#alia seror o'neill
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On the Line
Radion yölinjalle soittaa sairas sekopää joka alkaa uhkailla vaarallisilla jutuilla. Mel Gibsonin pitää yrittää pelastaa tilanne suorassa lähetyksessä helvetillisessä paineessa. Vähemmästäkin harmaantuu.
Pienen budjetin jännäritrilleri. Omaa hyviä hetkiä mutta loppuratkaisu on leffahistorian älyttömin.
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Top 20: a.s.o. — a.s.o.
[PLEASE NOTE: there's some flashing stuff in this video! Might be bad, I'm not sure. Here's the Bandcamp if you'd rather not risk it.]
A quick reminder what this is; over the next few weeks I'm going to go over my favourite records of the year and a couple of other things. "2023 review" is the tag if you want to avoid it (or find it, I guess!) and both this list of albums and any other lists are in alphabetical order only.
This first entry is actually one of the later additions to my list; I'd never even heard of a.s.o.* until people and places starting posting their own year-end lists. I forget which one had a blurb on this record that made me look it up on Bandcamp, but I am sure it mentioned "trip hop." And while I was never the biggest enthusiast of the genre back in the day (loving Massive Attack and Portishead and that one Sneaker Pimps album everyone played at every party for a few years is still kind a surface-level engagement with it!), it is a kind of sound I'm fond of. So as soon as this record started up with some dusty-ass loops and some languid, melancholy singing I was hooting and/or hollering (see also Anthony Naples excellent-but-not-on-my-lists orbs, specifically this track; if that whole vibe is coming back, count me in).
But while the sound absolutely would make this a keeper for me, that alone wouldn't have gotten me to play it so much/gotten it a place here. It really is the songwriting, and the way the duo subtly branches out in places. Occasionally, as on "Love in the Darkness," it feels like they're merging trip hop with post-Blue Nile sophisti-pop and if you know me you can imagine how much that increases my hooting and/or hollering.
*AKA singer/songwriter Alia Seror-O'Neill, although given that the whole record is produced by Lewie Day and both of them wrote and record it together and they're both on the cover, maybe it's kind of a band name too?
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· a.s.o. · Alia Seror-O'Neill · Lewie Day
a.s.o.
℗ 2023 Low Lying Records
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Reviews 322: Aporia
I discovered the music of Aporia and Mitchell James O’Sullivan by way of Dub Disco, a beloved label who released Dub Disco Presents Aporia + Remixes back in 2018. One side of the 12” highlighted tracks from Aporia’s debut release Almost Tropical alongside an exclusive new track featuring Fazerdaze, while the other saw Dub Disco head Aussteiger and associated artists such as LITS801, Cosmic Palms, and S&W applying their balearic remix skills to to O’Sullivan’s tropically-tinged psych pop fantasies. The whole thing was a revelation and in the time since, both Almost Tropical and Dub Disco Presents Aporia + Remixes have worked themselves deep into my heart and now comprise some of my favorite music ever. So as you can imagine, there was considerable anticipation for an Aporia follow-up, which finally came during fall of 2019 in the form of Hotel Aporia, released by Cosmic Compositions and Fantasy Fiction Records. The LP sees O’Sullivan expanding the band’s line-up to include Nick Petricevic and Alia Seror-O'Neill, while also featuring a host of guest musicians providing additional guitar, synth, and woodwind treatments. And conceptually speaking, Hotel Aporia seeks to transport the listener to the titular hotel…an imagined beachfront resort existing in a sort of Lynch-ian dreamspace, one used by the band as a means to “navigate their South Pacific identities” and that is seemingly only accessible via exotic amalgams of library psychedelia, 50’s pop, Hollywood noir, sci-fi surf rock, and Hawaiian tropicalia.
