I've probably watched this 40 times over the last few years and every rime I'm completely mesmerized and moved to tears by the end, I honestly can't think of another performance that has moved me in this way
This is definitely one of my favorite Aldous performances. You can't beat the acoustics of a bathroom! It's like the perfect mid point between her original folk music and her newer stuff. And she actually shows emotion here; which she doesn't show a whole lot of in some of her newer live performances. If you want another great artist who will rip out your soul, show you all the cracks, glue them back together... say a native prayer, slam your soul back inside... pat you on the head, punch you in the arm, and runaway. Checkout Aurora. You won't even know why you're crying tears of joy, you just will be. She's an algae ball full of pure unadulterated hope.
This is just one of the most beautiful things I've ever heard and I think it exceeds the album version of the same song. This recording should be etched onto a gold disc, blasted into interstellar space and preserved for the next billion years.
Aldous is so brutally honest in her music and performances. Don't think I'm aware of a more pure artist. She hides nothing! It (and she) is beautiful in every way.
Beautiful! As far as real singers try Joni Mitchell. Her lyrics brought me to my knees when I first heard Other People's Parties and all of the album Blue❤
I attended her concert here in Gothenburg a few weeks ago (april 2023). Fantastic appearance! The last song was "Swell does the skull" which she perfomed solo on the stage. A truly genuine artist, I feel only true human love for her. This is what it means to be a human in this worldy context.
when you read that comment and it s only 40 sec into the song you go like , what this guy is talking about ?!?! here another one that is to much into this and then 2:57 came ....the human flute....^^ ( actualy you can ear a glympse of that human flute at 1:52 but its kinda short , a minute later it hapen again and very clearly )
The old folk songs that have been passed down through generations have a deep soul searching melancholy that has been lost ,aldous has tapped into that perfectly with her amazing voice ,just beautiful .
Funny how I didn't connect with this song the first time I heard it on her album and now, I'm absolutely amazed by it. Her body of work is like a never ending discovery for me even though I've listened to her for hundreds of hours..
Nailed it. This is, by far, the superior version of this song. Absolutely perfect. This is my new favourite Aldous Harding song. A spectacular performance by one woman and one guitar, in her bathroom. No effects, no snazzy production team, just talent and heart. Love it.
You're not wrong about the wind. She's actually simultaneously singing and making light blowing sounds through her lips during the onomatopoeic ("ooo-wooo-ooo") section of the song. You can actually SEE her doing it by when she starts and stops (her lips puff, then de-puff, when you can hear the low whistle of the air pushing past her pursed lips). It's similar to what the Tuvan throat singers of Mongolia do (only somewhat less complicated), creating two tones through one voice.
Swell does the skull I don't want to be a sinner, no Don't want to be a sinner, no But bourbon, always bourbon Swell does the skull Don't want to be a sinner, no Don't want to be a sinner, no But velvet, always velvet Here he comes through the rain With his coat and his walking cane And he says softly to me: "The war is over, we belong in the country" Ooh Ring have the bell There's honey on the bread now There's honey on the bread now And music, always music He comes home, out of the rain I take his coat, and his walking cane He can feel that I hold him tight The day's over We belong by the fireside Swell does my skull I'll never be without him, no I'll never be without him, no I'll never be without him, no
I have no idea how many times I’ve watched this video, maybe several hundred by now. EVERY SINGLE TIME I am moved to tears. This has never happened to me with any other song. Just to see what would happen, I played it three times in a row, and I cried each time. Something about the combination of the haunting acoustics, the powerful emotions wrought across her face and the authenticity of her expressiveness through her lone instrument is wholly captivating and all consuming. What she feels, I feel and it is both heart wrenching and deeply beautiful. I am so so glad that this exists in the world and that we are all able to connect with something so achingly beauteous, full of longing, pain and love.
