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The Pessimist View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: The Darkest Music You've Ever Heard Thread
    Posted: January 30 2010 at 20:02
Well the name's in the title. I'll expect a lot of avant-garde, doom and maybe even early blues music? Great if you put those forward, especially if they are groundbreaking, but if you guys post things from a style you'd never expect to be dark, EVEN BETTER.

I'm gonna kick start this whole thing with three songs that are exceptionally dark to me:



THE darkest IDM album I've ever heard (Doll Doll Doll - Venetian Snares) and my favourite song off of it. Brilliant.



Introductory passage to perhaps the darkest Baroque suite ever. Purcell was truly a genius. A very depressed genius at that, nonetheless producing some of the finest music. The rest of Music For The Funeral of Queen Mary sustains this atmosphere, which is why I love it.




Neurosis, the darkest metal band (you don't get much heavier and brooding than their music imho), released their darkest album Through Silver In Blood, and this is by far the darkest song on there. Need I say more? You may need to go watch Slumdog Millionaire after this, because you may be crushed by it

Your turn guys Can you top those three?








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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 30 2010 at 20:17
I'm going to have to nominate Jandek
Not just because of the music, but because of the story of the artist. Jandek has, over the last 30 years, self-released sixty albums that can only be mail ordered from him directly for $8 each (as he doesn't have a website) or from the hippest online retailers. From what I hear, most of them are in the same vein as that song, and he never appeared in public as Jandek until 2004, and he still won't tell anybody what his real name is. What kind of mental state do you have to be in to record 60 albums of that...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 30 2010 at 20:41
Shub Niggurath's La ballade de Lénore
Univers Zéro's La Faulx and Jack the Ripper
Jean Leloup's Le castel impossible (lyrically)
 
That's some of them...
Les mains, les pieds balancés
Sur tant de mers, tant de planchers,
Un marin mort,
Il dormira

- Paul Éluard
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 30 2010 at 21:09
Originally posted by The Pessimist The Pessimist wrote:

Well the name's in the title. I'll expect a lot of avant-garde, doom and maybe even early blues music? Great if you put those forward, especially if they are groundbreaking, but if you guys post things from a style you'd never expect to be dark, EVEN BETTER.

I'm gonna kick start this whole thing with three songs that are exceptionally dark to me:



THE darkest IDM album I've ever heard (Doll Doll Doll - Venetian Snares) and my favourite song off of it. Brilliant.

Venetian Snares' Szamár Madár is pretty dark too.




Edited by A Person - January 30 2010 at 21:12
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 30 2010 at 21:12
Originally posted by Henry Plainview Henry Plainview wrote:

I'm going to have to nominate Jandek
Not just because of the music, but because of the story of the artist. Jandek has, over the last 30 years, self-released sixty albums that can only be mail ordered from him directly for $8 each (as he doesn't have a website) or from the hippest online retailers. From what I hear, most of them are in the same vein as that song, and he never appeared in public as Jandek until 2004, and he still won't tell anybody what his real name is. What kind of mental state do you have to be in to record 60 albums of that...

Ha, thanks!!  Any of my suggestions would have been pathetic compared to that guy!! Ouch

I always like "The End" by Nico, very dark & brooding and yet melodic.  However, compared to that sh*te by Jandek you provided, "The End" is like something released by the Bangles!!

Another one I enjoy is "Halber Mensch (or ½ Mensch; English: “Half Man”) by Einstürzende Neubauten.
Typically joyous German music!!

Still, that Jandek bit takes the cake, man!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 30 2010 at 21:15
Negura Bunget (I'll look for videos later).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 30 2010 at 21:25
Psychopath - The Edgar Broughton Band
Drip Drip - Comus
Death Disco - PIL
Something I Can Never Have - NIN
Music For Strings Percussion & Celesta (1st Movement) - Bartok
Toccata - ELP
Univers Zero - Pretty much anything
Wild Women With Steak Knives - Diamanda Galas
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 30 2010 at 21:39
Originally posted by Henry Plainview Henry Plainview wrote:

I'm going to have to nominate Jandek
Not just because of the music, but because of the story of the artist. Jandek has, over the last 30 years, self-released sixty albums that can only be mail ordered from him directly for $8 each (as he doesn't have a website) or from the hippest online retailers. From what I hear, most of them are in the same vein as that song, and he never appeared in public as Jandek until 2004, and he still won't tell anybody what his real name is. What kind of mental state do you have to be in to record 60 albums of that...
There's actually a wiki page on him, and there's a LOT of info (relatively speaking). And if you want you can find out his real name too.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 30 2010 at 21:45
Originally posted by DJPuffyLemon DJPuffyLemon wrote:

Originally posted by Henry Plainview Henry Plainview wrote:

I'm going to have to nominate Jandek
Not just because of the music, but because of the story of the artist. Jandek has, over the last 30 years, self-released sixty albums that can only be mail ordered from him directly for $8 each (as he doesn't have a website) or from the hippest online retailers. From what I hear, most of them are in the same vein as that song, and he never appeared in public as Jandek until 2004, and he still won't tell anybody what his real name is. What kind of mental state do you have to be in to record 60 albums of that...
There's actually a wiki page on him, and there's a LOT of info (relatively speaking). And if you want you can find out his real name too.