Aporia - Hotel Aporia (Fantasy Fiction & Cosmic Compositions, 2019) After an introduction of mysterious orchestrations, operatic hazes, and chirping birds and insects, “Psychic Driving” sees a psychedelic surf beat riding alone before being joined by swinging bass thumps, tambourine jangles, piano chord splashes, horror film Moog leads, and spaceage theremin choirs. As the noir atmospherics recede, multi-tracked narcotica whispers flow above a sparse groove...as if O’Sullivan is scatting forbidden secrets while glowing synth hazes hover just out reach, with his voice sometimes backed by wordless feminine magic. During mesmeric choruses, cinematic strings and ghostly synth leads flow beneath Seror-O’Neil’s fantasy hooks and at some point, the whole thing gives over to a delirium jam out…like a trippy 60s happening taking place in the Red Room from Twin Peaks, with strobe lights flashing and enigmatic masked figures executing the batusi and the swim amidst melting layers of orchestral exotica. “South Seas Beijing” follows with seagulls and crashing waves surrounding liquid chord slides that recall nothing so much as “Breathe in the Air”. A lazed beat snaps amidst maraca rattles and chime strands as a Roger Waters style bassline drops, giving the whole thing the distinct feel of Pink Floyd scoring a South Pacific sunrise. And after an outro of moonlit wave motions, echoing loon modulations, and galactic synth flourishes from Lawree Goodwin, we flash into “Moon Taxi” and another solar surf rhythm glide. Seaside guitars glimmer in the sunlight and basslines sing beneath equatorial electronics as a vocal duet emerges, with O’Sullivan’s and Seror-O’Neil’s voices blurring together into heavy-lidded splendor. Cooing wordless refrains alternate with a fantasy chant of “the moon is watching” as flower power breakbeats are guided by bouncing bass guitar warmth, with lines occasionally sliding through lyrical romanticisms. There are moments where the mix reduces to an ambient blur, with aquamarine guitar vapors flowing through underwater vibrato fx, and towards the end, we flow into instrumental psych pop perfection as yearning voices suffuse the background…like sirens singing out from a hidden island paradise.
Amongst my favorite cuts here is “Helium,” which lets dense layers of fantasy synthesis guide a futuristic 50s pop epic. Slow motion drum beats glide beneath birdsong, with snares splattering through dub echoes. The classical ice cream chord progression rushes over the mix via lush pad orchestrations, angel choirs, and sparkling chimes while subsonic body grooves are generated by buzzing waves of analog warmth. Eventually, everything recedes save basslines, beats, and O’Sullivan’s and Seror-O'Neill’s vocal lullabies, which surround the heart with narcotizing threads of Roadhouse style synth-pop that strongly recall Angelo Badalamenti's and David Lynch's collaborations with Julee Cruise, as well as Chromatics. Gemstone piano mirages swim through the mix and during feverish choruses, the soul rushes towards a cinematic paradise aglow in tropical warmth. As the track progresses, multi-tracked string machines and droning polysynths subsume the singing…though hushed vocal incantations are still heard deep in the ether. Galactic lasers wiggle and cosmic tracers squiggle while fuzz guitars (or synths?) climb towards a molten summer sky, and during a moment of psychosonic mystery, the mix devolves into tremolo chordscapes and filtering trap kit rhythms, only to explode back into a stunning climax of “Heart and Soul” romance. A-side closer “Hawaiin Noir” continues exploring realms of 50s pop ethereality, though the vibe is pushed ever further towards South Pacific fantasy. Seed shakers keep a sparse rhythm while surf-stye guitars play doo wop progressions. A gorgeous voice calls out over the crashing waves with ecstatic abandon…like a goddess of the sunrise beckoning the spirit towards a paradise yet undiscovered…the effect so powerful as to literally take your breath away. Another guitar glides into the picture with soft motion solos, starshine electronics twinkle amidst a universal string synth hum, and nearing the end, everything fades into a mirage of meditative metal resonance, wherein Tibetan bowls sing over cricket chirps and crashing waves.
“Cloud Lodge” opens with insects and bongo rhythms surrounded by bubbling liquids. Bell trees flutter and stoner basslines pulse through ethereal shadows as O’Sullivan’s doped out lyricisms ride on sci-fi synths and spaghetti western guitars. New age melodies swim through the cosmos and further six-string accents melt into golden shimmer…all while dub chords delay towards the horizon. Next comes “Moog in Cairo” and its atmospheres of classical jazz meeting otherworldly exotica. There are touches of Omar Khorshid, Diminished Men, and Hosono’s, Suzuki’s, and Yamashita’s Pacific in the surfadelic guitar leads and as Fabien de Menou’s clarinets intertwine with mystical choral cloudforms, hand drums guide the body towards a hidden oasis. Twanging baritones decay towards a blood red sunset and child-like choirs sing songs of forbidden ecstasy amidst guiro scrapes and starshine chime descents....the whole thing like The Ventures tripping acid through a dramatic Hollywood rendering of an Arabian desert landscape. Rainforest percussions filter and pan over kick drums and ethereal gas clouds in “News from Nowhere” before we drop into the main groove, which sees basslines dancing and Peter Magnum’s sci-fi funk riffs crawling across the fretboard while drum machines sketch out robotic exotica patterns. Interstellar hazes blow across the spectrum, carrying with them outer-dimensional orchestrations that again evoke Arabian sunrises as well as the sensual dances of tango, and O’Sullivan’s double tracked vocalisms marry sonorous sensuality and falsetto radiance. Synthesizers gleam like diamonds and noir guitars melt down as ecstatic children sing in support of the increasingly desperate lyricisms…their voices only adding to the sense of haunted disorientation. Elsewhere, the mix reduces to hand drums and static oscillations while vibraphones sparkle like oceanic crystal. And at the end, wave sounds and prayer bowl drones return us to the fourth world environments of “Hawaiian Noir.”