I just fall in love with this beautiful woman again and again every time I see and hear her. What a blessing, to experience her. I hope the industry is not strangling her to extract every last tear. An army should be raised to prevent that. God bless you Aldous Harding, the beauty of your being brings me joy. :)
My grandfather died about a year ago. As a child he used to take care of me while my parents worked, cutting up melons and fresh fruit instead of giving me baby foods. When he was dying, I felt like such a coward, I didn’t want to see him, I didn’t want to watch someone I loved die, I felt like I was winning for running away from supporting him, and I didn’t want to be a sinner. When he died, my grandmother began to drink more heavily than she did when he was alive, heavy liquors, like bourbon. He served in the army at the end of WWII and during Korea, and I imagined him coming home from those wars to my grandmother, being done with it all, and trying to go back to rural Texarkana, where he was from. When he passed, my grandmother began to have more sugars in the house, namely honey, which she couldn’t do before with him having diabetes. When i hear this song, about an old man in a coat, out in the rain, it makes me think about how even when he was 80 years old he’d go out and play in puddles, when he couldn’t walk right he’d still play out there with a cane or a walking stick, and how most of the nights I’d go see him we’d start a fire in his front yard fireplace, and all my family would come together to talk. Even as I wrote this I began to cry, and every time I do I feel like there’s a swell in my skull, like my head is shaking with the tears coming out. And then I hear that last line, that I’ll never be without him, and I just want to hear his voice one more time, or give him a hug, because I miss him so much. I don’t know if the writer of this song will ever read this, but this song was one of the only things to bring me peace. It hurts me so much to hear this beautiful song, and yet it means so much to me. Hearing it makes me remember how much I loved my grandfather, and I can only say thank you.
Does anyone else feel as if Aldous is able to channel or kinda tune into somewhere else when she performs? Seems to come back into the room at the end of each song! Quality human!! 👍🏻
@@coaltin2509 Real talk! there’s too much psychic connection and witchy and Ouija board and Tara card stuff nowadays and way too many grown-up people believe that childish foolishness
Man, this is beautiful and amazing. What a finely crafted song- feels as if it was hundreds of years old, burnished by the hands of so many passing it down the years, its lyrics both universal and cryptic enough to hold any number of personal stories. A lovely melody line -lamenting, wistful, warm, chilling, remote; it's all of these. I'd place its origin as English or Flemish, 1770 - 1825, if I didn't understand the lyrics (bourbon and vervet give it away, in a hilarious fashion). That it's a contemporary creation imbues it with a mystical quality, as if this anachronism fell from the sky fully formed, like a meteorite - ancient, its shape and texture the testament of its long journey. Aldous Harding must have listened to and sung a lot of old folk songs over the years to have created this original gem. Very very cool.
Her Mum is a folk singer. I will say Aldous Harding in the same sentence as Bob Dylan with the reference to actually my favourite album of all time, The Times they are a Changin
Have watched and listened to this many many times since hearing Aldous Harding on BBC 6Music for the first time, yesterday morning. Completely mesmerising voice and performance, wow, just wow.
I am so moved by the music of Aldous Harding, I have to hold back from commenting on every video. Her music is Hauntingly beautiful. One could cry it's so sad but I feel peaceful too. You go on a journey of emotions... Her expressions are the bonus song you fell in love with. 🌸❤️☮️🇨🇦
every performance she does is so pensive, so mysterious yet incredibly honest, so free yet incredibly crafted. she is one of the most compelling musicians of our time.
Stunning and haunting, her album "Party" is really amazing, and rigthly named Rough Trades album of the year. She has an astounding voice that really moves you, live she is equally astounding
OK so me and my darling Ben cat are hearing this beauty of a song together..he's nudging my phone because he knows as much as I do exactly how fabulous this song is. Peace and love to you all xx
Heavenly, her voice and music are hypnotizing. i keep coming back to listen to this beautiful song, tho every time i get tears in my eyes. it feels nostalgic and brings me back to warm memories of a long time ago.
I have to admit, this girl is so interesting. Her voice is beautiful, and I'm listening to everything she's done. Her facial expressions have me transfixed. Crazy, chilling, compelling...odd....I need more!
This girl is wired so differently , oddly beautifully awkward in her delivery of these haunting notes, playing with the colouration of vocal tone with such maturity and confidence . I could watch her face forever it's almost painful where it goes.. Soooo earnest it kills me.
