
Dienstag, November 30, 2010
neue töne (891): le futur pompiste

Montag, November 29, 2010
konzert: on3 festival 2010, 27.11.10, teil 2





setlist: foxes mate for live / barnacle goose / sole brother / retard canard / the ballad of moose bruce / hummingbird / what to say / nova-leigh / kurt vonnegut




nach dieser dröhnung war es kein leichtes, die räume des bayerischen rundfunks wieder in die kühle nacht zu verlassen. aber das on3 festival hatte sein ende gefunden. ein durchweg positives fazit ist zu ziehen. die erlebten konzert in aller kürze:
those dancing days ***
telekinesis ***1/2
born ruffians ****-****1/2
crystal fighters ***1/2
schließlich sei noch auf die seite von on3 verwiesen, auf denen es neben fotos und berichten sicher auch wieder einige mp3 verwertbare ausschnitte der konzerte geben wird. tausend dank an die organisatoren von unserer seite, bis nächstes jahr!
telekinesis ***1/2
born ruffians ****-****1/2
crystal fighters ***1/2
schließlich sei noch auf die seite von on3 verwiesen, auf denen es neben fotos und berichten sicher auch wieder einige mp3 verwertbare ausschnitte der konzerte geben wird. tausend dank an die organisatoren von unserer seite, bis nächstes jahr!
Sonntag, November 28, 2010
konzert: on3 festival 2010, 27.11.10, teil 1






so weit fürs erste. der zweite teil des festivalberichts wird sich mit den kanadiern von born ruffians, den verschlossenen türen zu console sowie dem abenteuerlichen auftritt der crystal fighters aus london beschäftigen. also, dranbleiben, morgen früh gehts hier weiter!
telekinesis - coast of carolina (live @ on3-festival 2010)
neue töne (890): eux autres
eux autres - queen turner
Samstag, November 27, 2010
eingestreut (194): rare grooves

eingestreut (193): malcolm middelton
CD1 (Long, Dark Night):
Cheer Down – Total Belief – Break My Heart – Week Off – Red Travellin’ Socks – Fuck It, I Love You – A Brighter Beat – Burst Noel – We’re All Going To Die – Blue Plastic Bags – Box & Knife – Up Late At Night Again – Four Cigarettes – Moments – No Modest Bear – Love Comes In Waves – Devil & The Angel
CD2 (Live In Zurich!):
Crappo The Clown – Choir – Love Comes In Waves – Subset Of The World – One More Song – Zero – Autumn – Stay Close Sit Tight – Box & Knife – Blue Plastic Bags – A Brighter Beat – Don’t Want To Sleep Tonight
malcolm middleton - we're all going to die (acoustic home recording)
malcolm middleton - a brighter beat (original acoustic demo)
Freitag, November 26, 2010
glotzt nicht so romantisch (129): pj harvey

