I think a topic for sharing good music wont be bad ;)</p>
So, just write down your recently/all time/new discvoverd loved artists, tracks, or records or whatever, you´d like share with us</p>
this just should help to find new good music and inspiration(...)</p>
so...</p>
I think a short information, the name, maybe a song wouldn´t be bad...</p>
as a start :</p>
Patrick Wolf</p>
Patrick Wolf born Patrick Apps on June 30, 1983 at St Thomas' Hospital, London) is an English singer-songwriter from South London. Wolf plays many instruments including harp, clavinet, harpsichord, guitar, piano, autoharp, kantele, organ, mountain dulcimer, clavichord, harmonium, accordion, theremin, ukulele, viola and violin.</p>
His music is something between pop, folk, with some electronic influences</p>
short references to his records :</p>
Patrick's 2003 debut, 'Lycanthropy', mixed folk music, riot-breaks and
celebratory songs about cutting off your own penis. It was, on many
levels, quite unlike anything NME had ever heard before. Sonically, we
were shocked and awed that a record could be so monstrously electronic,
so pop and so neo-classically swish all at the same time. But, more
than that, this was a record with soul, a record of poetry, a record -
given Patrick's soaring, snarling theatrical voice - of quite glorious
melodrama.</p>
Wind In The Wires' was written in a similar state of emotional flux.however, you can hear hurt and anger in 'The Libertine' or recklessness
in the titanic 'Tristan' (which sounds like '80s glamour pusses ABC
meets techno glitchers Squarepusher), 'Wind In The Wires' is, for the
most part, far less highly-strung than'Lycanthropy', if no less
startling. By the time Patrick had written the spectral, FX-swaddled
title track (in the aftermath of a terrific storm which felt like it
was going to tip his wooden shack into the sea), his frustration and
rage had subsided, to give way to a more singer-songwriterly,
reflective sound. Where 'Lycanthropy' flashed with energy and nervous
creative excitement, his new album finesses and evolves this hybrid of
pop and medieval folk and electronica, without losing any of the jagged
edge.</p>
With The Magic Position, though, Wolf shakes off much of the
brooding insularity that clouded his previous records, refining his
melodic strengths and overcoming his tendency toward sullen
introspection. Album opener "Overture" has an energetic, marching
pulse, its ascending violin line providing a lilting and confident
backbone as Wolf announces his newly discovered positivity.(....)</p>
i just adore his lyrics and his voice!!</p>
Tristan - Patrick Wolf</p>
</p>
The Magic Position</p>
http://youtube.com/watch?v=HeR9_7cACUc</p>
A Boy Like Me</p>
http://youtube.com/watch?v=4ZM1mPSiUaQ&mode=related&search=</p>
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