Wednesday 23 December 2015

Where is my mind?

So, I’ve been trying to make some music lately, but I’m having trouble even starting banging on the keys. I wanted to make something light and warm, full of sunshine, before the year ends but doesn’t feel like I have it in me. Blah blah blah blah. I’ve been having weird old dreams (with newer scenerios) I thought I had figured out and wouldn’t see again. I hate weird dreams. There’s an annoying one in which I am trying to fight off some invisible demon or whatever (I can’t describe it; it is invisible after all) and even though I recite the words and fend it off, it never feels like it is over. It usually tugs at my clothes, pushes me, drags me off the ground and lifts me in the air, and my armpits get all ticklish and I just want to get it away from me, dammit. The dream I had last night, I was even crossing myself as some sort of exorcism – am not Christian, so it was surprising. I woke up feelng so annoyed and strange, ugh. Too much coffee, or too much Tomb Raider: Underworld? You pick.

I might not be making lots of music –or any music- right now, but I’ve uncovered the Gorillaz recently despite having seen various Demon Days videos on tv back in 2005 and am pretty much in love; Plastic Beach has to be one of my favourite albums ever now. There’s the song Empire Ants which I’ve been listening to over and over again. It reminds me so much of Boney M.’s Oceans of Fantasy, which in turn reminds me of my childhood. The old car, the last cassette, the stereo, my dad driving, squished between my older sisters in the backseat (shout out to the other youngest siblings that had to sit in the middle too). Just being young and carefree? Na, it goes deeper than that I think, but I can’t quite put my finger on it.
Anyway, will leave you all with Empire Ants


Sunday 22 November 2015

It's there

Aphelion is up on bandcamp! Was a bit of trouble uploading it.

Saturday 7 November 2015

Done, and done!

APHELION IS COMPLEEEEEEEEEEEETEEE!!!!!

*cue fireworks and confetti*

Uh, so, let me think of what I tried to do differently this time:


-Made longer tracks!
-Less 'instruments', more..uhhh... spacey pads and effects. Obscura had hammered dulcimer, tinny-ish piano, violins/cello/viola, guitar, bass, a chinese flute and a music box sound (I guess it doesn't really count). Just a teensy bit of piano in Aphelion.
-Darker in tone. I think.
-I hummed a bit for the first time on a track, 'Equinox'.
-The first few tracks are named after astronomical phenomena. Every track represents the stage of a journey, or state of mind.Or something.
-The little soundclip in the beginning of the track equinox was basically me walking to the microwave, switching it on and shutting its door.... Which got shortened to the switching on + background noises and looped. It repeats in the track Disintegrate.
-To me, disintegrate is one of the creepiest tracks I've ever made. 

.... That's all I can think of right now. I'll upload it on bandcamp soon.



Thursday 24 September 2015

Taylor Swift can help one make sense of their feelings...



But she likes Times New Roman, I like Calibri
She's my supervisor but I think we can all agree
I'm dreaming about the day when I can wake up and find
that my research has been over with the whole time

*headdesk*

This is what happens whenever I try to concentrate on working.

Monday 7 September 2015

a peek into my playlist: Taking the long way around

So, I'm halfway through my degree now, just beginning my research (Hint: it appears to involve me, pesticides, mosquitoes and rats. Only one of us will make it out alive! *energetic fist pump*). Today, as I was walking out of the building, I pondered on the direction my feet took unconsciously. It reminded me that I used to take the longest route ever around campus during the first semester just to delay getting to my awful dreadful classes. So glad those days are over. Anyway, so there's the following (self-made) choice of paths I had to get to classes back then: 

  • The straight-to-hell path. As the name implies, it involved going straight to class through the side entrance of the building, no detours whatsoever.
  • The "I don't want to go to class but I don't wanna waste my dad's money so I guess I'll take a little longer to get there" route. Self explanatory. I took the path through either the botany department or the long corridor  that ended between my zoology department and chemistry department.
  • The "I think I'll die from the crushing disappointment and sadness so let's walk around a little while and do some sightseeing and maybe put my brain into a semblance of order before I go to class" path. It was a long, long walk from the front entrance of the building (which was actually the furthermost from the main gate), through the physics department, down the stairs to the basement, then through the realm of wonder that was the architecture department. Ah, the glorious art that covers its walls! The lovely sketches and paintings! I always stopped there to look at the art for a few minutes. This little side adventure usually meant getting to class late, but it breathed a little life in me every time. 

