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andrew keeling - blue dawn (cdr)



'Blue Dawn' is the latest collection by acclaimed British composer, Andrew Keeling.

Andrew's second release on Burning Shed (following 'Reclaiming Eros'), 'Blue Dawn' represents the more meditative and spiritual side of Andrew's work and includes performances by Holland's 3-Orm, Scottish-based ensemble TripleSec, theorboist Matthew Wadsworth and pianist Steven Wray.

A piece from 1992, 'Distant Skies, Mountains and Shadows', is placed alongside more recent works: 'Mirare for theorbo', 'Petit Requiem pour Basil' for narrator, flute and piano and 'Blue Dawn' for solo piano.

Read new review at Billys Bunker





Tracks

1. Distant Skies, Mountains and Shadows (10:22)
2. Mirare (15:00)
3. Petit Requiem pour Basil (11:33)
4. Blue Dawn (31:16)



Credits

1. 3-Orm
2. Matthew Wadsworth
3. TripleSec
4. Steven Wray



Notes

“Follow nature!” cries Paracelsus in the notes for Blue Dawn, advice which Andrew Keeling has acted upon for several years. Going against the prevailing direction, his writing has been steering a path from egg-headed complexities associated with much of the clatter of the contemporary classical scene, to a pared-back approach unconcerned with knotty grandstanding or intertextual SFX.

Opening with a single attention-gathering piano note, “Distant Skies, Mountains And Shadows” delicately unfurls into the ruminative ambience of the Kerzo Chapel in The Hague. The particular pathway Keeling charts for the piano flute and clarinet of the Het Trio maybe angled and occasionally steep, but throughout the piece radiates lyrical warmth.

However the real heart of the album is to be found in “Blue Dawn”. Written between 2005/6 it consists of seven solo piano pieces touchingly played by Steven Wray. Though each is individually titled they work best when listened to in one sitting.

Occupying the hushed spaces from which Pärt’s “Für Alina” resonates, the themes gently see-saw between light and dark, between hope and fear, constructing a solemn reverie from starkly-drawn materials. Yet the effect of these halting, sensitive movements is anything but austere or simple. Over the course of a half hour, “Blue Dawn” creates a soundtrack to haunting dreams that touch upon the losses we experience and the gains which may be found arising from them.

The dawn of a new day can be viewed as a mere set of physical reactions within the natural world, or something, despite its repetition, that is resplendently unique. With a luminous clarity, Keeling probes for that startling, fresh beauty residing within the mundane, and which leaves us breathless when we find it. Magnificent.

Review by Sid Smith




--




As things are, and as fundamentally they must always be, poetry is not a career, but a mug's game. No honest poet can ever feel quite sure of the permanent value of what he has written: He may have wasted his time and messed up his life for nothing.
~ T.S. Elliot




The unconscious has no time. There is no trouble about time in the unconscious. Part of our psyche is not in time and not in space. They are only an illusion, time and space, and so in a certain part of our psyche time does not exist at all.
~ Carl Jung




I've listened to the music of Andrew Keeling for an extended period of time, and found it pleasing from the first I heard it. He sent three CDs to me some many months ago, but I was drawn to his Blue Dawn repeatedly for it's simplicity and honest sentiment. Contentment and simplicity haven't been a steady diet for me this past year, and I found myself listening to this piece without a thought to analyze or desire to describe it so much as a need to feel what it gave me in those sounds. It became a place to be when thiings got confusing, and most recently a troubling period of sleeplessness send me to the album to find a bit of peace. It has been for me a visit to the pleasant notion of a clockwork universe where all things have a place, which concept of time and space has generally been replaced with something messy involving strings and paradoxes looped around in a confusing mashup of science and hypothesis. I feel safe and protected in the landscape of Blue Dawn. When I discovered through emails with Mr. Keeling his love of Carl Jung, I became fascinated with the thought that Keeling's subconscious was a safe, familiar place for him. He respects and embraces both the aesthetics of T.S. Eliot and of Carl Jung, but prefers Carl to T.S. and centers his creativity where Elliot might not be quite so comfortable.




Composer Andrew Keeling writes a textured, inviting music to welcome a listener to a place beneath and within. Keeling's "Blue Dawn" leads me to a safe spot between my ears where melodies emerge like bubbles in a quiet stream. Each of the tunes that make up the album "Blue Dawn" offer a unique glimpse in reverse of a snapshot of consciousness, as the iridescence from his private glimpse of the collective unconscious. Each bubble in the stream in this Dawn is it's own fragment of a hologram delivered in time from a timeless place. Andrew's album is an oasis and a mirage, inviting me to a place still moving and yet still unmoved. I find this album helps me dream, but won't let me nod until the last tone is sounded. It can hold me aware in the twilight of the day awaiting the break of another awakening.




