The launch of the new Kuusumun Profeetta album Lyhtykuja is getting closer. Some minor delays prevent us from defining the exact release date yet, but it will be in a few months. To reward your patience (or make the impatience even worse), a taster of what is to come, a song called Lyhtykuja: loppu.
For over a decade, Kuusumun Profeetta has been one of the most
innovative and imaginative forces in Finnish music. Varying their style
with the elements of jazz, folk, psychedelic, progressive and hard
rock, the group has always managed to sound like Kuusumun Profeetta and
no one else. Quintessential features of their music are a strong sense
of drama, full scale of dynamics, aural richness and the unique voice
of the front man, Mika Rättö.
The group started in 1994 under the name Moon Fog Prophet. They first
made four critically acclaimed English language albums before switching
to their native language and changing their name into Kuusumun
Profeetta. The four Kuusumun Profeetta albums released so far have
been tremendously successful for a band that creates music entirely on
their own terms.
Kuusumun Profeetta / Moon Fog Prophet's Friend Space (Top 24)
Kuusumun Profeetta / Moon Fog Prophet has 935 friends.
Studion hämärästä esiin ryömivä joukkomme suuntaa kohti uusia seikkailuja suomen suvessa. Tervetuloa kuuntelemaan ja kommentoimaan tulevan albumin matskua.
When at last we tear our hands into heaven we can be sure that in the next made Religion we won't be punctured by slivers from crossed wooden beams. Nor will any star or blood thirsty moon brandish its filthy points towards our orifices of faith. Religions fall on dead electricity that we must carry around like river rocks that we have lovingly tied around our ankles as the waters of life rise to our throats. Be sure that when you feel the icy cold waters of life that you breathe heavily as it pours into your lungs like heavy liquid smoke. When the lights go out you will be connected once again to the truth.
Hello from the Red Planet! May fireworks light up your sky! Sometimes music bounces from inside your head to the next dimension and sometimes it's right in front of you. Just grab the magic and go for broke! I've always prided myself on having a low IQ since I was made with cheap re-processed American parts and a third class robot brain. Did you ever hear a synthetic human spouting philosophy in his underwear? Mickey Microphone the Robots From Mars Checkout our Robomusic and Tall Tale.
PS You're invited to a cookout at the summit of Mount Olympus, the largest volcano on Mars and within our solar system. Bring your own marshmallows. PPS ZZ Van Hendrix says that he remembers you from a past lifetime...I think he was a pretzel. PPPS We're building a giant TV-Radio Internet Link on Mars so that we can pick-up your My Space Page. Don't want to miss anything. We’ll be watching you… Who do you think taught Superman to see through walls?
HAPPY BELATED ACROSS THE UNIVERSE DAY!!! From the ROBOTS FROM MARS
Music from Earth has been deliberately launched into space by humankind. Other than attaching a disc to a spacecraft or randomly broadcasting TV and radio signals, the Third Planet has never before attempted to share it’s musical culture with the Heavens. A Beatles song has been beamed out into the galaxy. NASA broadcasted the song, "Across the Universe", through the transmitters of its deep space communications network on the 40th anniversary of the songs recording at London's Abbey Road studios. February 4th also commemorated the space agency's 50th anniversary. The music was converted into digital data and sent on a 431 light year-journey towards Polaris, the North Star. The broadcast began its galactic crossing at 7 p.m. EST/February 4th 2008. Martian Side note: It might take awhile for the flower children around Polaris to respond to this broadcast. They prefer space polkas and hate all forms of technology.