Surprisingly, it never occurred to me to bunk class. But unsurprisingly, (we get to the point of this blog entry, woohoo!) I ended up listening to a lot of music to a) pass the time b) to block out the noisy chatter of my classmates c) to make myself feel better. And here we gooooo, a playlist to help you 'take the long way around' because sometimes we need to walk around our challenges before we can face them. Clicky for the link if the embedded playlist doesn't show up. 

Saturday 15 August 2015

a peek at my playlist: to sleep

Ever since I got a cellphone (2008, IIRC, at the start of pre-medical yo!), I've stuffed it with as much music as I possibly could. I progressed from a 50MB memory card to a 1GB, then 2GB, and finally 4GB. Why stop here you may ask? It's enough for me and it doesn't feel like I'm swimming in music that I will not focus on ever. I managed my music library, painstakingly filling in metadata. And then, learned the fine art of making playlists. I've got a playlist for depression, aggression, Fiona Apple's brilliance, epic movie scores, studying, one named 'shutup', another named 'vacancy signs' and so on.... and then there's one called 'come sleep'.

It's just as the title suggests, it's something for me to fall asleep to. I don't always need a little musical nudge to fall asleep, but it's for those days when I can't empty my over-active mind. Clicky here if the embedded playlist is not working.





Does it work? For me, yeah. I usually nod off around Watch you sleeping or Prologue: Across the Sky.

So, what do you guys fall asleep to?





Wednesday 12 August 2015

So, there's this article...

....which was published at the end of last month by Akshatha Shetty on  Border Movement, and I would've posted about it here earlier, but I was so excited -pretty much floating in clouds ever since I read it- when it came out, and just needed sometime to absorb it first. I get all tingly and smiley whenever I think about it. Here ya go guys. Thank you so much, Akshatha, for the kind words. 

(Oh, and it took me a while to remember that the accompanying lines of poetry mentioned with the description of the track Dreaming were in the .pdf booklet I made when I was putting the evening/dreaming tracks together in a single package. You can download the whole thing here!)

Tuesday 11 August 2015

Lights, malware and the sun

Hey folks!
So we're about four tracks into Aphelion, and we're still on the dark side of the orbit. But no worries! The end is all sunny. Aphelion is a process of moving towards the sun, amidst restlessness, aimless drifting and bad, bad days... really bad days. Or letting it find you, whichever way you want to look at it. Because, uhm, life isn't linear, it moves in circles, hence the stumbling upon old things again and again. The crashing headlong into the same blue. The whole one-step-forward-and-two-steps-back processes. 

Anyway, I am currently in the process of being obsessed with First Aid Kit. I was minding my own business, really, browsing around on the internet, looking up songs from way back when myspace was popular. And voila! This lovely article comes up, and I end up listening to The Lion's Roar.




I am also currently digging my merry way through the soundtrack of all three Lord of the Rings movies, It's wonderful to justturn it on, sit back, relax and daydream about Viggo Mortensen... I mean, going off on an adventure, fighting orcsies, and uh, hanging out with elves. 

This is also pretty awesome. Yes, I just discovered it.



Also, had plenty of adventures with removing malware from my laptop when I tried to install Halo from an unreliable source. That was fun. Lesson learnt: download from a less sketchy site. 

And that's all for now, I guess.
Later guys!



Tuesday 14 July 2015

APHELION...

...is coming. Slow as a glacier, but t'is coming, people. So far, I put our the first two tracks out.



So what is Aphelion, you ask?

"The point in an orbit of a celestial body in which it is furtherest from the sun."

Far from the sun, but not sun-less exactly. Sort of a cosmic journey, I'd say. Travel through cold dark space before you get the slightest hint of warmth. Consider Aphelion a diary of this journey, and each track is an entry that attempts to explain that particular stage of the journey. So far, we're two tracks in. Let's see how long it takes to reach the sun.

Wednesday 17 June 2015

spirare listens: one smart apple

These days, I'm really into Fiona Apple's music. I've been hopping back and forth among her albums, marvelling over the lyrics and music the same way I used to catch a bug and let it crawl all over my hands. Of course, I let the music crawl into my ears... and soak into my painfully under-used grey matter.... and obviously, it seeps out gradually - but it leaves a stain behind. No, not the nasty kind. The kind you get when you remove an old framed painting from a wall. Or, if you've worked in a laboratory, the millions of indescribable colours and damage embedded in the counters from generations of careless students. Giemsa stains. Hydrochloric acid. Malachite green. A burn from a spirit lamp/Bunsen burner.

