#mimi goese
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I don't want to swim the ocean I don't want to fight the tide I don't want to swim forever When it's cold I'd like to die
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mitjalovse · 1 year ago
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Moby's early records showed us an unsure musician. Still, Everything Is Wrong presented his consequent path, when he could make this work to his benefit. You see, the latter album puts his eclectic strand up front, he tries to be EVERYTHING. I mean, Moby is probably one of those electronic musicians that would like to play in another style, yet he still remains within this one, since he realizes can take the elements of something else into his machine instruments and then tweak these parts into what he wishes to be at some moments. For instance, the tune on the link could be a great pop gem from the 90's with just a few changes. A random digression during my listening of this tune – why didn't Moby try to be a producer?
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dialoogid · 3 months ago
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Hugo Largo
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spilladabalia · 4 months ago
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Hugo Largo - Grow Wild
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fletcherwilbury · 8 months ago
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@whumpuary Day 21: Memories
Warning for Canon-typical violence, physical abuse, verbal abuse, mental abuse, bullying, favoritism
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mywifeleftme · 1 year ago
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131: Hugo Largo // Mettle
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Mettle Hugo Largo 1989. Opal
Two basses, one violin, one vocal mic, and no chance. At least that’d be the usual fate of a band with Hugo Largo’s lineup, but thanks to co-signs from Michael Stipe and Brian Eno, the NYC-based dream/chamber combo enjoyed mainstream distribution and a small but persistent following among art therapists and death doulas. Both their debut EP Drum and full-length Mettle are rapturous from a production standpoint, as you’d expect from a group composed of experimental music veterans (past credits including Swans, Glenn Branca Ensemble) and a gifted recording engineer. The twin bass lineup gives their sound a foundation of warm, sensuous goo you can feel in your chest, while violinist Hahn Rowe and vocalist Mimi Goese knit their keening weave above.
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Goese writes lyrics like a young Stipe (intuitive, allusive, occasionally precious), but sings more like Elizabeth Fraser, Kate Bush, even Bjork. People have used adjectives like “swanning” to describe her way of operatically ambling around a melody, but by and large it works. Hugo Largo convey the feeling of looking at a landscape in a black mirror, only for a liquid ripple to move over its surface. More to the point, they make the kind of music that compels abstract metaphors, a good tonic when you’re in that sort of mood.
131/365
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chasedbybuildings · 2 years ago
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Of and out of hand, boy...
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yourbleedingh3art · 1 year ago
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cchickki · 1 year ago
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Band of Brothers Week 2023 - Day 5: Angst (Playlist)
He Was a Good Friend - Francis and the Lights Parapluie - Michael Kamen Fare Thee Well (Dink's Song) - Oscar Isaac, Marcus Mumford The End of Childhood - Dario Marianelli, Jack Liebeck, Benjamin Wallfisch When It's Cold I'd Like to Die - Moby, Mimi Goese Airplanes - Local Natives Curl up & Die - Matt Maltese Breathe Me - Sia On the Nature of Daylight - Max Richter, Louisa Fuller, Natalia Bonner, John Metcalife, Philip Sheppard, Chris Worsey You Don't Know How Lucky You Are - Keaton Henson Foreground - Grizzley Bear How It Ends - DeVotchKa A Burning Hill - Mitski Exit Music (For A Film) - Radiohead Fade Into You - Mazzy Star Become the Warm Jets - Current Joys Headscarf - Michael Kamen Holocene - Bon Iver Sinking Man - Of Monsters and Men No Face - Haley Heynderickx Horizon - Garth Stevenson
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riptozier · 1 year ago
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when it's cold i'd like to die ; moby && mimi goese MUTUALS ONLY CAN REBLOG !