In “Isles in Motion / Shipwreck Bay,” chime strands flow over seaside field recordings while vibraphones and islander hand drums establish a loose exotica groove. Synthetic harps are plucked, morphing fourth world crystals decay into the mix, electronic zithers execute zany runs across a virtual fretboard, and basslines thump through tropical jungle growth while tambourines shake out golden glitter. Eventually, the stereo field washes away as an abstracted voice lectures above the sounds of the sea, presumably signaling entrance into “Shipwreck Bay.” Guitars smear into paradise mesmerism, with touches of Hawaiian psychedelia intermingling with oceanic new age, and ambient angels sing through bodies of cosmic-aquatic light. And as rainbow colorations surround the body in amniotic warmth, tribal drum rolls flow forth from bubbling pools of neon. Helicopter oscillations and mirage guitar shimmer introduce the climactic drum beats of “Secret Fields”…a sort of slow pounding ritualism accented by e-piano chordscapes. Rolling tom fills introduce dirgey basslines while synthesizers howl into the night, bringing touches of progressive rock, only as if slowed to the speed of heroin mesmerism. Vocals flow through lush vocoder fx and evoke a sort of balearic leaning Black Sabbath, though that band’s funereal doom energies are here subverted by Callum Fairely’s dreamscape guitar ascents and these ethereal orchestrations that radiate hues of a Hollywood sunset. Shakers and ride cymbals splash through tide pools while e-pianos sparkle and during a moment where the rhythms fade away, aqueous dolphin songs and mermaid pan-pipe melodies swim across the sky. As the drums return, they stomp unencumbered, although barely-there guitars trace out haunting themes of paradise majesty. Then, after returning to the Sabbath-ian psych rock dirge, the vocals eventually fade away, leaving space for increasingly hallucinogenic tapestries of synthesized symphonic wonderment.
(images from my personal copy)
#aporia#mitchell james o'sullivan#nick petricevic#alia seror o'neill#cosmic compositions#prison tapes#fantasy fiction#berlin#new zealand#dub disco#aussteiger#balearic#exotica#lounge#library music#psychedelia#psych pop#heart and soul#50s pop#noir#hollywood#south pacific#hawaiian#pop#hotel aporia#album reviews#vinyl reviews#music reviews#vinyl#2019
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Gods of Egypt (2016) HD SCREENCAPS Gallery Here: [X] size: 1281x534 3462 caps
#gods of egypt#Brenton Thwaites#John Samaha#Courtney Eaton#Nikolaj Coster-Waldau#Alia Seror-O'Neill#Emily Wheaton#Elodie Yung#Rachael Blake#Bryan Brown#Michael-Anthony Taylor#Emma Booth#Felix Williamson#Chadwick Boseman#Gerard Butler#capped by vapor
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#Élodie Yung#Gods of Egypt#Summit Entertainment#Nikolaj Coster-Waldau#Film#Movie#Alia Seror-O'Neill#Emily Wheaton
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The Complete Detail Of Gods of Egypt Name Gods of Egypt Storyline Mortal hero Bek teams with the god Horus in an alliance against Set, the merciless god of darkness, who has usurped Egypt's throne, plunging the once peaceful and prosperous empire into chaos and conflict. Detail Of Gods of Egypt Director Alex Proyas Writer
Matt Sazama
Burk Sharpless
Produced by
Brian Bookman -- associate producer
Topher Dow -- executive producer
Basil Iwanyk -- producer
Stephen Jones -- executive producer
Kent Kubena -- executive producer
Qiuyun Long -- executive producer
Alex Proyas -- producer
Yang Rong -- associate co-producer
Bo Shen -- associate co-producer
