 4:04
c A3 Rose, Arranged By [Strings] – Paz*
[e] B2 Orestes, Keyboards [Keys] – Billy*
[g] C1 Sleeping Beauty (Extended Intro), Bass – Paz*, Guitar [End Lead Guitar] – Troy*
[i] C3 Renholdër, Engineer [Drums] – Alan Moulder, Lead Vocals, Piano – Billy*, Percussion – Josh*, Vocals – Kelli Shafer, Maynard*
[j] D1 Thinking Of You, Guitar [End Lead Guitar] – Troy*
[l] D3 Over (Alt.), Kalimba [Gord] – Maynard*, Piano – Billy*
[c] A3 Rose, Arranged By [Strings] – Paz*
[e] B2 Orestes, Keyboards [Keys] – Billy*
[g] C1 Sleeping Beauty (Extended Intro), Bass – Paz*, Guitar [End Lead Guitar] – Troy*
[i] C3 Renholdër, Engineer [Drums] – Alan Moulder, Lead Vocals, Piano – Billy*, Percussion – Josh*, Vocals – Kelli Shafer, Maynard*
[j] D1 Thinking Of You, Guitar [End Lead Guitar] – Troy*
[l] D3 Over (Alt.), Kalimba [Gord] – Maynard*, Piano – Billy*
Civilistjävel! x Mayssa Jallad’s ‘Marjaa: The Battle of the Hotels (Versions)’ is a radical response to Mayssa Jallad’s 2023 original LP, a lyrical account of epochal events in Beirut at the dawn of Lebanon's civil war. ‘…(Versions)’ sees Civilistjävel! (aka Swedish producer Tomas Bodén) apply a stripped, dub methodology to Mayssa's rich stems, refracting the Arabic source through the hazy prism of Northern European electronica. Retaining ‘Marjaa…’s deep spatial framing and vaporous, shifting nature, traces are lifted and set down in a new landscape: a ghost of a ghost. Informed by Tomas' singular strand of ambient, minimalist, dub techno, ‘… (Versions)’ recalls the reductive, shimmering pulse of pioneering Berlin-based practitioners Basic Channel/Chain Reaction, but with the parameters stretched into the ether. Where versions typically focus on a rhythm, here the anchor is the tone and texture of Mayssa’s voice, around which a new world has been constructed. Disembodied and liminal, it conjures an eerie panorama that feels like a postscript to the original, further emphasizing the geopolitical events that have had such devastating effect in Mayssa’s homeland of Lebanon since that record’s release. ‘Marjaa…’ (tr. ‘reference’) combined Mayssa Jallad’s two main vocations: music and urban research/architectural history. The album was co-written with Fadi Tabbal and based on Mayssa's Historic Preservation master's thesis (‘Beirut’s Civil War Hotel District: Preserving the World’s First High-Rise Urban Battlefield’). The thesis examined a 5-month conflict that took place within Beirut's skyscraper-laden luxury hotel district of Minet El Husn near the start of the Lebanese Civil War. Addressing a post-war generation who have never been taught this difficult history, ‘Marjaa…’ was an attempt to process trauma, and “a call to protest for the renewal, rather than the recycling of the political class that once destroyed the country and holds us, to this day, hostage of its violence.” Often perceived as a mysterious, shadowy presence, Civilistjävel! has come increasingly to the fore in recent years through a consistently dazzling stream of records, released both anonymously and via Fergus Jones’ FELT imprint, often appearing with scant information and tracks for the most part untitled. Having featured tracks from ‘Marjaa…’ on mixes, and included the album in his picks of 2023, in early 2024 Tomas asked Mayssa to provide vocals for a track on his album ‘Brödföda’. Mayssa remembers, “Tomas asked me to choose one of the tracks he was working on. I was in Boston at the time, so I took a walk and chose a track. I wrote the lyrics at the public park, wondering if I was the only one around that was losing sleep over the genocide in Palestine and the war in South Lebanon. I went back to the apartment and recorded the vocals on my phone, while listening to the track on headphones. Tomas reworked it with the voice and sent it back. I liked it immediately.” Despite the geographical distance from Beirut to Uppsala, Sweden, where Tomas resides, Mayssa’s contribution sounds very much at home in Civilistjävel!’s atmospheric, contemplative sound-world. Tomas’ request was reciprocated by Mayssa soon after, resulting in the spectral, glassy ambience of ‘Etel, Kharita (Version)’. This was followed by an invitation to work on more tracks, which Tomas immediately embraced, intensively jamming out versions live to two-track tape in downtime between travelling. If not entirely dissimilar to his regular working practice, the immediacy of it was unusual. Much was improvised live with just a keyboard (not tethered to a grid), and a restricted set-up that largely forbade later edits - only the rhythm tracks are programmed. A sharp conceptual thinker and composer, Tomas takes creative liberties with Mayssa’s songs in a way that is deeply felt and sympathetically aligned, whilst unashamedly outside of the original context of the record. The voice is leaned into as an instrument, without the clear, specific details of language, and this axis provides an uncertain, amorphous footing - structure is often suggested or hinted at, before disappearing or collapsing into fog, and folding back into the message within the song. A somewhat unprecedented source for an album of versions, even those familiar with ‘Marjaa: The Battle of the Hotels’ may at points struggle to hear the songs these versions are rebuilt from, despite the vocal narratives remaining virtually intact. The light has shifted; eroded buildings are foregrounded; fragments of memories appear in chiaroscuro. Signs and signifiers have been replaced. Shorn of the original's warm guitar, ‘Baynana (Version)’ feels like an ominous visitation, the sun no longer visible. ‘Holiday Inn (March 21 to 29) (Version)’ is a molten, clattering invocation. The beat-less tracks nod towards the cold, otherworldly sound-scaping of late '90s isolationism. More propulsive and embodied, ‘Holiday Inn (January to March) (Version)’ and ‘Kharita (Dub)’ are strobing, iridescent techno - lithe, shifting and mutating with almost implausible finesse. A stunning addition to Civilistjävel!’s growing catalogue, ‘…(Versions)’ is a luminous counterpoint to ‘Marjaa…’, and a welcome reminder of how incredible that record remains.




















