The mind revealing itself to itself: the TOP 100 AMBIENT ALBUMS as voted by ILX

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I've never really warmed up to 1194... I guess most of what Barry Bruner said in the quote is true, but to me the things he mentions sound more like early-nineties ambient clichés than something awesome when you actually hear them on the album.

Tuomas, Monday, 24 June 2019 19:03 (four years ago) link

My #2 pick! Does not bode well for the rest of my top ten.

the girl from spirea x (f. hazel), Monday, 24 June 2019 19:06 (four years ago) link

Also it's funny, if you wanna sleep to this album, you gotta watch out for the scream at the end of Strange Air that comes after about twenty very quiet minutes.

the girl from spirea x (f. hazel), Monday, 24 June 2019 19:10 (four years ago) link

I once fell half asleep to Vladislav Delay's Anima, and was scared shitless by the creepy-voiced monologue at the end of the album, which is otherwise completely electronic. For a second, I thought someone had broken into my apartment.

Tuomas, Monday, 24 June 2019 19:14 (four years ago) link

Just listening to Henry Flint now, so good!

I am using your worlds, Monday, 24 June 2019 19:31 (four years ago) link

The last entry for today coming up, and it'll be the most new age thing in the poll so far...

Tuomas, Monday, 24 June 2019 19:33 (four years ago) link

Yanni time!

Siegbran, Monday, 24 June 2019 19:35 (four years ago) link

Lol

Uptown VONC (Le Bateau Ivre), Monday, 24 June 2019 19:39 (four years ago) link

81. (tie) Syntonic Research Inc.: Environments 2 - Tintinnabulation (Special Low Frequency Version) (1987)
219 points, 4 votes.

https://i.imgur.com/qR1M805.jpg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j_pUMNGXwPk

ha! Irv Teibel has now been retroactively credited as the author. His name never appears anywhere in the packaging, but Syntonic Research Inc. was essentially a one man operation. I've had some conversations with the guy who's recently inherited the library / organization; they're looking for a good label to handle a complete box reissue. For a series that sold in the millions and that was so ridiculously influential, it is a little silly how under the radar they all fly now

I have the CD issue of 'Tintinabulation'; they mastered it at the 16.666 rpm speed, lasts an hour, good move. 'Intonation' also sounds good slow. I have a set of the vinyl but I don't have some of the later cassettes, man do I want to hear 'Alpine Blizzard', what in hell does that even sound like

― Milton Parker, Tuesday, August 25, 2015 11:43 PM

In the absence of peer review, there’s always the theater of public opinion. As the series took off, Environments came packaged with customer feedback surveys, inquiring into everything from demographics and occupation to the make of one’s stereo system and speaker placement in their house. People responded at length, often appending typewritten commentary to the forms, digressing into their lives, their worries, their ailments and their solace—a patchwork of anxious, disconnected souls strung together with form stationery.

A blind man in Chicago wrote to say he played Teibel’s “Alpine Blizzard” at Christmastime. A lonely housewife in Soddy-Daisy, Tennessee, would retreat into Environments when her son and husband abandoned her for TV. A migraine sufferer says his doctor introduced him to Environments to miraculous effect, though he, like Teibel’s schnauzer Max, found the alligators of the Okefenokee Swamp unnerving. A Dairy Queen employee in Laurel, Delaware liked getting stoned and listening to “Dusk at New Hope” but wished the crickets weren’t so loud, while ABC News anchor Hugh Downs worried the recordings were making him too sane, “rendering me unfit for my profession.” One fan professedly into “alternate life styles” suggests that Teibel receive a Nobel Prize.
Cara Giaimo: "The Man Who Recorded, Tamed, and Then Sold Nature Sounds to America"

Tuomas, Monday, 24 June 2019 19:44 (four years ago) link

I love the long, detailed descriptions in the sleeve notes of that album on how to listen to it and what sort of beneficial uses and effects it can have. Especially this bit:

https://i.imgur.com/RdS5cbj.jpg

Tuomas, Monday, 24 June 2019 19:52 (four years ago) link

Whoops, sorry, the second quote in the entry was credited, it's from this article by Mike Powell:

https://pitchfork.com/features/cover-story/reader/natural-selection

The link below the quote leads to another article about Irv Teibel, they're both well worth reading.