Keeling's music has elements of song forms, strident English ballad, modern elements and some current techniques. He isn't from any particular school of sound, but finds his inspiration in dreams and muses in the wellspring of a peaceful subconscious. Andrew Keeling is a songwriter at heart. His melodies are broken like pieces of a puzzle to allow a rich exploration of the source of his song. He has been the champion of composition by Robert Fripp since the 1960's and has written about those King Crimson compositions with extraordinary clarity, written the "Musical Guides" to "Larks' Tongues in Aspic," "In The Wake of Poseidon" and co-authored with Mark Graham "A Musical Guide to King Crimson." Keeling has even been invited to arrange new versions of King Crimson's songs, and Robert Fripp's cluster filled clouds called "Soundscapes." The sweet consonant music of Blue Dawn is the more powerful to me coming from one who celebrates clusters, angularity and outright dissonance in others. He has the courage and inner peace to present a personal world of sound calmer and more inviting than my own best case scenario of a world view in the current circumstances. His spirit is kinder than my own in its embrace of contemplation and exploration of the uncontrollable subconscious or that collective unconscious I daresay I don't quite understand. I'm pleased to have met this music and the man who created it, if only through emails, videos, and his collaborations with former KC violinist David Cross. I greet this Blue Dawn as a hopeful beginning to a hopeful new phase in my ever changing experience. I once asked David Harrington of the Kronos String Quartet how he knew when an interpretation works, and he replied, "Well, first of all it pleases you." I've often thought that music is what is does, and if it doesn't move me, then it doesn't matter. I find this music moves me. I can hear time signatures and recognize clusters, chords, and arpeggios well enough, but that's not why I listen. This album pleases me. That's my considered critical opinion. I like what it makes me feel. I feel at home in the Blue Dawn.




"I also have to say 'muses' are important in the process of writing. Visible and invisible. People often appear who provide a trigger for pieces. For me, shadow and anima are greatly important in this. Everything happens in the shadow."
~ Andrew Keeling




THE SONGS




DISTANT SKIES, MOUNTAINS AND SHADOWS (performed on piano, flute and clarinet by The Het Trio at Kerzo Chapel in The Hague)




This song begins with a repeated note on the piano, which might support a dive into minimalism but that suggestion turns out to be a misdirect. There are events in this music constructed in ascending notes and cracked arpeggios like fragments gurgling toward and melody. Keeling's composition dances between ascension and dissolution like some apprentice Merlin practicing levitation on various objects in a pastoral clearing. There's a palpable sense of longing looped through this tapestry like the basil in a complex gourmet confection at some overpriced eatery. Keeling's appreciation of the natural world is as keen as the sensual world of poet Elizabeth Bishop describing the view at a National Park. Even the stones have a story to tell in Andrew's universe.




MIRARE (performed by Matthew Wadsworth on theorbo) (Wiki for the theorbo)






What a gift to hear the theorbo in a contemporary composition! The range of the instrument and Matthew Wadsworth's extraordinary ability with it tricked me into believing there must be more than one of him. Keeling's composition unveils itself in cells of melody between bookends of silence. Utilizing the extraordinary range of this instrument must be a challenge and an opportunity. There is a moment early in the piece where an astonishing chord is strummed just the once across both first and second peg boxes for a sound I've never heard before. This extended song clocks in at 15:07 and could well be enough to justify the album. A new instrument is a new way of thinking, and this new instrument dates back to the 16th Century. I've added this one to the Warr Guitars and Chapman Sticks in my memory as an experience that extended my understanding of how music can be played. "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, / Than are dreamt of in your philosophy." I had to resort to Shakespeare on this one. It's a lovely new experience and a piece worth repeating a few times on iTunes to take it all in. The sounds played in this song are so clear and diverse it's enough to make the common lute player cry.