So, here's music that has recently left a mark on my brain. 

(Click on the non-video links to go to the song.)

'Regret'- The Idler Wheel... (2012)

 Click to go to song



It's a miserable song. But I love it. Play it, let your anger out.

'Fiona Apple' - When the Pawn... (1999)




This song starts out kinda sweet, but then you get to the chorus:


Hunger hurts, but starving works, 

when it costs too much to love"

.... and the second stanza going all 


He said 'It's all in your head,' 

and I said, 'So's everything', but he didn't get it

It's got this undercurrent of longing, a quiet ache - just bubbling under the words.


'Not about love' - Extraordinary Machine (2005)





Here, Fiona adamantly states that she's not in love as the piano stomps and marches defensively.There's two versions of the album Extraordinary Machine -one previously leaked, one official that was re-worked with a different producers- so two versions of this song exist. I personally prefer the unreleased version.The official version is the one in the video here.



'Sullen girl' - Tidal (1996)





It's a sad song. But it leaves you tranquil, somewhat serene. As if whatever was troubling you has been put away, at least for the moment. It's calm under the waves, Fiona sings. 


'Hot Knife'- The Idler Wheel.. (2012)




Now this is a fun song to sing along to! It's playful and rather intense, and when Fiona belts out, 'He excites me, must be like the genesis of rhythm...' you can't help but tap your feet and sing along.

There's plenty more good songs, but these are the ones rotating in my mind these days. I find myself humming 'Hot Knife' constantly.

Later, folks!


Monday 15 June 2015

spirare listens: defragment

Once in a while, there's something to listen to that wraps itself around you and you want to snuggle forever in its sonic arms. 'Defragment' by Ali Suhail is exquisitely intricate and warm,sort of bittersweet and beautiful, and...and... it's just really good, ok? I like how the guitar and vocals are like a spinal cord, and the rest of the sounds basically neurons branching out in layers. It's just a beautiful experience. Imagine sunlit afternoons spent alone or with friends, dappled sunshine as you drive under trees stretching their branches over the road, watching the sun sink out of sight, foggy gardens... just life, to be honest - with this album as the soundtrack. All isn't sunshine and roses, though. Listen to the lyrics, and you get a sense of how carefully the words have been rolled into the nooks and crannies of the music.

I find the lyrics interesting. There's sort of a darkness to them, I guess? I mean, like there's this:

'...Give me a hand, I'm not right
Not even close to what I am
Reassemble you with all that I have...'
-Nature

.....and then this:

"A breathing shrine for scabs where mirrors never had much to say.
There's big stitches holding me together
They're scaring you away."
-Enough


Anyway, go have a listen guys.This is good stuff.




Defragment, by Ali Suhail - In loving memory of  Sabeen Mahmud.

Sunday 31 May 2015

music of may

Hi folks!



Thought I'd jot down a quick post about the music I've heard this month. It's been a slow, oozy month. I've been working on Aphelion, but I've reached a phase when I really hate everything I make, so taking a break before I finish it/trash it.Good times.


Without further ado....


 New track 1 - Ã¥pne sinn




Lovely track, with these chimes that make me think of a small stream flowing in semi-darkness.

Machinarium OST - Tomas Dvorak




This brilliant soundtrack belongs to a little point and click game, called Machinarium,  which follows the adventures f a robot in a robot universe. For the past few days whenever I turned on the computer,I would go online and put on this playlist. It's just perfect. My favourites include 'clockwise operetta', 'the sea', 'the mezzanine', 'the castle' and 'the glasshouse with butterfly'. You'll have to buy the game and soundtrack, but there's a free bonus EP. Oh, and do play the game too. It's a little hard, but use those lonely neurons - it's good for us!



Morphine - What Anxiety Feels Like




Dark, kinda serious track. Makes me think of walking down the street on a overcast day, hands stuffed in pockets.




Cafe Sooolaris(Rare) - Steaks 'n' Tea




Then, we have this piece of brilliant absurdity. Reminds me of asking what's on the menu in the gritty little restaurants you stop at on a road trip. 


Coffee pi, coffee pilao. Coffee pi, coffee pilao...


Rippling Purrs - Tipu Sabzawaar





I like this, because of the cat. 

-----

So, that's it for today.

And uhh, now off to study haematology. Hopefully, I'll pass the exam tomorrow.

- spirare.

Thursday 30 April 2015

Updates!

Hi guys!

