Yes, I too felt it was straight out of a movie. Really atmospheric, a bit psychedelic (the dark matter) with a good flow. Six minutes were just fine for this song, never got bored.
Very well done
Best regards, Anthony
Trip hop I likes, ok I get the gurl! For the Halloween yes it's great! Bass synth is dope everything works even the scream.
Cool dark track! This is trip hop alright
great mix Click thats a lovely vocal but its still got scare fest stamped through it, i also agree with Rita, your work is excellent bro, you never disappoint its always a pleasure to press play because you know it will be worth it.
Adding distortion to a cello, interesting. Good intro then it settles right in. The vox and the effects you put on them work well in this context. Good song for the halloween season!
Excellent. While listening to it, I thought of that "girl" with that towering hairstyle that walks around so strangely in Mars Attacks. The track is, as always, fascinating and frightening at the same time. Well, a very nice kind of scary. Good job.
Cheers, Micky
I love love love Narnia. Read all the books multiple times as a kid, especially the first ones and also really enjoyed the first 2 movies (I think I would also enjoy the rest but life's too short for sequels).
This track is very cool. It doesn't immediately say Narnia to me, but there are definitely gentle breezes, and I love the atmosphere!
As I said, I am from the post-war generation. I have no personal guilt. But I'm also German. And as that I stand in the German continuity, which I accept, have always accepted, and therefore also in the responsibility that follows from it, which arises for me personally. Of course I have something to do with all of this.
I'm truly sorry that all this happened to your grandmother. No one can undo all of this unimaginable suffering that began with one child and continues throughout life. Nobody can do that. But I assure you that I am absolutely intensely aware of what we did to your grandmother back then, what we did to people back then, what we did to humanity.
I said that I would get in touch again about another track from you that I also have a connection to.
It's this song here. When I read your description of this song, it hit me suddenly and immediately, it hit me very emotionally, which is why I couldn't react immediately, but needed time. Even now, at this moment, it continues to move me extremely.
I am German, post-war generation, born in the early 1950s, grew up German, socialized German in every respect, positive, negative, the whole package, with all its highs, with all its lows, German is anchored in my genes down to the last bit. And not because I tried hard for it at all costs, but because it's just there, just like that. It is my absolute identity and I completely agree with it.
Son of a German who was in the war, in Russia, in Belarus, in your grandmother's country. My father died in 1992. We never talked about the war. The only statement ever made was that he could already see the towers of Moscow in the distance. I do not know more. Unfortunately! But I never asked any further questions myself. After the war, my father was consistently politically active, SPD, and within this classically left-wing party he was very much on the far left. Politically far left, warm-hearted, a thoroughly social person who has done an above-average effort for other people his whole life. The question of whether he was a Nazi or whether he was involved in war crimes never occurred to me in all my childhood, youth and adult years. It wasn't even remotely there, for me it was always so completely natural that such a question didn't even come even remotely close to becoming a thought or becoming an existence.
Why am I writing all this to you? Because changes gradually occurred to me in the years after my father's death. It bothers me immensely today that I don't know anything specifically, can't ask, can't ask anyone anymore. I think everyone who was a German soldier in Russia during World War II took part in a German national crime. But to what extent he was personally guilty beyond being a collective soldier, which was not his decision, of killing the human being within himself in order to be able to commit the most disgusting atrocities, to be able to exercise his most disgusting, base instincts on other people...
...as a human being you have to be able to get along with yourself, at least to the extent that you don't ban all mirrors from the house, from the world!
My father was in Israel in the early 1960s, and later also several times in Yugoslavia and Poland during the Iron Curtain. That calms me down just a little bit. He certainly would not have traveled there if he had to expect to be recognized as a war criminal and executed there.
Everyone has their style. I like this one because I get hints of Electronica. Electronic music tends to be my favorite Genre. I love it even more when mixed with Cinematography. Too me this one gives off that vibe. You got a heart from me my man.
I'll say I have never heard a trip hop song before but this was enthralling. The sounds work so well together but manage to stay eerie and interesting. And the vocals just add a whole other dimension to it.
Well done!