Tuomas, Monday, 24 June 2019 19:56 (four years ago) link

several of my votes made it today, nice! although i now feel very guilty about not voting for Tired Sounds of SotL, i'm very glad that my Ballasted Orchestra vote helped boost it into the top 100. it's a beautiful album, but probably the most static/droney of their catalog, and not one i'd recommend to SotL newcomers. still - it has knocked me out cold at night more times than i can remember.

i am very enthusiastic about one of the two sides of Environments 2, enough to throw it some points even though i rarely flip it over.

i will never make a typo ever again (Karl Malone), Monday, 24 June 2019 19:58 (four years ago) link

Which side?

Thanks for linking to that Atlas Obscura article, Tuomas, that was a great read.

Uptown VONC (Le Bateau Ivre), Monday, 24 June 2019 20:06 (four years ago) link

Hmm, I think you're talking about a different version of "Environments 2"... The original is an LP from 1970 that has two different tracks on each sides, "Tintinnabulation" being one of them. But for this 1987 release that track was slowed down 100 %, so it only has one 60 minute track with the bells.

(xpost)

Tuomas, Monday, 24 June 2019 20:07 (four years ago) link

I’ll have to check when I get home! I remembered one side having about 25 minute of bells softly clanging in the wind. But I also have a terrible memory, so

i will never make a typo ever again (Karl Malone), Monday, 24 June 2019 20:10 (four years ago) link

but probably the most static/droney of their catalog, and not one i'd recommend to SotL newcomers

What if you like drone? I've dipped my toes into SOTL waters before (Refinement, Tired Sounds) and was kind of underwhelmed.

Shoegazi (Leee), Monday, 24 June 2019 20:15 (four years ago) link

Was there ever an 'I Kill Everything I Fuck (800% Slower)'?

― pomenitul, Monday, June 24, 2019 11:28 AM (one hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

On it.

― Uptown VONC (Le Bateau Ivre)

*applause*

Ambient Police (sleeve), Monday, 24 June 2019 20:24 (four years ago) link

Several of my votes made it today, Henry Flynt and Skelton being the most important to me, personally. Both of those records are just ungodly good, and I've been returning to them for years.

blue light or electric light (the table is the table), Monday, 24 June 2019 22:20 (four years ago) link

Hmm, I think you're talking about a different version of "Environments 2"... The original is an LP from 1970 that has two different tracks on each sides, "Tintinnabulation" being one of them. But for this 1987 release that track was slowed down 100 %, so it only has one 60 minute track with the bells.

oops, you're exactly right! yeah, i was thinking this one:

https://www.discogs.com/No-Artist-Environments-New-Concepts-in-Stereo-Sound-Disc-2/release/176729

oh well. now i really want to hear the 1987 version!

i will never make a typo ever again (Karl Malone), Tuesday, 25 June 2019 05:27 (four years ago) link

80. David Behrman: On the Other Ocean (1978)
223 points, 4 votes.

https://i.imgur.com/W6QKU7F.jpg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D3nG9BbzH3I

I listen to my tape of the radio station's copy of On the Other Ocean all the time in my car, very soothing.

― Trip Maker, 23. heinäkuuta 2011 4:26

on the other ocean is a favorite of mine, a very warm lovely record

― brimstead, 10. maaliskuuta 2014 20:01

I used to switch between eno's "discreet music" and David Behrman - "on another ocean"

― neutral sequence for flute (blank), 13. huhtikuuta 2012 21:43

wow, perfect sound forever rules, just when I think i've finally covered their archives I find another top interview...

http://www.furious.com/perfect/behrman.html

"Even though 'minimalist' composers/musicians such as Terry Riley, LaMonte Young and Steve Reich are pretty well-known outside of their own musical style, David Behrman has not been as heralded. This is CRIMINALLY WRONG."

― (Jon L), 6. huhtikuuta 2004 23:11

Tuomas, Tuesday, 25 June 2019 06:41 (four years ago) link

oh well. now i really want to hear the 1987 version!

