Interview with Hexperos

No Comments Written by jason on March 3, 2008 in Heathen Harvest, interview, Hexperos.

Heathen Harvest’s new issue features an interview with darkwave band Hexperos, a band featured several times on my A Darker Shade of Pagan podcast.

Hexperos

“The world of dreams and the world of women. Each song of ‘The garden of the Hesperides’ is sung by one of these nymphs (who are inspiring muses for me) and the album talks about various women. For example the song entitled ‘Artemisia’ is dedicated to Artemisia Gentileschi, a great and mysterious female painter, who lived in the ‘600 and whose style belongs to Caravaggio school. ‘Nana’ is a song from the ‘Siete canciones populares Españolas’ by the Spanish composer Manuel de Falla, it is a sad ‘cante jondo’, a lullaby. Each song represents a different aspect of the feminine world, so it is for ‘Ave Maria’ by the baroque composer Giulio Caccini, for ‘The Magnificence of the Night’ whose lyric is an extract from the novel ‘Woman in love’ by D. H. Lawrence, for Hesperos. “

For my own review of Hexperos’ new album “The Garden of the Hesperides”, click here.


Equilibrium’s Ethno-Gothic Entertainments

No Comments Written by jason on October 23, 2007 in Hexperos, Poets to their Beloved, Equilibrium Music, mp3, reviews.

The Portugal-based darkwave label Equilibrium Music has two new releases out that should please fans of Dead Can Dance’s darkly-tinged tribal sounds, and the neoclassical gloom of Sopor Aeternus. The first is “The Garden of the Hesperides”, by the Italian band Hexperos. Evoking a haunting mix of chamber music and electronic textures, the songs are made sublime by the clear, strong, soprano of vocalist Alessandra Santovito (from the band Gothica). Stand-out tracks include the gentle, soaring grace of “Hesperos”, and the moonlight-fueled, trance-inducing, “Ritual”. As their web site claims, this is music of “love and mystery”, and it is a strong debut album that promises even greater things in the future.

Hexperos
Hexperos

Download: Hexperos - “Hesperos”
(from the album “The Garden of the Hesperides”)

Links: Hexperos on Myspace

The second band making its debut is the German/Dutch duo Poets to their Beloved with their album “Embrace the Fool”. While Hexperos is decidedly influenced by Dead Can Dance, PttB can claim that Dead Can Dance brought them together as a music project. The two members, Saskia and Marcel, met and fell in love at a workshop held by Brendan Perry in Ireland. This fateful melding in Perry’s presence must have rubbed off, because some of the best tracks on “Embrace the Fool” seem positively haunted by the singer-songwriter’s guitar-sound and vocal preferences. Not that this is a bad thing, tracks like “Ecstatic Dance” and “Embrace the Fool” are well-executed and benefit from their influences. PttB would make an ideal opening act should Dead Can Dance ever do another reunion tour, it will be interesting to see where they go from here.

Poets to their Beloved
Poets to their Beloved

Download: Poets to their Beloved - “Ecstatic Dance (clip)”
(from the album “Embrace the Fool”)

Links: Poets to their Beloved on MySpace

You can hear tracks from both of these bands on my latest “A Darker Shade of Pagan” podcast.