good-evening-kiss:

You came into my life

So tenderly

With a burning love

That stings like a bee

And now that I’ve surrendered

So helplessly

You know I believe

You want to leave me

(Lyric: Where Did Our Love Go? // Soft Cell)

♡InktoberVC day 21: Worm Colors!

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gothiccharmschool:

jesuschristonecstasy:

you are the perfect drug….

  1. This is one of those perfect videos.
  2. At one point I sat down with this video and my copy of The World of Edward Gorey and cross-referenced the various “homages”. For my own amusement. No, I didn’t take notes during this madness, it was an insomnia-fueled project.
  3. Did I mention perfect video? I did, right?

Lestat, what are some of your favorite bands?

//ooc; I’ve thought about this for awhile now, it’s been almost a month 😛 and I think it’s a little unfair of my Lestat to answer, bc he’s clearly going to like what I like, to some extent! And my taste is fairly limited bc I don’t keep up with what’s popular, I tend to wait out the hype and then discover things on my own 5-10 years later, and then I’ll go, “Have you heard Crazy by Gnarls Barkley?? It’s mah jam :DDD” And my best friend will pat me on the shoulder and go “Honey that was 11 yrs ago.” *laughcries*

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[X] With @roselioncourt‘s help on our REAL LIFE visit last wknd, we made a rough list of bands/artists we think Lestat would love, and I’ll reblog this post with that list, as I don’t have it with me rn, but basically, I think he’s very into the performance aspect of it, the stage presence, and he’s into pop culture, he’d probably keep up with the current music scene, the top 100, what albums are selling, etc. He also likes to do covers of his fave songs and make variations to “improve” them ;D

In the meantime, you can check out my #music lestat motorcycles to tag.

Top Ten Spookiest Classical Pieces

an-earth-witch:

Perhaps I’m feeling macabre, but tonight I’m digging out my favorite spooky classical pieces and listening to them. So I thought putting together a top ten list of these would be fun while I drink my scotch. Note: These are not really in any particular order. I love them all.

1. Beethoven: Piano Trio in D major, op. 70 no. 1, “Ghost” – 2nd movement. Rattling of chains, shrieking of spirits; the nickname of this trio fits it well. The first and third movements are good as well, but only the second movement is really spooky.
2. Schubert: Der Leiermann (from Winterreise). A heartbroken young man sings about the hurdy-gurdy, an outcast who sits just outside the village and plays his instrument while dogs snarl at him and people ignore him.

Particularly chilling is that this is the last song of an hour-long cycle, and it drones on without clear resolution, ending with the line: “Strange old man, should I go with you? Will you accompany my songs on your hurdy-gurdy?” 
3. Mussorgsky: Night On Bald Mountain. You may know this one from Disney’s Fantasia, which is featured during the Witches’ Sabbath sequence.
4. Schubert: Der Erlkönig. Based on a poem by Goethe, this song tells the chilling story of a father and his ailing child riding through the woods on horseback, while a malicious spirit tries to lure the boy away, unseen and unheard by the father.
5. Saint-Saens: Danse Macabre. Death plays his fiddle in the cemetery, rousing all the skeletons from their graves and dancing with them until they have to slink back at the first light of dawn.
6. Brahms: Ballade in D minor, op. 10 no. 1, “Edward.” Based on a Scottish ballade, the story is of a mother who knows that her son has murdered his father – she just wants to hear him say it himself.
7. Shostakovich: Viola Sonata. Shostakovich composed during the height of Soviet censorship, and his music almost always has a hunted, almost panicked feel to it. He composed this viola sonata just a month before his death.
8. Shostakovich: String Quartet no. 8 in C minor, op. 110. Between the frenzy of the second movement and the insistent “knocking on the door” of the fourth, this quartet can really put you on edge. What makes this music even freakier is Shostakovich’s musical signature (D E-flat C B) throughout the work.
9. Mussorgsky: The Hut of Baba Yaga the Witch (from Pictures at an Exhibition). This one always sounds like Baba Yaga’s “Hut On Chicken’s Legs” is chasing me through the woods, but that might just be my wild imagination.
10. Scriabin: Piano Sonata no. 9, “Black Mass.” Some of the directions that Scriabin writes in the score are “mysteriously murmuring”, and “with a sweetness that becomes increasingly poisonous,” which is a pretty apt description for much of this work. It begins mysteriously, then builds in tension until it all explodes in some kind of orgiastic climax. It ends just as enigmatically as it begins.

Hi I’m looking for songs, do you have Louis playlist that you recommend?

monstersinthecosmos:

HI! I made you one.

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Never Found Our Way | Louis de Pointe du Lac

01. Aphex Twin – aisatsana [102]
02. Agnes Obel – Dorian
03. Thomas Newman – American Beauty
04. Gavin Luke – Emotions Becoming Clearer
05. God is an Astronaut – A Deafening Distance
06. Have a Nice Life – Emptiness Will Eat the Witch
07. Placebo – Song to Say Goodbye
08. Nine Inch Nails – 1 Ghosts 1
09. Clara Rockmore – Valse Sentimentale
10. Yann Tiersen – La Dispute
11. Erik Satie – Gnossienne No. 1
12. Ramin Djawadi – Light of the Seven
13. Poritshead – Roads
14. Billie Holiday – Gloomy Sunday
15. Dead Can Dance – Musica Eternal
16. Opeth – To Rid the Disease 

Listen on YouTube.

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