Tulihenki wrote: ↑Fri Aug 30, 2019 3:47 pm
My friends were in a horrible hangover and I decided to delight them with that Anguish song. Wasn't curing the force of hangover.
But anyway those songs were my first time to try some effects. Funny moments when hassling with 'em. I love what modern technology has done to us who wanna use softwares and compose different styles from metal to ambient nicely at home.
Hahahah to be fair, there aren't very many songs that will help cure a hangover
I agree! Modern technology has made it very easy to annoy all of our friends and family with our weird musical experimentation
"Limited love asks for possession of the beloved, but the unlimited asks only for itself." -Kahlil Gibran
5 new songs. Bought a midi-keyboard and been practicing with it. Bear in mind that I do everything alone and many things here are new for me like mixing.
I've done black metal since I was 13 years old. My bands include Heathendom, Tunrida, The Entropy, and lastly IC REX. Three first are "real" bands while IC REX has always been my own personal project in which Lucifer has been the guiding star from the beginning. Then I have also made some occult rock with my brother with the band named Milinda. I have also played live with Baptism (2004-2007).
I have liked/loved all of the IC Rex albums. I remember when I first time listened Sielun Kadotuksen Sinfonia. Friends said that good music but sound world is way too extreme, but I personally loved that. Suited very well to cold atmosphere. I tried to listen it now with my studio monitors but frequencies are little bit too harsh to bear with em'.
Anyway great stuff, Boreas! Easily can feel that there has been real inspiration and dedication to certain areas.
Thank you Tulihenki! I have been experiencing a real hiatus and lack of inspiration for the past two years concerning making music, but even before Tulen Jumalat was recorded and made I had the idea of making a complementary album to it called Jään Jumalat (Gods of Ice) which would concentrate on Saturnian gods / aspects of world's traditional mythologies. Maybe it will see the daylight one day, who knows.
Boreas wrote: ↑Thu Jan 16, 2020 1:14 pm
I've done black metal since I was 13 years old. My bands include Heathendom, Tunrida, The Entropy, and lastly IC REX. Three first are "real" bands while IC REX has always been my own personal project in which Lucifer has been the guiding star from the beginning. Then I have also made some occult rock with my brother with the band named Milinda. I have also played live with Baptism (2004-2007).
Wow, this is a very impressive musical catalogue! Thank you for sharing. I will pick up your releases on band camp when I am able, and I will continue to enjoy these youtube links in the interim. I'm very much enjoying the Tunrida so far, and am really excited to get to the IC REX.
"Limited love asks for possession of the beloved, but the unlimited asks only for itself." -Kahlil Gibran
Polyhymnia wrote: ↑Fri Feb 22, 2019 7:05 am
I'm in a band where music is the vessel which carries a portion of my magic and ritual work. Before recording I perform rituals, and even months leading up to recording I will prepare myself spiritually. The music I create flows through me from a place higher than myself, but also from somewhere very deep inside myself. Performing it is the place I feel closest to the heart of my magical practice. Post-production my bandmate and I like to experiment with various elements as a study in the human psyche and the way it reacts to music. Sometimes we will deliberately set the tempo just slightly off, or add specific sensory triggers. Watching people react is always the most amazing experience if they are open to it. Most people aren't aware of the magic that goes into what we produce, and I find "unsettling" is the most common adjective used after listening to our music. There's usually a visual element (photo or video) to accompany a track, and I find that the meshing of visual with audio heightens the ritualistic nature of the piece.
I'm quite nervous to share, but here's a little sampling and I hope you enjoy
This is our version of the traditional song O Death (also known as Conversations with Death):