Let England Shake
You might know this one from Polly’s performance on The Andrew Marr Show earlier this year, which you can watch below. Now though, the Four Lads ‘Istanbul (Not Constantinople)’ sample has been scrapped (“It actually became something that was drawing the song back rather than letting it become its own living entity, so we got rid of that in the end,” Polly explained), and what sounds like a hollow music box salvaged from a decrepit carousel mimics that song’s melody instead. It’s still played on autoharp, the chord progressions of which are so subtle that it almost becomes drone-like, Mick Harvey gracefully splashes the cymbals on every autoharp downstroke, and a wind section adds long, off-key chords for gravitas. Most striking of all though is PJ’s voice – high, brutally direct and confessional in places on ‘White Chalk’, here it’s layered and spritely, flirting with her regional accent on certain lines. It sounds like she’s having fun with it…
You might know this one from Polly’s performance on The Andrew Marr Show earlier this year, which you can watch below. Now though, the Four Lads ‘Istanbul (Not Constantinople)’ sample has been scrapped (“It actually became something that was drawing the song back rather than letting it become its own living entity, so we got rid of that in the end,” Polly explained), and what sounds like a hollow music box salvaged from a decrepit carousel mimics that song’s melody instead. It’s still played on autoharp, the chord progressions of which are so subtle that it almost becomes drone-like, Mick Harvey gracefully splashes the cymbals on every autoharp downstroke, and a wind section adds long, off-key chords for gravitas. Most striking of all though is PJ’s voice – high, brutally direct and confessional in places on ‘White Chalk’, here it’s layered and spritely, flirting with her regional accent on certain lines. It sounds like she’s having fun with it…
The Last Living Rose
There’s a pretty good quality video of PJ playing this at last year’s Camp Bestival. The recorded version is much the same in terms of voice and guitar, but with added spindly percussion and plaintive, sparingly used horns. There’s real emphasis at the end of this line - “past the Thames river glistening, like gold, hastily sold, for nothing, NOTH-II-IING!” – which seems much more of a direct political statement than we’re used to from Polly.
The Glorious Land
"This album’s not solely about war, it’s about very many different things – it’s the world we live in, and part of that is war,” PJ said in our interview. This song more than any other present seems directly related to the act of battle itself. There’s a shaky but liturgical rhythm to the drums which open the minute-long introduction, uneasy single bass notes, and then a bugle, which rears its ‘Reveille’ throughout the song, the lyrics of which make up a series of call and responses. All the lines are repeated twice, then answered twice: “How is our glorious country ploughed, not by iron ploughs,” is met with “our lands are ploughed by tanks and feet, fee-eet maa-arrching”. With more lines, her voice grows ever higher, the chorus sees her playing with intonation again – “oh, America” is sometimes “oh, A-me-ri-CAH”, followed by a rattling childlike chorus of “oh Eng-err-laa-aand”. The only line that remains unanswered is, “how is our glorious land bestowed?” her voice borderline hysterical, but still restrained.
The Words That Maketh Murder
“I’ve seen and done things I want to forget,” Polly sings, whilst a detuned autoharp echoes limitlessly. “I’ve seen soldiers fall like lumps of me-ee-eat.” Right, so here she’s definitely in character mode as she explained in the magazine, her voice a shellshocked but theatrically coy rattle. The lyrics are a harrowing portrait of war – nothing you couldn’t garner from the television or newspaper, but images of dismembered limbs and “a corporal whose nerves were shot” hang oppressively before she and collaborator John Parish question, “What if I take my problem to the United Nations?” come the end. All you critics who quarrelled with her move into narrative lyrics come the release of ‘To Bring You My Love’ – gird your loins.
All And Everyone
At first, this feels a lot lighter, with open, ringing autotune chords. There’s a certain air of resignation, as amplified by an organ, meek as though played by an old lady in the parish vestry. After about forty seconds though, it all tails off and weighted, dissonant autoharp clanks underneath, making chords out of different detunings. Again, we’re on the battlefield – and “death was everywhere, and everyone” - but mentions of beaches and sea along with the richly drab horns give it more of an old-timey D-Day feel than any modern war. The clanking, detuned strings chime with gunfire regularity, cymbals occasionally adding canon-like emphasis, but vanishing during the chorus, which drones at a half pace to Polly’s frantic descriptions during the verse.
On Battleship Hill
Initially the warmest sounding track so far, kicking off with an almost major chord echoing, comforting electric jangle. There’s no edge or sharpness to the guitar part at all, until a stuttering classical guitar falters on a single played string whilst Polly trills, “The scent of time has carried on the wind” in a nigh-on hysterial alto. Here she’s lamenting the senescent damage that time brings upon humans, but not on the land, which “returns to how it’s always been, time carried on the wind.” A jarring, eerie listen.
England
A love letter to England; here, it’s this character – or Polly’s – raison d’être, and in the country’s dying throes, her protagonist wilts accordingly. It’s an unhinged listen, starting off with just her voice half singing, half wailing, “laah-dah-da-dah” like a slightly mad child, whilst a thinner, far more distant, approximation of her voice is trapped underneath, almost mangled into Middle Eastern intonation that recalls routine prayer calls. Again, she’s dealing with the torture of aging – “I have searched for your springs,” she sings, “but people, they stagnate with time, like water, like air…”
In The Dark Places
Back to that raw, more live feel; the guitar a thick burr beneath as she and John again roam the landscape, witnessing “our young men / hit with guns / in the dirt / and in the dark places”. It’s probably the most affecting song on the record, the verse all searching high notes, then dropping into an almost spoken chorus, where Polly and John take turns leading verses of “And not one man has / and not one woman has / revealed the secrets of this world.”
