How had I not heard of CD Baby before? Now I am dooooooomed. Not only have I discovered the Vampire Beach Babes, but my "gothic" search turned up a band called Ver Sacrum, which has the description Violins. Cellos. Oboe. Lush, affected guitars. If you live in the 19th century and are regularly drinking absinthe, you are probably hearing music in your head already. For the rest of us, The Ballrooms of Mars is the perfect soundtrack for the visions that Baudelaire and Verlaine would have experienced.
I'm not supposed to be buying cds! I'm supposed to be saving up for a trip next month!
I'm not supposed to be buying cds! I'm supposed to be saving up for a trip next month!
looks sternly at Jilli and taps his toe
"Ballrooms of Mars" is a T.Rex songtitle, btw.
Oooh, look, Circus Contraption.
Quirky-jerky, loony-croony, gypsy carnival opera music. Tom Waits meets the Rocky Horror Picture Show? Danny Elfman meets Squirrel Nut Zippers? Listen to this glorious tangle of sounds and decide for yourself.
Circus Contraption is an honest-to-goodness, one-ring travelling circus based in Seattle, Washington. Music is an integral part of our show, and we work constantly toward blurring the lines between the musicians and physical performers in the creative process.
What do we sound like? Sometimes spooky, sometimes quirky, sometimes raucous, and sometimes just a bit silly. Imagine an off-kilter carousel accompanied by Halloween music gone slightly wrong. At any given moment, you'll hear vocals, accordion, banjo, guitar, bass, clarinet, violin, saxophone, trumpet, trombone, tuba, theremin, washboard, drums, beer bottles, rusty junk and elbow grease.
Circus Contraption puts a contemporary twist on circus music traditions with an aesthetic described as "a cross between Tom Waits and Wings of Desire" and as "the last surviving klezmer band in outback Paraguay."
More Victorian Goth music: Jill Tracy and the Malcontent Orchestra
"Into the Land of Phantoms" is an elegant, eerie journey led by cello, violin, marimba and orchestral percussion- hanging like velvet curtains around Jill Tracy's signature dark parlor piano."
This is a limited edition, so best to order now.
Described by the SF Weekly as "exquisite, lush, and positively poetic," the noirish compositions by Jill Tracy and The Malcontent Orchestra have developed a fervid following of devotees, critical acclaim, and multiple Bay Area Music Awards nominations. Their original score to F.W. Murnau's silent vampire classic "Nosferatu" has only enhanced the band's reputation of sophistication and musical virtuosity. The San Francisco Examiner described the score as "remarkable....lyrical and lovely." The Marin Independent called it "unforgettable." The San Francisco Chronicle hailed Nosferatu "deliciously macabre."
"I strive to honor the integrity of the film," explained composer/pianist Jill Tracy in a 1999 SF Gate interview during the filmscore's debut. I don't see Nosferatu as inciting horror or trepidation, as much as an unsettling allure. It's a beautiful, sensual work; the listener should surrender to the spell of the music as intensely as to the spell of the vampire."
For the past five years, Jill Tracy and The Malcontent Orchestra have performed the score live during the week of Halloween to the delight of Bay Area audiences. This is Jill Tracy's first instrumental album of this sort.
The beautifully designed booklet features artwork created from both the film's lavish scenes and the band in the theatre performing the work.
Check out Jill Tracy's stunning CD "Diabolical Streak" also available on CD Baby.
looks sternly at Jilli and taps his toe
I'm not buying anything. I'm just writing down band names for future reference.
"Ballrooms of Mars" is a T.Rex songtitle, btw.
Ah-ha! That's why it sounded familiar.
I really really need to go to the next Circus Contraption show. I've managed to miss all of them so far, and that makes me sad.
"Into the Land of Phantoms" is an elegant, eerie journey led by cello, violin, marimba and orchestral percussion- hanging like velvet curtains around Jill Tracy's signature dark parlor piano."
Hey! I have a Jill Tracy cd, from the last time I was in San Francisco (which was '97).
Limited edition? Nooooooo!
1997? That's too damn long ago. Seven years!
1997? That's too damn long ago. Seven years!
I know, I know. But hey, that's being taken care of!
I had no idea Jill Tracy had recorded something other than "Quintessentially Unreal". I really like her work.
I had no idea Jill Tracy had recorded something other than "Quintessentially Unreal". I really like her work.
I just ordered her CD
Diabolical Streak.
I'm waiting on Diabolical Streak until after the trip I'm saving up for. But the limited edition
into the land of phantoms
had to be ordered now now now. Because what if they were all gone in a month? I'd be a despondant goth, which must not happen.