Notes For The 08/24/08 ADSOP Podcast

No Comments Written by jason on August 24, 2008 in podcast, A Darker Shade of Pagan.

A Darker Shade of Pagan: Podcast for 08/24/08

New this week: Brand new music from Blackmore’s Night.

Other notes: This week sees the first official ADSOP cd giveaway. Listen to the podcast to learn how to win a free copy of Blackmore’s Night’s new album “Secret Voyage”. In other news, if you use Facebook, why not become a “fan” of A Darker Shade of Pagan there. 

In the future: Even more stuff (and by “stuff”, I mean great new music).


Notes For The 08/17/08 ADSOP Podcast

One Comment Written by jason on August 17, 2008 in podcast, A Darker Shade of Pagan.

A Darker Shade of Pagan: Podcast for 08/17/08

New this week: Brand new music from Fern Knight, Bat For Lashes (from the upcoming Cure tribute “Perfect As Cats”), Novemthree, and Bon Iver !

Other notes: This week I fell in love with a Test Dept. / Brith Gof collaboration called “Gododdin”, and played a track from it that I found on the Internet. Sadly the album seems to be out of print. I would love to get my hands on a copy (CD or digitial), so drop me a line if you have any leads that don’t cost me an arm and a leg (Got it! Expect to hear more from this album in the future.). In other news, if you use Facebook, why not become a “fan” of A Darker Shade of Pagan there. 

In the future: You can expect wonderful things (and new music), including some possible ADSOP CD giveaways!


Notes For The 08/10/08 ADSOP Podcast

No Comments Written by jason on August 10, 2008 in podcast, A Darker Shade of Pagan.

A Darker Shade of Pagan: Podcast for 08/10/08

New this week: Brand new music from Falling You, and Mercury-prize nominated folk act Rachel Unthank and the Winterset.

Other notes: I was pretty pleased with the “flow” of music this week. I also ended up playing just about every band mentioned in my recent collection of capsule reviews.  In other news, if you use Facebook, why not become a “fan” of A Darker Shade of Pagan there. 

In the future: Expect some older stuff from Sharron Kraus (and friends) that will interest my explicitly Pagan listeners. Plus, I may play a preview track from an excellent-looking Cure tribute coming out from Manimal Vinyl.


Recent Music Reviews/Picks

No Comments Written by jason on August 5, 2008 in reviews.

It has been awhile since I discussed music here, so I thought I would provide some capsule reviews of recently released music that sings to the Pagan soul (or at least my Pagan soul). All of these artists can be heard on my weekly A Darker Shade of Pagan podcast, and are easily obtainable through mail-order or digital download.

Falling You - “Faith”

John Zorko and his rotating band of “magicians” have created yet another magnificent collection of haunting ethereal soundscapes enhanced by masterful female vocals. This album, like previous Falling You efforts, explores a common theme as expressed through a variety of guest vocalists including Suzanne Perry, Amanda Kramer, and Dru Allen (among others). While “Faith” and Falling You’s previous albums may engender admiration from the New Age music scene, don’t let that fool you. These compositions are dynamic, engaging, and deeply moving. You can purchase a digital copy of “Faith” from Magnatune for a sliding scale charge of $5-$18 dollars. Physical copies will be available later this month through a variety of online distributors (CD Baby, Amazon).

Incus - “Fire and Bone”

While Incus has always evoked the word “tribal” when discussing the band’s sound, it hardly seems adequate in discussing the festival-touring juggernaut (including stops at Starwood and the Pagan Spirit Festival) this ever-evolving group of individuals, lead by singer and composer Jason Cohen, has become. As a result, “Fire and Bone”, unlike their previous release “Burning Thread”, seems to carry the aspirations of a group trying to capture the magic of its hard-won live energy. At times this is successful, like on the energetic opening cut “Claudia Always Eyes”, or the slow burn into Russian folk-jam of “Weight (Wait)”. However, elsewhere, this album strikes me as transitional, with some missteps keeping the album from eliciting an unreserved endorsement. “Fire and Bone” is a snapshot of an evolving band that hasn’t quite captured its lightning in a bottle. This album hasn’t been released yet, though you should be able to order it from CD Baby soon.

Sharron Kraus - “The Fox’s Wedding”

Fans of pastoral British folk are in for a treat. Sharron Kraus, who has been generating buzz for some time now among fans of darkly-inflected folk music, delivers a masterwork that is both mythic and deeply personal. There isn’t a weak track to be found here, all the songs seem to lead you towards an ever-shifting seasonal journey that reminds you how deeply personal turning the wheel can truly be. That sacrifice and rebirth are simultaneously inside and outside of us. For fans of “The Wicker Man” soundtrack, surely, but also for those wondering who is envisioning the future of folk music. Wonderful. You can buy a digitial version of “The Fox’s Wedding” at Amazon, or order a physical copy from Jnana Records (or Amazon).