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othcrside · 1 year ago
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𝐍𝐀𝐃𝐈𝐍𝐄 + 𝐂𝐎𝐋𝐒𝐎𝐍'𝐒 𝐌𝐈𝐗𝐓𝐀𝐏𝐄 now playing...
roslyn. bon iver + st. vincent. in the woods somewhere. hozier. la belle fleur sauvage. lord huron. let the light in. lana del rey + father john misty. pictures of you. the cure. northern downpour. panic! at the disco. sidelines. phoebe bridgers. when it's cold i'd like to die. moby + mimi goese. second chances. gregory alan isakov. blood bank. bon iver. chemtrails over the country club. lana del rey. evermore. taylor swift + bon iver. milk & honey #1. arcade fire + owen pallett. dead of night. orville peck. cannibal holocaust (main theme). riz ortolani. cosmic love. florence + the machine. as the world caves in. sarah cothran. if we were vampires. jason isbell and the 400 unit. your face. wisp. the new year. death cab for cutie.
( @tea-rcses )
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tvugly · 2 years ago
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ask game!! i was tagged by @leonardcohenofficial :3c thank u maddie!!
relationship status: in love
favorite color: orange <3333
song stuck in my head: when it’s cold i’d like to die - mimi goese probably bc the weather here was beautiful one day and now it’s gloomy again 🙄
last song i listened to: top of the world -the chicks idk this one gets me every time...
three favorite foods: peaches, okroshka, and salmon of any variety...
last thing i googled: egyptian spiny mouse.. i think they’re cute
dream trip: honestly i just wanna be on a beach rn anywhere...
anything i want right now: lmaoooo to have a bunch of vacation hours accrued so i can go on trips with my friends
i’m gonna tag @freddy-kruegerr @sheetz @alter-koker @bluhahae and anyone else who feels like doing this :3
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massiveladycat · 1 month ago
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When you get this, list seven of your favourite music singers/bands and send it to ten of your moots as anon
sorry for the late response, i was outside!! gosh this is hard 1. When It's Cold I'd Like To Die by Moby, Mimi Goese 2. Justice for Tulsa orrrr Tulsa '67 by The Outsiders Musical 3. U (English Version) by Milan U 4. Honeybee by Head and The Heart 5. Die With A Smile by Lady Gaga, Bruno Mars 6. A Girl Like Me by flowerovlove 7. Suzume by RADWIMPS, Toaka
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dankusner · 4 months ago
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FANCY — by Ray Davies (not Hugo Largo nor Mimi Gooese [sp?])
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“Hugo Largo remains one of the freshest and most contemporary groups of our time. These songs are sweet lullabies for a troubled world.” — Michael Stipe
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"Forty years after their formation, no music sounds quite like Hugo Largo. Their hushed, majestic atmosphere — which veers toward ambient dream-pop but emerged from the noisy No Wave scene of 1980s New York — is the result of open-ended exploration and pure vision, an embrace of mystery and a refusal to compromise.
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Even the basic components of the band — two bassists (Tim Sommer and Adam Peacock), a violinist (Hahn Rowe), and a one-of-a-kind powerhouse vocalist (Mimi Goese) — set them apart from any peers or contemporaries.
With Huge, Large and Electric: Hugo Largo 1984-1991, a new box set via Missing Piece Records, their entire catalog, as well as unreleased and live recordings are finally
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To celebrate the 40th anniversary of their formation, Hugo Largo will release Huge, Large and Electric, a three LP set featuring all of the band’s studio output (1988’s Drum and 1989’s Mettle) including a full album of previously unreleased and live recordings (Hugo Largo Unreleased and Live 1984-1991).
These albums are long out of print, and will be released on streaming services for the very first time.
The set includes essays from Michael Stipe, who produced the band’s debut release Drum, along with Brian Eno and Hugo Largo member Tim Sommer.
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an appreciation of Hugo Largo ‘the great lost band of post punk…’ 21 March 2017
an appreciation of Hugo Largo ‘the great lost band of post punk…’
hugolargo_1[1]Hugo Largo: A Silent Scream
A cold autumn evening: October 1988.
Glasgow Barrowland provides a familiar refuge from the wind and rain.
A sizeable crowd has gathered to see That Petrol Emotion.
The bar is busy, the atmosphere cheerful.
As the support act take to the stage, there is minimal migration to the front.
The musicians take up their positions, and at first glance something is not quite right.