So, it's been a while. I've been busy; working on exams, then practicals, and then the new semester in which we started on our specialization subject and I am loving it. Medical entomology, vector biology and insect molecular biology *insert warm fuzzy feelings here*. Compared to the horror I studied in the first semester, this is paradise. And so, I've been working on new music for some weeks now. It's been tentatively titled 'Aphelion'. I've learned a little about the musical scales and chords (thank you, Taimur the Great of 6la8). Maybe this new knowledge will help me evolve a little more sonically. Though, since I know myself best, it will take a while to work myself into a new-ish direction. So yeah, till new music is ready I 'remixed' an old track from dust:threads:sunbeams, and put it up on soundcloud for thy enjoyment!


Tuesday 17 March 2015

spirare listens: a peek at my playlist

If I had a favourite season, it would be this in-between winter/spring. Ahh. Just look around you. Sunshine, that stiff breeze, chirping crickets, diamond-bright stars, bright young leaves, sparrows building nests. One sunny day, I saw that my favourite lizard (its name is Greenie and it lives behind a pipe in our backyard) had come out of hibernation. I said hello to it and mentioned I was glad to see him/her. He/she just blinked its golden eyes at me and muttered something about a hard winter and slid back behind the pipe. I agreed with him/her. T'was a cold winter, or maybe I have aged a hundred years and simply feel the cold too much. I am waiting for the weather to get warm enough to run around barefoot. My feet are smooth and clean. I had to wear socks for too long, my feet need air. I hate socks, but I also hate cold feet.


Anyhow, this month I had a sudden longing to listen to some music that I had sitting quietly tucked away for a long time.Stuff you listen to once and then forget about. You take it out sometimes, look a at it, rub your hands all over it and immerse yourself its texture and then put it away. Other times, you take it out, fall in love with it and put it in your pocket, and carry it around with you, and discover more of who made it. So, let's start with....



Dance Magic Dance -  David Bowie








I don't really listen to David Bowie's music, and if it hadn't been for Labyrinth, a movie I watched nearly two years ago, I wouldn't have heard this song. The movie is kinda annoying,but I somehow ended up liking this song. 

You remind me of the babe
What babe? 
babe with the power
What power? 
power of voodoo
Who do? 
you do
Do what? 
You remind me of the babe

This exchange is like a mobius strip. Or a dog chasing its own tail.


Criminal - Fiona Apple




This song... I'm never really sure how to describe it. But it's got this smooth-yet-gritty quality to it that I love.



Song to the Siren - This Mortal Coil






Mournful and haunting. It just kinda seeps into all the corners of your brain,and makes you want to tuck yourself in a chair by the window and stare into space.


Keep it Close - Seven Lions ft. Kerli




This song is a beauty. It builds up and then just crashes all manner of hail, snow and sleet over you and finally slowly drips to a stop. Perfect for running through a city on a rainy day.


Protection - Massive Attack






One night, my neighbours were away, leaving their bratty kids at home. And what did the kids do? Play some incredibly loud, incredibly bad music till one in the morning. At first I thought I was going to pass out from the lack of sleep + lack of silence I so badly need before waking up to yet another day at uni, but then I remembered: Headphones. Music. Must save myself. This was one of the songs I ended up playing to drown out the noise and soothe myself to sleep. It didn't lull me to sleep but hey, it helped my brain relax and shift to "Repose", and finally, I heard one of the older kids screaming at the younger ones to turn off that music. Sweet.



That's all for now folks. Time for me to write an assignment on systemic lupus erythmatosus!


-spirare

Saturday 7 March 2015

Uploads

Hi all!

I finally managed to upload Obscura on to Bandcamp. Check it out, and download it in your favourite format if you like. I added a bonus track to it too!

Sunday 22 February 2015

The Zoologist Chronicles: Me and the Birds

I started my masters last year all alone in an unfamiliar place. My friends are scattered all over Lahore. The cats don't come to me like the ones at my old college. The trees are hostile. And I long for the presence of my feathered bird-friends.

It's like starting school all over again.

Except in school, I wasn't really aware of any birds besides sparrows and crows (and that one which makes a creepy crying sound at night, but more on that later),

It was in my fourth semester of bachelors when we finally started ornithology. Our teacher took us on a round of the campus and introduced us to what lurked among the leaves. And I was blown away.

I'm a regular birdwatcher and have seen lots of birds, but for the sake of brevity I'll include about five species in this post that made the biggest impression on me and try to sound zoologist-y about them. It's hard to do that because when I see them what I actually feel is wonder and amazement and other indescribable emotions. You might have guessed.... I'm not a very articulate person.