Silver Summit - “Silver Summit”

A heady mix of psychedelic folk and mysticism, Silver Summit’s debut album is an ode to what lays beyond. The album plays like an initiatory journey to the otherworld, from the opening chimes of “Music In the Afterlife”, to the breathy chant-like “In-Between Place” (appropriately placed near the the middle of the album) to somber and spooky closer “The Bridge”. You are left feeling changed and deeper entwined in mystery than before you started. It is little wonder that other reviewers are describing Silver Summit as “bewitched”, “a collision of heaven and earth, fire and water”, or for “sonic voyagers seeking to ascend to the next level.” You can buy a digital copy of “Silver Summit” from Amazon, or you can order a physical copy through Drag City/Language of Stone.

Other picks:
Fern Knight - “Fern Knight” - A mix of folk, prog, and classical elements that serves as “an ode to all things green and living”, and showcases the amazing songwriting abilities of Margaret Wienk. [Purchase]

Lux Interna - [a lantern carried in blood and skin] - A retrospective collection of haunting neo-folk that explores a Gnostic band finding the “inner light” in a world of illusions. [Purchase]

Pamela Wyn Shannon - “Courting Autumn”: A psych/pastoral-folk exploration of the waning year that highlights a shining musical talent. [Purchase]


Notes for the 08/03/08 ADSOP Podcast

No Comments Written by jason on August 3, 2008 in podcast, A Darker Shade of Pagan.

A Darker Shade of Pagan: Podcast for 08/03/08

New this week: Brand new music from Pamela Wyn Shannon, Accolade, and Revue Noir!

Other notes: The theme this week was “autumnal” in honor of Lughnasadh. Though it may not feel like autumn yet, especially here in the Midwest, the wheel is slowly turning and before long well be raking lawns, harvesting apples, and preparing for the coming Winter.  In other news, if you use Facebook, why not become a “fan” of A Darker Shade of Pagan there. 

In the future: I completely forgot to play some Rachel Unthank and the Winterset, so expect that next week! You may also hear some experimental wonder-working from Madison’s Kinit Her.


Notes for the 07/27/08 ADSOP Podcast

No Comments Written by jason on July 27, 2008 in Dancing Ferret/Noir, podcast, A Darker Shade of Pagan.

A Darker Shade of Pagan: Podcast for 07/27/08

New this week: Nothing “brand new”, but I did play cuts from new releases by Qntal and Lunascape.

Other notes: This week was a special tribute to Dancing Ferret/Noir records, who are closing up shop in November. All the songs, except the closer, were from DF/Noir releases.

In the future: Expect to hear music from Mercury-shortlisted artists Rachel Unthank and the Winterset.


Notes for the 07/20/08 ADSOP Podcast

No Comments Written by jason on July 20, 2008 in Woven Wheat Whispers, podcast, A Darker Shade of Pagan.

A Darker Shade of Pagan: Podcast for 07/20/08

New this week: Brand new stuff from Incus, Silver Summit, Rusalnaia, and Sharron Kraus!

Other notes: This week was a special tribute to the late, lamented, Woven Wheat Whispers distributor/label. As such the majority of the tracks were from artists who either sold their music through WWW, or appeared on one of their compilations.

In the future: I will be doing a tribute to Dancing Ferret/Noir records next week. The popular goth/darkwave label will be closing up shop come November. They have exposed American artists to a variety of great Pagan-friendly European acts.


Two Pagan-Friendly Music Sources Close

This past few weeks has seen announcements from two Pagan-friendly music labels/distributors that they are closing up shop. First, at the end of June, the online folk music resource Woven Wheat Whispers called it quits.

“We didn’t have to close WWW, it was paying it’s way and no money was lost. It was just a decision about the future taken calmly at a point where we had time to think… It was meant to be fun and would have turned into slog at some point in the near future … We could have continued and would have done alright, but with Myspace starting to sell downloads, Amazon coming in and iTunes level of market dominance, there was little point. Even CDBaby now sell downloads alongside the CD. Exiting in a positive way seemed the best thing to do at the right time. WWW didn’t collapse, we have all the money needed. It was a decision taken about how far to push what was a small home operation delivered in my spare time.”