First of all, the band doesn’t appear to have a drummer.
Even more worryingly, on closer inspection, much to the chagrin of the tousled assemblage of noiseniks increasingly impatient to get their rocks off, there’s no guitar.
Suddenly, two bass guitars map out a crisscrossing rhythm one on top of the other, then an electric violin fills the expanse of the venue as exquisitely as if it were painting frescos on the walls of a yawning cave.
There’s something strange about the singer too.
She smiles.
Then she begins to sing.
Her voice is piercing.
Elastic.
Ecstatic.
Then, rather disturbingly, she drags a steak knife across her neck.
Few in the audience take any notice.
Conversations continue over the music.
Some bodies trudge away disconsolately looking for the bar.
Furrowed brows are everywhere in evidence.
But, randomly dotted around the ballroom, there is the odd silent soul, rooted to the spot.
Transfixed.
For those rapt few, it was as if the people on the stage had dropped out of the sky from another planet.
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“I thought we were the greatest fucking band in the world”, says Tim Sommer, founder of Hugo Largo, the remarkable 1980s NYC four piece.
For those fortunate – or old – enough to have been around at the time, Hugo Largo were precisely that:
incontrovertibly unique, out on a limb.
As evidenced by that Barrowland performance, not everyone felt the same, but for those enraptured by their gently ravishing mysteries, they became something of an obsession.
There was no-one remotely like them.
Hugo Largo made only two records, both of which have been long unavailable.
It is now thirty years since the first, Drum, was released, but there exists renewed optimism that the pair might be reissued later this year.
The band’s line up of two bass guitars (Sommer and Adam Peacock), electric violin (Hahn Rowe) and singer (Mimi Goese) raised eyebrows at the time.
Unsurprisingly so, for they had set out to be different and had been refining their unorthodox approach to making music for some considerable time before 1987.
A dyed in the wool music freak, Sommer was a former punk fanzine writer, a highly regarded journalist for NY’s Trouser Press and for a period in the early ’80s, Sounds’ New York correspondent.
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He was also a veteran of the NY hardcore scene, having worked with Thurston Moore, Swans and the Glenn Branca Ensemble.
His philosophy paralleled Howard Devoto‘s, whose characteristically sardonic remark that he had formulated “the revolutionary idea that one could play slow songs”, was similarly instructive.
For Sommer, during one of the most fertile eras of rambunctious guitar noise, believed that ‘quiet’ could be punk, or more precisely, that ‘punk’ could be quiet.
There’s little doubt that working for Trouser Press and Sounds helped shape Sommer’s musical sensibilities – he always expressed a preference for the UK post-punk sounds of PiL and more particularly Young Marble Giants, who would become a crucial influence on Hugo Largo‘s sound. “
I saw them in the fall of 1980 – they announced onstage it would be their last ever show – and that changed everything for me.
They didn’t jump around, they were quiet, joyful, but soooo punk rock to me.
I thought:
I see the future now.”
For Tim it seems, punk was more to do with attitude and inventiveness than simply fiddling around with the volume level.
“In 1982 I first had the idea of a quiet noise band.
Occasionally, in the NY noise scene, some bands were playing beautiful stuff, but none were quiet, none were experimenting with low volume. I wanted to keep it quiet and contained, mixing the energy of Stiff Little Fingers with the minimalism of PiL and Young Marble Giants. Rock & roll had always been: block one – guitar; block two – bass; block three – drums; block four – vocals. It was the way The Beatles did it, The Velvet Underground, Led Zeppelin, Sex Pistols – that’s what you call rock’n’roll right?”
Sommer was aware of his own limitations as a musician, admitting:
“I wasn’t a very good guitar player. I was an OK bass player. So I felt I could make these basses work in an ensemble way, playing off one another – it seemed natural to me.
There was an English band I’d seen in NYC (Delta 5) who had two basses but didn’t really use them in that ensemble way.
Then there was one song by The Cure (‘Primary’) which was all bass – that was really interesting.”
“I had an apartment on Thomson St. in Greenwich Village. I’d play one bass line into a boom box and then play it back and play along with it. I wrote four or five songs that way.
