Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Bohren & Der Club Of Gore ::: Black Earth


A group of friends in Germany, all former members of such grisly-named hardcore acts as Chronical Diarrhoea and Macabre Farmhouse, meet up, looking to take doom metal into a completely different direction. They choose the name "Bohren" (which is German for "drilling"), and as a tribute to Dutch instrumental group Gore, one of their biggest musical influences, they tack on "& Der Club of Gore" for good measure. The new band releases three albums, including a lengthy double album called Midnight Radio and the 2000 release Midnight Radio, featuring such titles as "Prowler", "On Demon Wings", "Nightwolf", and "Dead End Angel". Their album Black Earth is released in their home country in 2002, to much critical acclaim, eventually landing a North American distribution deal early this year with Ipecac Records. So just what are these guys playing that has listeners so intrigued and critics clamoring for their thesauruses? Why, jazz, of course.

Yes, jazz. In fact, this just might be a variation of jazz you might never have heard before. Remember Angelo Badalamenti's music for David Lynch's great TV series Twin Peaks? That slow, slinky, playful, minimalist blend of '50s rock 'n' roll and lounge piano, how hearing a single movement in the soundtrack instantly hit you with the mental image of Audrey Horne coquettishly walking across a room? Well, the music on Black Earth is just as simple, but instead, this music sounds more like a corpse clawing its way out of a grave, lumbering in the moonlit night, with creaky joints and a half-decayed face, in search of human flesh to feast on. Sure, there are times when you are hit with a mental image of a cherry-lipped femme fatale, but it's always only for a brief spell, as the music pulls you deeper and deeper into a dank pit of nasty, monstrous, ambient jazz.

Bohren & Der Club of Gore's great strength is in their extreme simplicity, as the quartet base each song around Robin Rodenberg's massive double bass playing, which slowly, lugubriously creeps along, holding down the rhythm with single thrums on the strings, which are tuned so low, you can hear the vibrations in your gut. Morten Gass and Christoph Closer provide accompaniment on piano, Rhodes piano, and tenor saxophone, displaying only the barest minimum of improvisational flair, while drummer Thorsten Benning accentuates the basslines with subtle beats, sounding more atmospheric than rhythmic, like a somnambulistic Elvin Jones. The overall effect is hypnotic, enthralling, sounding like a demonic hybrid of the Bad Plus and Candlemass. These musicians could easily be Satan's own jazz combo.

Black Earth is very dark, and very gloomy, but most surprisingly, it's incredibly beautiful, and Morten Gass's production on the album is immaculate, the bass dominating the mix, resonating and full. Gass admitted in one interview that they spent most of the studio sessions trying to perfect the sound of Rodenberg's bass, and on the final product, they indeed pull it off. The album's sound is deep, warm, and full; instead of being bombarded by solos and overproduction (the closest the album gets to orchestration is with subtle touches of mellotron), you're left to just sit back and lose yourself in the long, low, sustained bass notes, the haunting notes of the Rhodes, the soft, sultry sax solos.

With song titles like "Maximum Black", "Constant Fear", "Skeletal Remains", "The Art of Coffins", you immediately expect something as campy and over the top as Cradle of Filth, but that's anything but the case. There's a dignified air to this album, something best exemplified on the sensual "Maximum Black", and although the album's gorgeous, embossed, black-on-black skull cover art will immediately get the attention of metal fans, Black Earth has the potential of being a crossover success, as the music can easily appeal to fans of dark, theatrical metal, goth rock, and yes, even jazz aficionados. This album is simply too beautiful for words, a perfect companion to Fantomas's near-great metal/free jazz experiment Delirium Cordia. Don't hesitate, seek out this astonishing record, and make your nights even darker.

Tracklist:
01. Midnight Black Earth (08:48)
02. Crimson Ways (06:43)
03. Maximum Black (07:38)
04. Vigilante Crusade (07:32)
05. Destroying Angels (07:11)
06. Grave Wisdom (06:33)
07. Constant Fear (06:27)
08. Skeletal Remains (08:00)
09. The Art Of Coffins (12:04)

Preview:


Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?o1p3bhd25fvjptp

1984 ::: Radio niebieskie oczy Heleny / Anioł w tlenie


Awesome Polish new wave/post punk from the 1980's.  This album was released in 1984.

Tracklist:
A1 Magick 6:06
A2 Your God 4:05
A3 Call Back Your Senses 4:57
A4 Samekh 4:26
B1 The Book Of The Law 4:18
B2 The Face Of The Angel 5:09
B3 The Phoenix Mass 4:45
B4 Rosa Alchemica 3:42
B5 Tantra 3:05

Preview:


Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?zxq4jssv4yu48n5

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Teatro Satanico ::: Black Magic Block


For Black Magic Block, the latest release from Italian experimental project Teatro Satanico, the project’s founder Devis Granziera (a.k.a. Devis DeV deviLs g.) enlisted the collaboration of Kalamun and Faber. Black Magic Block is intended to be seen as a companion piece to their Chidakasha MCD released at around the same time by the Portuguese label HellOutro Enterprises, and both releases feature occult themes as well as Teatro Satanico’s first use of lyrics in English – in the case of Black Magic Block, this includes texts by the occultists Aleister Crowley and Austin Osman Spare.
 
The album opens superbly with the hard industrial beat, processed vocals and dense electronic jitters, swoops and burbles of ‘L.H.P.’ Imperiously and infectiously rhythmic, this song had me shaking my booty in no time – a relatively rare experience with my Judas Kiss reviewing work. The gleefully Satanic refrain ‘Let’s follow the left-hand path!’ recalls the absurd controversy which saw Teatro Satanico accused of Satanism in an Italian court a few years ago, and all in all, ‘L.H.P.’ is easily the most interesting track I’ve heard so far from Teatro Satanico. ‘Baby Babalon’ follows suit in similar dancefloor-friendly style, opening with thin high-frequency tones before settling into an agitated, awkward beat, with the ‘Baby, baby Babalon’ refrain reminiscent of Iggy Pop’s ‘Funtime’.
 
After these two noisy freakouts, ‘Images & Oracles By A.O.S.’ is much more restrained, a quietly unsettling piece of low drones and whispered vocals, with text by Austin Osman Spare intoned over a Coil-style background of cold, isolationist ambient punctuated by piercing high frequencies. ‘Hymn To Lucifer’, the song with lyrics by Aleister Crowley, is another rhythm-driven pieced, but much more sparse and minimal than the first two songs, with an old-school industrial beat assembled from odd little bleeps and clicks, sounding quite a bit like Throbbing Gristle tracks like ‘What A Day’ and ‘Walkabout’.
 
The 14-minute ‘Gatto’ is the longest track on Black Magic Block, featuring more mechanical rhythms overlaid with vocals, which this time are processed into a really evil-sounding, insinuating whisper, the song collapsing after five minutes or so into a sonic storm of freeform noise, whooping sirens and rapid-fire cut-up electronica. Gatto finally regains some kind of rhythmic axis in its last couple of minutes, but this track is certainly the most challenging piece on the album – then again, fans of noise music, in particular the Partikel collaborations between Merzbow and Nordvargr, will probably really like this.
 
The album’s final listed track is ‘La Magia Quale Scienza Dell'io’, which bounces heavy beats back and forth across the stereo channels before subsiding into heavily distorted organ music, tinkling keyboards and sung vocal samples sifted through thick layers of drones and static. This track has more traces of melody than anything else on Black Magic Block, but remains resolutely outré and experimental. After ‘La Magia Quale Scienza Dell'io’, there’s an untitled seventh track. Teatro Satanico have stated that this track was left untitled in order to focus attention on the lyrics: ‘E' tutto inutile se non uccidi il tuo dio ed il tuo io’ (‘Everything is pointless if you don't kill your god and your ego’). Hollow tapping and rattling beats reverberate behind cyclic metallic scrapes and squeals. Any vocals are so heavily processed as to make the track effectively an instrumental – which I guess may be the result of Teatro Satanico killing their egos.
 
The occult references and themes of Black Magic Block invite comparison with Italian esotericists Ain Soph, with whom Teatro Satanico have collaborated in the past, as well as artists like Coil and Zero Kama, but the album is dense and varied enough to exercise a broad appeal over fans of industrial and experimental music in general, and the first two tracks in particular are just great, with an electro-pop sensibility similar to that of Suicide or PiL. I think I need to track down a copy of Chidakasha now.

Tracklist:
L.H.P. 8:24
Baby Babalon 7:20
Images & Oracles By A.O.S. 10:02
Hymn To Lucifer 8:02
Gatto 14:04
La Magia Quale Scienza Dell' Io 6:30
Untitled 9:19

Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?nt3ozkwj1wo

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Coph Nia ::: That Which Remains


First official release of Aldenon Satorial's Coph Nia. This album is stark with Crowley overtones, both visually and lyrically. Coph Nia sits easily as equal beside Raison d'ętre, Morthond, Desiderii Marginis, adding to the haunting choir of the dark ambient scene.

