Ekstasis is the second studio album by the American musician Julia Holter. It was released on March 8, 2012, by RVNG Intl. It was preceded by two singles, "Marienbad" and "In The Same Room". A 12" EP, "Goddess Eyes" - which featured both versions of "Goddess Eyes" from the LP - followed in December 2012, after the album had been issued by Domino in the UK on October 26.Wikipedia
Ekstasis is the second studio album by the American musician JuliaHolter. It was released on March 8, 2012, by RVNG Intl. [4] It was preceded by two singles, "Marienbad" and "In The Same Room". A 12" EP, "Goddess Eyes" - which featured both versions of "Goddess Eyes" from the LP - followed in December 2012, after the album had been issued by Domino in the UK on October 26. [5]
Category:Baroque Pop Experimental Pop Ambient Music
Ekstasis is the sophomore studio album by an American musician JuliaHolter, released on March 8, 2012, by RVNG, and re-released on October 26, 2012, by Domino.
On her second album, the California singer and songwriter pulls in references and sounds from everywhere and shapes them into music that's both haunting and life-affirming.
JuliaHolter's second album, Ekstasis, is a collection of songs written and recorded across the span of three years. Ekstasis marks a return to the playful searching of her 2007 Eating the Stars EP, but guided by newly-learned disciplines, slightly better technology, and nearly limitless home recording time.
This Is Ekstasis Lyrics: Three to two to one / We're losing "I" / In dreams of distance, you crawl close / And as I hover over you / As we are always far-near / Far from us too / Near-far / Far ...
JuliaHolter's second album, Ekstasis, is a collection of songs written and recorded across the span of three years. Ekstasis marks a return to the playful searching of her 2007 Eating the Stars EP, but guided by newly-learned disciplines, slightly better technology, and nearly limitless home recording time.
In 2011, JuliaHolter arrived seemingly armed with wisdom beyond her years. That wisdom translated into her first full-length, Tragedy. A masterful work based on Euripides' Hippolytus, it was an album filled with the sort of vocal layering and echo chamber work that would make Meredith Monk or Alexis O'Hara proud. The prolific Holter has returned already with Ekstasis (named after the ...
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