I played some of the songs to my then girlfriend [Lucy Sexton] who had a big loft apartment in the West Village in Manhattan. She and her roommates would dance around and recite things.”
The flatmates gave Sommer the confidence he needed.
“[They] thought this was something we could do. I think it was Lucy – although it could have been Mimi – who came up with the name.
She used the phrase to describe those giant sweaters in thrift stores: Hugo Largo sweaters!”
It wasn’t long before Anne and Lucy decided they wanted to do their own thing, but Mimi stayed on.
Fellow bassist Greg Letson, whom Tim had known from the Glenn Branca Ensemble was there at the inception, and it wasn’t too long before they were performing live.
Tim recalls: “We got our first gig at Maxwells in April ’84. We put together a few songs and we played. People loved it. We instantly began getting more gigs.”
However, they weren’t always made to feel welcome.
“In the mid-80s if you showed up at a club without drums, they assumed you were playing folk music! We would have to explain: ‘No, this is an alternative rock band!’
They were soon joined by Hahn Rowe, another GBE veteran, who began engineering their live sound (“like Brian Eno had done during the early Roxy Music shows” says Hahn).
“Two bass and vocals is pretty complicated for the average soundman – most of them fuck it up” says Tim, “so Hahn started being our soundman, and then playing a little violin. He did that until mid-1986, when he finally came on stage with us.” Before then, in January 1985 Letson, without warning, suddenly quit.
“I was sitting around at home in Hoboken and he called me.”
The message was abrupt: ‘I don’t want to do this anymore.’
“Mimi invited me over and suggested Adam Peacock – her then boyfriend – could fill in. He’d been to all the shows and knew how to play bass.
We rehearsed once, and then played a gig opening for Billy Bragg at Danceteria, which went really well.
Adam was a much better fit than Greg.
Greg was technically a better musician than any of us, but he didn’t add anything creatively.
Once Adam came into the band, he and I started writing together.
Until then it had just been Mimi and I.”
Peacock was self-taught and had no problem stepping in.
“I had a brief gig with Cool It Reba within a week of moving to NY, finding myself on stage at CBGB’s on a Saturday night and then touring up and down the East Coast on the back of their debut LP, on one occasion even opening for REM.”
Musically, there was a meeting of minds right away.
“On so many levels we didn’t get on” adds Tim, “but we never disagreed about music. It was an incredibly harmonious musical environment.
We would hand Mimi pure instrumental tracks and she would come up with a melody and lyrics over them.
She never changed anything we did and we never changed anything she did.”
Peacock remembers how he and Sommer collaborated together.
“We would get together in my bedroom with our little amps and just play – sometimes one of us starting something off with a little fragment of something.”
The bass parts were like “left and right hands of the piano, one of us acting sort of as a metronome, one of us taking a melody or progression on top.
That subsequently branched into pieces written specifically for guitar and bass – the Mettle LP being quite full of that.”
Tim recalls making a demo in late ’85/early ’86.
“I gave a copy to Michael Stipe who was a friend of mine. I wasn’t expecting a response. He liked it and said ‘let’s go down to Athens and make a record’, so in June ’86 we went down to Athens for two days and made the Drum EP with Michael and John Keane.
It was really magical. I can’t think of a single negative energy or memory associated with that period.
There was a big local NY indie label – Relativity – who offered to put it out.
They were very excited and supportive.
By early ’87, we were playing live a lot around New York and once the EP came out we started flying.
We went on a long tour of the States with The Feelies, then a couple of our own tours, but at the same time we started having the personal problems that led to us breaking up so prematurely. But musically, it was amazing.”
Drum showcases both Goese’s unshackled vocal performances, best exemplified on ‘Scream Tall’, ‘Harpers’ and ‘My Favourite People’, alongside the jaw-clenching tension of ‘Grow Wild’ and the subtly menacing urgency of the startling ‘Second Skin’.
A beautifully unsettling hysteria pervades the record.
Theres a wizard cover of The Kinks‘ ‘Fancy’ and Stipe himself makes a number of interventions, most remarkably on the gorgeous ‘Eureka’.