Not all tracks scour shadows, with female vocals gracing neoclassical song in 'Our Lady of the Stars' & 'Sanctus' giving this album a fresh breath.  "That Which Remains", released by Cold Meat Industry, was Coph Nia's 1st record and probably its best.

Tracklist:
01. The Scapegoat 6:26
02. Opus 77 9:42
03. Doppelganger(Qliphothic Phantasmagoria) 10:58
04. Sanctus 8:11 - Guitar - Bill Brissette, Vocals - Clara Pahlen
05. Holy War(Pt.2 - Silence) 8:04
06. Our Lady Of The Stars 6:39 - Vocals - Clara Pahlen
07. The Veil 0:59
08. That Which Remains 11:33

Preview:


Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?ngy4ngyjgty

Teatro Satanico Charles Manson ::: Going Down


Strange devilish sounds on this ultra rare release from 2003.  Italian act Teatro Satanico continues their exploration of the utterly strange in this very limited album (only 50 copies released).  Get it while you can.

Tracklist:
1- Confesso Tutto!
2- Anatema Contro I Nemici Di Israele
3- Antisociale
4- Marta
5- Comandante Bruno
6- Il Figlio Di Ezzelino

Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?kxjog2ladambgvh

The Grey Wolves ::: Legion of Hell


The Grey Wolves first appeared back in 1983 after being born out of the ashes of a unit called OFI (Opera for Infantry). their music is often labelled as “death industrial” and their name associated with others such as Nurse with Wound and Ramleh. The two members (Dave Padbury and Trevor Ward) have been often controversial and outspoken, and have taken part in a prolific ammount of different projects, and as well have released many productions. They spread their messages across utilising different medias:(pamphlets, mail art, manifestos), and have taken part fully within the cassette scene since back in it's early days. In fact both members have thier own tape labels (Open Wound and Sol Niger) focusing on industrial music. The year of release of this tape isn`t listed anywhere; however I do believe that it came out towards the end of the 80s, and it was distributed by Strength Recordings in the UK and by Ministry of Ultramarine Theatres in Italy. As for the music; far away from the power-electronics assault that made them famous; this tape is instead crafted with esoteric elctronicks messages and sequencings . ”Legion of hell’ stands as a manifesto of the experimental dark-ambient music of that era.

Tracklist:
a01-lost souls
a02-hall of the dead
a03-for good or evil-new spirit rising
a04-angels of darkness
b01-eternal suffering

Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?793h47kssskq40u

Friday, January 20, 2012

A New Book Blog


Here is your opportunity to read some very excellent books.  This blog is still in its infancy but in time it aims to share some of the best literature available today.  Only books which have been properly scanned will be included so you can be sure that anything downloaded there is of the highest quality.  Check it out.

http://exumedia.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Coil ::: The Golden Hair With a Voice of Silver



As the AMG review indicates, this is an exceedingly good "entry level" compilation for would-be Coil fans. The first disc entitled The Silver Voice collects some of Coil's more contemplative cuts from early releases but mostly leans on Coil's late-period output, which featured a lot of drone and folk. Most of the songs feature Peter Christopherson and company's pretty and dark melodies (and weird tape effects) behind Jhonn Balance reciting poetry and singing. The first disc is unassailable as far as I'm concerned. Every track is excellent and different. My favorite tracks are probably the mournful almost-jazz of "At the Heart of It All", and the hymnal-esque "A Cold Cell."

The second disc (A Golden Hair) contains Coil's more avant-garde output from the 80's and early 90's. Along with some loud industrial-punk ("Panic", "The Anal Staircase") there's some indelibly weird acid house cuts ("First Dark Ride", "Further Back and Faster", "A.Y.O.R.") that some might find disagreeable, as well as some more subdued instrumental cuts that are nonetheless too dirty and disturbed for the spooky, blue-tinged Voice of Silver ("Red Skeletons", "First Five Minutes After Violent Death") and then there's "Blue Rats", which is almost synth-pop.

While it doesn't cover everything, this is as perfect a primer to Coil as I've found. It gives a good impression of the weird, dark, cultish sensibility of the band.

Tracklist:

A Guide For Beginners: A Silver Voice
1-01 Amethyst Deceivers
1-02 Lost Rivers Of London
1-03 Are You Shivering?
1-04 Ostia (The Death Of Pasolini)
1-05 Where Are You?
1-06 At The Heart Of It All
1-07 A Cold Cell
1-08 Batwings (A Limnal Hymn)
1-09 Who'll Fall?
1-10 The Dreamer Is Still Asleep
   
A Guide For Finishers: A Golden Hair
2-01 Panic
2-02 First Dark Ride
2-03 Further Back And Faster
2-04 The Anal Staircase
2-05 Red Skeletons
2-06 Scope
2-07 Solar Lodge
2-08 Blue Rats
2-09 A.Y.O.R.
2-10 The First Five Minutes After Violent Death

Preview:


Download here:

A Guide for Beginners: The Silver Voice (Disc 1)
http://www.mediafire.com/?jujo3twzl0e
The Golden Hair With a Voice of Silver (Disc 2)
http://www.mediafire.com/?aqgmrmzjxdw

Coil ::: Musick To Play in the Dark Vols. 1 and 2



Recorded in 1999 towards the beginning of Coil's foray into slower, darker mood music (the actual genesis of the shift in sound was the Equinox series, which I'll be getting to soon), Musick to Play in the Dark is more or less what it says on the label. Many of the songs on the subdued first disc of The Golden Hair With a Voice of Silver came from these two albums, but they take on a different feel in their original context, probably because for that compilation they chose the songs that were the least creepy.

The production style for much of the music here is very minimal with lots of reverb, giving the sense of a vast emptiness which Coil uses very well. The music has a hazy, dreamlike quality to it (be it the pitch-shifted samples under the piano dirge of "Ether", or the bass drone of "Broccoli", or the percussive pops of "Strange Birds") and more often than not it is deeply, deeply unsettling. Jhonn Balance repeating one word over and over on "Something" is the least of what it takes to make me uncomfortable, and when Balance whispers menacingly "One day your eggs are going to hatch" on "Strange Birds", you feel like you want to be nowhere nearby when that happens. Nonetheless, this is a very enjoyable album, replete with the songcraft of Coil's later works (this is the second Coil album Thighpaulsandra contributed to). Just do yourself a favor and leave the lights on when you listen.

At the end of its initial phase of operation, Coil had taken its music to a somewhat logical endpoint, a frigid coda where its jarring, industrial phase split between a love/sex/drug fascination and the hollow ring of metal-on-metal collision. Though traditional song structures and melodies shot through the underbelly of their most memorable work (anyone remembering their take on “Tainted Love,” Marc Almond inclusive, will have a hard time denying this charge), Coil thrived on the lurid dreams of the willing set against the chilling actualities of life itself. Our bodies begin and end at discrete points, in temporal, physical, and metaphysical situations, and the weight of this burden strikes a minor, ceaseless chord that resonates throughout Coil’s music.

Originally released around the turn of the millennium, Musick to Play in the Dark featured a restarted Coil at bay, with original members John (later Jhonn) Balance (R.I.P.) and Peter Christopherson joined by synthesist/bassist Thighpaulsandra, and Drew McDowall (replaced by Rose McDowall on the second volume). These are long-form works, collections of mood pieces in several modes, and what’s interesting (and somewhat predictable) is that the patience displayed while shifting in between these modes creates a tension and space that feels … almost removed from music by a step, as if the performance decided to slowly back away from Coil at a respectful, totality-fearing distance (or maybe it was the psychic force of their music that pushed it all back).

Musick the first peaks early on, with the Delia Derbyshire-esque sweep of the excellently-titled “Red Birds Will Fly Out of the East and Destroy Paris in a Night,” but does not sacrifice its ability to intone fear into the audience’s minds, as it does on the seemingly innocent “Broccoli,” its lyrical ramblings holding themselves in the round, turning from absurd to ghoulish as the track drones onward, pitched-down choruses adding to the overall effect. Vol. 2 is its own work entirely, more focused on a set of instrumentation and style that is smaller in scope than on the first volume. Tweaky, inner-ear synth squelch glides icily along its requisite sine waves, Balance’s vocals at first obscured by vocoding and electronic pincers but eventually ebbing back into its deep, reverberating pall. Even somewhat uplifting moments, such as the jumping-jack rhythms of “Paranoid Inlay,” collapse into interminable darkness given a few minutes of runtime. The bulk of what’s left is unreasonably cold, alone, and deadly serious, from the elegant piano tumble of “Ether” to the surgically imprecise puddle of “Where Are You?” leading into the album closer “Batwings (A Limnal Hymn),” a tour-de-force of Guignol imagery and the almost unavoidable, mantra-like denouement amidst electronic cycling and dulcet tones.