I mentioned Woven Wheat Whispers on this blog last year when they released (with Cold Spring Records) the amazing “John Barleycorn Reborn” compilation. Woven Wheat Whispers introduced me to some great artists, including The Owl Service, Cunnan, Arrowwood, Novemthree, Sharron Kraus, and The Horses of The Gods. It at times felt like the label/service was especially created for fans of The Wicker Man soundtrack (a high compliment in my book). Needless to say, WWW artists got, and continue to get, at lot of airplay on my podcast/streaming radio show.

Meanwhile, just yesterday, Dancing Ferret/Noir Records founder Patrick Rodgers announced that his popular goth/darkwave label would be closing down in November.

“After November, Dancing Ferret Discs (and Noir Records) will stop releasing new material. Of course this does NOT mean that our wonderful artists are hanging up their hats, nor that their albums will disappear. It also does NOT mean that anything will happen to Nocturne, Dracula’s Ball, Digital Ferret or IsoTank. It simply means that in the future, new albums by the DFD bands that you love will be released by other labels (or in some cases, by the artists themselves).”

DFD/Noir, aside from representing popular darkwave acts like The Cruxshadows, also introduced America to great European neo-medieval, ethereal, Pagan-folk, and darkwave bands like Corvus Corax, Irfan, The Dreamside, Faun, and Omnia.

Both of these labels/services have been instrumental in helping to expand the idea of a “Pagan music” beyond the New Age mediocrities and sub-par folk that many assumed was the norm. It showed that there were new generations of musicians across America, the UK, and Europe, that were making challenging and exciting music that dealt with themes near and dear to the Pagan soul. To say that the exit of Woven Wheat Whispers and Dancing Ferret/Noir leaves a hole is an understatement. So I raise my glass in toast to both of them, they have enriched us more than most will ever know.

You can expect tributes to both Woven Wheat Whispers and Dancing Ferret/Noir in upcoming episodes of my A Darker Shade of Pagan podcast.


Notes for the 07/13/08 ADSOP Podcast

No Comments Written by jason on July 13, 2008 in podcast, A Darker Shade of Pagan.

A Darker Shade of Pagan: Podcast for 07/13/08

New this week: Lux Interna’s “A Lantern Carried in Blood and Skin” and Tearwave’s “Different Shade of Beauty”. Also, still relatively fresh from last week is “Musique du Crépuscule” by the French band Les Fragments de la Nuit.

Other Notes: I played two cover-songs this week. Tearwave’s rendition of “Under the Milky Way”, a song by The Church, and  Unto Ashes’ version of “Ostia (The Death of Pasolini)” by Coil. The song “The Hunter/Cernunnos” is by classic Pagan rock band The Moors, their first and only album is available for purchase once more! Pick it up while you have the chance!

In the Future: I’m expecting a brand new album by popular Pagan-festival act Incus any time now, so expect to be hearing more about that soon.


Wiccan Jazz?

No Comments Written by jason on June 7, 2008 in Wicca, Jazz.

Looking for Pagan music but aren’t a fan of folk music, neo-medieval stylings, or darkwave? Then you might want to check out the latest offering from Jazz musician Jordi Rossy. His trio’s new album is entitled “Wicca”, and according to All About Jazz, it’s “mesmerizing”.

“Wicca is a largely ruminative album, Rossy somewhere on the piano spectrum between George Winston and his sometimes employer Mehldau … Whether the piano is in the lead, organ droning behind, or organ leads, in churchy mode, with piano chords underneath, that sound is consistent and, at its best, mesmerizing. A comfort zone is established and observed, only breached noticeably on the title track, the CD’s longest, adding trumpet and tenor sax and combining disparate elements of tempo and form into an intricate yet harmonious texture.”

You can order the album from this web site.


Old Traditions, New Directions

No Comments Written by jason on May 11, 2008 in folklore, Morris Dancing, Paganism, goth.

The Independent has a feature up on the tradition of Morris Dancing, specifically how two troupes are bringing a decidedly modern aesthetic to these venerable folk traditions.



The Hunters Moon Morris

“Morris dancing is a joke, isn’t it, with a hey nonny no? Beardy men with beer bellies prancing about in white stockings, waving hankies? Very twee. But try telling that to the men and women of Hunters Moon, here by the Sussex coast looking like the devilish spawn of Hell’s Angels and medieval mummers. They are part of a secret revolution in morris dancing, transforming the most easily lampooned of English eccentricities. Fresh rivalries are emerging, as younger men and women reinvent “the morris” in startling ways - including, as we discover during a mad dash around southern England on May Day, the world’s first Gothic morris troupe - or “side”.”