You can hear it in the Youtube link I posted. :)

Tuomas, Tuesday, 25 June 2019 06:46 (four years ago) link

79. Biosphere: Cirque (2000)
224 points, 4 votes.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IbWOM4GEO9A

https://i.imgur.com/sXIDxPE.jpg

Cirque is really lovely, almost as great as Substrata. It's more sample heavy (in a klf Chill Out sort of way), and *sigh* there are few a beats here and there. Definitely a stand-out artists among the deluge of ambient out there... His records have a spontaneity to them.. A spontaneity of which I can't quite locate the source.

― gaseous (gaseous), 15. huhtikuuta 2006 8:47

Although bearing similarities to Biosphere's early 90's output, the absorbing Cirque (2000) suggests further changes and it revels in new sounds, low-fi environmental samples and beats with oddly muted edges. Tracks range from totally abstract looping exercises like "When I Leave" and "Moistened & Dried" to atmospheric drum'n'bass with the frantic beats muted and softened to tickle you ears rather than move your feet. Cirque is based on the infamous and fatal Alaskan wilderness trek of American amateur explorer Chris McLandless and the sense of loneliness and isolation is palpable at times. The album does end on a positive note with pulsing reverse chord effects that create a lovely enveloping warmth, perhaps an acknowledgement that even the most patient listener doesn't want to be left out in the cold for too long.

Mike Watson, Ambient Music Guide

Tuomas, Tuesday, 25 June 2019 07:08 (four years ago) link

Cirque is one of my favourite Biosphere records, but I couldn't bring myself to vote for it in this poll, it feels way too groove and beat oriented to fit here.

Tuomas, Tuesday, 25 June 2019 07:10 (four years ago) link

I absolutely love Cirque, i just limited my ballot to one album per artist.

Siegbran, Tuesday, 25 June 2019 07:18 (four years ago) link

Likewise.

pomenitul, Tuesday, 25 June 2019 07:41 (four years ago) link

77. (tie) Vladislav Delay: Multila (2000)
230 points, 5 votes.

https://i.imgur.com/7heTSfB.jpg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B35LE3_9UM8

just had oral surgery today whilst listening to Vladislav Delay -- not a bad combination; I highly recommend getting your teeth pulled next time you listen to Multila.

― Lee, 23. maaliskuuta 2002 3:00

Vladislav Delay - Multila. One of my all time favourite albums and a real maverick in terms of albums to fall asleep to. More than once Its taken me like a week to listen to it in full becuase I kept falling asleep during it.

― Thomas Mehlt (Tokyo Ghost Stories), 8. kesäkuuta 2006 17:15

Multila is desert island disc

― brimstead, 7. joulukuuta 2018 0:14

Tuomas, Tuesday, 25 June 2019 08:11 (four years ago) link

Didn't vote for it because I put no thought into my pathetic ballot but 'tis a great album indeed.

pomenitul, Tuesday, 25 June 2019 08:16 (four years ago) link

77. (tie) Ian William Craig: A Turn of Breath (2014)
230 points, 5 votes.

https://i.imgur.com/9mEXJHO.jpg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qpk8gwCJo7E

kinda one of the best things i've heard in the 21st century.

― scott seward, 23. marraskuuta 2015 8:30

This just came up on my "Spotify discover" playlist and it's probably the first time I've actually "discovered" anything via that playlist.

― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), 24. joulukuuta 2015 5:42

Ik ben gek op verval, zoals bij sinds jaren verlaten bioscopen, fabrieken, pretparken… Die liefde treft ook muziek; of wat daar dan van over is… Ian William Craig heeft een klassiek geschoolde stem en een voorliefde voor drones en tape manipulatie. Het gevolg is een dwaaltocht over een kathedralenkerkhof (of het graf van William Basinsksi, dat kan ook). Gebroken glas-in-lood, engelen met uitgeregende ogen, de geur van beschimmelde duivenpoep. Het is niet onder woorden te brengen hoe diep dat me raakt.

― Sebastian (Royal Mermaid Mover), 17. syyskuuta 2014 21:58

this thread put me on Turn of Breath and for that I am forever in its debt, I keep finding new ways to enjoy this record

― grinding like a jolly elf (jamescobo), 3. tammikuuta 2016 6:52

Tuomas, Tuesday, 25 June 2019 08:25 (four years ago) link

de geur van beschimmelde duivenpoep

Awesome.

Siegbran, Tuesday, 25 June 2019 08:38 (four years ago) link

Fantastic record.