Not easy listening here, mind you, but then again, Coil never was. These records don’t merely deserve a full and unimpeded attention span; they require their own environments. Candlelight, blackout shades, red wine and intoxicants of choice are their demands. Anything less and you might laugh. You might still laugh on first listen. It’s just your nerves trying to avoid the inevitable. Listen again, until the cold, humid dusk of their finest hours truly sink in. - Dusted

Tracklist:     

Musick to Play in the Dark Vol. 1
1 Are You Shivering?
2 Red Birds Will Fly Out Of The East And Destroy Paris In A Night
3 Red Queen
4 Broccoli
5 Strange Birds
6 The Dreamer Is Still Asleep
   
Musick to Play in the Dark Vol. 2
1 Something
2 Tiny Golden Books
3 Ether
4 Paranoid Inlay
5 An Emergency
6 Where Are You?
7 Batwings (A Limnal Hymn)

Preview:


Download here:
Vol. 1
http://www.mediafire.com/?ooe6k59eg3zdroe

 Vol. 2
http://www.mediafire.com/?ljji28n6o7o68oe

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Threshold Houseboys Choir ::: Form Grows Rampant


Peter "Sleazy" Christopherson, who along with Jhonn Balance was the only other permanent member of Coil. Christopherson is a living legend by this point, having more or less invented industrial music as a co-founder of art/noise freak-punks Throbbing Gristle and Psychic TV.

Form Grows Rampant consists entirely of long-form instrumentals, most of which feature altered recordings of townsfolk that Sleazy recorded in the area of Thailand he calls home Christopherson's talents as a composer are considerable, despite his inability to actually play any instruments - he used sequencers and transcribed melodies he came up in his head by ear. Stylistically, Form Grows Rampant is very similar to Coil's last albums, particularly The New Backwards LP (which, if you wanted to be really technical about it, could be called a THBC album) and some of the rarer Coil songs (many of them on the Black Gold compilation) that had an odd jazzy vibe to them. It's hard to classify this sort of music - there's very little of the industrial noise sound Christopherson is credited with midwifing. One imagines that at this point  like late Coil, it's mysterious, weird and often very pretty (Christopherson really seemed to love melodic percussion, as marimba and xylophone are used often in his later Coil works and in his THBC albums.) Not bad for the purposes of ambiance, definitely enjoyable for home listening.

Tracklist:
CD1 A Time Of Happening
CD2 Intimations Of Spring
CD3 So Young It Knows No Maturing
CD4 So Free It Knows No End
CD5 As Doors Open Into Space
   
Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?ihmitcfhzyn

Threshold Houseboys Choir ::: Amulet Edition


Peter Christopherson's last  solo album.  Amulet Edition is a refinement of the sensibility established by Form Grows Rampant, with many of the same elements - digitally manipulated string samples and recordings of Thai peasants set to music. Christopherson got more lithe with every release, and many of these songs are outright pretty - "Ikoreek", with its keys, double bass, and manipulated strings / samples, conveys an immense sadness, while "The Hangman's Ball", with its vocoded chant and consistent rhythm, wouldn't sound out of place on some upstart's Warp debut. "Distonto" is a more straightforward throwback to Coil, specifically the cold gothic tones of Musick to Play in the Dark. And "As X is to Geff" succeeds primarily on the tunefulness of its treated vocal recording and odd, twangy guitar. A remarkably assured release, and as melodically rich as anything Sleazy's ever had a hand in.

Overall, Christopherson continued with the post-Industrial exotica style (to borrow a phrase from Jonathan Dean’s review of the first album) but things are less hectic here. The mutated Thai boys’ voices are again a key feature and Christopherson’s beloved string samples make another appearance but a far calmer course has been taken by this choir. Of course, it is impossible not to compare Christopherson’s work with the music of Coil and fans of Coil will not be disappointed in his current direction. There are nods to Coil classics, the mood is similar in vein to the Musick to Play in the Dark albums and "Distonto" on the fourth disc is very much reminiscent of “Chaostrophy” (on Love’s Secret Domain). The strings and liquid, nocturnal mood capture the same nightly essence of the LSD album.

However, it would be a mistake to simply write off The Threshold HouseBoys Choir as Coil Mk.2. Christopherson was affected by his new life in Thailand and this shows in the music. This collection and the Form Grows Rampant album have a far more languid and tropical vibe to them compared to the pastoral and urban directions that Coil went in (and I get the feeling that Christoherson’s exotic side is tempered in SoiSong by Ivan Pavlov’s colder approach to music). What is most striking about this music is the joy that shines through it. “The Hangman’s Ball” starts off as being quite restrained in tone but before long a powerful and undeniably ecstatic trumpet erupts from the heavens (albeit the trumpet sounds programmed but the sentiments still ring true).

Although initially only available at the Brainwaves festival, a further 155 copies are to be made available online for those unfortunate souls who missed out on a rather extraordinary live performance by Christopherson. Those despairing of the limited numbers can take solace in the fact that this music is intended to be finished and (by my reckoning) most likely will appear in a similar fashion to Form Grows Rampant. - Brainwashed

Tracklist:
Disc A
1.01  Be Happy
1.02  There And Back
1.03  The Day Moon Died
   
Disc B
2.01  Ikoreek
2.02  As X Is To Geff

Disc C
3.01  The Hangman's Ball
3.02  Khun Cap Taxi

Disc D
4.01  Distonto
4.02  Lowly Low
   
Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?miztzzygyem

Rhythms of Rapture: Sacred Musics of Haitian Vodou

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Insulin Reaction ::: What's The Point


Don't know much about these guys but nice sound all the same.

Tracklist:
A1 - Lonely Lady
A2 - Reconstruction
A3 - Want
A4 - New Way
A5 - Darkzone
A6 - Factory
B1 - Blacksuit Man
B2 - Differences
B3 - Machine
B4 - Crossfire
B5 - Secrets
B6 - Cannibals

Preview:


Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?mo7x7cubpsbvu8u

Hidden Agenda ::: More Decisions


A very cool Minimal group from the 80s.  Here is an album released last year of the group, 4 previously unreleased tracks and some tracks from their only album Few Decisions.

Tracks 1 to 4 previously unreleased from 1983.

1 - Moving Pictures
2 - Age Of Haste
3 - Living In Hollow
4 - Freeze Up

Tracks 5 to 8 originally released on "Few Decisions" K7 from 1983.
5 - Talking To Myself
6 - Still We Say
7 - Renew Flesh
8 - Life At The Top

Preview:


Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?kgps0mowzji115g

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

A Systematic Course in the Ancient Tantric Techniques of Yoga and Kriya


This book is the most comprehensive text ever published on yoga. It contains a complete course of 36 structured lessons on all the practices of integral yoga. The lessons were compiled from the teachings given by Swami Satyananda Saraswati and are useful as a practical and theoretical guide for all levels of yoga teachers and aspirants.

The book presents a synthesis of yoga in a scientific and systematic manner. The different branches of hatha yoga, mantra yoga, karma yoga, bhakti yoga, jnana yoga and kriya yoga are progressively introduced with special emphasis on practice, theory and application in daily life. Includes line drawings,diagrams and colour plates.

The techniques covered in this book have their basis in the ancient vedic (tantric and yogic) shastras and were handed over the centuries from guru to disciple.

Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?79dsj07oz1ypmck

Daoist Mineral Magic


Book contains the Study of the Realm of Minerals, Introduction to the Alchemical Transformations of Minerals, History of Magical and Medicinal Rocks, Formation of Minerals and Crystals, Minerals in Traditional Chinese Pharmacology, Absorbing the Healing Properties of Gems, Creating Gem Ens Elixirs, Cleansing the Crystal With Sunlight, Moonlight, Flowing Water or Earth, Ritualistic Cleansing and Incantations, Charging a Stone, Storage and Care of the Gem Elixir, Dose and Administration, Toxic Stones, Planetary Gem Elixirs, The Categorization of Planetary Gem Elixirs and Specific Powers, Lapidary (The Secret Powers of Rocks and Gems), The Magical Qualities of Gemstones and Minerals, Magical Defenses using Minerals and Stones, Ritual Cleansing, Purifying the Altar Room, Summoning the Celestial Immortals, Using Breath Incantations to Open, Imprint, and Activate a Magical Stone, Ending the Ritual and Closing the Magical Ceremony, The Magical Energetic Properties of Gemstone Formulas, Divination Using A White Jade Ball, Healing With Crystals, Prayer Beads (Malas), Using the Prayer Stone Beads, Types of Prayer Beads, Using Malas As An Oracle, Using Malas to Ward Off Ghosts, Magical Stone Rings, Imprisoning a Spirit in a Magic Ring, Other Techniques Using Magical Rings, Magic Stone Talismans, Secret Powers of Metals, Planetary Metals, Spirit Rocks, Good Energetic Rocks, Evil Energetic Rocks, Element Rocks, Energy Regulators, Sacred Stone Formations, Gathering Qi from Caves, History of Cave Meditation, Preparation for Cave Meditation, and Guidelines for Cave Training.

Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?ankxkn6czs9nngx

Daoist Exorcism: Encounters With Sorcerers, Ghosts, Spirits, And Demons


This book contains the History of Exorcism, The Three Realms of Daoist Magic, Interactions with the Spirit World, Schools of Daoist Sorcery, Understanding Psychic Influence, Principles of Psychic Interference, Psychic Attacks, Types of Psychic Attacks, Symptoms That Indicate a Psychic Attack, Defending Against Psychic Attacks, Encounters With Ghosts, Types of Hauntings, Communicating with Ghosts, Encounters With Spirits, Historic Classification of Spirits and Immortals, Seductive Spirits, Animal Spirits, Plant Spirits, Nature Spirits, Spirits of the Elemental Realms, Spirit Snakes and Spider Spirits, Sensations Attributed to the Presence of Spirit Entities, How and Why Negative Spirit Entities Attack, Self-Defense Against Spirit Entities, Protecting Children, Closing the Ghost Gate to Protect against Ghosts and Spirits, Encounters With Demonic and Evil Spirits, Demonology, Levels of Demonic Influence, Demonic Manifestation, Demonology According to Christian Mysticism, Historical Facts, Demonic Attacks, Encounters with Demon or Spirit Possessed Individuals, Demon or Spirit Oppression, Ten Reasons Why a Demon or Evil Spirit will Interact with an Individual, Three Stages of Demonic Assault (Demonic Infestation, Demonic Oppression, and Demonic Possession), History of Possession, Signs and Symptoms of Spirit Possession, Signs and Symptoms of Demonic Possession, Exorcism, Functionality of Exorcism, Four Primary Stages of Exorcism, The Ritual of Summoning Spirits for Interrogation and Exorcism, Binding and Banishing Techniques used to Remove Evil Spirit Entities, Treating Demonic or Spirit Oppression and Possession, Removing a Spirit or Demonic-Entity from a Individual, What to do After the Demon or Spirit Entity Leaves the Body, When the Demon or Spirit Entity Will Not Leave, Treatment for Phobia or Anxiety of being Spirit or Demon Oppressed, Medical Qigong Treatment for Spirit and Ghost Hallucinations, Treatment using the Thirteen Ghost Points, The Magic Circle, and Three Stages of Daoist Exorcism.

Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?o40fzsqbeaifjjz

Daoist Weather Magic and Feng Shui


This book includes the following information: Introduction to Feng Shui, History of Feng Shui, The Original Schools of Feng Shui, The Form School, The Compass School, Pattern (Li) and Energy (Qi), The Four Animals, The Qi of Earth, The Earth’s Three Layers, The Earth as Yin , Heat and Light, Interactions of Heaven and Earth, The Earth’s Energetic Grids, Three Realms of Earth Energy, Five Element Patterns of Earth, Three Treasures of Earth, The Energy of Earth (Soil): Di, Understanding The Landscape, The Movement of the Water, The Topography Flow, Normal and Abnormal Landforms, The Location of Sha Qi, Sha Qi and Sorcery, The Location of the Residence, Understanding The Mountain Dragon, The Dragon’s Pulse, The Dragon’s Lair, Four Mountain Dragons, Mountain Formations, Five Element Mountain Formations, Sacred Mountains, Five Sacred Mountains of Thunder Magic, Patterns of the Nine Star Mountains, Gathering Qi From Mountains, Valleys, and Deserts, Interactions With Mountain (Nature) Spirits, Summoning Mountain Spirits, Finding and Entering into the Power Spot, Communicating With Mountain Spirits, Before Leaving the Power Spot, If Things Go Wrong, Returning to the Power Spot, Gathering Energy from Valleys, Gathering Energy from Deserts, Summoning The Earth God to Remove Malevolent Spirits, The Energy of Wind: Feng, Wind, the Music of the Earth and Voice of Heaven, The Wind as Messenger of Change, The Stars Affecting Wind and Rain, The Yin and Yang Nature of Wind, Wind Direction and Daoist Magic, The Eight Directions of the Wind, Whirlwinds, Gathering Qi from the Four Winds, The Energy of Water: Shui, The Magical Virtues of Water, Water in Science, The Body’s Need For Water, The Voice of Water, Energetic Qualities of Water, The Water Dragon, The Water Dragon Classics, The Four Animal Water Patterns, Five Element Water Formations, Gathering Qi From Oceans, Lakes, Rivers and Streams, Invisible Watercourses, Sacred Watercourses, Waterfalls and Energetic Portals, Cultivation Techniques, Common Water Spirits, Daoist Weather Magic, Daoist Magical Theory, The Six Laws of Daoist Magic, Techniques of Natural Power, Understanding Weather Magic, Weather “Sense” Perception, Weather Divination, Rain Storms, Clouds, Mist, and Fog, Snow Storms, Hail Storms, Wind Storms, Dust Storms, Thunder Storms, Daoist Weather “Tools,” Weather Stones, Weather Talismans, Weather Magic Rituals, Gathering Qi From Clouds and Mist, Rainmaking Rituals, Calling the Wind, Summoning a Storm, Calming and Sedating a Storm, Stopping a Storm, Thunder Magic (Wu Lei Fa), History of Thunder Magic, History of the Five Thunder Gods, The Two Primary Schools of Thunder Magic, Internal Thunder Magic (Cultivation and Healing), The Yellow Court Meditation for Internal Cultivation, Closing the Devil’s (Ghost) Gate Before Healing the Sick, External Thunder Magic (Magic and Exorcism), Constructing the Thunder Altar, The Direction to Summon the Thunder, The Thunder Talisman, The Thunder Incantations, The Thunder Hand Seal, Summoning the Power of Thunder, Gathering the Power of Thunder.

Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?6mu84wi68bq8ako

Daoist Plant and Animal Magic


This book contains an Introduction to the Alchemical Transformations of Plants, Superior, Medium, and Inferior Herbs, Gathering Energy from Nature, The Magical Properties of Trees, Gathering Qi from Trees , Locating Tree Power Spots, Precautions, Tree Spirits, Forest Spirits, The Magical Properties of Plants, Visionary Plants, Gathering Qi From Plants, Gathering Energy from Bushes, Suffumigation, Meditation for Absorbing the Plant's Essence, Plant Spirits, Chinese Historical Encounters With Plant Spirits, Communicating With Plant Spirits, Harvesting the Magical Essence of the Plant's Spirit, Ancient Chinese Plant Alchemy, The Magical Art of Plant Alchemy, Creating A Magical Plant Tincture, Plant Ens (Creating Immortal Elixirs), Plant Stones (Creating Immortal Pills), Using Herbs To Create Talismanic Paper, The Study of the Realm of Animals, Introduction to the Alchemical Transformations of Animals, Animal Images of Ancient China, Chinese Totem Animals, Using Animal Masks For Protection, Animal Magic (Familiars), Types of Familiars, Interacting With Animal Familiars, Daoist Bagua Animal Totems, Daoist Celestial Animal Totems, Animal Shapeshifting, Animal Sacrifices, The Energetic Power of Blood, The Blood Ritual, and Creating a Blood Spirit.

Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?p4r2230zo26ndmm

Daoist Magical Incantations, Hand Seals, and Star Stepping


This incredible book contains secret Daoist teachings on Magical Incantations, Imprinting with Incantations, Enchantment, Trance Induction, Daoist Magical Hand Seal Training, Types of Hand Seals, Specific Functions of the Hand Seals, Hand Seals Used For Worship, Summoning, Protection, Obstruction, Attacking, Binding, Imprisoning, and Sealing, Mao Shan Hand Seals Used for Healing or Protection, History of Daoist Star Stepping, Using Star Stepping with Hand Seals, Incantations and Magic Seals, Summoning the Spirits of the Dead, Summoning Celestial Immortals, and much, much more.

Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?6f7l19bbb3vl36m

Monday, January 9, 2012

Brion Gysin / William Seward Burroughs / Genesis Breyer P.Orridge ::: Interviews + Readings


Incredibly rare recording!  Even upon its release it was already  limited to 100 copies recorded on a C90 cassette.  Poetry readings and voice/music cut ups by these legends of 'weird'.  Get it while you can.

