We share post-rock songs, albums and playlists. Subscribe to our channel for more great music. Like us on Facebook - facebook.com/whpostrock Follow us on Twitter - twitter.com/whpostrock
I just discovered this album and it's AMAZING! Keep up the work, I'd love to hear you live once! I guess there is little chance for that but Romania awaits you!
brilliant, probably (in my opinion ) the best post rock band and album, this is the type of music that I listen to, the type that makes me think, makes me feel all sorts of emotions , absolutely fantastic, I know in only 15 and I don't really know what heart break is but I think I've had my fair share. what inspired you to make this?
Post-rock is so brilliant. I want to make it the background music to my life. something stable and soothing and just there, constant melody. I feel like I could keep listening to every album, and nothing gets old, it just seeps through you with each replay and it absorbs you in turn. There's nothing quite like it that _feels_ . that you could make atmosphere out of. an entire story, an entire planet with just music.
Your channel, as well as "Wherepostrockswells" are where i spent the majority of my youtube time now. Ive been actively using this site for about 10 years now. And the last 10 months of it have been spent mostly amongst both that channel _and_ yours. It almost feels like retirement.....like the end of a long, chaotic journey.....like, these channels are where i have "settled down" as it were..... Thank you both for existing, and entering my reality.....i cant stress enough how much i appreciate it.
Utterly brilliant. Moons Eat Stars I love you! I concur with Jesse, amazing crescendos reached on every song, understated yet mindbogglingly good. This album is up there with the classics of all time. Best I have heard for a long time. Can't stop listening to it. Thanks for writing and recording this precious piece of art, and to Worldhaspostrock for sharing it.
I knew I had seen your profile picture before - Solzhenitsyn. Can I ask why he's your profile picture? He was an incredible man, so I understand if that's why. Gulag Archipelago was a tough read.
@@bth1279 Well spotted! Thinking on it takes me back... I suppose, in short, it started when I read Ivan Denisovich, being about 15 at the time (I'm 38 now). As runs through a lot of his work, the importance of the right perspective when in less than wonderful circumstances resonated with me hugely. It helped me a lot through a less than happy time for myself. Albeit no gulag, much like Ivan I was mostly in a closed society and at the whim of people who had little to no interest in my welfare. Often the opposite. Thus, he was firmly established as one of my favourite authors, and people besides. I even wrote an essay on A Day in the Life Of, lol. The Archipelago certainly is grim reading at parts. Along with helping me manage, his work started a truly deep fascination with the whole gulag system, and how people survived it. At the risk of sounding a little lame, I suppose I must relate to it a lot. Anyway (tl;dr much? lol), it's always great to meet someone else who appreciates his work, but also who he was as a person. :D As an interesting aside, I think he would have truly appreciated post rock as a form of music. However, also what it stands for, and how it can work as a way of feeling and healing.
@@robink9861 That's brilliant, I can certainly understand how his works helped you to have a different perspective on life and suffering. Life can be brutal and heartbreaking; it can feel relieving and warming to feel understood and to see life in a more difficult way - comparing our own lives to those of Auschwitz or Gulag survivors (and those who didn't survive) can really make your life seem so much more positive, or at least lessen the perceived level of difficulty that you face. I've yet to read Ivan Denisovich, but it's certainly on my To-Read list. I was surprised when I found Gulag Archipelago in my college library haha. I've struggled with mental health problems for most of my life from a young age, so books like his have helped me too in that respect. I'm really glad they were there for you too. How did you come across them? I highly recommend the Jocko Podcast, especially the episodes with Jordan Peterson as he was the person who introduced Solzhenitsyn to me. Agreed! It's nice to meet you too :) I totally agree with you, he would have loved this genre of music. He lived a long life but I still wish he was around today.