Stars & Cast
Brenton Thwaites -- Bek
John Samaha -- Vendor
Courtney Eaton -- Zaya
Nikolaj Coster-Waldau -- Horus
Paula Arundell -- Fussy Older Maidservant
Alia Seror-O'Neill -- First Young Maidservant
Emily Wheaton -- Second Younger Maidservant
Elodie Yung -- Hathor
Rachael Blake -- Isis
Music by Marco Beltrami Genres Action | Adventure | Fantasy Country USA | Australia Language English Release Date
Philippines -- 24 February 2016
USA -- 24 February 2016 (New York City, New York) (premiere)
Albania -- 25 February 2016
Argentina -- 25 February 2016
Australia -- 25 February 2016
Brazil -- 25 February 2016
Chile -- 25 February 2016
Filming Locations
Fox Studios
Moore Park
Sydney
New South Wales
Australia
Certificate Rated PG-13 for fantasy violence and action, and some sexuality Box Office Of Gods of Egypt Budget $140,000,000 (estimated) Opening Weekend $14,123,903 (USA) (28 February 2016) (3,117 Screens) Gross
$31,153,464 (USA) (11 June 2016)
$31,141,074 (USA) (8 May 2016)
$31,089,811 (USA) (1 May 2016)
$30,998,712 (USA) (24 April 2016)
$30,883,112 (USA) (17 April 2016)
$30,699,324 (USA) (10 April 2016)
$30,493,373 (USA) (3 April 2016)
Technical Specs Of Gods of Egypt Runtime 126 min Sound Mix Dolby Digital Company Credits Of Gods of Egypt Production Company
Pyramania
Summit Entertainment
Mystery Clock Cinema
TIK Films
Thunder Road Pictures
This Movie Detail Written By www.Moviemorning.com
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The Complete Detail Of Gods of Egypt Name Gods of Egypt Storyline Mortal hero Bek teams with the god Horus in an alliance against Set, the merciless god of darkness, who has usurped Egypt's throne, plunging the once peaceful and prosperous empire into chaos and conflict. Detail Of Gods of Egypt Director Alex Proyas Writer
Matt Sazama
Burk Sharpless
Produced by
Brian Bookman -- associate producer
Topher Dow -- executive producer
Basil Iwanyk -- producer
Stephen Jones -- executive producer
Kent Kubena -- executive producer
Qiuyun Long -- executive producer
Alex Proyas -- producer
Yang Rong -- associate co-producer
Bo Shen -- associate co-producer
Stars & Cast
Brenton Thwaites -- Bek
John Samaha -- Vendor
Courtney Eaton -- Zaya
Nikolaj Coster-Waldau -- Horus
Paula Arundell -- Fussy Older Maidservant
Alia Seror-O'Neill -- First Young Maidservant
Emily Wheaton -- Second Younger Maidservant
Elodie Yung -- Hathor
Rachael Blake -- Isis
Music by Marco Beltrami Genres Action | Adventure | Fantasy Country USA | Australia Language English Release Date
Philippines -- 24 February 2016
USA -- 24 February 2016 (New York City, New York) (premiere)
Albania -- 25 February 2016
Argentina -- 25 February 2016
Australia -- 25 February 2016
Brazil -- 25 February 2016
Chile -- 25 February 2016
Filming Locations
Fox Studios
Moore Park
Sydney
New South Wales
Australia
Certificate Rated PG-13 for fantasy violence and action, and some sexuality Box Office Of Gods of Egypt Budget $140,000,000 (estimated) Opening Weekend $14,123,903 (USA) (28 February 2016) (3,117 Screens) Gross
$31,153,464 (USA) (11 June 2016)
$31,141,074 (USA) (8 May 2016)
$31,089,811 (USA) (1 May 2016)
$30,998,712 (USA) (24 April 2016)
$30,883,112 (USA) (17 April 2016)
$30,699,324 (USA) (10 April 2016)
$30,493,373 (USA) (3 April 2016)
Technical Specs Of Gods of Egypt Runtime 126 min Sound Mix Dolby Digital Company Credits Of Gods of Egypt Production Company
Pyramania
Summit Entertainment
Mystery Clock Cinema
TIK Films
Thunder Road Pictures
This Movie Detail Written By www.Moviemorning.com
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