Tracklist:
A- Untitled
B- Untitled

Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?ag2zxrt1tdy

Sunday, January 8, 2012

What is Fado?


By Anton Garcia-Fernandez.

General introduction

As a little kid growing up in the city of Vigo, in the northwest of Spain, my parents would now and then drive my sister and me across the border to the little town of Valença do Minho, in Portugal. It was merely a 25-minute trip, I know, but to me it meant much more than that. The landscape on the other side of the Minho river, the natural barrier that separates Spain and Portugal, was not really different, yet it was this awareness of being in another country, in contact with another language and another culture, that made all the difference to me. This regular contact with Portuguese life, less than half an hour away from my hometown, led me to develop an interest in the Portuguese language and culture in general. In time, it would lead me to the discovery of fado, at first through releases by Amalia Rodrigues and Carlos do Carmo that my father had in his extensive record collection, and later through those by great fadistas such as Alfredo Marceneiro, Fernando Farinha, Maria Teresa de Noronha, Carlos Ramos, Lucilia do Carmo, Tony de Matos, Joaquim Silveirinha, and Filipe Pinto, to mention but a few.

Fado records were part of my luggage when I first came to the United States about five years ago: I play them constantly at home, and they are a regular part of my daily existence. However, I have found that the genre is largely unknown to English-speaking audiences; although it is possible to purchase fado recordings in the United States, not a great deal has been written about it in English. There are notable exceptions, such as Paul Vernon's A History of Portuguese Fado and Michael Colvin's The Reconstruction of Lisbon, yet for the most part, fado has not garnered major critical attention in English. As merely a collector of fado recordings and books about the style, it is not my intention to take a dry, serious critical approach to the intricacies of fado in this blog. I simply would like to present the music, its history, its foremost interpreters and composers, and its most important recordings to English-speaking audiences that may not be acquainted with them or with the Portuguese language. My area of scholarly research is mainly Spanish, English, and Portuguese literature; I am not a musicologist, and that is the reason why the articles published in All This Is Fado will deal mostly with the literary dimension of fado, as well as with specific songs, recordings, songwriters, and interpreters. I humbly submit these articles to the readers' scrutiny, hoping that they will be informative and interesting. If I succeed in getting people exposed to and interested in fado music, all my efforts will have been rewarded. Now, to the matter...



A Brief Sketch of the History of Fado

A Portuguese popular saying describes the essence of fado in the following fashion: "Fado can't be seen or heard; it simply happens" (“O fado não se vê nem se ouve; simplesmente acontece”). Like any sententious phrase, this is an extremely obscure utterance, but it is very much to the point, since fado has always defied a clear-cut definition, and its origins, in spite of the efforts of scholars, remain very much in the dark. In a recent message sent to me, Vitor Duarte, the grandson of the great fadista Alfredo Marceneiro, argues that the most important aspect of fado is that it is essentially Portuguese. Notwithstanding the fact that some musicologists have attempted to locate its birth in Brazil, these theories are not stronly sustained, and there is no doubt that throughout the twentieth century, fado became a musical symbol of Portugal, so much so that it has been described as "true expression of the Portuguese soul." Yet, like the saying above, this nationalist-laden description of the genre is not enough: fado does hail from and is mostly sung in Portugal, and so describing it merely as Portuguese does not seem to help very much.

The question of the musical/literary origins of fado, then, remains open to interpretation. Scholars have tried to document its birth with varying degrees of success, producing a number of theories about the subject, none of which are fully convincing. One of these theories traces the origins of the genre back to the traditional songs of the Arabic peoples that settled in Portugal during the Middle Ages. This theory, however, does not bear in mind the fact that fado only appeared in Portugal and not in the south of Spain, also populated by Arabic peoples around the same time period.

Another theory, beautifully developed in Pinto de Carvalho's classic study Historia do fado (1903), asserts that fado derives from a certain musical form known as lundum, brought to Portugal by sailors who used to cultivate it during their long sea journeys. Indeed, Portugal has always been a seafaring country, and this origin would explain the preponderance of sea-related themes in early fado lyrics. Yet, Pinto de Carvalho's explanation is not always consistent and convincing--although extremely poetic in its development--and so this theory is not widely accepted.

Other theories argue that fado harks back to the rich medieval tradition of troubadour love and satirical lyrics, themes that are still common in present-day fado. However, it could be argued that these are universal themes, and most important, fado did not take root in other parts of Spain that boasted medieval poetry traditions such as that of Portugal.


Whatever the origins of fado may be, Eduardo Sucena (1) divides its historical development into three different periods. First of all, fado appears in Lisbon toward 1822, and in these early years, instrumental compositions and dancing are more important than lyrics and singing. The second period begins around 1840, when the use of the guitar becomes more prominent and the popularity of fado singing overtakes that of dancing. Finally, by 1888, fado is taken to the university city of Coimbra, and it is gradually accepted across social classes and appropriated by the aristocracy. This tendency toward crossing social boundaries is a key element of fado from its earliest years, as the story of Maria Severa (1820-1846) amply proves. The figure of Severa, a Lisbon prostitute who played guitar and sang fado, has acquired a somewhat mythical dimension that makes it difficult to differentiate fact from fiction. Her love affair with the Count of Vimioso, a nobleman who appreciated fado, is widely seen as the first of many contacts between the nobility and the fado-singing working class, and as such, it is sung and remembered in many song lyrics. The pathos of Severa's story, brought to an abrupt end by her untimely death, as well as its iconographic importance within the universe of fado, calls for a separate article in this blog.

The advent of radio, phonographic records, and the cinema during the first half of the twentieth century changed fado forever, standardizing its sound and the image of its performers and creating an idea of genre. It was then that fado, originally synonymous with poverty, crime, roguery, and the lower social strata, acquired national and international exposure. Its interpreters, names such as Alfredo Marceneiro, Armandinho, Ercilia Costa, Berta Cardoso, Amalia Rodrigues, and Frutuoso França, among many others, also gained widespread recognition singing on radio, on records, in movies, in theaters, and in special establishments known as fado houses (casas de fado). The physical image, dress code, and stage presence of the fadista were also constructed around this time, with black as the predominant color of the performer's outfit, in sync with a half-lit stage and a serious, almost stoic countenance. These elements are so very much inscribed in the popular imaginary of the Portuguese people that even the new, more innovative stars of the genre (Mariza, Katia Guerreiro, Camane) respect these prescriptions to a great extent.




Instrumentation, Lyrical Dimension, and Styles

The typical musical accompaniment of fado is rather sparse, usually consisting solely of stringed instruments such as the classical guitar (known in Portuguese as viola), the bass guitar (viola-baixo) used to stress the rhythm, and the Portuguese guitar (guitarra). The latter is closely associated with the style, and its special tuning gives fado its recognizable tinkling sound. The Portuguese guitar is a very versatile instrument, and over the decades, great instrumentists like Armandinho, Raul Nery, António Chainho, and Artur Paredes have experimented with it and perfected its sound and devised innovative playing techniques. Even though fado singing is usually accompanied by these stringed instruments, there are many recordings on which the singer is backed by a whole orchestra, and Amália Rodrigues even cut a magnificent record accompanied by saxophone great Don Byas (2).

One of the most appealing aspects of fado lies in the lyrics of its songs, in which the poetic element becomes crucial. The best fado compositions are usually a perfect marriage of melody and lyrics, yet sometimes poetry prevails over the music, since many songwriters often create new lyrics for already existing tunes. The poetic universe of fado is dominated by the letmotif of saudade, a deeply nostalgic feeling of longing and yearning for love, for one's homeland, or for a past that will never be recovered. Being a mostly urban cultural expression, the city is another key element of fado, whose lyrics constantly reference the experience of the city (mostly Lisbon and Coimbra), describing its people, its neighborhoods, its festivities, its dark corners, and its grand avenues. More traditional lyrics hark back to fado's possible pre-urban existence, depicting country scenes, character types, and popular traditions. The theme of the sea is also quite recurrent, as is that of Portugal as the singer's motherland, an aspect that reveals how fado lyrics strive to come to terms with the idea of national identity. Just like other styles such as blues or country music, fado sometimes becomes self-referential, attempting to define its essence and generic boundaries, as well as celebrating some of its myths (Maria Severa, for instance) and foremost musical representatives (Armandinho, Alfredo Marceneiro, Amália Rodrigues, Ercília Costa). Finally, many poems by some of Portugal's great poets (Luís de Camões, Fernando Pessoa, Miguel Torga, José Carlos Ary dos Santos) have been set to music and entered the repertoire of fadistas.