PETIT REQUIEM POUR BASIL (performed by Scottish ensemble TripleSec with narration by Rosalind Rawnsley)
The haunting sound of Rosalind Rawnsley singing and narrating this requiem for the unexpected death of a colleague has a sense of immediacy and resonance like that of a voice in a dream, if that dream is in French. There is genuine shock and sadness in her voice, through the flute and piano work of TripleSec which is appropriately playful and somewhat suggestive in fleeting moments of Debussey's "Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun." I've experienced the death of family members recently enough to remember the laughter among the waves of sadness. This song has the feel of performance art to me, but without the common "experimental" flaws of that form. Listening to this song at night in bed, it feels like a voice in a dream full of poignant, prophetic resonance. There are occasional quotes in the music which will add flavor whether they are recognized or not. I like this technique of composition, which is familiar in jazz, but a bit less common in composition. It adds meaning like a quote from some other text included in the story. The spirit is willing but my French is weak. I enjoy hearing this piece without translation as a trigger for my own subconscious to fill in whatever meaning it needs at the moment. Just plain sounds like prophecy from some oracle, or the words of a Cassandra. Meaning is less important to me sometimes and the deeper resonance. I'm thinking of Coltrane again, so I'll toss in the quote for what it's worth.




“I never even thought about whether or not they understand what I'm doing . . . the emotional reaction is all that matters as long as there's some feeling of communication, it isn't necessary that it be understood.”
~ John Coltrane




BLUE DAWN (performed on piano by Steven Wray)
"Follow nature!" ~ Paracelsus (from the notes for Blue Dawn)




1ST MOVEMENT — CAELA
"Caela, for example, came as a result of hearing a woman say the word 'caela' to me in a dream. It means 'out of the forest'. I had no idea prior to this."
~ Andrew Keeling
Now the forest in my mind is always a place from the Brother's Grimm. It is a place of mystery and danger, simlar to the land in Joseph Conrad's "Heart of Darkness" from whence comes arrows shot by unseen foes and such as that. I have little sense of that danger in Keeling's Caela, but then again he's far more at home in the subconscious than I have yet become. Andrew's forest story is full of drama and transformation. It seems to seek resolution from the start, and toys with a return to the tonic like a boy wanting to go home only to be pulled away time and time again by mysterious forces and other creatures familar and unfamiliar. Church chords and arpeggios populate this narrative on piano which ends with a reassuring ascendance in the upper register.




2ND MOVEMENT — THE HOUSE OF EROS



"The House of Eros came a result of walking on Haworth Moor to Top Witherns."
~ Andrew Keeling




The repeated opening three-note phrase resembles a bird song slowed down for clarity, but it developes with complicating harmonies gently and quietly into a tender creature of unknown origin. Space and silence are used effectively, along with some instances of repetition which hypnotize a little like minimal fragments of an incantation.




3RD MOVEMENT — KINDERTOTENLIED



"Kindertotenlied was in response to a dream when a man told me his daughter, Zoe, was dying."
~ Andrew Keeling




The news of the death of a loved one can suck the air out of the room. Keeling manages to suggest that airless quality with a poignant charm. The slow but building realization of an emotion develops for me as the piece finds it's pace. All music exists in time along a line but this piece suggests stillness which is nonlinear and paradoxically eternal. Go figure? I've felt such things before, but seldome heard them with more tenderness in song.




4TH MOVEMENT — RESURGAM (AFTER J.D.)



Resurgam (latin: "I shall rise again") is the name given to two early Victorian submarines designed and built by Reverend George Garrett as a weapon to penetrate the chain netting placed around ship hulls to defend against attack by torpedo vessels. (from Wiki)




There is indeed a rising in this piece slowly to a kind of surface. A tiny chord in the upper register repeated close to a dozen times with just one slight change at the end takes me to a contemplative place on a tranquil sea. Well worth the trip.




5TH MOVEMENT — MANA



Sparse and beautiful. Sweet reverent quiet and full of silence. A companion piece to Morton Feldman's piano pieces. Just lovely.




6TH MOVEMENT — HYMN: BLUE DAWN



A nod to Amazing Grace, which is a song as close to a miracle as Shenandoah. This piece has near as much heart as a folk melody by great generous Anonymous. That's priceless. A beautiful piece. For any composer now to have such warmth is as astonishing as Gorecki's "Symphony of Sorrowful Songs" was a blindside of beauty after a life of 12-tone.




7TH MOVEMENT — FORGET-ME-NOT
"Forget-me-Not was written in one sitting. So, yes, titles are an important stimulus."



~ Andrew Keeling
Ascending and descending with minor chord complications and then resolve. Sweet courageous resolve coming from a piece as Iberian as Eric Sati. As sweet as a lullaby in it's quiet reverence.