Bitter Branches
Drums dash at a gravelly chase, the pace much faster than anything else thus far, and the ominous guitar sprinting behind recalls the oppressive chase of ‘Uh Huh Her’. As on the opening song, Polly’s having fun with her voice again – it veers mercurially between an unnerving coo during the drops and an echoing shriek on the verses as she castigates the trees: “Bitter branches / Spreading out / There’s none more bitter-er-er / than the wood.”
Hanging In The Wire
And the oppressive sound lifts… We’re still out in the countryside, but rather than dendrophobic railings, here the lyrics trace a lone rambler who “sees the mist rise over no man’s land.” Beneath her dislocated, high voice, the song’s piano-led, but wouldn’t have fit on ‘White Chalk’ due to its sweet, high classical refrain – though she does mention “the white cliffs of Dover.”
Written On The Forehead
So the sample was stripped from ‘Let England Shake’, but there’s one here – an old reggae track called ‘Blood And Fire’. I’m not sure who did it originally – the only thing YouTube’s throwing up is a really shit UB40 cover of it… Anyway, as a muffled voice chants, “Blood, blood, blood, blood and fire” in the background, Polly’s voice trembles, “People throwing Dinars / At the bellydancers.” We’re not on homely pastoral turf any more, with the mention of Dinars seeming to link back to the trapped voice in ‘England’ that sounds like prayer call. Given that the original sample on ‘Let England Shake’, ‘Istanbul (Not Constantinople)’ referred to the Turkish people reclaiming/renaming their capital city as its original name was of Latin origin, so there seems to be a parallel Middle Eastern narrative or set of references running through the record.
The Colour Of The Earth
John Parish kicks off this song, singing, “Louis was my dearest friend / Fighting in the ANZAC trench.” Quick history lesson for you here: this refers to a fight to capture the Ottoman capital of Istanbul – then known as Constantinople – during the first world war, a battle that resulted in heavy casualties on both sides. Which lends credence to the theory I was mooting on ‘Written On The Forehead’ about the dual narrative. When Polly talked of the album being about war in parts, my instant assumption would be that it’s a reaction to the military activity of recent years, but if it is, she’s chosen a more recondite fight with which to contrast it, or in which to set her observations. The instrumentation here is autoharp again, blurred by infinite reverb (perhaps due to the high ceilings of the church in which they recorded), with subtle chord changes that are as plain in tone as an unexotic landscape, but as breathtaking as a bird’s eye view of same.
There’s a pretty good quality video of PJ playing this at last year’s Camp Bestival. The recorded version is much the same in terms of voice and guitar, but with added spindly percussion and plaintive, sparingly used horns. There’s real emphasis at the end of this line - “past the Thames river glistening, like gold, hastily sold, for nothing, NOTH-II-IING!” – which seems much more of a direct political statement than we’re used to from Polly.
The Glorious Land
"This album’s not solely about war, it’s about very many different things – it’s the world we live in, and part of that is war,” PJ said in our interview. This song more than any other present seems directly related to the act of battle itself. There’s a shaky but liturgical rhythm to the drums which open the minute-long introduction, uneasy single bass notes, and then a bugle, which rears its ‘Reveille’ throughout the song, the lyrics of which make up a series of call and responses. All the lines are repeated twice, then answered twice: “How is our glorious country ploughed, not by iron ploughs,” is met with “our lands are ploughed by tanks and feet, fee-eet maa-arrching”. With more lines, her voice grows ever higher, the chorus sees her playing with intonation again – “oh, America” is sometimes “oh, A-me-ri-CAH”, followed by a rattling childlike chorus of “oh Eng-err-laa-aand”. The only line that remains unanswered is, “how is our glorious land bestowed?” her voice borderline hysterical, but still restrained.
The Words That Maketh Murder
“I’ve seen and done things I want to forget,” Polly sings, whilst a detuned autoharp echoes limitlessly. “I’ve seen soldiers fall like lumps of me-ee-eat.” Right, so here she’s definitely in character mode as she explained in the magazine, her voice a shellshocked but theatrically coy rattle. The lyrics are a harrowing portrait of war – nothing you couldn’t garner from the television or newspaper, but images of dismembered limbs and “a corporal whose nerves were shot” hang oppressively before she and collaborator John Parish question, “What if I take my problem to the United Nations?” come the end. All you critics who quarrelled with her move into narrative lyrics come the release of ‘To Bring You My Love’ – gird your loins.
All And Everyone
At first, this feels a lot lighter, with open, ringing autotune chords. There’s a certain air of resignation, as amplified by an organ, meek as though played by an old lady in the parish vestry. After about forty seconds though, it all tails off and weighted, dissonant autoharp clanks underneath, making chords out of different detunings. Again, we’re on the battlefield – and “death was everywhere, and everyone” - but mentions of beaches and sea along with the richly drab horns give it more of an old-timey D-Day feel than any modern war. The clanking, detuned strings chime with gunfire regularity, cymbals occasionally adding canon-like emphasis, but vanishing during the chorus, which drones at a half pace to Polly’s frantic descriptions during the verse.
On Battleship Hill
Initially the warmest sounding track so far, kicking off with an almost major chord echoing, comforting electric jangle. There’s no edge or sharpness to the guitar part at all, until a stuttering classical guitar falters on a single played string whilst Polly trills, “The scent of time has carried on the wind” in a nigh-on hysterial alto. Here she’s lamenting the senescent damage that time brings upon humans, but not on the land, which “returns to how it’s always been, time carried on the wind.” A jarring, eerie listen.
England