Fado is cultivated mainly in two geographic areas of Portugal, Lisbon and Coimbra, which has given rise to two distinct styles of understanding and performing this kind of music. In Lisbon—as well as in Porto—fado is usually performed by fadistas dressed in black, and many of the songs touch upon the typical themes of unrequited love, the dark side of life, and popular urban traditions and characters. Most Lisbon fado compositions are actually story songs: they narrate a story that is sometimes more complex than others. In Coimbra, fado is closely related to its ancient university, performed only by male musicians and singers who don traditional student costumes for the occasion. The fado of Coimbra has more affinities with popular ballads and folksongs than that of Lisbon, and many of its performers (José Afonso, for instance) fully embraced this traditional folk element. Not as well-known as Lisbon fado, the Coimbra style boasts many important names such as Edmundo Bettencourt, Augusto Hilário, António Menano, and the guitarists Artur and Carlos Paredes.

Finally, as far as the nature of its melody and its lyrical structure, there are several different styles of fado. Frederico de Freitas (3) notes that fado is "an essentially syllabic kind of song, as are generally most Portuguese popular melodies," and that the poetic structure of most compositions consists of quatrains made out of seven, ten, or twelve syllables. Sometimes, fado melodies are uptempo (a style known as fado corrido), and in many cases, two or more fadistas improvise the lyrics in a contest sort of fashion (fado à desgarrada or fado ao desafio). According to de Freitas, there are many other recognizable styles of fado, namely fado balada, fado nocturno, fado serenata, and fado marcha, among many others.

Love and jealousy
Ashes and fire
Pain and sin
All this exists
All this is sad
All this is fado

Notes

(1) Eduardo Sucena. Lisboa, o fado e os fadistas. Lisbon: Edições Vega, 1992: 9-16.
(2) Amália Rodrigues and Don Byas. Encontro. Valentim de Carvalho, 1973.
(3) Frederico de Freitas. O fado, canção da cidade de Lisboa. Lisbon, 1973: 233-4.

Combichrist ::: Today We Are All Demons


Combichrist makes super-aggressive, pounding electronic music, incorporating elements from industrial, electro, EBM, and other electronic dance forms. This album doesn't alter Combichrist's basic recipe from previous releases. Most of the sounds and concepts are extensions of those used on previous albums. But to me, that doesn't matter in the least. The album sacrifices innovation for quality: every song is good, many are great. This solid cd further cements Combichrist's status as one of the pillars of contemporary dark electronic music.

Combichrist's vocals are not like typical "hellektro" vocals. They are naturalistic- not processed through a vox machine. In that sense they hearken back to old-school industrial or even punk such as Black Flagg or maybe proto-industrial like Big Black.

There are significant differences between Combichrist and "hellectro/dark electro" such as Suicide Commando or Hocico. One of Combichrist's major contributions to the genre is the injection of a healthy dose of irony into a field which takes itself quite seriously. There is rage and fury, but it is married to a lampooning and a wink and nod toward the excesses of that fury: BDSM, blood and guts, killing, etc., are all used with a clever combination of pure feeling vs. gleeful irony. Combichrist is FUN and FUNNY, qualities that make it completely unique in the world of hard electronics/industrial dance.

From the first sample which opens the album, a answering machine message left by an idiotic-sounding dude on his way to jail asking to be bailed out, to the female vocals that lace a lot of the songs - a whiny and pissed off sounding chick who apes and eggs on the vocalist like a 1940's gangster's moll, to more wacky samples such as a robo-Asian voice repeating "my grandma gives good head!" over and over, there's a slapstick element to this music that allows you to feel the rage and laugh at yourself at the same time.

In summary, this is another great release from a master of the genre with a unique style.

For those looking for more of the humorous side of Combichrist, the side project Scandy is a winner. A little lighter sound, and Andy doesn't sing very much- mostly instrumentals and some of those same kooky female vocals. Check it out.

Tracklist:
01 - No Afterparty
02 - All Pain is gone
03 - Kickstart the Fight
04 - I want Your Blood
05 - Can't change the Beat
06 - Sent to destroy
07 - Spit
08 - New Form of Silence
09 - Scarred
10 - The Kill V2
11 - Get out of My Head
12 - Today we are all Demons
13 - At the End of it all

Preview:


Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?fldzlj5nmyj

Combichrist ::: The Joy of Gunz


Now, don't get me wrong, I love Combichrist and enjoy Andy's newer stuff, but I really wish I could hear more of this sound. Raw, gritty power-noise that has a deep level of darkness and emotion without the need for lyrics. While not as danceable as his newer material, the Joy of Gunz album delivers the commanding auditory presence that lies at the heart of industrial. For the future of Combichrist, it'd be nice if a balance could be found between power like this and modern dance beats. All in all, an amazing album and one I would recommend (if not require!) be added to the collections of Combichrist fans and fans of industrial music in general!

Tracklist:
01 - Intruder alert
02 - Joy of the world
03 - You will be the bitch now
04 - Winteryear
05 - Play dead
06 - Turmoil
07 - Master control
08 - Vater unser
09 - The line of the dead
10 - Bulletfuck
11 - Human error
12 - God wrapped in plastic
13 - History of madness
14 - Shrunken heads for all ocassions
15 - Hidden track

Preview:


Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?8bmyoiem75l

Combichrist ::: What The Fuck Is Wrong With You People


In just their few short years of existence, Combichrist has become one of the most iconic bands in the electronic music genre. After finishing up their tour in support of KMFDM in the fall of 2006, Combichrist earned even more notoriety among fans of industrial rock who had previously never heard of them. With an ever growing army of fans, Combichrist is poised to release What The Fuck Is Wrong With You People?, their newest album in 2007. Featuring last year's break out single, "Get Your Body Beat," the album is an explosive barrage of corrosive beats, leering vocals, and acidic melodies. WTFIWWYP? is a high energy, adrenaline charged piece of sonic battery. If you don't find yourself sweaty, naked, out of breath, and bleeding by the time the album is finished, you weren't listening! 

Tracklist:

Disc 1
01 - 5 AM (After Party)
02 - What The Fuck Is Wrong With You People
03 - Electrohead
04 - Adult Content
05 - Fuck That Shit
06 - Brain Bypass
07 - Get Your Body Beat
08 - Deathbed
09 - In The Pit
10 - Shut Up And Swallow
11 - Red
12 - Are You Connected
13 - Give Head If You Got It
14 - All Your Bass Belongs To Us

Disc 2
01 - God Warrior
02 - Dead Again
03 - Verdammt
04 - Am
05 - Dawn Of Man
06 - Jack Torrance
07 - Another Corpse Under My Bed
08 - Bodypart
09 - Hal 9000
10 - Shut Up And Bleed (Feat Waste)

Preview:


Download here:
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=1R1RBBP9

Combichrist ::: Everybody Hates You


After releasing two albums with his band Icon Of Coil last year, and releasing an album by his side project Panzer AG, singer Andy LaPlegua doesn't sit idle. This is the result of his second side project, Combichrist. Icon Of Coil's same careful programming, sequencing, and attention to detail are there, but Andy has taken a different musical approach. Aggressive EBM is grafted to power noise electronics with floor shattering beats, crunchy synths, catchy melodies, and plenty of well-placed samples.

Tracklist:
01 - This Shit Will Fuck You Up
02 - Enjoy The Abuse
03 - Today I Woke To The Rain of Blood
04 - I'm Happy Anyway
05 - Blut Royale
06 - Who's Your Daddy, Snakegirl
07 - Feed Your Anger
08 - God Bless
09 - Like To Thank My Buddies
10 - Happy fucking birthday
11 - This Is My Rifle
12 - Lying Sack of Shit
13 - Without Emotions

Preview:


Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?izdnnjhzjyn

Funker Vogt ::: Thanks for Nothing


Funker Vogt may be one of the more aggressive bands to emerge from the electro-industrial scene in the mid-90's, and on Thanks For Nothing they do their best to make their mark on the genre. Boosted strongly by the acidic vocals of Jens Kastel, the band comes off as a visceral, bleak force of nature. Songs like "Black Hole" are crafted out of mountains of synth, constantly shifting electronic percussion, and some of the harshest yelps in the genre. Despite the simple nature of the music, the band takes the formula and makes it work through sheer willpower. Even their needless remake of Ministry's "Land of Rape and Honey," here called "Land of Milk and Honey," is still a very vivid and angry song. This is a very hateful band, and the ten tracks on Thanks For Nothing are wiry, twitchy sound pictures that are more likely to appeal to fans of the harder aspects of the genre.

