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2023-09-26, 08:43
  #37
Medlem
Encloaked - The Air is Thick With Magic Here

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4GTmkP7aiI8

Från intervju :

"Today, I want to ask you a few questions about Encloaked and Dungeon Synth in general. In my opinion, Dungeon Synth is currently rather popular among young Epic Metal fans (and bands!) – do you agree?

It’s starting to get more traction. It makes sense really. So much Heavy Metal, especially Epic/Traditional/Power Metal is infused with the same fantasy themes as Dungeon Synth so I’m surprised there wasn’t more crossover from the get-go. The popularity of video games is a big part of it, too."

"What do you find fascinating about this kind of music?

I find it very calming and nostalgic. It really reminds me of the music of classic SNES or PC games. I love fantasy and sword & sorcery which is the bread and butter of the genre, too. It’s incredibly nerdy and there’s a wide range of artists and each person has their own spin on the genre.

It’s also a genre almost entirely dominated by solo projects, so everything is very personal. Sometimes it’s great to throw a couple of albums on the stereo and set a mood while dealing with other tasks like cooking, reading, working or playing games."

https://epicmetalblog.com/2020/11/24...ck-gatekeeper/
Citera
2023-10-02, 09:31
  #38
Medlem
Hermit Knight - Together, just one last adventure

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qujbIEgbwmI

Från intervju :

"From an early age heavy metal and video games became an easy outlet and welcoming form of escapism."

"The appeal of releasing on tape cassettes and making small little batches of the weirdo music I wanted to create was irresistible. Like a call to destiny, everything made sense and the pieces seemed to fall in perfectly."

"What is it about the DIY method that appeals to you?

Just having the ability to have complete control over a vision. From start to finish, you are in the captain’s chair. While resources and finances can be a weakness, you find how to make it work. Finding clever ways to make the rusted pile of trash you create shine and sparkle by using your hands and heart."

"What does Dungeon Synth (and/or related genres) mean to you?

For myself, it’s the ultimate escapism. It’s a chance to dive head first into another’s story and find yourself on an adventure. My taste, for the most part, takes more root in the “fantasy ambient” fields. I found myself into Dungeon Synth and its perspective subgenres from finding DnD again.

As I was seeking more music to play for the games I had planned, I found myself more often than not stumbling into this genre. So, the transformative nature and exploratory concepts found themselves deep in my brain. Simply put, I suppose, it is the freedom of imagination. It means I can dream again."

"Tell us about your gaming habits?

I have played video games as far back as I remember. I began my journey on the NES with such wonderful titles as: Zelda, Crystalis, Final Fantasy and Uninvited. Finding comfort in RPGs and their freedom to play how I want in a not so linear fashion. My real heart lies with the best console in my opinion, the SNES. With games like Secret of Mana, Link’s Awakening and the best game ever: Earthbound.

From the years spent gaming, I continued my journey and found myself loving either turn-based RPGs or world builders such as CIV. I had dabbled in MTG as a youth and recently just played it again for the first time in about 20 years. Finally, I love DnD."

https://wyrddaze.wordpress.com/2023/...gnome-records/
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Senast redigerad av Betongkaja 2023-10-02 kl. 09:52.
Citera
2023-11-22, 17:28
  #39
Medlem
Elminster - The making of a mage

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LA-MwaSumNM

Intervju :

"I first discovered Elminster when I happened upon a small used bookshop in the basement of a Chicago building while I was visiting family at the age of fifteen. I was immediately taken with the cover of the second book in the Elminster series of the Forgotten Realms setting, Elminster in Myth Drannor. I picked up that book and a handful of others and made a point of ordering a copy of the first book in that series, The Making of a Mage.

As I began to read it, I experienced an immersion that I haven't had since being a little kid reading Deltora Quest, Harry Potter, The Hobbit, or Eragon. I didn't know it at the time, but something awoke in me the day I cracked TMoaM open in the back of my dad's car for the first time that would eventually lead to me deciding to create a dungeon synth soundtrack to said book 4 years later."

"As to what Elminster the character means to me, a whole lot. Ed Greenwood has a knack for developing very relatable young adult characters in an extremely vivid, tactile world. I felt much like the awkward, sarcastic El in his coming of age story and the rest, as the saying goes, is history."

"In retrospect, I do feel as if I am called to create. I have a hard time being casually into something, I have a compulsive urge to take part. "

https://www.continuousrevelations.co...ster-interview
Citera
2023-11-22, 22:46
  #40
Medlem
VillageOblivias avatar
Secret Stairways gjorde riktigt fin, stämningsfull dungeon synth. Tyvärr tog Matthew Davis, mannen bakom projektet, livet av sig år 2011.

