lo rez escribió:hello ,
here is some music i felt in love with . its a kind of chill-ambient ..
Artist Jocelyn Montgomery & David Lynch
Album Title Lux Vivens
Date of Release Aug 25, 1998
1. Flame and Vision performed by Montgomery / David Lynch - 1:53
2. Sapientie performed by Montgomery / David Lynch - 3:10
3. O Tu Illustrata performed by Montgomery / David Lynch - 8:23
4. Et Ideo performed by Montgomery / David Lynch - 3:21
5. Viridissima performed by Montgomery / David Lynch - 5:07
6. Battle and Aftermath performed by Montgomery / David Lynch - 1:41
7. Gloria Patri performed by Montgomery / David Lynch - 2:31
8. Lux Vivens performed by Montgomery / David Lynch - 8:22
9. Deus Enim performed by Montgomery / David Lynch - 2:50
10. Clarissima performed by Montgomery / David Lynch - 7:21
11. Orzchis performed by Montgomery / David Lynch - 2:43
12. Caritas performed by Montgomery / David Lynch - 2:49
13. Kyrie performed by Montgomery / David Lynch - 2:56
14. Hodie performed by Montgomery / David Lynch - 2:56
15. Alleluia performed by Montgomery / David Lynch - 6:21
Jocelyn Montgomery was surround by music while growing up in England. With a grandfather who hobbied as a fiddle-maker introduced her to the beautiful, classical sounds of her native country. Furthering her interests at The Purcell School of Music for the next six years, Montgomery studied formal vocal training and continued it at Saint Paul's Girl School while taking up the Violin. After graduation, she spent a couple years flexing her classical folk background at various parties and weddings while studying composition in London. With some indie-film roles under her belt -done for the sake of paying her bills- Montgomery eventually married and moved to Los Angeles, but of course not letting that get in the way of her singing career. With additional recognition as a result of her new found home, Mammoth Records immediately came to Montgomery's attention and released "Lux Vivens" in 1998 with additional production help from film maker David Lynch.
The teaming of former Miranda Sex Garden vocalist/fiddler Jocelyn Montgomery with the bleak auteur-of-darkness David Lynch might seem inaccessible in theory. But the duo's startlingly lovely modern take on 12th century abbess Hildegard von Bingen's music on Lux Vivens is remarkably alive and endlessly compelling. Lynch's industrial drone and bizarre sound samples, from gentle waves to crashing thunder, aren't that far removed from his Eraserhead score. His brooding tones suggest funeral marches, chirping birds in flight, battles between Heaven and Hell, landscapes devoid of light, and percolating medieval stews. One can't emphasize enough just how beautifully Montgomery's tender, yearning voice works with Lynch's stoic sonic base. She comes across like a sweeter and more religious Sinéad O'Connor, without the latter's pop sense. Montgomery almost seems the perfect mixture of O'Connor and the Cocteau Twins' Liz Fraser; equal parts inner strength and angelic levity. Indeed, it would be hard to overstate the otherworldly beauty of Montgomery's stunning, nearly transcendental vocal work here. It seems both Montgomery and Lynch found equal muses in each other, if only because their highly contrasting musical styles clash and weave together so magically over the course of the album. Completely accessible, and brimming with emotion and style, Lux Vivens is an absolute aural treat that both sounds wonderful as background music, and rewards intensely close listening. The title says it all, really: the duo's music is a kind of living light. Gorgeous.
Jocelyn.Montgomery.-.Lux.Vivens.mpc-q8.rar 
CD-Rip EAC mpc-q8 104mb
enjoy lo-rez