THE CASE FOR CONSONANCE




The celebrated freedoms of current composition have the doors widely swung for anything but resolution. Think about it. Any piece that ends on the tonic is the subject of ridicule. The chords of the common period in classical music have been avoided as traitorous to the movement by new music Nazis. I am truly moved by a great live performance of Schoenberg on the right night, and I can't do the math, but that's not a steady diet for me and I never ever reach for the 12-tone when I'm feeling bad and looking for a lift. So Andrew Keeling includes great big church chords at the end of this album and they have the consonant release of "God is in his heaven, the cats are purring, and all is right with the world." I love that feeling, and I do truly hate to hear happy on a bad day and once trashed "Up With People" over three reviews for no purpose other than to vent frustration at unsupported optimism in a troubled world. Unfounded happy talk is deadly, and sounds to me like razor blades on a chalkboard. But I love the courage of this sophisticated, kind and fine intellect Keeling in his embrace of the beauty of the harmonic values hard wired into the physics of music and I consider him to be a man out of time with a heart bigger than Webern in his stingy little tunes. Composer John Adams gets it, and I love him for that. He's another child at the coronation shouting out that the king has no clothes in his joke about Webern, "Here's an E flat. Use it well." I like what Andrew has to say, and his mind is clearly less troubled than my own. I'd like some of that for my ownself, and he can play those funky major chords all day in my book. His understanding of angular chords is deep as evidenced by his brilliant analysis and exposition of the compositions of Robert Fripp which he has championed since 1960. That he doesn't restrict his music to the traveling chords or clusters demanded by puerile purists of the new is a sign of courage in my book, and a demonstration of freedom of choice damn near lost on the zealots of "serious" composition. I love me some dissonance, but that's not all I love. Prokofiev should have been spanked for writing "The Stone Flower," because that pretty music is cloying and empty and somewhat traitorous to his own musical story since he allowed Stalin to dictate his taste. Keeling is nothing of that sort. It's his party and he'll write what he feels. At CalArts there were numb skulls who thought it revolutionary to ride bikes through the crowd at a concert of Handel yelling "Give us new music." Those idiots are working in banks and law firms and looking back at the hubris they embraced in their youth. There's always room for warmth in music and any narrow system, movement, or understanding of sound that don't allow for it is doomed to find a place on the trash heap of history. I had a bad month that robbed me of sleep and just suffered through it feeling sick, but the best moment of the day sometimes was listening to Keeling's astonishingly kind chords at the end of this album, after a hearty exploration of fragmented song and broken Hallelujahs in the majority of his music. Freedom only happens at the moment of choice. Limit your choices and you limit your freedom. It takes courage to love in this world and trust is in short supply. Let's make room for consonance without flashing that superior smile and thinking we are smarter than the music. This music fits right alongside my Kronos Quartet, Jörg Widman, Unsuk Kim, and John Adams albums. "Nuff said.




SIDESHOW






"All a musician can do is to get closer to the sources of nature, and so feel that he is in communion with the natural laws.”
~ John Coltrane



I experienced an epiphany in an outdoor concert in Ojai where Pierre Boulez was conducting György Ligeti's "Lux Aeturna" at it's appropriate double pianissimo (not the cranked up version heard in Kubrick's 2001). The audience sat quietly, but the birds in the trees considered it a sing-along, indiscreetly overpowering the piece with the enthusiasm of their song. The trees didn't sing for Igor Stravinsky's "La Noche" or Pierre's own "Malarmé Variations." Birds like Ligeti. More than 20 years later in Ohio, I was reminded of that day while listening to Blue Dawn in preparation for this review on a hot day. Beyond the screen the Cardinals, state birds of Ohio, and all their companions were singing at the top of their beaks. I tested this observation with some pop on my iTunes, and noticed the trees got quiet again. I had mentioned the birds in that review of Boulez at Ojai, so I'll mention it here. Birds like Ligeti and Andrew Keeling. I shared this delightful fact with the composer and he acknowledged that he was familiar with Lux Aeturna. He added that he kept a budgy in a cage near his piano, and he had noticed that the bird sang along loudly to consonant chords, but either didn't sing or sang quietly to dissonance. Apparently birds like consonance and micropolyphany in Andrew and György's music. Are the birds of Vienna partial to the Viennese School? I have my doubts. Nature has its laws, and it has its preferences.