Drum was released in two formats, initially as a seven track EP, then later extended to a nine track album.
While reviews were generally positive, the band were not the type to be easily pigeonholed, meaning that outside of New York, media coverage was slender, and musical comparisons often predictably lazy.
“From the beginning, Tim always posited that Hugo Largo was a punk band”, recalls Hahn.
“Of course, that was an outrageous notion, but Tim was very savvy about labels and how the band would be portrayed in the music press.”
Naturally so, after all he had started out as a music journalist, but frustratingly for Sommer “The Cocteau Twins were the only band that we were compared with.
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I always felt we had more in common with The Durutti Column, whom we played with both in London and New York.”
In the U.K. at least, the band were often compared to AR Kane, another band who, for the time being at least, had the British music press tripping over themselves in a rush to invent new genres upon which they could shower their loquacious approval.
‘Oceanic rock’, ‘dreampop’ – in many ways both slightly unsatisfactory labels – had their roots here.
In the meantime, live shows were leaving audiences spellbound.
Mimi is unequivocal in her conviction that the superior HL experience was the live performance.
“I think it’s hard to capture the feeling of two basses recorded. I’m glad for the recordings but the live show had the palpable power.”
Tim recalls:
“I’ve always had the attitude that whether we played to 20 or 200, I always knew that there would be a percentage of the audience that would be blown away – like ‘What the fuck is this? I fucking love this!’ – and that gives you a lot of confidence.
Mimi came up with things that were just out of this world.
I never asked her what anything meant.
She loved the sound of words, the tone and shape of words: the meaning wasn’t that important.
She taught me that music that didn’t have descriptive or intelligible lyrics could still achieve an extraordinary emotional power.”
“I trained as a dancer not a singer”, explains Mimi.
“I think that informed my gymnastic vocal style. In fact, I didn’t know how to read music so I would draw a graph of the vocal melodic line to remember it.
Because I wasn’t trained, I didn’t have a lot of rules in place.
My main rule for writing lyrics was to stay descriptive and no love songs.”
The band were making waves and some illustrious names were beginning to take note, amongst them David Byrne and Brian Eno, who duly signed them to his Opal Records label – which had a distribution deal with Warner Bros – in ’88.
From the outside the future may have looked rosy, but the resultant album was the last long player they would release.
Long before the rippling subaquatic expanse of sound that was Mettle had hit the shop shelves in early ’89, relationships within the band had begun to disintegrate.
As Tim explains:
“By late ’88, it was clear we couldn’t really coexist as personalities in the group.
I was difficult.
Mimi was difficult.
In different ways.
We were very strong personalities.
Mimi was a deeply brilliant artist but very modest, very polite, whereas I was positive we were the greatest band in the world.
Mimi would never have said anything like that.
More likely she would have seen Hugo Largo as one expression of the many different types of art she was making.
Adam and Hahn were somewhere in between.
Despite that, we never stopped being creative when we worked together – from the first day to the last.
When we kept getting better offers through ’88, that was alien to Mimi.
She did not at that point have the same cognisance of the music business as I did.
She had modest expectations and I had enormous ones.”
Meanwhile, Peacock points to the lack of objective advice from the band’s management and notes:
“When things really started happening – a residential recording studio, our big Warners contract, European tours – it was all happening so fast that we kind of got swept along without managing to touch base with each other.”
The band’s last recording was the Christmas song ‘Gloria’ (aka ‘Angels We Have Heard On High’).
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“By then we had a more vibey sound as opposed to the more choppy metronomic sound that was on Drum“, explains Sommer.
Before long, Hugo Largo was no more.
Six months or so afterwards, the band, minus Tim, regrouped, but it wasn’t the same.
“Even when I was being a dysfunctional person, I still understood what that band was about. I wasn’t surprised or upset about it, because I have so much respect for the talent of Mimi, Adam and Hahn, but neither was I surprised that it didn’t work.”
Looking back now, how does Sommer reflect upon the band’s recorded output?