DISCLAIMER: Unless stated, none of the pictures used below are mine. They link back to their amazing photographers on Flicker. Do check out their other photographs.

Let me start with the spotted owlets.


Spotted owlets




Spotted owlets (Athena brama) are little fluffballs. This picture makes it look very tall and majestic, but don't be fooled. Three-quarters of the time I've seen them, they look like this:



Owls are nocturnal and/ or crepuscular i.e. active at dawn and dusk, but you can see them roosting on branches near their nests. The ones I have seen had a nest nearly two floors above, in a hole where a brick had fallen out of a wall near a window. Since they were near a window, this meant they could often be seen from indoors, sleepily perched on branches that nearly touched the window. However, if you got too near the window they would glare at you and fly off.  

Spotted owlets eat bugs and rodents, and spit out undigested gross stuff as pellets. I collected a few for the pure pleasure of dissecting them and found bones and fur (or feathers?) and God know swhat in them. 



(this pic is mine.the hands are not mine though.)



They have a very distinct chuck-chuk-chuck-chirrr call. You got owls near your place? You'll definitely hear them. Since my house is not too far from a couple of thirty something trees, I would hear their calls in the evening. An older and more undisturbed area is even better - you could even find barn owls there. Seriously though, if you do have barn owls - or any owl- in your area, keep an eye on them and protect them since they are used in black magic. Which doesn't end well for the poor owls, I've been told. This and this article might give you an idea.


Purple Sunbird


Next is the lovely purple sunbird(Nectarinia asiatica). 



It's very small, like a hummingbird, and feeds on nectar. The adult male is a dark purple with shiny iridescent green-blue-light purple feathers, while the female is plainer, with an olive brownish yellow plumage. The juvenile males are kinda drab too. They have long curved beaks and a snaky tongue to sip nectar. Despite its size, it has a very loud, trilling call. During summer and spring I became aware of how noisy they are! Their calls pretty much echoed around the street. The flowers that I have personally seen them feeding from include the hibiscus, kachnar (Bauhinia variegata) and the orange-coloured flowers of Thevetia peruviana. It perches to feed, unlike the hummingbird, which hovers. They also migrate to warmer areas in the winter. You can make sugar syrup and put it in a birdfeeder bucket thingy for them if you want to attract them to your place. I tried but it didn't exactly work - the sunbirds are more attracted to my mom's brightly coloured laundry clips than sweet sticky sugar syrup. I did get an army of ants though. Total failure. Just plant a hibiscus bush. I have one in my home, but it has only flowered once or twice. My gardening skills are a failure too, it seems. 


Yellow-footed green pigeons



These are among my favourite birds. Fat and green, sneaky and pretty hard to see as they skulk around on branches gorging themselves on fruit. Yellow-footed green pigeons (Treron phoenicoptera) can be seen these days, feeding in large flocks in trees such as pipal and banyan. I think they are seasonal migrants, because I've only ever seen them in the winter. Apparently the breed from March to July. They are so hard to see! I remember spending time walking around my old college's banyan tree, trying to get a glimpse of these pigeons, hearing a loud plop! as another half-eaten fig would drop to the ground. 




Indian Grey Hornbill


Now this bird has a very interesting life! The male and female look very similar - plain greyish brown plumage, with a funny protrusion (called a casque)on their curved beaks and a mullet.

This is a female. You can tell by the smaller casque and the lighter face.





And this is a male!




It's got a longer and more pointed casque and a darker face. I haven't been able to distinguish the ones that I've seen, because I have only caught fleeting glimpses so far. Not only does it blend well in the tree branches, it also nests very high up. However it has a very distinct silhouette - you will immediately know if it flies over you.



So, you'll know the story - male bird meets female bird, falls in love and they both move into a lovely nest hole. Soon, the eggs are laid and the female is locked in the nest-hole with them as the entrance is almost entirely sealed up with mud pellets and fecal matter, and she loses her feathers, and grows them back around the same time as the little chicks hatch and mature. And she is brought food by the male in the meantime. Cool, huh?