A love letter to England; here, it’s this character – or Polly’s – raison d’être, and in the country’s dying throes, her protagonist wilts accordingly. It’s an unhinged listen, starting off with just her voice half singing, half wailing, “laah-dah-da-dah” like a slightly mad child, whilst a thinner, far more distant, approximation of her voice is trapped underneath, almost mangled into Middle Eastern intonation that recalls routine prayer calls. Again, she’s dealing with the torture of aging – “I have searched for your springs,” she sings, “but people, they stagnate with time, like water, like air…”
In The Dark Places
Back to that raw, more live feel; the guitar a thick burr beneath as she and John again roam the landscape, witnessing “our young men / hit with guns / in the dirt / and in the dark places”. It’s probably the most affecting song on the record, the verse all searching high notes, then dropping into an almost spoken chorus, where Polly and John take turns leading verses of “And not one man has / and not one woman has / revealed the secrets of this world.”
Bitter Branches
Drums dash at a gravelly chase, the pace much faster than anything else thus far, and the ominous guitar sprinting behind recalls the oppressive chase of ‘Uh Huh Her’. As on the opening song, Polly’s having fun with her voice again – it veers mercurially between an unnerving coo during the drops and an echoing shriek on the verses as she castigates the trees: “Bitter branches / Spreading out / There’s none more bitter-er-er / than the wood.”
Hanging In The Wire
And the oppressive sound lifts… We’re still out in the countryside, but rather than dendrophobic railings, here the lyrics trace a lone rambler who “sees the mist rise over no man’s land.” Beneath her dislocated, high voice, the song’s piano-led, but wouldn’t have fit on ‘White Chalk’ due to its sweet, high classical refrain – though she does mention “the white cliffs of Dover.”
Written On The Forehead
So the sample was stripped from ‘Let England Shake’, but there’s one here – an old reggae track called ‘Blood And Fire’. I’m not sure who did it originally – the only thing YouTube’s throwing up is a really shit UB40 cover of it… Anyway, as a muffled voice chants, “Blood, blood, blood, blood and fire” in the background, Polly’s voice trembles, “People throwing Dinars / At the bellydancers.” We’re not on homely pastoral turf any more, with the mention of Dinars seeming to link back to the trapped voice in ‘England’ that sounds like prayer call. Given that the original sample on ‘Let England Shake’, ‘Istanbul (Not Constantinople)’ referred to the Turkish people reclaiming/renaming their capital city as its original name was of Latin origin, so there seems to be a parallel Middle Eastern narrative or set of references running through the record.
The Colour Of The Earth
John Parish kicks off this song, singing, “Louis was my dearest friend / Fighting in the ANZAC trench.” Quick history lesson for you here: this refers to a fight to capture the Ottoman capital of Istanbul – then known as Constantinople – during the first world war, a battle that resulted in heavy casualties on both sides. Which lends credence to the theory I was mooting on ‘Written On The Forehead’ about the dual narrative. When Polly talked of the album being about war in parts, my instant assumption would be that it’s a reaction to the military activity of recent years, but if it is, she’s chosen a more recondite fight with which to contrast it, or in which to set her observations. The instrumentation here is autoharp again, blurred by infinite reverb (perhaps due to the high ceilings of the church in which they recorded), with subtle chord changes that are as plain in tone as an unexotic landscape, but as breathtaking as a bird’s eye view of same.
ein (p)fund mp3 (310)
"rasa" heißt das album auf chicken ranch, es ist das zweite der band aus nashville, die singleauskopplung heißt, wie sie klingt:
we were the states - goldjax art bombadiert mich in den letzten wochen arg mit mails, ausgewählt habe ich daraus diese krachmacher namens alexander and daniel, da sie berauschend schönen noisepop 'n' punk spielen, die "thefunsun" 7" ist gerade erschienen:
slow animal - saturday morningeine kleine große nummer ist er hier, veröffentlicht grad sein solodebut "you plan to do nothing" (30. november), stammt aus halifax und bietet banjobeförderten folkrock, wirklich klasse, mitglied von wintersleep und während des songschreibens ständig im kajak unterwegs:
zac crouse - waitin on the windetwas flotter in der anlage und mit einer hammond im anschlag kommt ab 25, januar das album "old friends:
i was a king - someone is waitinghowe gelb und co. waren eben auf hiesigen bühnen zu sehen und haben stets einen guten eindruck hinterlassen, immer dabei das frische werk "blurry blue mountain", daraus:
giant sand - fields of greenihr neues album "mondo amore" erscheint am 25. januar und die ersten tunes kommen mächtig bluesig daher, aber die ganz großen auflösungserscheinungen wirds wohl nicht geben:
nicole atkins - vultureshier und in der notiz zu den kommenden alben des jahres 2011 doppelt sich zur zeit einiges, macht aber nichts, drückt nur sympathie aus, so auch der hinweis auf das am 18. januar erscheinende "native speaker" (flemish eye):
braids - lemonadeam 27. november erscheint auf cloudberry records diese hervorragende 5track neuauflage als 3inch cdr namens "the kensingtons", bitte reinhören:
the kensingtons - intercity baby"house plants" ist das produkt, das uns der in der schweiz lebende chicagoan bryn martin via aaahh records präsentiert, einfühlsame gitarrenlines an soundcollage, nicht überraschungsfrei:
pinkle - what i hopepinkle - alibi
pinkle - bee hee
und wo wir gerade bei western vinyl sind, verweisen wir noch auf den "electric endicott" release, der teil der wiederentdeckung dieser new yorker d.i.y. legende ist:
gary wilson - electric endicottgary wilson - in the night
leider ist es bei weepop! etwas leiser geworden, dafür aber, dass sie nicht ganz aus der welt sind, wollen wir werben, mit einigen der letzten frei verfügbaren tracks aus recht aktuellen alben und einem brandneuen track (der erste):
little my - x's for eyesthe just joans - stuart had a dirty book
the 1959 hat co. - awesome sneakers
great dynamo
04.12.10 zakk Düsseldorf
timo räisänen
08.02.2011 - München, Atomic Café
09.02.2011 - Münster, Amp
10.02.2011 - Hamburg, Molotow
11.02.2011 - Berlin, Rosis (Karrera Klub)
12.02.2011 - Dresden, Sputnik
trumans water
2010-11-27, Bremen, Friese
2010-11-30, Berlin, Bang Bang Club
2010-12-01, Kiel, Schaubude
Donnerstag, November 25, 2010
neue töne (889): chris schlarb


