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Ulver - albumguide og diskusjon


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Hvilket verk av Ulver liker du best?  

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    • Vargnatt
      2
    • Bergtatt
      39
    • Kveldssanger
      8
    • Nattens Madrigal
      10
    • Themes from William Blake's The Marriage of Heaven and Hell
      14
    • Metamorphosis
      0
    • Perdition City
      23
    • Silence Teaches You How to Sing
      1
    • Silencing the Singing
      0
    • Lychantropen Themes
      1
    • 1993-2003 - 1st Decade in the Machines
      1
    • A Quick Fix of Melancholy
      0
    • Svidd Neger
      1
    • Uno (blant flere artister)
      0
    • Blood Inside
      3
    • Shadows of the Sun
      12


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Parkteatret kunne vurdert å være en smule kjipere med fototillatelsene sine noen ganger. For all del, hadde jeg hatt med kamera hadde jeg selvsagt tatt bilder selv, men det er litt kjett å ha lukkerlyder i øret under relativt stille partier.

Var vel tre-fire som tok bilder bare på høyre siden, og til sammen var de lite "høflige" i lydbruken.

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Plakat:

ULVER_OPERA_POSTER_thumb.jpg

HQ

 

og pressemelding:

PRESS RELEASE MAY 13 2010

 

Ramble On and The Norwegian National Opera & Ballet presents

 

ULVER LIVE IN CONCERT

WITH SPECIAL GUESTS IAN JOHNSTONE & CHRISTIAN FENNESZ

 

The Norwegian National Opera, Main Stage, Saturday July 31 2010

 

"That Ulver all of a sudden decided to become a live band may prove to be one of the best ideas in Norwegian music ever." Øyvind Rones, groove.no

 

ULVER, early pioneers of Norwegian black metal, now living legends of the dark music industry, has since the beginning in the early nineties sold half a million albums worldwide. The band has also made music for several major motion pictures, and the controversial American director Harmony Korine sums it up: "There's a real lineage from a composer like Wagner to a band like Ulver."

 

Author and rock legend Julian Cope says: "Ulver are cataloguing the death of our culture two decades before anyone else has noticed its inevitable demise."

 

During their first fifteen years ULVER never played live, which contributed to the shaping of their legendary history. When Mr. Stig Sæterbakken finally succeeded in persuading the band to play their first concert at the Norwegian Festival of Literature last May, fans came from all over the world – including Australia, Japan, Canada and the US.

 

A newspaper writes on the band's latest concert so far, at the Logen theatre in Bergen: "The cult band hit us hard with suggestive music accompanied by images of salutary nazi jugend crosscut with living dead jews. Ulver is one of the few bands which can move from pictures of Jesus to sex, burlesque and atom bombs without making you jump. The music alone is too powerful for anything to make you more flabbergasted."

 

Ulver takes up The Norwegian National Opera with their dramatic mix of sound, light and images, together with prominent guests such as Christian Fennesz and the artist and Coil-affiliate Ian Johnstone. This is the first and last time Ulver performs on a major stage in Oslo in 2010.

 

 

PRESS CONTACT:

Pelle Neraasen, Ramble On

pelle[at]rambleon[dot]no

 

 

"Ulver's presentation is surreal and stark. A psychedelic excursion, an immersive experience, fuelled by haunting, progressive art. After such a night, you don't want to see another band for a few days. Because anything else would pale when put alongside Ulver." Malcolm Dome, Classic Rock Magazine

 

"In many respects, Ulver epitomise what happens when metal's melancholic strand is taken to its logical conclusion. While the band's roots lie in clattering black metal, their evolution began with the release of 1998's openly progressive Themes From William Blake's The Marriage Of Heaven And Hell. By the time they'd got to Shadows Of The Sun, they'd wandered still further away from their gnashing early work, sitting at the remote, windswept crossroads of art-rock, ambient adventurism, improvisational noise, and the hymnal aspects of modern classical music." Phil Alexander, Mojo Magazine

 

:)

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