Coppersmith barbet (Megalaima haemacephala)



                  

This bird.... all my life I have heard its constant metronomic calls, especially in the summer. I used to wonder what it was, was it some random machinery going off somewhere? An alarm? I never ever knew it was a bird. I never even associated it with a bird before studying ornithology. Now, if you have a nice, greenery-filled area with lots of old trees chances are you've hear it already. Pause on a still summer day and listen, you'll probably hear it. Its call is a very prominent blip-blip-blip-blip,varying in speed or pitch, as steady as a ticking clock. I've seen the bird - a rather eclectic looking bird, green and yellowish with a prominent red patch on the neck and above the beak - early in the morning, just sitting there on a tree hooting away happily. They love ficus trees - yup, this tree feeds and houses lots of bird species - and will spend loads of time among the branches, sunning themselves or stuffing themselves. Its even got whiskers! They can be kinda hard to see, they blend in with leaves pretty well.

And for a bonus, here's the mystery bird that makes the spooky crying noise I've often heard at night:


                             



That's a red-wattled lapwing. Funny looking bird, isn't it? And apparently its call sounds like someone saying did-you-do-it. Judge for yourself. (you might want to turn the volume down when you click play, the call is rather piercing.)

Until next time, folks!


Sunday 11 January 2015

spirare listens: a peek at my playlist

Hello people!

Since my last (proper) post way back in early december, the world has been moving on, another year has rolled around and we are all set for 2015, I hope. Things have been happening, among which a small post-it in the world of obscure music was my decision to upload Obscura (hope y'all liked it) with swanky new artwork when the realization dawned on me the one I had previously decided on was absolutely bogus. November was bleak, but December even more so. I cannot remember ever being so cold in my life. Whether it is because of current events in Pakistan, or because I ran around barefoot and sweater-less in my youth (what goes around comes around i.e. the cold I never felt before is coming back to haunt me.), I wait for the spring thaw and leap outside at the slightest hint of sunshine. Also, line-drying laundry is so hard in this weather. I finally understand my mother's concerns. So here is a list of music I am currently listening to while I wait for the warmth to descend.



all is full of love - Bjork





Ahh, Bjork. Her entire discography is full of gems to listen to again and again and again. This particular song from homogenic, the closing track of the album, caught my attention when I saw the eccentric video on television some years back. The album version is musically different from the video version, which features soaring vocals, beats and robots over sweeping string arrangements, while the album version is drum-less and more ambient. Use the album version as your alarm tone, and you won't regret it. There are also several glorious live versions, but my absolute favourite is this one.


BJORK - ALL IS FULL OF LOVE from Lance Bangs on Vimeo.



Superstar - the Carpenters




M | Karen Anne Carpenter - SuperStar [1971]. from Musica on Vimeo.


My father is a huge Carpenters fan. He once said that he has heard no voice as smooth and amazing as Karen Carpenter's. And I quite agree with him. Apparently, he had a huge collection of music consisting of Boney M., the Eagles, Simon and Garfunkel, Donna Summers, etc  when he was a teenager, but by the time I was born and gained consciousness of the world, only one measly cassette of Boney M. was left. And did we listen the heck out of it, until it got warped one boiling day when it was left on the car dashboard. I hunted down several carpenter's songs, and so, one of my favourites is Superstar.


Nas ne Dogonyat -  t.A.T.u.



t.A.T.u. - Nas Ne Dogonyat (Censored) from t.A.T.u. on Vimeo.


Soo, I like t.A.T.u. Some people - ok most people - have classified them as irrelevant and a waste of time... but I really like some of their music. The duo, consisting of Lena Katina and Yulia Volkova, released several English and Russian albums before splitting up some time ago and this is one of my favourite songs. It's also the first song by t.A.T.u. I ever heard. If you need a soundtrack to run away to on a cold winter night, this should kick it off.  



May it be - Enya




Enya-May It Be from mflex sounds on Vimeo.

I've already mentioned before how much I love the soundtrack to the Lord of the Rings film series before. This song, from the soundtrack of the Fellowship of the Ring, featuring lovely ethereal vocals by Enya caught my fancy a couple days ago. I simply love the chorus:

Mornie utulie (darkness has come)
Believe and you will find your way
Mornie alantie (darkness has fallen)
A promise lives within you now


If you have seen the movie, you may remember Galadriel saying, "The Quest stands upon the edge of a knife. Stray but a little, and it will fail, to the ruin of all. Yet hope remains while the Company is true." And that's what I think this song is about - goodness of your heart, friendship, loyalty and staying hopeful in dark times . We all know that's dumb, but still - it makes for a beautiful message.



- So this is it for today folks. I'll be shaking off more dust as winter goes by!

2017, 2017

Yo fellow humans, how you doin'.  It's been a year since I updated this blog last... I guess I haven't really accomplishe...