@@bth1279 So very true. It really is an amazing medium, the written word. I shudder to think how less well developed I'd be without having read the books I did, at the time of my life I was lucky enough to find them in. I hope it wasn't the abridged version of the Archipelago! haha. To me it seems vaguely criminal to cut bits out of such an epic work. Especially under the presumption that they aren't needed in order to fully understand the situation. Who is anyone in the West and who hasn't been in the gulag to decide that? (Apologies, pet hate of mine lol) Mental health has been something I've finally admitted I also have not exactly had the best of times with. I was diagnosed with depression at 16, all but forced onto pills that only made things worse, and in the end lumbered me with a raging Valium addiction at 18/19 or so. I should have stood my ground better. Instead, so began the spiral of two decades of pain and ever increasing isolation that I am only now managing to right. Without finding books like A Day in The Life of along the way, idk how much worse it all would have been. To answer your question (finally), part of the irony is that it was my mother who introduced me to A Day in the Life of. Her being one of the doctors who filled me full of pills and watched them drive me over the edge. I have to giver her credit where it is due, though, she did open my eyes to some wonderful things. What did you do at college, btw? And if you don't mind me asking, how old are you? I'll make sure to check out the podcast. Thanks to corona, I have plenty of free time atm. It would be one hell of a final irony if, having finally gotten to a place where I want to live again, some friggen virus does away with me lol.
@@robink9861 I feel the same way, books have an excellent way of improving your heart and mind, simply by telling stories! I've been a book-lover ever since I read The Alchemist - Paulo Coelho, the book that made me realise how great books truly are. I doubt it was, it was long enough! Hahaha I agree with you, cutting down books is a sin! They should be left in the author's original words (except for translations of course haha). I'm really glad you're doing better, have you been able to see a therapist? It sounds like a rough time you went through, especially at a young age when you're still becoming an adult and learning about yourself. Have you cut down or stopped all medications now? I study an Access to Higher Education course in Science (I'm guessing you're in the US as Valium isn't really a thing here in the UK? So we have A Levels which is between high school and university - A Levels are usually for people aged between 16-18. As I'm 23, I have to do an Access course to be able to go to university, which is just an adult version really). Then I'll head to uni to study Biology as I've always had a deep love of nature and the wilderness. I find solace in nature. Haha, I wish you the best of health! You've got this :) I'm also on FaceBook if you'd like to chat more there - totally your choice!
Some moments breech boundaries of rational, sceptical thought and we just sit back and feel the beauty. A thunder storm with this music playing sounds like one of those moments.
Это прекрасно! Музыка подобная дыханию, спокойная, величественная, эмоциональная. Лететь на крыльях ветра, лежать в густой траве, стоять ночью глядя на звезды, ехать по дороге на мотоцикле... И слушать это творение. Музыканты, вы талантливы! Я восхищен! СПАСИБО. (с любовью из России)
+Moon Eats Stars Tnx for your awe inspiring level of creativity and sharing. Casting the last vestige of a precious light into the farthest most reaches of the night ~
We share post-rock songs, albums and playlists.
Subscribe to our channel for more great music.
Like us on Facebook - facebook.com/whpostrock
Follow us on Twitter - twitter.com/whpostrock
Thank you for sharing, Worldhaspostrock. If you like our music, make sure to follow us on facebook: facebook.com/moonseatstars
This album is amazing! Keep doing what you do.
Thank you.
I just discovered this album and it's AMAZING! Keep up the work, I'd
love to hear you live once! I guess there is little chance for that but
Romania awaits you!
brilliant, probably (in my opinion ) the best post rock band and album, this is the type of music that I listen to, the type that makes me think, makes me feel all sorts of emotions , absolutely fantastic, I know in only 15 and I don't really know what heart break is but I think I've had my fair share. what inspired you to make this?
I adoooore this!!
Post-rock is so brilliant. I want to make it the background music to my life. something stable and soothing and just there, constant melody. I feel like I could keep listening to every album, and nothing gets old, it just seeps through you with each replay and it absorbs you in turn. There's nothing quite like it that _feels_ . that you could make atmosphere out of. an entire story, an entire planet with just music.
Your channel, as well as "Wherepostrockswells" are where i spent the majority of my youtube time now. Ive been actively using this site for about 10 years now. And the last 10 months of it have been spent mostly amongst both that channel _and_ yours.