IMO this is the first Aldous performance I would represent to anyone. Blessed to see her at work at Bristol UK twice. My take on the song is that the man with the cane is on a Jonnie Walker bottle. She is the artist. Hope she is in UK soon and I will endeavour to be stared through by her.
Yes! I thought I was the only one who was making the Johnnie Walker connection! The song could entirely be about a struggle with alcoholism. The lyrics "velvet always velvet", "there's honey on the bread now" both could be describing bourbon characteristics. And of course "bourbon always bourbon" is a dead giveaway. I just imagine the character in this song somberly sitting by the fireside, listening to music on a rainy evening after the day's work is done, and clutching tightly a bottle of JW; alone and contemplating her life as a singer/sinner.
I've spend a lot of time wondering how I'd express what I feel listening to Aldous Harding. It's actually simple, I feel love--that I love, and that I'm being loved.
Waouh. Nous avons découvert Aldous Harding il y a peu et du coup nous venons de découvrir "le bruit des graviers" = double choc !! Tous les chanteurs le savent les toilettes et les salles de bain ont les meilleures reverbs naturelles ;-) Bravo, et merci, c'est top.
I feel like whenever she sings she is channeling thousands and thousands of years of spirits of powerful, resilient women who have martyred themselves for righteous causes. Jus me ?
this is true talent, I cant take my eyes off her,, she is creepy and perfect at the same moment, fascinating musician and woman, this music will open doors you did not know where there
@@lebruitdesgraviers Hi there, thank you very much for capturing this extraordinary artist so exceptionally well! May I ask what microphone was used for the recording? Means a lot, thanks again!
I've probably watched this 40 times over the last few years and every rime I'm completely mesmerized and moved to tears by the end, I honestly can't think of another performance that has moved me in this way
Watching once again. Vocals in perfect dance with the picking. Taking her time.
This is definitely one of my favorite Aldous performances. You can't beat the acoustics of a bathroom! It's like the perfect mid point between her original folk music and her newer stuff. And she actually shows emotion here; which she doesn't show a whole lot of in some of her newer live performances.
If you want another great artist who will rip out your soul, show you all the cracks, glue them back together... say a native prayer, slam your soul back inside... pat you on the head, punch you in the arm, and runaway. Checkout Aurora. You won't even know why you're crying tears of joy, you just will be. She's an algae ball full of pure unadulterated hope.
Its never been more relevent than todays situation in Ukraine. Great art is timeless.
I'm back here again and I wholeheartedly agree
Same to me, mate
This is just one of the most beautiful things I've ever heard and I think it exceeds the album version of the same song. This recording should be etched onto a gold disc, blasted into interstellar space and preserved for the next billion years.
Total commitment to the song. She isn't controlling her facial expression, the song is. Glorious.
@3:00 that is the cleanest, purest tone i've ever heard. sounds like an otherworldly flute. just gorgeous.
She is, bar none, one of the most profound artists alive right now. Just remarkable what pours through her.
Amen
Is everyone hyperbolic these days or what? I mean, leave some room...
@@lukeylukeluke2 Yes, but no need to squash enthusiasm. I too chuckle with these UA-cam pronouncements. Music evokes so much doesnt't it?
Yes, still one of the best youtube music videos ever...
Aldous is so brutally honest in her music and performances. Don't think I'm aware of a more pure artist. She hides nothing! It (and she) is beautiful in every way.
josephine foster for ex.
Beautiful! As far as real singers try Joni Mitchell. Her lyrics brought me to my knees when I first heard Other People's Parties and all of the album Blue❤
As it should be
All of this.
Strongly believe that her kids with Keaton Henson would be able to fly
I attended her concert here in Gothenburg a few weeks ago (april 2023). Fantastic appearance! The last song was "Swell does the skull" which she perfomed solo on the stage. A truly genuine artist, I feel only true human love for her. This is what it means to be a human in this worldy context.
Just incredible, the control, the sentiment, the genius of this track, ,this video, the delivery and sound! Bravo Aldous Harding Bravo
She sounds like a human flute. It's beautiful.