Tracklist:
01 - A New Beginning
02 - Black Hole
03 - Thanks For Nothing
04 - Animals
05 - Alone
06 - Remember Childhood
07 - This Circle
08 - Suspended Animation
09 - Funker Vogt
10 - The Land Of Milk & Honey

Preview:


Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?7rfm7drw6ilm7lo

Friday, January 6, 2012

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Velvet Acid Christ ::: Hex Angel (Utopia-Dystopia)


In recent years, Velvet Acid Christ has taken on a more dance-driven ebm form...at least with it's better known songs. Hex Angel marks the return to VAC's roots...and is perhaps the closest attempt to fully realizing Brian's musical intentions for the project from the start. The overall tone of Hex Angel is slower, darker, and more descriptive than in the past. It resembles the more abstract works in the genre now, like Skinny Puppy, Dismantled, Haujobb, or perhaps even Nine Inch Nails at times. Pretty Toy is probably the strongest track, with it's haunting synths and warping stereo sounds. Although Haunted, Collapsed and East are also very memorable songs. So what does VAC's shift in style mean in the end? It means fans of high bpm future-pop and ebm will probably not like this album. However, fans of the darker, more ambient side of electronic music will likely adore it. I still favor VAC's style found on Fun With Knives and Twisted Thought Generator, but Hex Angel earns it's place in my collection for it's originality and artistic boldness.

Tracklist:
01 Haunted
02 Collapsed
03 Pretty Toy
04 Hypoxia
05 Misery
06 East (Meaningless Life Mix)
07 Dead Tomorrow
08 Convex
09 Eva
10 Crawl
11 Exit (Diseased World)

Preview:


Download here:
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=7YWJKI8K

Velvet Acid Christ ::: Wound


Since their last studio album, Hex Angel, in 2003, Velevet Acid Christ has graced fans with four volumes of his vault series Between The Eyes and re-released his ground breaking album Calling Ov The Dead. With those promises to fans kept, he's ready to move onto his next studio release. With a brand new album for fall 2006 in the works, VAC now offers a teaser of things to come. The Wound single features three blistering mixes of the title track, as well as an alternate version of ''Ghost Regen'' and an amzing cover of The Cure's ''The Figurehead''. Wound presents a passionately angry and opinated view of the band - animal rights. They have contructed a versatile song that demands attention not only for its ties with animal rights, but for the other meanings that listeners can construe from it. The single proves that the three years between new studio work was well worth the wait. VAC exhibits more musical maturity and artistry than ever before.

Tracklist:
01 Wound (Sacrificed Mix)
02 The Figurehead
03 Wound (Legacy Of The Revolution Mix)
04 Wound (Vivisected Mix)
05 Ghost Regen (Fractured Coils Version)

Preview:


Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?5ydytnmikmd

Monday, January 2, 2012

Jello Biafra ::: If Evolution Is Outlawed, Only Outlaws Will Evolve

You can't go wrong with Biafra's fantastic sense of humor, especially in conjunction with his ever-scathing political commentary.

This is a highly listenable and entertaining set of cds, which is not to undermine their importance. They are challenging and thought-provoking, addressing contemporary social and political issues, and weave together a perfect blend of satire and seriousness.

CD 1:
"Depends on the Drug" – 1:15
"Talk on the Death Penalty/When Psychopaths Guard the Henhouse" – 3:23
"The Murder of Mumia Abu Jamal" – 6:48
"Clinton Comes to Long Beach" – 2:52
"The Hex-Files: Space Shuttle Sequels" – 9:16
"Half-Time" – 4:19
"The New Soviet Union" – 26:02

Download: http://www.mediafire.com/?8h1ju27h6i4tcgn

CD 2:
"Talk on Censorship - It Takes a Pillage to Raze a Child/Talk on Censorship-The Contract on America" – 71:00

Download: http://www.mediafire.com/?pittgs1xgqn1z8b

CD 3:
"Talk on Censorship: Bridge to the New Dark Ages/Talk on Censorship: Which Way to the Zoo?" – 47:42
"Wake Up and Smell the Noise" – 23:22

Download: http://www.mediafire.com/?kdoxazvi46x99kh

Jello Biafra ::: In the Grip of Official Treason

Jello hits it right on yet again. His spoken word CD's should have titles like "Politics for dummies", "How not to fall under the corporate spell", and "How many dead people will be enough to quench the blood thirst of the Bush administration"... Sick of the religious right and other hypocrites are you? Interested in the truth? Want to destroy the decaying corrupt state? This one is for you. Great listen, as always.

CD 1:
Fat Mike Speaks – 2:15
Punk Voter Battle Cry – 24:15
Die for Oil, Sucker (T.W.O.T. Version) – 7:40
Ass Clowns in Toyland – 5:57
Junk Mail From Hell – 2:15
Der Gropenfurhrer Putsch – 9:40
And You Will Know Us By Our Trail of Cash – 4:41
Brown Lipstick Voodoo Ritual – 6:02
Forgotten Recent History Lessons – 11:52
Votes Disappear Like Magic – 4:26

Download: http://www.mediafire.com/?330cncttw4gd9ys

CD 2:
Big Jim, the Cyber Crow – 3:19
Your Child Left Behind – 9:42
The Faux FEMA Follies – 8:55
Witness for the Prosecution – 4:31
Holiday in Guantanamo – 11:20
Weapons of Mass Distraction – 15:20
Mr. Hat's Mr. Hat – 11:29
Go Down on Me, Moses – 13:54

Download: http://www.mediafire.com/?regj9hj63qq5zps

CD 3:
The Lord is My Sheep – 2:12
The Last Big Gulp – 8:42
The Terror of Tinytown's Big Adventure – 3:02
Iraqnophobia – 13:15
The Curse of the Wolfman – 7:11
Bloodbath and Beyond – 3:29
Pirates of the Reconstruction – 9:49
The Flute and the Cobra – 5:36
And All I Got Were These Lousy Freedom Fries – 13:49
The Simplest Way Out is Out – 3:28
Red State/Blue State Statik Attak – 2:45
American Idle – 5:33

Download: http://www.mediafire.com/?ra03dppuqxcnudl

Jello Biafra ::: Machine Gun in the Clown's Hand


Apart from the dire warnings of the ol' Reagan/Bush I gang reclaiming the White House under Dubya's banner and the exploitation of the 9/11 casualties, Biafra can temper the listening experience with a few tales from his wacky youth.

For instance, he sidetracks from taking swipes at the Dubya pinata to recall his high school days: He had a geometry teacher whose language, like Dubya's, grew more and more garbled the more he tried to explain "angles C, A and 'Bwee!'" to his bemused class. His lectures devolved into such jibbering nonsense as: "Oober de Ahmpus Blabby Dwerp?" and "Lassie, Bottomless Negroes!" I heard this anecdote live and on CD and it is a constant source of amusement for me, my wife and my friends.

THIS is the essence of keeping a humorous spirit in times like these. Contrast this with Dubya's terminally clueless stabs at humor: The engagment where he showed a still of himself peeking under his desk and quipping, "Those WMD's have to be somewhere!" Our Prez doesn't seem to realize that self-deprecating humor doesn't work when the subject in question is GENUINELY incompetent and UNREPENANTLY rash.

Enough of him, though. Jello's "whistle-stop" speeches are informative, but have the festive atmosphere of late-night stand-up comedy. I was never attracted to the Dead Kennedys, but I'm glad that band introduced the country to this irreverent talent. His ex-bandmates should feel fortunate to have known such a venerable kidder: I heard about what you naughty little boys are doing to Biafra in the courtroom! Shame on you three! Straps to the bootie all around!

Though I am registered Democrat, I too am saddened by "my" party's weakness and the Republican's blind loyalty to the pampered child in the White House. I sympathize with the Green Party and I do NOT think they were the "spoilers" at the 2000 election. This country desperately needs a third party to challenge the Donkey party's complacency and the Elephant party's belligerence.

Finally, kudos to Biafra for acknowledging himself as a torchbearer and not an idol on a pedastal. "People come up to me and exclaim: 'OOOOOOH! YOU CHANGED MY LIFE!' Maybe... Now it's YOUR turn."

Pass me that torch, Jello m'boy. I'm ready to run a lap...

