Discover “Phantom Ghost - Pardon My English”: One release from 2012, from Germany - Available in CD
Phantom Ghost

Pardon My English

  • CD
  • DIALDial CD 026
  • 2012
  • Germany
  • Pardon My English
Phantom Ghost - Pardon My English
CD - Phantom Ghost - Pardon My English

Pardon My English

one item in stock

Phantom Ghost returned from our excursion to the modern and would like to share what they brought with you.[Kompakt]LIGHT ANOTHER CIGARETTE IN THE TITTERY The sparrow has landed. We have returned from our excursion to the modern and would like to share what we brought with you: Some Showtunes and a Twelve Tone Row. The show, as it turns out to be, is our very own. We started out writing new material to perform on stage, after we had found out it was great fun to refrain our instrumentation to vocals, piano and bad acting. Originally very attracted to the- as our label told us- very clandestine idea of releasing three 12inches with very limited playability for DJs, we agreed not to ruin our Dial friends and work on an album instead. The topics we have always been drawn to are those with a bouquet of rather ominous sweetness, but this time to get rid of some of the ghosts conjured up during our seances proved not as easy as it is hopefully now easy on the ears to listen to this condensed summary of our insights. Some wonderful guests helped us through the mirror: Our associated member, visual artist Michaela Meise, lends us her bell-like voice she used so Êaccurately last year on her album with reinterpretations of catholic hymns, the surprise success 'Preis Dem Todesüberwinder'. She joins in the second bird hymn in the history of Phantom Ghost Ê-'In The Tittery'- and Êembodies the role of the lonely concubine in our micro musical 'Phantom Of The Operette'. The amazing Violoncello player Boram Lie, founding member of the Kaleidoskop ensemble, currently also performing with Brandt Brauer Frick and the Bamberg Symphony Orchestra, gave the dead golems of cello arrangements we handed her so carelessly a life and expressivity we would not have dreamed of. Always operating on the verge of our capabilities ourselves (sometimes you might hear a groan on the piano track), we needed to finish the album with a rusty trombone performed with the fragile resoluteness of someone experienced in self-display, but just getting acquainted with the instrument. We found the perfect cast in actor Thomas [was]

1
Pardon my English I
03:13
2
Universal prostitution
04:07
3
Dr. Schaden Freud
02:31
4
Dreams of Plush
04:50
5
Pardon my English II
02:24
6
In the tittery
04:07
7
Phantom of the operette
04:07
8
Pardon my English III
05:30
9
Smashing New York Times
03:20
10
Three limericks for liberty
02:45

Genres of the Artist

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