Uptown VONC (Le Bateau Ivre), Tuesday, 25 June 2019 08:48 (four years ago) link

76. Spacemen 3: Dreamweapon (1990)
231 points, 4 votes.

https://i.imgur.com/zGUlPsU.jpg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-_qA0nelfNc

there is nothing lazy about this music.

A point that's often lost when talking about them. As easy as it is to dismiss them as hazy druggie fucks, the intensity to the sound is tremendous. "Dreamweapon" doesn't put me to sleep at all - it's too intense and I get caught up in it. The only other art that's induced a similar reaction is going to La Monte Young's Dream House or watching Sistiaga's experimental films.

― Elvis Telecom, 19. huhtikuuta 2013 9:04

also everybody who likes drone (as opposed to or beyond space rock) should have a copy of the "dreamweapon" reissue if only for the "ecstasy symphony"

― vahid (vahid), 3. lokakuuta 2003 23:34

Be asleep and awake at the same time with "Dreamweapon"

― p.j. (Henry), 6. lokakuuta 2003 23:28

Although I should say that "Dreamweapon" is not a variation, but it's own thing entirely. Get it later- it's fantastic, but you've got to be in the mood for *The Drone*....

― jsoulja (jsoulja), 2. elokuuta 2005 0:11

Tuomas, Tuesday, 25 June 2019 12:40 (four years ago) link

yessss Dreamweapoin and Multila are all time faves

don't know the Behrman at all, loving this poll

Ambient Police (sleeve), Tuesday, 25 June 2019 13:41 (four years ago) link

The Behrman I discovered in one of my experimental composition classes when I was at Uni— I went to a school with a music conservatory and was a music comp minor.

It has remained one of my favorite records ever made since then, and I'm still totally flabbergasted that I forgot to put it on my ballot, even tho I'm pretty sure I nominated it! Might be a case of something being so much a part of you that you forget that it's even there.

blue light or electric light (the table is the table), Tuesday, 25 June 2019 13:57 (four years ago) link

I need to spend more time with Dreamweapon, I always wanted it but every time I came across it back in the day it explicably cost like $30

the girl from spirea x (f. hazel), Tuesday, 25 June 2019 16:35 (four years ago) link

inexplicably that is, or maybe I was right the first time

the girl from spirea x (f. hazel), Tuesday, 25 June 2019 16:35 (four years ago) link

get this version IMO:

https://www.discogs.com/Spacemen-3-Dreamweapon/release/542452

Ambient Police (sleeve), Tuesday, 25 June 2019 16:36 (four years ago) link

is that the best mastered version and/or the one to buy if you wanna make sure the guys get some of the money?

the girl from spirea x (f. hazel), Tuesday, 25 June 2019 16:39 (four years ago) link

75. Charlemagne Palestine: Strumming Music (1974)
233 points, 3 votes.

https://i.imgur.com/9EC40OZ.jpg?1

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TGN21a5T9oY

Strumming Music was an instant <3<3<3 for all time for me.

― ledge, Friday, June 6, 2008 3:57 PM

''Strumming Music (Shandar) LP - extremely difficult to find on LP, there's a CD version floating around, but that's tough to find too.''

but i have. and fantastic 50+ min piece it is as well. my room was filled with lovely sound. don't know abt 'really badly engineered tho', but i do have athreshold for bad recordings but it sounds good to me.

― Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Sunday, March 16, 2003 10:33 PM

Saw him play a few years ago at the Purcell Rooms - he performed a variation on 'Strumming Music' and snapped a couple of strings on his Bosendorfer piano, which is some kind of feat. He brought all his teddy bears w/ him and when one of the strings snapped I thought a bear had fallen into the piano! After playing for abt an hour he drank a big glass of cognac. CP still had incredible stamina and concentration - when the music gathered pace it sometimes sounded as if there were loads of backing tapes playing (there weren't, of course) - the appreciative audience settled into a kind of collective trance - just amazing.

― Andrew L, Saturday, August 10, 2002 3:00 AM

strumming music by Charlemagne Palestine.. ambient? really?

