Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta lisa gerrard. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta lisa gerrard. Mostrar todas las entradas

martes, 7 de septiembre de 2010

Dead Can Dance - The Hidden Treasures




Genere: Pop/Rock.
Style: Modern Classical, Neofolk, Goth Rock, Ambient.

Similar Artists: Bel canto, Nick cave, Cocteau twins.
Recording Year: Swindle Records, 1994.




A very well know group for the "Fields Of Haze People". No need to explain anything.

This is a collection of studio outtakes, unreleased songs and rare live performances.












Fields Of Haze... Underground for all.

miércoles, 25 de agosto de 2010

Lisa Gerrard - Black Opal



Genre: Pop/Rock
Style: World fusion, Adult alternativeSimilar Artist: Delerium, Elizabeth Fraser, Forest for the trees
Recording year: Gerrard Records, 2009.


In collaboration with Brendan Perry, Lisa Gerrard is half of the duo Dead Can Dance, which started releasing arty goth rock on the 4AD label in the mid-'80s. Gerrard began her solo career with the 1995 release The Mirror Pool, which contained a lot of work that wouldn't fit comfortably into the DCD oeuvre. Combining these fragments with music that she composed and arranged digitally before reconfiguring them into scores that could be performed, it also draws on a composition by Handel and traditional Iranian music. Recorded and produced largely at her home in rural Australia, it extends the world music inclinations of recent Dead Can Dance albums by featuring bouzouki, tablas, and camel drums; though the somber, orchestrated pomp of Dead Can Dance is also present in her operatic, often wordless vocals, and string/woodwind passages (some of which were performed by Australia's Victorian Philharmonic Orchestra). Gerrard released her second album, Duality, written and performed with Pieter Bourke, in the spring of 1998. Gerrard composed the score for director Niki Caro's Whale Rider in 2003, followed by Immortal Memory, a collaboration with Irish composer Patrick Cassidy in 2004. Another collaboration followed in 2005, this time with composer Jeff Rona for the soundtrack to the Native American drama A Thousand Roads. 








Fields Of Haze... Underground for all.

miércoles, 13 de enero de 2010

Gladiator - OST





Genere: OST

Recording Year: Decca, 2001.


This second soundtrack compilation for Ridley Scott's sword and toga epic, Gladiator, hit stores nine months after the movie's initial release. It was timed to capitalize on the film's front-runner status in the 2000 Oscar horse race, but it would be shortsighted to dismiss the disc as a wholly mercenary attempt to milk the Gladiator cash cow. Perhaps such claims would be warranted if Gladiator: More Music From the Motion Picture were what its title implies: a collection of excerpts from the film's original soundtrack that were left off of the first album. The initial album, Gladiator: Music From the Motion Picture, remains more than adequate as a summary of a highly eclectic and effective score which is not only Hans Zimmer's finest composition (thanks in large part to contributions by former Dead Can Dance vocalist Lisa Gerrard) but also one of the most original facets of an otherwise overblown and overrated blockbuster action flick. Thankfully, the second Gladiator CD is not merely an accumulation of leftover scraps of music. Rather, it is a fascinating audio diary, an inside look at the process of composing a film score. Zimmer's liner notes provide detailed accounts of the stories behind each discarded outtake and incomplete draft. One track is a fabulous vodka-inspired late-night jam between Zimmer's synthesizers and strings, Djivan Gasparyan's duduk, and Heitor Periera's Spanish guitar. Another is a faster, African-influenced version of Gerrard's stirring end credit theme, "Now We Are Free," that was abandoned for being too cheerful. It is clear from listening to the CD that these recordings were not rejected because the music was of an inferior quality to the final versions. In fact, some of these pieces are more inventive and listenable than anything on the soundtrack. They were cut simply because they did not meet the requirements of the narrative. Gladiator: More Music From the Motion Picture demonstrates strikingly not only how creative but also how exacting, meticulous, practical, and utilitarian a film composer must be.







Fields Of Haze.

jueves, 13 de agosto de 2009

Lisa Gerrard & Patrick Cassidy - Immortal memory



Género /Gender: World fusion, Alternative rock

Artistas similares / Similar Artist: Delerium, Elizabeth Fraser, Forest for the trees

Año de grabación / Recording year: 4AD, 2004.



Lisa Gerrard compositora y cantante australiana. Integrante principal de la desaparecida banda Dead Can Dance. Ella es mejor conocida por su profunda voz de contralto.

Lisa creció en el barrio multi-étnico de East Prahan, donde convivió entre las culturas griega, turca, italiana, irlandesa y árabe. Esta diversidad cultural tuvo gran influencia en su música, particularmente en sus posteriores álbumes con la banda Dead Can Dance y en su trabajo solista.

Immortal Memory es un trabajo realizado entre Lisa Gerrard y el compositor irlandés Patrick Cassidy. Obra realizada como un ciclo entre la vida, la muerte y el renacer, esta obra se ha descrito como un soundtrack de película huérfana.



Lisa Gerrard is an Australian singer and composer. Main member of the extinct band Dead Can Dance. Well known by her deep voice of contralto.

Lisa grew in the multi-ethnic district of East Prahan, where she coexisted between the cultures Greek, Turkish, Italian, Irish and Arab. This cultural diversity had great influence in her music, particularly in its later albums with Dead Can Dance and with her solo work.

Immortal Memory
is a collaboration between vocalist Lisa Gerrard and Irish composer Patrick Cassidy. Billed as a cycle of life and death and rebirth, Immortal Memory is better described as an orphaned film score.





Fields of Haze.
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