Review by Billys Bunker

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Reviews

Andrew Keeling’s second release on Burning Shed, Blue Dawn represents, as the website has it, the more meditative and spiritual side of Andrew’s work. From 1992, Distant Skies, Mountains and Shadows is the eldest work on either of these discs by quite a long way. The piece was originally written for ‘Het Trio’, the famous Dutch flute/bass-clarinet/piano combo who took it on tour and broadcast it on BBC Radio 3. This was the trio whose repertoire we in the alas now defunct 3-Orm were desperately trying not to duplicate. We recorded it in a ‘Chapel’ space behind the Korzo Theatre in The Hague, now used as a ballet rehearsal room and fortunate enough to have a decent piano. The horrendous amount of resonance actually suits this atmospheric music quite well, and aside from having to sit around and wait while the chimes of the Grote Kerk over the road finished every quarter of an hour, it was a nice place to work and at least isolated from most of the traffic noise. The extra ‘live’ sounds mostly come from the nearby theatre and offices, and the floor, especially designed to be easy on dancers’ feet but the curse of our wonderful sound engineer Rick van der Mieden. I don’t want to give the impression of a carnival of squeaks, slamming doors and jingling keys: it’s actually not that bad, but it does bring back traumatic memories. For those interested, the unusual sounding flute is a bass flute, while the clarinettist plays bass clarinet as well as the more common Bb instrument. In this piece the title makes a clear case for what you might expect from the music.

MirAre which follows, is cut at a higher level; so the solo theorbo blows 3-Orm away fair and square. Much longer than a lute, and with considerable bass wallop by comparison, the theorbo has plenty of dynamic punch, while remaining a softer instrument than this recording might lead you to believe. Like Black Sun, the piece is rich with ideas and effectively idiomatic writing for the instrument, and should provide pickings for players willing to move beyond the 17th century. It impressively received its première in the Wigmore Hall, London.

Petit Requiem pour Basil is for narrator, flute and piano, and is about the death of one of narrator Rosalind Rawnsley’s esteemed colleagues. The news of this event arrived when the composer was staying with Rosalind and her husband, and the work is a direct response to this devastating moment. The ‘live’ recording of Scottish-based ensemble TripleSec has a slightly home-made feel, but the playing and delivery is heartfelt, even though the music is not always entirely in the nature of a lament. The text is in French, so for a poor cultural barbarian such as myself it is not always easy to know what it’s all about. That said, the quotation from Fauré’s Requiem and the mood and intent of other passages are all clear enough.

The one remaining work on this disc is a 30 minute cycle for piano called Blue Dawn. The first movement of this, Caela, was written for a charity event at St. Martin-in the-Fields in London and performed there by Steven Wray. He has has premiered several of the composer’s other pieces, and will be including Keeling’s works Pneuma and Tjarn on his own soon to be released CD. Like Distant Skies …there is plenty of pleasantly static, atmospheric writing here, but I found myself struggling a little against my own associations with composers like Satie, Debussy, Gurdjieff, and even the kind of atmosphere conjured up by something like Morton Feldman’s Rothko Chapel. Rather than allow my initial preconceptions and literary stumbling around to spoil things, I asked Andrew to provide some comment, and he very kindly wrote back. The titles referred to are the seven movements in the piece, though not described in order of performance:

“There’s a history to these pieces. While I was on holiday in Slovenia in 2003 I had this dream: Walking through a graveyard. Someone has just died and the newly-dug grave has hundreds of roses on it. Wotan is walking with me - long grey coat and large grey felt hat. I can see the first light of dawn through a Baroque archway some way ahead. Just after that I heard a voice, in a dream, say Caela to me. I looked up the word which means ‘out of the forest.’ Next to be written was Kindertotenlied after I’d had a dream about an old man’s daughter who was dying. Then, after a walk to Top Withens on Haworth Moor some days before my mother-in-law’s death (and reading Sylvia Plath’s poem ‘Two views of Withens’); The House of Eros. Then Mana (a Jungian term); then Resurgam (after J.O.) (I heard the Offenbach piece, which is quoted in it, played at my mother-in-law’s funeral (The word Resurgam was on the altar of the crematorium). Then Hymn: Blue Dawn. I thought it was finished, but then, one Saturday afternoon some time after I sat at the piano and wrote Forget-me-Not. It was really the postscript.

I felt the Blue Dawn pieces were the turning point in my music. It seems like the Blue Dawn CD is the end of a cycle and the beginning of another which has just started with two new pieces: Maximon for soprano sax & piano (Maximon is the Guatemalan god of procreation and healing); and Scry for guitar quartet. Scry, as you’ll probably know, is occult terminology for looking into the future.”