CD 1:
Miscue 911 – 4:35
United We Scam – 7:03
Flogging the Infidels – 11:34
Honey, I Blew Up the World – 13:19
The Big Ka-Boom, Pt. 1 – 34:10
The Pied Piper and the Damage Done – 14:33
Truth Is Stranger Than Hype – 7:21
The Terror of Tinytown – 11:13

Download: http://www.mediafire.com/?aw9k3g53asiac69

CD 2:
Machine Gun in the Clown's Hand – 7:06
The Great Betrayal – 8:49
The Martyr That Would Not Die – 6:23
Propane and Propane Accessories – 4:38
Faith-Based Initiatives – 13:12
Fight Terror - Resist Corporations – 4:27
Be Patriotic - Fight the Government – 9:46
Beat Around the Burning Bush – 5:10
Fight Crime - Make Mischief – 11:12

Download: http://www.mediafire.com/?wn1wfwdpa1yhj93

CD 3:
Cowboy Cornholio and the Sunshine State – 9:30
...And Gore Made Us Want to Ralph – 7:20
The Rolling Blackout Revue – 7:08
12 Steps to Corporate-Free Sobriety – 17:01
Joey Ramone – 5:44

Download: http://www.mediafire.com/?t5onyvffolusv2l

The JFK Assassination & The Gangster Nature Of The State


When Oliver Stone’s movie JFK opened in December 1991 a huge PR campaign was mobilized against the film. Even progressives spoke out. Noam Chomsky wrote in support of the Warren Commission's findings – in contrast Michael Parenti gave one of his highly acclaimed talks criticizing the lone assassin theory. The bitter questions that haunted defenders and critics alike was whether government agencies of a democratic country would do such a thing as assassinate an elected President.

In this talk Michael Parenti turns to that question first – he examines, in part one, what he calls “the gangster nature of the state.” In part two he goes over details of the assassination and critiques The Nation, The Progressive, Chomsky and Cockburn. He spoke in Berkeley, CA, on the 30th anniversary of the JFK assassination.

Download here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?o8zei7xlzwqz26c

Sunday, January 1, 2012

The Fascination of Time

by Raoul Vaneigem   

People are bewitched into believing that time slips away, and this belief is the basis of time actually slipping away. Time is the work of attrition of that adaptation to which people must resign themselves so long as they fail to change the world. Age is a role, an acceleration of "lived" time on the plane of appearances, an attachment to things.

The growth of
civilization's discontents is now forcing every branch of therapeutics towards a new demonology. Just as, formerly, invocation, sorcery, possession, exorcism, black sabbaths, metamorphoses, talismans and all the rest were bound up with the suspect capacity for healing and hurting, so today (and more effectively) the apparatus for offering consolation to the oppressed—medicine, ideology, compensatory roles, consumer gadgetry, movements for social change—serves the oppressor and the oppressor alone. The order of things is sick: this is what our leaders would conceal at all costs. In a fine passage of The Function of the Orgasm, Wilhelm Reich relates how after long months of psychoanalytic treatment he managed to cure a young Viennese working woman. She was suffering from depression brought on by the conditions of her life and work. When she was recovered Reich sent her back home. A fortnight later she killed herself. Reich's intransigent honesty condemned him, as everyone knows, to exclusion from the psychoanalytic establishment, to isolation, delusion and death in prison: the duplicity of our neo-demonologists cannot be exposed with impunity.

Those who organize the world organize both suffering and the anaesthetics for dealing with it; this much is common knowledge. Most people live like sleepwalkers, torn between the gratification of neurosis and the traumatic prospect of a return to real life. Things are now reaching the point, however, where the maintenance of survival calls for so many analgesics that the organism ap- proaches saturation point. But the magical analogy is more apt here than the medical: practitioners of magic fully expect a backlash effect in such circumstances, and we should expect the same. It is because of the imminence of this upheaval that I compare the present conditioning of human beings to a massive bewitchment.

Bewitching of this kind presupposes a spatial network which links up the most distant objects sympathetically, according to specific laws: formal analogy, organic coexistence, functional symmetry, symbolic affiliation, etc. Such correspondences are established through the infinitely frequent association of given forms of behaviour with appropriate signals. In other words, through a generalized system of conditioning. The present vogue for loudly condemning the role of conditioning, propaganda, advertising and the mass media in modern society may be assumed to be a form of partial exorcism designed to reinforce a vaster and more essential mystification by distracting attention from it. Outrage at the gutter press goes hand in hand with subservience to the more elegant lies of posh journalism. Media, language, time—these are the giant claws with which Power manipulates humanity and moulds it brutally to its own perspective. These claws are not very adept, admittedly, but their effectiveness is enormously increased by the fact that people are not aware that they can resist them, and often do not even know the extent to which they are already spontaneously doing so.

Stalin's show trials proved that it only takes a little patience and perseverance to get a man to accuse himself of every imaginable crime and appear in public begging to be executed. Now that we are aware of such techniques, and on our guard against them, how can we fail to see that the set of mechanisms controlling us uses the very same insidious persuasiveness—though with more powerful means at its disposal, and with greater persistence—when it lays down the law: "You are weak, you must grow old, you must die." Consciousness acquiesces, and the body follows suit. I am fond of a remark of Artaud's, though it must be set in a materialist light: "We do not die because we have to die: we die because one day, and not so long ago, our consciousness was forced to deem it necessary."

Plants transplanted to an unfavourable soil die. Animals adapt to their environment. Human beings transform theirs. Thus death is not the same thing for plants, animals and humans. In favourable soil, the plant lives like an animal: it can adapt. Where man fails to change his surroundings, he too is in the situation of an animal. Adaptation is the law of the animal world.

According to Hans Selye, the theoretician of "stress", the general syndrome of adaptation has three phases: the alarm reaction, the phase of resistance and the phase of exhaustion. In terms of real life he is still at the level of animal adaptation: spontaneous reactions in childhood, consolidation in maturity, exhaustion in old age. And today, the harder people try to find salvation in appearances, the more vigorously is it borne in upon them by the ephemeral and inconsistent nature of the spectacle that they live like dogs and die like bundles of hay. The day cannot be far off when men will have to face the fact that the social organization they have constructed to change the world according to their wishes no longer serves this purpose. For all this organization amounts to is a system of prohibitions preventing the creation of a higher form of organization and the use therein of the techniques of liberation and individual self-realization which have evolved throughout the history of privative appropriation, of exploitation of man by man, of hierarchical authority.

We live in a closed, suffocating system. Whatever we gain in one sphere we lose in another. Death, for instance, though quantitatively defeated by modern medicine, has re-emerged qualitatively on the plane of survival. Adaptation has been democratized, made easier for everyone, at the price of abandoning the essential project, which is the adaptation of the world to human needs.

A struggle against death exists, of course, but it takes place within the limits set by the adaptation syndrome: death is part of the cure for death. Significantly, therapeutic efforts concentrate mainly on the exhaustion phase, as though the main aim were to extend the stage of resistance as far as possible into old age. Thus the big guns are brought out only once the body is old and weak, because, as Reich understood well, any all-out attack on the attrition wreaked by the demands of adaptation would inevitably mean a direct onslaught on social organization—i.e., on that which stands opposed to any transcendence of the principle of adaptation. Partial cures are preferred because they leave the overall social pathology untouched. But what will happen when the proliferation of such partial cures ends up spreading the malaise of inauthenticity to every corner of daily life? And when the essential role of exorcism and bewitchment in the maintenance of a sick society becomes plain for all to see?

The question "How old are you?" inevitably contains a reference to power. Dates themselves serve to pigeonhole and circumscribe us. Is not the passage of time always measured by reference to the establishment of some authority or other—in terms of the years accumulated since the installation of a god, messiah, leader or conquering city? To the aristocratic mind, moreover, such accumulated time was a measure of authority: the prepotency of the lord was increased both by his own age and by the antiquity of his lineage. At his death the noble bequeathed a vitality to his heirs which drew vigour from the past. By contrast, the bourgeoisie has no past; or at any rate it recognizes none inasmuch as its fragmented power no longer depends on any hereditary principle. The bourgeoisie is thus reduced to aping the nobility: identification with forebears is sought in nostalgic fashion via the photos in the family album; identification with cyclical time, with the time of the eternal return, is feebly emulated by blind identification with a staccato succession of short spans of linear time.

This link between age and the starting-post of measurable time is not the only thing which betrays age's kinship with power. I am convinced that people's measured age is nothing but a role. It involves a speeding up of lived time in the mode of non-life—on the plane, therefore, of appearances, and in accordance with the dictates of adaptation. To acquire power is to acquire "age". In earlier times only the "aged" or "elders", those old either in nobility or in experience, exercised power. Today even the young enjoy the dubious privilege of age. In fact consumer society, which invented the teenager as a new class of consumer, fosters premature senility: to consume is to be consumed by inauthenticity, nurturing appearance to the advantage of the spectacle and to the detriment of real life. The consumer is killed by the things he becomes attached to, because these things (commodities, roles) are dead.

Whatever you possess possesses you in return. Everything that makes you into an owner adapts you to the order of things—makes you old. Time-which-slips-away is what fills the void created by the absence of the self. The harder you run after time, the faster time goes: this is the law of consumption. Try to stop it, and it will wear you out and age you all the more easily. Time has to be caught on the wing, in the present—but the present has yet to be constructed.

We were born never to grow old, never to die. All we can hope for, however, is an awareness of having come too soon. And a healthy contempt for the future can at least ensure us a rich portion of life.