Yes, but the fact that there have been only two interviews with him since 1978 speaks for itself, I think.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 30 2010 at 22:52


Disturbingly hilarious!
Rickity tickity tin....
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 31 2010 at 00:11
Originally posted by DJPuffyLemon DJPuffyLemon wrote:

There's actually a wiki page on him, and there's a LOT of info (relatively speaking). And if you want you can find out his real name too.
Somebody figured out his name, yes, but he has never actually admitted to anybody he is Sterling Smith. He still says "A representative from Corwood Industries" on the back of the live albums and doesn't call himself Jandek at his concerts. I can't help but feel that at least some of that is an act, but nobody would do what he did unless he truly felt what he was expressing.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 31 2010 at 00:23
Hmmm, this is a low quality live recording - and the band appear to be rather jolly here compared to what their albums sounded like, but at least you get an idea:

Munch - Addicted

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 31 2010 at 00:30
The Holy Bible by The Manic Street Preachers is an absolutely masterpiece of blood drenched darkness. Avoiding the gloomy doldrums of most music this depressing, it is by turns savage and dispassionate but never mopey and boo-hoo-hoo- which I think is it why it so depressing. The narrator has lost interest- he contemplates death, gun control, prostution, annorexia, the Holocaust etc and can only respond with impotent anger that is slowly and gradually replaced by a void. That it preceded the real life suicide of lyricist Richey Edwards only adds to the ominous atmosphere.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 31 2010 at 06:07
 
Excerpts are available on youtube, but I am too lazy to post them.
 
 
"Magma was the very first gothic rock band" (Didier Lockwood)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 31 2010 at 06:18
Just about anything by The Residents of course.  The darkest album in my collection, which is dark in a really subtle way: Steve Roach's Darkest Before Dawn.
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 31 2010 at 06:30
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 31 2010 at 07:01
More Munch - hopefully this link works. Their darkest moment ever.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 31 2010 at 14:09
Originally posted by lucas lucas wrote:

 
Excerpts are available on youtube, but I am too lazy to post them.
 
 


I love this Almost like the soundtrack to a war or something. A real soundtrack to a war, with all those REAL emotions (fear, sadness, panic, rage, aggression, doom) that aren't really depicted in most war film sound tracks.



I think that is the darkest death metal I've heard in a long time. Berserker? Brutal? Heavy? No chance. This sound will make you wanna kill babies it's so dark.

In fact the whole album is similar.

http://www.progarchives.com/album.asp?id=25266

I couldn't recommend it enough to anyone who digs dark stuff.



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 31 2010 at 15:02
Originally posted by The Pessimist The Pessimist wrote:

Originally posted by lucas lucas wrote:

 
Excerpts are available on youtube, but I am too lazy to post them.
 
 


I love this Almost like the soundtrack to a war or something. A real soundtrack to a war, with all those REAL emotions (fear, sadness, panic, rage, aggression, doom) that aren't really depicted in most war film sound tracks.

 
And the lyrics are very dark as well :

Je cherchais tes restes et rassemblais tes membres,

Lorsque les pleureuses furent prises de terreur à la vue des serpents,

Innombrables

Qui encerclaient ton torse

Comme des rameaux – ils vivaient d’une vie autre que la leur.

J’en recueillis un au creux de la main et lui montrai le soleil.

 

Il se figea et resplendit d’or.

 

D’étranges échos nous parvenaient des Enfers.

Je fis offrande à Perséphone de cette veine pleine d’un sang si noble

Et j’entendis le chant de la terre.

 

Elle m’accueillit au séjour des ombres.

 

I was looking for your remains and was assembling your limbs

When the weeping women were frightened at the sight of snakes,

Countless

Which circled your torso

Like branches – they lived a life different than theirs.

I collected one in the hollow of my hand and showed it the sun.

 

It freezed and shone with gold.

 

Strange echoes came from Hell.

I offered Persephone this vein full of so noble a blood

And heard the chant of earth.

 

She welcomed me to a stay among shadows.
 
"Magma was the very first gothic rock band" (Didier Lockwood)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 31 2010 at 16:27
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xxjw6ZsHjNU&feature=related this song is probably the darkest i know of or atleast verry dramatic and epic, sad but also dark


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