Comes in standard jewel case with 8 page booklet containing liner notes by the bands, and artwork by Lily Blackwood.
Includes unlimited streaming of Mires Of Sorrow: A Tribute To My Dying Bride
via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
ships out within 2 days
edition of 100
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£3GBPor more
Streaming + Download
Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
"With my current work being largely acoustic and choral based, I wanted to cover a My Dying Bride song which could loosely fit this style. I believe I've achieved this with Black God; with its already leaden, hymnal atmosphere, the song manifests well in a full choral style. In my opinion, a good cover version should be complimentary to the original, whilst also imbued with the artist's own 'stamp'. That was my main objective here, and I hope those who hear it feel I have managed to do the song justice." - Matt Ford
An absolutely amazing album that reaches you to the bottom of the abyss. Gaia takes you by the hand, tells you that you're not alone in this, the pain is over, the misunderstanding of your pain is over and accompanied by keyboards, violins, acoustic guitars, cello and amazing vocals, she pulls you out of the disgusting mire of your mind and together you embark on a journey of melancholy, despondency, hope, pessimism and the seasons. tenebriscaedes
Powerful, plaintive expression of the fathomless sorrow of our suffering cetaceans and their depthless home, together with the indescribable loveliness of their distant blue-black realm. I feel as much interstellar space here as I do deep ocean, equally crushing and buoying. Dave Aftandilian
A truly stellar death/doom album with heavy doses of black metal. Tracks like Isolation, Child of Light, and Broken Hymns deliver the sorrowful and icy tone of this album, elevated by the stirring cello compositions of Raphael Weinroth-Browne. The album delivers a deeply satisfying crescendo in Becoming Intangible before stirring the soul once again with Epilogue. Matt Richardson