TPoH music inspiration time!
I love so many of the Doctor Who soundtracks it was super hard to pick just one but this is very TPoH-esque for me, just a shame it’s so short! I love music that involves warped/rewound sounds.
It’s a cool place, and they say it gets harder
You’re bundled up now, wait ‘til you get better
(via curvedcat)
1,080,167 playsTPoH music inspiration post time!
I adore Pushing Daisies. I adore the soundtrack. And the cinematography. And the colour schemes. And the story telling method. And Ned’s eyebrows. And basically everything else about it.
But yes entire soundtrack has an appropriate amount of goof/sadness/foreboding to it for TPoH purposes but this one reminds me of a particular bit. Which needless to say it will take the better part of a century to get to but please believe me when I say I am looking forward to it immensely.
TPoH music inspiration time!
Don’t know if I’ll be able to manage a drawing for you chaps today so hopefully this makes up for it :’|
TPoH music insp time!
Love the soundtrack to this picture. I’ve had some lovely suggestions for tracks in my inbox too I’ll try and find time to go through them later.
what the fuck
this is the scariest shit i’ve ever seen in my life
This is so cool. Eat Otomo Yoshihide’s heart out.
I’m used to associating this sort of heavy creepy distortion type audio as being achieved by internal studio mixing. Picking sections, warping them, reversing, repeating, all that sort of thing done with the board tools and programming suites. I didn’t stop to think that the same sort of effects could be achieved PHYSICALLY by fucking with the playback tools and the storage mediums themelves. It’s incredibly clever, especially when they introduce the cut-apart and reconstructed vinyl platters, it becomes the audio equivalent of cut-paste collaging or magnetic poetry. It takes something as ethereal and insubstantial as music, and makes it as tangible as sculpture.
Whoa.
(via attoliasthief)