Enchantment of the Ring (1997)
Citera
2023-11-25, 11:39
  #41
Medlem
Ithildin - Arda's Herbarium - Vol. I

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_B9-De6NrC4

Ithildin - Arda's Herbarium - Vol. II

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=adW-F8pzIac

Ithildin - Arda's Herbarium - Vol. III

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SWYFWhooL20

Ithildin - Arda's Herbarium - Vol. IV

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t3LBHIIcfGs

Ithildin - Arda's Herbarium - Vol. V

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=njU4IlmdGfE

"Over the past few years, this Canadian artist has been making an unofficial soundtrack to the book “Flora of Middle-Earth” by Walter S. Judd & Graham A. Judd. Each song is an entry in the book and presented in alphabetical order."

Intervju :

"Within the dungeon synth community, Tolkien-themed music is very popular and not original at all, but where I come from, in the province of Quebec, it’s not so common, so I felt not too bad about going that way. Furthermore, I wanted to stay true and honest to myself and if I had a fantasy music theme choice to make, it was between The Legend of Zelda and The Lord of the Rings. "

"I must have been 9 or 10 years old, I was at the cinema… the scene of the unveiling of The Shire with the arrival of Gandalf and the magnificent music of Howard Shore. Damn. It was still abstract inside me at that time, but I knew deep down that I had just opened a treasure chest."

"If you could step through a portal to any realm of fantasy, where would it be?

Well, to stick with what I’ve said before, I should choose between Hyrule, Termina or Middle-Earth. Ok… Again, sorry for this clichéd and unoriginal answer, but I’ll have to go with The Shire. This is where the fantasy was born in my mind, you know. It’s almost home. "

https://wyrddaze.wordpress.com/2023/...ns-3-ithildin/

Lite intressant är det att han gillar tidiga Pink Floyd och gjort ett Dungeon Synth-album han kallar The Hobbit at the Gates of Dawn [A Tolkien-themed fantasy music tribute to Pink Floyd]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iqqA89Dh76I
Citera
2023-12-03, 15:13
  #42
Medlem
Wizards of Aldur - Queen of Sorcery

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4_k_kixX934

Inspirerat av fantasyförfattaren David Eddings.

"Sagan om Belgarion (originaltitel The Belgariad) är en bokserie om fem böcker skriven av den amerikanska författaren David Eddings 1982–1984.

Serien handlar om pojken Garion som växer upp i kungadömet Sendarien i västra delen av världen. När han blir större får han följa med på ett äventyr som avslöjar hans sanna natur. Resan sträcker sig över hela kontinenten och han får senare namnet Belgarion."

Samma musiker har även gjort Dungeon Synth inspirerat av Warhammer 40K :

Astra Telepathica - Our Distant Stars

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GNUWZrte8ZY
Citera
2024-07-27, 10:04
  #43
Medlem
Psyclopean - Atlantean Twilight

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Hk-C2x4_Xc

"A plethora of vaporous musical vignettes created as soundtracks for a collection of prose pieces written by Clark Ashton Smith"

"Some of the sounds are more meditative and dream-inducing, but the intent is to evoke a strange nostalgia - something that pricks the worn edges of memory like a half-forgotten fever dream, a mist-enshrouded fantasy being both familiar and unsettling at the same time. It's a place one would love to visit but might unknowingly drift into forgetfulness, becoming lost in the twilight landscape for all eternity - and succumbing to the ancient gods of imagination."

Om Clark Ashton Smith :

"Clark Ashton Smith (1893-1961), perhaps best known today for his association with H.P Lovecraft and the Cthulhu Mythos, is in his own right a unique master of fantasy, horror and science-fiction. Highly imaginative, his genre-spanning visions of worlds beyond, combined with his profound understanding of the English language, have inspired an ever -increasing legion of fans and admirers.

For most of his life, he lived in physical and intellectual isolation in Auburn, California (USA). Predominantly self-educated with no formal education after grammar school, Smith wore out his local library and delved so deeply into the dictionary that his richly embellished, yet precise, prose leaves one with the sense that they are in the company of a true master of language.