The Wolf’s Head and Vixen Morris.

The article profiles the decidedly Pagan-oriented Hunters Moon Morris, and the gothic Wolf’s Head and Vixen Morris. Journalist Cole Moreton describes Wolf’s Head and Vixen as looking like a “boozy, woozy gathering of the Sisters of Mercy fan club”, but they, like the Hunter’s Moon troupe, are trying to reclaim Morris dancing from a static and sometimes oppressive vision of English history and culture.

“One reason for the recent growth of Border morris is that it is easier to learn (while more spectacular) than other forms. Another is an increase in the number of British neo-pagans, many of whom are drawn to it. “We quite consciously work with ideas of shamanism,” says [Wolfshead founder Philip] Kane. “It’s a form of ritual theatre, a magical space embracing both dancers and audience.” There are radical politics at work too: he sees the dance, and “neo-pagan carnivals” such as the Rochester Sweeps, as a way of resisting the “complacent nostalgia” of Englishness “founded on the detritus of imperialism, Christianity, racism and xenophobia”. His England has more primitive, inclusive roots, and for him the morris is a way of expressing that.”

Of course there are still several traditional Morris “sides” (albeit aging rapidly) performing in England. Unlike the Pagan and goth troupes, they see what they are doing as safely within the bounds of their Christian faith, and downplay any esoteric aspects connected to Morris dancing by folklorists in the past.

“So, what do they think they’re up to? Norman Hopson, the 56-year-old squire, is a technical manager for BT but has the no-nonsense manner of a bluff countryman. “Some say the handkerchiefs are there to frighten away spirits, and the same for the bells,” he says. “We say they are there to accentuate the movements.” Nor is there anything mystical about his experience of dancing: “I see myself as a street entertainer.” … Hopson doesn’t see it as a symbol of fertility, or anything else, thank you. “The Long Man is a local landmark,” he says. “It’s just a carving on a hill. I don’t think it has any further significance.” The side’s bagman, Alan Vaughan, puts it more strongly: “We would go against that pagan idea,” he says. ‘Traditionally, morris dancing has been connected with the church. I personally have danced in Durham Cathedral.’”

Of course the pagan and esoteric undertones to modern Morris dancing (true or not) are irrevocably wrapped into it thanks to folklorists like Cecil Sharp, who felt that folk-traditions were cultural fossils of England’s primitive past (what Ronald Hutton calls the “geological model” of human culture). This notion of pagan survivals helped pave the way for the emergence of modern Pagan religion, and still casts a long shadow in the public mind when considering Morris dances and other folk traditions.

“The folk singers of today … are the last of a long line that stretches back into the mists of far-off days.”
- Cecil Sharp, English Folk Song: Some Conclusions, 1907

Nor is England the only place where Pagans and other subcultural groups are staking their own claims to the Morris legacy. Pagans in America, most notably in California, have started up their own Morris traditions. Before long, the Victorian folklorists may turn out to be prophets, as more and more Morris troupes embrace a Pagan aesthetic.

PS - Speaking of traditions, today is Mother’s Day. Check out my post concerning the holiday from last year, I think it says all I want to say about the subject.

Guillermo del Toro’s Fairy War

No Comments Written by jason on May 10, 2008 in movies, Hellboy, Guillermo del Toro, Paganism.

Life has been good for director Guillermo del Toro lately. His 2006 film “Pan’s Labyrinth” was widely acclaimed by critics (winning three Academy Awards), and he was recently tapped to direct the two Hobbit films (under the watchful eye of Peter Jackson). In between these two momentous events comes the July release of “Hellboy II: The Golden Army”, which continues to mine the rich themes of myth, faith, choice, and the imagination.

“I think it’s the primal motor of human endeavor,” said del Toro about his fascination with exploring mythology and fantasy in his films. “All human endeavor: spiritual, physical, social. I think myth makes humans what we are, it is the essence of being human, the capacity to invent. No raccoon worships the god of the trash can and we do. There are plenty of people that worship in search of a spiritual meaning. Anyone that says, ‘Okay, we are this or that many chromosomes away from being an ape,’ they should consider imagination as one thing that is a huge chasm between us.”



The old, horned, king of the otherworld.

In this follow-up to the 2004 cult-hit, del Toro seems to be expanding on his fascination with the fairy-inhabited “otherworld” from “Pan’s Labyrinth”. This time with the threat of an all-out war between fairy-folk and humanity. Hellboy creator, and film co-writer, Mike Mignola, compares fae/human tensions in the movie to the history of American Indian struggles.