“Drum feels much more taut – but it’s a collection of songs. Mettle felt more like a sound – a whole sound. If people ask about our music, I play them ‘Country’ or ‘Eskimo Song’ from Drum or ‘Martha’ and ‘Halfway Knowing’ from the second record.
I was involved in the composition of every song on the first record, but in the second there is a whole lot I had nothing to do with.
Despite that, I prefer Mettle.”
For Peacock it is Drum which represents the band’s sound at its most powerful.
“Drum is still very much from our basement phase – all spare and minimal – whereas Mettle has us following our spirits into (for me) slightly self-indulgent anything-goes experimentation.
Drum is pure, whilst Mettle is us after we’d been given carte blanche and a huge amount of money to record the record we were basically playing live – and that’s perhaps it’s failing.”
As so often happens in rock history, Hugo Largo‘s implosion appeared to come at the height of their popularity and the peak of their creative powers, but they had made a lasting impression.
For Hahn, “the fact that our music was diametrically opposed to the noisy and raw aesthetic of the NY noise scene was sometimes taken as a type of sly defiance of the norm.
Personally, I thought we never really fit into any one arena. We were misfits and that became part of the appeal of group in my estimation.”
If for some Hugo Largo was a visionary concept, Goese would argue that providence played its part.
“To say it was a fully formed concept negates the influence of NYC’s underbelly community, the atmosphere of the time, luck, chance, magic and the input from people involved. It’s important to acknowledge the confluence of factors and the unknown. It evolved organically. For how little music we recorded, it’s shocking we are remembered at all.”
When Sommer talks about Hugo Largo his passion remains unambiguous.
“I don’t know why I was so sure that a band could work without drums, but from day one it seemed they weren’t necessary, and – without sounding like too much of a dick – I take 100% credit for being the architect of the idea.
I’m not the person who made it work, I’m not the person who realised the idea – that was very much the work of Hahn and Adam and Mimi and myself.
I didn’t make another record til 2005. I know why that is.
When I hear music in my head the vocabulary is Hugo Largo’s vocabulary.
I’m still thinking in Hugo Largo colours.
I’m using different musicians and performers, but those are still the colours I think in.
Who else would you want to work with but Mimi and Adam and Hahn? They were the best.”
A new generation of Huguenots await the discovery of one of the ’80s best kept secrets, who sound as remarkably fresh today as they ever did. Go on, enter the silence…
[With thanks to Tim, Adam, Mimi and Hahn, each of whom is still making music, although sadly not with one another. Tim’s career has come full circle and he is music columnist for the New York Observer]
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maisybr · 4 months ago
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American singer Mimi Goese album ‘soak’ 1998
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rumoredr3birth · 2 years ago
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Songz
Just wanted to post some of my fav lyrics/verses that get my creative brain juices goin :P Mostly sad stuff lol and some religious trauma.😗😗
No TW’s that I can think of lmk if I should add any
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bleh songs below the cut XP
When it’s cold I’d like to die - Moby, Mimi Goese
“I don't wanna swim the ocean
I don't wanna fight the tide
I don't wanna swim forever”
I’m Tired (With Zendaya) Bonus Track - Labrinth, Zendaya
“I’m sure this world is done with me
Hey lord, you know its true”
“I’ll be one my way
How long can I stay?
in a place that cant contain me
Hey, Lord, you know I'm tired”
My Body Is a Cage - Arcade Fire
“My body is a cage
that keeps me from dancing
with the one I love
but my mind holds the key”
“Just because you've forgotten 
doesn't mean you're forgiven”
True Romance - She Wants Revenge
“Open your heart and feel me
tell you don't feel the same”
The Perfect Fit - The Dresden Dolls
“I can’t change my name
But I can be your type”
“I used to be the smart one
Sharp as a tack
Funny how that skipping years ahead
Has held me back”
Hearts A Mess - Gotye
“pick apart
The pieces of your heart
Let me peer inside
Where only your thoughts have been
Let me occupy your mind
Like you do mine”
“ Your heart's a mess
You won't admit to it
It makes no sense
But I'm desperate to connect
And you, you can't live like this”
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