Though Smith primarily considered himself a poet, having turned to prose for the meager financial sum it rewarded, his prose might best be appreciated as a "fleshed" out poetry. In this light, plot and characters are subservient to the milieu of work: a setting of cold quiet reality, which, mixed with the erotic and the exotic, places his work within its own unique, phantasmagoric genre. While he also experimented in painting, sculpture, and translation, it is in his written work that his legacy persists."

http://www.eldritchdark.com/
Citera
2024-08-03, 07:39
  #44
Medlem
Fen Walker - Sojourns in the Realm of the Undermoon

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oRFKMotmB18

Från intervju :

"The first three Fen Walker albums, known as Saga I, follow a woman who is a shepherd of the dead. She travels over the island continent of Ur and guides lost and lonely spirits to burial sites, mounds or tombs where they can live out the next life in peace and comfort. Proper burial and funerary practices are central to the life of the Urish people, who dedicate their lives to building labyrinthine tomb structures and regularly visiting deceased relatives. All of this is important, because without proper burial, spirits live in a hell of loneliness, never able to pass onto the second death and never able to interact with the people they can see and hear all around them.

Eventually, The Wanderess, as she is known, fails in her duty and grave robbers desecrate the sacred Barrow Lands and steal the treasures from the mounds. Though she is able to get the treasure back, in shame, she exiles herself to the mysterious lands of the north."

"A large theme in the Fen Walker story has been tradition and conservation versus technology and change, which is something I think a lot about. I don’t believe either are inherently bad, but there must be a balance between the two."

"Outside of the Dungeon synth sphere of influence I am inspired by legendary German synthesists Tangerine Dream, their album “Phaedra” is a particular favourite of mine as well as many of their soundtracks. The Blade Runner soundtrack by Vangelis is one of the great synth albums of all time and I’ve lost count of the number of times I’ve listened to it. “Music Inspired by Lord of the Rings” by Bo Hannson is probably my greatest inspiration for Fen Walker; it is a tragically overlooked gem of 70’s progressive rock and I hear something new every time I listen to it."

"I have a regular Tuesday night Call of Cthulhu session that I run. In addition to the myriad, other tabletop games I play with my wife and friends. The jewel of my game collection is the original edition of Hero Quest that I found recently. I found this classic board game once before as a child in a second hand store for $4. Slowly the pieces were lost and the board damaged. It would probably be accurate to say that Hero Quest was my introduction to the world of fantasy, and I am forever grateful for it and it’s been very nostalgic playing through it again."

https://wyrddaze.wordpress.com/2022/...th-fen-walker/
Citera
2024-08-09, 14:24
  #45
Medlem
Wodenwyrd - Futhorc

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=510t7idBobQ

Musikern själv kallar det Saxon Synth.

"Each track in this album encompasses the Anglo-Saxon Futhorc. Futhorc is the rune alphabet that branched off from the Germanic Elder Futhark. Each track is an attempt to capture the literal and spiritual meaning of each rune."

Många avfärdar runor som enbart ett alfabet. Men runorna är en levande energi som talar till oss genom både tid och rum. Som Nigel Pennick, som skrivit många böcker om runor, skriver om att kliva in i den magiska världen :

"the magical view of the world, dismissed as superstition by the modern worldview, was a valid means of living under harsh and difficult circumstances."

"there is much that can be learned from this way of relating to the world…beyond the fixation on materialism that powers mainstream culture today"

Som mytprojektet Hookland skriver om att leva i den magiska världen :

"There's a palpable tension in fields waiting for harvest. A sense of some completing ceremony coming down the way. It is more than the crop anticipating blade. The whole land feels awake. I'm not surprised so many claim they see Faeries this time of year."
Citera
2024-11-03, 08:37
  #46
Medlem
Trogool - Beyond the River Skai

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oFKXX1S2rfc

Från intervju :

"How did you get into the idea of playing dungeon synth? What were you doing before you knew what DS was?

Well, before I knew about the genre tag “dungeon synth,” I was already into the music that collectively came to be filed under that banner. In a way, I was already doing DS as early as 2006ish. I was always really attracted to the idea of making music “at home” with computers or “keyboards” or whatever.

I’m not sure when the interest first developed, but it probably goes a ways back, because I was into the music I heard in video games as a kid in the 90s, and I seemed to have figured out, even back then, that it was done in some mysterious way that didn’t necessarily involve live performers but was instead a more solitary pursuit."

"I was talking with a friend around that time about how Bal-Sagoth’s intros and interlude tracks were so incredible, and he told me about how Mortiis had albums that were basically like “album-length intro tracks.” "

"Some of my earliest experiments with orchestral samples were based on the question, “what if Mortiis style music was made with more realistic orchestral elements?”"

"Anyway, to actually answer your question, I was hell-bent on making some kind of epic folky symphonic metal back in those days. From about 2006-2013 I tried to make that my main focus, and I made a couple of recordings with my project Waves of Amphitrite.