Blue Dawn is one of those pieces in which you have to go beyond the superficial, and look properly into the ‘what’ and ‘why’ of both the music, and one’s own response to it. At first I felt it was missing a personal element, the fingerprint of the composer less visible through economy of means, tintinnabular harmonies and widely-spaced notes. You might indeed find it to be a bit too close to the middle of the road at first: eyes wide-open and clear, but seeing no further than the bright lights of an oncoming juggernaut stacked with soft duvets. I however found it useful to come back to it after a day or so, and found that it had been beavering away unconsciously at the soft, slushy, stupid part of my lazy musical brain and had made a little home, becoming established as something rather rich and strange.

I am very grateful to Andrew Keeling for supplying the discs for this review, and for his helpful comments. I’m also proud to have been able to contribute to one of the tracks, and look forward to seeing what this fascinating composer will come up with next.

Dominy Clements, Musicweb International

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Coma Divine (double cd digibook)
3 x boddy / reuter / mullaney
triptych (cd)
2 x yoshi hampl
water dealer (cd)
1 x a marble calm
restless (flac download)
1 x os
compilation (cdr)
1 x l'orange
2 people in a room (cd)
2 x porcupine tree
arriving somewhere... soundtrack (flac download)
1 x My Dying Bride
An Ode To Woe (CD/DVD)
1 x Darkthrone
A Blaze In The Northern Sky (CD)
1 x the relatives
trans europ connection (cd)
1 x Darkthrone
Under A Funeral Moon (vinyl)
2 x a marble calm
surfacing (cd)
2 x centrozoon
never trust the way you are (cd)
4 x Porcupine Tree
Fear Of A Blank Planet (flac download)
2 x Old
Down With the Nails (CD)
1 x marvin ayres
neptune (enhanced cd)
1 x marvin ayres
cellosphere (cd)
1 x steve adey
burning fields / everything in its right place (flac download)
1 x MADDER MORTEM
DEADLANDS (cd)
4 x no-man
radio sessions (flac download)
1 x Dave Stewart & Barbara Gaskin
Green and Blue
1 x cipher
elemental forces (mp3 download)
1 x Darkthrone
Frostland Tapes (3CD)
1 x no-man
the break-up for real (flac download)
3 x centrozoon
lovefield (cd)
4 x ian boddy
slide (CD)
1 x theo travis
double talk (cd)
2 x DiN
index02 label sampler (cd)
3 x Moonbound
Confession And Release (cd)
2 x Unfolk (Alessandro Monti/Kevin Hewick)
The Venetian Book Of The Dead (Il Libro Veneziano Dei Morti) (cd)
1 x Steven Wilson
Harmony Korine (David A Sitek Magnetized Nebula Mix) (mp3 download)
4 x theo travis
slow life (mp3 download)
2 x My Dying Bride
34.788% ...complete (Digipack CD)
1 x porcupine tree
on the sunday of life (cd)
1 x porcupine tree
futile (mp3 download)
2 x Autopsy
Severed Survival - 2CD SPECIAL EDITION (2CD)
1 x My Dying Bride
Anti-Diluvian Chronicles (3 CD)
1 x robert rich and ian boddy
react (cd)
1 x The Opium Cartel
Night Blooms (cd)
1 x The Pineapple Thief
The Dawn Raids 1 + 2 (2CD bundle)
1 x richard barbieri
things buried (mp3 download)
2 x Opera IX
The Call Of The Wood (cd)
1 x bernhard wagner
the fourth night (cd)
1 x reuter / boddy
pure (cd)
1 x Colin Edwin
Third Vessel (flac download)
1 x Globo
This Is London, 1966 (mp3 download)
5 x porcupine tree
xm (mp3 download)
2 x peter hammill
enter k (mp3 download)
2 x Porcupine Tree
In Absentia (flac download)
1 x David Cross and Andrew Keeling
English Sun - Electric Chamber Music, Volume 2 (cd)
1 x theo travis
heart of the sun (flac download)
2 x Porcupine Tree
Nil Recurring T-Shirt (Mens XX-Large)
1 x ex-wise heads
holding up the sky (cd)
3 x Porcupine Tree