Love your name fat budgie
Well-described budgie.
fat budgie I came here to make a similar comment, just hearing the song without the video I would’ve said there was a flute being played too.
Damn! You ain't shittin'
when you read that comment and it s only 40 sec into the song you go like , what this guy is talking about ?!?! here another one that is to much into this and then 2:57 came ....the human flute....^^ ( actualy you can ear a glympse of that human flute at 1:52 but its kinda short , a minute later it hapen again and very clearly )
The old folk songs that have been passed down through generations have a deep soul searching melancholy that has been lost ,aldous has tapped into that perfectly with her amazing voice ,just beautiful .
This beautiful artist keeps me on the edge of tears at all times.
Funny how I didn't connect with this song the first time I heard it on her album and now, I'm absolutely amazed by it. Her body of work is like a never ending discovery for me even though I've listened to her for hundreds of hours..
Nailed it. This is, by far, the superior version of this song. Absolutely perfect.
This is my new favourite Aldous Harding song.
A spectacular performance by one woman and one guitar, in her bathroom.
No effects, no snazzy production team, just talent and heart. Love it.
Devastating...can't stop listening to this even though I bawl my eyes out every time.
The resonances of certain notes sound like the wind in a far away place and time. I can listen to this forever.
jo massey Perfectly said!!
You're not wrong about the wind. She's actually simultaneously singing and making light blowing sounds through her lips during the onomatopoeic ("ooo-wooo-ooo") section of the song. You can actually SEE her doing it by when she starts and stops (her lips puff, then de-puff, when you can hear the low whistle of the air pushing past her pursed lips). It's similar to what the Tuvan throat singers of Mongolia do (only somewhat less complicated), creating two tones through one voice.
@Simon McCreath to whom and/or what might you be referring here, Mr. McCreath?
Swell does the skull
I don't want to be a sinner, no
Don't want to be a sinner, no
But bourbon, always bourbon
Swell does the skull
Don't want to be a sinner, no
Don't want to be a sinner, no
But velvet, always velvet
Here he comes through the rain
With his coat and his walking cane
And he says softly to me:
"The war is over, we belong in the country"
Ooh
Ring have the bell
There's honey on the bread now
There's honey on the bread now
And music, always music
He comes home, out of the rain
I take his coat, and his walking cane
He can feel that I hold him tight
The day's over
We belong by the fireside
Swell does my skull
I'll never be without him, no
I'll never be without him, no
I'll never be without him, no
Sinner or singer or some points?
At first I thought it was in a different language until I saw your lyrics!
@@ericjam6346 glad I'm not the only one
Rings in my skull... ...that soulful voice she uses words to pry open my brain...
And sitting here drunk on bourbon... I can somehow relate.
I have no idea how many times I’ve watched this video, maybe several hundred by now. EVERY SINGLE TIME I am moved to tears. This has never happened to me with any other song. Just to see what would happen, I played it three times in a row, and I cried each time. Something about the combination of the haunting acoustics, the powerful emotions wrought across her face and the authenticity of her expressiveness through her lone instrument is wholly captivating and all consuming. What she feels, I feel and it is both heart wrenching and deeply beautiful. I am so so glad that this exists in the world and that we are all able to connect with something so achingly beauteous, full of longing, pain and love.
it draws you in like a seemingly calm ocean, but then it's too late, you drown in this depth of emotion.
I just press the pause button :)
Yep, doing just that right now... Wish me luck
if you don't shed a tear listening to this song ,,,you have no emotions
I just can't get over how utterly beautiful this is.
I just fall in love with this beautiful woman again and again every time I see and hear her. What a blessing, to experience her. I hope the industry is not strangling her to extract every last tear. An army should be raised to prevent that. God bless you Aldous Harding, the beauty of your being brings me joy. :)
Aldous is a once in a generation talent. Soak it up people. Nothing this beautiful lasts longer than necessary.
We got two incredible albums before the inevitable downturn, we should be thankful.