― braunld (Lowell N. Behold'n), Friday, May 17, 2019 7:43 AM

Tuomas, Tuesday, 25 June 2019 16:40 (four years ago) link

xp

other than the Superior Viaduct 2LP reissue I think that's the most legit of them all! Space Age is the label run by the ex-manager that they don't see money from, right?

also that SFTRI CD has a couple of bonus tracks

Ambient Police (sleeve), Tuesday, 25 June 2019 16:41 (four years ago) link

74. Raymond Scott: Soothing Sounds for Baby Volume 1 - 1 to 6 Months (1964)
234 points, 4 votes.

https://i.imgur.com/HRcQOku.jpg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k66nGplNRmQ

I'd put them up there with Terry Riley's "In C" and Steve Reich's "Come Out" as pioneering early minimalist works. I think their high-pitched blips might get a tad annoying if played too loud, but as spritely background music (which is what I guess they're supposed to be), they're great.

― dleone (dleone), Tuesday, April 15, 2003 4:42 PM

they're very primitive pieces, but immersive and timeless. and often not very relaxing at all, bizarre minimal squawking NOISE. he was arguably the first person to build himself a sequencer, in this case a huge wall-sized bank of relays turning signal generators on and off. so there he is in the late 50's early 60's letting those 8th notes run into tape echo, going 'wow, these things really start to sound great when you let them run for more than about 5-10 minutes, but how in the world am I going to _market_ this stuff?'

― milton, Tuesday, April 15, 2003 8:53 PM

Yeah, the electronic stuff is so way beyond it's years, we have still not cought up. The mad scientist aspect of Scott is the real meat of him, I believe. He kept stiving for more, for sounds that did not exist, for music that could not be made. The Manhattan Research and Baby Sounds CD's are a must. The think I like best is how he used those crazy contraptions. Everytime I search out an ondioline recording or theremin or glass harmonica, etc...the music is usually really dumb or goofy or just not worth of the sounds that are making it. I think Scott not only pulled amazing sounds from the either, i think he used them for good, not evil. He made records and music WORTHY of existing beyond the vehicles for those instruments. I wish Bruce Haack did the same. Or Enoch Light or even Esquivel. I find myself paining through those recordings to just hear the parts rather than the whole. Not so with Scott.

― Mark, Sunday, April 21, 2002 3:00 AM

I tried out the first volume of 'Soothing Sounds' on my sister's four month-old twin babies and it actually worked! It didn't make 'em cry, scream, shit themselves or throw up, there was the odd distracted smile, a few gurgles and the occasional tapping of feet and hands. And then they went to sleep!

― Andrew L, Wednesday, May 30, 2001 3:00 AM

Tuomas, Tuesday, 25 June 2019 16:49 (four years ago) link

Shout out to the two other ppl that voted for Charlemagne, keep ducking and dodging the Ambient Police

space invaders are smokin penises!!!! (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 25 June 2019 16:59 (four years ago) link

72. (tie) Deathprod Morals and Dogma (2004)
236 points, 4 votes.

https://i.imgur.com/K9T433e.jpg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZFLs_MxhC5U

Morals and Dogma is devastating.

― Barnaby, Hardly, Saturday, July 18, 2009 3:13 PM

When Sten uses an instrument or a found sound, he obscures the source, refusing to take advantage of any associations it brings. Although there are acoustic instruments on the album, he blurs the edges or manipulates the attack, keeping control of every detail of the timbre. For just one example, he uses a sound on "Dead People's Things" that resembles the suction tool you'd use to clean an aquarium. You can try to pick apart the sound of pebbles gurgling against the plastic, or the drone of streaming water, but the outlines blur before you can make out what it really is; and in the end, it may be something as basic as a stretched-out violin sample.

Chris Dahlen, Pitchfork

Tuomas, Tuesday, 25 June 2019 17:00 (four years ago) link

Barnaby otm, didn't expect it to place.

Uptown VONC (Le Bateau Ivre), Tuesday, 25 June 2019 17:01 (four years ago) link

Strumming Music is another one I really need to check out, looks like the Sub Rosa 3CD version is pretty cheap

never even heard of Deathprod!

Ambient Police (sleeve), Tuesday, 25 June 2019 17:01 (four years ago) link

Ohh you should check it out, you won't be disappointed.