Lightbulb Sun (Remaster) (CD/DVD-A)
1 x My Dying Bride
Like Gods Of The Sun (CD)
1 x Dave Stewart and Barbara Gaskin
02 The Cloths Of Heaven (mp3 download)
1 x Ophthalamia
Via Dolorosa (cd)
1 x markus reuter
the longest in terms of being (cd)
2 x peter chilvers
piano (cd)
1 x bernhard woestheinrich
down on earth (mp3 download)
2 x alias grace
griosach (mp3 download)
1 x Magma
Udu Wudu (cd)
1 x no-man
returning jesus demos (flac download)
2 x Fovea Hex
Bloom / Huge / Allure (flac download)
1 x fovea hex
bloom (flac download)
1 x Dave Stewart and Barbara Gaskin
03 (I Know) I'm Losing You (mp3 download)
2 x porcupine tree
nil recurring (cd)
1 x Darkroom
Some Of These Numbers Mean Something (cd)
1 x nucultures
butterflies, zebras and moonbeams (double cd)
1 x Steven Wilson
NSRGNTS RMXS (mp3 download)
3 x Globo
This Is London, 1966 (cdr)
1 x No-Man
Together We're Stranger (Super Jewel Case CD/DVD-A)
1 x Rhys Marsh And The Autumn Ghost
Dulcima (cd)
1 x david hurn
the beautiful trustful future (cd)
3 x travis & fripp
thread (flac download)
2 x Ozric Tentacles
Spice Doubt (CD)
2 x Dave Stewart and Barbara Gaskin
04 Amelia (mp3 download)
1 x andy butler
livelooping (cd)
2 x Peter Hammill
This (flac download)
1 x terry stamp
howling for the highway home (cd)
1 x Cut Iowa Network
Minus Pilots Bundle (Vinyl)
3 x Darkthrone
Preparing For War - Special Edition Boxset (2 CD / DVD)
1 x centrozoon
blast (cd)
1 x [ramp] and markus reuter
ceasing to exist (cd)
1 x alistair murphy
passing (mp3 download)
3 x My Dying Bride
Songs Of Darkness Words Of Light (Digipack CD)
1 x Judy Dyble
Talking With Strangers (Scandinavian Edition) (cd)
6 x nunbient
just another dark age (cdr)
1 x Dave Stewart and Barbara Gaskin
07 Make Me Promises (mp3 download)
2 x Opera IX
Sacro Culto (CD)
4 x The Michael Giles MAD Band
The Adventures Of The Michael Giles MAD Band (cd)
1 x theo travis
slow life (cd)
1 x The Afterthought
Living For Tomorrow EP (flac download)
1 x Peaceville
Hoodie (Large)
1 x john wesley
shiver (cd in card wallet)
1 x martin grech
the heritage (cd single)
2 x egg archive
copious notes (companion booklet)
1 x tony harn
loops (cd)
1 x My Dying Bride
The Light At The End Of The World (Digipack CD)
2 x centrozoon
angel liquor (cd)
1 x Darkthrone
Dark Thrones & Black Flags (Special Edition CD)
2 x Bloodbath
The Fathomless Mastery (Vinyl)
2 x Darkthrone
Under A Funeral Moon (Digipack CD)
1 x Bass Communion / Pig
Live in Mexico (mp3 download)
1 x bernhard woestheinrich
down on earth (flac download)
1 x tetsu inoue
yolo (cd)
2 x gavin harrison & 05Ric
drop (flac download)
1 x Peaceville
21st Anniversary Long Sleeved Shirt (Extra Large)
3 x Peaceville
Long Sleeve Black Shirt (Extra Large)
1 x Steven Wilson
Only Child (Pat Mastelloto Mix 3) (flac download)
1 x Ozric Tentacles
Swirly Termination (CD)
1 x nosound
slow, it goes (mp3 download)
1 x Nosound
Lightdark Short Sleeve T-Shirt (2 CD/X-Large T-Shirt Bundle)
2 x Novembre
Classica (CD)
1 x theo travis's double talk
ascending : live at the pizza express (mp3 download)
2 x michael peters
stretched landscape #1 (cdr)
2 x Gavin Harrison & 05Ric
Circles (flac download)
1 x a marble calm
restless (mp3 download)
2 x Bass Communion / Pig
Live in Mexico (flac download)
1 x andrew keeling
reclaiming eros (cdr)
1 x Gallhammer
Ruin of a Church (DVD)
2 x Madder Mortem
Desiderata (CD)
3 x no-man
burning shed event 16.06.06 (flac download)
1 x Solefald
Neonism (CD)
1 x minus pilots
superior proof of cinema (vinyl)
1 x Engineers
Three Fact Fader (CD with bonus CD)
1 x kevin moore
ghost book (cd)
1 x Barren Earth
Our Twilight (CD)
1 x Darkthrone