I think I have watched/listened to her video 100 times. Can't describe how she makes me feel. I hear the song all day now
My grandfather died about a year ago. As a child he used to take care of me while my parents worked, cutting up melons and fresh fruit instead of giving me baby foods. When he was dying, I felt like such a coward, I didn’t want to see him, I didn’t want to watch someone I loved die, I felt like I was winning for running away from supporting him, and I didn’t want to be a sinner. When he died, my grandmother began to drink more heavily than she did when he was alive, heavy liquors, like bourbon. He served in the army at the end of WWII and during Korea, and I imagined him coming home from those wars to my grandmother, being done with it all, and trying to go back to rural Texarkana, where he was from. When he passed, my grandmother began to have more sugars in the house, namely honey, which she couldn’t do before with him having diabetes. When i hear this song, about an old man in a coat, out in the rain, it makes me think about how even when he was 80 years old he’d go out and play in puddles, when he couldn’t walk right he’d still play out there with a cane or a walking stick, and how most of the nights I’d go see him we’d start a fire in his front yard fireplace, and all my family would come together to talk. Even as I wrote this I began to cry, and every time I do I feel like there’s a swell in my skull, like my head is shaking with the tears coming out. And then I hear that last line, that I’ll never be without him, and I just want to hear his voice one more time, or give him a hug, because I miss him so much.
I don’t know if the writer of this song will ever read this, but this song was one of the only things to bring me peace. It hurts me so much to hear this beautiful song, and yet it means so much to me. Hearing it makes me remember how much I loved my grandfather, and I can only say thank you.
💜
I heard you and felt your emotion, I'll jump in the next puddle I see and think of your Lovely Grandfather too, Go_d is a 🌊
TLDR
Jody Wheeler Grandad died, didn’t process it / get over it until I heard this song
@@hardmeme5971 thanks. I read it now. I'm glad you found some peace. I went through something similar with my own grandad, so can relate.
She so clearly knows something about the way the guitar and voice mesh together that very few others know. fcking awesome.
This song changed me forever
Same feeling, same thought!
Me too
me too, a real change.
ProFound
As when I discovered Joni Mitchell at 16
Does anyone else feel as if Aldous is able to channel or kinda tune into somewhere else when she performs? Seems to come back into the room at the end of each song! Quality human!! 👍🏻
Absolutely. It is some cosmic stuff.
I agree. I have told friends that she seems to be inviting us to visit another universe. She is one of the great artists of our time.
I was just thinking the same thing....
Nah, she is extremely human and raw. Stop placing weird witchy/cosmic rhetoric where there is none. Sis is powerfully talented, learn to accept that.
@@coaltin2509 Real talk! there’s too much psychic connection and witchy and Ouija board and Tara card stuff nowadays and way too many grown-up people believe that childish foolishness
Stunning......she is the most honest and direct songwriter I have heard in a long time. The meaning of this song is so sad.....
What is the song about?
Do you have the lyrics?
@@marciafrazza2985 You can find the lyrics by scrolling down the comments section.
TKS!
absolutely exquisite
Just back for my daily visit
Man, this is beautiful and amazing. What a finely crafted song- feels as if it was hundreds of years old, burnished by the hands of so many passing it down the years, its lyrics both universal and cryptic enough to hold any number of personal stories. A lovely melody line -lamenting, wistful, warm, chilling, remote; it's all of these. I'd place its origin as English or Flemish, 1770 - 1825, if I didn't understand the lyrics (bourbon and vervet give it away, in a hilarious fashion). That it's a contemporary creation imbues it with a mystical quality, as if this anachronism fell from the sky fully formed, like a meteorite - ancient, its shape and texture the testament of its long journey. Aldous Harding must have listened to and sung a lot of old folk songs over the years to have created this original gem. Very very cool.
Her Mum is a folk singer. I will say Aldous Harding in the same sentence as Bob Dylan with the reference to actually my favourite album of all time, The Times they are a Changin
Bathrooms, every musician's first reverb-effect :) Lovely stuff.
One of the best youtube music videos ever...
Man, what a clip! It's fantastic. She's wonderful and the filmakers showed how she sings with her soul in a brilhant form! Lovely.
