Add to My Profile | More VideosDRAGONS - Here are the roses
Add to My Profile | More Videos
Downloadable files for your listening/viewing pleasure:
German Radio March 2008 Janice Long Radio Show 12th Nov 2007 XFM Session 18th Feb 2008 XFM Session 13th Aug 2007 BBC 6 Music 12th June 2007 London Calling "Condition" 3rd Nov 2007 London Calling "Treasure" 3rd Nov 2007 London Calling New Track 3rd Nov 2007 London Calling "Lonely Tonight" 3rd Nov 2007 London Calling "Trust" 3rd Nov 2007 London Calling "Epiphany" 3rd Nov 2007 London Calling Remembrance" 3rd Nov 2007 Amsterdam Paradiso 3rd Nov 2007 - Audio - This is the entire show as an audio file, so file size is large.LIVE at The Paradiso in Amsterdam - Video - Click on "Exclusives" on the left once there.Welcome.
During one of my wanderlusts, as I searched for the end of the vast and everlasting internet, I found a treasure. This treasure was not comprised of shiny baubles or glittering gold coins, but of pleasantries for the senses. I was swept away into another existence, where shadows frolicked and danced, vibrations altered everything they touched, and hope prevailed against all extreme odds. I became bewitched and entranced, within a haze of musical creation.
After this experience, and then acquiring their first EP, I am forever enchanted. I wrote to the band and asked if I could create a site specifically for US based MySpacers, for the purpose of enjoying DRAGONS music. I wish to share with you the same experience.
~Anna
"Every now and then, a record comes along that takes your breath away on the very first listen. Here Are The Roses, the debut LP from the enigmatic electronic rock duo Dragons, is one of these records. This is a work of unapologetic melodrama and self-possession, a serious statement of intent that imprints itself indelibly on the soul. Lyrically, the songs are devastating in their bleakness. They come steeped in sepulchral gloom, conjuring disorienting images of graphite skies, monochrome city streets and isolated figures languishing in the shadows. Where Is The Love? a work of sombre, sinister beauty, is the stuff of gothic nightmares while the eponymous opener (“I’m sitting half naked/ My heart racing/My soul long deadâ€) is a heartfelt paean to alienation, even if it concludes on a more hopeful note. Singer Anthony Tombling Jnr sounds like the weight of the world rests exclusively on his shoulders while David Francolini’s drumming conjures an atmosphere of ferocious, slow-burning intensity. The tension reaches boiling point in Lonely Tonight, searing with the suggestion of a relationship gone bad. If all this sounds like an unlikely formula for a pop record that’s because it is. But it is Tombling Jnr and Francolini’s willingness to engage with the darker side of human experience that gives their music urgency and depth, rather than weighing it down with emotional baggage. In an era of bland musical commercialism, Dragons arrive like a breath of fresh air in a sticky sauna. Here Are The Roses is a tremendous record – visceral yet captivating, experimental yet full of heart. Listen to it. You won’t hear anything else like it."