Song picture
Zardusht
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Instrumental: Electric mandolin (2 mandolins) interplay, heavily phased baritone (by tuning) guitar tuned in 5ths instead of 4ths, drummachines bounced against one another.
electronica progressive punk experimental christian heavy metal psychedelic avant garde dark ambient weirdness psychedelia slambient
Artist picture
Avant garde experimental punk psychedelic progressive dark ambient slambient rock'n'roll heavy metal jazz madness and general weirdness with lots of effects and
I am an avant garde musicmaker, composer etc. I never compose anything based on a perception of what's hot or anything like that, but follow the creative impulses of spirit, soul and body whether composing a composed piece of freejamming to see what comes out. Some of the things, well, a lot of the things, I do are unclassifiable to me. I do tend toward the kinds of sounds used in heavy metal (Black Sabbath was one of my earliest influences and favorite bands), progressive and punk rock, and my technique inclines toward blues. This is generally true whether I'm playing the electric mandolin, which is my primary instrument nowadays, bass guitar, my first instrument and primary for most of my musical career, or guitar. Most of my compositions are lyricless because I possess no words or language to express what I put into sound.
Song Info
Charts
#6,039 today Peak #178
#1,254 in subgenre Peak #32
Author
Woden Thoth
Rights
(C) (P) 2010 Woden Thoth
Uploaded
September 23, 2010
Track Files
MP3
MP3 6.3 MB 128 kbps 6:52
Story behind the song
Composed while I was watching a documentary about Neda, the Iranian women shot to death during a demonstration in Tehran, presumably by a government agent, for which reason I named it 'For Neda' on the recorder. Later changed the name to 'Iran Psychedelic' for further obscuration and also because the song itself really doesn't capture the trajedy of Neda's death. While the song itself has a psychedelic quality, it's really not about Iranian psychedelia either. Finally, I settled on 'Zardusht' (the Farsi version of Zoroaster / Zarathustra) to keep its connection to Iran in the title and reflect my interest in spiritual traditions.
Lyrics
none
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