It almost feels like retirement.....like the end of a long, chaotic journey.....like, these channels are where i have "settled down" as it were.....
Thank you both for existing, and entering my reality.....i cant stress enough how much i appreciate it.
Thanks a lot for the support ^^
Post-rock need comments. Thanks for all the great albums.
Utterly brilliant. Moons Eat Stars I love you! I concur with Jesse, amazing crescendos reached on every song, understated yet mindbogglingly good. This album is up there with the classics of all time. Best I have heard for a long time. Can't stop listening to it. Thanks for writing and recording this precious piece of art, and to Worldhaspostrock for sharing it.
Finding this album today has been the happiest surprise discovery this year by far!
I love this album. Rapidly becoming one of my post rock favourites.
I knew I had seen your profile picture before - Solzhenitsyn. Can I ask why he's your profile picture? He was an incredible man, so I understand if that's why. Gulag Archipelago was a tough read.
@@bth1279 Well spotted! Thinking on it takes me back... I suppose, in short, it started when I read Ivan Denisovich, being about 15 at the time (I'm 38 now). As runs through a lot of his work, the importance of the right perspective when in less than wonderful circumstances resonated with me hugely.
It helped me a lot through a less than happy time for myself. Albeit no gulag, much like Ivan I was mostly in a closed society and at the whim of people who had little to no interest in my welfare. Often the opposite. Thus, he was firmly established as one of my favourite authors, and people besides. I even wrote an essay on A Day in the Life Of, lol.
The Archipelago certainly is grim reading at parts. Along with helping me manage, his work started a truly deep fascination with the whole gulag system, and how people survived it. At the risk of sounding a little lame, I suppose I must relate to it a lot.
Anyway (tl;dr much? lol), it's always great to meet someone else who appreciates his work, but also who he was as a person. :D
As an interesting aside, I think he would have truly appreciated post rock as a form of music. However, also what it stands for, and how it can work as a way of feeling and healing.
@@robink9861 That's brilliant, I can certainly understand how his works helped you to have a different perspective on life and suffering. Life can be brutal and heartbreaking; it can feel relieving and warming to feel understood and to see life in a more difficult way - comparing our own lives to those of Auschwitz or Gulag survivors (and those who didn't survive) can really make your life seem so much more positive, or at least lessen the perceived level of difficulty that you face.
I've yet to read Ivan Denisovich, but it's certainly on my To-Read list. I was surprised when I found Gulag Archipelago in my college library haha.
I've struggled with mental health problems for most of my life from a young age, so books like his have helped me too in that respect. I'm really glad they were there for you too. How did you come across them?
I highly recommend the Jocko Podcast, especially the episodes with Jordan Peterson as he was the person who introduced Solzhenitsyn to me.
Agreed! It's nice to meet you too :)
I totally agree with you, he would have loved this genre of music. He lived a long life but I still wish he was around today.
@@bth1279 So very true. It really is an amazing medium, the written word. I shudder to think how less well developed I'd be without having read the books I did, at the time of my life I was lucky enough to find them in.
I hope it wasn't the abridged version of the Archipelago! haha. To me it seems vaguely criminal to cut bits out of such an epic work. Especially under the presumption that they aren't needed in order to fully understand the situation. Who is anyone in the West and who hasn't been in the gulag to decide that? (Apologies, pet hate of mine lol)
Mental health has been something I've finally admitted I also have not exactly had the best of times with. I was diagnosed with depression at 16, all but forced onto pills that only made things worse, and in the end lumbered me with a raging Valium addiction at 18/19 or so. I should have stood my ground better. Instead, so began the spiral of two decades of pain and ever increasing isolation that I am only now managing to right. Without finding books like A Day in The Life of along the way, idk how much worse it all would have been.
To answer your question (finally), part of the irony is that it was my mother who introduced me to A Day in the Life of. Her being one of the doctors who filled me full of pills and watched them drive me over the edge. I have to giver her credit where it is due, though, she did open my eyes to some wonderful things.
