Cauldron One <> TORN FROM THE THROAT OF THE DEVIL HIMSELF.
[ Now playing in Demon Tribe Hollow... Magnifishit (DTH track 1,927 of 56,999) by Skinny Puppy from Mythmaker ]
I'm beginning yet again. Two months ago, I thought I would have MySpace, Facebook & Twitter sites for my music and graphic art project - Demon Tribe Hollow - I began with the opening of my site just after the first of the year. Well, I guess too much has been going on for me to get those sites up. Things just keep cropping up, like today for instance. I thought the power supply to one of my hard drives died, so I went out and got a new one, only to return home and find out that it hadn't actually expired. Just little things like that, you know, day in, day out. But this particular occasion is good, in a way, at least in that it reminded me I need to get my data fully backed up, which I don't now. And if I lost any of it, I know I'd fret forever.
Anyway, I'm going to try to post every day from now on. I know I've said that many times before, but all I can do is say I'm going to give it another go. What's a great song to begin this new resolution? I think I have a near-perfect one; it's magical to me in a way that very few pieces of music are...
I revisited one of my absolute favorite films of the past decade on Sunday night -- Stephen King & Frank Darabont's The Mist. Actors Thomas Jane & Marcia Gay Harden do absolutely impeccable jobs in the film, as far as I'm concerned, and the direction offered by Darabont's sure hand is remarkable. Jane's character, at the end, is the ultimate personification of anguish, and Harden's role is a remarkably accurate female Jim Jones throughout. And the Lovecraftian horrors they encounter -- perfect nightmares. Therefore, last, but in no way even the slightest bit least, is the role Australian duo Dead Can Dance play in the movie, with their truly awe-inspiring The Host Of Seraphim, which nearly becomes a character itself, considering the prominent role the piece plays during the film's climax. Religious, profound, sublime, infinitely moving -- there are not words to describe DCD's awesome achievement.
[ Now playing in Demon Tribe Hollow... Fart In A Bag (DTH track 1,928 of 56,999) by Mr. Bungle from Bowel Of Chiley ]
[ Now playing in Demon Tribe Hollow... Magnifishit (DTH track 1,927 of 56,999) by Skinny Puppy from Mythmaker ]
I'm beginning yet again. Two months ago, I thought I would have MySpace, Facebook & Twitter sites for my music and graphic art project - Demon Tribe Hollow - I began with the opening of my site just after the first of the year. Well, I guess too much has been going on for me to get those sites up. Things just keep cropping up, like today for instance. I thought the power supply to one of my hard drives died, so I went out and got a new one, only to return home and find out that it hadn't actually expired. Just little things like that, you know, day in, day out. But this particular occasion is good, in a way, at least in that it reminded me I need to get my data fully backed up, which I don't now. And if I lost any of it, I know I'd fret forever.
Anyway, I'm going to try to post every day from now on. I know I've said that many times before, but all I can do is say I'm going to give it another go. What's a great song to begin this new resolution? I think I have a near-perfect one; it's magical to me in a way that very few pieces of music are...
I revisited one of my absolute favorite films of the past decade on Sunday night -- Stephen King & Frank Darabont's The Mist. Actors Thomas Jane & Marcia Gay Harden do absolutely impeccable jobs in the film, as far as I'm concerned, and the direction offered by Darabont's sure hand is remarkable. Jane's character, at the end, is the ultimate personification of anguish, and Harden's role is a remarkably accurate female Jim Jones throughout. And the Lovecraftian horrors they encounter -- perfect nightmares. Therefore, last, but in no way even the slightest bit least, is the role Australian duo Dead Can Dance play in the movie, with their truly awe-inspiring The Host Of Seraphim, which nearly becomes a character itself, considering the prominent role the piece plays during the film's climax. Religious, profound, sublime, infinitely moving -- there are not words to describe DCD's awesome achievement.
[ Now playing in Demon Tribe Hollow... Fart In A Bag (DTH track 1,928 of 56,999) by Mr. Bungle from Bowel Of Chiley ]
VIEW 3 of 3 COMMENTS
You go and do something nice with that house. Meanwhile, I'll get back to school and try to get a real job. In my case, the house might be for another life. One step at the time...
Have a good summer.