“The focus is more on the folklore and fairy tale aspect of Hellboy. It’s not Nazis, machines and mad scientists but the old gods and characters who have been kind of shoved out of our world. I kind of equate it to the whole American Indian situation. The Indians were shoved onto reservations. You had your old, wise Indians who said, “You know, this is the way it is. We can’t fight anymore. We just have to accept our fate.” You then have your Geronimo character saying, “Or we could just kill the White Man.” That’s kind of the situation we have in the film. We have our elf characters resigning to the way things are and then there’s one saying, “Or we could take the world back.” The main difference is - what if the Indians had a nuclear warhead? The elves have their equivalent of the weapon that is too terrible to use. What if this guy decided to use it?”

Building on that theme, a viral marketing web site called HETFET, Humans for the Ethical Treatment of Fairies, Elves, and Trolls, has emerged.



HETFET logo.

“We know that every minute of every day, all across the world, terrible crimes are taking place all around us. But the victims of these crimes can’t ask for help because humanity turns a deaf ear to the segment of society that we once called “mythical creatures.” Not anymore. At HETFET, it is our unwavering belief that these misunderstood beings deserve the same rights as those given to animals or people. No more, no less; just the right to coexist and be left alone.”

Needless to say, the Pagan overtones of the site, complete with a real petition to save old-growth forests, are palpable. With the otherworldly action, a film preview sporting massive pre-historic Venus figurines, and a trip through a “Troll market” (not to mention a horned god/king!), this Hellboy film is shaping up to be a real treat for the Pagan film-goer. I’m very much looking forward to seeing it in July.

How many songs can you write about Pan?

No Comments Written by jason on March 17, 2008 in Inkubus Sukkubus, Paganism.

Play Louder reviews a recent concert by veteran Pagan goth-rockers Inkubus Sukkubus, and asks some essential questions.


Inkubus Sukkubus

“Finding them to be an unlikely but consistent pop-goth songwriting machine and completely and utterly stuck in a time warp of their own invention, I found there to be something incredibly endearing about Inkubus Sukkubus. How many songs can you write about Pan, the injustices of the Catholic church, and seasonal pagan festivals? Well, the answer, fortunately, is sh**loads…”

Despite being stuck in an “endearing time warp”, the band manages to win over the reviewer, not to mention their legions of loyal fans.

“…one can’t help but feel a tremendous attachment to them, and respect for them. They’re the rebellious aunt and uncle I never had. They’ve invented their own reality, and reached a modest number of people in a lot of places in a way that no other band could. From the big beardy old men to the leather-clad, off-the-rails cyber goth girls (both equally intimidating), there’s nobody not willing to raise their devil horns in salute and chant ‘Isis, Astarte, Diana, Hecate, Demeter, Kali, Inanna…’ till they’re hoarse.”

If that rousing endorsement has peaked your interest, you can download a variety of Inkubus Sukkubus songs at their SoundClick page. Maybe you too can be won over by the world’s most famous Pagan band.


Interview with Hexperos

No Comments Written by jason on March 3, 2008 in Heathen Harvest, interview, Hexperos.

Heathen Harvest’s new issue features an interview with darkwave band Hexperos, a band featured several times on my A Darker Shade of Pagan podcast.

Hexperos

“The world of dreams and the world of women. Each song of ‘The garden of the Hesperides’ is sung by one of these nymphs (who are inspiring muses for me) and the album talks about various women. For example the song entitled ‘Artemisia’ is dedicated to Artemisia Gentileschi, a great and mysterious female painter, who lived in the ‘600 and whose style belongs to Caravaggio school. ‘Nana’ is a song from the ‘Siete canciones populares Españolas’ by the Spanish composer Manuel de Falla, it is a sad ‘cante jondo’, a lullaby. Each song represents a different aspect of the feminine world, so it is for ‘Ave Maria’ by the baroque composer Giulio Caccini, for ‘The Magnificence of the Night’ whose lyric is an extract from the novel ‘Woman in love’ by D. H. Lawrence, for Hesperos. “

For my own review of Hexperos’ new album “The Garden of the Hesperides”, click here.


Occult Prog-Rock from the 1970s

No Comments Written by jason on February 23, 2008 in Jacula.

I just discovered the band Jacula, a prog-rock Italian band made up of occultists and mediums.

You need to a flashplayer enabled browser to view this YouTube video

You can find a MySpace page for the band, here (it seems like almost any band, no matter obscure these days has a MySpace page).  Band member Antonio Bartoccetti went on to form the musical project Antonius Rex. The band seems to be named after a pulp-horror vampire character.