What did you do at college, btw? And if you don't mind me asking, how old are you? I'll make sure to check out the podcast. Thanks to corona, I have plenty of free time atm. It would be one hell of a final irony if, having finally gotten to a place where I want to live again, some friggen virus does away with me lol.
@@robink9861 I feel the same way, books have an excellent way of improving your heart and mind, simply by telling stories! I've been a book-lover ever since I read The Alchemist - Paulo Coelho, the book that made me realise how great books truly are.
I doubt it was, it was long enough! Hahaha I agree with you, cutting down books is a sin! They should be left in the author's original words (except for translations of course haha).
I'm really glad you're doing better, have you been able to see a therapist? It sounds like a rough time you went through, especially at a young age when you're still becoming an adult and learning about yourself. Have you cut down or stopped all medications now?
I study an Access to Higher Education course in Science (I'm guessing you're in the US as Valium isn't really a thing here in the UK? So we have A Levels which is between high school and university - A Levels are usually for people aged between 16-18. As I'm 23, I have to do an Access course to be able to go to university, which is just an adult version really). Then I'll head to uni to study Biology as I've always had a deep love of nature and the wilderness. I find solace in nature.
Haha, I wish you the best of health! You've got this :)
I'm also on FaceBook if you'd like to chat more there - totally your choice!
This band... this channel... thank you both.
That is all.
Wonderful album, only halfway through and I am highly satisfied with what I hear. Beautiful togetherness, hypnotic grooves and coloration. Lovely
28:54 my life starts
So... so... amazing. It gave me chills at every song, every minute. One of the greatest albums I've ever heard. Thank you!
The "thunder" at the beginning matched perfectly to the weather in my country right now... coincidence, i think not.
Some moments breech boundaries of rational, sceptical thought and we just sit back and feel the beauty. A thunder storm with this music playing sounds like one of those moments.
Absolutely a wonderful piece of music! Excellent!!!!!!!! Nice work, really blessed to have your music, Thanks. Respect!
This is quite wonderful.
Ramblings of a Broken Mind is unbelievably astounding!
Это прекрасно! Музыка подобная дыханию, спокойная, величественная, эмоциональная. Лететь на крыльях ветра, лежать в густой траве, стоять ночью глядя на звезды, ехать по дороге на мотоцикле... И слушать это творение. Музыканты, вы талантливы! Я восхищен! СПАСИБО. (с любовью из России)
Voice of Luna gives me chills.
I never usually get chills.. but I'm getting them more since I discovered Post-rock.
love lilting echo most!
This builds so well to good peaks very nice
A year later and this is still mood
Liting echo is so good
+Moon Eats Stars Tnx for your awe inspiring level of creativity and sharing.
Casting the last vestige of a precious light into the farthest most reaches of the night ~
Beautiful!!!
I love this track ! a complete masterpiece I could listen to it for hours :)
OMG so beautifully heartwrenching
Even true love isnt beatifull like this.
Cheers
Really enjoyed this album
pure gold
rad. 17:30 is trippy and fucking awesome
I'M GOING CALM MIND SO THIS SOUND IS NICE TO THANKS...
Voice of Luna, just wow
It's really really good
Fantastic job, man!
This is amazing too!
amazing!!
I thank for this
soothing af
Trip!
SupeR!
Is there a chance I can use your music in a podcast? I really love these!
noice!
it's amaziiiing :3 ^^
45:38 📈📈📈🎆🎆🎆📉📉📉
25:12
Good stuff. Pretty sure this one needs a fade in at the beginning.
Prescription Meds show me the way….
Suena bonito. Pero bostecé. Lindamente aburrido. (Solo es una crìtica)
mono sarnoso
BR.
sasha king crimson ₪₪₪₪
The title kinda of reminds me of the pac-man monster thing abit in a sorta way. Just saying…
brutal.....
check my new song ...tnks
Love the album, and the vocals were beautiful but uncomfortably out of tune at some points