chris schlarb - i can live forever if i slowly die (excerpt) (from: "psychic temple", 2010)
chris schlarb - section I (from: "twilight & ghost stories", 2007)
create(!) - six dreams/divided (from: "a prospect of freedom", 2006)
liz janes & create(!) - lonesome valley (from: "liz janes & create(!)", 2005)
create(!) - revolutionary call roll (from: "patterns", 2000)
Mittwoch, November 24, 2010
zu gehör getragen (128)
warpaint - the fool (2010)
> einigkeit im hype um eine stilisierte musikalische schönheit, mithin etwas traning, bestenfalls unverzettelt, es bleibt beim kontrollierten lustverplomp, 3-3,5/5
cloud nothings - turning on (2010)
> anstandslose distanzlosigkeit, gedoppelt und leicht verhallt, schräges abdriften, juvenile auffrischer, energiegeladen, hook versessen, abgehakt, aufgekratzt, mitreissend, bissig und saucool, 3,5-4/5
wenzel - kamille & mohn (2010)
> die worte wie eh schön verschraubt, bleibt für die musikalie nur ein notgelass, ein album wie ein aufruf zum wieder- und neuentdecken künstler deutscher sprache, 3,5/5
the young gods - everybody knows (2010)
> für jene, denen verhallter gesang, aufgequirlte, computeranimierte und wiedergekäute, zuweilen abgeschmackte und unverhohlen stolze musik nicht auf den geist geht, 2/5
> einigkeit im hype um eine stilisierte musikalische schönheit, mithin etwas traning, bestenfalls unverzettelt, es bleibt beim kontrollierten lustverplomp, 3-3,5/5
cloud nothings - turning on (2010)
> anstandslose distanzlosigkeit, gedoppelt und leicht verhallt, schräges abdriften, juvenile auffrischer, energiegeladen, hook versessen, abgehakt, aufgekratzt, mitreissend, bissig und saucool, 3,5-4/5
wenzel - kamille & mohn (2010)
> die worte wie eh schön verschraubt, bleibt für die musikalie nur ein notgelass, ein album wie ein aufruf zum wieder- und neuentdecken künstler deutscher sprache, 3,5/5
the young gods - everybody knows (2010)
> für jene, denen verhallter gesang, aufgequirlte, computeranimierte und wiedergekäute, zuweilen abgeschmackte und unverhohlen stolze musik nicht auf den geist geht, 2/5
neue töne (888): construction & destruction
Dienstag, November 23, 2010
glotzt nicht so romantisch (128): munch munch