Best voice of the decade
Have watched and listened to this many many times since hearing Aldous Harding on BBC 6Music for the first time, yesterday morning. Completely mesmerising voice and performance, wow, just wow.
I am so moved by the music of Aldous Harding, I have to hold back from commenting on every video. Her music is Hauntingly beautiful. One could cry it's so sad but I feel peaceful too. You go on a journey of emotions...
Her expressions are the bonus song you fell in love with. 🌸❤️☮️🇨🇦
What a wonderful, wonderful talent. Up there with LP. A modern day poet at the top of her game. Just brilliant.
I love finding music that crawls into every crevice of my soul. Aldous does it, beautifully.
Watching her expressions, it's like she's in another place whilst singing.
I am in another place when she is singing.
watching her expressions, it looks like that place has racks and thumbscrews. I mean that in a very caring way, of course.
@Alvin That's some spirited Dark Humour, I think she would approve :-}
I would sell my soul to write something as beautiful as this just once in my life.
Don't.
every performance she does is so pensive, so mysterious yet incredibly honest, so free yet incredibly crafted. she is one of the most compelling musicians of our time.
Stunning and haunting, her album "Party" is really amazing, and rigthly named Rough Trades album of the year. She has an astounding voice that really moves you, live she is equally astounding
6 minutes and 23 seconds of constant goosebumps 🙌
That last “no”, I felt it in my spine
this still makes me sob, such a beautiful peice of music and the way its sang with such feeling. blows my mind everytime i hear it :'(
At 2:57 something sonically unparalleled.
Like a wooden flute. It's amazing. And her pitch is perfect throughout. Very impressive
just read this at the same time i was at this part. wow.
One of the best songs ever on youtube.
The power and beauty of this performance is amazing.
found her at 1 AM last night and every song of hers feels like a major spiritual awakening
That is absolutely beautiful and chill inducing. She is all the way in it.
OK so me and my darling Ben cat are hearing this beauty of a song together..he's nudging my phone because he knows as much as I do exactly how fabulous this song is. Peace and love to you all xx
Heavenly, her voice and music are hypnotizing. i keep coming back to listen to this beautiful song, tho every time i get tears in my eyes. it feels nostalgic and brings me back to warm memories of a long time ago.
So nice to read loving comments about Hannah.... on her behalf....Thank You xo
J adore cette artiste elle vit ses chansons et met une telle intensité, sensibilité dans ses interprétations
Robert Wyatt and Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and Judee Sill and Bert Jantsch and Neil Young and now Aldous Harding. Sorcerers of song.
beautiful lyrics , tunes. I have only just discovered your music. Don't know where i've been to miss this
Wow, I gave my tickets to my daughter last time she came in town. Next time I am going myself to hear her live in MTL. A truly gifted artist.
Incandescently extraordinary, a rare and raw beauty of terrifying honesty.
Wow. Just wow. Simply mesmerizing. What an absolute masterpiece of a somg, performance, and artist. Kudos, always kudos.
I have to admit, this girl is so interesting. Her voice is beautiful, and I'm listening to everything she's done. Her facial expressions have me transfixed. Crazy, chilling, compelling...odd....I need more!
Wow, that's exceptionally good.
just discovered her tonight. i feel blessed...
This girl is wired so differently , oddly beautifully awkward in her delivery of these haunting notes, playing with the colouration of vocal tone with such maturity and confidence . I could watch her face forever it's almost painful where it goes.. Soooo earnest it kills me.
Her emotional palette is so wide ranging rare and intense it gets you in the guts and at times stops your breath. She can not be imitated.
I have seen this video over and over again. Amazed by the song and the amazing performance.
I'm here again, good to know that good art still lives on, despite everything.
The best song iv’e ever had in my mind love it she is one of a kind xx
The tranqjility in the menacingly sweet tone sets a melancholic mood for a heart warming song..
So very intense. Superb guitar playing, and a staggeringly versatile, and most enchanting voice. Mercy. le bruit des graviers
She is so incredible and talented I am lucky enough that I lived long enough to witness her existence, she is always getting better
How lucky are we to share the same planet with someone like this?