They’re not very good, though, and I had a bit of a crisis after which that project ended. I went back to the drawing board after that to figure out my strengths and weaknesses. I realized that my main interest really seemed to be in the virtual orchestra area, so I figured that, since I had managed over time to gather all the tools I needed to do a project from start to finish, I might as well focus on that.

It was sort of a coincidence that around that same time (2015), a friend of mine who shares my love of atmospheric music showed me Arath, and that was pretty much how I discovered that there was a whole new scene with new artists doing stuff in that style. That was a great time because it gave me some direction, and that’s where Trogool came from.

I was frankly sick of trying to write expressive personal lyrics; I just wanted to write some instrumental music inspired by stories I found evocative. It was just the perfect marriage of sound and aesthetic—the one I always wanted"

"Your albums are very orchestral with hints of Ennio Morricone in tracks like “Beholder of Ocean.” Do soundtracks or scores influence your work?

Some of my earliest favorite music was from my favorite movies, like Jurassic Park, for instance. I do love film scores, and they have undoubtedly had a big impact on me, maybe even more so now as an adult with some musical knowledge, looking back and re-experiencing them with a trained ear.

Soundtracks in general are something I’m always after in my Discogs want list, ha! Lately I’ve been listening a lot to a re-recording of Korngold’s score to the film The Sea Hawk, as well as a really cool re-recording of Herrmann’s score to Jason and the Argonauts.

Poledouris is one of my favorites (for obvious reasons). Also, the late James Horner wrote a great, underappreciated fantasy score to the cult classic movie Krull. I’m big into those types of movies. They’re fun and they tend to have equally enjoyable scores. Another favorite of mine is The Beastmaster.

Scores are interesting because they were often the place for experimentation. I’ve been reading a book called The Science of Sci-Fi Music (by Andrew May) that, in part, goes into this concept of cultural coding. That’s a really interesting concept in itself. It’s basically just tropes: why does a track sound “like the desert”? Why does one “desert” track succeed in bringing me there, while another, equally “desert,” track falls flat?

It’s just fun to think about why a score works for a given movie or game. And, of course, sometimes they’re just great to listen to without overthinking them. Not that I want to psychoanalyze myself here, but I bet film and game soundtracks played a role in preparing me to like music, like metal and dungeon synth, that is so tied to themes and aesthetics.

Video game soundtracks, too, have been really important to me all my life. In much the same way as film score, they were ubiquitous and varied. I listen to so much game music, new and old…"

https://www.invisibleoranges.com/trogool-interview/
Citera
2024-11-04, 06:05
  #47
Medlem
Arbadax - The Battlefield of Emsehar

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VJKAREJz8eY

Från intervju :

"Clearly, my love for fantasy is evident in my storytelling, which focuses on the character of ‘Arbadax.’ More generally, I’ve always been passionate about the fantastic in a broad sense, and also about the mysterious."

"This also ties into my passion for ancient and modern history, its mysteries, its conspiracies, its horrors… the epic and the mythology. It’s all connected. In the end, fantasy is nothing more than the story of humans living in a world truly shaped by their mythology, beliefs, and folklore."

"When I created the two more medieval-oriented albums, I was undecided about starting a separate project under a different name. But in the end, I continued as Arbadax and incorporated “The Bard’s Tales” and “The First King” into Arbadax’s storytelling, as if they were tales of the mythology and past history of the island of Ankmar."

"There was a period when I spent almost all of my free time writing music, recording, and jotting down ideas. I still have about a hundred riffs recorded on classical guitar, waiting to be developed. During that time, I also invented an alphabet that would be the alphabet of Ankmar and laid the foundations for its language.

I was completely immersed in inspiration from all angles. It was also a period when I started studying piano and became interested in the basics of mastering and mixing techniques, but I eventually stopped due to lack of time. This project also marked a break from my previous work because it doesn’t represent the typical ‘journey’ theme of fantasy stories, but simply a description of my imaginary land, Ankmar, which is partially connected to Sardinia, where I was born.

For example, ‘The Ruins of Karahal’ refers to the ancient name of the city of Cagliari, which was called Karalis in Latin. Or the sound of the sea in ‘The Grand Sea’ was recorded on a beach in Sardinia."

https://thedungeonindeepspace.com/20...ducer-arbadax/
Citera
2025-02-16, 00:38
  #48
Depressive Silence - Depressive Silence II (1996)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OxgVmpAk538

Jim Kirkwood - Master of Dragons (1991)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ytNp0gikre0
__________________
Senast redigerad av Cluster-B 2025-02-16 kl. 00:42.
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