Circle The Wagons - special edition (cd)
2 x nosound
clouds (mp3 download)
4 x Andrew Liles and Fovea Hex
Gone Every Evening (mp3 download)
2 x ex-wise heads
liquid assets (cd)
1 x Mont Campbell
Music From a Walled Garden (CD)
1 x Autopsy
Dark Crusades (2 DVD set) (2 DVD)
5 x Andrew Liles and Fovea Hex
Gone Every Evening (flac download)
2 x Peter Hammill
Thin Air (mp3 download)
5 x tim bowness / samuel smiles
world of bright futures (mp3 download)
1 x Cradle Of Filth
Eleven Burial Masses (CD/DVD)
1 x hugh hopper and matt howarth
the stolen hour (cd)
2 x Dave Stewart and Barbara Gaskin
The Big Idea (mp3 download)
1 x Katatonia
Tonights Decision - Vinyl (Double Vinyl)
1 x Enchantment
Dance The Marble Naked (CD)
2 x Porcupine Tree
Signify (double cd digibook)
3 x Ozric Tentacles
Become The Other (CD)
1 x Dave Stewart and Barbara Gaskin
09 The '60s Never Die (mp3 download)
1 x jack monck
recent songs (mp3 download)
2 x secret voices
no time for silence (cd)
1 x Dave Stewart and Barbara Gaskin
05 (Do I Figure) In Your Life (mp3 download)
1 x fovea hex
allure (mp3 download)
1 x iem
iem have come for your children (mp3 download)
1 x North Atlantic Oscillation
Grappling Hooks (cd + bonus disc)
2 x Anathema
Resonance (Super Jewel Case CD)
1 x Travis & Fripp
Thread (cd)
1 x My Dying Bride
A Line of Deathless Kings - UK 'box' edition (CD)
4 x bass communion
molotov and haze (cd)
2 x jansen / takahashi
pulse remix (cd)
1 x peter hammill
enter k (flac download)
1 x Darkthrone
F.O.A.D. Special Edition (CD)
2 x Nosound
Lightdark Long Sleeve T-Shirt (X-Large)
4 x theo travis
double talk (flac download)
1 x North Atlantic Oscillation
Call Signs (cd)
1 x Ex-Wise Heads
Liquid Assets (mp3 download)
1 x centrozoon
blast (definitive edition) (cd)
1 x Opeth
The Roundhouse Tapes - deluxe (Triple Vinyl with 2 CD set)
1 x gavin harrison & 05Ric
drop (cd)
2 x ex-wise heads
no grey matter (cd)
1 x GallHammer
Ill Innocence Bundle (CD / Medium T-shirt)
1 x Judy Dyble
Talking With Strangers (CD)
1 x Gallhammer
Gloomy Lights (Digibook CD)
2 x arc
fracture (cd)
1 x Michael Peters
Impossible Music (CD)
1 x steven wilson
cover version 1 (cd single)
1 x steve adey
mississippi: remixed (flac download)
1 x Asgaroth
Red Shift (cd)
1 x faceless
different sounds (cdr)
2 x Stefano Panunzi
A Rose (cd)
1 x The Afterthought
Living For Tomorrow EP (mp3 download)
1 x Porcupine Tree
House of Blues, Dallas, TX, 20th April 2010 (General Admission eTicket)
4 x Dave Stewart and Barbara Gaskin
07 Deep Underground (mp3 download)
1 x no-man
lost songs (flac download)
1 x cipher
elemental forces (flac download)
1 x dave sinclair
full circle (cd)
1 x mike figgis
hotel soundtrack (cd)
3 x The Pineapple Thief
The Dawn Raids 2 (flac download)
2 x fovea hex
huge (flac download)
1 x alias grace
pieces (mp3 download)
7 x darkroom
fallout 1 (cdr)
2 x nosound
clouds (flac download)
1 x markus reuter
taster (part 1) (mp3 download)
1 x mirage
mirage (cd)
1 x My Dying Bride
Meisterwerk II (Digipack CD)
1 x No-Man
Wherever There is Light (CD EP)
2 x uriel
arzachel collectors edition (cd)
1 x Various Artists
Ember Rock Vol 1: Looking Towards The Sky (cd)
1 x the resonance association
...Stars LP + Failure... CD bundle (cd + vinyl)
1 x porcupine tree
fear of a blank planet (dvda)
1 x alias grace
storm blue evening (cdr)
1 x Dave Stewart and Barbara Gaskin
06 Golden Rain (mp3 download)
1 x no-man
returning jesus (cd)
2 x The Pineapple Thief
The Dawn Raids 2 (CD EP)
1 x Dark Sanctuary
L'etres Las-L'envers Du Miroir' & 'Vie Ephemere' (CD)
Subtotal: €4133.45 EUR
Shipping: €440.45 EUR
Total: €4573.90 EUR



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