IMO this is the first Aldous performance I would represent to anyone. Blessed to see her at work at Bristol UK twice. My take on the song is that the man with the cane is on a Jonnie Walker bottle. She is the artist. Hope she is in UK soon and I will endeavour to be stared through by her.
Yes! I thought I was the only one who was making the Johnnie Walker connection! The song could entirely be about a struggle with alcoholism. The lyrics "velvet always velvet", "there's honey on the bread now" both could be describing bourbon characteristics. And of course "bourbon always bourbon" is a dead giveaway. I just imagine the character in this song somberly sitting by the fireside, listening to music on a rainy evening after the day's work is done, and clutching tightly a bottle of JW; alone and contemplating her life as a singer/sinner.
She is now in my top five all time favorites. My soul shivers when I listen to her.
Just started listening. Mesmerizing and outstanding.
this song reminds me of early Leonard Cohen so much...and that's a HUGE compliment. this is wonderful. She is incredibly talented. Bravo!
This song is killing me !!!!
"I'll never be without him, no"
a Premiere of Aldous Harding's Zoo Eyes up here tomorrow the 8th on 4AD
Wow just wow. Always nice to see someone who really lives for their art.
One of my absolute favorite songs from Aldous. Thank you so much, @lebruitdesgraviers!
Rafael Barker you’re welcome ;)
I've spend a lot of time wondering how I'd express what I feel listening to Aldous Harding. It's actually simple, I feel love--that I love, and that I'm being loved.
I listen to this as my first song of the day. Outrageously good
Waouh. Nous avons découvert Aldous Harding il y a peu et du coup nous venons de découvrir "le bruit des graviers" = double choc !!
Tous les chanteurs le savent les toilettes et les salles de bain ont les meilleures reverbs naturelles ;-)
Bravo, et merci, c'est top.
I listen to this song everyday every time I don't know why I love this song so much but her sound makes me wanna cry
Finally something worthy of the title of art
I'm absolutely mesmerized, transfixed, every time I see this. Watching her is just as spellbinding as hearing her.
Bloody brilliant. There's something ancient about her, that taps into my soul. I don't know what it is, but it often has me filling up with tears.
Sublime chanson et live-sessions✨
I feel like whenever she sings she is channeling thousands and thousands of years of spirits of powerful, resilient women who have martyred themselves for righteous causes. Jus me ?
Not just you. I ALWAYS think this when I see her perform.
this is true talent, I cant take my eyes off her,, she is creepy and perfect at the same moment, fascinating musician and woman, this music will open doors you did not know where there
Absolutely stunning!
Tellement beau... Sa voix est un instrument en soi, c’est magnifique.
This is absolutly beautiful...a gift
Don't know how I came across this, but, man, this is absolutely stunning - what an amazing voice, artist, world to discover!
Oh my god, is this Song beautiful...... Pure Art.....great Talent... Best Artist ever from Kiwi-land
Who ever filmed this must've been losing their shit watching this performance
Everything was totaly clean ;)
@@lebruitdesgraviers Hi there, thank you very much for capturing this extraordinary artist so exceptionally well! May I ask what microphone was used for the recording? Means a lot, thanks again!
@@UnterDerSonneOhUnterDerSonne If I well remember, guitar was in DI and vocals with a clip mic (sennheiser I think)
@@lebruitdesgraviers Thank you very much for the answer, I really love how well her performance is captured! Great job!
Amazing! I play this over and over. I'll probably add 50 000 views. The acoustics, everything...sublime!
Beautiful work.
thank you for this song. it is a part of my meditation.
dark folk at its best
Dark folk...that's a good description of her genre.
I don’t think dark is the word for it.
She’s like, the” Binah “ of folk.
That's a good term. She has an ominous energy that is cutting.
@@thesunfire do we haver to categorize, leave it to the shit journo's, stop thinking as it gets in the way ...x
@@STEVEFINNERTY nothing wrong with categorising; makes it easier to find similar art, for one.
perfectly shot, sung, and played in a bath!
Overwhelmed, in awe of Aldous Harding..a game changer!
Each next note is unexpectedly new and beautiful