Uptown VONC (Le Bateau Ivre), Tuesday, 25 June 2019 17:02 (four years ago) link

72. (tie) Terekke: Improvisational Loops (2018)
236 points, 4 votes.

https://i.imgur.com/yRsSoav.jpg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qp7LX0w4FXs

omg the Terekke album is so beautiful. very ambient, mostly just soft muted drifty synth pads but it's really excellent.

― brimstead, Tuesday, April 17, 2018 4:57 AM

As is the case with any successful ambient track, “Nuwav2” establishes it’s commanding synth melody from its first moments and allows the shimmering reverberations to ebb and flow like snow through the wind. It’s the type of melody that mimics the feeling of burrowing in a gratuitously sized coat while walking in a roaring blizzard. The chords feel like a house track without the percussion played under a vast ocean, with shimmering chords bouncing off rays of light piercing through the water. At the tail end of the track, flurries of notes begin to accent the proceedings with a vague retrowave flair. These moments also add mild echoes of minimal techno and microhouse, which Gardner explores more directly on tracks like “arrpfaded” and “l8r h8r.” Throughout, he works off everything introduced in “Nuwav2” with shorter bursts, further building on the narrative of steady ripples. What Gardner birthed with the 20-minute epic is distilled down to concentrated portions to allow the album to gracefully fade into a fond, constantly resurfacing memory.

Scott Murphy, Soundtracks for the Blind

Tuomas, Tuesday, 25 June 2019 17:08 (four years ago) link

That one is probably the most recent album in the top 100.

Tuomas, Tuesday, 25 June 2019 17:09 (four years ago) link

is that the most recent release to place so far? I did check that out as per brimstead's recommendation

XP!!!

Ambient Police (sleeve), Tuesday, 25 June 2019 17:09 (four years ago) link

71. (no artist): Symphonies of the Planets 1 - NASA Voyager Recordings (1992)
242 points, 4 votes, 1 first place vote.

https://i.imgur.com/fdcoA4j.jpg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OLDWKpAkRHs

This collection of Voyager's electromagnetic recordings of the planets is still one of my fave drone/ambient albums.

― Elvis Telecom, Saturday, February 13, 2010 2:20 AM

http://www.neuroacoustic.com/nasa.html#NASA_more-info

These sounds are recordings of the interaction of the Solar wind and the Ionosphere of each of the outer planets. The resonance of these ions is exactly within the range of human hearing (20-20,000 Hz) - called by NASA "Ion Acoustic Waves". This means that nothing had to be done artificially to the sounds to hear them – They were the REAL "Music of the Spheres". Although there is no air in space, there is vibration. Space does not have the medium of air to carry the vibration to your ear, but the vibration is present. With the specialized recording equipment aboard Voyager, it became possible to record these amazing sounds for the first time and then hear them here on Earth.

Imagine his amazement and that of all of us when we heard these NASA Space Sound recordings that sounded like dolphins, whales, ocean, crickets, choirs, Tibetan bowls and monks chanting! Something in the core of the subconscious awakens and pays close attention to and in the presence of these sounds. These are some of the most powerful tools for healing, inner awakening and self change that Dr. Thompson has researched and produced. His Primordial Sounds™ are found on his Audio Programs, giving even more power to his musical sounds and other techniques used.

These were originally released on a label called 'Brain/Mind Research' with equally New Agey liner notes and marketed as theraputic tools, one CD for each planet. I found those remaindered in the early 90's and have listened to these a lot.

The skeptic is thinking the data's been clearly been processed by someone who grew up on Space Music in the same way that the guys who colorize the Hubble shots were influenced by 70's / 80's Space Art (i.e. I can hear digital reverb applied to certain components of the drone, so my guess is it's been layered somewhat). But this is so much more abstract than most space music I have no problem accepting that he's working with captured data & part of me can imagine that this could be an accurate representation of the way soundless vibrations move & develop in a vacuum.

― Milton Parker, Friday, January 16, 2009 10:46 PM

played this voyager stuff for the tenth graders and they totally tripped out on it ...

― moonship journey to baja, Saturday, January 17, 2009 8:20 AM

Tuomas, Tuesday, 25 June 2019 17:26 (four years ago) link

Yay the Terreke album!! Really great stuff

brimstead, Tuesday, 25 June 2019 17:28 (four years ago) link


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