I'm so glad you add vocals to your tracks, so many people here that make "electronic" music never attempt to try to do this. To me it adds another dimension to a track, a huge one. They def add to the track. Solid track, has some cool guitar in it, lead was neat!
on Show It To Me by ClickbaitCabaret
on Show It To Me by ClickbaitCabaret
on Show It To Me by ClickbaitCabaret
on Show It To Me by ClickbaitCabaret
on Pretty Gurl by ClickbaitCabaret
on The Gentle Breezes of Narnia by ClickbaitCabaret
on CLICKBAIT CABARET THEME by ClickbaitCabaret
Very well done
Best regards, Anthony
on The Cursed Ouija Board Remix by ClickbaitCabaret
on Show It To Me by ClickbaitCabaret
on Pretty Gurl by ClickbaitCabaret
Cool dark track! This is trip hop alright
on Pretty Gurl by ClickbaitCabaret
on Pretty Gurl by ClickbaitCabaret
on Pretty Gurl by ClickbaitCabaret
If you appear on LM again, there will be another good track.
on Pretty Gurl by ClickbaitCabaret
Wayne
on Pretty Gurl by ClickbaitCabaret
on Pretty Gurl by ClickbaitCabaret
Dude, this is... weird. Special. Different. Excellent!
on Pretty Gurl by ClickbaitCabaret
Cheers, Micky
on The Gentle Breezes of Narnia by ClickbaitCabaret
This track is very cool. It doesn't immediately say Narnia to me, but there are definitely gentle breezes, and I love the atmosphere!
on Genghis Khan by ClickbaitCabaret
on In Memory of the Holocaust by ClickbaitCabaret
I'm truly sorry that all this happened to your grandmother. No one can undo all of this unimaginable suffering that began with one child and continues throughout life. Nobody can do that. But I assure you that I am absolutely intensely aware of what we did to your grandmother back then, what we did to people back then, what we did to humanity.
Thank you for your patience.
Seelengold
on In Memory of the Holocaust by ClickbaitCabaret
I said that I would get in touch again about another track from you that I also have a connection to.
It's this song here. When I read your description of this song, it hit me suddenly and immediately, it hit me very emotionally, which is why I couldn't react immediately, but needed time. Even now, at this moment, it continues to move me extremely.
I am German, post-war generation, born in the early 1950s, grew up German, socialized German in every respect, positive, negative, the whole package, with all its highs, with all its lows, German is anchored in my genes down to the last bit. And not because I tried hard for it at all costs, but because it's just there, just like that. It is my absolute identity and I completely agree with it.
Son of a German who was in the war, in Russia, in Belarus, in your grandmother's country. My father died in 1992. We never talked about the war. The only statement ever made was that he could already see the towers of Moscow in the distance. I do not know more. Unfortunately! But I never asked any further questions myself. After the war, my father was consistently politically active, SPD, and within this classically left-wing party he was very much on the far left. Politically far left, warm-hearted, a thoroughly social person who has done an above-average effort for other people his whole life. The question of whether he was a Nazi or whether he was involved in war crimes never occurred to me in all my childhood, youth and adult years. It wasn't even remotely there, for me it was always so completely natural that such a question didn't even come even remotely close to becoming a thought or becoming an existence.
Why am I writing all this to you? Because changes gradually occurred to me in the years after my father's death. It bothers me immensely today that I don't know anything specifically, can't ask, can't ask anyone anymore. I think everyone who was a German soldier in Russia during World War II took part in a German national crime. But to what extent he was personally guilty beyond being a collective soldier, which was not his decision, of killing the human being within himself in order to be able to commit the most disgusting atrocities, to be able to exercise his most disgusting, base instincts on other people...
...as a human being you have to be able to get along with yourself, at least to the extent that you don't ban all mirrors from the house, from the world!
My father was in Israel in the early 1960s, and later also several times in Yugoslavia and Poland during the Iron Curtain. That calms me down just a little bit. He certainly would not have traveled there if he had to expect to be recognized as a war criminal and executed there.
on Show It To Me by ClickbaitCabaret
on Show It To Me by ClickbaitCabaret
on Show It To Me by ClickbaitCabaret
Well done!
on Show It To Me by ClickbaitCabaret
Well done, again!
Wayne