munch munch - wolfman's wife from kit mason on vimeo.
29.11.2010 Hamburg (DE), Astrastube30.11.2010 Berlin (DE), Marie Antoinette
03.12.2010 Wien (AT), B72
06.12.2010 Karlsruhe (DE), Carambolage
07.12.2010 Nuernberg (DE), K4
08.12.2010 Zuerich (CH), Stall 6
09.12.2010 Paris Fleche D'or
10.12.2010 Koeln (DE), Tsunami
wenzel - kamille und mohn (2010)
"kamille und mohn" ist am 05. november auf matrosenblau erschienen.
Sonntag, November 21, 2010
neue töne (886): brainstorm

brainstorm - beast in the sky
brainstorm - lonely ghost
Samstag, November 20, 2010
eingestreut (192): winter's day


dawn smithson - a new day (from: "safer here", 2005)
neue töne (885): cuffs

cuffs - privelege (demo)
pants yell! - the not-so-city life
pants yell! - magenta and green
Freitag, November 19, 2010
glotzt nicht so romantisch (127): the woodlands, la sera, gregory & the hawk, shuteye unison
ein kleine runde aktueller videos von künstlern, die ich sehr mag oder bald sehr mögen werde. wer in welche kategorie gehört, könnt Ihr ja gerne raten.
zunächst the woodlands mit einem neuen song "in the dark on monday". hier hatte ich ausführlich über das paar samuel und hannah berichtet. sie werden demnächst eine electro dance remix ep vorlegen. was ich davon halten soll, weiß ich noch nicht, bis dahin:
zunächst the woodlands mit einem neuen song "in the dark on monday". hier hatte ich ausführlich über das paar samuel und hannah berichtet. sie werden demnächst eine electro dance remix ep vorlegen. was ich davon halten soll, weiß ich noch nicht, bis dahin:
über katy goodmans aktuelles projekt la sera hatte ich bereits mehrfach berichtet, nachdem sie mit "never comes around" ihre erste single vorlegte, stehen die albuminfos bereits auch fest, am 15. februar erscheint das selbstbetitelte debut auf hardly art, hier nun das video zur single, vorab die mp3:
la sera - never comes aroundhier greifen wir auf einen parks and records ableger zurück, nämlich shuteye unison, deren aktuelles "our future selves" auch "century m" abwarf:
und schließlich noch ein video einer jüngeren oliver peel session mit gregory and the hawk und dem song "landscapes":
neue töne (884): pepper rabbit

Donnerstag, November 18, 2010
konzert: nina nastasia, 17.11.10










aus der ferne, und es mussten in diesem barmen dunkel nur ein paar schritte sein, wirkte nastasia alt und vom leben angegangen. aus der nähe hatte sie ein lebendiges, jugendhaftes gesicht. flinke augen, eine frische gesichtsfarbe und ein dauerhaftes lächeln um die mundwinkel machten sie nicht nur sympathisch, sondern mehr noch vertraut.
11-18 - Manufaktur, Schorndorf, DE
11-19 - Hafen 2, Offenbach, DE
11-20 - Glanz & Gloria, Osnabrück, DE
11-21 - Home Plugged, Brussels, BE
11-22 - dBs, Utrecht, NL
11-23 - Steinbruch, Duisburg, DE
11-24 - King Georg, Köln, DE
11-25 - UT Connewitz, Leipzig, DE
11-26 - Blue Bird Festival, Wien, AT
Abonnieren
Posts (Atom)